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The Iran war is nearing the three-week mark as about 2,200 more U.S. Marines and three more warships are headed toward the region, two U.S. officials say.

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Police in Barcelona said the death of Jimmy Gracey, a University of Alabama student from Illinois who went missing on vacation, was likely an accident.

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Amazon is reportedly developing a new AI-focused smartphone that doesn't rely as heavily on traditional apps. "The phone is seen as a potential mobile personalization device that can sync with home voice assistant Alexa and serve as a conduit to Amazon customers throughout the day," reports Reuters. From the report: As envisioned, the new phone's personalization features would make buying from Amazon.com, watching Prime Video, listening to Prime Music or ordering food from partners like Grubhub easier than ever, the people said. They asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters. A key focus of the Transformer project has been integrating artificial intelligence capabilities into the device, the people said. That could eliminate the need for traditional app stores, which require downloading and registering for applications before they can be used. Alexa would likely be a core feature but not necessarily the primary operating system of the phone, the people said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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The first Marine Expeditionary Unit, which is coming from the Pacific, is still making its way toward the region

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Trump emphasizes that there is ‘nothing more important’ for the US at the moment than voter ID as he demands Congress to pass the Save America act

The US military is deploying thousands of additional marines and sailors to the Middle East, three US officials told Reuters on Friday.

One of the officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that the USS Boxer, along with the marine expeditionary unit onboard, were departing the west coast of the US about three weeks ahead of schedule.

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Stuart Niven suspended after revelations he was struck off as company director, while other candidates have been accused of extremist statements including describing Humza Yousaf as ‘not British’

Severin Carrell is the Guardian’s Scotland editor.

Malcolm Offord, Reform UK’s Scottish leader, has doubled down on his defence of the party’s vetting by dismissing remarks by candidates backing Tommy Robinson or describing Humza Yousaf as an “Islamist moron” (see 10.12am) as “fruity language”.

It has taken a matter of hours for Reform Scotland’s big launch to fall apart and their true colours to show.

If Nigel Farage refuses to act and remove this candidate, Malcolm Offord must step up and show some leadership himself. This incident has confirmed once and for all how poisonous and chaotic Reform is and I have no doubt that Scots will send them packing.

Again, as I say, this was done in a former life before she became a member of Reform. We’ve all said things in the past that may be intemperate… I am saying that we have to grow up on this and not take offence at every moment in time.

I’ve been very clear that we have brought in a whole range of candidates, 80% of whom are not politicians. They’re real people with real lives who said real things in a past life. Okay, this was said before she was a candidate. She wasn’t even a member of the party at that time.

And what we got in the situation is that in all our lives in the past, we’ve made comments that might sometimes be intemperate. But the issue with this modern world we live in is everything is now written down and remembered. I just think we have to be more, more realistic about the fact that real people say real things, and now she’s a candidate, she will be held to a higher standard.

Liberal Democrats urge the government to ensure the NCA or new National Police Service takes over investigations into serious waste crime. We also need an independent review of the entire waste crime system to crack down on organised gangs once and for all. New powers for the Environmental Agency simply won’t cut it.

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As the Iran war rages, Israel continues killing senior Iranian figures. CBS News asked experts how they do it.

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Peter Coates’s family welcome end to years pursuing answers after he died when outage stopped oxygen machine

A family has welcomed a coroner’s conclusion that ambulance delays possibly contributed to their father’s death in 2019 after enduring “years of distress trying to pursue answers”.

The family of Peter Coates said they had been met with “delays and resistance” from a regional ambulance service as they tried to discover the full circumstances of his final minutes.

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Plunging oil shipments transiting the Strait of Hormuz have sent global energy prices soaring to their highest level in years.

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Chuck Norris' family said his death at 86 was sudden, but did not share any other information.

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The Trump administration argued that Harvard unlawfully discriminated against Jewish and Israeli students, in violation of federal civil rights law.

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Announcement follows Poland’s confirmation of troop withdrawal because of ‘worsening security situation’

Meanwhile, French president Emmanuel Macron has confirmed the seizure of the tanker, which he said belonged to the Russian shadow fleet.

In a strongly worded post on X, he said:

“The French navy boarded this morning in the Mediterranean a new vessel from the shadow fleet, the Deyna.

The war in Iran will not divert France from its support for Ukraine, where Russia’s war of aggression continues.

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Joe Kent, a top counterterrorism official in the Trump administration, resigned Tuesday citing his opposition to the ongoing war in Iran.

Kent’s resignation came as the most recent and perhaps most consequential of a series of rifts opening on the far right over the war in Iran. While most of the defections had come from MAGA media figures, Kent’s departure from his role as director of the National Counterterrorism Center was the first major defection from the administration.

In his letter of resignation, Kent condemned the war as a violation of the president’s campaign promises to steer clear of foreign wars, criticizing what he described as Israeli pressure as a catalyst for dragging the U.S. into a deadly potential quagmire.

“I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran,” wrote Kent in a letter posted to X, where it had received nearly 100 million views as of Friday morning. “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby.”

Related

“Utterly Dismayed”: Air Force Engineer Resigns as Dissent Against Gaza War Slowly Spreads Within Military

Kent is not the only government national security professional disaffected by Donald Trump’s war in Iran, according to advocates for conscientious objection who say they’re fielding nonstop calls from distressed service members. Many service members could refuse to take part in the war, either by refusing outright — and risking punishment — or by declaring as conscientious objectors, according to Mike Prysner, executive director of the Center on Conscience and War, a group that counsels members of the military on their rights in objecting to participation in or support of combat operations.

“This is the kind of thing that really resonates: seeing respected people in positions of power validating what many service members feel, which is that this is bad and people shouldn’t take part in it,” Prysner said. “There are a lot of people who may be inspired by what Kent did.”

Skyrocketing Objections

Prysner said that in the weeks since the war began with joint U.S.–Israeli airstrikes on February 28, the group’s phones have been ringing around the clock. Active-duty military personnel and military families are scrambling, he said, to figure out what their rights might be in refusing to take part in the war. His group has helped dozens of service members explore or start applications to declare as conscientious objectors.

“We’ve started more people in the CO process in the past two weeks than we typically do over the period of a year,” Prysner said.

Prysner said the group has spoken with service members occupying ranks from major to private, including three fighter pilots.

Prysner’s numbers could not be independently confirmed, and representatives of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding the number of new applications for conscientious-objector status.

Kent, an Army veteran who later served in the CIA before running as a hard-right House candidate in Washington state, is the most senior member of the administration to resign over the war in Iran. Until Tuesday, he served under Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence and herself a former critic of pressure to the U.S. and Israel to carry out regime change in Iran.

Related

Air Force Academy Prepares Ideological Overhaul, With Erika Kirk Bringing “Bold Christian Faith”

The resignation came amid a broader split in the MAGA movement, with some Trump loyalists backing up the president’s decision to go to war while others, perhaps most notably conservative pundit Tucker Carlson, questioning the logic of attacking Iran in concert with Israel. In the wake of Kent’s announcement, Trump called his departure “a good thing,” while White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said the letter was brimming with “false claims.” Kent, according to media reports, was the subject of a leak investigation by the FBI.

“Sooner the Better”

The U.S. military offers service members avenues to avoid combat or even be discharged from the ranks if they can prove that they hold religious, moral, or ethical objection to “war in any form.” The practice in the U.S. of declaring as a conscientious objector goes back as far as the U.S. military, although the regulations around it and the reasons cited by would-be conscientious objectors have expanded over time, and in the current, all-volunteer military, regulations require that one’s believes have “crystalized” since signing on.

“It’s totally valid for people to cite a specific conflict in their CO application, as long as that leads them to the broader realization that they cannot participate in any war,” Prysner said. “It’s absolutely valid for service members to look at the war in Iran and make the conclusion that they can’t be part of this in any form.”

Prysner is himself a veteran who served in the Iraq War, and came to anti-war activism after his deployments there. He said he began to question the violence unleashed in Iraq after coming into contact with Iraqis. In the age of the internet, however, the horrors of war can be quickly beamed into people’s phones and social media, potentially spurring more members of the military to question their role in that violence.

That dynamic was on display in Iran, Prysner told The Intercept. The surprise nature of the U.S.–Israel attack caused the families of service members to reach out to loved ones stationed abroad, while numerous active-duty members who reached out had been motivated by the clear and devastating impact of the war on civilians, notably a U.S. airstrike on February 28 that killed 168 people, most of them children, at a school in the Iranian city of Minab.

“By far the most common thing we’ve heard from people for a specific thing that caused them to reach out was the Minab school massacre,” Prysner said. “It’s not wanting to be a part of what they see as crimes against people they have no reason to hurt.”

Related

Daniel Ellsberg Wanted Americans to See the Truth About War

Hundreds of service members resisted participation in the Iraq War, including many who successfully applied as conscientious objectors. But many had a difficult time successfully proving that their opposition to war was not simply a fear of serving overseas. Others went AWOL, with at least 200 service members fleeing to Canada to avoid fighting.

Some, such as former Marine Stephen Funk, served jail time for refusing to deploy. Funk also faced discrimination in the Marines as a then-closeted gay man and spent months in the brig for his refusal to ship off to Iraq. In the years after his discharge, he worked with anti-war groups like Iraq Veterans Against the War and Veteran Artists to promote peace and work with other vets to reintegrate.

Funk told The Intercept he has been horrified to see the U.S. yet again charging into a war that has already killed hundreds of civilians and stands to kill, injure, and morally compromise members of the U.S. military. He urged service members facing a crisis of conscience to listen to their heart.

“I would say go for it, the sooner the better,” Funk told The Intercept. “You don’t want to have injuries, or moral injuries, that you’ll carry for the rest of your life.”

The post Joe Kent’s Resignation Could Bolster a Wave of Conscientious Objectors to Trump’s Iran War appeared first on The Intercept.

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In his latest book, the New York Times bestselling author writes of a cultural crisis: an increase in anxiety and depression, concurrent with a rise in social media use, during what he terms an "Age of Emptiness."

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It’s me again Margaret

Ok guys I’m back with a brand new rendition

Took the new gt back and now I present Icy White. Thought about naming her Jax Teller cause the white shoes but nah Icy White it shall be

I am 53 and use my marvelous stick with a mirror and bells to ward off danger as I rescue litter from the ground and place in the proper place. I do this as an “Incline Pal” a 100 percent volunteer group I created here in Manitou Springs Colorado. I use the board to quickly get the town cleaned while wearing my wife’s link to our store. It’s all I can do because of early onset dementia. I forget too much and this board and the others that led to this actually made me wanna live again and I look forward to each new day. I’m the coolest volunteer in town and people love my stick.

Now I am not about to drop in with the gt I’m going home to get the pint I’m more familiar with. I will have the wifey video and post it if that’s ok. I’m not trying to spam anything just sharing my life so I can look back and maybe remember?

Namaste guys and whoever wants to joust , “Come at me dawg “ lol

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Exclusive: Chris Bryant says policy agreements are being done in bits and pieces but a greater vision is needed by both sides

It was all smiles and warm handshakes when the two men in charge of renegotiating the UK’s relationship with the EU met in Brussels this week.

Maroš Šefčovič and the UK minister for EU relations, Nick Thomas-Symonds, sharing a stage on the third floor of the vast European parliament building, were at pains to show the cross-Channel relationship was in a good place after years of rancour.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Fan Xinquan, a retired electronics worker in Beijing, has recently started raising a "lobster," hoping that the AI agent he has been training can help organize his specialized industry knowledge better than chatbots like DeepSeek. "OpenClaw can actually help you accomplish many practical things," the 60-year-old said at a recent event hosted by AI startup Zhipu to teach people how to use and train the AI agent, which has gone viral in China, with its various local versions earning the "lobster" nickname. In the past month, OpenClaw, which can connect several hardware and software tools and learn from the data produced with much less human intervention than a chatbot, has captured the imaginations of many in China, from retirees looking for side income to AI firms hoping to generate new revenue streams. [...] Huang Rongsheng, chief architect at Baidu's smart device unit Xiaodu, said at an event on Tuesday that parent group chats for his daughter's primary school class have become overwhelmed by OpenClaw discussions. "My daughter came to me and asked: Dad, I see you raising a lobster every day," he said. "Can I have one too?" Bai Yiyun, another attendee at the Zhipu event, said she hopes to use the agent to start a side hustle during her retirement. "If DeepSeek marked a milestone for open-source large language models, then OpenClaw represents a similar turning point for open-source "agents," said Wei Sun, chief AI analyst at Counterpoint Research.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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CBS News Radio to shutter after nearly 100 years as editor Bari Weiss tells staff cuts were ‘necessary’ decision

CBS News announced it is laying off dozens of employees on Friday and ending CBS News Radio – its nearly 100-year-old radio service – as part of a strategic restructuring.

The news was announced in a memo to staffers from its editor-in-chief, Bari Weiss, and president, Tom Cibrowski. Employees will be informed by the end of the day if their job has been affected, the two executives said in the memo.

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The number of parents and children booked into the country’s only immigrant family detention center, in Dilley, Texas, plummeted in February by more than 75% compared with a month earlier, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement data obtained by ProPublica.

Between April 2025, when President Donald Trump started sending families there, and January of this year, the  number of people sent into detention with their families averaged around 600 per month. In February, those so-called books-ins fell to 133. As of mid-March, they dropped again to just 54.

This week there were only around 100 people in family detention at Dilley, compared with an average daily population in January of over 900, the data shows.

Current and former ICE officials and lawyers with clients in Dilley said they were unable to explain the reason for the sharp decline. However, they said the shift followed weeks of mounting public pressure generated in part by the widespread publication of letters written by several of the detained children in which they described the conditions inside Dilley and their despair at being ripped from their homes and schools.

ProPublica published several of those letters on Feb. 9 after visiting the facility — about an hour south of San Antonio — in mid-January. The letters set off a storm of outrage in Washington and across the country. They were raised in congressional hearings and pasted on posters in anti-ICE demonstrations.

Rep. James Walkinshaw, a Democrat from Virginia, read the letters aloud to ICE’s acting director, Todd Lyons, during a congressional hearing on Feb. 10, pressing him for answers about whether the children’s detention could cause adverse psychological effects. He pointed to one drawing by a 5-year-old Venezuelan girl named Luisanney Toloza of her family. 

“My son’s 5. He can’t write many words, but he can communicate through drawings like this,” Walkinshaw said, making special note of the expressions on the family’s faces. “None of the faces are smiling.”

It was another 5-year-old who first triggered public attention to children being detained at Dilley. Liam Conejo Ramos was picked up on Jan. 20 in Minnesota and sent to the facility with his father. A photograph of him at the time of his detention, wearing a blue bunny hat, went viral. 

Detainees, emboldened by the attention, organized a protest in a yard at the facility that was captured in an aerial photograph and widely published on social media. Lawmakers demanded multiple visits to push for the release of Ramos and others. Nearly 4,000 doctors, nurses and health professionals sent a letter to the Trump administration calling for the immediate release of all children currently in immigration detention. This month, social media personality Rachel Accurso, an educator better known as Ms. Rachel, who makes popular children’s programming, posted a video conversation with one of the kids detained at Dilley to her 4.9 million Instagram followers, garnering more than 3,700 comments.

Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Democrat from Texas, has been at the forefront of a push by legislators from his party to shut down Dilley and for the administration to find alternatives to family detentions. When told about the drop in the number of families being held at Dilley, he said, “That trailer prison is no place for children, and I’m glad to hear that the numbers continue to decline,” adding, “It’s a reminder that people can make a difference by speaking up.”

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, said in a statement that custody decisions are made “daily, on a case-by-case basis,” adding that the “administration does not make immigration decisions based on public opinion. We follow the rule of law.” In the past, the agency has said that Dilley offers families a safe environment equipped with access to educational materials, child care necessities and round-the-clock medical and mental health care. Meanwhile, CoreCivic, the private prison company operating the facility, said in a statement it does not have “any say whatsoever” in whether detainees are deported or released.” In previous statements, it has said that the health and safety of detainees is its “top priority.”

Dilley first opened as a family detention facility under former President Barack Obama in 2014, mostly for recent border crossers. Trump kept the facility running during his first term, but President Joe Biden stopped holding families in 2021, arguing the United States shouldn’t be in the business of detaining children.

Soon after taking office a second time, Trump resumed family detentions at Dilley. As border crossings have dropped to record lows, more of the families being held there have been arrested inside the United States and have been in the country long enough to lay down roots and build networks of relatives and friends. The children detained there have ranged in age from newborns to older teenagers. The vast majority of adults held at Dilley had no U.S. criminal record. 

Following the protests and the publication of children’s letters, detainees and attorneys interviewed by ProPublica said guards took away crayons, colored pencils and drawing paper during recent room searches. This week, ProPublica learned the facility had cut off access to video calls in common areas.

The Trump administration said in a recent court filing that personal property had not been destroyed at Dilley and items confiscated during searches were “limited to materials identified as protest-related and not authorized under facility rules.” CoreCivic “vehemently” denied staff confiscated or destroyed children’s personal artwork or supplies. DHS said the restrictions were put in place on video calls following the livestreaming of recorded calls online “that resulted in the unauthorized dissemination of law enforcement sensitive information.” The agency added the video calls are still available in private rooms, as is access to in-person visitation and phones.

While a long-standing legal settlement, known as the Flores agreement, holds that children should generally not be detained for more than 20 days, the data ProPublica obtained showed the average days in custody was longer than that for every month since family detentions resumed at the facility last year. In each month between November and February, the average stay in family detention was over 50 days.

DHS has said in the past that the Flores agreement, in place since the 1990s, is outdated and should be terminated because newer regulations address the needs of children in detention.

One Egyptian family, Hayam El Gamal and her five children ranging in age from 18 to 5-year-old twins, has been at Dilley for nine months. They were taken into custody after the father, Mohamed Soliman, was charged over an alleged antisemitic attack in Boulder, Colorado, that killed one person and injured 13 others. The family said it had no knowledge of his plans. DHS said it is still investigating.

One 13-year-old Guatemalan boy named Edison was released from Dilley with his mom this week. During his 92-day detention, Edison had cried in video calls to his father back in Chicago, saying he felt like he was being treated like a criminal. (His father asked that his son’s last name not be used.) Then in the early hours of Wednesday morning, a guard came to their bunk room and told him and his mom to start packing their belongings. By that night, they were on a plane to Chicago to be reunited with Edison’s dad. “We don’t understand why they were released,” his dad said. “All I can tell you is it was a miracle from God.”

As soon as they landed, the family went home to enjoy a seafood dinner, one of Edison’s favorites.

The post The Number of Families Being Held at Dilley Detention Center Has Plummeted appeared first on ProPublica.

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During a six-decade career at the New Yorker, Mr. Tomkins profiled scores of artists, including Marcel Duchamp, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and Georgia O’Keeffe.

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Late-night hosts panned Trump’s joke about the 1941 attack, addressed new unredacted Epstein emails and talked popular puppy names

With The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on hiatus until at least 27 March, late-night hosts on Thursday discussed Donald Trump’s snafu while meeting Japan’s prime minister, his caginess over Iran, and new findings in the Epstein investigations.

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Trump is claimed to be weighing up a change of heart over ‘boots on the ground’, as Iran says it will hunt down US and Israeli officials

The US is reportedly considering plans to occupy or blockade Iran’s Kharg Island to pressure Tehran to reopen the strait of Hormuz, despite earlier suggestions by Donald Trump that he was not leaning towards putting “boots on the ground”.

The claims, made on the Axios website, followed previous reporting that the US was considering occupying the key Iranian oil terminal.

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Stuart Niven found to have diverted Covid grants to personal account and other candidates’ Islamophobic remarks revealed

Reform UK has suspended one of its Scottish candidates after it emerged he had been struck off as a company director, and the party faces growing attacks for fielding candidates making Islamophobic remarks.

Reform confirmed on Friday morning it had suspended Stuart Niven, its candidate for Dundee West, after the Herald revealed he had been struck off after diverting tens of thousands of pounds of Covid grants into his personal account.

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If you want to help testing alpha or beta quality software (either firmware or package), how to verify it is working correctly on your board in a safe way? Follow these 10 simple steps.

  1. After installing the new software, ensure you correctly restored all your configs. If going between firmware versions:
  • The App config between 6.X versions released to date can always be copied.
  • Between 6.02 and 6.05 the motor should be recalibrated.
  • Between 6.05 and 6.06 you can, to the extent of my knowledge, copy the config.
  1. Go to the package UI (a tab called “Refloat” from 1.2.2 onwards, “AppUI” on older versions) and check the board pictograms for pitch and roll are correct and updating correctly when you move the board.

  2. Press footpad sensors and check the in-app indicator to see the sensors are working correctly.

  3. Unless you are confident and want to fast-run it, enable Handtest under Refloat UI tab → Settings (cog icon) → Setup. If there is stuff around which the board could hit or if it could damage the flooring, always enable the Handtest.

  4. Engage the board with your hands pressing on the footpads. Be ready in case the board does something unexpected.

  5. Rock the board back and forth, slowly at first, then speed up and push the board faster.

  6. Turn off Handtest. Ideally, go to a grassy terrain. Wear protective gear, especially if on concrete/asphalt. Step on the board and ride around slowly, feeling out how the board reacts.

  7. Ride slowly for a few minutes to gain trust in the new software. Test how it reacts in high torque situations before going fast.

  8. Explicitly test any changes in functionality (mentioned in release notes or the text accompanying the build) that you use to ensure it works as you expect it to.

  9. Enjoy your spanking new software!

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The best filtered water bottles can remove contaminants like lead, pesticides, microplastics, sediment and bacteria.

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Actor who rose to fame after starring in Bruce Lee’s The Way of the Dragon also became a TV fixture with Walker, Texas Ranger

Chuck Norris, the former world karate champion who used his fight prowess to become the star of a string of low-budget but financially successful action movies, has died aged 86.

His family posted a message on social media saying Norris had died on Thursday, adding: “While we would like to keep the circumstances private, please know that he was surrounded by his family and was at peace.”

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I spoke with Andy Weir about the adaptation of his hit novel, Project Hail Mary. Our conversation quickly turned into a mind-blowing lesson about science fiction.

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In Denmark, the spread of solar panels in rural areas has become a divisive issue among voters, especially in rural areas

In one telling of the story, the golden fields of a proud farming nation are under attack. Besieged by an industrial sprawl of solar panels, they are being smothered at the behest of an urban elite.

That narrative has failed to thrive in conservative heartlands such as Texas and Hungary, which have embraced solar power while lambasting green rules. But it is taking root in Denmark, the most climate-ambitious nation on Earth. “We say yes to fields of wheat,” said Inger Støjberg, the leader of the rightwing populist Denmark Democrats in a speech in 2024. “And we say no to fields of iron!”

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‘These AI agents have been really, really helpful,’ says a former Sydney employee. ‘But you couldn’t use something like that to replace an actual human worker’

Sacked from his “dream job” at software giant Atlassian, Rubio* wants just one thing – closure.

“We were probably exceeding expectations and there’s no explanation from the company as a whole as to why any of this happened,” he says.

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Three weeks into the US-Israeli war of choice in Iran, Labor is warning of financial pain. But the economic cost isn’t the only risk here

A group of public service chiefs gathered on Thursday night for a quiet dinner in Canberra to send off Australia’s new ambassador to the US.

There was lightning and heavy rain outside the upmarket Pan-Asian restaurant Chairman and Yip, but inside the private dining room the mood was cheerful.

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The interest earning potential of all three is high, but that's not the only item savers should be thinking about now.

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  • Scranton beat NYU to end three-year win streak

  • Violets’ bid for third straight NCAA title falls short

  • Peper scores 19 as dynasty run ends in Virginia

New York University’s historic 91-game winning streak is over after a 60-52 loss to Scranton in the Final Four of the Division III NCAA Tournament on Thursday night, ending one of the longest unbeaten runs in college basketball history.

The Violets (29-1) had the second-longest winning streak in NCAA history, trailing only UConn’s 111-game run between 2014 and 2017, and were seeking a third consecutive national championship. Instead, Scranton (32-0) advanced to the title game, holding off a late NYU rally.

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Owner of labrador says bottle find may be connected to poisoning that led to one of England’s last public hangings

A man in Devon believes his beloved dog has dug up a key piece of evidence in his back garden connected to a notorious Victorian murder case.

Paul Phillips, 49, told reporters that his labrador, Stanley, recovered a blue glass bottle with the words “Not to be taken” written on the side from their home in Clyst Honiton.

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I saw the new $1,499 Nosh One up close. Here's my take on the latest AI-powered cooking robot.

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HHS is looking into the states for ‘alleged disregard of, or confusion about’ the federal Weldon amendment

The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said on Thursday that it is investigating 13 states that require state-regulated health insurance plans to cover abortion services.

HHS officials said in a news release that the department’s office for civil rights (OCR) is looking into the states for allegedly violating the federal Weldon amendment, which prohibits federal funding for programs or state or local governments that “subjects any institutional or individual healthcare entity to discrimination on the basis that the healthcare entity does not provide, pay for, provide coverage of, or refer for abortions”.

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Three people were suing ex-Sinn Féin leader for liability over IRA bombings in UK that left them injured

Three victims of IRA bombings who sued Gerry Adams alleging he was a member of the paramilitary group and culpable for the attacks have withdrawn their lawsuit on the last day of the civil trial.

John Clark, Jonathan Ganesh and Barry Laycock, who were injured respectively in the 1973 Old Bailey bombing, the London Docklands and Manchester bombings in 1996, were seeking symbolic “vindicatory” damages of £1 each.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:38

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 20, 2026 — Super Micro Computer, Inc. has issued the following statement:

Supermicro was informed yesterday that the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York has unsealed an indictment of three individuals associated with the Company in connection with an alleged conspiracy to commit export-control violations.

Supermicro is not named as a defendant in the indictment. The individuals charged are Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Senior Vice President of Business Development and a member of the Company’s Board of Directors; Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, a sales manager in Taiwan; and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun, a contractor. Supermicro has placed the two employees on administrative leave and terminated its relationship with the contractor, effective immediately.

The conduct by these individuals alleged in the indictment is a contravention of the Company’s policies and compliance controls, including efforts to circumvent applicable export control laws and regulations. Supermicro maintains a robust compliance program and is committed to full adherence to all applicable U.S. export and re-export control laws and regulations.

The Company has been cooperating fully with the government’s investigation and will continue to do so. Supermicro has not been named as a defendant in the indictment.

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 Responds to US Indictment of 3 Individuals Tied to Export Control Allegations appeared first on HPCwire.

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

A 31-year-old Georgia woman has charged with murder by police who say she took pills to induce an abortion.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:14

The Reform UK leader has belatedly clocked that most British people really don’t like the US president on whose coat-tails he has spent the past decade riding

At last, the culture has thrown up a split more nauseatingly up itself than Gwyneth Paltrow’s from Chris Martin. It is Nigel Farage’s attempt to consciously uncouple from Donald Trump, a man up whose backside he’s spent the past decade most firmly lodged. Nigel’s made such a massive, self-satisfied show of his real estate in the presidential large intestine for 10 years now that I actually don’t think non-surgical extraction is possible at this stage. He doesn’t just get to walk away whistling. The only way out is a full Faragectomy. I’ll give the president a piece of drone fuselage to bite down on.

Anyway: conscious uncoupling. Back in the day, you’ll remember, Gwyneth and the Coldplay singer deployed this particular phrase when announcing their marital split. Did the public love it? They did not. The general vibe – as with so much of Her Vajesty’s output – was that she would do even marriage failure more smugly and unachievably than mere plebs could ever. The pivot from gushing about her perfect marriage to gushing about her perfect divorce felt like mere days.

Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:11

Palestinians say the move is part of a wider Israeli strategy to leverage security tensions to tighten restrictions

For the first time since 1967, al-Aqsa mosque – Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site – was closed at the end of Ramadan on Friday, with tensions rising among Palestinians as Israeli authorities keep the complex shut, forcing worshippers to hold Eid prayers as close as they could to the sealed site.

On Friday morning, hundreds of worshippers were forced to pray outside the Old City, as Israeli police barricaded the entrances to the site.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:05

Researchers develop an AI for Science framework that extracts and fuses cross-disciplinary expert knowledge with experimental data to accelerate alloy discovery and scientific insight

March 20, 2026 — High-entropy alloys are promising advanced materials for demanding applications, but discovering useful compositions is difficult and expensive due to the vast number of possible element combinations. Now, researchers have developed a novel AI-driven framework that integrates experimental data, computational modeling, and cross-disciplinary expert knowledge extracted from scientific literature. By combining these sources in a way that accounts for uncertainty, their approach can make reliable predictions even for poorly studied alloy compositions, outperforming conventional data-driven machine learning methods that rely on training data alone.

This study presents a hybrid framework that integrates materials data with AI-extracted scientific knowledge, enabling uncertainty-aware discovery. Evidence about elemental substitutions in alloys is collected from two independent sources: material datasets, where alloy pairs with matching properties indicate substitutable elements, and large language models queried across five scientific domains. These “evidence streams” are combined using Dempster-Shafer theory to evaluate candidate alloys while explicitly quantifying prediction confidence versus uncertainty, guiding researchers toward promising candidates while flagging regions where current knowledge is insufficient. Credit: JAIST.

Progress in modern technologies relies on advanced materials, such as alloys used in aircraft engines and components capable of resisting corrosion and heat in industrial settings. In this context, high-entropy alloys (HEAs) have emerged as one of the most promising areas of study in materials science. By combining several elements in near-equal amounts, these materials can achieve exceptional strength, stability, and durability. However, discovering useful HEAs is exceptionally difficult and expensive, as each additional element dramatically increases the number of possible combinations. With growing demand for sustainable energy technologies and next-generation electronics, accelerating the discovery of advanced materials has become increasingly urgent.

Researchers worldwide have turned to artificial intelligence (AI) as a powerful aid in materials research– but this comes with its own limits. Most machine learning models are good at interpolation, meaning they can make predictions for materials that closely resemble those already in their training data. When researchers move beyond familiar territory and consider truly new compositions, the models’ accuracy drops. Meanwhile, decades of expert knowledge about how elements interact and substitute for one another in HEAs are buried across the scientific literature, with no clear way to integrate that expertise into data-driven AI tools.

Against this backdrop, a research team led by Professor Hieu-Chi Dam from the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST) has developed a new AI-driven framework for HEA discovery. Their study, published in the journal Digital Discovery on December 19, 2025, was co-authored by JSPS’s Researcher Dr. Minh-Quyet Ha and doctoral student Dinh-Khiet Le at JAIST, Dr. Viet-Cuong Nguyen from HPC Systems, Japan, Professor Hiori Kino at the Institute of Statistical Mathematics, Japan, and Professor Stefano Curtarolo from Duke University, USA. The team set out to combine experimental and computational materials data with cross-disciplinary expert knowledge extracted directly from scientific papers, creating a system designed specifically to work in data-scarce and unexplored regions.

At the core of the approach is a well-known idea in alloy design called elemental substitution. Under the optimal conditions, chemically similar elements can substitute one another without significantly affecting a material’s properties and stability. The researchers first identified substitution patterns directly from large materials datasets by comparing alloys that differ by just one element. They then used state-of-the-art large language models (LLMs), including GPT-4o, GPT-.5, Claude Opus 4, and Grok3 to extract expert judgments in the literature pertaining to five key scientific disciplines: metallurgy, solid-state physics, materials mechanics, materials science, and corrosion science.

Each source of information provided a piece of evidence rather than a final answer, and these pieces were combined using a mathematical framework known as Dempster-Shafer theory. Unlike standard probability methods, this framework can explicitly represent uncertainty and even ignorance, as Prof. Dam explained, “Traditional classifiers force binary ‘yes-or-no’ predictions even when information is insufficient. Our approach explicitly quantifies uncertainty, allowing ‘we cannot tell’ as a legitimate scientific outcome.” Simply put, the proposed system does not pretend to know more than it does when exploring unknown territory.

When tested on several alloy datasets, the team’s framework consistently outperformed conventional machine learning models, especially when little information was available. Most strikingly, it was able to predict the behavior of alloys containing elements that were completely absent from the training data, achieving accuracy rates ranging from 86% to 92%. The researchers also validated their approach against 55 experimentally confirmed quaternary alloys from the literature and showed that it outperforms far more computationally expensive methods, such as free-energy models. Beyond individual predictions, the proposed method can produce compositional maps that show where predictions are reliable and where uncertainty remains high. This enables researchers to focus experiments on the most promising and informative regions of the compositional space.

According to Prof. Dam, the broader significance of this work lies in showcasing how AI can be used for scientific discovery. “LLM-based extraction combined with formal evidence fusion can transform decades of dispersed expert knowledge into searchable, comparable, and quantitatively usable resources, which are particularly valuable for interdisciplinary problems where relevant insights span multiple fields,” he said. Notably, the same approach used in this study could accelerate drug discovery, guide battery development, and help optimize catalysts. In each case, the framework’s ability to quantify uncertainty would help research teams prioritize the most informative experiments, potentially reducing discovery timelines and costs.

Overall, this work demonstrates a path forward for AI in scientific discovery– one where machine learning serves not to replace expert judgment, but to systematically extract and combine it with experimental evidence to accelerate innovation across disciplines.


Source: JAIST

The post Researchers Develop AI Framework Combining Expert Knowledge and Data to Accelerate Alloy Discovery appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:01

Cheerleader-in-chief demands more enthusiasm for US-Israeli assault that is helping Russia pay for its war on Ukraine

When even your mother calls you out as a cheat and a liar, then it’s probably fair to assume you’re a wrong ‘un. Not that this stopped Donald Trump from appointing Pete Hegseth as his defence secretary. Or as Trump prefers, his war secretary. After all, there’s no point in having all this shiny military hardware if you’re not going to use it. For most of the past two weeks, Hegseth has been the president’s cheerleader-in-chief for the war on Iran, and at the weekend he decided to have a pop at the media for not being enthusiastic enough. It seems we’ve been concentrating on trivial matters like asking what the overall plan for the war is. We heard the president talk about regime change and then change his mind when it was clear that, though he had killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the regime was still in place. We heard the president say he wanted to neutralise Iranian nuclear facilities when he had already claimed to have done so last year. We heard Trump say that the war was already won though he fancied winning a little bit more, while the Iranians were insisting they were not beaten.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:01

Paid plan customers can try out the new AI feature.

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2026-03-20 09:00

SINGAPORE, March 20, 2026 — As quantum technologies continue to advance, the resilience and trustworthiness of digital systems have emerged as critical priorities for Singapore’s future infrastructure. Addressing these challenges, TUMCREATE, the research arm of the Technical University of Munich (TUM) funded by the National Research Foundation, Singapore (NRF), is playing a key role in QUASAR-CREATE (Quantum Security and Resilience for Emerging Technologies), a three-and-a-half-year research program.

The QUASAR-CREATE research program brings together an international consortium comprising Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore), Fraunhofer@NTU (FSR@NTU), TUMCREATE, the Technical University of Munich (TUM), and the National University of Singapore (NUS). The program aims to develop new methods and technologies that strengthen the security and resilience of emerging digital systems in the face of future quantum-enabled threats.

“Under the recently launched Research, Innovation and Enterprise 2030 (RIE2030) plan, Singapore is strengthening its capabilities in semiconductor and quantum-enabled technologies. The security of complex chips and electronic systems becomes a foundational design consideration,” said Professor Ulf Schlichtmann, CEO at TUMCREATE and Principal Investigator of the QUASAR-CREATE project. “QUASAR-CREATE contributes to this effort by advancing research on how security and resilience can be embedded at the hardware and system-design level. By bringing together complementary expertise from Singapore and Germany, the program supports the development of secure, trustworthy chip technologies that are essential for the future.”

Building Resilient Digital Foundations for the Quantum Era

QUASAR focuses on moving beyond conventional cybersecurity approaches by embedding resilience directly into the design of next-generation technologies. By integrating quantum-safe security mechanisms early in the development of digital systems, the program seeks to ensure that critical infrastructures remain robust, trustworthy, and adaptable amid increasing uncertainty.

The research program is organized into three coordinated thrusts, forming a complete security pipeline. Within this framework, TUMCREATE leads Thrust 1: Secure Hardware Platform, spearheading research into an open-source, verifiable, and quantum-safe hardware foundation for post-quantum security.

TUMCREATE Leads Secure Hardware Platform Research

Together with NTU’s School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (EEE), Thrust 1 focuses on the development of an open and verifiable, quantum-safe RISC-V processor platform, envisioned as a foundational building block for future secure systems. The research is positioned to deliver the world’s first fully open-source post-quantum cryptography (PQC)-secure 64-bit RISC-V processor implementation, integrating hardware-level protection and quantum-resistant cryptography from the ground up.

Professor Georg Sigl, Principal Investigator at TUM for QUASAR-CREATE, said: “Post-quantum security in resource constraint devices cannot be achieved by software alone. If we want digital systems to remain trustworthy in the era of quantum computing, security must be anchored directly in the hardware architecture. With QUASAR-CREATE, we are integrating quantum-resistant cryptography into a RISC-V processor with the final target to build a fully open-source chip design using open-source technology. The project plans to fabricate the chip using GlobalFoundaries’ 180-nanometer process technology at its manufacturing facilities in Singapore. This approach allows us to build a transparent and verifiable foundation for resilient digital infrastructures of the future.”

By embedding security directly into hardware architecture, the work addresses long-term trust, transparency, and resilience challenges that cannot be adequately mitigated through software solutions alone.

The research integrates both hardware and software-level protection mechanisms to defend against side-channel and physical attacks – threats that are expected to intensify as quantum and other advanced computing technologies mature. Key components include post-quantum cryptographic accelerators, secure operating systems, and trusted execution environments, ensuring protection across the entire computing stack.

To demonstrate real-world applicability, the platform will be validated through practical use cases such as FIDO2 authentication token, with future extensions exploring compatibility with quantum key distribution (QKD) technologies.

Strengthening Singapore’s Quantum Security Research Ecosystem

QUASAR-CREATE exemplifies Singapore’s commitment to advancing cutting-edge, internationally collaborative research with real-world impact. The program brings together complementary expertise from NTU, NUS, TUM and the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, including contributions from the Fraunhofer Institute of Applied and Integrated Security (AISEC), the Fraunhofer Institute for Electronic Nanosystems (ENAS), and Fraunhofer Singapore as an institutional partner.

“As quantum technologies move closer to real-world deployment, ensuring trust and security will be essential for their adoption,” said Principal Investigator, NTU Professor Gwee Bah Hwee, School of EEE. “QUASAR-CREATE allows us to bring together expertise across institutions to address these challenges proactively, supporting Singapore’s efforts to harness emerging technologies in a secure and sustainable way.”

Through its leadership of the secure hardware thrust, TUMCREATE strengthens research collaboration with NTU in microelectronics – in close partnership with NTU’s School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (EEE) – extending existing educational ties into joint, application-driven research. The program also opens pathways for engagement with the QUASAR professorship at NTU, funded by the Dieter Schwarz Foundation, reinforcing long-term capability building across research, education, and innovation.

By anchoring advanced quantum security research within Singapore’s research ecosystem, TUMCREATE contributes to the translation of frontier science into deployable, future-ready solutions that support trusted digital infrastructures in the quantum era.

About QUASAR-CREATE

QUASAR-CREATE (Quantum Security and Resilience for Emerging Technologies) is a three-and-a-half-year international research program funded by the National Research Foundation, Singapore (NRF). The program brings together the Technical University of Munich (TUM), Fraunhofer@NTU (FSR@NTU), Nanyang Technological University (NTU) Singapore, and the National University of Singapore (NUS) to address security challenges arising from emerging quantum technologies. QUASAR-CREATE aims to develop quantum-safe digital systems using post-quantum cryptography and quantum key distribution, while strengthening Singapore’s research capabilities and talent pipeline in quantum security.

About TUMCREATE

Founded in 2010, TUMCREATE is a multidisciplinary research platform fostering research exchanges between the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the world’s leading universities, local institutions, and public agencies as well as industry partners from the region to contribute to the sustainable transformation of societies through science and technology. Funded by the National Research Foundation, TUMCREATE’s multi-faceted research projects span topics from urban mobility, food science and technology, biomedical technology, and preventive care to solutions for a carbon-neutral megacity. For more information, please visit https://www.tum-create.edu.sg.

About Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

A research-intensive public university, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) has 35,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students in the Business, Computing & Data Science, Engineering, Humanities, Arts, & Social Sciences, Medicine, Science, and Graduate colleges.

NTU is also home to world-renowned autonomous institutes – the National Institute of Education, S Rajaratnam School of International Studies and Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences Engineering – and various leading research centers such as the Earth Observatory of Singapore, Nanyang Environment & Water Research Institute and Energy Research Institute @ NTU (ERI@N).

Under the NTU Smart Campus vision, the University harnesses the power of digital technology and tech-enabled solutions to support better learning and living experiences, the discovery of new knowledge, and the sustainability of resources.

Ranked amongst the world’s top universities, the University’s main campus is also frequently listed among the world’s most beautiful. Known for its sustainability, NTU has achieved 100% Green Mark Platinum certification for all its eligible building projects. Apart from its main campus, NTU also has a medical campus in Novena, Singapore’s healthcare district.

For more information, visit www.ntu.edu.sg.


Source: TUMCREATE

The post TUMCREATE Advances Open-Source RISC-V Processor for Post-Quantum Security appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:00

The ASSESS Summit in Atlanta gathered people who want simulation to operate as a core capability of engineering organizations rather than as a specialist service on the side.

Over two days, the most substantive material came from NAFEMS‑led projects and practitioner case studies. Those sessions focused on the structures that make simulation credible at scale: shared data, clear requirements, and governance that management can understand and fund.

From the outset, NAFEMS and ASSESS leadership framed the summit as part of a longer‑running program. They emphasized that simulation already sits behind many decisions about safety, sustainability, and profitability, yet senior recognition of its role remains uneven. At the same time, the surrounding ecosystem of software and data is becoming more complex, while vendor consolidation is reducing the competitive tension that used to drive innovation.

NAFEMS CTO Ian Symington

In response, ASSESS set out four strands of activity: leadership discussions to set direction, concrete technical projects, working sessions to define new projects, and an international community to share experience. The aim is to move beyond general statements about “the future of simulation” and create specific artifacts that organizations can use.

That intent was visible in NAFEMS CTO Ian Symington’s update on data‑driven benchmarks. Rather than talk about artificial intelligence in the abstract, his project starts from a simple structural problem that most analysts know well: a plate with a hole, with the region around the hole acting as a stress concentrator.

The team built several families of models by varying load, thickness, plate length, and hole position, then generated finite‑element results that capture principal stresses and concentration levels. They have made these datasets available in industry tool formats and through an open portal, with documentation and QR‑code access so that engineers can download them without a long setup process.

Symington did not present this as a polished showcase. He described training geometric deep‑learning models that performed well on some datasets and failed on others, and how understanding those failures required the same care analysts traditionally apply when checking a mesh or boundary condition. For teams that are curious about data‑driven surrogates but wary of investing months in bespoke training cases, this benchmark offers a controlled way to experiment, anchored in a problem whose physics and finite‑element behavior are already well understood.

A second project tackled interoperability.

Rather than start from particular standards, the NAFEMS team worked from the situations engineers encounter when moving models, meshes, and results between tools. They examined where information is lost, where manual workarounds are required, and where results become hard to trust.

For each situation they identified the data that must be preserved, the existing standards or technologies that address parts of the need, and the gaps where current mechanisms are weak or absent. The result is not a new standard, but a requirements‑centered description of what effective interoperability looks like in practice.

That gives engineering groups a clearer way to assess their current tool chains and a more concrete vocabulary to use when they push vendors on roadmap priorities.

Márton Gróza’s update on simulation for certification brought a similar level of specificity to regulated environments.

Márton Gróza, technical officer at NAFEMS

His team interviewed experts across sectors about where simulation is already used in certification contexts, what regulators accept, and where the friction lies. Several patterns emerged. Many authorities still look first to physical tests when they weigh evidence, even when simulation has been integral to the engineering work. Simulation outputs are seldom compiled in a way that supports outside review; documentation tends to be written for internal use.

There is wide agreement that verification, validation, and uncertainty quantification need to be tied more systematically to simulations that feed into certification decisions. At the same time, probabilistic metrics and risk‑based framing remain unfamiliar to many of the managers and engineers who must ultimately sign off on risk.

The project has produced a report that summarizes these themes and points to concrete examples, such as railway braking‑distance work in which probabilistic methods are being used to compare traditional test‑based processes with routes that rely more heavily on simulation. The next step will be direct engagement with regulators and certification engineers, using the interview findings as a basis for discussion. That is slow, detailed work, but it is exactly the sort of work a neutral organization is well placed to do.

The industry‑perspective talks added another layer, showing how organizations are applying data‑driven methods to specific workflows.

In one case, a Rescale‑supported project for a high‑performance vehicle manufacturer relied on explicit forming simulations to predict wrinkles, thickness changes, and fiber orientations in carbon‑fiber monocoques. These forming simulations then fed into structural crash analyses.

The turnaround time was long, sometimes eight to 10 weeks for a full cycle across many parts. By identifying forming and mapping to structural meshes as the main bottlenecks, the team was able to train a surrogate model on a carefully chosen set of high‑fidelity runs. That surrogate now predicts forming outcomes from process parameters and initial layup, within a defined design envelope. It can be used by design engineers to explore variants more quickly, and by manufacturing engineers to understand how changes in diaphragm pressures, temperatures, and friction will affect forming, without immediately resorting to full explicit analysis.

In a different example, Kinetic Vision presented a packaging case built on Siemens Simcenter Physics AI.

Over more than a decade, a client had accumulated over 100,000 bottle simulations, including critical top‑load studies. Those results had been archived in lightweight files. Physics AI learns directly on meshes from this archive, and once trained it can provide predictions for new geometries without meshing at the inference stage. In one instance, a model trained on forty‑five simulations in under four hours could generate a prediction in less than twenty seconds for a case that would otherwise take two to four hours to run.

That makes it realistic to screen many design candidates and reserve full simulations for the most promising designs. The speaker was explicit that such an approach is worthwhile only when there is an ongoing need to explore large design families; it would not be appropriate for one‑off studies.

The Caterpillar keynote from Darrel Meffert pulled many of these threads together into a long‑term enterprise narrative. Meffert has spent more than twenty years at Caterpillar and led its central simulation strategy for almost a decade.

He described how, around 2012, a group of mid‑level and senior managers concluded that Caterpillar’s physics‑based analysis was strong, but product leaders still preferred to wait for tests before making key decisions. Rather than wait for a directive from above, they pooled funding and brought in an internal strategist to help them shape an enterprise simulation strategy.

Several elements of that strategy stand out. The team identified and quantified real bottlenecks, such as constrained compute capacity and duty cycles that did not match actual machine usage. They used consolidated data and external benchmarks to make a case for more HPC investment directly to the chief information and technology officers. They paired application engineers with data scientists to derive duty cycles from telematics, so that simulations reflected how equipment is used in the field. They created joint projects between test and simulation teams, selecting problems that neither group could solve alone and requiring shared leadership. They provided constrained, comparative simulations in the environments where design engineers work, leaving detailed high‑consequence assessments to specialists. And they cataloged hundreds of simulation types on single‑page summaries, coupled with a structured way to express confidence in each piece of evidence.

Over time, that combination of capacity, better data, closer collaboration, and clearer communication shifted Caterpillar toward simulation‑led development in many areas. Meffert reported that, today, the annual savings associated with the enterprise simulation strategy exceed 10 times the total investment over nine years.

Across all of these sessions, I heard the same message over and over – the most important developments in simulation are not only new algorithms, but the scaffolding around them. These are the shared datasets, well‑defined requirements, structured links to certification processes, and enterprise strategies that treat simulation as a managed capability.

NAFEMS and ASSESS are positioned between users, vendors, and regulators, and in Atlanta they used that position to good effect. The work presented there will give organizations concrete models to draw on as they decide how to develop their own simulation roadmaps in the years ahead.

About the author: Kevin Jackson is an analyst at Intersect 360 Research, a market intelligence, research, and consulting advisory practice focused on HPC data center trends, AI, cloud, big data, and hyperscale. He is the former editor of AIwire. 

The post ASSESS 2026: How NAFEMS is Turning Simulation into an Enterprise Capability appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:00

The new Mighty2 retains the compact style of its predecessor while adding a useful particle sensor and some other nice touches.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 09:00
Sofia Guidetti

SOFIA GUIDETTI
Staff Reporter

As soon as I saw that Caleb Hearon would be coming to the university on Feb. 20 for a Perkins Live event at the Trabant University Center, I immediately marked it down on my calendar to reserve a free ticket and see him live.

It is safe to say that, for me, going to the event was completely worth it.

Hearon is a comedian, writer and actor who has his own popular podcast called “So True with Caleb Hearon.” He has also appeared in several films and shows, including “Jurassic World Dominion,” “I Used to Be Funny” and “Overcompensating.”

Hearon is currently set to co-write and star in the upcoming film, “Trash Mountain,” directed by Lilly Wachowski, who is most known for creating “The Matrix” franchise with her sister, Lana Wachowski. In addition, he is co-starring in the highly anticipated movie, “The Devil Wears Prada 2,” which is supposed to premiere in May.

This Perkins Live event, announced on Instagram on Feb. 2, was a Q&A led by members of The Crew, the student-run programming board at the university. The event was an hour long, beginning with questions from the two moderators before opening up to audience questions that Hearon was eager to answer.

“So, starting off simple, what is your biggest fear?” the moderator said to begin the Q&A.

This question earned a bunch of laughs from the audience, as well as from Hearon himself, who replied with a funny answer before he gave a real answer, which was dying on a day when a bigger event happens. I did not even realize this could be a fear until he said it, and now I am afraid of that happening.

“What celebrity do you irrationally fear?” the moderator said.

“Irrationally fear? I don’t fear any of those f—— people. Take celebrities off a pedestal, because you meet these people and you’re f—— falling asleep,” Hearon said.

Although he was half-joking when he said this, later answering Patti LuPone or Julia Roberts, the sentiment made sense. Many people worship celebrities to the point where they do not view them as real people anymore, which is not a healthy mindset,  and I think it is important that Hearon made note of it to a room of young college students.

Hearon also had some things to say about the current political, economic and cultural state of the world when asked about X, formerly known as Twitter.

“The cultural problem that we’re in is that so many of these [billionaires] get really good at, like, science or making cars or something. And then they’re like, ‘And now I need to be beloved and funny.’ And it’s like, when you’re neither, you f—— suck,” Hearon said.

Aside from being a comedian, he had some insightful things to say about the world around us. For many, art and politics are very closely intertwined, which Hearon’s background and career speak to. He originally intended to go to law school, or another graduate program, after graduating from Missouri State University with a bachelor’s degree in sociopolitical communications.

This is how most of the event went, with the moderators asking questions and Hearon responding with something witty, as well as insightful. Once the moderators opened it up to audience questions — that were submitted via scanning a QR code and writing a question — Hearon tried his best to get through most of them since he loved how attentive the university’s audience was.

One question from the audience that stood out to me was, “What is your opinion on the current political and economic state of the world?” 

I know this is a meme of Jaden Smith that Generation Z likes to quote a lot, but Hearon had a very empowering answer, which stuck with me after the event.

“I have so much hope, and I think if you talk to organizers, who are doing genuine, important work in this country, they have hope as well,” Hearon said. “And hopelessness to me is a privileged person’s retreat from action … But I feel so hopeful.”


Caleb Hearon’s comedic and inspiring visit to the university was first posted on March 20, 2026 at 8:00 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

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:56

was browsing facebook market place and found a listing for a "onewheel plus" for 450, had nothing to loose so stopped by to check it out. it was actually a xr (has the over lip battery box was seen) and the rails were xr. it only had a front view for the marketplace listing so could not make out the rails or box. turns on, comes with charger. best part, they been sitting on it so long (if they would have had a side shot on the listing im sure it would have moved) that they took 200 bucks off the price tp get rid of it. put the downpayment down there and then. will pickup in april and update. excited for the project. this might be one of the best finds since i got into the sport.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:50

Defense secretary had said relatives of service members killed in refueling tanker crash told him ‘do not stop until the job is done’

The father of a US military member killed in the Iran war has contradicted Pete Hegseth’s claim that bereaved families urged him to “finish” the job in the Middle East.

Hegseth, the defense secretary and a former weekend Fox News host, told reporters at a Pentagon briefing on Thursday that he had spoken with relatives of all six service members killed in last week’s refueling tanker crash during a “dignified transfer” of their remains at Delaware’s Dover air force station the night before.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:36

Mette-Marit says she ‘did not know he was a sex offender’, despite Googling him three years after his prison sentence

Norway’s crown princess, Mette-Marit, has said she was “manipulated and deceived” by Jeffrey Epstein as she spoke publicly for the first time about her years-long relationship with the late sex offender.

She also claimed that she “did not know he was a sex offender or an abuser” – despite telling him in an email in 2011, three years after he had been sentenced to 18 months in prison and pleaded guilty to soliciting sex from girls as young as 14, that she had recently Googled him.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:32

Former ACIP members make contradictory statements following judge essentially invalidating panel and recent decisions

Does the US have a vaccine advisory committee? The answer became surprisingly murky on Thursday, as former members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) and health officials made contradictory statements following a federal judge essentially invalidating the committee and their recent decisions on Monday.

According to a former member of the committee who asked not to be identified to discuss sensitive matters, ACIP will continue to exist without the 13 members who were stayed by Judge Brian Murphy on Monday – and officials plan to start the process over again with new members.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:30

Jonathan Horn scooped best sports feature prize for a series on AFL, while Chris Hopkins won for pictures of a cancer sufferer caring for her son

Sports writer Jonathan Horn and photographer Chris Hopkins have won Melbourne Press Club awards for their work for Guardian Australia.

Guardian Australia was recognised with eight nominations in a range of categories in the 31st annual Quill awards, which were presented in Melbourne on Friday night.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:23

It’s been kinda cold where I’m at, also a bunch of snow the last couple of months. While on YouTube the algorithm pushed some Onewheel ASMR videos and it was calming to listen to while working.

Kind of like river noises or white noise 🤣

Anyone else do this? Or any recommendations for long videos with mostly just sound instead of music or commentary?

Here’s that go me hooked:

https://youtu.be/0tzjAAAiHP0

submitted by /u/JackOfAllTrades_o7
[link] [comments]

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 08:10

Though the president wields great power, the conflict in the Middle East is spiralling in unforeseen ways that he may not be able to control

What a pity Benjamin Netanyahu remains at large after an international arrest warrant for alleged war crimes committed in Gaza was issued in 2024. Had he been detained, as he certainly should have been, the peoples of Iran, Lebanon, the Gulf – and Israel itself – might have been spared much present-day pain and suffering.

The Israeli prime minister’s lifelong, passionate obsession with eradicating the real and imagined threats posed by Iran was reportedly a key factor in prompting Donald Trump’s abrupt, unprovoked plunge into all-out war. Netanyahu should be in jail, not committing more crimes while the powerful but ego-driven US president negligently looks on.

Simon Tisdall is a Guardian foreign affairs commentator

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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

George Strausman said his sudden stardom has been a shock, and he doesn’t quite understand why millions of people are interested in watching him shape clay.

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

Fusion of cherished American eateries hopes to revive brands that have ‘gone hungry’ while rest of industry feasts

No one could say the New York union of Applebee’s and Ihop happened without fanfare.

A car park in Hawthorne, 30 miles north of Manhattan, had been decked out with a 30ft-high inflatable red apple. Red, white and blue bunting flew from masts. Upbeat music blasted from speakers.

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

The right to protest is ‘fundamentally American’, says Bajun Mavalwalla who awaits trial and faces six years in prison

This story was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center

A US military veteran arrested on federal conspiracy charges after participating in a June 2025 protest against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) told the Guardian he refuses to plead guilty and is ready to face justice.

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

Perhaps the most unexpected delight of the AirPods Max 2, priced at $549, is how it puts the cost of the MacBook Neo into perspective.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 07:46

Is Iran one crisis too many for Trump? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…

The US-Israel war on Iran is straining Trump’s alliances, at home and abroad.

Three weeks into exactly the kind of war of choice that he spent years decrying, US President Donald Trump is not getting the amount of international support that he seeks for his campaign of air strikes on Iran.

There is also reluctance among NATO and other allies to be drawn into the political and economic turmoil caused by the US-Israeli campaign, and Tehran’s region-wide retaliation.

Our experts discuss the state of US-Gulf relations, the muted European response to Trump’s appeals for help in re-opening the Strait of Hormuz, and what it could mean elsewhere in the world for ongoing crises in Ukraine, Cuba and Venezuela.

Joining host Bronwen Maddox this week are Dr Neil Quilliam, an associate fellow in our Middle East and North Africa Programme; Dr Christopher Sabatini, senior research fellow for Latin America; and Heather Hurlburt, a consulting fellow in our US and North America Programme.

About Independent Thinking

Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.

More ways to listen: Spotify, Apple Podcasts.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:45

Deficit rises unexpectedly to £14.3bn in February as markets price in up to three interest rate rises in 2026

Investors wary of the impact of the Iran conflict dumped UK government bonds on Friday, pushing the yield, or interest rate, on 10-year borrowing to its highest level since 2008.

The market move followed the Bank of England’s decision on Thursday to leave interest rates on hold and hint at a future increase. By Friday morning, markets were pricing in as many as three interest rate rises in 2026.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:42

What causes meningitis, what the public health response has been and how the situation differs from Covid

The deadly outbreak of meningitis in Kent has fuelled concerns about how far the disease will spread and seen the return of people wearing masks and queueing for vaccines. The scenes are reminiscent of the Covid crisis, but meningitis is very different. Here we look at how the outbreak unfolded.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:24

Foreign minister issues warning after Israeli attack on South Pars gasfield that prompted retaliatory strike on Qatar. Plus, what happened to the Oscars red carpet after the ceremony?

Good morning.

Iran has said it will show “zero restraint” if its energy infrastructure is targeted again as Qatar revealed that almost a fifth of its liquefied natural gas export capacity had been knocked out in an Iranian strike that is likely to have a years-long impact.

What did Araghchi say? In a post on X, he said: “Our response to Israel’s attack on our infrastructure employed FRACTION of our power. The ONLY reason for restraint was respect for requested de-escalation. ZERO restraint if our infrastructures are struck again.”

What’s the forecast for next week? More heat is in store for the coming days. By the end of the week, 100 cities could set all-time temperature records for the month of March, with temperatures climbing as high as 30F (17C) above average for the time of year, the new analysis says.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 07:11

Fire service warns ubiquity of batteries in everyday products is outpacing public understanding and safety regulations

Lithium-ion batteries represent a new technological hazard that one fire science expert has said keeps him awake at night, as fire service chiefs warn the ubiquity of the batteries in everyday products is outpacing public understanding and safety regulations.

The blaze that devastated a historic building in Glasgow and resulted in the closure of Central Station, Scotland’s largest rail interchange, is believed to have started in a shop selling vapes, which are powered by lithium-ion batteries. Glasgow’s Central Station has since reopened.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:02

Karachi particularly badly affected with 18 people killed, more than 50mm of rain and winds gusting up to 60mph

Unseasonally wet weather struck southern Pakistan and north-west India on Wednesday, as heavy rain rolled in from the west, accompanied by thunderstorms, hail, and strong winds.

Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, was particularly badly affected, locally recording more than 50mm of rain with winds gusting up to 60mph. Walls, buildings, and a pedestrian bridge collapsed, with flooding and power outages across the city. At least 18 people were killed and several more injured, many by structural collapses, with other deaths attributed to a fallen tree and a lightning strike.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:00

Two of the three co-hosts of this summer’s tournament have been hit with the injury bug, casting doubt on a number of star players

When Marcel Ruiz slumped into the grass of San Diego FC’s Snapdragon stadium late in the first half of Toluca’s Concacaf Champions Cup game last Wednesday, he seemed to already know. He covered his mouth with his left hand and clutched his right knee – first the back of it, then the front – with his other hand. He turned his head every which way, perhaps hoping that he might scan something or someone who would tell him that this was not in fact happening. That his World Cup on home soil was not already over three months before it was to even start. That Mexico’s injury crisis had not just deepened further.

Ruiz is only 17 matches into his international career for El Tri, yet the central midfielder has firmly established himself as an important cog in Mexico’s setup with his clean passing and defensive cover. More pertinently, the 25-year-old was part of a young core finally asserting itself on a team that long felt caught between generations and suffered through a lackluster autumn, winning none of their six friendlies against World Cup-bound teams.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:00

Dozens of volunteers, mostly over the age of 70, offer rides and serve as interpreters

On a February afternoon at a Spanish-immersion childcare center in Minneapolis, dozens of toddlers grabbed puffy coats out of cubbies as parents shuffled them out the door.

Down the hall, Michael, the husband of the center’s director, stared intently at a monitor streaming the building’s security footage, watching for any vehicles that might be carrying agents from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Since January, when federal agents descended on the Twin Cities as part of Operation Metro Surge, he’s been leaving his own job early to volunteer here every afternoon.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:00

These budget security kits performed well in my tests and can help protect a home while saving you some cash.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:00

You can't remove the design from your device but you can at least darken some elements.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:00

As Florida moves homeowners' policies out of its state-run insurer of last resort, insiders question one new company's finances.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 07:00

BrianFagioli writes: Opera GX has officially landed on Linux, bringing its gamer-focused browser experience to Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and openSUSE-based systems. The browser includes GX Control for limiting RAM and network usage, a Hot Tabs Killer to shut down resource-heavy tabs, and built-in sidebar integrations for Discord and Twitch. Opera says this is not just a one-off port, but a long-term effort with ongoing updates and community engagement. "PC gaming has long been associated with a single dominant platform, but that's changing," says Maciej Kocemba, Product Director at Opera GX. "Bringing GX to Linux users -- who are renowned for the control they like to exert over their tools -- means gamers and developers can manage browser resources, customize their setup, and keep their system performing exactly the way they want."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 07:00

Record 171 million passengers are expected to fly this spring, even as TSA funding lapse risks longer airport lines

Spring breakers in the US could see their long-awaited trips to party destinations disrupted by a trifecta of issues: airport security delays, high gas prices, and chaotic weather.

The potential for flight delays comes as US airlines expect that they will see a record-shattering spring travel season. Airlines for America, an aviation industry group, said that 171 million passengers are expected to fly – a 4% increase from the 2025 spring travel period.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 07:00

Exclusive: Error in second half of 2025 came after IRS saw over a quarter of its workforce reduced after huge cuts by Doge

A technical glitch at the understaffed Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is masking millions of dollars in campaign contributions to state-level election groups, including key governor and attorney general races, a campaign finance watchdog has told the Guardian.

A total of $51m for the second half of 2025 remains unaccounted for due to this technical error, according to the Center for Political Accountability (CPA), a non-profit that tracks corporate spending.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 07:00

Closure of strait of Hormuz – a key fertilizer production and transportation route – has squeezed farmers as prices jump

Rodney Bushmeyer has been farming as long as he can remember. Bushmeyer’s father was a farmer, as was his grandfather.

The family-run Bushmeyer Farms in Illinois dates back more than 100 years, when his ancestors came to the US from Germany. They acquired the first 80 acres cost-free as homesteaders, cleared the land, and worked it.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:26

Michael Randrianirina, who sacked PM and cabinet without explanation, claims measure is to root out corruption

Madagascar’s military president has said new ministers will have to pass lie detector tests to root out corrupt candidates, after he dismissed the prime minister and cabinet without explanation earlier this month.

Michael Randrianirina came to power in a coup in October after weeks of youth-led protests under the banner “Gen Z Madagascar”. However, young people were quickly disenchanted by his choice of government officials, which they saw as being part of the old, corrupt elite.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:18

Kyiv sources say they think injection contained relaxant meant to make people more talkative in interrogations

Hungarian security operatives administered a “forced injection” to one of the Ukrainians detained earlier this month during a dramatic raid on bank vehicles carrying gold bars and tens of millions of dollars and euros in cash, sources have told the Guardian.

Hungary’s TEK anti-terrorism police detained seven Ukrainians from the state savings bank, Oschadbank, on 5 March. They were accompanying a convoy of two armoured cars from Vienna to Ukraine, as it transited Hungary in what Kyiv claims was a regular transfer of state funds. Hungarian officials have claimed it was money for the “Ukrainian war mafia”, without giving details.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 06:11

Company says tool to compare self-reported hours with computer estimates is for ‘awareness, not enforcement’

JP Morgan Chase has started to compare the hours junior investment bankers claim to have worked against logs on its IT system.

The US bank said it would begin issuing reports to junior bankers that compare computer-generated estimates of their work weeks against their self-reported time sheets as part of a pilot scheme.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:00

From owing a debt to obscure Japanese horror Sweet Home to the influence of Aliens and Texas Chain Saw Massacre, the franchise continues to petrify players three decades on

To many of us playing and writing about video games in the 1990s, Resident Evil seemed to come out of nowhere. The emerging PlayStation and Saturn consoles were all about slick, bright arcade conversions – the shiny thrills of Daytona and Tekken – and Japanese publisher Capcom was in a rut of coin-op conversions and endless sequels to Street Fighter and Mega Man. Scary games were rare at the time and mostly confined to the PC. So when the news of a horror title named Biohazard (the Japanese name for the series) started to emerge in 1995, it caught the attention of games journalists as it seemed radically out of step with prevailing trends. Games were about power, but as early demos quickly revealed, Resident Evil was about vulnerability.

Thirty years later, it’s still here. The series has sold more than 180m copies worldwide, with 11 core titles and dozens of spinoffs and remakes, as well as film, television and anime tie-ins. Its characters and monsters are icons, its tropes now embedded in game design practice. What has allowed it to not only survive but flourish in such a rapidly changing industry? Why do we still let it scare us?

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:00

The righteousness of the farmworker struggle persists in the face of a man who chose not to live up to its values

Cesar Chavez, one of the founders of the United Farm Workers, who died in 1993, led a movement for the rights and dignity of a long-abused, neglected and exploited agricultural workforce. Through a series of marches, hunger strikes, boycotts and union drives, Chavez and his movement succeeded in winning crucial labor and civil rights protections and advancing the cause and status of the Latino civil rights movement nationwide.

He also, according to a new report from the New York Times, sexually harassed and assaulted women in his movement, and sexually abused and raped the daughters of some UFW organizers when they were girls.

Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:00

Jesus Javier Gomez Islas, 23, says in filing against LAPD he has permanently lost vision in one eye due to unjustified munition fired at his face

A 23-year-old Los Angeles man who attended a recent immigration protest outside a federal building says he was blinded in one eye by a law enforcement projectile.

Jesus Javier Gomez Islas filed a claim against the LA police department (LAPD) on Thursday stemming from permanent injuries he says he suffered at a 31 January demonstration outside the Metropolitan Detention Center. The federal facility has been the site of frequent protests against Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown and was the site of “ICE Out” rallies that week.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:00

Last summer, a group of officials from the Department of Energy gathered at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling 890-square-mile complex in the eastern desert of Idaho where the U.S. government built its first rudimentary nuclear power plant in 1951 and continues to test cutting-edge technology.

On the agenda that day: the future of nuclear energy in the Trump era. The meeting was convened by 31-year-old lawyer Seth Cohen. Just five years out of law school, Cohen brought no significant experience in nuclear law or policy; he had just entered government through Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency team.

As Cohen led the group through a technical conversation about licensing nuclear reactor designs, he repeatedly downplayed health and safety concerns. When staff brought up the topic of radiation exposure from nuclear test sites, Cohen broke in.

“They are testing in Utah. … I don’t know, like 70 people live there,” he said.

“But … there’s lots of babies,” one staffer pushed back. Babies, pregnant women and other vulnerable groups are thought to be potentially more susceptible to cancers brought on by low-level radiation exposure, and they are usually afforded greater protections.

“They’ve been downwind before,” another staffer joked.

“This is why we don’t use AI transcription in meetings,” another added.

ProPublica reviewed records of that meeting, providing a rare look at a dramatic shift underway in one of the most sensitive domains of public policy. The Trump administration is upending the way nuclear energy is regulated, driven by a desire to dramatically increase the amount of energy available to power artificial intelligence.

Career experts have been forced out and thousands of pages of regulations are being rewritten at a sprint. A new generation of nuclear energy companies — flush with Silicon Valley cash and boasting strong political connections — wield increasing influence over policy. Figures like Cohen are forcing a “move fast and break things” Silicon Valley ethos on one of the country’s most important regulators.

The Trump administration has been particularly aggressive in its attacks on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the bipartisan independent regulator that approves commercial nuclear power plants and monitors their safety. The agency is not a household name. But it’s considered the international gold standard, often influencing safety rules around the world.

The NRC has critics, especially in Silicon Valley, where the often-cautious commission is portrayed as an impediment to innovation. In an early salvo, President Donald Trump fired NRC Commissioner Christopher Hanson last June after Hanson spoke out about the importance of agency independence. It was the first time an NRC commissioner had been fired.

During that Idaho meeting, Cohen shot down any notion of NRC independence in the new era.

“Assume the NRC is going to do whatever we tell the NRC to do,” he said, records reviewed by ProPublica show. In November, Cohen was made chief counsel for nuclear policy at the Department of Energy, where he oversees a broad nuclear portfolio.

Source: Weekly Information Reports from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Note: The data is from the week ending Jan. 24, 2025, through Feb. 13, 2026.

The aggressive moves have sent shock waves through the nuclear energy world. Many longtime promoters of the industry say they worry recklessness from the Trump administration could discredit responsible nuclear energy initiatives.

“The regulator is no longer an independent regulator — we do not know whose interests it is serving,” warned Allison Macfarlane, who served as NRC chair during the Obama administration. “The safety culture is under threat.”

A ProPublica analysis of staffing data from the NRC and the Office of Personnel Management shows a rush to the exits: Over 400 people have left the agency since Trump took office. The losses are particularly pronounced in the teams that handle reactor and nuclear materials safety and among veteran staffers with 10 or more years of experience. Meanwhile, hiring of new staff has proceeded at a snail’s pace, with nearly 60 new arrivals in the first year of the Trump administration compared with nearly 350 in the last year of the Biden administration.

Some nuclear power supporters say the administration is providing a needed level of urgency given the energy demands of AI. They also contend the sweeping changes underway aren’t as dangerous or dire as some experts suggest.

“I think the NRC has been frozen in time,” said Brett Rampal, the senior director of nuclear and power strategy at the investment and strategy consultancy Veriten. “It’s a great time to get unfrozen and aim to work quickly.”

The White House referred most of ProPublica’s questions to the Department of Energy, where spokesperson Olivia Tinari said the agency is committed to helping build more safe, high-quality nuclear energy facilities.

“Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, America’s nuclear industry is entering a new era that will provide reliable, abundant power for generations to come,” she wrote. The DOE is “committed to the highest standards of safety for American workers and communities.”

Cohen did not respond to multiple requests for comment. The NRC declined to comment.

Blindsided by DOGE

The U.S. has not had a serious nuclear incident since the Three Mile Island partial meltdown in 1979, a track record many experts attribute to a rigorous regulatory environment and an intense safety culture.

Major nuclear incidents around the world have only strengthened the resolve of past regulators to stay independent from industry and from political winds. A chief cause of Japan’s Fukushima accident, investigators found, was the cozy relationship between the country’s industry and oversight body, which opened the door for thin safety assessments and inaccurate projections overlooking the possible impact of a major tsunami.

“We knew regulatory capture led directly to Fukushima and to Chernobyl,” said Kathryn Huff, who was assistant secretary for the Office of Nuclear Energy during the Biden administration.

A road with a parked police car and a blurred officer. In the distance are four nuclear cooling towers billowing smoke.
The U.S. has not had a serious nuclear incident since the Three Mile Island partial meltdown in 1979. Leif Skoogfors/Getty Images

The U.S. has barely built any nuclear power plants in recent decades. Only three new reactors have been completed in the last 25 years, and since 1990 the U.S has barely added any net new nuclear electricity to its grid. Though about 20% of U.S. energy is supplied by nuclear power plants, the fleet is aging. Some experts blame the slow build-out on the challenging economics of financing a multibillion-dollar project and the uncertainty of accessing and disposing of nuclear fuels.

But an increasingly vocal group of industry voices and deregulation advocates have blamed the slow build-out on overly cautious and inefficient regulators. Among the most powerful exponents of this view are billionaires Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen; both venture capitalists have their own investments in the nuclear energy sector and are influential Trump supporters.

Andreessen camped out at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club in Florida, after Trump won the 2024 election, helping pick staff for the new administration. In late 2024, Thiel personally vetted at least one candidate for the Office of Nuclear Energy, according to people familiar with the conversations. Neither responded to requests for comment.

Four months into his second term, Trump signed a series of executive orders designed to supercharge nuclear power build-out. “It’s a hot industry, it’s a brilliant industry,” said Trump, flanked by nuclear energy CEOs in the Oval Office. He added: “And it’s become very safe.”

Under those orders, the NRC was directed to reduce its workforce, speed up the timeline for approving nuclear reactors and rewrite many of its safety rules. The DOE — which has a vast nuclear portfolio, including waste cleanup sites and government research labs — was tasked with creating a pathway for so-called advanced nuclear companies to test their designs.

The goal, Trump said, was to quadruple nuclear energy output and provide new power to the data centers behind the AI boom.

As DOGE gutted agencies, departures mounted in the nuclear sector. Career experts in nuclear regulations and safety departed or were forced out. When Trump fired Hanson, a Democratic NRC commissioner, the president’s team explained the move by saying, “All organizations are more effective when leaders are rowing in the same direction.”

In an unsigned email to ProPublica, the White House press office wrote: “All commissioners are presidential appointees and can be fired just like any other appointee.”

In August, the NRC’s top attorney resigned and was replaced by oil and gas lawyer David Taggart, who had been working on DOGE cuts at the DOE. In all, the nuclear office at the DOE had lost about a third of its staff, according to a January 2026 count by the Federation of American Scientists, a nonprofit focused on science and technology policy.

That summer, Cohen and a team of DOGE operatives touched down at the NRC offices, a series of nondescript towers across from a Dunkin’ in suburban Maryland. He was joined by Adam Blake, an investor who had recently founded an AI medical startup and has a background in real estate and solar energy, and Ankur Bansal, president of a company that created software for real estate agents. Neither would comment for this story.

Many career officials who spoke with ProPublica were blindsided: The new Trump officials at the NRC seemed to have no experience with the intricacies of nuclear energy policy or law, they said. One NRC lawyer who briefed some of the new arrivals decided to resign. “They were talking about quickly approving all these new reactors, and they didn’t seem to care that much about the rules — they wanted to carry out the wishes of the White House,” the official said.

At one point, Cohen began passing out hats from nuclear energy startup Valar Atomics, one of the companies vying to build a new reactor, according to sources familiar with the matter and records seen by ProPublica. NRC staffers balked; they were supposed to monitor companies like Valar for safety violations, not wear its swag.

NRC ethics officials warned Cohen that the hat handout was a likely violation of conflict rules. It betrayed a misunderstanding of the safety regulator’s role, said a former official familiar with the exchange. “Imagine you live near a nuclear power plant, and you find out a supposedly independent safety regulator — the watchdog — is going around wearing the power plant’s branded hats,” the official said. “Would that make you feel safe?” The NRC and Cohen did not respond to requests for comment about the hat incident.

Valar counts Trump’s Silicon Valley allies as angel investors. They include Palmer Luckey, a technology executive and founder of the defense contractor Anduril, and Shyam Sankar, chief technology officer of Palantir, the software company helping power Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s deportation raids.

It was among three nuclear reactor companies that sued the NRC last year in an attempt to strip it of its authority to regulate its reactors and replace it with a state-level regulator. Before the Trump administration came into office, lawyers watching the case were confident the courts would quickly dismiss the suit, as the NRC’s authority to regulate reactors is widely acknowledged. But new Trump appointees pushed for a compromise settlement — which is still being negotiated. The career NRC lawyer working on the case quietly left the agency.

Valar and its executives did not reply to requests for comment.

“Going So Fast”

The deregulatory push is the culmination of mounting pressure — both political and economic — to make it easier to build nuclear power in the U.S. Over the years, a bipartisan coalition supporting nuclear expansion brought together environmentalists who favor zero-carbon power and defense hawks focused on abundant domestic energy production.

Anti-nuclear activists still argue that renewable energy like wind and solar are safer and more economical. But streamlining the NRC has been a bipartisan priority as well. The latest major reform came in 2024, when President Joe Biden signed into law the ADVANCE Act, which went as far as changing the mission statement of the NRC to ensure it “does not unnecessarily limit” nuclear energy development.

Some nuclear power supporters say the Trump administration is merely accelerating these changes. They cite instances in which the current regulations appear out of sync with the times. The NRC’s byzantine rules are designed for so-called large light-water reactors — massive facilities that can power entire cities — and not the increasingly in vogue smaller advanced reactor designs popular among Silicon Valley-backed firms.

Rules that require fences of certain heights might make little sense for new reactors buried in the earth; and rules that require a certain number of operators per reactor could be a bad fit for a cluster of smaller reactors with modern controls. Advances in sensors, modeling and safety technologies, they say, should be taken into account across the board.

The NRC has said it expects over two dozen new license requests from small modular and advanced reactor companies in coming years. Many of those requests are likely to come from new, Silicon Valley-based nuclear firms.

“There was a missing link in the innovation cycle, and it was very difficult to build something and test it in the U.S. because of mostly licensing and site availability constraints in the past,” said Adam Stein of the pro-nuclear nonprofit Breakthrough Institute.

The regulatory changes are in flux: This spring, the NRC is starting to release thousands of pages of new rules governing everything from the safety and emergency preparedness plans reactor companies are required to submit to the procedures for objecting to a reactor license.

“It’s hard to know if they are getting rid of unnecessary processes or if it’s actually reducing public safety,” said one official working on reactor licensing, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation from the Trump administration. “And that’s just the problem with going so fast — everything just kind of gets lost in a mush.”

Lawyers from the Executive Office of the President have been sent to the NRC to keep an eye on the new rules, a move that further raised alarms about the agency’s independence.

Nicholas Gallagher — a relatively recent New York University law school graduate and conservative writer whom ProPublica previously identified as a DOGE operative at the General Services Administration — has been involved in conversations about overhauling environmental rules.

He’s working alongside Sydney Volanski, a 30-year-old recent law school graduate who rose to national attention while she was in high school for her campaign against the Girl Scouts of America, which she accused of promoting “Marxists, socialists and advocates of same-sex lifestyle.”

NRC lawyers working on the rules were told last October that Gallagher and Volanski would be joining them, and they both appear on the regular NRC rulemaking calendar invite.

The White House maintains, however, that “zero lawyers from the Executive Office of the President have been dispatched to work on rulemaking.” Neither Gallagher nor Volanski replied to requests for comment.

The administration is routing the new rules through an office overseen by Trump’s cost-cutting guru Russell Vought, a move that was previously unheard of for an independent regulator like the NRC. The White House spokesperson noted that, under a recent executive order, this process is now required for all agencies.

Political operatives have been “inserted into the senior leadership team to the point where they could significantly influence decision-making,” said Scott Morris, who worked at the NRC for more than 32 years, most recently as the No. 2 career operations official. “I just think that would be a dangerous proposition.”

Morris voted for Trump twice and broadly supports the goals of deregulating and expanding nuclear energy, but he has begun speaking out against the administration’s interference at the NRC. He retired in May 2025 as part of a wave of retirements and firings.

At a recent hearing before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board — an independent body that helps adjudicate nuclear licensing — NRC lawyers withdrew from the proceedings, citing “limited resources.” The judge remarked that it was the first time in over 20 years the NRC had done so.

Meanwhile, some staff members, other career officials say, are afraid to voice dissenting views for fear of being fired. “It feels like being a lobster in a slowly boiling pot,” one NRC official who has been working on the rule changes told ProPublica, describing the erosion of independence.

The official was one of three who compared their recent experience at NRC to being in a pot of slowly boiling water. “If somebody is raising something that they think that the industry or the White House would have a problem with, they think twice,” the official said.

Inside the NRC, the steering committee overseeing the changes includes Cohen, Taggart and Mike King, a career NRC official who is the newly installed executive director for operations. The former director, Mirela Gavrilas, a 21-year veteran of the agency, retired after getting boxed out of decision-making, according to a person familiar with her departure. Gavrilas did not respond to a request for comment.

Any final changes will be approved by the NRC’s five commissioners, three of whom are Republicans. In September, the two Democratic commissioners told a Senate committee they might be fired at any time if they get crosswise with Trump — including over revisions to safety rules.

Draft rules being circulated inside the NRC propose drastic rollbacks of security and safety inspections at nuclear facilities. Those include a proposed 56% cut in emergency preparedness inspection time, CNN reported in March.

Even some pro-nuclear groups are troubled by the emerging order. Some have tried to backchannel to their contacts in the Trump administration to explain the importance of an independent regulator to help maintain public support for nuclear power. Without it, they risk losing credibility.

“You have to make sure you don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater,” said Judi Greenwald, president and CEO of the Nuclear Innovation Alliance, a nonprofit that promotes nuclear energy and supports many of the regulatory changes being proposed by the Trump administration.

Greenwald’s group favors faster timelines for approving nuclear reactors, but she worries that the agency’s fundamental independence has been undermined. “We would prefer that they yield back more of NRC independence,” she said.

An industrial room filled with pipes and large structures.
The Vogtle nuclear power plant in Waynesboro, Georgia, is the largest nuclear power station in the U.S. Kendrick Brinson/The New York Times/Redux

“Nuke Bros” in Silicon Valley

One Trump administration priority has been making it easier for so-called advanced reactor companies to navigate the regulatory process. These firms, mostly backed by Silicon Valley tech and venture money, are often working on designs for much smaller reactors that they hope to mass produce in factories.

“There are two nuclear industries,” said Macfarlane, the former NRC chair. “There are the actual people who use nuclear reactors to produce power and put it on the grid … and then there are the ‘nuke bros’” in Silicon Valley.

Trump’s Silicon Valley allies have loomed large over his nuclear policy. One prospective political appointee for a top DOE nuclear job got a Christmas Eve call from Thiel, the rare Silicon Valley leader to back Trump in 2016. Thiel, whose Founders Fund invested in a nuclear fuel startup and an advanced reactor company, quizzed the would-be official about deregulation and how to rapidly build more nuclear energy capacity, said sources familiar with the conversation.

Nuclear energy startups jockeyed to spend time at Mar-a-Lago in the months before the start of Trump’s second term. Balerion Space Ventures, a venture capital firm that has invested in multiple companies, convened an investor summit there in January 2025, according to an invitation viewed by ProPublica. Balerion did not reply to a request for comment.

A few months later, when Trump was drawing up the executive orders, leaders at many of those nuclear companies were given advanced access to drafts of the text — and the opportunity to provide suggested edits, documents viewed by ProPublica show.

Those orders created a new program to test out experimental reactor designs, addressing a common complaint that companies are not given opportunities to experiment. There are currently about a dozen advanced reactor companies planning to participate. Each has a concierge team within the DOE to help navigate bureaucracy. As NPR reported in January, the DOE quietly overhauled a series of safety rules that would apply to these new reactors and shared the new regulations with these companies before making them public.

Secretary of Energy Chris Wright — who served on the board of one of those companies, Oklo — has said fast nuclear build-out is a priority: “We are moving as quickly as we can to permit, build and enable the rapid construction of as much nuke capacity as possible,” he told CNBC last fall. Oklo noted that Wright stepped down from the board when he was confirmed.

The Trump administration hopes some of the companies would have their reactors “go critical” — a key first step on the way to building a functioning power plant — by July 2026. Then the NRC, which signs off on the safety designs of commercial nuclear power plants, could be expected to quickly OK these new reactors to get to market.

According to people familiar with the conversations, at least one nuclear energy startup CEO personally recruited potential members of the DOGE nuclear team, though it’s not clear if Cohen was brought aboard this way. Cohen has told colleagues and industry contacts that he reports to Emily Underwood, one of Trump adviser Stephen Miller’s top aides for economic policy. He is perceived inside government as a key avatar of the White House’s nuclear agenda.

In its email to ProPublica, the White House said, “Seth Cohen is a Department of Energy employee and does not report to Emily Underwood or Stephen Miller in any capacity.”

The DOE spokesperson added, “Seth’s role at the Department of Energy is to support the Trump administration’s mission to unleash American Energy Dominance.”

Cohen has been pushing to raise the legal limit of radiation that nuclear energy companies are allowed to emit from their facilities. One nuclear industry insider, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said many firms are fixating on changing these radiation rules: Their business model requires moving nuclear reactors around the country, often near workers or the general public.

Building thick, expensive shielding walls can be prohibitively expensive, they said.

Valar CEO Isaiah Taylor has called limits on exposure to radiation a top barrier to industry growth. A recent DOE memo seen by ProPublica cites cost savings on shielding for Valar’s reactor to justify changing those limits. “Shielding-related cost reductions,” the memo said, “could range from $1-2 million per reactor.” The debate over the precise rule change is ongoing.

The DOE has been considering a fivefold increase to the limit for public exposure to radiation, which will allow some nuclear reactor companies to cut costs on these expensive safety shields, internal DOE documents seen by ProPublica show.

A presentation prepared by DOE staffers in their Idaho offices that has circulated inside the department makes the “business case” for changing the radiation dose rules: It could cut the cost of some new reactors by as much as 5%. These more relaxed standards are likely to be adopted by the NRC and apply to reactors nationwide, documents show.

In February, Wright accompanied Valar’s executive team on a first-of-its-kind flight, as a U.S. military plane was conscripted to fly the company’s reactor from Los Angeles to Utah. Valar does not yet have a working nuclear reactor, and a number of industry sources told ProPublica they viewed the airlift as a PR exercise. Internal government memos justified the airlift by designating it as “critical” to the U.S. “national security interests.”

Cohen posted smiling pictures of himself from the cargo bay of the military plane.

Cohen told an audience at the American Nuclear Society that the rapid build-out was essential to powering Silicon Valley’s AI data centers. He framed the policy in existential terms: “I can’t emphasize this strongly enough that losing the AI war is an outcome akin to the Nazis developing the bomb before the United States.”

As it deliberated rule changes, the DOE has cut out its internal team of health experts who work on radiation safety at the Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security, said sources familiar with the decision. The advice of outside experts on radiation protection has been largely cast aside.

The DOE spokesperson said its radiation standards “are aligned with Gold Standard Science … with a focus on protecting people and the environment while avoiding unnecessary bureaucracy.”

The department has already decided to abandon the long-standing radiation protection principle known as “ALARA” — the “As Low As Reasonably Achievable” standard — which directs anyone dealing with radioactive materials to minimize exposure.

It often pushes exposure well below legal thresholds. Many experts agreed that the ALARA principle was sometimes applied too strictly, but the move to entirely throw it out was opposed by many prominent radiation health experts.

Whether the agencies will actually change the legal thresholds for radiation exposure is an open question, said sources familiar with the deliberations.

Internal DOE documents arguing for changing dose rules cite a report produced at the Idaho National Laboratory, which was compiled with the help of the AI assistant Claude. “It’s really strange,” said Kathryn Higley, president of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, a congressionally chartered group studying radiation safety. “They fundamentally mistake the science.”

John Wagner, the head of the Idaho National Laboratory and the report’s lead author, acknowledged to ProPublica that the science over changing radiation exposure rules is hotly contested. “We recognize that respected experts interpret aspects of this literature differently,” he wrote. His analysis was not meant to be the final word, he said, but was “intended to inform debate.”

The impact of radiation levels at very low doses is hard to measure, so the U.S. has historically struck a cautious note. Raising dose limits could put the U.S. out of step with international standards.

For his part, Cohen has told the nuclear industry that he sees his job as making sure the government “is no longer a barrier” to them.

In June, he shot down the notion of companies putting money into a fund for workplace accidents. “Put yourself in the shoes of one of these startups,” he said. “They’re raising hundreds of millions of dollars to do this. And then they would have to go to their VCs and their board and say, listen, guys, we actually need a few hundred million dollars more to put into a trust fund?”

He also suggested that regulators should not fret about preparing for so-called 100-year events — disasters that have roughly a 1% chance of taking place but can be catastrophic for nuclear facilities.

“When SpaceX started building rockets, they sort of expected the first ones to blow up,” he said.

The post DOGE Goes Nuclear: How Trump Invited Silicon Valley Into America’s Nuclear Power Regulator appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Wilmington Senior Center has been a service hub for the elderly in and around the city for seven decades. But in recent years, the center has faced funding hardships, leading to pared back services.

Days after posting their March lunch menu onto social media, officials from the Wilmington Senior Center closed the doors of the 70-year-old facility. 

According to multiple sources, including residents and elected officials, the senior center’s abrupt closure is now sparking conversations in Delaware’s largest city about what led to the decision and whether the center plans to reopen. As of Wednesday, the center remained closed during what would have been its normal operating hours.

Wilmington Senior Center officials have not made any public statements about the closure nor did they respond to questions from Spotlight Delaware.

The news comes about four months after the Senior Center ended its Friday operations and laid off a third of its staff, amid ongoing funding shortfalls. At that time, the center’s executive director, Sam Nussbaum, told Spotlight Delaware that it needed to make up 70% of its budget for the year. 

“I need to save this agency,” Nussbaum told Spotlight last October. “We don’t have money coming in.”

According to government records, the Wilmington Senior Center received $3 million in state funding between the fiscal years 2018 and 2026. Most of that money came from Delaware’s legislative program, called grant-in-aid, that distributes taxpayer dollars to various organizations that serve the public. 

In the most recent fiscal year of 2026, the Wilmington Senior Center received over $160,000 from the state. 

New Castle County also allocated just over $63,000 to the organization between 2019 and 2023, according to the county’s open checkbook, with about one-third stemming from CARES Act funding given during the COVID pandemic.

Located near the city’s Brandywine Village neighborhood, the Wilmington Senior Center has been a social and wellness hub for the elderly community since 1956.

It serves people over 50 years old, offering a range of programs including affordable meals, health workshops, computer classes, Bible study, Pilates, and trips to local farmers’ markets. Memberships only cost $25 a year. There also are one-time lifetime memberships available for $500, according to the senior center’s website.    

Wilmington Senior Center, which has been operating as a community hub for older Delawareans since the 1950s. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

While Nussbaum cited financial difficulties last fall, it’s not clear whether potential shortfalls are what caused the facility to close earlier this month.

The organization has not filed an annual non-profit tax return form with the Internal Revenue Service since 2020, according to a federal database. 

The database does show that its nonprofit status was revoked in 2024. It is unclear why that happened, but revocations can occur when an organization fails to file its tax forms for three consecutive years. 

Nonprofit organizations are required to file tax forms, called Form 990s, which are publicly viewable online.

The Wilmington Senior Center brought in almost $875,000 in revenue in 2020 — the last year tax data for the organization is publicly available. Its 2020 finances capped a steady decrease in revenue that occurred over the previous decade. In 2011, the center brought in nearly $2 million.

Last spring, the IRS reinstated the Wilmington Senior Center’s nonprofit tax status but the organization’s tax forms for 2021 through 2024 are still not available online.

In October, Nussbaum told Spotlight that the center receives just over $200,000 annually from the state, while operating on a roughly $660,000 budget, leaving the center to make up more than $400,000 each year.

Is the closure temporary?

Several individuals who use the Wilmington Senior Center told Spotlight Delaware that earlier this month they received phone calls from senior center employees, announcing that services would be discontinued. 

Verna Clark, a Baynard Village resident, was among those individuals. She said a senior center employee told her that the organization was closed indefinitely.

“That’s all she could tell me,” Clark said. 

Clark, who has attended the senior center for nearly a decade, said that, with a car, she’s fortunate to have the option to go elsewhere. For now, though, she plans to wait and see if it reopens.

“There are other centers that I would go to, but I said ‘I’m going to just hold off, and wait and see,’” she said. 

Nussbaum did not respond to requests for comment for this story. When reached by phone, board member Loraine Bertuola declined to comment. When reached a second time to ask about new information that had been uncovered, Bertuola hung up shortly after the conversation began.

Senior center officials failure to publicly address the closure has left residents and some local and state officials in the dark. Many say they only heard about the closure from neighbors or employees.

Meanwhile, one legislator suggested that the center may reopen open.

State Rep. Stephanie Bolden (D-Wilmington). | PHOTO COURTESY OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Rep. Stephanie T. Bolden (D-Wilmington) said she met with senior center leaders who said the center closed temporarily because Nussbaum had been “dismissed” and replaced.

“They may have been closed for a couple of days to reorganize, but they have not shut down the Senior Center,” she said.

But other local government officials say they’ve heard differently. Wilmington City Council President Trippi Congo said he received calls from residents and Senior Center employees last week and learned that a reopening may be uncertain because of funding challenges. 

Congo said he is working to schedule a meeting this month with officials from the senior center, the mayor’s office, New Castle County officials, and officials from Gov. Matt Meyer’s office to better understand the center’s situation and to see who may be able to assist. 

“I wanted the state and the county to be there because they also have value for the seniors, and they have a lot more funding than we do,” Congo said.

State Rep. Nnamdi Chukwuocha (D-Wilmington)was also told last week about the center’s shutdown, and noted that he has not heard from leadership at the center.

Chukwuocha says he is in ongoing discussions with other senior centers, such as The Jimmy Jenkins Senior Center at the Kingswood Community Center, who said they could offer a pipeline for the seniors who are no longer being served. 

Seniors pose for a photo at the Jimmy Jenkins Senior Center. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

He plans to hold more conversations with legislators and the Controller General’s Office to understand how to continue to support the seniors who were being served at the center. 

Logan Herring, CEO of Kingswood Community Center, said he had been in discussions with the Wilmington Senior Center for about a year about creating a pipeline between the Wilmington Senior Center and the Jimmy Jenkins Senior Center. He said Nussbaum initially reached out to his office for guidance, but they were never able to move forward with the plan.  

Asked if unresponsiveness from Senior Center officials led to the plan stalling, Herring suggested that if communication delays did occur, they may be due to the center operating in a crisis mode. 

“I just think that they were really in a tough spot financially, and when you’re in survival mode, it’s hard to think beyond that,” Herring said.

The post Wilmington Senior Center abruptly shuts its doors, doesn’t say why appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 06:00

The 55-year-old has is an assistant coach at the University of New Orleans. Now he believes he can take the step up to the top of his sport

You are Arizona State athletics director Graham Rossini, more of a forward-thinking sports executive than a classic campus administrator. The Sun Devils basketball team have just staggered through another middling season, missing the NCAA tournament for a third straight year. You’ve just fired coach Bobby Hurley, but the vacancy isn’t what anyone in the sport would call coveted – not compared to a blue-blood program like Duke or Kentucky, or even the cross-state rival Arizona Wildcats men’s basketball, standard-bearer of the old Pac-10.

You could hire another hardwood hero like Hurley, a Duke Blue Devils men’s basketball supervillain whose winning pedigree as a player surfaced only in flashes over 11 uneven years on the sideline. You could turn to a television retread, someone angling for a return to the bench and a larger stage. You could give some young striver a big break. Or you could do something else entirely – something big and bold: You could give Percy Robert Miller a shot.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 06:00

From the White House to Iran’s former crown prince, proponents of the U.S.–Israel war on Iran sell it to the American people — and Iranians themselves — as a crusade for liberation. Instead, the regime remains in place as the death toll grows, environmental hazards proliferate, and civilian infrastructure is decimated. 

As if the destruction inside Iran itself wasn’t enough, the war is starting to have serious ramifications for the global economy and, more to the point, expanding into neighboring countries.

Lebanon, in particular, has come into Israel’s crosshairs, with increasing Israeli incursions and missile strikes deeper into the country. The number of dead there is approaching 1,000 with Israeli missiles razing entire apartment blocks in central Beirut this week and a ground invasion getting underway. More than 1 million Lebanese people have been displaced.

“I think the Lebanese are suffering now, and there’s not really anyone who’s trying to save them,” says Afeef Nessouli, a Beirut-based journalist, speaking to The Intercept Briefing. “They know that, and they know that they’re just political pawns who are always at the worst end of the stick along with Palestine.” He adds, “The fear is that [Israel] will occupy south of Litani [River] … and just take people’s homes, take their land, and never give it back, make settlements for their country.”

“It’s been really stunning to watch that so many people fall for this idea of ‘This is a human rights intervention’ — and yet it’s accomplished through massive human rights violations,” says Ali Gharib, a senior editor at The Intercept. Commenting on Israel’s strategy of making failed states out of its adversaries in the region, he notes, the Israelis “don’t need [Reza] Pahlavi to work. They don’t need him to go in there and become this democratic leader. They just need him to lead a movement that damages the regime enough to put Iran into some kind of fractured state or state failure where it’s not a threat to Israel anymore.”

“We’ve had in the last 20 to 25 years, especially since the Iraq War in 2003, a lobby pushing for regime change in Iran,” says Sanam Naraghi-Anderlini, a veteran peace strategist. “The Iraq version of regime change ended up being a catastrophe from a U.S. perspective, but actually from an Israeli perspective and from a Saudi perspective, and even from a UAE perspective, the decimation of Iraq has been a success because if Iraq had turned out to be a liberal democracy, it would’ve challenged Israel on the question of Palestine. It would’ve challenged Saudi Arabia on the question of Islam and what is Islam.”

It’s a region in upheaval, and at the center are Israeli and American fictions about liberatory bombs.

“I’ve been on podcasts with Israeli journalists where they’re telling me the Iranians wanted us to go in and liberate them,” says Naraghi-Anderlini, “And my response to them is: Liberate their bodies from their souls?”

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

Transcript

Ali Gharib: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Ali Gharib, and I’m a senior editor at The Intercept. The U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran is stretching into its third week, with attacks having started on February 28. The bombardment of Iran has remained relentless. At least 1,400 people have been killed and more than 18,000 have been injured.

Civilian infrastructure has taken a hit too, including Iranian hospitals, pharmaceutical plants, educational centers, and civilian energy depots. Iran, for its part, has retaliated by launching missiles and drones into Israel itself, as well as attacking U.S. bases in the region. It has also targeted energy infrastructure in the nearby Gulf Arab states.

Meanwhile, Israel has increased its attacks on Lebanon, killing more than 900 people and displacing more than 1 million, and it’s preparing for a ground invasion against the paramilitary group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. 

On Wednesday, Israel expanded its airstrikes into central Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, where it razed residential buildings. 

Afeef Nessouli, is a journalist and Intercept contributor based in Lebanon, where he has been reporting since November. He joins me now from Beirut.

Afeef, welcome to The Intercept Briefing. 

Afeef Nessouli: Yeah, thanks for having me, Ali. I appreciate it. 

AG: Afeef, what can you tell us about what it’s actually been like in the parts of Lebanon where you’ve been reporting, since Israel increased its attacks on the country following the strikes against Iran? 

AN: So I’m in an area of Beirut called Tayouneh. Tayouneh is hundreds of meters away from the evacuation orders that have been all over the southern suburbs — it’s just right north of the southern suburbs — so it’s very loud here. Right outside of my area, there’s hundreds of tents lined up.

It’s right outside of the park. Horsh Beirut is this public space, and families from the southern suburbs have just lined up their tents and have had to make do with such little resources.

It’s really so hard to see so many people without shelter. It’s just a catastrophic situation.

AG: It’s not entirely surprising to hear that you might be seeing people there in tent cities, given that, I think I read that 1 in 5 Lebanese people were displaced now, and especially with Israel expanding its attacks into Beirut and central Beirut, as we saw on Wednesday, decimating parts of central Beirut and imploding with missiles buildings in the center of town.

So what have you been seeing, what have you’ve been talking to people there, internally displaced people? 

AN: So on Wednesday, Israeli airstrikes hit central Beirut. They killed at least 12 people, wounding 41 people.

Going to the strike areas is really just awful to see and awful to witness. Buildings are rubble. It’s causing panic and fear among people in places that were not told to evacuate.

I talked to a mother who was displaced from the southern suburbs, a neighborhood called Bourj Al Barajneh. She’s been staying under this huge statue of a crescent moon right outside of Al Amin Mosque in downtown Beirut. She’s mostly just worried for her kids — worried that they’re not getting enough to eat, worried about them just being terrorized, and also it’s just so cold. 

You have to understand: Everything is all hands on deck. So a lot of schools are being turned into shelters. The stadium has been turned into a shelter.

One I visited in Ras, Beirut, which is in northwestern Beirut, over 200 families I think were in and out of that shelter. People are sleeping on the floors. I spend a lot of time with an organization called Truth Be Told that’s passing out hot meals from donations and prescription medication around Horsh Beirut, where all the families are lined up in tents.

What you’re mostly hearing is that people don’t have anywhere to go. They have nowhere to sleep. And everywhere they do have to sleep is incredibly uncomfortable. There are men sleeping in their cars. There are cars everywhere. People are struggling. They’re struggling to survive in an economy that was already just decimated from the last few years.

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AG: I’m curious, on the geopolitics, Afeef — how do you think these attacks have affected Hezbollah, the Lebanese paramilitary group from the south of the country but has become a central player in Lebanese politics and obviously a group closely linked with Iran? Is your sense that Hezbollah has been weakened by these attacks? Is the group continuing to be diminished or are they holding pretty firm at this time? 

AN: I can say that a lot of people inside of Lebanon and a lot of people outside of Lebanon had seemed to count Hezbollah out, for the most part. They had seemed decimated, especially after the Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah was killed. It seemed like they were taking a long rest period. 

So a lot of the criticism is, Israel had had over 10,000 ceasefire violations — and it took the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to be assassinated for the group to push into the war and take decisive action. 

AG: And of course, you’re talking about Hassan Nasrallah, the late leader of Hezbollah who was killed by Israel during an earlier round of its war with Lebanon — [after] a pager attack that Israel lodged against Lebanon, where it loaded pagers with explosives and meticulously distributed them to Hezbollah officials, killing scores of Hezbollah officials as well as countless civilians. And Ali Khamenei was the supreme leader of Iran until he was assassinated by Israel at the outset of this latest war with Iran.

AN: After the supreme leader was assassinated, I went to the public mourning in Dahiyeh. It was literally the evening of when Israel started striking the southern suburbs, and you could tell that the emotion was palpable. People were crying, people were wailing, people were chanting, people were angry. It was extremely well attended, it was extremely big.

Ultimately, the same night, I was awoken in the middle of the night by two really loud strikes on Dahiyeh. It was really clear that Hezbollah had decided to take Lebanon into the war. And a lot of Lebanese people were pretty upset at that. They felt like they weren’t given any consent; they were not able to consent to this sort of act. It’s become a pretty polarizing subject.

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Beirut Suburbs or “Hezbollah Stronghold”? U.S. Media Parrots Israeli Propaganda to Justify Bombing Civilians

A year ago, when Hezbollah entered the war on behalf of Gaza, I think people were more amenable to the idea. They understood that Israel wanted to make incursions into the country and occupy land. I think in the last year, having not really responded to a lot of ceasefire violations in the south, but responding to Ali Khamenei’s assassination was just a disappointment to a lot of Lebanese people who felt, “Well, are you acting on behalf of Iran, or are you acting on behalf of our best interest?”

It seems like they’ve lost some support on the ground. So there is that, there is a decimation of their reputation right now, from what I am at least gathering on the ground. But also there’s a lot of people who understand or the people who are on the front lines, they’re the ones who have to self-help when all of their houses are demolished. And there’s military access roads for Israeli occupation soldiers to literally making their demolished houses gone forever because now there’s military access roads paved on top of them. 

“It feels like this big psychological operation done to Lebanese people for decades to separate them into sects, into tribes, and to get them destabilized.”

In Lebanon, there’s so many political opinions. And when something like this happens, it really feels like the people of the country are pitted against each other. It feels like this big psychological operation done to Lebanese people for decades to separate them into sects, into tribes, and to get them destabilized, while all of these outside forces are manipulating their lived experience, their day-to-day experience. I think most people really just want to have a Lebanon that they can depend on economically, that they can depend on politically, and that they can depend on in general for having a life that isn’t burdened by cycles of violence every few months. 

AG: Touching on that a little bit, I’ve talked to my friends, Lebanese friends, who admittedly are probably very self-selecting, but it seems they have sensed a resentment. You were sort of touching on this, a resentment of the fact that between the so-called ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, and the Israeli assassination of Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, there were some tens of thousands of Israeli ceasefire violations recorded, and none of these prompted a response from Hezbollah. But their willingness to go in retaliation for the assassination of a foreign leader — do you sense that kind of resentment? Is that one of the things contributing to Hezbollah’s diminishing stature?

AN: Yeah, so I spoke to one woman last night. She’s in her mid-30s. She has family from the south. Someone who theoretically supported Hezbollah getting into the war on behalf of Gaza after October 7. Someone who understands having land in the south — family homes in the south — that have been under fire for, really, decades. She says that, in the last year and a half, since the so-called ceasefire was brokered, after 10,000 violations from Israel, after Hezbollah really didn’t respond to all of the violations, and yet they woke up on behalf of the supreme leader’s assassination — just doesn’t sit well with her. She doesn’t see the reason why Lebanon would have to be in this fight. 

But on the other hand completely, there’s also this sophisticated understanding, obviously, that there’s a neighbor to the south that has occupied an entire country and wants to have the Litani River be its northern border. There is this idea that Israel has been manipulating and manufacturing this feeling for a while, that they are coming in and they were going to come in and they were attacking Lebanon much before Hezbollah had ever come around.

The fact of the matter is that Israel really does want to sow discord in the sectarian populations of Lebanon. They have dropped leaflets a couple days ago in central Beirut saying, “Lebanon is yours. You can inform on Hezbollah” and like they shared a QR code.

“What ends up happening is that a lot of people discriminate against people from the south, people from Shia backgrounds, because they’re basically afraid.”

And then they target residential buildings and say, “We’re coming after Hezbollah” and cause psychological damage and physical damage and ruin so much peace for so many people. Ultimately what ends up happening is that a lot of people discriminate against people from the south, people from Shia backgrounds, because they’re basically afraid that if they let them into their buildings or try to take care of them, they’re going to be around people that are affiliated with Hezbollah and are going to be targeted. 

A lot of these people are just displaced. They’re unhoused in rain, their houses have been destroyed, and then their fellow patriots are literally just terrified that being around them or letting them in is going to result in Israel killing all of them. That’s a real fear on the ground right now.

It’s something that feels very beneficial to Israel and the U.S. to have: sects in Lebanon fighting each other all of the time not paying attention to the slow incursions — the slow pushing forth — on the southern border. Also, it’s probably beneficial to countries like Iran to pour money, pouring arms, have proxies that are fighting its battles.

Ultimately what happens is that the situation on the ground becomes unbearable. Everybody’s trying to pressure the people to orchestrate some heroic political ends that is impossible for the people to do because they’re obviously being manipulated by powers much larger than them. I think the Lebanese are suffering now, and there’s not really anyone who’s trying to save them. And they know that. They know that they’re just political pawns who are always at the worst end of the stick — along with Palestine. So, yeah, it feels really dismal in Lebanon right now. 

“Most people really just want to have a Lebanon that they can depend on economically … and that they can depend on in general for having a life that isn’t burdened by cycles of violence every few months.”

AG: You mentioned in the south, the razing of people’s homes to make roads for Israeli military infrastructure as they increase their ground incursions and seem to be making preparations for a full-scale ground invasion.

Of course, this is all fraught with the history of the rise of Hezbollah in response to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, an occupation that lasted for nearly two decades with ongoing hostilities in the two and a half decades since 2000, when Israel officially left south Lebanon. What is the mood among people today in Beirut and also more broadly in Lebanon with regard to fears of what an Israeli occupation could mean for the future of their country?

AN: I think most people in Lebanon look at Israeli occupation as something that’s just unacceptable. While there’s a lot of opinions that are diverse politically in Lebanon, sometimes in contradiction of each other, one thing I think that is mostly true is that most Lebanese people do not want any normalization with Israel. There are some people who do, but it’s not many.

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The fear is that they will occupy south of Litani — the Litani River is Israel’s northern border — and just take people’s homes, take their land, and never give it back, make settlements for their country. The feeling and the fear is that actually the more Israel does, the more it greedily takes up land, the less that anyone in Lebanon is going to stop fighting back. Because the fear is that there’s always going to be violence, and being caught in a cycle of violence and a cycle of economic destruction. I think most people really just want a Lebanon that is peaceful. I think they want a Lebanon that they can feel safe in. And now half of the country really feels like Hezbollah has dragged them into this war.

A lot of people know that Israel would’ve done it anyway, and a subset is always going to fight back on the southern border because that’s where they come from. So it just becomes a ripple effect for everybody in the country. Nobody wants the land to be occupied by Israel, but also not everybody at all wants to be in war constantly with Israel either.

So you just have different lived realities where there are people who are losing their homes, they’re displaced, they’re suffering, they’re fighting back as best as they can. Then there’s people in Lebanon who are living in a totally different reality and are really mad because, admittedly so, their city is getting bombed, their economy is degrading, they have no chance for a future that feels at all stable. So you just have a society that is at the highest level of tension — and everybody, without fail, is afraid of civil war.

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Because the truth is that Hezbollah is part and parcel of society. So when the Israelis and the U.S. pressure the government to disarm Hezbollah, a lot of Hezbollah is in all sorts of society. A lot of them are in the army. So it’s not an easy fix here.

I think the idea is that the Israelis want to make it seem like the government can just easily disarm Hezbollah, and if they don’t, they’re going to get punished for it. But it’s obvious that’s impossible. So it’s made people feel completely disenchanted with all of the leadership that’s involved and the leadership in the state as well, because the response has been mostly inadequate. It’s just something out of a horror show.

AG: Given what we’ve seen, pretty clearly seems to be Israel’s strategy of making failed states out of its adversaries in the region, you have to wonder if Israeli’s strategic thinking is exactly to stoke that resentment. So yeah, a complicated situation. 

Afeef, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to us. It’s really a pleasure and really appreciate all your insights and also your excellent reporting. So thanks so much for joining us on the Intercept Briefing. 

AN: Ali, I really appreciate you for covering Lebanon and having me on your show.

AG: After a quick break, I’ll be speaking to Sanam Naraghi Anderlini about Iran. Sanam is a peace strategist and founder and CEO of International Civil Society Action Network, or ICAN. She has served around the globe as expert for the U.N. on conflict mediation and was architect of the Women, Peace, and Security agenda. 

We’ll be right back.

[Break] 

AG: Welcome back to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Ali Gharib. 

The war in Iran is deepening. Instead of finding ways to tone down the conflict, all the sides are doubling down on ultimatums and escalation. The cost has come in human lives, including to Gulf residents, Israelis, and American troops, but most notably in Iran, where Israel and America have been expanding their bombing campaigns, including carpet bombing in densely populated cities.

Joining me now to discuss all this is Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, a peace strategist and the head of the civil society network ICAN.

And full disclosure here: This is gonna sound familiar to members of the family WhatsApp group, because Sanam is actually my cousin. 

She’s also a veteran peace builder and has been working on conflict resolution for decades. She intimately knows Iran and is an analyst on these issues as well. Thanks for joining us, Sanam.

Sanam Naraghi Anderlini: Thank you for having me. 

AG: I wanted to talk to you a little bit about the trap that the war is falling into — this kind of logic of “escalation of all sides.” There are all these interested parties that are involved in the war — which is basically the Iranians, the Israelis, and the Americans — and they all have different interests. Can you talk about how all of those different interests right now point to this conflict escalating, rather than finding any off ramps? 

SNA: So the way we have to understand this is that you have an Iranian regime that is basically focused on survival. They’ve always been — their logic has always been survival.

In a conflict like this, with two nuclear states, they are fighting a war of asymmetry. So their tactics have been, “How do you escalate the pain for the other side?” to actually bring it to an end quicker. We call it the “hurting stalemate”: How do you get into a stalemate of some sort that is hurting the various parties, so that you end up with some kind of resolution? But at the moment, it’s the logic of escalation to get to that point of pain. 

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For the Israelis, the logic has always been to try and decimate Iran as a regional power and as a power that would challenge them on the question of Palestine more than anything else. We saw that for them, the decimation of Iraq — or basically Iraq falling to its knees, as opposed to turning into a liberal democracy or Syria or Libya or any of these countries. Their fragmentation and essentially the destruction of the state in those countries was beneficial to the Israeli cause of both Greater Israel, but also vis-a-vis specifically the Palestinians.

So right now, with the Iran war going on, they also want to do as much damage as possible, and we’re seeing that on a daily basis. Hospitals have been hit, civilian sites have been hit, residential areas. When they went after Larijani, the national security adviser, over 100 civilians were killed.

We’ve just heard on Wednesday about a petrochemical plant that’s been hit. This is de facto chemical warfare now being played out, using the sources that are on the ground. So they are going full on and essentially escalating.

Iran is retaliating and is doing a sort of matching retaliation. You hit a petrochemical plant, they say, we’re gonna hit yours. So then comes the U.S. The U.S. — as we have repeatedly now heard from different U.S. officials — doesn’t really know why it’s doing this. Iran was not a threat to them. There was no nuclear threat, there was no ballistic missile threat. They got dragged into this war by Israel, and they are now in it. 

The problem is that as a major power — as a superpower, frankly — they can’t be seen to lose. So it’s a little bit like the situation of Russia and Ukraine. Russia can’t be seen to lose to Ukraine. So the U.S. is now caught in that kind of trap. So they’re also escalating at the moment.

“The problem is that as a major power — as a superpower, frankly — they can’t be seen to lose.”

But actually what I’m really worried about is that there are no guardrails. We don’t have anyone standing and actually being the grown-up in the room saying, “There are nuclear plants. They shouldn’t be hit.” The implications of a Bushehr plant, which something was lobbed there. No damage was done. But the implications of this kind of damage and radioactive spillage for the entire Gulf region is really significant. And yet there is no real attention to this kind of escalation or trying to put, as I say, guardrails around essentially what are war crimes happening now.

AG: Sanam, maybe you can speak a little bit to what you see on the broader international scene, because I think there have been some shifts in the past week where we’ve seen Europe pushing back on a few things. But this has all been set up by a very long campaign that’s largely centered around human rights as an idea for justifying this sort of intervention and interventions like it before. We saw this in Afghanistan, we saw it in Iraq. We’ve seen it in a lot of places. 

For you and I looking at this who’ve worked in this world — you more than myself — it’s been really stunning to watch that so many people fall for this idea of “This is a human rights intervention” — and yet it’s accomplished through massive, massive human rights violations. This targeting of civilian infrastructure and civilian facilities and homes and disproportionate casualties happening on things like the Larijani assassination.

Can you talk about how we got to this place where this rhetoric is built up around human rights to justify something like, if not quite a total war, at least a massive full-scale destruction of a country that we’re seeing in process right now? 

“If Iraq had turned out to be a liberal democracy, it would’ve challenged Israel on the question of Palestine.”

SNA: We’ve had in the last 20 to 25 years, especially since the Iraq War in 2003, a lobby pushing for regime change in Iran. They did it in Baghdad. It used to be said that men go to Baghdad, real men go to Tehran. The Iraq version of regime change ended up being a catastrophe from a U.S. perspective, but actually from an Israeli perspective and from a Saudi perspective, and even from a UAE perspective, the decimation of Iraq has been a success because if Iraq had turned out to be a liberal democracy, it would’ve challenged Israel on the question of Palestine. It would’ve challenged Saudi Arabia on the question of Islam and what is Islam; we wouldn’t have ended up with all this sort of Wahhabi/Salafi versions of Islam being spread around the world. And it could have possibly challenged the UAE on being an economic powerhouse. 

Iraq is an educated — was an educated population. They have oil, they were wealthy, et cetera, but it was decimated. And these other three powers rose. 

Iran was always on their agenda, and especially on the Israeli agenda. And the first threat that was perceived was, let’s make it a question of a nuclear threat. OK, so that was the big thing on the table. Nuclear negotiations happened; 2015 JCPOA [Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action] is achieved.

AG: The Iran nuclear deal

SNA: We see a change in tactic. We started seeing massive propaganda using Iran International and other television stations into Iran with very gauzy nostalgic stories of the Pahlavi era. Then we see them co-opting the Women Life Freedom movement in 2022. It was meant to be some sort of coalition opposition movement that was again, trying to co-opt Women Life Freedom. 

Now, Women Life Freedom was authentic. It was homegrown. It had nothing to do with the diaspora. The diaspora supported it because it was so beautifully nonviolent and so inclusive. It was women’s rights, and we had men standing with women. Life and the question of life is both around economic livelihoods and justice and so forth. And then freedom. The question of, can we have democratic freedoms and dignity?

The Iranian regime crashes down on that as they often do when they see protest movements. They crack down heavily, but ironically they also back down. So once the protest stopped, what we saw was that the mandatory nature of the hijab basically disappears. You see Iranian women walking around wearing whatever they want. 

But the question of, how do we go about with regime change from the outside again? The focus shifts, and with Trump coming into power [in 2016] and getting rid of the JCPOA, that was about controlling and containing the nuclear program, but also removing sanctions so there would be economic relief for the Iranian public. Obama never got rid of the sanctions, and by the time Trump came in, he got rid of the nuclear deal — nuclear side of it. 

The Iranians maintained and then they continued cooperating with the U.N. and the nuclear experts for a long time with inspectors. Then at some point it became clear that there was not going to be a new deal. And so the whole thing disappeared.

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In the meantime, what was happening was that the shift in D.C. and again with Israeli support, became about “maximum pressure,” which is around economic pressure. It was really strangling the Iranian economy and really hitting inflation and affecting very poor people. 

At ICAN, we did a report on sanctions in 2012. It was called “Killing them Softly,” and we were looking at the humanitarian implications of sanctions back in 2012. In 2017 onwards, it comes in really, really heavily. We’ve even had Nancy Pelosi in February of 2026 saying, we imposed these sanctions with the view of hurting the poor Iranians in rural areas so that there would be an uprising.

AG: It’s worth mentioning too that this strategy really came out of Israel’s closest allies in Washington, right? This was like the Foundation for Defensive Democracies — these Likud-oriented, right-wing pro-Israel think tanks that had literally called for a strategy of maximum pressure, which is what Trump put in place.

SNA: Exactly. This has been an ongoing fight between different think tanks, different leanings, et cetera. But of course those guys have a lot more money and a lot more resources because they’ve literally got the backing of the Israeli government behind them. 

So you get maximum pressure. You get the protests back in December of 2025. They were economic protests. It was the bazaar and the traders and others, but people were really feeling the inflation level. So December protests start, and we don’t really hear that much about them. There isn’t really that much sort of repression of these protests. It’s very much a domestic issue. 

Then all of a sudden we see Reza Pahlavi coming into this domain and calling out to people and saying, go out 7th and 8th of January, go out into the protest. Go out in your millions. We are with you. 

AG: Reza Pahlavi, of course, the former crown prince of Iran, who’s become a central figure of the right-wing Iranian opposition, and who has claimed for himself the role as the head of the transition to a purported democracy that’s soon to be coming in Iran. 

SNA: We start seeing Mossad or Israeli-aligned assets on Twitter saying, we’re there, we’re on the ground with you. We are there to help you. So these messages need to really be investigated. Because if you know the Iranian regime, you know that their instinct when feeling threatened is to crack down, and they will crack down heavily on their own population.

So how can you sit in Virginia or in Maryland and tell people to go out onto the streets and say, we’re going to be there with you, and actually expose them to what became a very violent crackdown coming on the back of the Twelve Day War, the Israeli American war in June?

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Again, it had been during nuclear negotiations, and the attacks on Iranian leadership was pretty significant. So you’re dealing already with a regime that is going to be paranoid about infiltration. In January, you say to people, go out onto the streets. People’s kids are going out, and they go out into the streets, and then we see the internet blackout. Again, during the Twelve Day War, there was [an] internet blackout because banks were being attacked. There were cyber attacks against Iranian banks by Israeli assets. So you’re dealing, as I say, with a regime that is already on hyper alert and paranoid, and so they react very violently. 

How many people were killed? This becomes a big topic of debate and discussion. The human rights organizations, and the one that I follow is an organization called Harana, they did a very meticulous verification of people who died, families verifying and so forth. They had reached the number of about 7,008 people who had been killed during those two nights of protests. That’s a lot of people. But the machinery of propaganda — news, whatever you want to call it — started inflating the numbers. And it became 12,000 and then 20,000 and then 30,000 and then 40,000 and then 50,000. 

AG: The 7,000 number is bad enough. 

SNA: Yes. 

AG: Here we were in 2013 or whatever it was, completely outraged about Sisi’s counter-coup against the Muslim Brotherhood killing 1,500 protesters in one day. And that was outrage. We got talks in Washington about cutting off weapons to Egypt, cutting off Egypt from aid. 

These numbers were already staggering. So to just watch it balloon out of proportion like this with no basis and evidence, it really showed you that some of the opposition at this point was really just absolutely going for it and willing to stop at nothing, in a very Trumpian way, 

SNA: It was Trumpian, but it was also very — suddenly it started to look like the Gaza playbook, right? Because it was very much like the horrific things that happened on October 7 in Israel. It was using that horrific incident to then rile up and get emotionally charged around what the response should be.

In the case of Iran, it became about, well we need to go and protect people. We started subtly seeing Iranians in the diaspora using certain talking points. Because I was hearing it from different places. First it was somebody would say, “This is a war of liberation. These people who were on the streets were fighting a war of liberation.” That’s a dangerous thing to say, because if you’re claiming that the protesters who went out on a Friday night and a Thursday night out of frustration, out of anger, whatever, were soldiers and it’s a war — then you are putting them directly at risk.

AG: This is part of the opposition, from the opposition perspective, the Pahlavi perspective too. Pahlavi, as we know, has been traveling to Israel the past few years, is really — I think it’s safe to say at this point — has become a stooge of the Israelis. This was absolutely his strategy too. You heard him during the January protest crackdown. 

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The January protests were effectively a nonviolent movement. One of the things that was so shocking about the breadth of the crackdown was that this was a nonviolent movement. Sure, OK, setting the occasional police station on fire, but that is not what the movement was about.

And you had Pahlavi here saying everybody in the regime is legitimate targets, even civilian officials. That’s calling for a civil war. That’s calling for war crimes.

SNA: That’s the problem that you’re sitting, again, you’re sitting in Potomac, Miami, or wherever he happened to be when he said all this, and he’s sending out people. And either you know your opposition, you know the force that you’re fighting against the regime, in which case you have to be mindful of what you’re doing. We have known for 47 years that this is a regime that will use violence and it has used violence throughout time. So if you’re claiming to be the leader of the opposition, do you put your followers at risk like that? That, to me, is a question of responsibility. That’s definitely an issue.

If you don’t know the nature of your adversary, then that’s also admitting incompetence of some sort. How could you not know this could happen? So what was the intent of telling people to go out into the streets and then having all these Mossad voices on Twitter? What was the intent of it? Was the intent creating this space where this violence would come out so that then the next excuse for regime change becomes this is a regime that is killing its own people, it’s awful to its own people? We’ve had all the propaganda all these years. People, they’ve had it up to here with the economics, with the corruption, with all of the things that are going on, and the answer becomes well, yeah, it needs military attack.

AG: This is where you really see the Israelis start to step up and say, rise up. And for whatever reason, because of the desperation of Iranian people, people really latch onto this. It’s incredible for us to think, like many of our relatives have enough sense, certainly our relatives who are inside Iran, many of whom are geriatric and the rest of whom are just sensible, aren’t going out in the street and listening to Reza Pahlavi. But you listen to anecdotes from them about their friends. These people were actually listening to these messages and going into the street and being shot at and slaughtered. Meanwhile, Pahlavi and the Israelis are saying, do it, rise up, overtake the government. 

SNA: Yeah. 

AG: The people on the ground themselves can’t be blamed for thinking that there’s some sort of plan in place. This connects back to what you were saying about the Israelis, where this kind of is the plan, right? It’s that they don’t need Pahlavi to work. They don’t need him to go in there and become this democratic leader. They just need him to lead a movement that damages the regime enough to put Iran into some kind of fractured state or state failure where it’s not a threat to Israel anymore.

SNA: Yeah. So what I started seeing, and I think this is the situation we’re in now, unfortunately, is that you have a regime that has sacrificed the country and the nation for its own survival, and they’re continuing to do that. Then we have an opposition led by the Israeli sort of mentality — but now very much owned by Iranian diaspora themselves — that is so driven by getting rid of the regime that they’re also willing to sacrifice the nation. 

The rhetoric that we hear it’s just heartbreaking because when the girls’ school was hit some people were saying, “Oh, it’s the regime’s own rockets.” Exactly like what we heard in Gaza when the hospital was hit. Then it became “This is collateral damage. There’s a price for freedom.” I find that really quite revolting because I’m thinking, it’s not your kid. Those children did not sign up to be the price for freedom, whatever freedom means.

Then we started seeing Israeli journalists. I’ve been on podcasts with Israeli journalists where they’re telling me, “The Iranians wanted us to go in and liberate them.” And my response to them is: Liberate their bodies from their souls?

AG: Liberate them from their pharmaceutical factories and their hospitals and their girls’ schools.

SNA: So many schools now, I think it’s 60 schools have been hit. Schools, homes, energy sources, flour depots for making bread and corn, food, water, energy. All of these things are being hit. Police stations.

Ali Gharib: Homes — residential towers with hundreds of apartments.

SNA: Thousands, right? So they’re hiding behind this language of freedom and this language of human rights and then causing incredible mass human rights assault going forward in terms of atrocities. It’s all war crimes as well.

Again, at the forefront of it, we have Reza Pahlavi, who to me, is not only a puppet, he’s like a pied piper. He’s the one who led this diaspora into: I’m gonna give you heaven. And it’s now pretty hellish for the people on the ground in Iran. So this is something that we have to reckon with. I think diasporas — I’ve worked on conflicts for many years — diasporas often play a significant role in terms of shaping the policy. 

But what I always felt with Iranians was that no matter what differences we may have had politically, what drives us is a love of country. The targeting right now has been against the state and the nation. When you hear that something like 50 heritage sites have been damaged, for each of us, when we think about Isfahan or when we think about iconic buildings in Tehran, whether it’s the Azadi Tower or the Azadi Stadium, these are places and things that have meaning to us as a nation. They are part of how communities are formed and imagined and created. Iranians have a deep sense of nationhood, yet in this context, in the way that this polarization has happened, as I say, you have people who are saying, “Well, we will rebuild.” Are you now saying that in this war, another 30,000 people can die for freedom?

This is pretty despicable when you’re sitting outside the country. If you want to fight the war then by all means, fly to Istanbul, take the bus, and go straight to Tehran and be on the streets with the people. But to sit outside and wage war is horrific.

“Those of us who sit outside have a particular responsibility. … People living inside, they may not have the same information.”

Those of us who sit outside have a particular responsibility. We have seen what the United States has done in these countries. We have access to all of the information — whether it’s Syria, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan, Sudan — we know what kind of entity we deal with and in the international space, when these countries get embroiled in conflict. I think we have a particular responsibility in terms of trying to prevent that happening to our own country. People living inside, they may not have the same information. As I say, they are so traumatized by what the regime has done that it’s easy to say, “I want something else.” 

One last point, which I think is really significant, is that there’s a generational issue here. My generation is probably the last generation that remembers the revolution and the Iran–Iraq war. I was 11 when that happened. And for the years that I was returning to Iran to do my research and understand what was going on, I remember in the 1990s, there were student protests. And the taxi drivers, I would say to them, “Did you go to the protests?” And the taxi driver would say, “No, ma’am, we’ve already been out there once to be against something. I’ll go out there when I know it’s for something.” 

So this idea of everybody united against the shah, thinking the day after was going to be better and then they got the Islamists. People have been inoculated against that. They remember the Iran–Iraq war. That was a pretty horrific war for eight years, and Iran had no allies in the world except for Israel and Syria. Israel was giving weapons to Iran throughout the 1980s. So it’s interesting the shifts that have happened. 

But what I’m saying is that I’m in my 50s now, so the generations that come after me, they don’t remember the revolution. They don’t remember the war. And this rallying around the Pahlavi name as an alternative to the regime — “whatever it is, it’s gotta be better than the regime.” That’s exactly the parallel that we’re seeing. And it’s a very dangerous one, I think. 

AG: This is something that you said when we spoke on the phone earlier that I do want to get to because I think this is very important and it actually speaks to both sides. What you said is that inside of us all— And I think this both animates the people inside Iran who, I don’t want to take away their agency. There are people there who are calling for these bombs and celebrating them. 

I think that now we’re getting to a point where some people are waking up to what that actually means. Something you’d mentioned before is that the Twelve Day War last June seems now like it might have been a prelude to calm people’s nerves, that this won’t be as bad as you think. So when the call for more bombs and war comes, “bomb this regime into submission,” people won’t get what it is — I think now people increasingly are starting to get a grip on it — but still there are people who are diehard for it. Diehard for Pahlavi. Part of this is polarization and information compartmentalization where people are watching Iran International, the Fox News of the Iranian diaspora that beams into the country. They’re getting bad information. There’s conspiracy theories about the girls’ school bombing — all this stuff that we don’t need to get into all this detail about. But those people really are just looking for something to grasp, to hope for, right?

Then you’ve got people on the outside throwing up their hands, and I think, like we’ve seen this in our family discussions where people say, “God, I hope it ends soon.” And what you said to me earlier in our pre-interview is that hope is not really a strategy. What can be our strategy on the outside that’s not just hope? How do we look at this conflict in a way that can advance things for the country and for the people inside that we think is morally sound for us to push?

SNA: I genuinely think that if we care about Iran and Iranians, we need to be really advocating for very serious guardrails around the type of weapons that are being used and the type of targets that are being hit. As I said, if they go after Bushehr nuclear plant, there’s going to be radioactive spillage in Iran and in the Gulf. This is dangerous. This is really dangerous. Petrochemical plants, oil plants, these are the kinds of things that have been hit, and Iran is retaliating. So there needs to be a collective voice of saying, “Enough, stop this, we have to put some limits on this.” The weapons and the targets, that’s number one.

“If they go after Bushehr nuclear plant, there’s going to be radioactive spillage in Iran and in the Gulf. This is dangerous.”

Number two is that at this point, I would like more of us — and those people who have a larger platform than I do — to be talking about the political prisoners. There are thousands and thousands of people who were arrested in January who need to be released, but there are also the long-term ones and the dissidents and others who have had the courage, despite everything that’s going on, to actually issue statements and speak out about what they want change to be. 

So there’s been a pretty vibrant conversation inside Iran from within the regime and from the periphery of it and the opposition around referenda and changing things and so forth.

Third thing. We need to take a page out of the book of the countries that have done this before and learn some lessons. The first place I go back to is South Africa, where the opposition to the apartheid regime gathered together in the 1950s, all sorts of communists and ANC [African National Congress] and all sorts of liberation fighters and others. But they got together, and they articulated the people’s charter, and it was a vision of the South Africa they wanted to create. That document became a roadmap and a destination, if you want, for what they were fighting for. What is it that we are fighting for? What unites us? This is the kind of thing that I wish Pahlavi had done, or I wish that we could now do and actually open up the space for conversations.

“What is it that we are fighting for? What unites us?”

Related to that is the acceptance amongst all of us that Iran is now a country of 93 million people. Even if 5 percent of those people are regime supporters, that is a population of 4.5 million, 5 million people. We have to say that this is a country in which they also have a role. The future of Iran, I would like if it was my choice, I would like a future of Iran where I get to go and visit my father’s grave without fear of being arrested or being detained, where I could take my children to visit the country and see the beauty of my homeland without fear. But I also want other people to be able to go live back home there, and the folks that are living there, who have had to be part and parcel of the system that is there — for them to also feel safe.

All the horrors that this regime actually played out on us, I don’t want to become them. That to me is the question. So it’s really thinking about it in this way of: What does it mean to live with the lens of human rights and inclusivity and plurality? Then what do we do with the most egregious elements, whether it’s in the prisons and the torturers, whether it’s the leaders who ordered the violence, those kinds of things need investigation.

Again, South Africa had a tribunal. They also had a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Other countries have done that. Yemen had a national dialogue process for two years where they brought people from all sorts of political parties and tribes and young people and women to actually imagine the future that they were going to have. These are the kinds of things that we need to have in Iran. 

Let’s remove the embedded violence that has shaped this regime and has infiltrated into society, and actually bring it back to the Iran that we all love and the history of pluralism and frankly, secularism, that goes back 2,500 years. Secularism means Muslims — diehard Muslims — also get to live and practice their lives, right? It’s that kind of a vision that I think we need to be thinking about. 

AG: And we’re going to leave it there. Thanks for joining us on the Intercept Briefing, Sanam.

SNA: Thank you, Ali. 

AG: That does it for this episode. 

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

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

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

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

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

Until next time, I’m Ali Gharib.

The post “Liberate Their Bodies From Their Souls”: The Lies That Sell the Iran War appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
On Thursday, Secretary of Education Cindy Marten announced her recommendation to revoke the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence’s charter, and State Board of Education members voted to approve her recommendation. As a result of the vote, the charter school will close its doors at the end of the 2025-26 school year. The vote marks Delaware’s first charter school closure by state regulators in a decade. 

Delaware education officials announced Thursday that the state will move forward with closing a Georgetown charter school due to persistent struggles with low enrollment.

The Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence (BASSE) will close its doors at the end of this school year, leaving roughly 120 students from throughout Sussex County to find placements in new schools. 

During a Thursday State Board of Education meeting, members voted to confirm Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten’s recommendation – also made that day – to close the school. 

The decision came one day after BASSE students advocated for their future by holding a moment of silence in support of their school. They also lined the hallway with posters that said “We are BASSE strong,” and “Let us learn at BASSE.” 

During the Thursday meeting, Marten cited concerns relating to enrollment and economic viability at the school. In her comments made at the meeting, she referenced a 2025 audit of the school, which stated that “auditors were unable to obtain sufficient information to assess the school’s financial condition.” 

Also during the meeting, State Board of Education Vice President Deborah Stevens noted BASSE staff and families had passionately fought for their school’s survival. Still, she said the reality is that Delaware’s public education funding formula relies on the number of students enrolled in a school. 

“When there is a lack of students, there’s also a lack of funding, and it really does put a school in jeopardy as a result,” she said.

BASSE students and staff advocated for their charter school’s future by holding a moment of silence on Wednesday. They also lined the hallway with posters that said “we are BASSE strong,” and “let us learn at BASSE.” | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JULIA MEROLA

Speaking during the meeting’s public comment period, BASSE Board of Education Secretary Katherine Cauley noted that Marten’s December announcement of a state investigation into the school came just as prospective students were sending in applications for attendance the following year.

She indicated that the timing of the announcement amounted to state officials not giving the schools “a fair chance” to boost its enrollment.    

During a February meeting between BASSE and Delaware’s Charter School Accountability Committee, school officials also argued that Marten’s announcement caused some parents to feel uncertain about their kids’ future at the school.  

Named after the prominent civil rights attorney who was born in nearby Milton, the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence was founded in 2018.

The first to close in seven years 

Shortly after the announcement of the closure on Thursday, BASSE released a statement calling the decision troubling, “given that the Secretary has never visited the school or spoken directly with its leadership.”

The decision marks the first Delaware charter school closure in seven years and the first to be closed by state regulators in a decade. It also leaves Sussex County with just two charter schools, compared to six in Kent County and 15 in New Castle County.

In 2016, the state Board of Education revoked the charter of the Delaware STEM Academy. In recent years, most troubled charter schools have voluntarily closed, rather than face a forced closure.

Charter schools are publicly funded but independently operated by their own board of directors. They are not eligible to receive taxpayer dollars for facilities and capital projects, but do receive state funding for each enrolled student.

The tuition-free schools feature specialized missions or academic curricula that differ from traditional public schools, and that requires them to maintain certain enrollment levels and reporting duties to the state Department of Education, which issues their founding charters.

‘We are BASSE strong’ 

While BASSE will close largely because of low enrollment, many students and parents told Spotlight Delaware on Wednesday that they value the school because of its small learning environment, which they say has benefited students’ learning outcomes. 

BASSE is made up of students from throughout Sussex County, where many school districts grapple with overcrowded schools

One eighth-grade student named Bella said the small-school environment has helped her improve her reading, writing, and public speaking skills because she gets more quality time with her teachers. 

BASSE eighth grader Bella said the small-school environment has helped her improve her reading, writing, and public speaking. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JULIA MEROLA

Bella previously attended the Laurel School District, which is at 76% capacity, according to the Delaware Department of Education

Bella said she wants to become a special education teacher when she grows up, and believes that the tight-knit community at BASSE has helped show her “what it actually takes to be a spec ed teacher.” 

BASSE special education teacher Sherri Webster, who started working at the school at the end of September, also said the school’s small environment helps her develop close bonds with her students. 

In the past, Webster has worked at middle schools where caseloads of 50 special education students caused some to “fall through the cracks.” At BASSE, she typically works with just 18 students — less than half of her previous caseload. 

Webster also said she has seen more success with her students at BASSE than anywhere else she has worked. 

“Here, you’re able to really see your work and how you’re impacting these kids. It’s tremendous,” she said.

BASSE special education teacher Sherri Webster said the school’s small environment helps her develop close bonds with students. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JULIA MEROLA 

Multiple students also told Spotlight Delaware about their experiences with bullying in previous schools.

BASSE, they said, is a safe space for them. 

Lizzie, a ninth grader, said she was bullied at two previous schools before coming to BASSE midway through the 2024-25 school year. She called the charter school her “last hope.”

Ultimately, she met another ninth grader, Maddie, who she says has become “like a sister.”

Aside from close bonds, Lizzie also said BASSE is the first place where she has been able to advocate for herself in the classroom. She has an individualized education plan (IEP) to help with her speech, and says she was able to sit in on an IEP meeting with school staff and her mom — something she never had the opportunity to do before. 

“I really like to advocate for myself in those types of situations,” she said. “I love to be there in the conversation.” 

While parents on Wednesday did not know whether their school would reopen for the next school year, some said they knew for certain that their children would not return to traditional school districts. 

Megan Wharton said her son went to a Christian school for years before deciding he wanted something different. He then enrolled in a traditional public school where  he had an “awful” experience with bullies.

Wharton then enrolled her son at BASSE at the start of this school year, where his life has changed, she said. He is now even on the honor roll.

Wharton said she had been praying that BASSE would not close, and she had already enrolled her son at the charter for the next school year. 

She knew one thing for sure. Her son would not go back to his regular school district for the eighth grade. 

“I will do whatever I have to do … but never back into (traditional) public school,” she said.

The post State will close Georgetown charter school at end of academic year appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 05:40

Anglo-Dutch company, which also owns Dove and Hellmann’s, will focus more on personal care products if deal agreed

Unilever, the owner of Marmite, Dove and Hellmann’s mayonnaise, is in talks to combine its food business with the US-based spice and seasoning maker McCormick.

The Anglo-Dutch food company – which last year spun off its ice-cream division, the home to Ben & Jerry’s, Magnum and Wall’s – has entered discussions over the future of the “highly attractive” business.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 05:30

States were on notice from the U.S. Department of Justice that if they didn’t fall in line, the federal government would force them into compliance.

It wasn’t President Donald Trump’s administration applying pressure. It was the early 1990s, and President Bill Clinton had signed the “motor voter” law requiring states to offer voter registration when someone applies for a driver’s license.

Idaho, with its fiercely independent streak, didn’t want to participate. So instead of going along with the federal government’s new National Voter Registration Act, state legislators followed the recommendation of Idaho’s top election officials and scrambled for a way out. Because the federal voter law said states with same-day voter registration could be exempt, Idaho lawmakers passed a bill almost unanimously, with full support from Republicans, to adopt same-day registration.

Idaho’s chief deputy secretary of state at the time, Ben Ysursa, described the move as an almost existential response to “an insidious federal intrusion into state election procedures.”

The Clinton Justice Department eventually sued three states for not complying with its demands. By then, Idaho’s had a shield against litigation due to its exemption.

Three decades later, the exemption and the philosophy that led to it are at the heart of Idaho’s refusal to comply with a very different demand by the Trump Justice Department. The state’s top election official cites the exemption as one reason he will not sign a deal to give the Trump administration all the voter data his office holds, including sensitive personal information like partial Social Security and driver’s license numbers.

Idaho Secretary of State Phil McGrane is one of about a dozen Republicans nationally to resist the administration’s efforts to gather sensitive voter data ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, in the face of litigation threats from the Justice Department.

In a state that Trump won in 2024 by one of the largest margins in the country, an effort that the administration touts as essential to weeding out noncitizen voters has tested the limits of what a committed Trump stronghold will tolerate when it comes to privacy and federal power.

Lists of voter addresses and party affiliations are often available to the public through an open records request. McGrane provided the government with this version. But state election administrators also keep more sensitive information such as a person’s exact date of birth and partial Social Security number. In Idaho, the law says this information can’t be given out — and that’s what the Trump administration is still after.

Among the other five states exempt from the law, three have refused to give up their voters’ sensitive information and have since been sued by the Justice Department. Wyoming handed over its data without a lawsuit. Other states that are not exempt have also been sued.

McGrane, who is an attorney, told the Justice Department in letters that he doesn’t see any legal reason why he should honor the government’s request — and that, given the administration’s recent admissions over its handling of sensitive data, he couldn’t be sure the department would keep it safe, which is his duty under state law.

The trimmed-down version of voter info he’d already handed over should be enough for “any legitimate inquiry” by the government into how effectively Idaho maintains its voter lists, McGrane wrote.

Through a spokesperson, McGrane declined an interview request from ProPublica, citing the possibility of an impending lawsuit from the Justice Department. A spokesperson for the Justice Department also declined to comment.

A smiling bald man wearing glasses, a suit and an “I voted” sticker looks off camera in front of an abstract background of blurred lights.
Idaho’s Republican secretary of state, Phil McGrane, is one of about a dozen Republicans nationally to resist the administration’s efforts to gather sensitive voter data ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Kyle Green/AP Photo

A Justice Department attorney threatened to sue Idaho in December, in a halting voicemail with McGrane’s office that was obtained by ProPublica and previously reported on by the Idaho Capital Sun.

“I need to get some clarification as to what you’re going to be doing. Or not doing. So, again, I need a response from you,” the lawyer says in the recording. “You may have seen in the news that we have sued six states earlier this week for refusing to provide their voter registration lists, and we’re preparing additional lawsuits.”

The lawyer then tells the secretary of state’s office he would “like to keep everyone out of that as possible — as much as possible, but I haven’t heard anything back from you.”

Ysursa, who served three terms as secretary of state until 2015, said McGrane is “in a much more politically volatile situation than I ever was.”

“Going against Trump in Idaho on certain things, that’s a fine line,” Ysursa said. “And I think he’s doing a good job. He’s doing the right thing.”


Public policy surveys in Idaho conducted since the 1990s have surfaced a current of “distrust or wariness towards federal control or national control,” said Matthew May, survey research director at the Boise State University School of Public Service.

The polling over time has revealed Idahoans’ strong belief in independence, May said.

In the months since McGrane’s refusal, more than 130 constituents have called, emailed and sent handwritten cards and letters to his office. Of those, just one person said they wanted McGrane to provide information to the Trump administration. The others were supportive, appreciative or, in some cases, seemingly panicked by the prospect of their private information being released.

Although the senders skewed more Democratic than Idaho’s electorate, just over half the messages came from Republicans and unaffiliated voters, based on a review of voter registration data for commenters who left their names.

“Mr McGrane has done a masterful job of dancing around the US Justice Dept request for the full voter records of Idaho voters,” wrote one registered Republican. “When the dancing no longer works, I expect Mr McGrane to give them a big fat NO!

“Voting is our one sacred right in this country,” the person continued. “DOJ has no legitimate business receiving our PRIVATE voter information. They may threaten to sue, but so will the voters of Idaho if you grant their request. Do not give them our personal voter information. Thank you.”

Ysursa told ProPublica that he has urged McGrane to “hold the line,” even amid threats of repercussions. Ysursa is one of nine former secretaries of state who filed an amicus brief in federal court, arguing against the administration’s demands for full voter information.

The Trump administration’s creep toward nationalizing elections runs counter to the ethos of “keep your federal hands off Idaho,” Ysursa said.

McGrane is a self-described election nerd who worked his way up through elections offices, as opposed to cultivating a resume as a professional politician. He served as a county elections chief and gained a reputation for approaching voting day with a Super Bowl level of enthusiasm. He also became known for his ability to resist the political winds.

McGrane was one of seven people featured on the cover of Time magazine in 2022 as “the defenders” of America’s elections. That year, McGrane was the only Idaho Republican candidate for secretary of state who did not back the false claim that fraud was responsible for Trump’s loss in the 2020 election.

In perhaps the strongest sign that Trump’s base in Idaho has not been inflamed by McGrane’s pushback on the administration’s demand for voter rolls — which received plenty of media attention locally — he drew no challenger by last month’s deadline to enter the Idaho Republican primary for his position.

A pile of handwritten cards. A post-it note reads: “I’m a Republican, and you restored my hope. Excellent job…developing and protecting Id. elections.” Another card reads: “Mr. McGrane: I am an Idaho Voter and I want to thank you for NOT sharing our voter information with the DOJ. And keeping our information Safe, as it should be. Bravo!”
Voters across Idaho have sent McGrane thank-you notes for not sharing their data. Audrey Dutton/ProPublica

While the Constitution gives states the authority to run elections, the National Voter Registration Act gives the federal government an oversight role when it comes to ensuring voter lists are properly maintained. The law says election officials must make a “reasonable effort” to keep ineligible voters off of the rolls, and typical oversight comes in the form of lawsuits claiming that states aren’t doing a good enough job.

Under Trump, the Justice Department has gone a step further. The department claims it has the right to seize states’ unredacted voter rolls without proving its case in court, citing in lawsuits the powers that agency officials say they have under the National Voter Registration Act, the Help America Vote Act and the Civil Rights Act.

The Justice Department has privately told states more about its intentions, according to emails obtained by ProPublica through public records requests.

In Montana, a federal lawyer told the secretary of state’s legal counsel that the department was requesting voter rolls to “facilitate a review for noncitizens and dead voters,” adding that federal officials would be able to assess whether there are duplicate registrations as well.

The demands come as part of the Trump administration’s focus on hunting down noncitizens on the voter rolls, a long-standing preoccupation for the president. He has long claimed, without evidence, that noncitizens have infiltrated the rolls to influence elections.

Three judges who have considered the government’s lawsuits fully so far have dismissed them, saying that the federal laws the Trump administration cites as the basis for its demands do not apply — especially not where voters’ private information is concerned.

In Oregon, U.S. District Judge Mustafa Kasubhai wrote that the Justice Department’s claims were “troubling,” representing federal overreach.

In California, U.S. District Judge David Carter said the centralization of the information would have a chilling effect on voter registration, leading to decreased turnout as people worry their data could be used for an “inappropriate or unlawful purpose.”

“This risk threatens the right to vote which is the cornerstone of American democracy,” Carter wrote.

In Michigan, U.S. District Judge Hala Y. Jarbou echoed that interpretation, writing that “the risk of having one’s personal information misused will deter people from registering to vote.”

The Justice Department has appealed all of the courts’ decisions.

Leaders in Republican-led states that have held back their voter rolls, meanwhile, have taken pains to show they are making other efforts to keep noncitizens from voting.

Idaho started looking for evidence of problems well before the Trump administration’s request. McGrane said in a letter to the Justice Department that his office worked with federal agencies to check the citizenship status of all registered Idaho voters in the lead-up to the 2024 general election.

Given what Idaho has already done and the processes already in place, the federal government has “no legal or practical rationale for duplicative review,” McGrane wrote.

The tools Idaho employed, he said, included a Department of Homeland Security program known as the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements.

Idaho’s search found 11 cases of noncitizens registered to vote — none of whom actually cast votes in 2024 — and state police referred those cases to the Justice Department’s chief prosecutor in Idaho for review.

McGrane told the Justice Department that he hadn’t heard anything about those cases since.

The post As Trump Demands Voter Data, This Fiercely Independent Red State Says No appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 05:15

Interim president announces changes after firing defence minister, who was close to Maduro, the leader ousted by US

Venezuela’s interim president has said she has replaced all her senior military commanders, the latest in a flurry of changes since the US ousted Nicolás Maduro.

Delcy Rodríguez announced the changes in a social media post a day after firing the long-serving defence minister, who had been close to Maduro, and replacing him with a former intelligence chief.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 05:05

In retaliation for the ongoing U.S.–Israeli war, Iran responded with a novel form of counterattack. For the first time in military history, private sector data centers came under deliberate attack.

In an era when companies known for e-commerce, social networks, and search engines have also become close collaborators with militaries, is bombing their servers fair game?

Three days after the U.S. and Israel began their joint bombardment, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched kamikaze drone strikes against Amazon-owned data centers in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain that provide an array of cloud computing services to customers throughout the Middle East. The impacts and subsequent fires “caused structural damage, disrupted power delivery to our infrastructure, and in some cases required fire suppression activities that resulted in additional water damage,” according to Amazon, resulting in service outages across the region.

The motive behind the attack, according to Iranian state television, was not to block people from ordering groceries or posting to social media, but rather to highlight “the role of these centers in supporting the enemy’s military and intelligence activities.” Though only Amazon’s centers are known to have come under fire, a March 11 tweet from the quasi-official Tasnim News Agency listed dozens of regional facilities, including data centers owned by Microsoft, Google and others, deemed “Enemy Technology Infrastructure” suitable for targeting.

It’s unclear if the Amazon data centers struck by Iranian drone strikes are used for military purposes or civilian purposes, or both. And it’s unknown if the attacks in any way hindered the militaries of the U.S., Israel, or their allies in the Gulf from using AI or other cloud-based services in their war efforts. But with Amazon, Google, and even Facebook parent company Meta are all eager partners of the Pentagon that augment the destructive power of the United States in Iran and elsewhere, server farms may now have the same status as factories building bombs and warplanes.

Scholars of international law and the laws of armed conflict say that when a military runs on the cloud, the cloud becomes a legal military target. But the cloud is an abstraction, not a physical site — a global network of millions of chips in servers spread across hundreds of massive buildings across the planet, servicing both civilian apps and state tools used to surveil and kill. Separating the former from the latter is an extremely difficult task.

“The legality turns on whether the specific facility, at the specific moment, is genuinely serving the military operations of a party to the conflict in a way that offers a concrete and definite advantage to the attacker,” explained León Castellanos-Jankiewicz, a lawyer with the Asser Institute for International and European Law in The Hague.

Sometimes the split between military and civilian use is straightforward. Microsoft, for example, helps run the Joint Warfighter Cloud Capability, which the Pentagon says provides it with “greater lethality.” This work involves the processing of classified data, which the government does not want commingling with civilian tech. Cloud computing services are generally offered via geographically distinct “regions,” each made up of many physical data centers. Customers typically select the region that is closest to them to minimize lag time. Microsoft’s US DoD Central and US DoD East regions are “reserved for exclusive [Department of Defense] use,” according to the company, and are serviced by data centers in Des Moines, Iowa, and Northern Virginia, respectively.

Amazon offers similar cloud regions exclusive for Pentagon use, though the location of these data centers is not public. Oracle, another JWCC provider, operates Pentagon-specific facilities in Chicago, Phoenix, and Virginia. Companies are understandably tight-lipped about where exactly on the map these facilities stand, in no small part because Iran, or any country at war with the U.S., would have reason to target them.

“A data center that is used solely or primarily for military applications is targetable,” said Ioannis Kalpouzos, an international law scholar and visiting professor at Harvard Law, “and a center that supports the Pentagon’s JWCC falls in that category.”

Related

AI’s Imperial Agenda

The march of data center construction has become a point of contention across the United States and around the world, with communities frequently — and sometimes successfully — rallying to block what they view as enormous resource-draining eyesores. But for those living in the widening shadow of data centers, planned or built, their status as military targets may be unsettling beyond concerns over water and energy consumption.

And as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth aggressively shoehorns AI tools into the military wherever possible, the rapid expansion of data centers means the potential proliferation of legitimate military targets across the United States.

With comparisons between the destructive power of AI-augmented warfare and nuclear weaponry becoming more common, the ever-expanding network of American data centers may recreate Cold War anxieties around intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, silo placement. The country’s nuclear launch capabilities were famously clustered in the relatively sparsely populated Upper Midwest, forming a so-called “nuclear sponge” that would draw Soviet nukes away from population centers and toward rural areas and farmland.

But the legal calculus around most data centers will be less clear. Google, for example, says the Pentagon uses both its general purpose public cloud and smaller specialized air-gapped networks that don’t touch the public internet, depending on the sensitivity of the data involved. Even cloud work involving Top Secret military data “can operate within Google’s trusted, secure, and managed data centers.” The company also sells modular mini-data centers for use closer to battlefields or bases.

These arrangements, shrouded in both military and trade secrecy, make it hard to assess whether a server is hosting a student’s homework or Air Force R&D, blurring the legality of attacking data centers that may host both. Google may have little control over how governments use its cloud tools; The Intercept has previously reported that Google executives worried internally they wouldn’t be able to tell how the Israeli military was deploying its cloud services.

“The practical challenge is that cloud infrastructure is often technically opaque, even to providers themselves,” Castellanos-Jankiewicz said. “The services a given data center supports may not be readily ascertainable from the outside or even inside, which complicates the attacker’s legal obligations considerably.”

Amazon and Google’s Project Nimbus similarly provides cloud computing services across the Israeli government, including both civilian agencies and the Ministry of Defense, along with state-owned weapons companies.

“The picture becomes more legally complex when a data center functions as a so-called ‘dual-use’ object,” simultaneously hosting military data or capabilities alongside civilian services,” Castellanos-Jankiewicz told The Intercept. “Once a facility is found to make an effective contribution to military action, the entire physical object can, under the dominant legal view, qualify as a military objective.”

The embrace of commercial cloud computing by the U.S. and others has muddled an already murky legal picture, Castellanos-Jankiewicz explained. “A military’s decision to store classified data or run AI-enabled military systems on commercial cloud infrastructure shared with civilian services could itself raise legal concerns — particularly if the commingling of military and civilian uses makes a strike more likely or increases the foreseeable harm to civilians when one occurs.”

Related

OpenAI on Surveillance and Autonomous Killings: You’re Going to Have to Trust Us

Determining whether a given data center can be legally attacked under international humanitarian law — itself comprised of various treaties that not every country adheres to — relies on a complex series of balancing tests that rarely produce concrete answers. To begin with, every object and person is generally presumed civilian and exempt from attack under this framework. Before launching a strike, a country is supposed to have a verifiable reason to believe a data center contributes to the enemy war effort, and reason to believe an attack will appreciably harm that effort. What “effectively contributes to military action” will, of course, be a source of disagreement.

Anthropic’s Claude large language model was reportedly used to accelerate American airstrikes against Iran; Claude, in turn, was built in part using 500,000 chips housed in an $11 billion Amazon data center in Indiana. If Claude is now arguably a weapon, is this Indiana site the data equivalent of a bomb factory? Kalpouzos, the Harvard Law visiting professor, told The Intercept it depends on the facts at the moment the bomb hits, not past usage. “If the facility is currently used in the training of the LLM that is used in the conduct of military operations — for example, by fine-tuning object classification or user-interaction features — then this could render it targetable,” he said.

In a recent article for Just Security, Klaudia Klonowska and Michael Schmitt said that the law calls for proportionality and restraint even against military targets. An attack against a data center that provided both military and civilian computing would need to be precise enough to destroy the former while minimizing harm to the latter, they argued. But international law may call for a degree of carefulness that militaries have little interest in. “If it were possible to attack only the area of the data center where servers hosting military data are located without destroying the entire center, the attacker would need to do so,” they wrote.

These requirements can be hard to observe in reality. The U.S. and Israel both tout the extreme precision of airstrikes that regularly slaughter civilians. And neither country, nor Iran, is a signatory to some of the relevant legal frameworks that make up the so-called “laws of armed conflict” in the first place.

Indiscriminate warfare practice by U.S. and Israel has also, ironically, been instrumental in reshaping how these laws are interpreted and effectively loosened. Throughout the Israeli genocide in Gaza, Israel’s military and the Pentagon both made clear it’s acceptable to destroy an apartment block or hospital if one first claims there is a genuine military target inside.

The second Trump administration in particular has been keen to more tightly integrate Silicon Valley into the global American killing apparatus, a plan to which the industry has shown itself to be largely amenable. Even after being thoroughly maligned by the administration following the collapse of its Pentagon deal over purported disagreements around safety guardrails, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei issued a public statement making clear he still wanted in on military spending: “Anthropic has much more in common with the Department of War than we have differences. We both are committed to advancing US national security and defending the American people, and agree on the urgency of applying AI across the government.” That attitude, now commonplace across the tech sector, will see the further commingling of consumer tech and warfare both in the abstract and under sprawling data center rooftops across the country.

“These [data centers] are further melding military and civilian infrastructure,” said Kalpouzos, “and together with the increasingly permissive rules of engagement adopted by the U.S. and Israel, are potentially drawing in larger sectors of the economy and society in what is targeted and destroyed.”

The post Data Centers Are Military Targets Now appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 05:00

Having lapped its rivals in the US landscape, the most powerful American sports league is pushing for supersonic expansion of its calendar and its geography

“Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. And they’re getting hoggy.” When Mark Cuban, then owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, fired that line at the NFL in 2014, he was partly goading and partly gloating.

It felt directionally true. The NFL looked bloated, arrogant and vulnerable. Decades-long skeletons were tumbling out of the closet. Crisis followed crisis: concussions, Colin Kaepernick, sinister owners, cheating scandals and an almost Nixonian attempt to institute law and order. Youth participation declined. Football felt, if not dying, then at least dated, creaking under the weight of its own mythology.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 05:00

It’s difficult to put yourself in the place of Cherise Doyley, a pregnant mother of three who found herself facing a judge while in labor at the University of Florida Health hospital in downtown Jacksonville.

She had arrived at the facility with a plan for her birth. She wanted to try for a vaginal delivery, but she understood from years of experience as a professional birthing doula that things don’t always go as planned.

She arrived overnight at the hospital after her water broke. Doctors told her they were concerned about the risk of uterine rupture, a potentially deadly complication for her and her baby. She understood the risk to be less than 2% and repeatedly told doctors she wouldn’t consent to a cesarean without trying to have a vaginal delivery first. The doctors appeared to relent, leaving her to labor for several more hours. 

Then a nursing supervisor wheeled a tablet up to her bed and informed her she was in court. The reason? Failing to agree to a C-section. 

When advocates for pregnant women say that you shouldn’t lose your constitutional rights just because you conceived, this is the kind of situation they’re talking about. 

I’m a reporter based in Alabama, and throughout my career, I’ve focused on women facing the consequences of the state’s fetal personhood policy. That’s the idea that fetuses should have the same legal status as children. My investigation shows how a similar theory played into the cases of two women: Cherise Doyley and Brianna Bennett, who experienced eerily similar situations in Florida. In both cases, they found themselves fighting for their rights to make medical decisions because they were pregnant.

I obtained a video recording of Doyley’s court hearing. Watching her argue her case from her hospital bed shocked me. Even though courts have found time and time again that you can’t force someone to undergo medical treatment — even if it could save someone else’s life — the video underscored for me how pregnant women are the rare exception. 

In several states, judges have ruled pregnant patients can be forced to receive blood transfusions or remain on bed rest if it is in the best interest of the fetus. In Doyley’s case, a court would force her to undergo surgery. 

ProPublica has already investigated how abortion restrictions can lead to pregnant women being denied lifesaving care. Experts worry that the opposite problem, forced treatment, could also become more common in states like Florida that have fetal personhood policies.

Doyley signed a waiver allowing the hospital to discuss her case with ProPublica, but a spokesperson for University of Florida Health in Jacksonville would not comment, citing patient privacy.

By sharing and examining Doyley’s case with her consent, we aim to show you what forced medical treatment can look like. And, while we encourage you to read the full investigation, we wanted to offer you a look inside the Zoom court hearing so you can see for yourself what happened.

The Hearing Convenes

Nurses wheel in a tablet for a virtual hearing, and Cherise Doyley realizes she is facing a court hearing about her birth choices. Obtained by ProPublica

You can see the confusion on Doyley’s face as she realizes she’s being taken to court over her medical decisions. She asked for a lawyer, or at least a patient advocate. Florida courts don’t require lawyers for pregnant women in hearings about their medical decisions and the hospital didn’t provide an advocate, so Doyley had to go it alone.

Judge Michael Kalil was on the call in his black robe and explained how the hearing would work. Doyley, a Black woman, was lying in a hospital bed, hooked up to IVs and monitors and covered by a sheet. She was surrounded on the screen by nearly a dozen doctors and lawyers, most of them white, who offered a lot of testimony about what could happen to Doyley’s baby if she continued to refuse a C-section. 

The Judge Explains the Proceedings

Judge Michael Kalil explains that the state attorney’s office, at the request of the hospital, has asked him to grant an order for an emergency C-section. Obtained by ProPublica

Dr. Erin Burnett said during the hearing that she did not think Doyley could successfully give birth vaginally. A long labor could increase the risk of uterine rupture, which could kill Doyley and the child, she said. Dr. John Davis, the chair of the obstetrics and gynecology department, said in the hearing the hospital had been recognized for its low C-section rate and did not perform unnecessary surgeries. Doyley’s condition required intervention, he said.

“Everybody was very concerned about the baby’s welfare,” Jenny Van Ravestein, director of women’s services at the hospital, said during the hearing. 

Burnett and Davis did not respond to requests for comment, and the hospital declined ProPublica’s requests to interview them and others involved in Doyley’s care.

The research on the risks of uterine rupture after prior C-sections is unclear. Studies have found that 0.15% to 2.3% of these labors resulted in a rupture, depending on a number of factors such as body mass, a history of successful vaginal births and whether the labor began spontaneously or had to be induced. Either number felt pretty low to Doyley. 

What the testimony doesn’t include, though, is much about the downsides Doyley faced from having another C-section, which could entail a long recovery, infection and other complications, along with the risk of death. 

But she couldn’t explain her reasoning until the judge decided to unmute her.

Doyley Testifies

When Doyley is unmuted, she testifies that a C-section could put her life in danger. Obtained by ProPublica

Doyley had her reasons to want to avoid major abdominal surgery: She had difficult recoveries from her previous C-sections. A hemorrhage after a prior C-section had sent her back to the hospital for almost a week. 

She worried that she wouldn’t be able to care for her children if she was struggling with recovery from the surgery itself and potentially also with complications. And she was concerned that if she were to die, her children could fall into the foster care system. Doyley said she didn’t see surgery as a low-risk option. She wondered aloud in the hearing if her other children’s lives — and her own — mattered to the hospital and doctors. 

Kimberly Mutcherson, a law professor at Rutgers University, said that women who want to opt for care that seems risky to doctors often face accusations of not caring about their babies.

“You’re somebody who is a bad mother, right?” Mutcherson said. “Which is a huge part of what the thought process is here. This is not what mothers do. Mothers sacrifice, including allowing somebody to cut you open.”

Obstetricians care for two interconnected patients — the mother and her fetus. Sometimes their needs conflict. When that happens, the ethical guidelines for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists say the doctor should prioritize the well-being of the mother. However, these cases show that doctors sometimes elevate the welfare of the fetus over the mother, said Elizabeth Kukura, a law professor at Drexel University.

“It reflects a deep understanding of women as the incubators,” Kukura said. “Women in their role as childbearers.”

The hearing dragged on for more than two hours. At one point, Doyley asked for a transfer to another hospital because she did not want anyone involved in the hearing to operate on her if she needed a C-section. Hospital officials said that wasn’t likely to happen since another hospital would have to accept her as a patient first.

Doyley agreed to stay at University of Florida Health but asked if the hospital could assign a Black nurse or doctor to her care. She wondered aloud in the hearing what would happen in the morning, after the 6 a.m. deadline imposed by the court had passed. “They’re going to tie me up and go give me a C-section against my will?”

A Deadline Is Set

Doyley says she doesn’t like her care being determined by nurses and doctors, most of whom were white, who have been involved in her court hearing. Obtained by ProPublica

The judge did not order an immediate C-section, but he said the hospital could perform one in an emergency without her consent. 

Doyley later said she did her best to maintain her poise and composure. And at the end, she even thanked the judge and highlighted how absurd the whole thing felt to her.

“I appreciate you spending two hours on a Sunday going through my medical history and fighting for my vagina and my baby,” she said.

The Judge Rules

Doyley thanks the judge at the end of the hearing, trying to keep her composure. Obtained by ProPublica

Overnight, doctors said the baby’s heart rate dropped for several minutes. They rushed Doyley into surgery, and she, once again, gave birth via C-section.

The next morning at 8 a.m., nurses again put Doyley in front of a tablet for a final hearing. Doyley said the baby was born at 2 a.m., and she still hadn’t been taken to the neonatal intensive care unit to see her daughter. 

“Tell them I don’t want to be on,” she said. “Y’all can have your own meeting. I want to see my child.”

Once Kalil heard the baby had been born, he wished Doyley well and closed the case.

The Case Is Closed

Hours after her C-section delivery, Doyley finds herself back in a hearing before she even gets to see her baby. Obtained by ProPublica

In response to questions from ProPublica, Kalil wrote in an email that the judicial code of conduct prohibits judges from commenting on cases. “These ethical standards exist to protect the integrity of the judicial process, ensure fairness to all parties, and preserve the Court’s neutrality,” he wrote.

For a year, Doyley and her family tried to forget about the case and move on. But she couldn’t shake the feeling of violation. She said if the hospital could force her to undergo surgery, it could happen to anyone.

“When we use the courts to basically strong-arm, bully someone into an unnecessary medical procedure against their will, it’s akin to torture, in my eyes,” Doyley said.

The post She Was in Labor at a Florida Hospital. Then She Was in Zoom Court for Refusing a C-Section. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 05:00

Rather than evacuation, Israel’s defense minister said the mission now is “to protect northern communities against raids and anti-tank fire.”

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 05:00

Israel’s assault on the world’s largest natural gas deposit has renewed tensions between the two allies’ end goals in Iran.

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

This is not Britain’s war, it’s Trump’s and Netanyahu’s. The prime minister should be wary of becoming ensnared like Blair was with Iraq

Is this the turning point? A deranged US president and an Israeli prime minister facing prosecution are seeking to entice the armies of the world into the stupidest war of the 21st century. Israel’s strike this week on Iran’s South Pars gas field was clearly meant to provoke an Iranian retaliation so massive as to ensure a ferocious response from Donald Trump. Thus escalation beckons. This is how small wars become big.

There is only one way of calling a halt. It is for Trump and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu to stop bombing Iran. Yet both leaders clearly see themselves as trapped. Trump, having already claimed to have won the war, now feels lonely. Though he has amassed the largest aggressive force of modern times, he pleads with his one-time allies to come and give him moral support. But Trump started this war. He must face the wound to his pride that may go with stopping it. He must then complete the harder task of getting Israel also to stop.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 03:01

Unseasonably warm and even dangerous temperatures this week were up to 30F above average for the time of year

The record-breaking heatwave scorching the US west this week would have been “virtually impossible” if not for the climate crisis, a team of scientists has determined.

Millions of Americans from the Pacific coast to the Rockies baked under unseasonably warm and even dangerous temperatures this week, with temperatures up to 30F (17C) above average for the time of year.

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

AleRunner writes: "China is helping Cuba race to capture renewable solar energy as the United States imposes an effective oil blockade on the Caribbean island, creating its worst energy crisis in decades," reports The Washington Post. Later in the article, it states that "China's decades-long push into clean energy technology is now helping to protect it from the soaring oil and gas crisis spurred by Trump's war against Iran," and that "Chinese exports of solar equipment to Cuba skyrocketed from about $5 million in 2023 to $117 million in 2025 and show no sign of stopping." According to researchers from Ember, solar could be responsible for as much as 10% of Cuba's electricity generation. "That would be among the fastest expansions of solar energy anywhere [...] and place Cuba ahead of most countries -- including the U.S. -- in the share of electricity generated by sun power," the report says. As the Iran war drives energy prices higher, countries around the world are working overtime to reduce their reliance on fossil fuels. China sees this as a big opportunity. "Chinese authorities have made clear that they intend to replicate what they're doing in Cuba elsewhere," reports the Washington Post.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 02:20

IEA makes 10 recommendations to help households and businesses prepare for a drawn-out disruption to energy markets

The world’s energy watchdog has advised governments to reduce highway speeds and encouraged workers to carpool or, ideally, work from home to combat soaring oil prices and impending fuel shortages caused by the Middle East conflict.

It has also recommended countries consider limiting car access to designated zones in large cities, by giving vehicles with odd-numbered plates access on different weekdays to those with even-numbered plates.

Work from home where possible to save petrol.

Reduce highway speed limits by at least 10km/h to reduce fuel usage.

Encourage public transport to reduce oil demand.

Limit car access to roads in large cities through a number-plate rotation scheme.

Increase car sharing.

Encourage efficient driving for commercial vehicles through load optimisation and vehicle maintenance.

Divert LPG use from transport to preserve it for essential needs like cooking.

Avoid air travel where possible.

Encourage electric cooking and other options to reduce reliance on LPG.

Help industrial facilities switch between different petrochemical feedstocks to free up LPG.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 02:05

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 02:00

Artificial intelligence agent instructed engineer to take actions that exposed user and company data internally

An AI agent instructed an engineer to take actions that exposed a large amount of Meta’s sensitive data to some of its employees, in the latest example of AI causing upheaval in a large tech company.

The leak, which Meta confirmed, happened when an employee asked for guidance on an engineering problem on an internal forum. An AI agent responded with a solution, which the employee implemented – causing a large amount of sensitive user and company data to be exposed to its engineers for two hours.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 01:33

Boyband drops album that speaks to its Korean roots ahead of Seoul comeback concert, with more than a quarter of a million fans expected to attend

K-pop stars BTS released a new album on Friday billed as reflecting the maturing boy band’s Korean roots and identity, as buzz built ahead of their open-air comeback concert in the heart of Seoul.

The Saturday night gig, which is expected to draw around 260,000 people, will be BTS’s first after a hiatus of almost four years while all seven members served compulsory military service. It comes ahead of an 82-date world tour.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-20 00:50
  • Dončić drops 60 as Lakers win eighth straight

  • LeBron posts triple-double in Miami return

Luka Dončić scored 60 points, LeBron James had a triple-double on a night where he tied the NBA record for games played, and the Los Angeles Lakers pushed their season-best winning streak to eight games with a 134-126 win over the Miami Heat on Thursday night.

It tied the second-most points Dončić ever scored in a game, behind a 73-point night against Atlanta in 2024 and matching a 60-point night against New York in 2022. Dončić also broke the record for a Heat opponent, topping the 58-point effort from James Harden for Houston on 28 February 2019.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-20 00:50

After a trip back out to the launch pad, NASA's Artemis II rocket will be readied for a historic flight to the moon.

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

How America can take advantage of the status quo.

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

A socioeconomic divide shapes the country’s politics—and its aggressive foreign Policy.

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

External escalation, internal consolidation.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 23:33

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: A lobbying trade body for smaller cloud providers is asking the European Commission to impose interim measures blocking Broadcom from terminating the VMware Cloud Service Provider program, calling the decision a death sentence for some tech suppliers and an illegal squeeze on customer choice. As The Reg revealed in January, Broadcom shuttered the scheme, a move sources claimed affects hundreds of CSPs across Europe and curtails options for enterprises buying VMware software and services. The Cloud Infrastructure Service Provider in Europe (CISPE) trade group, representing nearly 50 tech suppliers, filed the complaint today with the EC Directorates-General, accusing Broadcom of bully-boy tactics, and calling for authorities to halt what it terms as "ongoing abuse." Francisco Mingorance, CISPE secretary general, said of the complaint: "Businesses -- both cloud providers and their customers -- are being irreparably damaged by Broadcom's unfair actions, which we believe are illegal. "After imposing outrageous and unjustified price hikes immediately following the acquisition of VMware, Broadcom is now applying the 'coup de grace'. We need urgent intervention to force them to change. The only way to stop bullies is to stand up to them." CISPE claims that, since Broadcom completed its $69 billion takeover of VMware in October 2023, prices have risen tenfold, payment is demanded upfront, products are bundled regardless of customer need, and minimum commitments are based on potential rather than actual consumption. The VMware Cloud Service Provider (VCSP) program officially closed in January and all transactions must be complete by March 31. After that date, only a select group of suppliers will be able to sell VMware subscriptions -- either standalone or as part of a broader service. Across Europe, we're told this equates to hundreds of businesses losing their authorization. For some, the loss of VCSP status effectively destroys their market. Those whose operations were built around VMware must now hand customers to another authorized supplier or begin the costly migration to an alternative platform. Broadcom said in a statement responding to the complaint: "Broadcom strongly disagrees with the allegations by CISPE, an organization funded by hyperscalers, which misrepresent the realities of the market. We continue to be committed to investing significantly in our European VMware Cloud Service Provider partners... helping them offer alternatives to the hyperscalers and meet the evolving needs of European businesses and organizations."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 23:26

The Justice Department says it has shuttered four websites that were allegedly used by Iranian government-linked groups to post hacked information and threaten regime critics.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 22:52

Samoa and Tonga raise supply concerns with foreign partners as businesses and residents in Papua New Guinea grapple with higher fuel prices amid the Iran war

The leaders of some Pacific countries have appealed for help with oil supplies while others urge against “panic buying” as the import-reliant nations grapple with fears over possible fuel shortages and escalating costs caused by war in the Middle East.

Oil prices have surged to nearly $110 a barrel after strikes against energy infrastructure in Iran and the Gulf states.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 22:26

This blog is now closed – our coverage of the Middle East crisis continues here

Turning to Australia now, a petrol tsar will manage “unprecedented” supply issues caused by the Middle East conflict as the finishing touches are put on measures to address dire shortages in many regional areas.

Prime minister Anthony Albanese convened a snap virtual meeting of the national cabinet on Thursday to discuss major price shocks and shortages driven by the US-Israel war on Iran.

My government will be announcing more measures to prepare the nation for supply chain challenges over coming days and weeks.

Our fuel supply is currently secure. However, I want us to be over-prepared.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 22:11

The vote by the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, whose members are supporters of the president and were appointed by him earlier this year, was without objection.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 22:09

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 20.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 21:59

This live blog is now closed.

Answering a reporter’s question on Iran’s missile capabilities, considering the country has managed to strike numerous states in the Gulf, Gen Dan Caine, the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, said Tehran retains “some capability” to attack American assets.

“They came into this fight with a lot of weapons.,” he said, adding that the US continues to be “as aggressive and assertive” in striking Iran.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 21:37

The FCC announced Thursday that it had approved the $6.2 billion merger of major broadcast station owners Nexstar and Tegna.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 21:31
Truly I tell you, one of you will nosedive tonight.

Do most of you ride solo, or do you usually roll with a crew? If you ride with friends, how deep is the squad typically? Just you and one other rider, 3-5, or 12 apostles deep?

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

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 21:14

As other Asian economies race to conserve energy, China has huge reserves of oil and gas as well as alternative energy sources like wind and solar

Xi Jinping has been preparing for a crisis like this for years. China must secure its energy supply “in its own hands”, its president was reported to have said during a visit to one of its vast oilfields in 2021.

The US-Israel war on Iran plunged the Middle East into a deep conflict, with the strait of Hormuz – one of the most important waterways in global trade – all but closed and key energy facilities across the region under attack.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 21:00

This morning, I powered on my board, saw the juice was low, and tossed it on the charger. About 2 hours later, I went to check on it and the light bar was showing the same low reading as it had been when I plugged it in. I cycled the power, and the light bar was now looking more accurate, but in the onewheel app, it was showing connected, with 0% battery. Closed the app, powered down the board, relaunched the app, and booted up the board. Light bar looked cool, and the app was showing 90%, but when I opened diagnostics, it was showing 0's across the board. Everything. Hmmmm.

I decided to charge it up to 100% and leave it on the charger for the next 10ish hours, even though I've heard the GT-S is balanced as soon as the charger turns green and the light on the board goes off. When I powered it on, the board showed 100, the light bar was fully illuminated (almost too illuminated. it seems like when you power the board on, the light gets fully illuminated, but once it cycles, if you look at it from a side angle, it can look like a few LED's aren't lit up. maybe i'm imagining that). I took it for a cruise, tho., and brought it down to 85%, but the light bar is still fully illuminated.

I ride this year round. It gets charged daily. I avoid bad weather. Any ideas what I should look into, or be concerned about?

submitted by /u/Partially-Functional
[link] [comments]

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 21:00
Ryan Shore

RYAN SHORE
Staff Reporter

As the NCAA regular season comes to a close, there was a lot at stake for the Delaware Fightin’ Blue Hens going into the Thursday night game against the Sam Houston State University Bearkats. The nationally televised, Star Wars themed night brought in a packed student section in a must-win scenario.

Before the transition from the Coastal Athletic Conference (CAA) to the Conference USA (CUSA) division over the summer, the Blue Hens lost a heartbreaker to the University of North Carolina Wilmington Seahawks in the CAA Championship game, ending their run in the conference. 

Despite making the conference championship game, the Hens were the 12-seed in the division. Delaware witnessed a similar fate in its first CUSA season this year. Yet, by winning Thursday’s game, the Blue Hens keep their opportunity to compete in the conference tournament in their first year.

The game began with both teams running strong on defense until the Blue Hens found an early run of fast breaks. The Bearkats spent the rest of the first half fighting back and the game sat tied at 33 after the second quarter. 

Senior guard Justyn Fernandez had a team-high thirteen points at the half, with the Blue Hens having seven big three-pointers as well. Junior guard Christian Bliss had two big steals, as well as senior forward Houston Emory with two major blocks on defense.

The second half began in a similar fashion, with the Hens beginning the half with a 17-6 run, only to find themselves tied with seven minutes remaining. As minutes started to slip away, Delaware found its momentum. Bliss, Fernandez and guard Alex Kazanecki showed up in the clutch, combining for 12 of the team’s 14 threes. Bliss and Fernandez combined for 48 points on the night. 

In the closing minutes, the Bearkats did all they could to gain the lead back, but the clock hit zero and the Fightin’ Blue Hens won 83-80 in a Thursday night thriller.

Fernandez showed confidence and resilience throughout the whole game, with 26 points, four assists and a pair of rebounds.

 “Controlling what we can control, just sticking to the game plan, making sure to complete the task at hand today,” Fernandez said. “Just continue to be aggressive, continue to go through our progression. We’re happy that we were able to get to the line and convert at the line more than anything. As a group, just sticking together, trying to hold them to one possession, continuing to follow the game plan.”

Regardless of the close game, the Blue Hens’ defense had a highlight reel that included eight steals and 10 blocks, compared to five steals and one block from the Bearkats. Bliss had four steals and forward Houston Emory ended the game with four blocks and a steal, running the paint on his own.

With a three-game win streak around mid-February, followed by a losing streak going into their matchup with the second-seed Bearkats, the Blue and Gold won their first game in the past five as they prepared for what may be the end of their season. 


Delaware played the regular season closer two days later, where they fell to the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs with a 81-38 final score. The Blue Hens finished the 2025-26 campaign with a 10-21 overall record, and a 6-14 conference record.


Delaware Men’s Basketball: A Thursday night thriller on Star Wars night was first posted on March 19, 2026 at 8:00 pm.
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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:53

Federal law says living presidents can’t appear on currency, but commission approves design for US’s 250th birthday

A federal arts commission on Thursday approved the final design for a 24-karat gold commemorative coin bearing Donald Trump’s image to help celebrate the US’s 250th birthday on 4 July.

The vote by the US Commission of Fine Arts, whose members are supporters of the Republican president and were appointed by him earlier this year, was without objection. It clears the way for the US Mint to begin production on the coin, whose size and denomination are still under discussion.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:50

The man who attacked a synagogue in Michigan last week sent a photo of himself with the AR-style rifle he had during the attack to a family member in Lebanon, according to a U.S. official.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:45

US president was meeting with Japanese PM when he said: ‘Who knows better about surprise than Japan?’

It would be funny if it wasn’t so Trumpy.

Hosting the Japanese prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, in the Oval Office on Thursday, Donald Trump could not resist mocking Japan about its 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor during the second world war.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:35

The vernal equinox heralds the arrival of spring in the Northern Hemisphere. But have you heard the myth about balancing an egg on its end?

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:31

Scott Bessent says actions will increase oil supply and bring down prices, but long-term effects in question

The US may soon remove sanctions on Iranian oil stranded on tankers at sea, the treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, said on Thursday as Washington seeks to curb prices soaring over Iran’s closure of the strait of Hormuz.

“In the coming days, we may un-sanction the Iranian oil that’s on the water. It’s about 140m barrels,” Bessent said during an appearance on Fox Business Network’s Mornings with Maria.

Continue reading...

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:14

The 31-year-old Georgia woman went to the emergency room with severe pain after allegedly taking abortion pills at home, according to police and court records.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:07

German chancellor Friedrich Merz described Orbán’s U-turn on the loan Hungary had agreed to in December as ‘a gross act of disloyalty’

EU leaders fumed after Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, refused to drop his opposition to a vital €90bn (£78bn) loan for Ukraine, accusing him of betrayal and acting in bad faith.

German chancellor Friedrich Merz described Orbán’s U-turn on the loan Hungary had agreed to in December as “a gross act of disloyalty” adding: “I am firmly convinced that it will leave deep marks.”

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-20 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 20 #1013.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-20 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 20, No. 747.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 20:33

ABC has canceled its already filmed season of "The Bachelorette" starring Taylor Frankie Paul after video surfaced of a 2023 incident in which she was charged with assault.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-20 00:41

In her first public interview since the investigation, Dolores Huerta said that at the time of the incidents, she felt alone and trapped.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 20:02

Mother and child held in notorious Rio Grande Valley detention centre despite presenting visa, family says

A Canadian mother and her seven-year-old daughter, who has autism, have been detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Texas since Saturday, family members have said.

Relatives of Tania Warner and her daughter Ayla Lucas say they were detained unlawfully. They are uncertain about what problem ICE found with their immigration paperwork.

Continue reading...

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 19:56

Some highs in California, Nevada and Arizona recorded at 25-35F above normal, with widespread alerts and closures

States across the US south-west recorded blistering temperatures at the tail end of winter, including some of the hottest March temperatures ever recorded in the US, with forecasts indicating hotter days are still to come.

California, Nevada and Arizona were all under heat warnings on Thursday amid record-breaking temperatures.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 19:52

It's tough to ignore the buzz of your phone when a new message arrives.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 19:51

When Google said they were going to require verification from every single Android developer that would end the ability to install applications from outside of the Play Store (commonly wrongfully referred to as “sideloading”), it caused quite a backlash. The company then backtracked a little bit, and said they would come up with an “advanced flow” to make sure installing applications from outside of the Play Store remained possible. Well, Google has detailed this “advanced flow”, and as everyone expected, it’s such a massive list of onerous hoops to jump through they might as well just lock Android down to the Play Store and get it over with.

First, if a developer is verified, you can download their applications to your device and install them the same way you can do now. Second, developers with “limited distribution accounts”, such as students or hobby projects, can share their applications with up to 20 devices without verification. Third, and this is where the fun starts, we have unverified developers – basically what all Android developers sharing applications outside of the Play Store are now.

Here’s the full “advanced flow” as described by Google to allow you to install an application from an unverified developer:

  • Enable developer mode in system settings: Activating this is simple. This prevents accidental triggers or “one-tap” bypasses often used in high-pressure scams.
  • Confirm you aren’t being coached: There is a quick check to make sure that no one is talking you into turning off your security. While power users know how to vet apps, scammers often pressure victims into disabling protections.
  • Restart your phone and reauthenticate: This cuts off any remote access or active phone calls a scammer might be using to watch what you’re doing.
  • Come back after the protective waiting period and verify: There is a one-time, one-day wait and then you can confirm that this is really you who’s making this change with our biometric authentication (fingerprint or face unlock) or device PIN. Scammers rely on manufactured urgency, so this breaks their spell and gives you time to think.
  • Install apps: Once you confirm you understand the risks, you’re all set to install apps from unverified developers, with the option of enabling for 7 days or indefinitely. For safety, you’ll still see a warning that the app is from an unverified developer, but you can just tap “Install Anyway.”
↫ Matthew Forsythe at the Android Developers Blog

Setting aside the fact that developer verification is, in and of itself, a massive problem, I’m kind of okay with a few scary warnings, a disclaimer, and perhaps a single reboot to enable installing applications outside of the Play Store – a few things to make normal people shrug their shoulders and not bother. However, adding enabling developer mode and a goddamn 24-hour waiting period is batshit insanity, and clearly has the intention of discouraging everyone, effectively locking Android to the Play Store.

Android is already basically an entirely locked-down, closed-source platform, and once this “advanced flow” comes into force, there’s virtually no difference between iOS and Android, especially for us Europeans who get similarly onerous anti-user nonsense when trying to install alternative application stores on iOS. I see no reason to buy Android over iOS at this point – might as well get the faster phone with better update support.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 19:30

From Apple and Samsung to budget wildcards, here are the smartwatches actually worth buying after testing dozens.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 19:05

If prosecuted, case against 31-year-old would be one of first in Georgia since it passed 2019 law banning most abortions

A 31-year-old Georgia woman has been charged with murder by police who say she took pills to induce an illegal abortion.

If state prosecutors decide to move forward with the murder charge brought by local police against Alexia Moore, her case would be one of the first instances of a woman being charged for terminating a pregnancy in Georgia since it passed a 2019 law banning most abortions.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 19:04
Onewheel GTS is it worth it

Onewheel GTS for 1,200$ with 3,000 miles on it is it worth the buy what are the things bound to go wrong ?

submitted by /u/FoundationSimilar772
[link] [comments]

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

As attacks rattled markets, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Trump administration might lift restrictions on Iranian oil already loaded onto vessels.

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

Cloudflare's CEO predicts AI-driven bot traffic will surpass human internet traffic by 2027, as AI agents generate vastly more web requests than people. "If a human were doing a task -- let's say you were shopping for a digital camera -- and you might go to five websites. Your agent or the bot that's doing that will often go to 1,000 times the number of sites that an actual human would visit," Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said in an interview at SXSW this week. "So it might go to 5,000 sites. And that's real traffic, and that's real load, which everyone is having to deal with and take into account." TechCrunch reports: Before the generative AI era, the internet was only about 20% bot traffic, with Google's web crawler being the largest, according to Prince, whose infrastructure and security company is used by one-fifth of all websites. But beyond some other reputable crawlers, the only other bots were those used by scammers and bad actors. "With the rise of generative AI, and its just insatiable need for data, we're seeing a rise where we suspect that, in 2027, the amount of bot traffic online will exceed the amount of human traffic that's online," Prince said. The executive also noted that this change to the web would require the development of new technologies, like sandboxes for AI agents that can be spun up on the fly and then torn down when their task has finished. These could come into play when consumers ask AI agents to perform certain tasks on their behalf, like planning a vacation. "What we're trying to think about is, how do we actually build that underlying infrastructure where you can -- as easily as you open a new tab in your browser -- you can actually spin up new code, which can then run and service the agents that are out there," Prince said. He imagines there will soon be a time when millions of these "sandboxes" for agents would be created every second. "I think the thing that people don't appreciate about AI is it's a platform shift," Prince said. "AI is another platform shift ... the way that you're going to consume information is completely different."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:58

Akrotiri and Dhekelia bases have become targets for Iran after outbreak of Middle East crisis

EU leaders have pledged to stand behind Cyprus as it seeks “an open and frank discussion” on the future of the British bases on the island, which have become a target after the outbreak of the latest Middle East crisis.

Ahead of an EU summit on Thursday, Cyprus’s president, Nikos Christodoulides, said he wanted “an open and frank discussion with the British government” regarding the status and future of the British bases on the island.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:32

Legislators propose designating 31 March as Farmworkers Day in light of allegations against late labor leader

California quickly moved to rename Cesar Chavez Day as Farmworkers Day in the wake of allegations the labor leader abused women and girls.

Less than two weeks before the annual holiday celebrating Chavez, the California state assembly and state senate said they were introducing a bill to redesignate the day.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:32

Few Americans feel they know a lot of the specifics about the SAVE Act.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:30

Popular shows and films can be had without jetting off to a pirate site.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:13

The body James Gracey, the University of Alabama student who disappeared in Barcelona, has been found, Spanish police said Thursday.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 18:02

Foreign minister issues warning after Israeli attack on South Pars gasfield and as Qatar reels from retaliatory strike

Iran said on Thursday it would show “zero restraint” if its energy infrastructure was targeted again as Qatar revealed that almost a fifth of its liquefied natural gas export capacity had been knocked out in an Iranian strike that is likely to have a years-long impact.

The warning, delivered by the Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, followed Israel’s attack on Iran’s massive South Pars gasfield – which it shares with Qatar – which triggered Iranian retaliatory strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas complex and other Gulf neighbours, sending stock markets tumbling globally and triggering sharp increases in gas prices.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:00
My XR is still working

not much to see here. I just wanted to post that my XR is still working and nothing is wrong with it. it continues to work.

there's a lot on here about issues and breaks and fixes and stuff like that. I just wanted to post something for people who don't have a one wheel yet, so they know they do work sometimes.

submitted by /u/PerspectiveNo4332
[link] [comments]

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 18:00

The UK regulator Ofcom fined 4chan nearly $700,000 (520,000 pounds) for failing to implement age checks and address illegal content risks under the Online Safety Act, but the platform mocked the penalty and signaled it won't pay. A lawyer representing the company responded with an AI-generated cartoon image of a hamster, writing in a follow-up post on X: "In the only country in which 4chan operates, the United States, it is breaking no law and indeed its conduct is expressly protected by the First Amendment." The BBC reports: The fines also include 50,000 pounds for failing to assess the risk of illegal material being published and a further 20,000 pounds for failing to set out how it protects users from criminal content. 4Chan has refused to pay all previous fines from Ofcom. "Companies -- wherever they're based -- are not allowed to sell unsafe toys to children in the UK. And society has long protected youngsters from things like alcohol, smoking and gambling. The digital world should be no different," said Ofcom's Suzanne Cater. "The UK is setting new standards for online safety. Age checks and risk assessments are cornerstones of our laws, and we'll take robust enforcement action against firms that fall short."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:54

James ‘Jimmy’ Gracey was at nightclub in Spanish city for spring break when he separated from friends at about 3am

The body of James “Jimmy” Gracey, a 20-year-old college student from Illinois, was found Thursday in the water off a Barcelona beach, police in Spain said.

Gracey’s body was found by police divers and positively identified, the press office for Catalonia’s regional police in Barcelona told the Associated Press.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:41

Domestic energy companies could benefit from high oil prices in the short-term, but take a hit if the Iran war drags on.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:38

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:36

From Windows models with Qualcomm Snapdragon X and Intel Panther Lake processors to MacBooks running on Apple's latest M5 chip, these are the longest-lasting laptops we've tested.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 17:35

Mortgage rates, though still well below their level a year ago, have edged up since the Iran war erupted. Here's why.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:33

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 20, No. 543.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:25

Former FBI Director James Comey has been subpoenaed by prosecutors in Miami as part of the Justice Department's investigation into Obama-era intelligence officials.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:18

Democrats are fighting hard against the Republican-backed Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, or SAVE America Act, saying it would erect roadblocks for Americans seeking to register to vote or cast a ballot.

As the Senate began several days of debate about the bill March 17, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., emphasized the problems he said the legislation would cause.

The act "would force Americans to register (to vote) only in person, something only 5% of Americans do today," he told reporters.

Schumer is correct that the act would require documentary proof of citizenship be presented in person to register to vote. But he’s wrong about the percentage of Americans who register to vote in person, according to federal data. Federal surveys show it’s higher than that.

With President Donald Trump’s strong support, the House passed the SAVE America Act in February following years of falsehoods and exaggerations about noncitizen voting, something that rarely occurs

What does the bill say about in-person voter registration?

The bill says someone seeking to register to vote "shall not be registered to vote in an election for federal office unless the applicant presents documentary proof of United States citizenship in person to the office of the appropriate election official" by the registration deadline.

Eliza Sweren-Becker, deputy director for the voting rights and election program at the liberal Brennan Center for Justice, said this requirement would apply not only to new registrants and those registering in a new state, but also to potentially a lot of people who don’t consider themselves new registrants.

For instance, depending on how a state interpreted the bill’s language, moving to a new county within a state or to a new voting precinct could count as a new voter registration and trigger the citizenship proof requirement.

States’ decisions on how to classify residential moves will affect whether the documents are needed, Sweren-Becker said.

The law is also vague about who qualifies as "an election official," she said. Would that mean only election workers? Or would an employee of a motor vehicle agency — where many voting registrations are made — qualify?

How many Americans currently register to vote in person?

Data from the federal Election Assistance Commission shows the percentage of voters who register in person is significantly higher than Schumer’s count. 

A Schumer spokesperson told PolitiFact the senator referred to a report by the liberal Center for American Progress that used data from a 2022 survey by the Election Assistance Commission. The report said 5.9% of voters registered in person at election offices. 

But this data is outdated and excludes in-person registration at other government offices and at polling places.

Every two years, the Election Assistance Commission compiles the Election Administration and Voting Survey. The most recent edition reflects 2024 election cycle data, including the methods Americans used to register to vote during the two years before the 2024 election.

The survey tracked at least six ways voters would have registered in person: at election offices (6%); at polling places and voting sites (2.2%); at public assistance offices (1%); at disability services offices (0.1%); at armed forces recruitment offices (0.1%); and at other public facilities, such as libraries (1.8%). 

Collectively, these add up to 11.2%.

"Clearly, more than the 5% or 6% going to elections offices are registering in person," said Matthew Weil, vice president for governance at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank. 

An even larger share of voter registrations — 30.7% — came from motor vehicle agencies. Federal law allows voters to register to vote when they get driver’s licenses or do other automobile-related tasks. (For another 8.7% of voters, the registration method was not recorded.)

Because some states allow voter registration online through motor vehicle agencies, and states’ policies on voter registration at those agencies vary, it’s unclear what share of that 30.7% is occurring in person versus online. The data doesn’t specify, a spokesperson for the Election Assistance Commission told PolitiFact. 

But voting administration experts said it was highly likely that many such registrations required an in-person visit.

So the percentage of-in person voter registrations before the 2024 election was between 11% (if all motor vehicle agency registrations were online, which is unlikely) and 42% (if every motor vehicle agency interaction was in person). 

The survey listed four categories that do not require registering in person, and collectively they accounted for almost half of all voter registrations before the 2024 election. Automatic voter registration — an option in some states where voters are registered automatically unless they opt out — accounted for 25.2%. Online registration accounted for 13.9%; mail, email and fax registrations accounted for 8.3%; and voter registration drives accounted for 2%. 

"A sizable share of Americans do register online and by mail, sharing their drivers license information for identity verification or showing ID when they vote," said Lisa Bryant, a political scientist at California State University-Fresno. "These convenient options will very likely disappear if SAVE were passed."

Our ruling

Schumer said the SAVE America Act "would force Americans to register only in person, something only 5% of Americans do today."

The bill under consideration in the Senate would require documentary proof of citizenship be presented in person to register to vote.

However, Schumer significantly understated the percentage of people who register in person; before the 2024 election, it was between 11% and 42%, depending on how many registrations stemmed from in-person visits to motor vehicle agencies, a data point that is not being collected.

The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details, so we rate it Half True.

Senior correspondent Amy Sherman contributed to this article. 

RELATED: President Trump wants to slash voting by mail. About 1 in 4 Republicans voted that way in 2024

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:16

Royer Perez-Jimenez, 19, from Mexico, was found ‘unconscious and unresponsive’ in Florida detention center

A teenager held at a US immigration detention facility in Florida died this week, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said on Thursday, the youngest person to die in ICE custody since Donald Trump took office last year.

Royer Perez-Jimenez, 19, originally from Mexico, was found “unconscious and unresponsive” in his room on 16 March at the Glades county detention center in Moore Haven, Florida, according to the ICE press release.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:10

What happens if you make a Linux syscall in a Windows application?

So yeah, you can make Linux syscalls from Windows programs, as long as they’re running under Wine. Totally useless, but the fact that such a Frankenstein monster of a program could exist is funny to me.

↫ nicebyte at gpfault.net

The fact that this works is both surprising and unsurprising at the same time.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:00
  • Brit overcomes seven-time grand slam champion 7-5, 7-5

  • 25-year-old secures first victory since January

In her first training session at the ATX Open in Austin last month, weeks after injury put an end to her Australian Open, Francesca Jones found herself in an unusual, delightful situation. Her training partner across the net was none other than Venus Williams, the most successful active female tennis player.

Being able to train with such a legendary player was a dream itself, but Jones can now say that she has also defeated her as she closed out a 7-5, 7-5 win over the 45-year-old seven-time grand slam champion in the first round of the Miami Open. The victory marks Jones’s first WTA 1000 match win in her career, breaking a four-match losing streak.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 17:00

For the second time in the past month, an AI agent went rogue at Meta -- this time giving an engineer incorrect advice that briefly exposed sensitive data. The Verge reports: A Meta engineer was using an internal AI agent, which Clayton described as "similar in nature to OpenClaw within a secure development environment," to analyze a technical question another employee posted on an internal company forum. But the agent also independently publicly replied to the question after analyzing it, without getting approval first. The reply was only meant to be shown to the employee who requested it, not posted publicly. An employee then acted on the AI's advice, which "provided inaccurate information" that led to a "SEV1" level security incident, the second-highest severity rating Meta uses. The incident temporarily allowed employees to access sensitive data they were not authorized to view, but the issue has since been resolved. According to Clayton, the AI agent involved didn't take any technical action itself, beyond posting inaccurate technical advice, something a human could have also done. A human, however, might have done further testing and made a more complete judgment call before sharing the information -- and it's not clear whether the employee who originally prompted the answer planned to post it publicly. "The employee interacting with the system was fully aware that they were communicating with an automated bot. This was indicated by a disclaimer noted in the footer and by the employee's own reply on that thread," Clayton commented to The Verge. "The agent took no action aside from providing a response to a question. Had the engineer that acted on that known better, or did other checks, this would have been avoided."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:44

The FBI uses "all tools to do our mission," Director Kash Patel said on Wednesday during a Senate hearing.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:43

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:39
  • Tiny North Carolina university stuns Wisconsin

  • No 1 Duke survive upset scare against No 16 Siena

  • Nebraska ends NCAA drought with rout of Troy

Chase Johnston made his first two-point basket of the season, a fast-break layup with 11.7 seconds remaining that gave No 12 seed High Point an 83-82 victory over fifth-seeded Wisconsin on Thursday in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Johnston finished with 14 points, including four three-pointers for the Panthers, who were 10-and-a-half-point underdogs. He came in shooting 64 of 136 (47.1%) from three-point range but 0 of 4 inside the arc.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-19 16:37

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-19 16:36

Horizon to begin trading on March 20 on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol ‘HQ’

SINGAPORE and LAS VEGAS, March 19, 2026 — Horizon Quantum Computing Pte. Ltd. (Horizon Quantum), a pioneer of software infrastructure for quantum applications, today announced that it has completed its previously announced business combination with dMY Squared Technology Group, Inc. (dMY), a publicly traded special purpose acquisition company. The Business Combination was approved by dMY’s shareholders at dMY’s special meeting held on March 17, 2026. On March 20, 2026, the combined company’s Class A ordinary shares and warrants will begin trading on Nasdaq under the ticker symbols “HQ” and “HQWWW,” respectively.

Horizon Quantum is building software infrastructure that empowers developers to use quantum computing to solve the world’s toughest computational problems. The closing of the Business Combination provides Horizon Quantum with gross proceeds of approximately $120 million, before transaction expenses, which the company plans to use to accelerate its investments in research and development, strengthen its hardware testbed, and further advance its integrated development environment Triple Alpha.

“Recent rapid progress in advancing quantum computing hardware and breakthroughs in error correction mean that the field is reaching an inflection point. With today’s closing and our Nasdaq listing, Horizon Quantum is positioned to deliver the software infrastructure that will power this next phase of computing and help enable broad quantum advantage across tough computational problems,” said Dr Joe Fitzsimons, Founder and CEO of Horizon Quantum. “While there is still much work needed before quantum computers reach their full potential, with more than 20 years in quantum computing research, I have never been more excited about the prospects and future of the technology.”

Harry You, Chairman and CEO of dMY, said, “Over the tenure of my career, I have witnessed many technology companies triumph, and I have found that the ones who are most successful in building long-term shareholder value have been those that build software infrastructure and operating systems. Horizon Quantum is compelling because the company is approaching the quantum industry with hardware-agnostic software infrastructure that stands to benefit regardless of which way the market share ultimately falls across the competing quantum modalities, including the cloud.”

Advisors

Needham & Company, LLC, served as dMY’s exclusive financial advisor and exclusive placement agent for the PIPE transaction. Ellenoff Grossman & Schole LLP represented Horizon Quantum as legal counsel and Rajah & Tann Singapore LLP represented Horizon Quantum as Singapore legal counsel. White & Case LLP represented dMY as legal counsel and TCF Law Group, PLLC represented dMY as Massachusetts legal counsel. Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP represented Needham & Company as legal counsel. ICR, LLC, served as dMY’s strategic communications advisor.

About Horizon Quantum

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


Source: Horizon Quantum

The post Horizon Quantum Closes Business Combination with dMY, Secures $120M to Advance Quantum Software Stack appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-19 16:35

BARCELONA, Spain, March 19, 2026 — Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech has announced SpeQtrum QaaS, a full-stack Quantum as a Service cloud-based service, providing remote access to classical as well as analog and digital quantum computers. SpeQtrum will give users access to Qilimanjaro’s multimodal data center in Barcelona, the first in the world to integrate digital QPUs, Qilimanjaro’s unique analog QPUs, and classical HPC accelerators within a unified framework.

The integration of analog and digital QPUs with classical GPUs is designed to enable researchers and developers to prototype, execute, and optimize quantum workflows that improve results beyond individual modalities or dual combinations, and will be accessible via the cloud.

“SpeQtrum QaaS is the first opportunity for researchers and developers to have access to the best of three worlds, both digital and analog quantum QPUs and classical GPUs,” said Marta Estarellas, CEO of Qilimanjaro. “Users will be able to select the platform best suited to the particular use case from the world’s first multimodal quantum data center.”

Key aspects of the platform include:

  • Accessibility: Secure, cloud-based access to Qilimanjaro’s multimodal quantum data center, eliminating the need for on-prem hardware installation
  • Integrated Technology: Single entry point for access to digital quantum computers, analog quantum processors, and classical GP

The Qilimanjaro team will work closely with clients to help them implement this technology in their research and development teams, to support them in accelerating adoption and become quantum ready. The beta phase of the software will open in Q3. Anyone interested in securing a spot in the beta phase can sign up here: https://qilimanjaro.tech/speqtrum.

Analog quantum computers encode complex problems naturally within the system and its continuous dynamics. This paradigm bypasses the error correction required by the more common digital quantum systems which use quantum gates. By combining analog, digital and classical supercomputers, Qilimanjaro’s platform is designed to maximize the utility of each system to unlock real computational value years ahead of digital-only roadmaps.

About Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech

Based in Barcelona, Qilimanjaro is a quantum computing company, fast-tracking useful quantum computers via the development of the company’s signature analog quantum chips. Founded in 2019, Qilimanjaro builds full-stack quantum computers based on fluxonium analog qubits. This novel architecture bypasses the need for error correction and unlocks faster, more scalable solutions. Analog quantum systems provide near-term advantages in simulation, optimization, and AI, where digital QPUs either fall short or require massive overhead. The company follows this dual technology strategy to expand access to quantum computing resources now. First, the SpeQtrum QaaS platform provides remote access to hybrid quantum data centers combining analog, digital, and classical compute. Second, the company’s SpeQtrum on-premise systems offer full-stack and modular quantum integration both for analog and digital QPUs for HPC centers and research institutions.


Source: Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech

The post Qilimanjaro Launches SpeQtrum QaaS with Access to Multimodal Quantum and HPC Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:34

It's the last day of Nvidia GTC. This is your ultimate guide to everything the chipmaker has talked about here in San Jose.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 16:22

Every 1-cent increase in gasoline prices reduces consumer spending by $1.5 billion annually, one economist says.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-20 06:52

Academics discover black people ‘significantly more likely’ to be identified when compared with other ethnic groups

Essex police have paused the use of live facial recognition (LFR) technology after a study found cameras were significantly more likely to target black people than people of other ethnicities.

The move to suspend use of the AI-enabled systems was revealed by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which regulates the use of the technology deployed so far by at least 13 police forces in London, south and north Wales, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Hampshire, Bedfordshire, Suffolk, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Surrey and Sussex.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 17:07

"The morale is getting worse by the day because no one knows when this is gonna end," said Cameron Cochems, a lead TSA officer in Boise, Idaho.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 16:31

Asked why the U.S. didn't inform allies ahead of the Iran strikes, President Trump said, "Who knows better about surprise than Japan?"

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 19:15

Jeffrey Epstein's lawyer testified to the House Oversight Committee that he "had no knowledge whatsoever" of his client's crimes.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 21:53

Two sources confirmed to CBS News that Saleh Mohammadi, a young member of Iran's national wrestling team, was among the three men executed in Iran.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 23:16

Thursday's meeting with Tom Homan marked a key development as progress to date has appeared stagnant.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 20, No. 1,735.

2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-19 16:01

March 19, 2026 — Microsoft combines accelerated computing with cloud scale engineering to bring advanced AI capabilities to customers. For years, Microsoft has worked with NVIDIA to integrate hardware, software and infrastructure to power many of today’s most important AI breakthroughs.

Credit: Shutterstock

What’s new at NVIDIA GTC:

  • Expanded Microsoft Foundry capabilities to build, deploy and operate production-ready AI agents on NVIDIA accelerators and open NVIDIA Nemotron models
  • New Azure AI infrastructure optimized for inference-heavy, reasoning-based workloads, including the first hyperscale cloud to power on next-generation NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 systems
  • Deeper integration across Microsoft Foundry, Microsoft Fabric and NVIDIA Omniverse libraries and open frameworks to support Physical AI systems from simulation to real‑world operations

From Frontier Models to Production-Ready Agents

At the foundation of this system is Microsoft Foundry: serving as the operating system for building, deploying and operating AI at enterprise scale. Foundry builds on Azure to bring together models, tools, data and observability into a single system designed for production agents. Microsoft is expanding those capabilities across Foundry Agent Service and NVIDIA Nemotron models.

The next-generation Foundry Agent Service and Observability in Foundry Control Plane are now generally available, enabling organizations to build and operate AI agents at production scale. Foundry Agent Service allows teams to quickly develop agents that reason, plan and act across tools, data and workflows. Once created, Foundry Control Plane provides the developer end-to-end visibility into agent behavior, unlocking both developer productivity as well as enterprise trust. Companies such as Corvus Energy are already using Foundry to replace manual inspection workflows with agent-driven operational intelligence across their global fleet.

Microsoft is further simplifying the path from prototype to production with the availability of Voice Live API integration with Foundry Agent Service, in public preview, which enables developers to build voice-first, multimodal, real-time agentic experiences. This pairs with the general availability of a refreshed Microsoft Foundry portal and expanded integrations for Palo Alto Networks’ Prisma AIRS and Zenity, delivering deeper builder experiences and runtime security across the entire agent lifecycle.

NVIDIA Nemotron models are also now available through Microsoft Foundry, joining the widest selection of models on any cloud, including the latest reasoning, frontier and open models. This bolsters Microsoft’s recent partnership announcement bringing Fireworks AI to Microsoft Foundry, enabling customers to fine-tune open-weight models like NVIDIA Nemotron into low-latency assets that can be distributed to the edge.

Scaling AI Infrastructure for the World’s Most Demanding Workloads

Inference AI workloads are reshaping cost, performance and system design requirements. To operationalize agentic AI at scale, customers need purpose-built infrastructure for inference‑heavy, reasoning‑based workloads that can be deployed and operated consistently across global and regulated environments.

Microsoft’s AI infrastructure approach is engineered to seamlessly bring next-generation NVIDIA systems into Azure datacenters that are designed for power, cooling networking and rapid generational upgrades. This allows customers to move with speed and agility and stay at the leading edge from generation to generation.

In less than a year, Microsoft has deployed hundreds of thousands of liquid-cooled Grace Blackwell GPUs across the company’s global datacenter footprint, and now Microsoft is excited to be the first hyperscale cloud to power on NVIDIA’s newest Vera Rubin NVL72 in its labs. Over the next few months, Vera Rubin NVL72 will be rolled out into Microsoft’s modern, liquid-cooled Azure datacenters.

Microsoft’s infrastructure innovation with NVIDIA also extends to sovereign and regulated environments to give customers control of both where AI runs and how it evolves over time. Recently, Microsoft announced Foundry Local support for modern infrastructure and large AI models, and now the company has initial support for NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform on Azure Local, extending accelerated AI capabilities to customer-controlled environments. This approach allows organizations to plan for next-generation AI workloads, including reasoning-based and agentic systems, while maintaining Azure-consistent operations, governance and security through Microsoft’s unified software layer with Azure Arc and Foundry Local.

Bringing AI into the Physical World

As AI moves beyond digital experiences, Microsoft and NVIDIA are collaborating to support the next wave of Physical AI. At GTC, this work centers on NVIDIA Physical AI Data Factory Blueprint, with Microsoft Foundry as the platform for hosting and operating Physical AI systems on Azure at cloud scale.

By integrating this blueprint with Azure services as part of a Physical AI Toolchain, Microsoft enables developers to build, train and operate physical AI and robotics workflows that connect physical assets, simulation and cloud training environments into repeatable, enterprise-grade pipelines. To support, Microsoft is introducing a public Azure Physical AI Toolchain GitHub repository integrated with the Nvidia Physical AI Data Factory and with core Azure services.

To further the impact of AI in real‑world, physical environments, Microsoft and NVIDIA are deepening the integration between Microsoft Fabric and NVIDIA Omniverse libraries, connecting live operational data with physically accurate digital twins and simulation. This allows organizations to see what’s happening across their physical systems, understand it in real time and use AI to decide what to do next. In practice, customers in manufacturing and operations and beyond are using this approach to move beyond dashboards and alerts to coordinated, AI‑driven action across machines, facilities and workflows.

From Innovation to Impact

Microsoft is delivering reliable, production‑scale AI by bringing together its global AI infrastructure, platforms and real‑world systems with the latest innovation from NVIDIA. For customers, this means the ability to operate intelligence continuously, running inference-heavy, reasoning-based and physical AI workloads with the performance, security and governance required for real businesses and regulated industries.

Whether powering always-on agents, scaling next-generation AI infrastructure or deploying intelligent systems in factories, energy facilities and sovereign environments, Microsoft and Nvidia are helping customers move faster from insight to action.


Source: Yina Arenas, Microsoft

The post Microsoft at NVIDIA GTC: New Solutions for Microsoft Foundry, Azure AI Infrastructure and Physical AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:00

Order up a Raggedy Ann or a Barbie doll: Playing with dolls helped children develop a stronger tolerance for diverse perspectives.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 16:00

Longtime Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes: Rapper Afroman, born Joseph Edgar Foreman, famous for his 2000 hit "Because I Got High", has won a defamation lawsuit that seven Ohio police offers filed against him. A jury found he did not defame the officers in music videos he made about a 2022 police raid of his home. In August 2022, Adams County Sheriff's Department raided Afroman's home on suspicion of drug trafficking and kidnapping. Neither drugs nor kidnapping victims were found, and charges were never filed. However, local officials would not pay for damages occurred during the raid including a broken front door and a video surveillance camera. Afroman used his home security footage of the raid to create music rap videos criticizing the police over the incident; "Will You Help Me Repair My Door?", "Why You Disconnecting My Video Camera?", and "Lemon Pound Cake". He posted the videos on YouTube. In March 2023, seven officers filed a lawsuit against Afroman for invasion of privacy and the unauthorized use of their images from the security footage in addition to defamation claims. The officers requested an injunction for Afroman to stop speaking about them or using their photos. The officers also wanted all proceeds from the videos, song sales, performances, and merchandise claiming they had suffered "emotional distress" due to the videos. Afroman's defense included Freedom of Speech rights to criticize public officials. The ACLU filed an amicus brief supporting the rapper, arguing that the lawsuit was a SLAPP suit only meant to silence criticism. In October 2023, the court agreed and dismissed the invasion of privacy, "right of publicity", and "unauthorized use of individual's persona" claims but allowed the defamation case to proceed. Defamation claims by the officers included the allegation Afroman repeatedly had sex with the wife of Randolph L. Walters, Jr. When Afroman's lawyer asked Walters "But we all know that's not true, right?", the officer replied he did not know. Defamation from emotional damages requires that harm arise from a false statement; however, if a statement is so outrageous that no one would believe it to be true, then reputational damage cannot be a result.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:59

As we sat down for an interview in the GTC Expo this week, it was hard not to notice that Sam Werner, the General Manager of IBM Storage, was excited. “Did you hear Jensen talk about Nestlé?” he asked. “The work we had done that was highlighted, and the 30x cost performance improvement?”

Indeed, 15 minutes into his GTC keynote, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang showcased how IBM’s customer, Nestlé, had adopted Nvidia GPUs to speed up its order-to-cash data mart, which is used to coordinate every order, delivery, and invoice across the food manufacturer’s global operations. Instead of running the 15-minute routine to update the data mart several times a day, thanks to GPUs, Nestlé was able to lower the data mart query time to three minutes, while dropping its costs by 83%, which translates to the 30x cost performance figure cited by Werner.

Nestle’s IBM watsonx data mart is GPU-accelerated thanks to cuDF

But the way that Nestlé implemented GPUs is important. Nestlé uses the IBM Storage Scale System (formerly Spectrum Scale) to house its enterprise data. Thanks to the work that IBM has done to bridge the open source software it’s adopted, including the Velox library and the Presto SQL query engine, with Nvidia’s CuDF, Nestlé was easily able to brings the sheer horsepower of Nvidia GPUs to bear on structured data sitting in its watsonx.data lakehouse.

“It was Scale underneath, which is my storage solution,” Werner told HPCwire. “We help bring all that data to the GPUs with our high-performance storage layer.”

It’s easy to forget how important storage is to AI, whether it’s running the latest large language model (LLM) or running traditional machine learning algorithms. Storage is also critical to running large SQL analytics workloads, as Huang talked about in his keynote with Nestlé.

No matter what workload is proposed, Werner is confident that IBM’s storage solutions will have something to offer. But Werner is particularly excited about the potential for his Storage Scale unit to sell lots of storage in support of AI initiatives, and in fact to lead the industry.

Here are seven aspects of IBM’s current Storage Scale offerings that some customers may not know about:

Sam Werner is the General Manager of IBM Storage

  1. Content-aware storage: “We automatically vectorize the data,” Werner said. “We have a capability called content-aware storage. So we take that data, we watch it as it changes. And every time it changes, we run it through an AI data pipeline and we vectorize the data. The way other people would normally do it is you’d copy your data to a server, you’d run it on this AI model and vectorize the data, but you lose the connection to the source. So now if the source data changes, there’s no way to know that in the vector database.”
  2. Storage virtualization: “We don’t make you replatform,” Werner said. “We actually will bring it into our namespace, and then we provide GPU Direct connection into the GPUs. So we give you super high performance, but allow you to leave your data where it lives…. It can be sitting in the cloud. It can be sitting on prem, it can be in an old NetApp NFS file, or it can be anywhere. I’ll put it in my namespace, vectorize it, and make it available without impacting your applications.”
  3. Multi-protocol support: “It’s S3, it’s NFS, it’s SMB, it’s HDFS,” Werner said. “We’re about to publish our S3 RDMA, which will be the best performance in the industry. We’ve been working closely with Nvidia on that…GPFS technology gives us a huge advantage in the AI space because it’s one of the only true cluster file systems out there that gives you linear scale and performance, no matter how big your cluster gets.” (Now that IBM owns Confluent, you might see Kafka as another supported protocol in the storage stack.)
  4. IBM Fusion Storage: “I have all this great technology,” Werner said. “I’m putting it all together as a single platform, which we call Fusion. With Fusion, I actually can deliver it as a hyper-converged infrastructure, which includes the servers, storage, the networking, and the GPU nodes, all in an integrated rack running OpenShift. We run bare metal OpenShift on it, and then you can just start building your AI applications and it has Scale in it.”
  5. FlashCore Modules: “We have FlashCore Modules, which goes back to our Texas Memory Systems acquisition,” Werner said. “We took that big, solid-state technology and we ultimately boiled it down to an industry-standard form factor drive. Just in February we announced our latest generation FlashCore Module 5. What we do is we have an FPGA in there with ARM processor cores, so we’re able to offload a lot of stuff that happens in the storage down to the drive itself. We call it computational storage. And within this drive I do compression of the data. I just added deduplication so we can get five to one data reduction in these drives. And I use QLC memory rather than TLC memory, but I get TLC performance and durability.”

    IBM Fusion Storage provides a unified solution for modern storage (Image courtesy IBM)

  6. NAND Shortage: “There’s a NAND shortage?” Werner joked. “It’s actually a really great advantage for us. I have great relationships with the vendors that I buy memory from, and I’ve already secured memory supply in advance. So I’m in a very good position from a supply perspective. Are my costs going up a bit? Of course, memory prices are going up, but we’re able to manage that at a significantly lower rate of increase than what you’re seeing happen with industry standard drives. So I’m in a really good position. I have plenty of supply and my costs are much better controlled than industry standard.”
  7. Tape for AI: “I have seen demand already go up 2x to 3x and it’s still increasing,” Werner said. “I am working very closely with my ecosystem to significantly increase the amount of capacity we have, which we’re able to do no problem. Think about an enterprise that’s trying to tap into all their data forever. You don’t ever have to delete any of it. You have an S3 API right here, move your data there, I keep track of all the data, make it searchable, and you can retrieve it back. Tape has really high throughput. We have lots of drives. We can stream the data. It’s only challenge is if you’re doing random reads from all over the place, then yes. But if we have a catalog that makes it searchable, we can make that data really easy to retrieve for your AI when you want it. And we can also make it easy to save all the tokens that you’ve created forever, so you can go back to it. You don’t have to recreate those tokens later.”

Like every storage vendor on the planet, IBM is working with Nvidia on its new STX platform, which uses BlueField-4 DPUs to implement Nvidia’s Context Memory Storage (CMX) architecture to break through the GPU memory wall for large-scale AI inference. The more work that AI users can push down into the storage layer, the less work there is for the GPU, and the greater the throughput can be.

(Nick-N-A/Shutterstock)

“AI is triple-digit growth for me in this space. It’s a huge growth driver,” Werner said. “AI has finally given customers the opportunity to unlock the value of this enormous amount of data they’ve been sitting on…Now they’re able to unlock that value and I’m able to help them do that. So I’m able to show a really good ROI and people will be able to do that.”

IBM may not be the first storage vendor that comes to mind when IT decision-makers sit down to hash out an AI strategy. But Werner says there’s no other storage vendor can match IBM in offering such a wide spectrum of storage capabilities. As the AI boom continues, Werner is confident of the hand that Big Blue is holding, not to mention a few wildcards that play in its favor, thanks to its experience and its legacy of supporting the IT endeavors of the biggest organizations on the planet for more than 100 years.

“The biggest banks in the world run on my stuff because they know my stuff is secure and I can do this,” Werner said. “A lot of these others don’t have that experience. And at some point people are going to wake up and go, holy crap, my AI application needs to be highly available. It needs DR, it needs all of this because this is mission-critical.”

The post Seven Reasons IBM’s Storage Chief Is Bullish on AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:54

Lawsuit says rescission of endangerment finding – which ruled greenhouse gases threaten public health – was illegal

A coalition of 24 states, alongside a dozen cities and counties, has sued the Trump administration over its decision to revoke the bedrock scientific determination underpinning virtually all US climate regulations.

The new lawsuit, filed in the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Thursday, is being led by the states of Massachusetts, California, New York and Connecticut. It argues that the Environmental Protection Agency’s February rescission of the 2009 endangerment finding – which the White House described as the “single largest deregulatory action in US history” – was illegal.

Continue reading...

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 15:44

LUXEMBOURG, March 19, 2026 — SUSE, a global leader in enterprise open source solutions, today released its inaugural Cloud and AI Pulse Survey revealing that a growing number of enterprises are turning to hybrid (59%) and private (16%) cloud due to technical and business concerns and digital sovereignty requirements. The global survey of nearly 600 enterprise technology leaders in the U.S., UK, Japan, India and Germany examined the impact of AI on cloud adoption, budgets, governance, IT priorities and resilience. In the U.S., amidst shifting global sentiment, one-third (31%) cited digital sovereignty as a top tech priority this year, fueled by the need for open source support and vendor lock-in concerns.

“While it was no surprise that more than half of survey respondents say implementing AI is a major challenge, we were encouraged by the impact AI is having on hybrid and private cloud adoption and digital sovereignty as it relates to AI model training data,” said Margaret Dawson, Chief Marketing Officer at SUSE. “This new data confirms what we are seeing from customers; priorities are shifting toward more flexible, scalable and governed deployments.”

AI Drives New Set of Priorities

As AI increases system complexity, risk exposure and priorities are shifting toward scalable and governed deployments.

  • Globally, implementing AI ranked as either a critical (24%) or major (37%) challenge.
  • When it comes to AI model training, digital sovereignty is becoming a defining requirement cited as either extremely (42%) or very (40%) important.
  • Four out of five countries cited implementing AI as their top budget priority line item.
  • In Germany, AI implementation ranked only twelfth as a critical challenge, but second as a budget priority, indicating a notable gap between perceived urgency and investment.

Hybrid Cloud and Open Source Resurgence

Across the globe, data reveals that respondents are re-architecting AI environments around control and compliance. Hybrid and multi-cloud were cited as strong options, providing the ability to support regulated, sensitive, and edge workloads while maintaining operational flexibility.

This shift away from public cloud is consistent with the larger industry movement fueled by AI, such as the buildout of private AI factories which is expected to reach 20% adoption this year according to Forrester alongside growth of on-premises servers to manage local compute costs, performance, and data governance requirements.

  • 59% of organizations plan to prioritize hybrid cloud deployments for workloads where digital sovereignty is required, with 16% relying purely on private cloud.
  • Over half (51%) plan to spend more on scaling across multiple cloud environments.
  • Nearly half (46%) are increasing their investment in enterprise support for Open Source.
  • On average, the top three priorities globally were as follows:
    • Skills gaps and talent shortages
    • Enhanced security
    • Implementing AI

U.S. Concerns and Priorities: Vendor Lock-In and IT Resilience

In the U.S., concerns around vendor dependency and IT resilience are shifting from concerns to core priorities.

  • As it relates to digital sovereignty, 39% of U.S. enterprises express concern about reducing vendor lock-in, higher than any other country and outpacing the global average of 25%.
  • Similarly, in terms of challenges, 50% cite vendor lock-in as a critical or major issue.
  • Compared to other countries, 64% of U.S. respondents cited IT resilience as the most important technological priority, higher than the global average of 55%.
  • 53% of U.S. respondents cite enhanced security as a top IT priority.
  • In the U.S., implementing AI ranks as both the top budget priority (#1) and second-largest critical challenge (#2).

Survey Methodology

The Cloud and AI Pulse Survey was conducted among 596 global enterprise technology leaders, including director-level and senior decision-makers responsible for software tools and IT infrastructure strategy.

Forrester Blog – November 10, 2025: Predictions 2026: Prepare For AI, Security, And Integrated Network Infrastructure And Operations, Michele Pelino and Naveen Chhabra

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.


Source: SUSE

The post SUSE Survey Finds Hybrid and Private Cloud Adoption Rising Amid AI and Sovereignty Demands appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:33

US Southern Command chief briefed senators amid Trump’s increasing use of force in the region and comments about taking Cuba

The US military is not rehearsing for an invasion of Cuba or actively preparing to militarily take over the island, the top general overseeing American forces in Latin America has told lawmakers.

But Gen Francis Donovan, head of US Southern Command, said the Pentagon stands ready to address any threats to the US embassy in Havana, defend its base at Guantánamo Bay and aid US government efforts to address any mass migration from the island, if needed.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:31

Nvidia says it's modified OpenClaw with added privacy and security controls, making claws safe for enterprises. The jury is still out.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:30

SEOUL and SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 19, 2026 — AMD has announced a strategic collaboration with NAVER Cloud to accelerate the development of sovereign AI infrastructure in Korea, supporting national-scale AI capabilities with AMD’s open, high-performance compute platforms. The collaboration further strengthens the existing relationship between the companies and aims to advance AI infrastructure by integrating AMD compute platforms across NAVER Cloud’s AI and cloud offerings.

Credit: Shutterstock

To support large-scale AI training and inference workloads across its cloud and AI services, NAVER Cloud is expanding its use of AMD EPYC processors to include deployment of the upcoming 6th-Gen AMD EPYC “Venice” processor. AMD is also providing NAVER Cloud with access to next-generation AMD Instinct MI455X GPUs to support its cloud and production environments.

Both companies will collaborate to optimize NAVER Cloud AI services and software stacks on AMD platforms and AMD ROCm software. Additionally, the companies plan to collaborate on research and development initiatives to enable new AI services and solutions for NAVER customers.

“Sovereign AI infrastructure plays a critical role in accelerating how nations build and deploy advanced AI,” said Dr. Lisa Su, chair and CEO, AMD. “Our expanded collaboration with NAVER Cloud brings together AMD’s leadership AI compute platforms and open software ecosystem with NAVER’s cloud and AI capabilities to enable scalable infrastructure and accelerate the next generation of AI in Korea.”

“NAVER Cloud is focused on building scalable and open AI infrastructure to support the rapid growth of AI innovation,” said Soo Yeon Choi, CEO, NAVER. “Through our collaboration with AMD, we will leverage high-performance AMD compute platforms to enhance our AI and cloud services and deliver new capabilities to customers and developers.”

This collaboration reflects the shared goal of both companies to advance sovereign AI infrastructure, enabling organizations in Korea to build and deploy AI services with greater control over data, performance, and scalability.

About AMD

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing. Learn more at  www.amd.com.

About NAVER Cloud

NAVER Cloud, a subsidiary of NAVER Corporation, has been providing IT infrastructure and platform services since 1999. With over two decades of experience powering NAVER and its affiliates, NAVER Cloud offers its public cloud service, NAVER Cloud Platform, to support enterprise digital transformation with proven technology and operational excellence. NAVER is the world’s third company to develop a hyperscale Large Language Model (LLM), and NAVER Cloud leverages this advanced AI expertise to deliver end-to-end capabilities across the entire AI value chain — encompassing AI services, data, foundational AI infrastructure, supercomputing resources, cloud platforms, and data centers.


Source: AMD

The post AMD and NAVER Cloud Announce Strategic Collaboration to Advance AI Infrastructure in Korea appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:30

Enjoy all the discounts without having to put in any of the work.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 15:28

Reform party leader criticised for making comments after event held in London’s Trafalgar Square this week

Muslim leaders have condemned Nigel Farage’s call to ban public prayer by Muslims in the UK as bigoted and warned of a “growing tide of hate” after the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, questioned whether the events fitted “within the norms of British culture”.

Farage was speaking at the launch of Reform UK’s manifesto for the forthcoming Scottish parliament elections when he made the remarks.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:26

DarkSword spyware reports are scary, but basic iOS software hygiene can go a long way to keep your data safe.

2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:25

US president says he told Netanyahu ‘don’t do that’ as he distances himself from attack that has angered Gulf allies

The US-Israeli war against Iran has exposed further divisions between the two countries after an Israeli strike on Iran’s largest gasfield angered US allies in the Gulf and prompted Donald Trump to say he knew nothing in advance about the attack – a claim that Israeli officials disputed.

Speaking in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump said he had spoken to Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu following the strikes on Iran’s South Pars gasfield – part of a reserve shared with Qatar – and had told the Israeli prime minister to refrain from further attacks that could escalate a regional war on energy infrastructure.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 15:23

After a long wait, Apple has unveiled the AirPods Max 2. Here's my full skinny on all the performance and feature upgrades the new model offers.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 15:06

About a quarter of prison places are unsafe, Ministry of Justice admits

The government has reneged on a pledge to make all prison cells fire-safe or take them out of use by the end of next year, meaning tens of thousands of prisoners in England and Wales will remain at risk.

The Ministry of Justice has admitted it has known for almost two decades that about a quarter of prison places are unsafe, putting the people housed in affected cells at risk.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 15:04

In an interview with "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Rafael Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said there had already been damage done to Iran's nuclear sites.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 15:01

Prepare to gawk at the newest reveals for Barbie, Masters of the Universe and more.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Google is planning big changes for Android in 2026 aimed at combating malware across the entire device ecosystem. Starting in September, Google will begin restricting application sideloading with its developer verification program, but not everyone is on board. Android Ecosystem President Sameer Samat tells Ars that the company has been listening to feedback, and the result is the newly unveiled advanced flow, which will allow power users to skip app verification. With its new limits on sideloading, Android phones will only install apps that come from verified developers. To verify, devs releasing apps outside of Google Play will have to provide identification, upload a copy of their signing keys, and pay a $25 fee. It all seems rather onerous for people who just want to make apps without Google's intervention. Apps that come from unverified developers won't be installable on Android phones -- unless you use the new advanced flow, which will be buried in the developer settings. When sideloading apps today, Android phones alert the user to the "unknown sources" toggle in the settings, and there's a flow to help you turn it on. The verification bypass is different and will not be revealed to users. You have to know where this is and proactively turn it on yourself, and it's not a quick process. [...] The actual legwork to activate this feature only takes a few seconds, but the 24-hour countdown makes it something you cannot do spur of the moment. But why 24 hours? According to Samat, this is designed to combat the rising use of high-pressure social engineering attacks, in which the scammer convinces the victim they have to install an app immediately to avoid severe consequences. "In that 24-hour period, we think it becomes much harder for attackers to persist their attack," said Samat. "In that time, you can probably find out that your loved one isn't really being held in jail or that your bank account isn't really under attack." But for people who are sure they don't want Google's verification system to get in the way of sideloading any old APK they come across, they don't have to wait until they encounter an unverified app to get started. You only have to select the "indefinitely" option once on a phone, and you can turn dev options off again afterward. "For a lot of people in the world, their phone is their only computer, and it stores some of their most private information," Samat said. "Over the years, we've evolved the platform to keep it open while also keeping it safe. And I want to emphasize, if the platform isn't safe, people aren't going to use it, and that's a lose-lose situation for everyone, including developers."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:46

UK’s bilateral aid to African countries, which funds areas such as schools and clinics, to be cut by almost £900m by 2028-29

Some of the world’s poorest countries will lose out on UK aid that funds programmes such as schools and clinics, due to budget cuts set out by the foreign secretary.

The UK’s bilateral aid to African countries will be reduced by almost £900m by 2028-29 – a 56% cut – as part of more than £6bn in cuts which are funding an increase in defence spending.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:46

Cryptocurrency’s biggest Pac spent more than $10m for their candidates, only to be defeated by those who are anti-crypto

The cryptocurrency industry spent big and lost often in this week’s Illinois primaries.

As the industry prepares to make massive donations in the 2026 midterm elections to replicate its success in 2024, the Illinois losses mark an early setback for firms that are trying to establish themselves as power players in American politics.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:39

Meta's Horizon Worlds will be available on Quest headsets for a while after all, after originally aiming for a June 15 hard shutdown. But it won't support anything new.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:38

Two former FBI agents who helped investigate President Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results sued the federal government, alleging they were wrongfully terminated.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:36

The US president wanted an easy win, but the conflict is spiralling following Israel’s attack on a gas field and Iranian retaliation across the region

Shortly after the US and Israel began their illegal assault on Iran, with the US president still preening himself over the kidnapping of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro the previous month, a state department official joked that Donald Trump had a new foreign policy credo: “Decapitate and delegate”. It was a reversal of Colin Powell’s invocation of the “Pottery Barn rule” ahead of the invasion of Iraq: you break it, you own it.

Gen Powell, then secretary of state, was warning that wars can escalate beyond expectation and are harder to exit than enter. It remains unclear what precisely the Trump administration expected from this conflict – perhaps not least to the White House itself – but it is certain that the president was not paying heed when people described the likely consequences.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:34

Ok so bad news first; my XR isn’t taking a charge for some reason. I thought I left it with middle battery left over the winter and that’s worked just fine in the past, but when I went to break it out the battery is zero and staying there even after 24 hours to try to “reset” it.

But the good news is that I’ve been converting VESC for awhile and now this is the perfect excuse! But here’s the thing; I want more power but I’m also kinda cheap. What’s the best build-for-the-buck? What parts do I need? What’s the cheapest option and what build is worth splurging on? Any tips appreciated!

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

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:31

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell used the phrase "we don't know" at least 14 times during his press conference. Investors are nervous.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:29

Gold has dropped sharply from its recent highs, offering investors an opportunity to capitalize on the lower price.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:24

March 19, 2026 — Blood is often pictured as a smooth, continuous stream, but in reality it behaves more like rush-hour traffic in a dense city with crowded lanes, sudden merges and countless tiny intersections where direction and speed change instantly. For most people, those arterial roadways manage this traffic gracefully.

Sickle blood cells (blue) are jostled by healthy blood cells (red). Image credit: Michael Graham, 2020.

For people living with sickle cell disease (SCD), however, the circulation is under constant strain. Much of the harm happens quietly in the body’s smallest blood vessels, where red blood cells must bend, slide and divide into branching pathways to keep tissues alive. When this choreography breaks down, damage accumulates over years, injuring vessels, stressing organs and shortening lives.

Recent research, supported by U.S. National Science Foundation ACCESS allocations on the Expanse system at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), part of the University of California San Diego School of Computing, Information and Data Sciences, zooms in on what happens when blood encounters microscopic vessel bifurcations, the tiniest forks in the road where one capillary splits into two branches.

“Blood isn’t just a liquid, it’s a suspension of living, flexible particles,” said Michael Graham, the Steenbock Professor of Engineering and Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. “Once you recognize that, you realize that where cells are located within the flow can matter just as much as how fast the blood is moving.”

Using high-performance computing (HPC) systems like Expanse at SDSC, Graham’s team along with Wilbur Lam, a physician-scientist at Emory University and Georgia Institute of Technology, have shown that in SCD, a subset of abnormal red blood cells consistently takes the wrong turn at these junctions, triggering a chain of mechanical events that may help explain how vessels are gradually injured over time. Graham said that in healthy microcirculation, red blood cells tend to drift toward the center of a vessel as they move along, so when a vessel divides, these centrally located cells are more likely to follow the branch carrying the larger fraction of blood. This pattern helps oxygen distribute efficiently throughout the body’s web of capillaries.  

SCD disrupts that balance. Some red blood cells become stiffer, smaller and less flexible with properties that push them away from the center of the vessel and toward the wall, where they travel in a thin layer rather than mixing evenly with the main flow. That seemingly subtle shift has major consequences at a fork in the road.

Simulations supported by NSF ACCESS and run on SDSC’s Expanse showed that when a vessel splits, stiff, sickle-shaped cells near the wall are more likely to peel off into the slower-flowing branch rather than following the faster stream. Over time, that pattern causes certain pathways to become disproportionately loaded with abnormal cells, effectively reversing the usual “traffic rule” that steers centrally located cells into higher-flow branches.

For SCD patients, the key issue is not only which branch a cell enters but what happens once it gets there. After the split, sickle cells tend to cluster along the outer walls of the branches, exactly where the flow can generate strong mechanical forces. When stiff cells repeatedly skim along the vessel lining, they create sharp spikes in shear stress, the frictional force the flowing blood exerts on the wall.

Those stress spikes matter because the endothelium, the inner lining of blood vessels, responds to mechanical forces just as it does to chemical signals. Persistent, elevated stress can trigger inflammation, make vessel walls “stickier” and promote further obstruction. Over years, this wear-and-tear may help explain why people with sickle cell disease face higher risks of stroke, organ damage and chronic pain, even in regions where vessels never become completely blocked.

“What we’re seeing with simulations on Expanse is a purely physical mechanism that can contribute to vascular injury,” Graham said. “The cells don’t need to stick chemically or form clots. Their stiffness and location alone are enough to increase stress on the vessel wall.”

At the individual level, this work reframes sickle cell disease as not only a problem of oxygen delivery but also a disorder of cumulative vascular injury. Even when blood continues to move, repeated mechanical insults can quietly damage vessels in the brain, lungs, kidneys and other organs. The study also sheds light on why complications often cluster in specific regions of the circulation rather than appearing uniformly throughout the body. Vessel geometry, including branch diameter and angle of divergence, can amplify these effects and create persistent hot spots of stress.

Graham said that the findings suggest new directions for therapy. Instead of focusing solely on preventing outright blockages, future treatments might aim to change how red blood cells distribute themselves within flowing blood. Drugs that soften cells, reduce dehydration or lessen their tendency to migrate toward vessel walls could lower harmful mechanical stress even if overall flow rates stay the same. Microfluidic devices inspired by this work might allow clinicians to test how an individual patient’s blood behaves under different conditions, opening the door to more personalized treatment strategies.  

“Our research does not offer an immediate cure, but it provides a clearer map of how microscopic events translate into long-term harm,” Graham said. “With the help of SDSC’s Expanse system, we have connected the repeated wrong turns of sickle cells at the smallest junctions of the circulatory system to the real-world suffering of patients. Our work shows how damage can accumulate silently and why managing sickle cell disease requires more than simply maintaining blood flow.”

Allocations on SDSC’s Expanse were supported by NSF ACCESS (allocation nos. MCB190100 and PHY240144).

More from HPCwire: Comet Supercomputer Supports Sickle Cell Disease Discovery [2020]


Source: Kimberly Mann Bruch and Scott Paton, SDSC

The post SDSC’s Expanse Charts the Hidden Toll of Sickle Cell Disease appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:23

Royer Perez-Jimenez was arrested by the Volusia County Sheriff's Office in January, according to ICE.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:01

House of Lords decision welcomed as ‘landmark moment’ after attempt to strike out amendment is defeated

Women who have been convicted, and in some cases jailed, over illegal abortions are set to be pardoned after a historic vote in the House of Lords.

Last June, the House of Commons voted to end the criminalisation of women who terminate their pregnancies outside of the legal framework, while keeping the existing framework in place. Doctors and others who act outside of the law could still face the threat of prosecution.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:00

Discovery at Monte Verde puts north-to-south expansion theory back at centre of heated debate on continent’s human history

A groundbreaking new study may have once again upended our understanding of human prehistory in the Americas.

For years, the predominant theory of how humans arrived in the western hemisphere centred around the Clovis culture, which crossed the Beringia land bridge from Asia between 13,400 and 12,800 years ago, and spread south.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:00

As Americans face a housing crisis, this development shows how communal living can bring homeownership within reach – and foster connection

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:00
  • 2027’s short season will precede full calendar switch

  • Five Concacaf Champions Cup berths will be awarded

  • No inter-conference play until MLS Cup

The typical cliche for a regular season is that it’s a marathon, not a sprint. In 2027, Major League Soccer will be the exception.

On Thursday, MLS revealed how its short 2027 “sprint season” will be formatted as it nears flipping its schedule to a fall-to-spring format next year. The competition’s structure will be familiar in many ways, with the regular season table seeding a postseason bracket and culminating with MLS Cup. Lasting just under three months, it’ll proceed at a breakneck pace that could be an enthralling departure from the league’s usual flow.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:00

I used CNET's lab test data to calculate the cost-per-megabit for each router generation. The results showed me I was wrong about the value of Wi-Fi 7 routers.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 14:00

Meta is partially reversing its decision to drop VR support for Horizon Worlds, keeping VR access for existing Unity-based games while shifting future development to a new flatscreen-focused Horizon Engine. UploadVR reports: If you somehow missed it, on Tuesday Meta officially announced that its Horizon Worlds "metaverse" platform would drop VR support in June, meaning it would only be available as a flatscreen experience for the web and smartphones. But now, in an "ask me anything" session on his Instagram page, Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth says the company has decided to "keep Horizon Worlds working in VR for existing games to support the fans who've reached out." Bosworth says this specifically applies to worlds developed with the Horizon Unity runtime, suggesting it applies to those built inside VR or with the Horizon Desktop Editor, but not those built for the new Horizon Engine with Horizon Studio. The picture painted here is of a clean technical break, with the legacy Unity version of Horizon Worlds continuing to support VR, and the new Horizon Engine focusing fully on flatscreen. This VR support will continue through the Horizon Worlds VR app, which Bosworth says will stay on Quest's store "for the foreseeable future". Specific worlds will not be recommended by the operating system, though, and nor will they be seen in the storefront. Horizon Worlds will be just another app on the store. As for the reason behind not supporting VR in Horizon Engine, Bosworth repeated the explanation he's been giving for two months now -- "because that's where most of the consumer and creator energy already was, and so we're leaning into that."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 13:58

Mozilla sets a release date for its next version of Firefox, which will include a free VPN service and a new split-screen tab mode.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:52

The Pentagon wants $200 billion in supplemental funds to pay for its war on Iran, a defense official told The Intercept. That sum is four times the amount originally floated by Pentagon officials. War Secretary Pete Hegseth said that number could even increase.

The request for the additional $200 billion has been sent to the White House, which normally reviews requests before they go to Congress, according to the defense official who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak freely about the pending proposal. The $200 billion ask, first reported by the Washington Post, is in addition to a record-setting $1.5 trillion War Department budget request for 2027.

“Obviously, it takes money to kill bad guys,” Hegseth said when asked about the request during a press conference on Thursday. “As far as the $200 billion, I think that number could move.”

Hegseth spoke only in terms of immediate costs of the war. “We’re going back to Congress and folks there to ensure that we’re properly funded for what’s been done, for what we may have to do in the future, ensure that our ammunition is everything’s refilled, and not just refilled but above and beyond,” he explained.

Immediate war expenses will, however, be dwarfed by estimates offered by experts in the costs of war, lawmakers experienced with the Pentagon budget, and government officials briefed on Operation Epic Fury.

“Now, Secretary Hegseth wants $200 billion for a war that Congress never authorized?”

“Taxpayers haven’t gotten any clarity from the administration about the goals or costs of this war. To date, all we’ve seen are ballpark estimates, and lowballed ones at that. Now, Secretary Hegseth wants $200 billion for a war that Congress never authorized?” said Gabe Murphy, a policy analyst at Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan budget watchdog advocating for an end to wasteful spending.

Linda Bilmes, who co-authored “The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict” with economist Joseph Stiglitz, previously told The Intercept that short-term expenses — like munitions, costs of deploying aircraft carrier strike groups, and aircraft lost — will pale in comparison to long-term expenditures such as the costs of veterans’ benefits and interest on war debt. She said the cost of the conflict could ultimately reach into the trillions of dollars.

Related

Trump’s War on Iran Could Cost Trillions

Costs will rise dramatically if the 50,000 U.S. troops deployed around the Middle East file disability claims at the typical rate due to exposure to “toxins, contamination, acid rain, dust from infrastructure destruction, and burning oil fumes,” Bilmes, a senior lecturer in public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, said.

A new war also makes it more likely for Congress to approve a bigger Pentagon budget going forward, Bilmes told The Intercept. “That becomes the base budget and, over a decade, it’s another trillion dollars added to the defense budget.”

Murphy said the supplemental request raises fundamental questions for which the War Department and White House have yet to offer answers.

“$200 billion is 20 percent of the Pentagon’s budget this year. This is much more than the direct cost of the war so far, and likely more than will be needed anytime soon,” he said. “This request begs the question: Is the Pentagon just trying to pad its already-massive budget, or is the administration planning for a protracted war?”

The post Pentagon Claims It Needs Additional $200 Billion to Pay for War on Iran appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:45

Leaders are scrambling to rename streets and schools after reports that the farm labor activist sexually abused girls in the movement he led.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:39

Duggar, 31, was taken into custody in Arkansas and was awaiting extradition to Florida, where he faces charges

Former reality TV star Joseph Duggar is facing a child molestation charge in Florida, almost five years after his brother Josh, who also starred in the TLC show 19 Kids and Counting, was convicted of downloading child sexual abuse images.

Joseph Duggar, 31, was arrested in Arkansas, where he lives, and was awaiting extradition to Florida on Thursday. Duggar is charged with lewd and lascivious behavior toward a child under 12 years old, according to an arrest affidavit from the Bay county sheriff’s office in Panama City, Florida.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:39

March 19, 2026 — By optimizing microorganisms that could bolster production of high-value fuels, chemicals, and materials, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) researchers are compressing the time from lab experiments to commercial biotechnology readiness.

Microbiologist Bram Stone observes bacterial growth in an automated liquid handling system, which has been paired with AI to optimize growth conditions. Photo credit: Andrea Starr, PNNL.

The acceleration has been made possible by integrating AI and high-throughput automation into existing research programs that are harnessing microorganisms to bolster production of high-value fuels, chemicals, and materials.

A Test Case for AI and Automation in Experimental Design

Researchers Bram Stone and Joonhoon Kim have trained an open-source AI platform to focus on growth boundaries of microbial systems—that is, the point at which they either thrive or stop growing. They reasoned that an AI algorithm trained to analyze important growth conditions could help them narrow the search space for optimized ones exponentially faster than if they used traditional experimental approaches. Stone, a microbiologist, and Kim, a computational scientist, combined their expertise to modify BacterAI, which was originally created by a team at the University of Michigan led by Paul Jensen.

Jensen created BacterAI to accelerate infectious disease research using robotics, genomics, and computation to design new therapies. BacterAI operates on binary responses to data inputs, indicating either the presence (yes) or absence (no) of an ingredient. This approach is effective for experiments where presence or absence is the only information researchers seek, but to use the AI for investigating the growth or demise of microorganisms, scientists at PNNL had to change the algorithm to account for a range of growth conditions in experimental designs.

Stone called the AI training process “search and learn.”

Rather than asking the AI whether an ingredient is present, he said, the model now explores concentration ranges—1, 2, or 3 grams within 10 liters, and so on—proposing small, incremental changes to ingredient levels and learning from simulated outcomes.

“The computer runs through simulations for each step until it makes a prediction that growth will stop. And that’s the point where we know we need to delve deeper and perform more detailed analyses of our microbes,” said Stone. Exploring concentration ranges is critical to identifying the growth boundaries of a microorganism.

PNNL has made a large investment in decoding and predicting the ways that complex biological systems interact with their environments and help shape them. The ability to predict and engineer such systems is behind the burgeoning field of predictive phenomics. PNNL’s internal investment, called the Predictive Phenomics Initiative (PPI), is funding Stone and Kim’s project, as well as 10 more.

Optimizing Conditions for Industrial Scale Growth

Bioprocess scientist Jeff Czajka leads another PPI project and is also wrestling with the challenge of maintaining productivity of the microbes during the transition from lab-scale to industrial-scale tanks.

Czajka is conducting experiments with a versatile yeast called Yarrowia lipolytica that is used to produce biofuels, oils, and flavorings. By varying environmental conditions in 2-liter lab-scale bioreactors, Czajka aims to maintain the organism’s growth and production rate at industrial quantities.

This year, Czajka is partnering with Stone and Kim, contributing data and experimental conditions—such as pH, temperature, oxygen, and nitrogen—that will be used as inputs for the AI to optimize experimental design.

“We’ll combine the environmental conditions of a bioreactor with microorganisms in individual wells, allowing us to control the variables while simultaneously running many experiments,” said Stone. “We’re really excited to get started and look forward to comparing our data with Czajka’s experiments in the bioreactors.”

Moving to High-Throughput Automation with Tecan

In the coming months, Stone and Kim plan to integrate the modified AI model with a new Tecan Fluent automated liquid handling system, coupled to a fluorescence plate reader and incubator, to increase experimental throughput.

Stone plans to input 13 experimental variables into the AI, which will generate many thousand distinct experiments. After simulating these experiments, AI will pare the list to 300 key experiments. The Tecan system will then use a robotic arm to prepare 12 acrylic plates the size and shape of a postcard, each with 96 tiny wells representing 25 experiments done in triplicate and including several types of control experiments to assure automated data quality. The Tecan executes the experimental protocol, incubates the plates for two days, and then generates the data that Stone subsequently feeds back into the AI model for further refinement.

In just 18 minutes, the AI suggests another set of 300 experiments based on what it learned from the data produced in the previous batch.

“As humans, we wouldn’t be able to analyze data from 300 experiments in only 18 minutes and design the next set of experimental parameters,” he said. With this level of efficiency, researchers could realistically conduct 900 experiments per week while simulating new experiments in the parameter space of several billion experiments. Previous research has shown that 10,000 to 20,000 experiments can provide enough data to accurately represent a microorganism’s behavior in a system.

Stone said they’re also using the AI and automation systems to investigate a hearty soil bacterium called Pseudomonas putida that can break down waste streams and produce chemicals.

A specific strain of P. putida, he explained, naturally produces nitrogen during growth, yet dies when exposed to excessive amounts of it. By simulating incremental additions of ingredients, such as nitrogen, trace minerals, or salts to the microorganism’s growth mixture, the AI agent will search for the point at which these increments stop the strain from growing. These critical parameters form the basis for the next round of physical experiments.

“AI and automation are enabling us to understand growth boundaries at a faster rate, exponentially accelerating the time from lab discovery to commercialization. The faster we can get scientific solutions to industry, the greater impact we have on driving down costs,” said Stone.

The integration of AI and automation into biological experimentation aligns with PNNL’s broader Genesis Mission effort to accelerate scientific discovery using computing intelligence and power.

The updated BacterAI algorithm developed by Stone and Kim will be made available in the PPI’s open-source repository on GitHub, with original design credit to Jensen’s team.


Source: 

The post PNNL: Robotics and AI Power Biotechnology Advances appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:38

Fed officials expected to lower capital requirements for banks such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase by 4.8%

US federal regulators are trying to soften bank requirements, loosening the amount of capital US banks must have, in what would be some of the biggest changes to bank restrictions since the 2008 financial crisis and a huge win for financial institutions.

On Thursday, US Federal Reserve officials are expected to vote to lower capital requirements – the funds they need to cover risky assets – for the biggest banks by 4.8%, which could free up capital for banks such as JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:30

A Fed rate pause this week has left homebuyers with multiple items to consider. Here are four to think about now.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:24

Distributor says authorities warned screening Tunisian film-maker Kaouther Ben Hania’s docudrama could harm India–Israel relations

The Indian release of The Voice of Hind Rajab, the Oscar-nominated Tunisian film about the death of a five-year-old girl during the Israel-Gaza war, has been blocked by the country’s ratings body, according to the film’s Indian distributor.

In a report by Variety, Manoj Nandwana of Mumbai-based Jai Viratra Entertainment said that he was told that if the film was released, it would “break up” India-Israel relations.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:05

Daria Boyarskaya coordinating OSCE mission overseeing vote in which pro-Moscow Viktor Orbán could lose power

Hungarian rights groups have raised concerns over the appointment of Vladimir Putin’s former interpreter to a key role in an international election monitoring mission, amid fears of Russian interference ahead of Hungary’s crucial vote next month.

Daria Boyarskaya, who worked for many years for Russia’s foreign ministry and interpreted in numerous high-level meetings including one between Putin and Donald Trump, is now a senior adviser at the parliamentary assembly of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE-PA), based in Vienna. She is coordinating the body’s mission to monitor next month’s parliamentary election in Hungary.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 13:00

OpenAI announced it's acquiring developer tooling startup Astral to strengthen its Codex AI coding assistant, which has over 2 million weekly users and has seen a three-fold increase in user growth since the start of the year. CNBC reports: "Through it all, though, our goal remains the same: to make programming more productive. To build tools that radically change what it feels like to build software," Astral's founder and CEO Charlie Marsh wrote in a blog post. The company's acquisition of Astral is still subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approval.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:46

Anyone who was at Club Chemistry in Canterbury from 5 March to 15 March advised to get antibiotics and vaccination

The government has announced a major expansion in vaccination against meningitis in Kent after seven new cases of the disease were confirmed in the county, taking the total number of cases to 27.

On a visit to the University of Kent, the health secretary, Wes Streeting, said anyone who attended the Club Chemistry nightclub in Canterbury from 5 March until 15 March should come forward for antibiotics and vaccination.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:44

UK central bank has left rates on hold, and warned that CPI inflation will be higher in the near term as a result of the ‘new shock to the economy’ from Iran war

European stock markets have dropped sharply at the start of trading, hit by worries about surging energy prices.

In London, the FTSE 100 blue-chip share index has tumbled by 162 points, or 1.6%, to 10,142 points.

“Fears of a sustained energy shock have resurfaced after the escalation in the Iran war sent oil and gas prices soaring. The prospect of a longer, more drawn-out conflict is in sharp focus, as both sides ratchet up attacks on energy infrastructure.

Brent crude remains highly volatile but has traded as high as $114 a barrel today, threatening to climb back towards recent scorching levels. Gas prices have surged by 25%, reaching a range not seen since early January 2023.

The Company is ready to restart production and exports quickly with an improvement in the security environment.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:33

Rep. Byron Donalds, Florida’s leading Republican gubernatorial candidate, supports eliminating all property taxes on primary residences, which would cut public school funding — a stance that sets him apart from other Republicans championing a state property tax overhaul.

"The biggest people who've actually increased property taxes on the hardworking men and women of our state are school districts," Donalds said in a March 8 CBS News Miami interview. He pointed to Miami Dade, Broward, Hillsborough and Collier school districts and said they have decreasing enrollment but are collecting "far more property taxes than they ever have."

Florida public schools received around 40% of the state’s property tax revenue in recent years and typically make up the largest share of local taxes in homeowners’ bills. But they aren’t the main driver of property tax increases — that distinction goes to skyrocketing property values

School districts control some of the local tax money they receive and can choose to lower certain rates. Any increases, though, are subject to caps or voter approval. A large portion of school property tax revenue also comes via a mandatory rate the Florida Legislature sets that districts must levy to receive state funding.

"The primary driver of rising property taxes are rising property values," said Abigail Hall, a University of Tampa associate economics professor. "Most of what is happening in terms of school funding is outside of the school districts’ control."

When reached for comment, a Donalds campaign spokesperson told PolitiFact that many Florida school districts have increased property taxes or are "actively considering" it. The spokesperson sent articles about Alachua County, Leon County and several others

The articles, however, don’t prove that school districts are the "biggest" drivers of higher property taxes. In Alachua County, for example, a school board budget that led to a 6% increase in property tax revenue was largely because home values in the county increased. 

The district kept its operating and infrastructure rates capped. Its overall budget decreased by about $8 million.

Florida House Republicans passed their version of a property tax overhaul in February that would eliminate some property taxes on primary residences with voter approval, exempting schools. The Senate, however, didn’t take up the measure, raising the possibility of a special session.  

How are Florida’s public schools funded?

School districts are funded with federal, state and local money, with local funds almost exclusively coming from property taxes. State funding largely comes from sales taxes.

Local governments, including school boards, set millage rates, which are used to calculate property taxes. One mill equals $1 of tax for every $1,000 of assessed property value. So a rate of one mill on a $200,000 house would equal $200 in annual taxes, excluding exemptions. 

Florida’s public schools primarily rely on three millage rates. One, called the "Required Local Effort," is set annually by the Legislature and dictates what K-12 schools must collect from local taxpayers.

Schools can reduce or increase two of the three primary millage rates, but those rates are still subject to caps under Florida law. So all millage rates that school districts levy have some level of state control. School boards can also request tax money to finance specific projects, such as security officers in schools or teacher pay increases, via local voter referendum.

"While property tax collections may increase as property values grow, school district tax rates themselves are largely governed by state law and have trended downward over time," Nadine Drew, a Broward County Public Schools spokesperson, said.

Hall agreed, saying, "The state largely controls the rules. On the surface it may look like local officials appearing responsible for tax increases, but the underlying formula they’re required to use comes from the state." 

What’s driving higher property taxes in Florida? 

Florida’s rising property taxes are influenced by several factors, but increasing home values are a primary driver. 

Nationwide, the average home sale price rose from $383,000 in 2020 to $534,000 in 2025, a nearly 40% increase. And Florida has followed a similar trajectory, with its median home price rising from $330,000 in 2020 to $425,000 now, a 29% increase.

Florida’s property taxes have similarly increased; in 2019, the state collected $33.9 billion in property tax revenue, and in 2024 it collected $55.1 billion, a 62% increase.

A nonprofit’s 2025 study examined the relationship between property values and property taxes. For Florida, researchers found a correlation between rising home values and rising tax revenue. That’s because the state has no laws limiting the amount of tax revenue local governments can collect, which would insulate homeowners from an inflated housing market.

For the 2025-26 fiscal year, Florida school districts received about $21.6 billion in property tax revenue. About $10.9 billion of that came from the state’s mandated millage.  

Bruce Baker, a University of Miami professor and public school financing expert, said data from 2017 to 2022 showed Florida’s K-12 education spending as a percentage of personal income declined faster than property taxation. This shows "school spending from property taxation is not creating the pressure," he told PolitiFact in an email.

(Bruce Baker, University of Miami)

School districts can roll back millage rates 

Matthew Caldwell, the Lee County property appraiser and a former Republican lawmaker, said school taxes apply to a larger portion of a property’s value since they aren’t subject to certain exemptions, one reason they may appear outsized compared with other local taxes. Caldwell said districts can choose to roll back millage rates to prevent spikes in property taxes but typically don’t do that. 

School districts say they are hamstrung by Florida’s decreasing public school investment and declining student enrollment, which reduce state funding. 

Norín Dollard, a Florida Policy Institute senior policy analyst, said $4 billion, or 24.2%, of the state’s general revenue education funding is now going to private school tuition and homeschoolers, which "leaves county school districts responsible for a greater and greater share of support for public schools."

State revenue per pupil started to decline in 2000 and was replaced by increased local contributions, largely from property taxes, according to a 2025 study Baker conducted. 

"The State Legislature has passed along much of the cost of operating elementary and secondary schools to local property taxpayers. Per pupil spending for Florida school districts is at or below where it was in 1993," Baker said. 

Our ruling

Donalds said Florida’s school districts are the "biggest" drivers of increased property taxes.

Higher property taxes are largely related to increased property values. Since 2020, property tax revenue in the state has increased by over 60% as home values soared.  

Florida’s school districts received around 40% of the state’s property tax revenue in recent years. All school millage rates have some level of state control, including one the Legislature mandates that districts levy to qualify for state funding.

Donalds’ statement contains an element of truth because districts maintain some control over taxation; districts can choose to roll back millage rates to prevent spikes in property taxes but typically don’t do that. But his statement ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False. 

RELATED: Will Florida’s Supreme Court have to review lawmakers' property tax proposal? Only if someone sues

RELATED: Is DeSantis right that most Florida property tax dollars come from vacation homes, businesses?

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:26

Nellie Pou’s bill follows refusal of ICE chief Todd Lyons to rule out enforcement near stadiums and fan festivals

A New Jersey congresswoman introduced legislation on Thursday to block immigration enforcement from conducting raids within a mile of a Fifa World Cup soccer match or fan festival in the US this summer.

The Save the World Cup bill, introduced by Nellie Pou, a Democrat, is meant to assure visitors that they will not be detained and to remove the chilling effect of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations on the events, she said in a release. The World Cup’s first US match begins on 12 June.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:23

High-end specs meet DIY-friendly features. Gigabyte's latest Aorus Elite makes it easier to build a powerhouse PC without the typical installation headaches.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:17

This live blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here

Germany’s chancellor Friedrich Merz also called for de-escalation in the Middle East, welcoming what he said were signals by US president Donald Trump that combat action in Iran could come to an end, which could allow Europe to contribute to securing peace in the region.

“I am expressly grateful that the US president sent a signal in this regard last night that he is prepared to bring the fighting to an end,” he told reporters ahead of an EU summit in Brussels in comments reported by Reuters.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 13:40

Nigel Farage echoed Nick Timothy’s comments after he said public prayer for Ramadan was an ‘act of domination’

Cleverly is trying to show a video, but it is not working. So he just invites Kemi Badenoch to start her speech.

The Conservatives are launching their local elections campaign. There is a live feed here.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 12:57

Dozens said they weren’t given chance to arrange care for their kids after being deported at short notice, study shows

The Trump administration is deporting a significant number of parents without asking them if they have children or allowing them to decide whether to bring their children with them, in apparent violation of its own policies, a major report has found.

In interviews with dozens of parents deported to Honduras, as well as physicians and psychologists, government officials and staff at reception centers for deportees, researchers found that many parents were deported quickly after they were detained, without a chance to arrange for the care of their children.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-19 12:02

Days after Donald Trump won his second election to the White House, Democrats flocked to the New York Times to blame their stunning electoral defeat on alleged capitulations to minority groups — and cement themselves as the future leaders of the party. 

Few appeared more eager than Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., a moderate congressman and former presidential candidate with a reputation for bucking party leadership. 

“Democrats spend way too much time trying not to offend anyone,” Moulton lamented to the paper. “I have two little girls, I don’t want them getting run over on a playing field by a male or formerly male athlete, but as a Democrat I’m supposed to be afraid to say that.” 

That was over a year ago. Now, Moulton is running to unseat one of the most progressive members of the Senate, in the bluest state in the country, on a platform of generational change. And the anti-trans comments he’d hoped would establish him as a thought leader could help tank his campaign. 

Polls consistently show Moulton trailing his opponent, incumbent Sen. Ed Markey, particularly among younger voters. Despite making a case for a new generation in office, Moulton has a 3 percent favorability rating among likely voters ages 18 to 34, compared to Markey’s 67 percent, according to a February 24 poll from the University of New Hampshire. Only 2 percent of likely Massachusetts primary voters under 34 said they would vote for Moulton if the race were held that day, while 53 percent said they would support Markey.

Though it’s still early — most Massachusetts voters won’t cast their ballots until September 1 — the state of the race suggests that Moulton, while attempting to style himself as the vanguard of a brash new Democratic party, picked up some serious political baggage.

Tatishe M. Nteta, a political science professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, said Moulton was far from alone in his post-mortem for Kamala Harris. “The problem is, those comments now have defined [Moulton], not just as a national figure who bucked Democratic viewpoints, but now within the state,” he said. “In order for him to win, he’s going to either have to walk it back or justify it.” 

There were warning signs at the time. Massachusetts Democratic Gov. Maura Healey said the Salem congressman was “playing politics with people,” but Moulton refused to apologize. He argued that the backlash only reinforced his point and accused Democrats of forcing people to “change our values” to meet “the demands of one very small minority group,” by doing things like making them “put pronouns in their email signatures.”

“His ideas are from the last generation.”

“We were extremely offended by the comments that Seth Moulton made,” David Seaton, a college student at Tufts University and vice president of political affairs for the College Democrats of America, told The Intercept. “While Seth Moulton is running on a platform of generational change, his ideas are from the last generation, and his values are certainly from generations past.”

Related

Jon Chait Thinks Kamala Harris Went Too Far Left. He’s Just Falling for Trump’s Demagoguery.

Moulton is now stuck in a political quagmire trapping other Democratic pundits and politicians, some with presidential designs, who tripped over themselves to blame Harris’s loss on the party becoming too woke and out of touch. But now, as voters seem more concerned with rising costs, mounting war, and waning access to health care than pronoun usage, those comments seem less like a prediction and more like a political liability. 

“When you look at how much the world has changed since that moment,” said Josie Caballero, director of voting at Advocates for Trans Equality, “it just seems very out of touch with where we are now.”

Salem, MA - November 8: Protesters placed stickers on the front door of Seth Moulton's office. (Photo by Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Protesters placed stickers on the front door of Rep. Seth Moulton’s congressional office in Salem, Mass., on Nov. 8, 2024. Photo: Matthew J. Lee/Boston Globe via Getty Images

It might seem obvious that transgender rights aren’t the losing issue that Moulton predicted in deep-blue Massachusetts, where in 2018 residents overwhelmingly voted to keep statewide protections for trans people in place. But Caballero pointed to elections that suggested similar trends in red and purple states like Maine, Texas, and Virginia, where Republican Winsome Earle-Sears’s campaign and affiliated PACs spent millions on anti-transgender attack advertisements targeting her Democratic opponent, now-Gov. Abigail Spanberger

The former Virginia congresswoman did not capitulate on her positions regarding trans rights and not only trounced Earle-Sears on Election Day, but a poll of likely voters found they trusted her on “transgender policy” by a margin of 13 points.

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Democrats Swept Tuesday Night’s Election. Now What?

In New York City, Zohran Mamdani won his mayoral election after running an advertisement celebrating trans history and pledging his support to the community, along with a detailed policy agenda. 

Shelby Chestnut, executive director of the Transgender Law Center, said that voters this cycle are looking for candidates who can speak to universal issues like health care and affordability, instead of scapegoating vulnerable groups.

“I think we are living in a time where people are asking for an intersectional approach, where all bodily autonomy is respected, where people’s concerns are heard,” he said.

In Texas, Democratic Senate nominee James Talarico has pivoted toward economic populism when addressing anti-trans attacks. 

“The only minority destroying this country is the billionaires,” Talarico said on TV news, criticizing the media’s fixation on trans athletes. “Trans people are 1 percent of the population. We are focused on the wrong 1 percent.”

Graham Platner, who is running in a competitive primary for the Democratic nomination to challenge Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has similarly addressed the issue of transgender rights.

“An out-of-state billionaire is funding an anti-trans ballot question in Maine — so that we’ll spend our time fighting about trans people instead of raising his taxes,” said Platner in an interview with Slate. 

Still, Chestnut said that while Platner and Talarico’s stances offer a necessary “starting point” for Democrats, they’ll also have to address the topic directly and advocate and explain their beliefs.

“The Democrats’ response was, let’s not say anything and hope it’s just a non-issue.”

“We’re also in a moment where not saying anything proved to also be a losing strategy. Our opposition in the presidential election, on every corner, was blaming transgender people,” he said. “The Democrats’ response was, let’s not say anything and hope it’s just a non-issue. And the reality of it is, it’s an issue.”

In Massachusetts, Moulton’s tone has shifted from his more reactionary rhetoric in the immediate aftermath of the 2024 election, said Caballero.

“We went through the whole gay rights movement. We went through the whole civil rights movement. We never had to say, you know, ‘Seth Moulton: Straight’ or ‘Seth Moulton: White,’” he told WGBH at the time. “And all of a sudden, we have to change all our values to meet the needs or demands of one very small minority group.” 

Now, Moulton appears to be walking a tighter line without apologizing or qualifying his comments. He has shied away from making additional comments about trans athletes or pronouns in recent interviews and has instead focused on emphasizing his voting record.

“Congressman Moulton is acutely aware of the trauma the transgender community is facing,” wrote a spokesperson for Moulton in a statement to The Intercept, echoing other recent interviews. “He is a career-long ally with a 100% rating from the Human Rights Campaign for his voting record, and is a member of the Equality Caucus.”

The spokesperson added that Moulton still believes that “Democrats must engage in difficult conversations” in order to keep the transgender community safe.

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Gavin Newsom’s Biggest Problem Is Gavin Newsom

The tide has not completely turned. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, the current unofficial front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, has continued to fan the flames of hysteria over the participation of trans athletes in sports — despite the fact that there were fewer than 10 trans athletes out of some 510,000 in the entire NCAA as of 2024. 

“We just couldn’t figure out how to make this fair,” he told Katie Couric this month, referring to trans girls’ participation in track competitions. 

Rather than assuaging people with questions about transgender issues, these comments from Democrats help Republicans to make trans rights a “wedge issue,” said Chestnut.

Despite his controversies, an Emerson poll in February found that Newsom had a slight lead with likely Democratic voters if the presidential primary were held that day — though there are still more than two years and one midterms cycle to go before voters pick their next president.

For his part, Moulton has denied changing his opinion on transgender rights or his rhetoric. “His position has never changed, and his record reflects this,” wrote a spokesperson for Moulton, emphasizing his support for the Transgender Bill of Rights in 2023, ahead of the 2024 election. He co-sponsored the bill again in 2026.   

But Bailey Kelly, a student at Tufts University and secretary of the College Democrats of Massachusetts, said they view Moulton as a fair weather friend on the issue. 

“We see through that flip-flopping,” said Kelly, who co-runs the College Democrats of Massachusetts’ digital operations in support of Markey, after the senator won their endorsement. “And it’s insulting that he thinks we don’t see it.” 

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Ed Markey Beats Back Senate Challenge From Joe Kennedy

Authenticity is key for younger voters, said Amanda Litman, co-founder and president of Run for Something. “People are allowed to grow and change,” said Litman, “but it has to come from a place of truth by the candidate, or they’re not gonna be able to compellingly sell it. And I think that is the challenge for [Moulton].”

In January, both College Democrats of America and College Democrats of Massachusetts announced they were endorsing Markey after he won their internal vote in a landslide. Seaton said Moulton’s comments were “of the utmost importance” in the group’s decision not to support him. 

Redemption for candidates like Moulton is possible, Chestnut said. “There is nothing more powerful than some humility, and saying ‘you know what, I was wrong.’”

But to date, Moulton has not apologized for his comments, although he has stated that he “may not have used exactly the right words,” in an interview with CNN.

“Clarification is one thing, but walking back is another. And he has not done either up until this point, and Markey is going to seize on this,” said Nteta, the political science professor. “If Moulton is going to win, he is going to have to assuage the concerns of people in the state about how he is going to govern when he gets to the Senate.” 

The post Seth Moulton Saw Trans Rights as a Political Liability. It Could Doom His Senate Campaign. appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:00

Amid Trump threats, Copenhagen also sent over explosives intended to blow up runways, according to Danish media

Denmark reportedly readied itself for potential attack from the US in January – flying bags of blood to Greenland and explosives to blow up runways in case of a battle with its former closest ally.

During the tense days when Donald Trump threatened to take over Greenland – a largely autonomous territory that is part of the Danish commonwealth – “the hard way”, Copenhagen was so shaken that it started preparing for US invasion, according to Danish public broadcaster DR.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:00

Here's where you can watch Yellowstone, The Madison and more.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 12:00

Walmart has secured patents for systems that use machine learning to forecast demand and automate pricing decisions, "pushing the U.S. retail behemoth into a debate over the use of algorithms to adjust product costs," reports the Financial Times. From the report: In January Walmart obtained a U.S. patent for a "system and method for dynamically and automatically updating item prices" to carry out markdowns in its ecommerce unit, a rapidly growing division that generated more than $150 billion in sales last year. Last week it received another patent for using machine learning to predict demand and recommend prices for goods. [...] Walmart said that both patents were "unrelated to dynamic pricing," as the patent issued in January was specific to markdowns and last week's patent was designed for merchant teams to make decisions, not the technology. The patent granted in January involves an "end-to-end price markdown system" for ecommerce platforms such as Walmart.com based on data including predicted demand and consumers' price sensitivity. Last week's approved patent outlines ways to forecast demand and set prices at levels that will move stock over periods such as a week, a month or a quarter. "Example categories may include, for example, a food item, outdoor equipment, clothing, housewares, toys, workout equipment, vegetables, spices," according to the filing. The "demand forecasting and price recommendation" tool envisaged in the patent would incorporate sources including purchases, prices, methods of payment and customer ID, such as a passport or driver's license number. "Dynamic pricing or anything that smells like it is playing with fire," said Matt Hamory, a grocery industry consultant at AlixPartners, who cited "the goodwill that you can lose by getting customers to think or suspect or worry even slightly that you are doing things with pricing that are to your benefit and their detriment."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 11:58

Attacks on facilities by both sides in the conflict this week threaten grave consequences for the global economy

The escalating attacks on key oil and gas projects in the Middle East are expected to fuel a new phase of the ongoing conflict, with profound consequences for the world’s energy supplies and the global economy.

The Iran regime has vowed to target a string of key energy infrastructure across the region after warning that an Israeli strike on a production facility for its largest gasfield at South Pars on Wednesday had ignited a “full-scale economic war”.

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2026-03-19 20:04
2026-03-19 11:50

Even after accounting for record-high detention populations, the rate of deaths per 10,000 ICE detainees was the highest in 2025 than in any year since the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 11:50

Foreign minister claims Israel convinced Donald Trump to make ‘grave miscalculation’ of waging war on Iran

Oman’s foreign minister has claimed the US has “lost control of its own foreign policy” and accused Israel of persuading Donald Trump’s administration to go to war with Iran – a conflict he described as a “catastrophe” and a “grave miscalculation”.

Writing in the Economist, Badr Albusaidi, the Omani minister who mediated the latest nuclear talks between Iran and the US, offered an unusually damning assessment of events leading up to the US and Israel’s bombing of Iran and the war it has triggered across the Middle East.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:47

Conservative leader says debate not about freedom of religion, but its expression in shared public space

Kemi Badenoch has backed her shadow justice secretary, Nick Timothy, after he claimed that Islamic prayers taking place in public are intimidating and un-British, with Labour saying the Conservatives had embraced the “gutter” politics of prejudice.

The row began after Timothy posted images on social media of prayer at a Ramadan event in London’s Trafalgar Square, saying mass prayer in public places was “an act of domination” and “straight from the Islamist playbook”.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:46

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard faced another round of sharp questions about the Iran war from lawmakers on Thursday

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 11:43

This week, the Senate is expected to start an extended public debate about the SAVE America Act, a proposed bill that would require photo identification for voters in federal elections and proof of citizenship to register to vote in person or by mail.

A version of the bill passed in the House on Feb. 11, 2026, in a 218-213 vote along party lines, with one Democrat, Henry Cuellar of Texas, voting with House Republicans in favor of the bill.

It is widely expected that the chamber’s filibuster rules will prevent a full vote on the floor, but the act and debate process itself will touch on several constitutional issues.

What is the SAVE America Act?

In its current form, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act seeks to amend Section 3 of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993. The changes include requiring a passport, REAL ID card, military ID card, or other forms of identification that list the applicant as a citizen of the United States when applying to register to vote in elections for federal office. The act also requires documentary proof of United States citizenship when a person applies for the National Mail Voter Registration Form.

The SAVE America Act also requires that a “state shall remove an individual who is not a citizen of the United States from the official list of eligible voters for elections for Federal office.” For states that don’t require advance voter registration, such as North Dakota, they must establish “a system for confirming the citizenship of individuals voting in an election for Federal office prior to the first day for voting.”

In addition, the Help America Vote Act of 2002 would be amended to require that people who want to vote in person present an official valid physical photo identification at the polls. For people not voting in person, a copy of a valid photo identification or a state-approved affidavit with the last four digits of the individual’s Social Security number must accompany a remote ballot for federal office elections. Exceptions to the remote ballot ID requirement include absent uniformed services voters and people covered under the Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped Act.

The Constitution and subsequent voter eligibility laws

In Article I, Section 4, of the Constitution, the ability to establish and regulate elections for federal office is divided between state governments and the federal government. The Elections Clause reads, “The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations ….”

In general, the Constitution delegates the powers to conduct and administer voter registration to states and territories. However, Congress has passed laws under Article I, Section 4, using its ability to “make or alter” federal election regulations to add additional conditions. The National Voter Registration Act of 1993 established some requirements for voter registration applications for federal elections, which included a statement specifying eligibility requirements, including citizenship.

The Help America Vote Act of 2002 also required registration applications for federal elections include information such as a current and valid driver's license number, the last four digits of a Social Security number, or a unique identification number provided by the state for voter registration purposes.

Also, Section 611 of Title 18, U.S. Code, generally prohibits “any alien to vote” in an election for federal candidates with some exceptions, including if an “alien’s” parents is or was a U.S. citizen by birth or naturalization, if an “alien” permanently resided in the United States prior to attaining the age of 16, and if an “alien . . . reasonably believed at the time of voting” that they were a U.S. citizen.

Congress has various election enforcement powers under several amendments, which include banning discrimination at the ballot box based on race (15th Amendment) and on sex (19th Amendment). And Congress has passed statutes like the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to protect these rights.

The filibuster and congressional debate

The Senate voted 51-48 on Tuesday to move the House-approved SAVE America Act for consideration, with Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska joining the Democrats in objecting to the motion. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has indicated that the bill’s supporters could debate as long as possible until he calls for a cloture vote. In interviews, Thune has acknowledged publicly that enough votes don’t exist to overcome a filibuster for a vote beyond the debates.

The filibuster is a tactic that dates back to the 1840s in the Senate. The Senate’s website defines a filibuster as “a loosely defined term for action designed to prolong debate and delay or prevent a vote on a bill, resolution, amendment, or other debatable question.”

The modern version requires that at least 60 Senate members vote for cloture, or to end a debate if a member threatens a filibuster, to get a final floor vote to pass a law. The Senate currently uses a “silent” filibuster system where a member only needs to threaten a filibuster via a message to the Senate Majority Leader. A cloture vote is then required, with a 60-vote majority, to override the filibuster, limit debate time, and have a floor vote.

Another possibility is that Majority Leader Thune could allow for a “talking filibuster” that could extend for weeks by getting 51 votes to force Senate’s Democrats to conduct lengthy floor speeches against the SAVE America Act while requiring constant in-person attendance by the Republicans. In such a scenario, the Senate could not consider most other business until the filibuster ends. Thune has already stated he doesn’t plan to pursue a talking filibuster due to a lack of votes.

Thune also has not supported efforts to eliminate the filibuster entirely, an idea frequently championed by President Donald Trump. The president and some members of the Republican caucus want a talking filibuster to force a vote. How that plays out remains to be seen, but there will be considerable attention to the filibuster’s future in coming weeks.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:40

The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee advanced Sen. Markwayne Mullin's nomination to lead the Department of Homeland Security.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 11:35

March 19, 2026 — NERSC invites proposals for projects that will leverage the Perlmutter supercomputer to push the state of the art in AI for science and produce novel science outcomes.

The Perlmutter supercomputer

NERSC is looking for teams with expertise in deep learning for science, a deep understanding of the scientific domain, and demonstrated proof-of-concept results.

This is an open call. It is not necessary to be a current NERSC user to submit a proposal.

Awards

Initially, up to 10,000 Perlmutter GPU node hours will be awarded to accepted projects (each Perlmutter GPU node contains four A100 GPUs) with associated storage quotas on NERSC’s file systems. Additional computer time and data storage may be available for projects that can demonstrate their ability to use them effectively.

NERSC staff assistance will be available for consulting on running effectively at NERSC, but not generally for model development.

NERSC also encourages applications to use Perlmutter’s CPU-only nodes to generate AI-ready datasets, with the expectation that these datasets will be publicly available. Up to 20,000 CPU node hours per project will be awarded to successful applicants, possibly more depending on resource availability.

All awards are for the NERSC 2026 Allocation Year, which runs through January 19, 2027.

Guidelines

Proposals should include the following:

  • Well-defined project scope that includes relevant scientific background, objectives, methodology, and impact on the scientific community
  • Computational resource requirements and utilization plan
  • Team expertise, experience, as well as clear and specific deliverables, along with an expected timeline

Awardees will be required to report progress and summarize achievements to NERSC.

Criteria

Projects will be evaluated based on the following criteria:

  • Scientific significance and innovation
  • Degree of relevance to the missions of NERSC, Berkeley Lab, and the DOE Office of Science
  • Technical feasibility of the proposed project
  • Potential and readiness for effectively leveraging NERSC’s large computational resources at scale
  • Clarity in scope, timeline, objectives, and track record of the research team

Apply Now

Proposals are now being accepted and reviewed on a rolling basis until all resources are awarded.

Submissions made by April 30, 2026 will be given full consideration.

Submit a proposal online here.

Contact

Please email your questions to the NERSC AI team.

About NERSC and Berkeley Lab

The National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) is the mission computing facility for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, the nation’s single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences. Located at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), NERSC serves 11,000 scientists at national laboratories and universities researching a wide range of problems in climate, fusion energy, materials sciences, physics, chemistry, computational biology, and other disciplines. An average of 2,000 peer-reviewed science results a year rely on NERSC resources and expertise, which has also supported the work of seven Nobel Prize-winning scientists and teams.  NERSC is a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility.


Source: NERSC

The post NERSC Issues 2026 Call for AI for Science Proposals appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:34

Old debt won't just disappear, but can creditors freeze your bank account after the statute of limitations expires?

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:32

A California desert community tied the highest March temperature ever recorded in the U.S., amid a record-breaking winter heat wave in the Southwest.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:30

The following is the full transcript of the interview with International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Grossi, a portion of which will air on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 22, 2026.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:25
  • Cunningham to miss time with playoffs near

  • Detroit star may now fall shy of awards cutoff

  • Pistons lead East but face uncertain timeline

All-Star guard Cade Cunningham of the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons has a collapsed lung and is expected to miss at least two weeks and possibly more, a person with knowledge of the situation told the Associated Press on Thursday.

The exact timeline for a return to play is still unknown, the person said.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:14

Wage garnishment rules are strict, but knowing the limits and your rights can help protect your paycheck.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 11:13

I review a lot of laptops and have been doing so for decades. These are the best Windows laptops that CNET has tested.

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

Heather Hallett says ‘superhuman’ efforts of workers were at times the only reason health service survived

The NHS “teetered on the brink of collapse” during the Covid pandemic and only managed to survive thanks to the “superhuman” efforts of healthcare workers, an official inquiry has concluded.

In a damning assessment of how the UK’s healthcare systems dealt with the unprecedented pressure of the pandemic, the Covid-19 inquiry chair, Heather Hallett, said the impact of the virus was “devastating” due to the NHS being in a “parlous state” before the outbreak.

The NHS entered the pandemic with low bed numbers, high numbers of staff vacancies and high bed occupancy, meaning it was already in a “precarious position” and ill-prepared to deal with a pandemic.

There was not enough PPE at the start of the pandemic, meaning healthcare workers had to put themselves and their families at risk to care for patients.

Infection control in the early stages of the pandemic was flawed as it assumed Covid-19 was spread by physical contact, rather than being airborne.

The “stay home, protect the NHS, save lives” public message may have inadvertently led to a decline in hospital attendance of life-threatening emergencies such as heart attacks.

80% of healthcare professionals said they acted in a way that conflicted with their values during the pandemic, with some saying they felt they were “playing God” as they were unable to give everyone the treatment they needed.

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2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 11:04

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S. has struck more than 7,000 targets across Iran since the war began.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 11:02

US defense secretary suggests Thursday will be ‘largest strike package yet … death and destruction from above’

The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, said on Thursday there is no “timeframe” for ending the US war against Iran and did not deny reports that the Pentagon could seek an extra $200bn in taxpayer funding.

The military US-Israeli offensive began three weeks ago and continues to widen. Donald Trump threatened on Wednesday to “massively blow up” the world’s biggest gasfield after Israeli strikes on the Iranian site prompted Tehran to escalate strikes on oil and gas facilities around the Gulf.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:00

Our expert puts the best power washers through their paces on the toughest – and muckiest – outdoor chores, from grimy paving slabs to dirty decking

The best lawnmowers to keep your grass in check

The trouble with the great outdoors is that it gets a bit untidy. Your garden tools might do a good job of keeping your plot in check, but keeping your patio, decking and outdoor furniture spick and span can take hours, especially if you rely on a bucket of soapy water and a scrubbing brush.

That’s where the pressure washer comes in. These handy tools connect to your hose pipe and squirt water at any cleaning problem. Stubborn and unpleasant stains, from bird dirt to years of neglect, can be lifted from your garden’s hard-wearing surfaces in seconds. With the right attachments, you can also use your pressure washer to hose down cars, bikes and boats.

Best pressure washer overall:
Ava Go P40

Best budget pressure washer:
Kärcher K 2 Classic

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:00
Ryan Shore

RYAN SHORE
Staff Reporter

On Feb. 5, the National Basketball Association (NBA) trade deadline’s shot clock expired and teams for the rest of the season were set in stone come playoff time. With blockbuster moves and controversial questions, the deadline left an impression on almost every franchise’s future.

Almost a month before the deadline, the Washington Wizards addressed the issues the Atlanta Hawks were facing with star guard Trae Young, who had grown apart from the franchise. 

Young was moved quickly after news spread, being traded for veteran CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert in what looks to be a salary dump for the Hawks. With Jalen Johnson becoming a superstar at only 24 years old, Young’s praise in Atlanta faded quickly.

The trade block was deserted until Feb. 1, when the Cleveland Cavaliers began to step on the gas by adding depth to their lineup, including guards Keon Ellis, Dennis Schröder and forward Emanuel Miller. Within the week, they went on to acquire veteran guard James Harden in return for their much younger guard Darius Garland, who they began to lose faith in. 

The Cavaliers look to be in a win-now situation with an open Eastern Conference.

In what seemed to be the most head-scratching move of the deadline, former Defensive Player of the Year Jaren Jackson Jr. was traded to the struggling Utah Jazz from the Memphis Grizzlies, who looked to clean house from their prior stars for future draft compensation. 

In the week following the deadline, the Jazz were fined half a million dollars for violating the league’s player participation policy by benching their stars in winnable games. 

This violation has been an issue among many NBA teams, most notably the Indiana Pacers, who were fined $100,000 as they also look to tank. Despite the Pacers’ strategy, the franchise acquired its future center in Ivica Zubac as they wait for star guard Tyrese Haliburton to return next season.

The Chicago Bulls are in a tricky situation, as they currently have eight true guards on their roster. The franchise received zero first-round picks for core players in what appears to be a full rebuild ahead, losing Nikola Vučević and Coby White for role players and second-round picks.

The rich got richer as the Oklahoma City Thunder acquired young star Jared McCain, with the Philadelphia 76ers giving up on McCain despite the promising pre-injury performances he had. The decision was made as playing time became a steady issue for the second-year guard.

The Golden State Warriors added the injury-prone Kristaps Porziņģis, giving up sharpshooter Buddy Hield and small forward Jonathan Kuminga. The Warriors were one of the few reported teams making crucial offers for Giannis Antetokounmpo, so their lack of action during the deadline to help their veterans adds up.

The same case comes for the New York Knicks as they added point guard Jose Alvarado, as well as the Minnesota Timberwolves adding Ayo Dosunmu. The Milwaukee Bucks’ decision to hold on to their star Giannis Antetokounmpo until the off-season has been the “what if?” story of the deadline, as they wait for serious offers to appear after the finals.

The last notable blockbuster trade of the deadline regarded star power forward Anthony Davis getting traded to the Washington Wizards from the Dallas Mavericks after playing only 29 games for the franchise. 

Despite Cooper Flagg being an amazing selection for the Mavericks in this year’s draft, the franchise currently sits as the 12th seed in the Western Conference.

As the trade deadline ends and the all-star break takes place, the new moves and narratives will take form for teams come time for the playoffs.


NBA trade deadline: The key stories leading to the deadline shot clock was first posted on March 19, 2026 at 10:00 am.
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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Microsoft is considering legal action against its partner OpenAI and Amazon over a $50 billion deal that could violate its exclusive cloud agreement with the ChatGPT maker, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday. Last month, Amazon and OpenAI signed several agreements, including one that makes Amazon Web Services the exclusive third-party cloud provider for Frontier, OpenAI's enterprise platform for building and running AI agents. The dispute centers on whether OpenAI can offer Frontier via AWS without violating the Microsoft partnership, which requires the startup's models to be accessed through the Windows maker's Azure cloud platform, the FT report said, citing sources. OpenAI and Microsoft recently stated together that "Azure remains the exclusive cloud provider of stateless OpenAI APIs," a Microsoft spokesperson said in an emailed statement, referring to software interfaces used to access OpenAI's models. "We are confident that OpenAI understands and respects the importance of living up to this legal obligation," the spokesperson added. FT said Microsoft executives believed the approach was not feasible and would violate the spirit, if not the letter, of their agreement, and added that the companies were in talks to resolve the dispute without litigation ahead of Frontier's launch. "We know our contract," a person familiar with Microsoft's position told the newspaper. "We will sue them if they breach it. If Amazon and OpenAI want to take a bet on the creativity of their contractual lawyers, I would back us, not them."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 10:44

ABILENE, Texas, March 19, 2026 — Natura Resources LLC (Natura), a developer of advanced liquid-fueled molten salt reactors, continues to make progress advancing the reactor physics and safety analysis underpinning its reactor technology through high-performance computing simulations at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) of The University of Texas at Austin (UT).

Lonestar6 delivers HPC power to researchers across Texas. Supported by the University of Texas Research Cyberinfrastructure (UTRC) initiative and partners across the state’s leading research institutions, the supercomputer enables scientists to tackle complex challenges and accelerate discovery. Photo credit: TACC.

Reactor physics analyses are being performed by leading researchers and graduate students using UT’s advanced supercomputing resources. These simulations model the fundamental physics of Natura’s reactor design — specifically, the behavior of neutrons that sustain the fission chain reaction within the liquid fuel salt.

“By leveraging TACC’s supercomputers and experts, we’re able to model the core physics that governs reactor performance, safety characteristics, and operational strategy,” said Dr. Jonathan Scherr, Director of Nuclear Systems at Natura Resources. “These simulations support the technical foundations essential to our progress in developing our commercial-scale reactor.”

“The UT research team develops and uses predictive computer codes to model the reactor performance, which was used to support the construction application for Natura’s demonstration reactor and obtain Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval,” said Dr. Kevin Clarno, Associate Professor at UT.

The work being done with UT supports all phases of Natura’s development process, from early-stage concept ideation and optimization through final safety analyses and long-term operations support. The simulations directly inform Natura’s safety analysis methodology, including analysis of the reactor’s built-in safety characteristics that automatically slow the reaction if operating conditions change.

Supercomputers give Natura’s team the computing power needed to run highly detailed simulations of how the reactor operates and how radiation is managed. The result is improved confidence in how the reactor will operate in a variety of conditions.

For advanced reactor developers, rigorous reactor physics modeling is the backbone of the safety, design, and licensing process. Natura’s simulations provide the quantitative foundation for nuclear safety analysis, materials selection, fuel strategy, and long-term operational planning.

Natura’s continued advancement of reactor physics analysis reinforces its commitment to delivering a safe, commercially deployable liquid-fueled reactor to meet growing demands for energy, clean water and medical isotopes.

About Natura Resources

Natura Resources LLC is a leading advanced small modular reactor developer committed to answering increasing domestic and global demands for reliable energy, medical isotopes, and clean water. Natura’s reactors are liquid-fueled and molten salt-cooled, which enhances safety and reduces waste. With the first construction permit for a liquid-fueled reactor from the NRC, Natura has established itself as a leading force in the advanced nuclear industry, fueled by a commitment to support America’s energy future. The company is privately owned and has secured more than $120 million in private funding and a commitment of $120 million from the State of Texas. For more information, www.naturaresources.com.

About the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC)

The Texas Advanced Computing Center at The University of Texas at Austin is the nation’s leading academic supercomputing center. Since 2001, TACC has advanced discoveries across scientific disciplines by providing world-class systems, software, and expertise to researchers addressing society’s greatest challenges. TACC offers high performance computing, AI at scale, storage, visualization, training, and workforce development, fostering innovation that transforms science and improves lives. As home to the U.S. National Science Foundation Leadership-Class Computing Facility, TACC will drive the next decade of breakthroughs in computational research and discovery. For more information, visit www.tacc.utexas.edu.


Source: Natura

The post Natura Resources Advances Reactor Physics and Safety Analysis Through TACC Collaboration appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 10:39

U.S. author Jessica Joelle Alexander says Americans should consider adopting some of Denmark's "great parenting practices."

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 10:28

Hello r/onewheel!

I’m a photographer looking for the right board to move around during photo sessions, mostly sidewalks with some occasional trails.

TL;DR: Main contenders are Pint X or XR Classic. I need something stable/reliable for short point-to-point hops, easy to toss in my Model 3 (frunk or trunk), and good with a backpack full of expensive camera gear. Falls aren’t a huge worry for me personally (gear is insured), but I really don’t want to risk damaging thousands in cameras/lenses from instability.

I’ve also looked at electric scooters, but they seem less ideal for any trail sections and might not feel as stable?

My use case:

• Ride mainly on sidewalks, occasional trails for photoshoots.

• Drive a Tesla Model 3, so the board has to fit inside easily (frunk preferred for quick access?).

• I’m an avid road cyclist, so I’m comfortable with balance and handling a board, no beginner here.

• Primary goal is reliable A-to-B transport for sessions, plus packing it in the car for travel to other cities.

• Carrying a backpack with camera gear means stability is key to avoid wobbles or falls on uneven ground.

The Pint X wiring/battery harness issues (from older reports) are making me hesitate, has that been fully resolved on newer units, or is it still a concern? The XR Classic seems more stable and forgiving on bumps/trails from what I’ve read, but it’s pricier (~$2K).

I’m okay spending the extra on the XR Classic if it’s noticeably better for my needs (stability with gear, trails, reliability), but if the Pint X is solid enough and more portable, I’d go that route to save some cash.

What do you all think? Experiences with:

• Pint X reliability in 2025/2026 (wiring fixed?),

• XR Classic vs Pint X stability on sidewalks/light trails (especially with a backpack),

• Fitting either in a Model 3 (frunk/trunk pics or tips appreciated!),

• Overall recommendation for this kind of “work transport” use?

Thanks in advance

submitted by /u/ranger052
[link] [comments]

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 10:27

Republican senator’s nomination will now be considered by full Senate, where the GOP appears poised to confirm him

A key Senate committee on Thursday advanced Markwayne Mullin’s nomination to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on a near party line vote, a day after the Republican senator faced questions at his confirmation hearing about his approach to Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement agenda and accusations of encouraging violence.

Nearly all eight Republicans on the Senate committee on homeland security and governmental affairs voted to advance Mullin’s nomination, with the sole exception of the panel’s chair, Rand Paul of Kentucky, who the day prior had harshly criticized his colleague for comments he made about a neighbor who assaulted Paul in 2017, and an incident six years later in which Mullin readied himself to fight a witness at a committee hearing.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 10:24

The Guardian’s Maanvi Singh has been on the frontline of the Trump administration’s brutal ICE crackdown. Post your questions about what it’s been like to cover this stark moment in American history.

The unprecedented occupation of American cities by a bulked up Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has led to a series of shocking scenes over the past 12 months, including the killing of Alex Pretti and Renee Good by federal officials in Minneapolis. It has also led to an incredible community response as people banded together to protect their neighbours.

Guardian US immigration reporter Maanvi Singh has spent the past few months covering this story, including spending a week on the block where Alex Pretti was killed.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 10:21

State-run QatarEnergy says Iranian attack on its facilities has wiped out 17% of its LNG capacity for up to five years

Gas prices jumped to four-year highs and oil prices rose again after an escalation of attacks by Israel and Iran on gasfields heightened fears of prolonged disruption to international energy supplies.

QatarEnergy told Reuters on Thursday that Iran had damaged facilities that produced 17% of the state-owned company’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capacity and that it would take three to five years to repair them.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 10:07

I don't believe there is a setting, but would love one for the app to be able to lower the speed in which the buzz kicks in.

The boards supposedly lift up when you're reaching your limit but it's never felt on my end, the buzz is a really good warning but it kicks in as it's about to be too late.

Would love it, just for example for example, the Pint S that can reach 18mph. The buzz setting could be moved down to 17mph/16mph, so i have some time to react properly.
I've hit the buzz a few times and been able to slow down in time,
however last night i was not so lucky and took a bad fall.

Would love a setting if possible. Or if this could be forwarded to the right people/place.

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

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 10:00

Exclusive: At least four people have travelled back to the UK by lorry in the last two weeks

Asylum seekers who arrived in the UK in small boats and were forcibly returned to France under the controversial “one in, one out” deal have returned to the UK in lorries, the Guardian has learned.

When asked about the recent returnees, the Home Office said that people who came back to the UK after removal to France were detained and returned to France at the earliest opportunity. Amnesty International UK has called for “one in, one out” to be scrapped.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 10:00

US leaders anticipated a walkover. Now they’re embroiled in a conflict that could hasten the end of US economic dominance

Nobody gave the Boers a prayer when the war in South Africa began in 1899. It was farmers ranged against the might of the British empire, and the expectation was that resistance would quickly crumble.

Eventually, might did prevail. Britain won the Boer war, but it was a hollow victory that took the best part of three years to achieve and came at a high cost. The blow to British prestige – coming at a time when its global hegemony was under threat from fast-growing countries such as the US – was severe. Far from highlighting the extent of Britain’s power, it exposed its limitations.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 10:00

Iran war and its impact on energy and fertiliser costs is the main risk to the global economy, report says

An extended period of high oil prices as a result of war in the Middle East could “crimp” the AI boom, the World Trade Organization’s chief economist has warned.

The war and its impact on energy and fertiliser costs is the main risk to the global economy identified in the WTO’s latest Global Trade Outlook.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:52

The Herons are out of the Champions Cup after defeat to Nashville. Now it’s back to the same old hits for the club

Concacaf may not have the world’s most hallowed Champions League. The confederation is so aware of that fact that it rebranded the competition as a Champions Cup two years ago.

Nonetheless, winning the continental competition is the ultimate aim for MLS’s most ambitious clubs, even though (or perhaps because) only one of its last 25 installments has seen an MLS team crowned as Concacaf’s best. Liga MX continues to dominate the competition, boasting 21 winners since 2001, even as MLS improves. Even Costa Rica’s Liga Promerica has more titles since the turn of the century thanks to back-to-back victories for Alajuelense and Saprissa in the mid-2000s.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:31

Exclusive: Hanne, 16, from Sussex, was denied board on flight to London after weekend in Copenhagen

A 16-year-old British schoolgirl has been left stranded in Denmark after she was refused board on a flight to London because of new UK border rules introduced on British dual nationals.

Hanne*, from Sussex, was stopped from boarding a flight home on 8 March after a weekend seeing her British father, who is an academic on a short work stint at a university in Copenhagen.

Has your child been refused board on a flight because of the new rules? If you want to share your story, email: lisa.ocarroll@theguardian.com

* Names have been changed.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:27

Advocates said the Van Nuys building looked like an example of "clustering" — a red flag for hospice fraud.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:26

Only two of the Premier League’s last-16 teams made it to the quarter-finals while European giants are coming into form when it matters

Another traumatic week for the self-worth of the Premier League, one in which Europe’s big beasts got into their stride. The defending champions, Paris Saint-Germain, put on a devastating display at Chelsea. Bradley Barcola’s goal, their second, was the highlight of a 3-0 win. Barcelona ran out 7-2 winners over Newcastle, having been level at half-time at 2-2, 3-3 on aggregate. Real Madrid continue to be Pep Guardiola’s great tormentors, with Vinícius Júnior getting both goals at Manchester City. His crybaby celebration was aimed at those City supporters who mocked him after Rodri pipped the Brazilian to the Ballon d’Or in 2024. Bayern Munich continue to look irresistible. Harry Kane scored twice, and Lennart Karl’s strike continued his trajectory as German football’s next big thing in a 4-1 win over Atalanta, a mighty 10-2 on aggregate.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:17
When epoxy is not enough.

I decided to re mod the board as the epoxy didn’t hold, this has 5200 ft pounds of holding power. I adhered dog tag blanks to both ends of the pint to help keep from destroying the bottom, and if I ever learn the power slide braking I might throw sparks. Tried riding without my stick and I just can’t. I look stupid jumping off the thing and without my stick I can’t make the safe stop work so here we are

Took the gt back cause it made me look stupid. I float to a stop no worries push the button wait on the white walker man to light up so I can remount. Had my uggs on and as soon as I try to go it nosedived and don’t go cause it didn’t sense my feet. My pint never did that once. Not paying full price to put furniture sliders on a 2500 toy, now a 1000 dollar one with low miles, maybe, lol.

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

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 09:12

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 19, 2026 — DDN and Zadara have announced a strategic technology partnership to deliver high-performance AI infrastructure for sovereign clouds and multi-tenant AI factories, built on NVIDIA Reference Designs for multi-tenant clouds.

This partnership is a key component of DDN’s enterprise AI strategy, which is built around two pillars:

  • Enterprise AI at scale
  • A growing ecosystem of partners committed to making AI infrastructure easier to deploy, faster to operationalize, and more affordable to run.

By partnering with innovators like Zadara, DDN is accelerating its mission to make enterprise AI accessible, affordable, and fast – not just for hyperscalers, but for service providers, telcos, regulated industries, and global enterprises that need sovereign control, predictable performance, and secure multi-tenant operations.

As NVIDIA accelerates the global evolution of AI infrastructure through standardized reference architectures, enterprises, service providers, and telcos are increasingly focused on deploying software-defined AI factories that deliver predictable performance, rapid time-to-value, and secure multi-tenant operations across sovereign, private, and hybrid environments. The DDN–Zadara partnership directly addresses these requirements by combining Zadara’s AI-optimized, cloud-native orchestration and GPU-aware infrastructure platform, built-on NVIDIA Reference Designs for Multi-Tenant Clouds, with DDN EXAScaler’s proven performance for large-scale AI training and inference.

Together, the two companies will enable service providers, telcos, and enterprises to deploy NVIDIA-powered, AI infrastructure quickly, securely, and efficiently—while maintaining full control over compliance, cost, tenant isolation, and performance SLAs.

A Unified Foundation for Sovereign AI and Multi-Tenant AI Factories

Zadara’s platform is designed to abstract the operational complexity of AI infrastructure while preserving the performance and governance requirements demanded by sovereign and multi-tenant environments. The company supports secure GPU networking, policy-based orchestration,

and strong and secure tenant segmentation with native alignment to NVIDIA guidance on best practices for GPU virtualization and allocation.

Through this partnership, DDN EXAScaler will serve as the high-performance AI data layer for Zadara’s AI Factory and sovereign cloud deployments – enabling consistent throughput, massive concurrency, and predictable scaling for GPU-intensive workloads.

Making Enterprise AI Practical: Accessible, Affordable, and Fast

Enterprise AI adoption is accelerating—but many organizations still face the same core blockers:

  • High infrastructure complexity
  • Unpredictable GPU performance
  • Data locality and compliance requirements
  • Multi-tenant governance and operational control
  • Cost and time-to-value constraints

This partnership directly addresses those barriers by delivering an integrated, production-ready foundation for real-world AI factories- where the AI stack is not only powerful, but also operationally scalable.

While many AI factory strategies remain theoretical, Zadara and DDN are focused on delivering real-world deployments that customers can operationalize immediately, including containerized AI stacks, high-performance GPU networking, and multi-tenant controls required by regulated industries and national AI initiatives.

NVIDIA GTC Launch + Go-To-Market

“AI factories are the new operating model for modern enterprises and service providers—but they only succeed when the data layer can keep GPUs productive at scale,” said Alex Bouzari, CEO and Co-Founder at DDN. “Partnering with Zadara is part of DDN’s broader enterprise AI strategy and ecosystem commitment—making AI infrastructure more accessible, affordable, and fast for enterprises that need sovereign control and multi-tenant performance. Together, we’re delivering a proven path to deploy NVIDIA-powered AI factories with performance, security, and operational confidence.”

“NVIDIA reference designs are accelerating the broad adoption of AI factories. Yet organizations need a cloud-native platform that can operationalize them simply and efficiently in real-world, multi-tenant environments while complying with data sovereignty regulations,” said Yoram Novick, CEO at Zadara. “DDN EXAScaler brings the high-performance AI data foundation needed to meet demanding sovereign and enterprise requirements while Zadara delivers the orchestration, isolation, and policy control required to deploy AI infrastructure quickly, securely, and efficiently.”

Why This Partnership Matters

  • AI Factories are becoming the default infrastructure model for enterprises, telcos, and cloud service providers.
  • Sovereign and multi-tenant deployments require tenant isolation, compliance, and predictable SLAs—not just raw performance.
  • Tenant isolation spans across storage, compute and networking in tight integration.
  • AI infrastructure must be delivered as an integrated system—GPU + networking + data, with orchestration and policy built in.
  • Enterprise AI must be practical, with faster time-to-value and a clear path to production—not months of integration work.

Together, DDN and Zadara deliver a production-ready foundation for sovereign, multi-tenant AI factories—combining the high-performance AI data layer required to keep GPUs fully utilized with the cloud-native orchestration, policy control, and tenant isolation required to operate AI infrastructure securely at scale.

The joint solution enables customers to deploy AI infrastructure powered by NVIDIA to:

  • DDN EXAScaler performance at scale, delivering high throughput and massive concurrency for training, inference, checkpointing, and large dataset pipelines
  • Cloud-native multi-tenant orchestration, including GPU-performance-aware scheduling and automation
  • Policy-based segmentation and sovereign controls, supporting compliance, tenant isolation, and data locality requirements
  • Integration with NVIDIA networking and DPU technologies, enabling secure, high-performance AI factory architectures
  • Predictable performance SLAs and faster time-to-value, reducing operational complexity while accelerating AI deployment across enterprise and service provider environments

More from HPCwire

About DDN

DDN is the world’s leading provider of AI data storage and data management platforms, powering over 20 years of innovation across HPC, enterprise, and the largest AI deployments on Earth. With its EXA, Infinia, and intelligent data management platforms, DDN delivers unmatched performance, scale, and business value for customers building next-generation AI factories, hyperscale clouds, and Sovereign AI initiatives. DDN is the trusted partner for thousands of the world’s most data-intensive organizations, including the leading national labs, research institutions, enterprises, hyperscalers, financial firms, and autonomous vehicle innovators. For more information, visit www.ddn.com.

About Zadara

Zadara is a leading provider of sovereign AI edge clouds offering a revolutionary distributed cloud platform that simplifies operational complexity and enables seamless multi-tenancy through automated end-to-end provisioning of compute, storage, and networking. With over 500 edge cloud locations worldwide and with the ability to deploy a cloud in any location, Zadara’s clouds are uniquely positioned to meet the unique demands of various cloud-based use cases, including sovereign cloud and AI inference at the edge for service providers and the modern enterprise. Zadara clouds are AWS compatible and feature consumption-based pricing with zero data egress fees. Zadara’s fully-managed clouds are designed to accommodate any workload, anywhere – whether on-premises, hybrid, multi-cloud or at the edge. Zadara operates worldwide with a highly skilled team that provides 24/7 follow-the-sun support and services. Zadara is headquartered in Irvine, California.


Source: DDN

The post DDN and Zadara Power Sovereign, Multi-Tenant AI Factories Built on NVIDIA Reference Architecture appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:06

Satellite companies restrict access to images of the Middle East as the Iran war rages, with one citing concern data could be exploited "by adversarial actors."

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 09:04

Carriers warn they cannot hold off passing on costs for long, while some airlines plan to increase flights via Asia

Europe’s biggest airlines have said the rise in fuel prices caused by the war in the Middle East will drive up fares and are advising passengers to book early.

While carriers have partly hedged the price of jet fuel, bosses said they could not avoid passing on additional costs to passengers for long.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-19 09:04

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates, March 19, 2026 — The Technology Innovation Institute (TII), the applied research pillar of Abu Dhabi’s Advanced Technology Research Council (ATRC), has announced the direct integration of its recently released Quantum Computing Cloud Platform with the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform for hybrid quantum-classical computing.

This integration enables researchers and developers worldwide to submit quantum jobs directly to TII’s physical quantum hardware and simulators, available at  https://q-cloud.tii.ae, using the NVIDIA CUDA-Q programming interface. By bridging TII’s cloud-based quantum infrastructure with NVIDIA’s hybrid quantum-classical programming model, the integration significantly lowers technical barriers to entry and enables high-performance experimentation across quantum computing workflows.

The integration delivers a “write-once, run-anywhere” experience, offering two distinct pathways for job submission:

  • Native Integration: Utilizing TII’s specialized Python client to deploy quantum circuits and algorithms directly to TII’s cloud infrastructure.
  • Standardized CUDA-Q Interfaces: Leveraging standard Python or C++ CUDA-Q code to target TII’s cloud-based QPUs (Quantum Processing Units) as a seamless backend

Dr. Leandro Aolita, Chief Researcher of TII’s Quantum Research Centre, said: “Our goal is to make quantum computing on our in-house QPUs both accessible and performant for the global research community. By enabling CUDA-Q users to submit jobs directly to our cloud platform, we are not just providing a service; we are integrating the UAE’s sovereign quantum-technology capabilities into the global fabric of hybrid high-performance computing (HPC).”

Through this integration, CUDA-Q developers can select TII as a target backend with a simple configuration change, accelerating the development of hybrid quantum-classical algorithms in fields such as materials science, cryptography, and optimization. In doing so, the integration strengthens TII’s quantum ecosystem by enabling global developers to access its in-house quantum hardware through a widely adopted hybrid computing framework.

More from HPCwire: TII Launches Cloud Service Providing Access to In-House Quantum Processing Units


Source: TII

The post TII Scales Quantum Access Through Integration of Its Quantum Computing Cloud Platform with NVIDIA CUDA-Q appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:01

The companies are expanding their collaborative relationship.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:01

Commentary: If you want a new iPhone, get the iPhone 17. The iPhone 18 is still too far away, and we don't know enough about it to justify the wait.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:01

Nothing is challenging Google's Pixel 10A, as both phones share the same affordable price.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 09:00

Catch up on this year's Oscar winners and more!

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 08:30

The fates of two ostensibly similar online games released this year, Marathon and Highguard, prove that success is becoming close to unattainable

What does success look like for developers of online video games? In 2026, the answer could not be clearer: no one has a clue.

Consider Highguard, 2026’s first big flop. Signs were promising on its launch on 26 January, with a peak of 100,000 concurrent players on Steam – plus those enjoying the game on PlayStation and Xbox, which do not make player counts public. As a free-to-play game, the barrier to entry for Highguard was low. And thanks to a prime advertising placement at the end of December’s The Game Awards – a buzzy spot usually reserved for known hitmakers, not free-to-play upstarts – curiosity was high.

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

Afroman spoke to CBS News after he won the case, which tested the limits of parody and the license artists can take in social commentary directed at public figures.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 17:50

Stanford economists estimate that the typical U.S. household will spend an additional $740 on gas this year because of the jump in global oil prices.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 11:40

The FBI is investigating Joe Kent — who resigned this week over the war with Iran — in connection with alleged leaks of classified information, sources tell CBS News.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-20 01:08

As Iran retaliates for an Israeli strike on the South Pars gas field, one analyst warns the war is "now hitting the plumbing of the global energy system."

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

Paul Griggs says senior staff at consulting firm who are not ‘paranoid about being AI-first’ are likely to be replaced

The US boss of PricewaterhouseCoopers has warned that partners who do not get to grips with AI have no future at the consulting firm.

Paul Griggs said senior staff who were not “paranoid about being AI-first” would probably be replaced by others who were ready to embrace the technology. “I don’t think anyone gets a free pass here. Anyone,” Griggs told the Financial Times.

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

Michael Coyne, who has autism and works at the cafe, said he was shocked and confused when someone stole about $20 from his tip jar.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 08:00

Covid-related downturns and reductions in alcohol consumption have taken a toll on a once booming industry

In the early 2000s, Chris Bell, then a student at University of Colorado Boulder, followed a common path among people interested in brewing beer. He started doing so at home, then spent years working at established craft beer makers Long Trail Brewing in Vermont and Avery Brewing in Colorado before opening Call to Arms Brewing Company in 2015 in Denver.

In a crowded market, the business was successful. Its More Like Bore-O-Phyll beer won a gold medal in the fresh or wet hop ale category at the 2018 World Beer Cup. A local outlet called it one of the city’s best breweries, and it had a 4.7 rating from more than 400 reviews on Google.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 08:00

Reform UK leader’s remarks in Cameo clip risk damaging party’s ambitions in upcoming Welsh elections

Nigel Farage described Welsh people as “foreign speakers” in a paid-for personalised video message that could prove awkward for Reform UK in forthcoming elections in the country.

Farage made the remarks in a video he was paid to make on Cameo, a personalised video platform, to celebrate a wedding.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 08:00

Decision comes as concerns mount over economic fallout from conflict bringing fresh cost of living shock

The Bank of England has kept interest rates on hold amid growing fears over an inflation shock triggered by the US-Israel war on Iran.

As households brace for a rise in living costs, the Bank’s rate-setting monetary policy committee (MPC) voted by a majority to keep its key base rate at the current level of 3.75%.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 08:00

From Venezuela to the Middle East, this is gangsterism fused with colonialism. It repudiates the moral language through which US power once justified itself

Gone are any pretences about saving the Iranian people. “They really are a nation of terror and hate,” Donald Trump says of Iran. Asked if he would like to help its people, he replied: “I’d like to, if they can behave, but they’ve been very menacing.” Perhaps even he sensed the counterproductive ugliness of this, hastily adding that they are “great people … smart, brilliant, energetic”.

It gets worse. Trump wrote on Truth Social that Iran had “plans of taking over the entire Middle East” and “completely obliterating Israel,” adding: “JUST LIKE IRAN ITSELF, THOSE PLANS ARE NOW DEAD!” Pronouncing the death of a nation hardly screams liberation.

Owen Jones is a Guardian columnist

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 08:00

The two-and-a-half centuries of American life have all been building to this, the natural evolution of our culture

I’m a regular guy, just like you. I promise. There’s no one more normal than someone who publicly declares they’re normal. Here’s me, the average, everyday Joe, who can’t get enough of people beating the crap out of each other. I love a good scrape, a sloppy donnybrook, or a casual beating. This is what defines me as an American.

When I go to the cinema and large stretches of the film don’t involve actors smashing each other with baseball bats, I immediately start texting my friends about how boring Hamnet is. What’s all that clear liquid coming out of that man’s eyes? It’s not blood. Shouldn’t he be swearing revenge against his enemies right about now?

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 07:51

A federal judge has denied the asylum claim​ for the family of Liam Conejo Ramos​, a 5-year-old Minnesota boy whose arrest by ICE in January gained national attention.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 07:51

The United States made war on three continents over three days earlier this month, conducting attacks in Africa, Asia, and South America. During that span, the U.S. also struck a civilian boat in the Pacific Ocean. The globe-spanning scope of the attacks represents one of the few instances since World War II that the United States has been simultaneously involved in armed conflicts with such a wide geographic sweep.

The attacks in Ecuador, Iran, Somalia, and the Eastern Pacific from March 6 through March 8 are part of President Donald Trump’s escalating world war against variously defined “terrorists.” They highlight the administration’s increasing willingness to use the U.S. military as a solution to almost any perceived geopolitical problem.

“All war. All the time. Everywhere,” said Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer and specialist in counterterrorism issues and the laws of war, of the wide-ranging attacks over just a few days. “It’s unprecedented given the absence of any fresh congressional authorization.”

This month, Trump has repeatedly referenced his relentless war-making and even lamented it on occasion. “I built the military and rebuilt it in my first term, and we’re using it more than I’d like to use it to be honest with you,” he said.

The region that has seen the most profound increases in this “use” of military power is the Western Hemisphere as part of what Trump and others have called the “Donroe Doctrine.” This bastardization of the 1823 Monroe Doctrine — a unilaterally claimed license to militarily meddle in America’s backyard — has led to attacks on civilian boats in the waters surrounding Latin America and an attack on Venezuela. The most recent location of U.S. attacks in the region, Ecuador, is also the site of the first strike in Trump’s recent three-day, three-war spree.

“Yes — as @POTUS has said — we are bombing Narco Terrorists on land as well,” self-styled Secretary of War Pete Hegseth wrote on X on March 6, announcing a new strike in Ecuador. Days later, in a war powers report announcing the introduction of U.S. armed forces into “hostilities” in that country, the White House informed Congress of “military action taken on March 6, 2026, against the facilities of narco-terrorists affiliated with a designated terrorist organization.”

Related

Trump’s AI-Powered World Wars

The next day, Trump announced an escalation of his latest war of choice in the Middle East. “Today Iran will be hit very hard!” he posted, writing, “Under serious consideration for complete destruction and certain death, because of Iran’s bad behavior, are areas and groups of people that were not considered for targeting up until this moment in time.” That same day, U.S. Central Command posted footage of the U.S. striking unspecified Iranian targets beneath a threat by Hegseth to hunt and kill those that “threaten Americans anywhere on earth.” 

A day later, the U.S. conducted an attack as part of its war-on-terror-holdover conflict in Somalia. “In coordination with the Federal Government of Somalia, U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) conducted an airstrike targeting ISIS-Somalia on March 8, 2026,” reads an AFRICOM press release. “The airstrike occurred in the vicinity of the Golis Mountains.” (This frequently attacked region was the site, last year, of what a top Navy admiral called the “largest airstrike in the history of the world.”)

On the same day as the recent AFRICOM strike, U.S. Southern Command announced the latest attack in its campaign targeting so-called drug boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean that have killed almost 160 people in 45 strikes since September. “Six male narco-terrorists were killed during this action,” reads the SOUTHCOM announcement, which was accompanied on X by video footage of a boat exploding into a fireball.

During World War II, the U.S. fought a global war conducting combat operations simultaneously in Africa, Asia, and Europe, as well as limited fighting in North America against Japanese forces in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska in 1942 and 1943. The fight against the Axis powers was, however, a declared war — America’s last — and one discrete conflict. By contrast, Trump’s sprawling collection of undeclared wars include a remnant of the war on terror and several new unconstitutional wars begun by Trump.

“This is why the U.S. Constitution requires congressional authorization before using military force in this manner,” said Finucane. “It’s so the American public and their elected representatives can debate and deliberate whether the costs of a war are justified by the supposed benefits of this military operation. And whether the use of military force is the appropriate tool to solve the problem. And whether it’s even a problem that needs to be solved at all.”

The U.S. has rarely, if ever, conducted attacks — such as the airstrikes in Ecuador, Iran, and Somalia — on three continents over a 72-hour period since World War II. During the Cold War, the U.S. frequently conducted clandestine and covert operations, armed interventions, and wars across multiple continents, but not often analogous attacks. On August 21, 1998, in an early attack on Al Qaeda, the U.S. simultaneously attacked targets in Afghanistan and Sudan with cruise missiles. During the war on terror, the U.S. frequently was involved in simultaneous conflicts and interventions in numerous countries across the Middle East and Africa — and sometimes farther afield. In 2017, for example, a small number of Special Operations forces assisted troops in the Philippines in relieving a siege of the town of Marawi by ISIS-linked militants. U.S. forces were also attacking people in the Middle East and Africa that year, bringing combat to two continents.

The Office of the Secretary of War did not reply to questions concerning the concentration of attacks over such a short period of time and how often this has occurred since World War II.

During his second term Trump has already launched attacks on Ecuador, IranIraq, NigeriaSomaliaSyriaVenezuelaYemen, and on civilians in boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean. The Trump administration also claims to be at war with at least 24 cartels and criminal gangs it will not name.

“Today there are so many places in the world where the U.S. government is conducting military operations — including the war at home on migrants — that each event eclipses the last in terms of media attention,” said Stephanie Savell, the director of Brown University’s Costs of War Project. “Each and every case merits a great deal of study and debate. Many U.S. citizens are trying to do this, but news of yet another act of U.S. war violence continues to crop up, drawing media attention away from earlier events and creating huge obstacles to meaningful, sustained work by U.S. citizens to hold their government accountable.”

The post U.S. Warmongering Hits Historic Level as Trump Attacks 3 Continents in 3 Days appeared first on The Intercept.

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Ángel Esteban Aguilar Morales is one of the alleged ringleaders of the Ecuadorian criminal gang "Los Lobos" and one of the country's most-wanted fugitives.

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The move would be a major escalation in the US-Israel war against Iran. Plus, FBI director admits to buying data tracking Americans’ locations

Good morning.

Donald Trump threatened to “massively blow up” the world’s largest gasfield after Israeli strikes on Iran’s South Pars field led Tehran to take revenge on energy facilities across the Middle East.

What’s happening to oil and gas prices? Brent crude rose by 8% to $116 a barrel. European gas prices jumped, with the Dutch wholesale gas price up 24%.

What do we know about the war’s economic cost? The war cost the US $12.7bn by day six – the total is likely to have now exceeded $18bn. Here’s a visualization of how that has been spent.

Could US-Israeli attempts to take out Iranian leaders backfire? Some analysts think so. “It is not an approach that produces Jeffersonian democrats but hardened resistance fighters. It breeds more resistance,” said Sanam Vakil, an Iran expert at Chatham House.

Follow our live coverage here.

Who has spoken out? Labor rights activist and co-founder of the UFW Dolores Huerta, 95, released a statement on Wednesday saying: “I have kept this secret long enough. My silence ends here.” The report also includes the stories of two women, who were daughters of organizers in the movement, who said they were children when the grooming and abuse began.

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Two tugboat crew members were killed and two others were injured in what the Coast Guard called a "confined space incident" aboard a barge in Alaska.

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Energy company plans full return to London by moving global HQ to new development on South Bank

BP has agreed to sell its giant German oil refinery site in Gelsenkirchen to the investment firm Klesch Group as part of the British oil company’s plan to sell off $20bn (£15bn) worth of assets and cut its costs.

The value of the sale was not disclosed but BP said it would save the oil company about $1bn of underlying operating expenditure at the complex, which processes about 12m tonnes of crude oil every year, mainly as fuel for cars and aircraft.

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2026-03-19 07:14

Sadler’s Wells East, London
Visual spectacle overwhelms the human drama in the choreographer’s tech-heavy double bill

Technology can sometimes seem to take on its own life and sideline the people it is nominally assisting. That tension, even conflict, is the subject of Mirror, a new duet by Alexander Whitley, who has good form with choreographic deployments of digital, generative and VR technologies.

In black and white leotards studded with motion-capture markers, Gabriel Ciulli and Daisy Dancer wind themselves into spirals and symmetries that veer from closeness to counter-pull and back again. This unstable yet interdependent dynamic is interrupted by an impersonal beam of light that scans the space, and gives rise to rectangles flickering on the front cloth, like so many screen frames – a portal for the appearance of luminous digital doppelgangers that first echo then upstage the dancers, who now turn their attention away from each other and towards their ghostly avatars.

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2026-03-20 12:04
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Should the Gulf Arab states join the war against Iran? Expert comment jon.wallace

Saudia Arabia and the UAE have capable air forces that could complement Israeli and US strikes on Iranian missile and drone infrastructure. But the risks are considerable.

Saudi F-15 fighter jets preparing to take off for operations over Yemen in 2015

Despite getting struck repeatedly by Iranian missiles and drones, the Gulf Arab states have shown remarkable restraint in the war between the US/Israel and the Islamic Republic. Collectively, so far, they have chosen to pursue a defensive strategy. 

The chances of the Gulf Arab states reconsidering and going on the offensive are low. But they could go up should Iran escalate its attacks against critical infrastructure and civilian areas, causing casualties and more serious economic damage.

As always with states contemplating the use of force, it’s a matter of willingness and ability. Some Gulf Arab states – namely, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – are capable of joining the fight against Iran using their formidable air power assets. But would doing so make a difference in the war, or be strategically wise? Neither is clear.

Saudi capability

The Royal Saudi Air Force (RSAF) operates 449 aircraft including some of the best air power platforms in the world, such as advanced versions of the American F-15, Eurofighter Typhoon, and Tornado, armed with a variety of missiles. And it performs a range of missions – aerial and ground combat, airborne early warning and control, electronic intelligence, and tanker and transport operations. The Kingdom has a slew of Chinese drones too.

The Saudi aerial arsenal is superior to Iran’s in terms of modernity, flexibility, and lethality – and is in fact the envy of many advanced air forces around the world including those of NATO countries. However, it is how the RSAF has employed this tremendous equipment that leaves much to be desired.

Combat experience

The RSAF has some experience in conventional air and ground combat. During the 1980-1988 IranIraq War, the RSAF played primarily defensive and deterrent roles, especially against the Iranian military.

The RSAF didn’t pursue offensive strike missions inside Iran or Iraq. Rather, it was merely entrusted with defending Saudi airspace and regional maritime security. 

For the most part it did well, establishing an air defence identification zone over parts of the Gulf (also known as the ‘Fahd Line’) to secure its airspace. This was during a tense period in the Iran–Iraq War where the belligerents targeted each other’s merchant shipping and in particular oil tankers. 

One famous incident in June 1984 saw two Saudi F-15s intercept a small formation of Iranian F-4 Phantoms near Arabi Island in the Gulf. The Saudi fighters reportedly shot down either one or two of the Iranian aircraft, which were allegedly crossing into or near the Saudi air defence identification zone. Iran responded by dispatching 11 more F-4s into the skies over the Gulf, but after a brief standoff they returned home.

The RSAF’s first extensive operational experience was in Desert Storm in 1991, flying combat missions from day one. That mattered a lot symbolically and politically, although less so operationally for the US campaign. The RSAF flew 6,852 sorties (ranking second to the US Air Force) and struck Iraqi targets in Kuwait and southern Iraq.

Saudi crews engaged in air-to-air combat and achieved several kills, which was an impressive achievement. But two Tornado jets were shot down either by an Iraqi Mig-29 or by Iraqi air defences during low-level strike missions. 

After Desert Storm, Saudi Arabia began to deepen its security cooperation with the United States, with the RSAF a major beneficiary. Today, the RSAF and the US Air Force engage in bilateral drills with various mission sets on a periodic basis, including regular participation in the famous US Red Flag exercise in Nevada.

The RSAF’s most recent combat experience, during the Yemen intervention of 2015-2022, was not successful. In its campaign against the Iran-backed Houthis, it struggled tremendously with its targeting techniques, causing significant collateral damage and bringing heavy international opprobrium against Riyadh.

But that would be the wrong example to consider. In Yemen, the RSAF had to locate and strike mobile targets that were hiding among civilians and inside mountains. Even the most capable NATO air forces face difficulties with such dynamic targeting. 

In Iran, the RSAF would be tasked with striking fixed and open targets. And Iranian air defences have been massively degraded by US and Israeli fighters.

The UAE Air Force

The UAE Air Force has less operational experience than Saudi Arabia, but it fared better in Yemen and other conflict zones. And UAE pilots train intensively, participating in Red Flag since 2009.

The UAE has utilized US military assistance over the years more effectively than any other US Arab partner. That showed in combat operations in Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Iraq, and especially in Yemen. 

Against the Houthis, the UAE’s F-16 Block 60 fighters (more advanced than US F-16s) were more lethal and precise than any in the Saudi-led coalition, leveraging superior intelligence with the help of NATO-certified Emirati Joint Terminal Attack Controllers on the ground, which the Saudis didn’t have.

If Riyadh and Abu Dhabi give the order to their militaries to retaliate against Iran, their air forces are capable of operating as part of a US-led coalition striking military facilities and energy installations in Iran and flying back to their bases. 

But what would their objectives be? And what are the risks?

Willingness

For the Gulf Arab states, the immediate goal of fighting back would be to force Iran to stop its attacks against them, and in the long term to establish a modicum of deterrence against future Iranian strikes.

After all, if Gulf Arab states continue to rely exclusively on defence, they are essentially signalling to Tehran that it can cause them tremendous harm without suffering any consequences.

Economic attrition is core to Iran’s strategy in this conflict.

Equally, playing defence will exhaust their defensive systems well before Iran runs out of drones and missiles. The US can replenish Gulf defences, but Israel is a US priority and according to reports it is facing a shortage in interceptors.

Economic strain is also an important factor: it costs Iran a lot less to wage war with cheap missiles and drones than it does the US, Israel and Gulf Arab states to defend against them. Economic attrition is core to Iran’s strategy in this conflict.

For these reasons, going onto the offensive makes strategic, economic, and operational sense for Gulf states.

Risks

However, the risks are considerable.

First, it could lead to more intense Iranian bombing of the very assets the Gulf Arab states are trying to protect including oil fields, airports, data centres, and desalination plants.

Second, President Donald Trump could yet decide to stop military operations against Iran and declare ‘victory’, leaving Israel and the Gulf Arab states alone in the fight and reducing the likelihood of the Iranian regime falling. 

Third, joining the war against Iran will tremendously complicate if not completely sever relations between Iran and the Gulf Arab states. Those relations were never built on trust to begin with, and Iran will have a lot to answer for whenever the dust settles, but a direct military confrontation will deepen mistrust.

Fourth, going to war is never an easy proposition for any nation, let alone politically fragile ones as the Gulf Arab states. Internal political stability is paramount for those authoritarian countries. Fighting an external enemy could strengthen patriotism. But some countries like Bahrain, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia have to worry about entities and cells that can be activated by Iran and threaten their internal security.

Perhaps the greatest security risk in joining the war is that it would mean choosing to fight alongside Israel. Even before the war in Gaza, any such move would have been politically perilous for a Gulf leader. Choosing to join this fight, alongside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, could fatally undermine leaders’ credibility with swathes of their populations. That factor more than any other may enforce restraint. 

Stuck between a rock and a hard place

If Iranian strikes against the Gulf Arab states escalate, a defence-only approach to security could quickly become unsustainable. But if the Gulf Arab states decide to join the US-Israeli campaign, it could backfire. 

This is an incredibly hard decision, fraught with risks, and one the Gulf Arab states feel they have to make on their own with little confidence that Washington can be counted on as it once was.  

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Kennedy’s appointees promoted ‘treatments’ like bleach enemas, but new committee has only one autistic member

The first public meeting of US autism advisers – notably, since Robert F Kennedy Jr reshaped the committee – was cancelled recently with few details, coinciding with the creation of a rival organization that has prompted some questions within the autistic community about their focus.

Kennedy, the secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) who has long argued for a debunked link between vaccines and autism, chose entirely new members for the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee (IACC) in late January, with fewer autistic people and several anti-vaccine advocates.

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BrianFagioli writes: A new iOS exploit chain called DarkSword shows how attackers can break into certain iPhones, grab sensitive data like messages, credentials, and even crypto wallets, and then disappear without leaving obvious traces. It targets older iOS 18 builds using Safari and WebGPU flaws to escape Apple's sandbox, which is pretty wild on its own, but what really stands out is how fast it works and how financially motivated these attacks have become. The takeaway is simple but important, update your iPhone ASAP and don't assume mobile devices are somehow safer than desktops anymore.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 12:04
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Day 2 of our Guardian analysis of more than a million Epstein emails exposes the child sex offender’s deep relationships with more high-profile figures

The Epstein files have led to intense scrutiny over links between the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and the rich and powerful. But the vast trove of information has made it difficult to assess the extent of some of those connections.

In this second of a two-part series, The Guardian has focused on Epstein’s links to high-profile people in business and the arts – including the renowned economist and former US treasury secretary Larry Summers, the New York film director Woody Allen and Jes Staley, the former head of Barclays.

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Report shows how minerals critical to defense readiness have seen a ‘near total’ disruption in seaborne trade

The closure of the strait of Hormuz is causing a “paralyzing, real-time problem” for any prospective manufacturing surge in the US defense industrial base, and even for the repair of defense equipment damaged by Iranian attacks, according to analysis published by West Point’s Modern War Institute.

In particular sulphur, a vital upstream input in the extraction of critical minerals including copper and cobalt, has seen a “near total” disruption of seaborne trade in the straits, which makes up half the world’s total shipments, and prices have spiked nearly 25% since the war began, and seen a 165% rise year on year, the report said.

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2026-03-19 06:49

Weeks after three of Colin Dorgan's family members were killed in a shooting at a Rhode Island hockey rink, he helped his team win a state championship.

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2026-03-19 06:25

Hey all,

I’m a bit torn and could use some advice.

I’ve found a used Onewheel GT for $1,400

Here are the details:

  • Distance ridden: 1500 km
  • Condition: Good, everything works perfectly, reportedly
  • Range: reportedly still does 35+ km per charge
  • Upgrades:
    • Float Life tire (only ~200 km on it)
    • Float Life Savers
    • 3D printed FlightFins
    • Rail guards
    • Charging port plug
    • Custom wooden stand
    • Original charger included

The alternative is buying an XR Classic new, which is around $2,300 where i live (Denmark), since there are no used ones available where I live.

I’ll mainly be riding in the city (fairly hilly), maybe short commutes, and just for fun.

What’s making me hesitate is that the XR Classic seems to have a lower center of gravity and might feel more stable/playful for city riding, while the GT is more powerful and better on hills, but then again, the price difference is quite noticeable.

So I’m wondering:

  • Is the GT at this price a no-brainer, or would you still consider the XR Classic (or something else entirely?)
  • Is 1500 km something to worry about on a GT?
    • Would you trust the battery at that mileage?
  • For mostly city + hills, which one would you personally pick?
  • Anything specific I should check before buying a used GT?

Thanks!

submitted by /u/tonielsen29
[link] [comments]

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Artist who topped UK charts with Because I Got High created comedic videos from footage, which officers claimed invaded their privacy

Chart-topping US rapper Afroman has been cleared of wrongdoing after Ohio police filed a lawsuit against him, alleging defamation, emotional distress and invasion of privacy after the artist used footage from a police raid on his home in a series of mocking videos.

In 2022, police searched the rapper’s home for evidence of drug possession and trafficking, and kidnapping. No evidence was found and no charges were filed.

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Lemi Limbu, who has severe intellectual disabilities, remains in prison and will now face retrial for the murder of her daughter

A woman with severe intellectual disabilities in Tanzania has had her conviction and death sentence quashed after spending more than a decade in prison awaiting execution.

Lemi Limbu, now in her early 30s, was convicted of the murder of her daughter in 2015. On 4 March, a court in Shinyanga, northern Tanzania, declared she can appeal. She will face a retrial, but a date has yet to be set.

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$800-a-day position involves exposing a chatbot’s inconsistencies as it forgets, fudges or hallucinates

Imagine a day at work where your main task is to pick a fight with a computer. No meetings, no emails – just you, a chair and a chatbot with the maddening tendency to think it has the cleverest mind in the room.

The job title alone raises an eyebrow: “AI bully”. But this is precisely what a California startup called Memvid is offering: $800 to spend eight hours testing the patience and memory of artificial intelligence.

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Rulings in cases alleging antisemitism on US campuses say common pro-Palestinian speech is constitutionally protected

Few debates from the last few years have been more contentious than whether criticism of Israel and Zionism is antisemitic, threatens Jewish people or violates their civil rights. Allegations of antisemitism have cost people jobs, provided pretexts for censorship and fueled an unprecedented crackdown on protest over Israel and shows of support for Palestinian rights, especially at universities.

Pro-Israel groups have filed hundreds of lawsuits or legal actions in an effort to silence some of this speech, with the vast majority filed since 2023 in response to the protest movement surrounding Israel’s recent war in Gaza. The most important rulings to have come out of these cases, experts say, have found that speech and slogans at the heart of the controversies are protected by the first amendment.

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Dr. Adam Ratner hovered over a gravely ill infant in a New York City intensive care unit on a grim day in 2022. The 3-month-old girl spiked a fever two days earlier and had become lethargic. Soon she was having seizures and struggling to breathe.

She didn’t register Ratner’s towering frame or the bright hospital lights. Her eyes stared up and to the right, eerily frozen. 

He ran his hand over the soft spot on her head, which should have been flat. Instead, it bulged, a sign that too much fluid was building up inside her skull. 

The baby’s life was in danger, and Ratner needed to figure out why. He worried the culprit was bacterial meningitis, an infection of the membranes that protect the brain.

What came back on her lab tests was something out of the history books.

The infant’s meningitis was caused by invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b, or Hib, a type of bacteria that used to kill nearly 1,000 children a year in the U.S. A shot introduced in the late 1980s was so effective that Ratner, a veteran pediatric infectious disease doctor, was among the generations of physicians who had never seen a case. But the baby’s parents, Ratner learned, had chosen not to vaccinate her.

Disheartened, he told his colleagues, “This should be a never event.”

It wasn’t. The following year, Ratner treated another infant with Hib, then another, each of them unvaccinated. Two went home, but one had to be discharged to a rehabilitation facility. That 5-month-old boy had huge black pupils that didn’t respond to light, and he needed a ventilator to breathe. Ratner and his colleagues noted an “absence of brain stem reflexes,” indicating severe damage.

The U.S. government took a half century to build a vaccination system that shielded children from such a fate. Its success depended on two fundamental pillars: parents trusting in vaccines and children having access to them. Both are now in peril, thanks in no small part to the man steering America’s health policy.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who founded an antivaccine group and once likened the immunization of children to a holocaust, is transforming a government that long championed the lifesaving benefits of shots into one that spreads doubts about their safety here and abroad. 

Kennedy is also considering changes that could prompt the few companies that make vaccines for American kids to abandon the U.S. market, leaving parents who want the shots unable to get them.

The threat to vaccine access reaches across the globe after Kennedy yanked the government’s $1.6 billion pledge to the aid group that provides shots for the world’s poorest children. For decades, the U.S. had funded such work not just as a humanitarian mission but as a way to keep Americans safe from unchecked contagions.

Kennedy’s efforts to reshape vaccine policies have been well chronicled, but ProPublica wanted to take a broader look at how the changes might affect Americans’ health in the years to come.

We found that long-forgotten plagues have roared back, killing and maiming children in parts of the world where access to vaccines or trust in them faltered. What seemed like subtle changes to a country’s vaccine policies had disastrous consequences years later. 

Even in places that offer highly advanced health care, doctors have felt impotent trying to undo the damage when these horrors return. Modern medicine can’t reverse paralysis from polio. Surgeons can intervene when a baby is born blind, deaf and with heart defects after being exposed to rubella in the womb, but the child is still likely to face a life shaped by disability.

ProPublica reviewed hundreds of studies on vaccines and outbreaks of the diseases they prevent and interviewed more than three dozen people who have worked on U.S. immunization programs here and abroad, dating back to the days of smallpox. Some had never spoken publicly about their experiences.

They shared a pit-of-the-stomach dread that American children will end up fighting for their lives against infections that have long been preventable. 

“I think there always was a worst-case scenario,” said Dr. Melinda Wharton, who retired last September after more than three decades leading immunization programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “I don’t think I imagined it could or would be this bad.”

This week, Kennedy’s agency indicated it planned to appeal a federal court ruling that halted, at least temporarily, some of his changes. Among those was the decision to drop six diseases from the routine childhood immunization schedule.

HHS declined to make Kennedy available for an interview. In an emailed response to detailed questions, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said that the agency has not limited access to or insurance coverage for vaccines. During the prior administration, federal health agencies “told the public that questioning vaccine policy was off limits,” Nixon said. “That posture contributed to a collapse in trust in U.S. health care.”

“Secretary Kennedy believes that trust is rebuilt through an open review of safety data, the willingness to ask the hard questions, and ensuring the American people have all emerging information as soon as we know it,” he said.

Vaccination rates have fallen in large swaths of the country. Resentful of how government institutions responded to the COVID-19 pandemic, many Americans lost trust in public health leaders. Antivaccine activists spread misinformation and recast the once-fringe practice of refusing shots as an exercise in “medical freedom.” 

Two physicians wearing gowns, masks and other protective gear stand beside an infant seated in a car with the door open.
A medical team assesses an infant for measles in Spartanburg, South Carolina, this year. The Washington Post via Getty Images

Now the U.S. is experiencing a surge in measles not seen in three decades. There have been more than 3,600 cases across 46 states and three deaths since January last year. The virus spread so fast in South Carolina this year that some medical teams had to examine infected patients in their cars to protect vulnerable people in their waiting rooms, like they did during the worst days of COVID-19.

Measles, among the most contagious diseases, is typically the first to infect undervaccinated communities and serves as a warning that other scourges will follow. 

That’s what happened in New York City where antivaccine forces distributed illustrated handouts that seeded fear in Orthodox Jewish communities. Ratner saw a direct line between a loss of trust and the sick children in his ICU — first with measles in 2018 and 2019, then with Hib a few years later. 

Now the villainization of vaccines isn’t coming from pamphlets passed out on a Brooklyn street corner. It’s coming from the highest health offices in the U.S. government. 

“I’m worried,” Ratner said, “that we’re going back to a time where people die in childhood.”


The U.S. has been a leader on vaccination since the nation’s founding. 

During the Revolutionary War, George Washington ordered troops to be inoculated against smallpox, which had ravaged the Continental Army and was scaring away recruits. Washington knew the perils of the disease: His face was pocked with scars from his own teenage infection.

The inoculation, the country’s first immunization mandate, took a primitive form. A sore from a smallpox patient was lanced, then the pus was inserted under a healthy person’s skin. Though some people died, the resulting infection was, for the vast majority, milder than the type caught in a bunkhouse or on a battlefield.

Washington gave the order in February 1777, “keeping the matter as secret as possible” so that the British wouldn’t attack his bedridden troops during their monthlong recovery. Had he not carried out the inoculation, many historians have concluded, the British may have won.

Nearly two centuries later, in the throes of the Cold War, CDC scientists teamed up with their counterparts from America’s archenemy, the Soviet Union, to wipe smallpox from the planet. They worked through the World Health Organization to track the virus in cities, rainforests and war zones, vaccinating those at risk. Four U.S. presidents, Democrats and Republicans, backed the work until the disease that had haunted humans since the days of the pharaohs was gone.

Vaccines, for decades, weren’t politically divisive. They were so uncontroversial that McDonald’s restaurants in the 1990s put the childhood immunization schedule on their tray liners.

When the nation’s immunization program was in trouble in the 1980s, Republicans and Democrats stepped in to save it.

Vaccine makers were abandoning the U.S. market after a flood of lawsuits alleged that the shot used at the time to protect children from diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough caused profoundly disabling seizures. Scientists later discovered genetic causes of some of the most devastating forms of epilepsy, but parents who sued back then won big verdicts and settlements.

At one point pediatricians could only buy that shot from a single company, and there were shortages. The U.S. also was down to just one manufacturer for the measles-mumps-rubella shot and one for the polio vaccine. 

“If there is a fire tomorrow in the plant where the polio vaccine is manufactured, what would happen?” Rep. Henry Waxman asked the CDC director during a 1984 House subcommittee hearing.

“We would have a shortage,” the director answered.

An exasperated Waxman shot back: “Are we going to then start putting money into iron lungs for polio victims?” 

A liberal Democrat from California, Waxman for years worked with Sen. Paula Hawkins, a conservative Florida Republican, on legislation that stopped the exodus of vaccine makers by limiting their liability. Launched in 1988, the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program pays people who suffer rare but serious side effects, using money from a special tax on certain shots. The program maintains a table of injuries that are eligible for quicker payouts, and a dedicated vaccine court rules on cases involving health problems not listed on the table. 

Those who don’t like what they are offered can still sue vaccine makers in traditional civil courts, but a Supreme Court ruling significantly limited the types of cases that can win there. 

Just as the compensation program was getting off the ground, measles laid bare a different weakness in the immunization system. The disease tore through American cities, hitting Black and Hispanic preschoolers especially hard. Between 1989 and 1991, there were more than 55,000 cases and 123 deaths

In June 1991, President George H.W. Bush, a Republican, stepped into the White House Rose Garden with a message for “every parent everywhere in America”: “Please, make sure your child is immunized.” 

He announced that a special team of health officials was investigating why so many kids were missing their shots.

“While some say each generation repeats the mistakes of the last, no generation in America should suffer the plagues of the past,” Bush said.

The problem was access. Parents couldn’t afford the vaccines given at pediatricians’ offices. Bush’s successor, President Bill Clinton, a Democrat, ushered in a program that to this day offers free shots through local doctors to more than half of American kids. 

Vaccination rates climbed, and measles cases dropped precipitously. By 2000, the U.S. had stopped local spread of the virus so well that global health authorities declared it eliminated here. 

Having made progress at home, the U.S. government championed the use of vaccines abroad. Dr. Susan Reef, who had trained in the CDC disease-detective program made famous by Kate Winslet’s character in the movie “Contagion,” crisscrossed the globe showing health officials how they could save babies from birth defects and early death by introducing the rubella vaccine. 

A close-up photo of a child’s eye being held open. A white film covers the entire iris so that the pupil cannot be seen.
The cloudy eye of this 3-year-old is from glaucoma caused by congenital rubella syndrome, a constellation of problems resulting from exposure to rubella while in utero. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Dr. Andre J. Lebrun

Also known as German measles, rubella is usually mild in kids and adults. When people get infected very early in pregnancy, though, they face up to a 90% chance of giving birth to a baby with congenital rubella syndrome. About a third of those infants die before their first birthday. Most survivors have deafness, blindness, heart defects or intellectual disabilities. Before the vaccine, a U.S. epidemic in the mid-1960s led to 20,000 babies born with the syndrome.

Reef and her CDC colleagues helped foreign health authorities set up surveillance systems that identified newborns with congenital rubella syndrome.

During a 2011 rubella epidemic in Vietnam, Reef spotted a cluster of tiny bassinets in a Ho Chi Minh City intensive care unit. The babies’ eyes had cataracts, a sign of vision loss. She knew that most would have trouble hearing, if they could hear at all. A collaborator from the WHO told Reef that at least one of the infants had been abandoned by his family. 

Doctors had isolated the contagious newborns to prevent the spread of rubella, a sign the country’s surveillance system was working. But the scene of this preventable suffering, Reef said, “broke my heart.” 

Vietnam launched a national rubella immunization program a few years later. 

When Reef’s work began, less than half the world’s countries had introduced a rubella shot. When she retired in 2022 after a 30-year career at the CDC, all but 19 had. 


For half a century, one idea lay at the core of all U.S. immunization programs: Let down your guard and the diseases will return.

Dr. Chuck Vitek saw this happen as he walked the worn linoleum floors of Russian infectious disease hospitals in the mid-1990s. 

Throughout that decade, a massive epidemic of diphtheria raged across the countries of the former Soviet Union. The CDC repeatedly deployed Vitek to help health authorities contain this ancient contagion, once widely known as the “strangling angel of children.”

A tongue depressor holds open a person’s mouth so you can see two swollen brownish patches at the entry to the throat.
Tissue destroyed by the diphtheria toxin can build up in the back of a child’s throat, sealing off the swollen airway and suffocating them. Photo By BSIP/UIG via Getty Images

Diphtheria’s name is drawn from the Greek word for leather because tissue destroyed by the diphtheria toxin builds up in the back of the throat like a piece of hide, sealing off a swollen airway. Many parents had to watch their children suffocate. For those who escape asphyxiation, the toxin can damage the heart and nerves. Patients who seem better can drop dead weeks later. 

At one hospital, Vitek peered into the mouth of a sick Russian teenager and saw the thick greyish-white membrane covering a third of his throat. Doctors had administered antitoxin promptly, so his windpipe wasn’t blocked. But, pale and weak, the boy faced a terrible wait. Had diphtheria ruined his heart? 

Vitek had to leave before it was clear whether the child would survive. But one detail from his medical history stood out above all others: The teen had not been vaccinated.

“It was sad because it was something that would have easily been prevented with vaccination,” Vitek recalled. 

Vitek was another graduate of the CDC’s disease-detective program. A big part of his assignment was to investigate why diphtheria had come back. One obvious problem was access; the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 disrupted vaccine supplies. But that wasn’t the whole answer. 

The unvaccinated Russian boy offered a clue to the rest.

The Soviets had been big believers in immunization. Diphtheria shots for kids had been free — and mandatory — since the 1950s. 

When diphtheria seemed like a problem of the past, though, the Soviet Union eased up. Concerns about fevers and other possible side effects from the shot used back then overshadowed fears of the disease. In the 1980s, Soviet health authorities created alternative immunization schedules with lower-dose diphtheria shots and fewer total injections, and they directed pediatricians to put off vaccination if a child had one of a long list of health issues. “If a kid had a runny nose, a stomachache, almost anything,” Vitek said, doctors would skip the shot that day. “They wouldn’t make an effort to catch them up.”

Antivaccine activists tapped into the deep mistrust of government institutions in the years leading up to the collapse of the Soviet Union. One 1988 column in a Moscow newspaper suggested that Soviet officials knew the shot could be harmful — even deadly — but kept this secret. (In focus groups held years later, parents vividly recalled how news stories made them afraid of immunizations, Vitek and a colleague found.) 

By 1990, only 60% of infants in Soviet Russia had received all three full-strength diphtheria shots before their first birthday. 

The disease found a foothold. Before the epidemic was over, more than 157,000 people were infected and 5,000 died, mostly in Russia.

Health officials in Russia ended the policies that left their people vulnerable and held mandatory mass vaccination campaigns. 

“It was an extra dose across the entire population,” Vitek recalled. 

It took years to end the epidemic. 

Japan had a similar struggle with rubella. 

Large, red, raised patches cover a child’s cheek in such quantity that many of the patches connect to one another and only small strips of normal skin show through between. The red patches continue in a less dense pattern down the child’s neck and onto his chest.
A rash from rubella, also known as German measles Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

When health authorities introduced a rubella shot in the 1970s, they took an approach that weighed who was most at risk, targeting future mothers by giving the shot only to junior high girls. The boys of this era were passed over and remained susceptible as they grew up. Rubella researchers refer to them as “the lost generation.”

In 1989, Japan changed course and began vaccinating young boys and girls with a shot that combined protection for rubella, measles and mumps. But doctors quickly discovered that the mumps component — different from the U.S. version — sometimes caused a type of meningitis. Mistrust spread as health officials downplayed the risk at first, then yanked the combined vaccines in favor of standalone shots.

Japan in 1994 dropped its strict immunization mandates. Health authorities continued to recommend shots, but vaccination became a matter of personal choice, and a lack of trust shadowed the immunization program for years. One study showed Japan’s confidence in vaccines was among the lowest in the world.

Time and again, rubella circulated in the men who were never offered the shots as boys, then spread to pregnant women who hadn’t been fully vaccinated. Babies were born with the type of  devastating birth defects that Reef saw in the ICU in Vietnam. Japan’s epidemic from 2012 to 2014 was so bad that researchers discovered a temporary drop in the country’s fertility rates that coincided with a spike in Google searches for the Japanese word for rubella. 

Serious misgivings about vaccination in one part of the world can have far-reaching consequences. Twenty countries that thought their days of paralytic polio were behind them saw the dreaded disease return in the 2000s. The virus was traced to Nigeria, where religious and political leaders in some areas had boycotted polio immunization campaigns amid false rumors that the shots had been tainted to make Muslim girls infertile.

Organizers of the boycott feared the vaccine more than the disease. 

The governor of one northern Nigerian state told the Associated Press in 2004: “It is a lesser of two evils to sacrifice two, three, four, five, even 10 children [to polio] than allow hundreds or thousands or possibly millions of girl-children likely to be rendered infertile.” 

Polio roared back in Nigeria, leaving more than 2,500 children disabled. It spread around the world for years, paralyzing kids as far away as Indonesia.


When Kennedy became America’s top health official last year, no other leader at the CDC had more experience preventing death and disability with vaccines than Dr. Melinda Wharton. 

It was Wharton who had sent Vitek to Russia to figure out why diphtheria returned. And it was Wharton who started Reef on her quest to vanquish congenital rubella syndrome. Like them, she had trained as a disease detective.

In her 39 years at the CDC, Wharton had seen activists try to persuade Americans that the shots they were giving their babies were scarier than the diseases those shots prevented. In 2021, Kennedy had written in a book that measles — a virus the CDC says kills nearly 1 to 3 of every 1,000 children who contract it — wasn’t the menace that the government proclaimed.

“Measles outbreaks have been fabricated to create fear that in turn forces government officials to ‘do something,’” he wrote. “They then inflict unnecessary and risky vaccines on millions of children for the sole purpose of fattening industry profits.”

During his confirmation hearings, Kennedy told senators he isn’t antivaccine. “I am pro-safety,” he said. “I worked for years to raise awareness about the mercury and toxic chemicals in fish, and nobody called me anti-fish.”

In his early days as the nation’s top health leader, HHS dismissed thousands of Wharton’s colleagues, ended vaccine promotions during an especially deadly flu season and buried a CDC measles forecast that stressed the need for immunization.

A child’s stomach is uniformly covered in small, tightly packed reddish brown patches.
A measles rash covers a child’s torso. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Dr. Philip Nader

Wharton set five empty cardboard boxes on her filing cabinet in case she needed to pack up quickly. 

In recent years she managed the committee of outside experts that recommends which shots Americans should get and when. Few people had ever heard of her obscure corner of the federal health bureaucracy. 

But Kennedy knew it well. He understood that Congress had given these advisers the power to determine which shots were free for more than half of American kids and which ones insurers must pay for. Many states used the committee’s recommendations to set vaccine mandates for kids attending school.

Kennedy for years complained the panel had been captured by Big Pharma. On June 9, his chief of staff at the CDC removed Wharton from her role managing the committee. Just as that news was sinking in, Wharton’s phone lit up with messages from the committee’s members. Kennedy had announced in a Wall Street Journal column that he was replacing all of them. “A clean sweep is needed to re-establish public confidence in vaccine science,” he wrote.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kayla Bartkowski/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Kennedy stacked the new committee with many vaccine skeptics who quickly delved into his longstanding grievances about America’s immunization system. Webcasts of the meetings became a megaphone for mistrust. Some devolved into shouting matches as doctors from medical societies pushed back against misinformation. 

One of Kennedy’s new appointees, Retsef Levi, a professor of operations management at the MIT Sloan School of Management, suggested that vaccinating a baby was like flying on an airplane that hadn’t been rigorously tested. “I suggest to parents to be very, very suspicious when people tell them that something is safe, especially a vaccine,” he said.

In an emailed response to questions from ProPublica, Levi said that vaccines have benefits and risks “often personalized to the individual’s health status, risk factors, and preferences.” Being transparent about those benefits and risks, including being honest about what is known and not known, increases public confidence in vaccination programs, he said. 

The chair of the committee, Dr. Kirk Milhoan, told the “Why Should I Trust You?” podcast he wasn’t afraid to reconsider whether the polio shot is needed any longer. In an email to ProPublica, Milhoan, a pediatric cardiologist, said that the committee is required to review vaccines every seven years “to optimize effectiveness and to reevaluate possible long term risks.” 

Like Kennedy, Milhoan doesn’t think vaccines have been appropriately tested for safety. In the podcast, he said American parents deserve to know the risks so they can decide whether they’re more concerned about the disease or the potential for side effects from the shot. 

“What we are doing is returning individual autonomy to the first order, not public health,” he added.

Since she retired last year, Wharton has tuned in to the meetings she used to run, but at times they were too painful to watch. The new committee at one point sought advice from a former president of the antivaccination group Kennedy founded, while a CDC compilation of evidence that ran counter to her presentation was quietly removed from the panel’s website. For insight on the childhood schedule, the panel listened to a 90-minute talk by a Kennedy ally, a vaccine-injury attorney who once petitioned the government to withdraw approval of the polio shot for infants and toddlers. 

In January, the acting CDC director trimmed the childhood immunization schedule so that it recommended routine protection for 11 diseases rather than 17. Six shots that had been universal would now fall into a category that essentially means “talk to your doctor and decide for yourself,” with guidance for certain shots based on risk.

“The idea that it’s increasingly acceptable to put children at risk for these kinds of things is really just terrible,” Wharton said. “To have it be the official position of the federal government, it’s very frightening.”

Nixon, the HHS spokesperson, defended the slimmed-down schedule, saying it would “maintain robust protection against diseases that cause serious morbidity or mortality to children while aligning the U.S. with peer nations.” 

As for the committee, Nixon said Kennedy’s appointees are “committed to rigorous review and independent thinking.”

“Restoring confidence requires advisory bodies that are willing to ask hard questions, not simply reaffirm prior consensus and rubber stamp recommendations,” he said. “Disagreement at public meetings is a healthy scientific debate and the way to overcome groupthink.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics, which for decades had collaborated with the committee on the childhood vaccine schedule, boycotted the panel’s meetings and sued to block many of Kennedy’s moves. 

On Monday, a federal judge sided with the academy, finding that for an advisory committee dedicated to using vaccines to control preventable diseases, more than half of the new members “appear distinctly unqualified.” While he considers the case, the judge, for now, put on hold Kennedy’s appointments to the panel as well as the CDC’s changes to the childhood vaccine schedule. 

The ruling is a setback for Kennedy, but the Trump administration has foreshadowed other changes that could affect Americans’ access to shots.


President Donald Trump, with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., addresses reporters during a press conference in the White House. Francis Chung/Politico/Bloomberg via Getty Images

In September, President Donald Trump stepped up to the microphone in the White House’s Roosevelt Room with a major announcement about his administration’s efforts to counter the rise of autism. Flanked by Kennedy and other top health officials, the president urged pregnant women not to take acetaminophen, the pain reliever often sold as Tylenol. This news ricocheted around the globe. 

But less attention was given to other bombshells dropped about vaccines that day. The president complained that pediatricians were giving so many shots, they were treating America’s children like horses.

“They pump so much stuff into those beautiful little babies, it’s a disgrace,” he said.

Without explaining how, Trump said his administration was going to get aluminum removed from vaccines. “Who the hell wants that pumped into a body?” he said.

Aluminum has been used in shots since the 1930s to boost immune response. It is an essential ingredient in vaccines for nine diseases, including diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, human papillomavirus (a cause of cervical cancer), one version of the Hib vaccine, and many of the combination shots babies receive. Kennedy has long questioned its safety. 

A CDC-sponsored study found an association between aluminum in shots and asthma in young kids. But the researchers, citing limitations in their analysis, wrote that “these findings do not constitute strong evidence for questioning the safety of aluminum in vaccines.” A larger study by Danish government researchers subsequently found aluminum in shots did not increase the risk of autism, asthma, autoimmune diseases or dozens of other conditions. Kennedy criticized the methodology and tried unsuccessfully to get the Danish study retracted. 

If the federal government were to ban aluminum in vaccines, companies would have to reformulate them and, possibly, launch costly clinical trials. Nearly all the shots American kids get are made by a handful of pharmaceutical giants. The market is fragile enough that if any were to balk and stop making these vaccines, families could face shortages or lose access altogether.

The fate of the measles-mumps-rubella shot, which does not contain aluminum, is also up in the air. At the White House autism press conference, Trump, without offering evidence, said he had heard bad things about that shot, which has been used here since 1971. Researchers around the world repeatedly have found it does not cause autism. 

Nevertheless, the president implored parents to insist on separate shots for measles, mumps and rubella — “separate, separate, separate,” he repeated. 

But there are no FDA-approved standalone shots for measles, mumps or rubella. Facing a year with the most American measles cases in a generation, the president had suggested that there’s a problem with the only surefire prevention available and told parents to demand shots that don’t exist here. 

In an X post, the acting CDC director at that time called on manufacturers to develop them.

A shirtless child with a dense pattern of red bumps covering their face and chest.
A measles rash covers the face and shoulders of a young boy. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

A White House spokesperson did not answer questions about the president’s plans. 

“The Trump administration is committed to a nuanced, nimble, and multi-faceted approach to restore Gold Standard Science as the guiding principle of our health policymaking without compromising access to or coverage of any lifesaving treatment, including vaccines,” Kush Desai wrote in an email. “Until unveiled by the Administration, discussion about potential new policies or their second order effects is pointless speculation.”

The federal court ruling that paused January’s revisions to the childhood vaccination schedule doesn’t stop Kennedy from making similar changes in the future, as long as he follows the proper procedures. While moving shots to the talk-to-your-doctor category may seem harmless, it could affect access down the line. 

The injury compensation program that Congress created to prevent manufacturers from fleeing the U.S. market in the 1980s only covers immunizations the CDC recommends for “routine administration” to children or pregnant women. That leaves shots in other categories open to legal challenges by vaccine injury lawyers, renewing the specter of big legal verdicts that previously prompted vaccine makers to bolt.

Kennedy has long railed against the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, arguing it’s a gift to the pharmaceutical industry that removes any incentive to make safe products. Before he became HHS secretary, Kennedy referred plaintiffs to a law firm suing a vaccine maker in exchange for a cut of its fees if they won, federal financial disclosures show. 

Last year, he hired a vaccine injury lawyer to help him overhaul the compensation program and expand who can receive payments. In September, that attorney said he and Kennedy were considering ways to add symptoms of autism to the program’s injury table for quick payouts.

So many studies — performed in different parts of the world and involving more than a million people — have found no link between vaccines and autism that this has become scientific consensus. (Scientists have found serious methodological flaws in papers that have claimed such a link.) The compensation program’s vaccine court spent years in the 2000s trying cases that alleged shots caused autism and found they didn’t. ProPublica asked HHS whether Kennedy planned to add symptoms of autism to the program’s injury table, but the agency did not answer.

Given how prevalent autism is, a change like this could exhaust the compensation fund. If the program collapses and the legal protections go away, manufacturers may stop selling shots here like they did in the 1980s. 

Then, even Americans who still trust vaccines couldn’t get them.


A toddler with their eyes redacted, covered in sweat with flushed cheeks, wet hair and a hand on his head.
A child suffering from Haemophilus influenzae type B, or Hib American Association of Pediatrics

Diseases that have been wiped out in the U.S. are still found in other parts of the world. 

Polio is endemic in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and this month the CDC warned American travelers that the virus has been circulating in 28 additional countries, including Israel and the United Kingdom. In 2022, a young unvaccinated man in New York was paralyzed by the virus.

That same year, an outbreak of diphtheria began in Western Europe, its largest rise in cases in 70 years. Health authorities investigating the infection of an unvaccinated German boy in 2024 discovered that the toxic strain of the diphtheria bacteria had spread over two years from newly arrived migrants to homeless Germans, then to the child and his mother, who had no known contact with either group.

The 10-year-old was admitted to a hospital in the historic city of Potsdam. Like Ratner encountering his first patient with Hib, the German doctors had never seen diphtheria before.

“It was taught as history,” said Dr. Bernhard Kosak, head of pediatric emergency medicine and critical care there.

Treated with antitoxin and antibiotics, the child was transferred to the big teaching hospital in Berlin where a ventilator helped him breathe. But the marvels of modern intensive-care medicine couldn’t undo the damage from this ancient toxin. The boy died in January last year. 

Diseases can follow the contours of global travel. In just the first few months of last year, the CDC found, people infected with measles arrived in the U.S. from Canada, Vietnam, Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Australia, Guinea, the Netherlands, Somalia, Spain and Uganda. 

The Trump administration has walked away from long-standing international alliances that helped the U.S. beat back scourges in other countries. The president withdrew the U.S. from the WHO. And Kennedy backed out of the government’s promise to give $1.6 billion to Gavi, the global vaccine aid group the U.S. has funded for decades. He accused the organization of neglecting vaccine safety.

“Secretary Kennedy has made clear that American public health dollars going abroad must be spent wisely,” Nixon, the HHS spokesperson, said. “That means reviewing funding commitments and ensuring programs meet safety and effectiveness standards. Protecting Americans at home remains our first obligation.”

Reef, the former CDC doctor who had witnessed newborns suffering from congenital rubella syndrome in Vietnam, is devastated by the pullback. 

“It makes me very very sad,” she said, then paused for a long time. “Very very sad. I can’t explain to you what it feels like to see all your hard work going by the wayside.”

In retirement, she remains part of the group of experts that helps governments decide when to introduce the rubella vaccine and also serves on four WHO committees that determine whether nations have eliminated rubella or measles. 

When countries launch rubella vaccination campaigns for the first time, they can’t just target babies or the virus shifts to older groups and can infect those who are pregnant. To avoid this, Gavi for many years supported immunizing all children from 9 months old up to age 15 when countries first introduce the shot, which offers protection not just for rubella but also for measles.

But facing a massive hole in its budget, Gavi’s board in December decided in the future to save money by only guaranteeing that vaccine up to age 10 when a country first debuts it. Modeling predicts the change could result in 72,000 additional deaths from measles and congenital rubella syndrome, according to the Gavi board’s records. 

A Gavi spokesperson acknowledged that the shift creates a greater risk of congenital rubella but said that the organization had to figure out how to protect as many people as it could with far less money. Countries that want to offer the vaccine to older kids, she noted, can draw from a different pot of Gavi money, but that will leave those places with less funding for other shots.

Fallout from the budget cuts goes well beyond rubella. “The bottom line is that, over the next five years, we expect to be able to prevent 600,000 future deaths less than if we were fully funded,” the spokesperson said.

Addressing Kennedy’s criticism, the spokesperson added, “Gavi’s utmost concern is the health and safety of children. Our approach to vaccine safety is guided entirely by global scientific consensus.”

Circles of white film cover the centers of a child’s eyes.
Cataracts caused by congenital rubella syndrome Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The spread of measles in the U.S. warns of future rubella outbreaks. Since the rubella shot here is given in combination with the vaccine for measles and mumps, parents who turn down measles vaccines leave their kids vulnerable to rubella, too. It could take 20 years before birth defects from rubella become common again. Unvaccinated children have to grow old enough to become pregnant. The long lag time can give a false sense of security. 

But, Reef warned, “when it comes back, it will come back with a vengeance. We will see babies being born who are blind, deaf and have heart disease.”

The world is ill prepared for a major resurgence in diphtheria. Antitoxin, made from the blood of horses, has to be given immediately. Yet supplies are scarce, and not many companies sell it. Dozens of kids in Pakistan died in 2024 because doctors there couldn’t get it in time. 

Vitek, the CDC doctor who fought diphtheria in Russia, helped obtain permission for the CDC to keep an emergency stash of antitoxin for Americans after the only manufacturer with FDA approval stopped making it. The U.S. medical system still relies on an emergency supply controlled by the CDC. 

ProPublica asked the CDC and HHS how many diphtheria patients the government’s current supply could treat, but neither agency would say. (“The CDC vigilantly monitors disease trends, maintains emergency stockpiles, and supports outbreak response at home and abroad,” Nixon said.)

Vitek retired in July after 33 years with the CDC, but he still worries how diseases that seem vanquished can reappear if people can’t or won’t get shots. 

The unvaccinated parts of America could find themselves, like Germany, one unwitting traveler away from an outbreak of a horror from the history books. 

“Once it gets reintroduced, your kid could get sick or die, even with modern medicine,” Vitek warned. And diphtheria, he noted, “it’s a terrible way to die.” 

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The post How Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Vaccine Agenda Risks a Resurgence of Deadly Childhood Plagues appeared first on ProPublica.

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Why Should Delaware Care? 
From unrest over the leadership of its police chief to intense division over a proposed panhandling ordinance, the city of Dover has seen its fair share of controversy in recent months. Adding to this series of events is the city council’s decision to discreetly place a top city employee on administrative leave.

The city of Dover quietly put its top administrative employee on leave earlier this month — the first step toward permanently removing him from the position. 

Dover City Council unanimously voted to place City Manager Dave Hugg on a paid leave beginning March 2, Spotlight Delaware has learned through conversations with multiple city officials. According to the city’s charter, that leave is a first move toward officially firing him.

City officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, said long-simmering tensions between Hugg and city council members recently boiled over. Elected leaders, they said, grew tired of Hugg not promptly informing them about relevant issues, often leaving council members “blindsided” when matters were brought to their attention months later. 

Two officials pointed to a recent controversy surrounding city council members’ decision not to allocate money to the People’s Church homeless shelter as illustrative of the broader issue. The officials said Hugg failed to inform council members for months about a series of complaint letters the city had received about the shelter, as well as a threat of legal action from a neighboring resident.  

When asked about Hugg’s absence, a city spokesperson confirmed he was on leave but would not say why, citing the matter as a “personnel issue.”

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.

And Anthony Delcollo, a lawyer representing Hugg, said a public hearing is exactly what the city manager wants. Hugg did not directly respond to Spotlight Delaware’s multiple requests for comment.

“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. 

But it remains unclear when that required public hearing will take place. 

As of Wednesday afternoon, no item referencing a hearing for Hugg was listed on the agenda for the city council’s next meeting scheduled for Monday, March 23. There also is no timeline in the city charter for how long a city manager can be on administrative leave, or when their public hearing must take place. 

Dover City Solicitor Dan Griffith declined to comment on the decision to place Hugg on administrative leave, and the status of scheduling a public hearing. 

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. 

Capital city tensions

The most recent example of Hugg’s alleged tension with city council members played out at city council’s Committee of the Whole meeting on Feb. 26. During that meeting, council members discussed whether to approve $47,000 in funds for workforce development programs at a homeless shelter in downtown Dover. 

Dover City Council voted not to allocate money to the People’s Church homeless shelter at a recent meeting. that debate was part on the ongoing tension between elected officials and City Manager Dave Hugg. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

Council President Fred Neil asked if any of his colleagues had been told about the pile of complaint letters Hugg received about the shelter back in December – they said they had not. 

Prior to the start of that same meeting, council members discussed Hugg’s performance during an executive session, or a meeting of elected leaders not open to the public. When council returned to public session, they voted unanimously to “accept the recommendation of the city solicitor on the personnel matter.” 

Multiple city officials confirmed to Spotlight Delaware that the “recommendation” was to place Hugg on administrative leave.

At subsequent city council meetings, Assistant City Manager Sharon Duca has taken over Hugg’s typical duties, including providing city manager’s announcements and providing additional information on ordinances up for consideration. 

Council’s decision to place Hugg on administrative leave comes after a tumultuous nine months for the capital city.

Council members, police officers and even the mayor have been entangled in a controversy over Police Chief Thomas Johnson’s leadership since last summer, and a hotly contested panhandling ordinance first introduced last fall exposed divisions among the city’s elected officials. 

Now, the move to oust Hugg marks the latest disagreement involving one of Dover’s highest paid employees and the city’s elected officials.

Hugg previously served as Smyrna’s town manager for 14 years and was said to be retiring from public service when he stepped down from that position in late 2016, according to reporting from the Daily State News

Shortly after retiring from Smyrna, though, Hugg was hired as the acting director of planning and city development for Dover on a temporary, contract basis in early 2017. 

At the time, city officials told the Daily State News he would only work for six months, and Hugg would not be a candidate for the position of city planner. 

But Hugg ended up continuing in that position as the director of planning and community development for five years. He then was chosen by city council members to fill the permanent position of city manager in early 2022.

The post Dover moves to oust city manager, tensions revealed appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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We are trying our best to resist him, contain him and remove him from office as quickly as we possibly can. Thank you for your patience

Donald Trump is alone.

That’s different from the United States being alone.

Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is a professor of public policy emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Guardian US columnist and his newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com. His new book, Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America, is out now in the US and in the UK

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Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware ranks as one of the top states in the nation for health care costs. For years, lawmakers have tried to bring prices down, often meeting fierce resistance from hospitals. A new bill hoping to tackle the issue cleared its first hurdle toward becoming law this week, but it still faces powerful and well-funded opposition.

Delaware senators held their first debate Wednesday — during an abnormally packed committee hearing — over a bold health care reform proposal that would prioritize investments for primary care and is aimed at preventing costly trips to emergency rooms.

But even though the bill made it out of committee, it still must overcome powerful and well-funded opposition. 

Delaware’s hospital systems descended on the statehouse in protest of Senate Bill 1, the primary care reform bill that would also implement price caps on how high they can negotiate costs with insurers, claiming the bill would decimate revenues and lead to job losses. 

Multiple lawmakers decried the hospitals’ projected job loss claims, saying they are using health care workers as “pawns” in an effort to maintain profits. 

“Your campaign of fear, threatening the elimination of 4,000 jobs, is just disgraceful,” said State Sen. Ray Seigfried (D-Wilmington), who is a former ChristianaCare employee and executive of 25 years.

The bill, introduced by Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark/Glasgow) earlier this month, has the support of the state’s insurance department, the Medical Society of Delaware and the Mid-Atlantic Association of Community Health Centers. 

At the center of the hospital systems’ campaign against SB 1 is a provision that would regulate the rate at which insurers carrying plans for state employees and some commercial plans regulated by the Department of Insurance can reimburse hospitals for covered services. Those changes would also apply to the state’s Medicaid plan. 

Essentially, the state is seeking to drive down its own health care spending by capping how much money insurance providers will pay hospitals, which hold a majority of the market share in the state, for their services.

If passed as is, it could save the state hundreds of millions of dollars on medical costs. 

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.

One physician, who has practiced in Delaware for more than 35 years, said the state’s primary care infrastructure is in “dire straits.” 

Dr. Jim Gill said independent primary care physicians are currently reimbursed far below the proposed price caps, and that SB 1 is not about giving primary care doctors more money. 

Instead, he said the law allows primary care doctors to receive higher reimbursements for care they do during office visits, as well as care they do in between visits, which he said goes frequently unreimbursed. 

“Let’s face it, no one went into primary care for the money, but we need enough funding to fully care for the people of Delaware,” Gill said. 

During Wednesday’s committee hearing, a rift also emerged between doctors working in hospital systems and independent practitioners. 

Independent doctors and the Medical Society of Delaware, which represents all licensed state physicians, said they were in support of the bill because primary care is underfunded, while hospital doctors said they were against the bill because of the impacts it could have on their programs. 

After a nearly three-hour hearing, senators moved the bill out of committee. It will next be heard in the Senate Finance Committee, but is likely to see a vote by the full Senate.

A spokesperson for Gov. Matt Meyer did not respond to a request for comment on his stance on SB 1. He has yet to publicly comment on the bill. 

The hearing

Wednesday’s hearing opened with testimony from private practice physicians, the state’s insurance commissioner, outside experts and some hospital representatives. 

Richard Henderson, of the Medical Society of Delaware, said SB 1 comes after years of discussion about how to improve primary care in the state. While he said the bill is “not perfect,” he said it would bring down costs and improve people’s health. 

“The data both then and now is clear and unequivocal,” Henderson said. “Independent primary care practices improve outcomes and reduce the overall cost of care.”

Henderson also said the bill is “critical” to the survival of independent practices and will create an environment that attracts physicians to the state. 

Dr. David Tam, the CEO of Beebe Healthcare in Lewes, also testified at the committee meeting. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

Dr. David Tam, the CEO of Beebe Healthcare in Lewes, also testified at the committee meeting. He aimed his criticism of the bill at the impact it would have on his hospital because of its share of Medicare patients. 

Under SB 1, hospitals and providers would be barred from charging more than 250% of what the federal government reimburses for Medicare. But Medicare typically underpays physicians for their services.  

Since his hospital serves a large share of Medicare patients from a growing elderly population in Sussex County, Tam said the new price cap on other insurance would make it difficult to cover losses from treating Medicare patients. 

Admonishing hospital advocates’ tactics

During the hearing, multiple legislators admonished the Delaware Healthcare Association, a lobbying group for the state’s hospitals, because of messaging it has used to oppose SB 1. 

Specifically, the lawmakers homed in on statistics the group has used threatening the loss of 4,000 health care jobs if the bill passes. 

During the hearing, Townsend also said the Delaware Healthcare Association had handed out maps to legislators with dots representing where health care workers lived in their districts. While he said he does not know if the hospital systems knew about this, he called the move “inappropriate” in an interview after the hearing.

Still, he said the needs of their constituents and the precedent set in other states by similar legislation is something that supersedes some of that opposition. 

“I think that [the] need of everyday Delawareans who are suffering from high health care costs trumps a map that a lobbyist wants to put in our face,” Townsend said. 

Brian Frazee, CEO of the Delaware Healthcare Association, said his organization was not “using” the workers. He said health care employees “understand the impact of these different policies” and advocated with the organization.

When asked about the maps, he told Spotlight Delaware the group did share those maps with legislators, but that it is not uncommon. He said the intent of the maps was to show that there were people in their districts paying attention to the issue. 

“We have a lot of health care workers that are very important,” Frazee said. “And like other advocacy groups, we wanted legislators to understand the impact of some of these decisions on their constituents.”

Delaware’s hospital industry is one of the state’s largest employers. Frazee said in a text message after publication that staffing accounts for 60% of hospital budgeting, and that the hospitals don’t want to be put in a position where they have to make cuts.

What’s in the bill?

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. 

Brian Frazee, executive director of the Delaware Healthcare Association, testifies before the Senate Executive Committee on May 7, 2024, regarding House Bill 350.
Less than a year after taking the helm of the Delaware Healthcare Association, Brian Frazee has been the leader in the opposition to a hospital cost review board. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

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.

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.

Frazee, of the hospital 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. 

Efforts to introduce a 250% Medicare benchmark into Senate Bill 1 are a “blatant attempt” to slip in provisions that were removed from House Bill 350, the recently amended law that put an end to the state’s most recent fight with hospitals over health care costs. 

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.

After being voted out of committee, SB 1 now awaits consideration in the Senate Finance Committee. A hearing date for that committee has not been set.

Editor’s Note: This story originally reported that SB 1 would next head to a State Senate floor vote, but the bill actually will first head to another committee hearing. We regret the error.

The post Delaware holds hearing on hotly contested primary care reform bill appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-19 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The growth of data centers has become a hotly contested topic in Delaware and nationally, because the facilities, which power the technology of the future, require huge amounts of electricity. New regulations on the industry approved by New Castle County are the first of their kind in the state.

New Castle County Executive Marcus Henry signed new data center regulations into law Wednesday, a week after the county council’s near unanimous approval of the legislation.

In a statement, Henry described the regulations as a “thoughtful compromise.”

It followed months of bitter debate within the council that included one meeting during which a council member flipped the middle finger at another. At stake is the potential for thousands of future construction jobs and property tax proceeds, but the projects come with significant concerns, principally how they would impact energy rates and water capacity for consumers.

“This ordinance is the result of people coming together, listening to one another, and doing the hard work of finding common ground,” Henry said in his statement.

New Castle County County Executive Marcus Henry said he saw the final regulatory bill as a “compromise.” | PHOTO COURTESY OF DE SENATE DEMOCRATS

The sweeping legislation includes new rules that require data centers to maintain buffer zones around them, and to use energy-efficient backup generators, among other regulations.

Councilman Dave Carter first proposed the regulations last summer amid a backlash to a developer’s plan to build a massive, power-hungry data center on about 580 acres north of Delaware City.

Many residents and elected officials feared the facility, if built, would harm the local environment and exacerbate an energy crunch that was already impacting the region.  

While the newly passed regulations are, in part, an effort to respond to those concerns, the Delaware City data center will not be subject to them. The council’s compromise included a provision that made the rules only apply to newly proposed projects – not ones already in the development pipeline. 

What do the regulations say?

In the final amended ordinance, Carter included concessions on noise regulations, and on lighting regulations by deferring to existing standards for industrial projects rather than imposing stricter rules.

The final rules also clearly outline how data centers are allowed to use water to cool their supercomputers. The ordinance states that data centers must use a closed-loop cooling system, which is designed to reuse as much water as possible. By mandating such systems, Carter said data centers could reduce their water and energy use. 

The regulations also require data center projects to be at least 1,000 feet from the nearest residential dwelling, unless a developer submits a noise study to the county. They could then build them within 500 feet of a home. 

Data center developers also must set aside funds to decommission the data center if they decide to no longer operate it.

Where do the data center projects stand?

The regulations approved Tuesday will not impact the handful of data center projects that have already been proposed – including the facility near Delaware City, dubbed Project Washington.

Still, that massive project does face other obstacles. Last month, Delaware environmental regulators ruled that half of the two-part plan is not allowed under the state’s Coastal Zone Act, because of its proposed use of 516 diesel generators for back-up power. 

The developer, Starwood Digital Ventures, has appealed that ruling with a challenge that could take months, or years, to be fully adjudicated. 

A hearing of Starwood’s appeal will take place next Tuesday.

A rendering shows plans for a massive Delaware City data center dubbed Project Washington | SOURCE: STARWOOD DIGITAL VENTURES

Get Involved
The public is free to attend the hearing of the Starwood appeal, which is scheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday at the auditorium of the Richardson and Robbins building, located at 89 Kings Highway in Dover. DNREC said a link for virtual attendance will be listed here. Those wishing to provide public comment must register by emailing the address DNREC_CZICB_Appeals@delaware.gov no later than Monday.

For another possible data center development project near the St. Georges Bridge, the Coastal Zone Act could also become an obstacle. But it is unclear whether the new county regulations would apply to the proposal. The development was introduced to the county prior to the passage of the new rules, but those original plans called for a warehouse not a data center. 

The project’s engineering firm, Verdantas, indicated in recent documents filed with the county that the developer may now be planning to build a data center.

New Castle County’s Land Use Department did not respond to a request for comment about whether the regulations would apply to the St. Georges Bridge project, and Carter said he is not sure. 

“We have to work that out and see where it goes,” Carter said. 

A third proposed data center site near Newark has, perhaps, the easiest path now that the regulations, and their effective start date, have been determined.

That project would see the redevelopment of the White Clay Corporate Center into a three-building data center. Its zoning already allows data center projects, and it does not lie within Delaware’s designated Coastal Zone.

The post New data center regulations go into effect, but not for Delaware City proposal appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 05:56

I have a used GT and put 300miles on it. Man this thing is fun but I am constantly getting beeped at and scraping the nose going up hills or nose diving why trying to accelerate. I need more power. I could GTFO it. My issue is I already run out of range on my GT if I air down the tire and ride at 15-20mph and ride like I normally do. I weigh 150lb but I don’t like going past 20% battery so most of my rides end around 20miles on roads. If I go off road and hilly stuff it’s lower. Also the motor already get pretty toasty normally 140f and if I gtfo it then I will also need a new motor. Where I am stuck is do I spend 1,200 on a GTFO kit with a super flux plus another 130 for a new tire. Or do I just go buy a x7LR? Idk if I would like the xr platform more for carving a cruising around? Which is all I really do I am not doing freestyle tricks or racing or anything crazy. I just want like a top speed of 25mph with head room. Should I try and find a group ride and just try and ride a bunch of peoples boards to see what I like?

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-19 05:33
  • Video released of federation president Mehdi Taj

  • Fifa has no plans to move Iran games to Mexico

Iran will “boycott the United States” but “not the World Cup”, the Iranian football federation president, Mehdi Taj, said in a video released by the Iranian press agency Fars.

Iran are scheduled to play their group matches in the US in this summer’s tournament. “We will be preparing for the World Cup,” Taj said. “We will boycott the United States but not the World Cup.”

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 05:11

Records from the United States Air Force Academy’s oversight board show leaders dismantling diversity programs and reviewing curriculum as the board embraces what critics call a concerning ideological turn toward Christian nationalism and prepares to seat conservative activist Erika Kirk. 

The communications, revealed in December 2025 meeting minutes reviewed by The Intercept, come as the administration has employed religious rhetoric in its military policies. Amid the U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran, some service members and political supporters have framed the war in religious terms, including describing it as part of “God’s divine plan.” Other federal agencies have also openly embraced white nationalist rhetoric and imagery, including a Department of Homeland Security recruitment post that used a neo-Nazi-associated anthem days after the fatal ICE shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis.

When the White House announced Kirk’s appointment to fill her late husband’s seat on the board, it highlighted Charlie Kirk’s “bold Christian faith,” language critics say suggests religion was treated as a qualification for the role.

“The appointment of Erika Kirk to the U.S. Air Force Academy Board of Visitors goes hand in hand with Christian nationalist incursions into our armed forces, such as Pete Hegseth’s actions and statements promoting his fervent brand of evangelical Christianity at the Pentagon,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.

Critics warn the changes could reshape how the military’s premier officer training institution educates future leaders as it aligns with the administration’s “Restoring America’s Fighting Force” initiative, President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s marquee plan to reverse the military’s diversity efforts and emphasize “lethality.”

“The appointment of Erika Kirk goes hand in hand with Christian nationalist incursions into our armed forces.”

Minutes from the meeting describe academy leaders briefing the board on steps taken to implement those directives, including removing DEI elements from the admissions process and reviewing curriculum and academy facilities for compliance with presidential executive orders.

Related

How Trump Twisted DEI to Only Benefit White Christians

In public comments submitted to the Board of Visitors, included in the meeting materials, Doug Truax, CEO of the conservative Restoration of America Foundation, urged the board to review faculty and programs he said were aligned with “social justice” agendas. He also singled out Col. Candice Pipes, the academy’s admissions chief, for commenting on racial disparities in the Air Force, and claimed she said she pays a “diversity tax” as a Black woman.

The Air Force Academy has established four task forces to ensure compliance with the “Restoring America’s Fighting Force” plan, according to the minutes. One of them, focused on admissions, found that “with the changes being implemented, the Academy’s admissions process is merit-based and that diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) elements have been removed.”

The Board of Visitors is a congressionally mandated oversight body that reviews cadet life, curriculum, faculty, finances, and discipline at the Air Force Academy, which commissions roughly half of the service’s new officers each year and plays a central role in shaping the culture of future military leadership. The board’s findings and recommendations are delivered to the secretary of the Air Force and forwarded to Hegseth and Congress. While the board cannot directly set policy, its oversight can shape Pentagon scrutiny and congressional funding decisions.

“The Board can influence congressional funding of the academy, so there’s definitely some power there,” said William J. Astore, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel who taught at the academy for six years. “More than anything, the appointment of Kirk to the board demonstrates the ongoing politicization of the service academies.”

“More than anything, the appointment of Kirk to the board demonstrates the ongoing politicization of the service academies.”

Unlike earlier political appointments to the board, Kirk’s selection reflects a specific political and religious alignment rather than expertise in military affairs, said retired Air Force Lt. Col. Rachel VanLandingham, a graduate and former instructor at the academy. She warned the move could encourage academy officials who share those views to shape internal reporting or programs in ways that reinforce them.

“The BOV only makes recommendations to the secretary of defense through the secretary of the Air Force, so its influence is typically quite indirect,” VanLandingham said. “However, given Secretary Hegseth’s alignment with Kirk’s group and connections to Ms. Kirk, this appointment could provide a backdoor directly to the secretary of defense, thus elevating its power.”

Related

Hegseth Leads Push to Punish Military Service Members Over Charlie Kirk Comments

The changes revive long-standing concerns about religion and ideology at the academy. The Colorado Springs institution has faced repeated allegations over the past two decades that Christian beliefs are favored within cadet culture and leadership structures. In 2005, the Air Force launched a major investigation after cadets reported pressure to attend chapel services and adopt evangelical Christian beliefs. The review found that academy leaders had struggled to fully accommodate the religious needs of non-Christian cadets and had blurred the line between permissible religious expression and coercion.

Later climate surveys continued to highlight the issue. One 2010 survey found that 41 percent of cadets who identified as non-Christian said they had experienced unwanted religious proselytizing at least once or twice in a year.

“USAFA has long struggled with unlawful religious viewpoint discrimination, institutionally favoring Christianity over other religions,” said VanLandingham. “This appointment is not helpful in that regard.”

Federal law governing the Air Force Academy’s Board of Visitors divides appointment authority among the White House and congressional leadership. The panel’s members are selected by the president, the House speaker and House minority leader, the Senate majority and minority leaders, and the chairs and ranking members of the House and Senate armed services committees.

Of the board’s 14 currently filled seats, 10 are held by members of Congress, including seven Republicans and three Democrats, compared to five Democrats and three Republicans in December 2022. The remaining four members are presidential appointees. Only a small minority of the board’s members have prior military experience.

Minutes from a December 2022 meeting during the Biden administration show that academy leaders briefed members on cadet welfare programs, admissions, and sexual violence prevention initiatives, a stark contrast to the priorities under Trump.

Astore, the retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, said the board historically drew little attention from faculty focused on cadet education. But he said recent meetings and Kirk’s appointment suggest a growing focus on ideological priorities rather than professional military education.

“I don’t think Erika Kirk is going to question why cadets aren’t learning their Clausewitz and Sun Tzu,” he said.

“It is telling and highly inappropriate that the White House, in announcing Kirk’s appointment, brought up Charlie Kirk’s ‘bold Christian faith,’” Gaylor, of Freedom From Religion Foundation, said, “as if that were a qualification for his widow serving on it. The Constitution still bars any religious test for public office, but apparently the White House isn’t aware of that.”

The White House did not respond to questions from The Intercept asking why Kirk was selected for the position.

Turning Point USA, the conservative activist organization founded by Charlie Kirk where his wife is now CEO and board chair, also did not respond to questions about what role she is expected to play on the board.

Related

Military Leaders See Iran War as “God’s Divine Plan” — a Chilling Turn for Trump’s Fascism

A spokesperson for the academy said the institution “thanks all members of the Board of Visitors for their service and commitment to our mission,” and that according to federal law, “the institution does not influence or take a position on the selection of individual Board of Visitors members.”

But critics and former academy officials warned the changes could shape a generation of officers more loyal to political ideology than to the military’s traditional commitment to constitutional, nonpartisan service.

“They aren’t serious about developing officers of character at USAFA who can critically think and defend our nation most effectively through wise leadership,” VanLandingham said. “They are interested in turning the military into a Christian nationalist praetorian guard.”

The post Air Force Academy Prepares Ideological Overhaul, With Erika Kirk Bringing “Bold Christian Faith” appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 05:09

Because of greater exposure to disruptions in the Middle East, such as high natural gas prices, businesses and consumers outside the U.S. are being hit harder by the war in Iran.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 05:00

Can anyone derail the Connecticut juggernaut? Our contributors pick the winners, sleepers and upsets for this year’s women’s NCAA Tournament

There have been just four women’s Final Fours featuring all No 1 seeds. This year feels like it could give us the fifth. UConn v South Carolina would be a tantalizing rematch of last year’s national championship game – made even more interesting by the fact they didn’t meet in the regular season for the first time since 2014-15. Texas held off a late UCLA comeback when they played in November, but the Bruins have rolled off 25 straight wins since. EB

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 05:00

New Mexico prosecutors allege Meta prioritized profit, even as child abuse surged on Instagram and Facebook

Meta is facing a reckoning over its child safety practices as a trial surfaces fresh allegations that the company prioritized profit incentives and engagement over protecting children.

The landmark trial in New Mexico has now completed its fifth week, with the state attorney general resting the case on 5 March. Proceedings are expected to continue for another week as Meta presents its defense before the jury begins deliberations.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 04:00

Bizarre outbursts at the press, a backstory full of mishaps – the US ‘secretary of war’ earns his keep as the loyalty hire par excellence

Has there ever been a more ludicrous political character than Pete Hegseth, the US government’s so-called secretary of war, who makes Ronald Reagan look understated and urbane? Last week, Hegseth launched an attack on the American press for its coverage of Iran, which he called insufficiently “patriotic”. (A CNN commentator and former Republican congressman came back with “punk” and “cry baby” to describe Hegseth’s own demeanour.) When he stands at the podium with his Mr Incredible jaw and head extended, turtle-like, way out in front of his body, all you can think is this: which is a greater threat to American national security, Iran’s nuclear ambitions or Hegseth’s failure to meet even the most entry-level requirements for a person in his position?

The majority of Americans who know who he is – only about 70% of them, according to a recent survey by the Pew Research Center – don’t like the guy, and his petulant outbursts last week at the Pentagon can’t have helped. Since Donald Trump appointed him in January last year, what has become evident about Hegseth is that, like so many bullies, he backs down sharpish if he meets any significant pushback. “Jennifer, you’ve been about the worst,” snapped Hegseth to a Fox News reporter last June in a phrase we should all have had printed on T-shirts. (Jennifer Griffin elegantly countered “I take issue with that,” and Hegseth backed away and pivoted to another point.)

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 03:27

Trump says the U.S. will destroy a vast Iranian gas field if Tehran retaliates for an Israeli strike on the facility by attacking Qatar's infrastructure.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 03:00

Ireland’s former taoiseach warns of conservative Russian influence and says US is now ‘off the pitch’ under Trump

LGBTQ+ rights in Europe are caught in a “chill wind” from east and west as Vladimir Putin’s Russia exports its conservative agenda and the “Americans are off the pitch” under Donald Trump, Ireland’s former taoiseach Leo Varadkar has said.

Varadkar, who in 2017 became Ireland’s first out gay prime minister, said Europe needed to “step up” to avoid the continent becoming further squeezed by global forces seeking to chip away at recent progress.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 03:00

Trevor Milton, the pardoned founder of Nikola, is seeking $1 billion for AI-powered autonomous planes through a new venture called SyberJet. The Tech Buzz reports: "Autonomous planes will be 10 times harder than Nikola ever was," Milton told the Wall Street Journal in a rare interview. It's a remarkable admission from someone whose last venture collapsed under the weight of securities fraud charges after he overstated the capabilities of Nikola's electric and hydrogen-powered trucks. Milton was convicted in 2022 on three counts of fraud for misleading investors about Nikola's technology, including staging a video that made it appear a truck prototype was driving under its own power when it was actually rolling downhill. The conviction sent him to prison and turned Nikola into a cautionary tale about startup hype culture. His pardon, which came earlier this year, sparked immediate controversy in venture capital and legal circles. Now he's betting that AI and autonomous aviation represent a clean slate. SyberJet appears focused on developing artificial intelligence systems capable of piloting aircraft without human intervention - a technical challenge that's stumped even well-funded players like Boeing and Airbus. [...] Milton hasn't detailed SyberJet's technical approach or revealed who's backing the venture. The company's website remains sparse, and aviation industry sources say they haven't seen concrete demonstrations of the technology. That opacity echoes the early days of Nikola, when Milton made sweeping claims about revolutionary trucks that existed mostly in renderings and promotional videos. If you need a quick refresher on the Nikola saga, here's a timeline of key events: June, 2016: Nikola Motor Receives Over 7,000 Preorders Worth Over $2.3 Billion For Its Electric Truck December, 2016: Nikola Motor Company Reveals Hydrogen Fuel Cell Truck With Range of 1,200 Miles February, 2020: Nikola Motors Unveils Hybrid Fuel-Cell Concept Truck With 600-Mile Range June, 2020: Nikola Founder Exaggerated the Capability of His Debut Truck September, 2020: Nikola Motors Accused of Massive Fraud, Ocean of Lies September, 2020: Nikola Admits Prototype Was Rolling Downhill In Promo Video September, 2020: Nikola Founder Trevor Milton Steps Down as Chairman in Battle With Short Seller October, 2020: Nikola Stock Falls 14 Percent After CEO Downplays Badger Truck Plans November, 2020: Nikola Stock Plunges As Company Cancels Badger Pickup Truck July, 2021: Nikola Founder Trevor Milton Indicted on Three Counts of Fraud December, 2021: EV Startup Nikola Agrees To $125 Million Settlement September, 2022: Nikola Founder Lied To Investors About Tech, Prosecutor Says in Fraud Trial

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 02:53
  • Miami bury 16 threes for statement March Madness win

  • RedHawks quiet doubters after unbeaten regular season

  • Prairie View A&M claim first ever NCAA Tournament win

Eian Elmer scored 22 points and Miami (Ohio) beat SMU 89-79 on Wednesday night in the First Four for their first NCAA Tournament victory in 27 years.

Elmer went 6 of 9 from three-point range as the 11th-seeded RedHawks (32-1), undefeated during the regular season, advanced in the Midwest Region to play No 6 seed Tennessee.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 02:00

People struggle to cook and businesses bear brunt as closure of strait of Hormuz slows imports of liquefied petroleum gas

For four days, Maya Rani, 36, has been arriving each morning at a gas distributor’s office in Delhi, her six-month-old daughter in her lap, waiting for hours. And each day she returns home empty-handed, told that a cooking gas cylinder may not be available for at least another week. Around her, the queue keeps growing, people clutching forms and documents, hoping to secure a cylinder.

The flame in her kitchen began to fade last week and her husband, as he always does, took their 5kg cylinder to a local refiller. This time, there was nothing. The only option left was to apply for a government-subsidised supply, a process that has meant repeated visits, long waits and no certainty.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 01:01

Nigeria had largest increase in terrorism-related deaths, ranking fourth in global index behind Pakistan, Burkina Faso and Niger

Jihadist violence rose sharply in Nigeria and Democratic Republic of Congo last year, even as global deaths from terrorism dropped to their lowest level in a decade, according to a new report.

Nigeria recorded the largest increase in terrorism deaths globally in 2025, with fatalities rising by 46% from 513 in 2024 to 750, placing it fourth in the Global Terrorism Index, behind Pakistan, Burkina Faso and Niger.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 01:01

Driverless ‘robotaxis’ will be accepting fares in Britain’s biggest city by the end of next year. Can they deal with London’s medieval roads, hordes of pedestrians and errant ebikers? I got in the passenger seat to find out

‘I’m really excited to show you this,” says Alex Kendall, the CEO of Wayve, as he gets behind the wheel of one of the company’s electric Ford Mustangs. Then he does … nothing. The car pulls up to a junction at a busy road in King’s Cross, London, all by itself. “You can see that it’s going to control the speed, steering, brake, indicators,” he says to me – I’m in the passenger seat. “It’s making decisions as it goes. Here we’ve got an unprotected turn, where we’ve got to wait for a gap in traffic …” The steering wheel spins by itself and the car pulls out smoothly.

Riding in a self-driving car for the first time is a little like your first flight in an aeroplane: borderline terrifying for a few seconds, then reassuringly unremarkable. At least, that is my experience. By the time I step out, 20 minutes later, I’m convinced Wayve is a better driver than most humans – better than me, anyway.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 01:01

How close are we to the sci-fi vision of autonomous humanoid robots? I visited 11 companies in five Chinese cities to find out

Chen Liang, the founder of Guchi Robotics, an automation company headquartered in Shanghai, is a tall, heavy-set man in his mid-40s with square-rimmed glasses. His everyday manner is calm and understated, but when he is in his element – up close with the technology he builds, or in business meetings discussing the imminent replacement of human workers by robots – he wears an exuberant smile that brings to mind an intern on his first day at his dream job. Guchi makes the machines that install wheels, dashboards and windows for many of the top Chinese car brands, including BYD and Nio. He took the name from the Chinese word guzhi, “steadfast intelligence”, though the fact that it sounded like an Italian luxury brand was not entirely unwelcome.

For the better part of two decades, Chen has tried to solve what, to him, is an engineering problem: how to eliminate – or, in his view, liberate – as many workers in car factories as technologically possible. Late last year, I visited him at Guchi headquarters on the western outskirts of Shanghai. Next to the head office are several warehouses where Guchi’s engineers tinker with robots to fit the specifications of their customers. Chen, an engineer by training, founded Guchi in 2019 with the aim of tackling the hardest automation task in the car factory: “final assembly”, the last leg of production, when all the composite pieces – the dashboard, windows, wheels and seat cushions – come together. At present, his robots can mount wheels, dashboards and windows on to a car without any human intervention, but 80% of the final assembly, he estimates, has yet to be automated. That is what Chen has set his sights on.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 00:00

Though two men were arrested for allegedly pelting officers with snow, the mayor waved off the incident

A blizzard brought New York to a standstill on 23 February, with schools across the city closed. Restless young people without anywhere to go began to gather in Washington Square Park, summoned by Instagram chatshow Sidetalk, which wanted to stage an almighty snowball fight. A sea of young men in ski goggles gathered, armed with phones in one hand and balls of ice in the other. Cannonballs of snow flew across the sky. Others backflipped off snowmen or wrestled on the snow. The scene was of good-natured pandemonium.

“But it started getting chaotic once people were throwing gigantic blocks of ice. That’s when I left,” says Gabriella Yankovich who stopped by on her lunchbreak. “Boys being boys.”

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 00:00

How Sheinbaum can counter Trump’s threats.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-19 00:00

And why it augurs a more dangerous world.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 23:56

A group of House Democrats walked out of a closed-door briefing with Attorney General Pam Bondi on the Jeffrey Epstein probe late Wednesday, as tensions over the DOJ's handling of the Epstein case continue to simmer.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 23:45

Reported inquiry predates Joe Kent’s departure from his post as director of the national counter-terrorism center

The resignation of Joe Kent, a senior counter-terrorism official who spoke out against the US war in Iran, took a dramatic turn on Wednesday with a report that he is under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) over an alleged leak of classified information.

The inquiry predates Kent’s departure on Tuesday from his post as director of the national counterterrorism center, where he had overseen the analysis of terrorist threats, according to Semafor and CBS News. The FBI declined to comment on the existence of any such investigation.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 23:43

This liveblog is closed – follow our new liveblog here.

Iran is still exporting millions of barrels of oil, with about 90 ships, including oil tankers, having crossed the strait of Hormuz since the beginning of the war with Iran, according to maritime and trade data platforms reports.

This is despite Iran saying it had closed the vital waterway to vessels from the US and its allies.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The FBI has resumed purchasing reams of Americans' data and location histories to aid federal investigations, the agency's director, Kash Patel, testified to lawmakers on Wednesday. This is the first time since 2023 that the FBI has confirmed it was buying access to people's data collected from data brokers, who source much of their information -- including location data -- from ordinary consumer phone apps and games, per Politico. At the time, then-FBI director Christopher Wray told senators that the agency had bought access to people's location data in the past but that it was not actively purchasing it. When asked by U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, if the FBI would commit to not buying Americans' location data, Patel said that the agency "uses all tools ... to do our mission." "We do purchase commercially available information that is consistent with the Constitution and the laws under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act -- and it has led to some valuable intelligence for us," Patel testified Wednesday. Wyden said buying information on Americans without obtaining a warrant was an "outrageous end-run around the Fourth Amendment," referring to the constitutional law that protects people in America from device searches and data seizures.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 22:11
  • Cristian Espinoza goal leads Nashville to quarter-finals

  • Messi’s milestone the highlight for Inter Miami

  • Match was Miami’s last at Chase Stadium before move

Inter Miami’s Lionel Messi reached a milestone, but Nashville SC got a ticket to the next round of the Concacaf Champions Cup.

In a 1-1 draw, Messi got the 900th goal of his career, but a second-half strike from Nashville’s Cristian Espinoza sent Inter Miami packing on away goals after the second leg of their round of 16 matchup on Wednesday night.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 22:07

should be a big badge for running out of juice over five miles from home. what a hike.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 22:06

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 19.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 21:50

Independent committee to investigate safety standards and whether building practices contributed to worst residential fires in decades

Public hearings in Hong Kong begin on Thursday into a devastating fire that ripped through a housing complex last year, killing 168 people.

A judge-led independent committee will investigate whether fire safety standards were inadequate, if construction practices contributed to the fire, and if there were failures on the part of government officers or contractors.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 21:32

The detention of Dylan Lopez Contreras, 20, of Venezuela, a freshman in the Bronx, sparked national outrage

A New York high school student who was detained at an immigration courthouse in May last year, sparking national outrage, was released on Wednesday.

Dylan Lopez Contreras, 21, of Venezuela was a freshman at Ellis Prep academy, a Bronx public school dedicated exclusively to students who have recently arrived in the US. It was the first widely known instance of a public school student being arrested by federal immigration agents.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 21:07

Lawmakers leave closed-door meeting after AG refuses to commit to honoring subpoena to testify under oath

Democrats on the House oversight committee walked out of a closed-door briefing from attorney general Pam Bondi about the Jeffrey Epstein files on Wednesday, leaving what California congressman Robert Garcia called “an outrageous fake hearing” after Bondi refused to commit to honoring a subpoena to testify under oath.

The committee voted to subpoena Bondi earlier this month, with five Republicans joining Democrats to demand that the attorney general answer questions about the justice department’s failure to properly release files from the federal investigations into Epstein.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 21:03

Costa Rica on Wednesday closed its embassy in Havana and told Cuba's Communist government to pull its diplomats from Costa Rica.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 20:47

Board: Onewheel XR Classic

Purchase date: December 2024

Mileage: 322 miles

Issue: Complete power failure — no LEDs, no response to charger, totally dead

**What happened:**

Plugged in to charge, came back to unplug and power on — nothing. No LED feedback at all, not even on the charger indicator. Tried hard reset, deep discharge recovery (4+ hours), different outlets. Sent the board into Future Motion's San Jose repair center.

**FM diagnosis:**

"Battery was not performing up to specification and will need to be replaced."

**Repair quote:**

$600 battery assembly + $52.76 labor = $652.76

**Warranty status:**

Out of warranty by a matter of weeks (12-month hardware warranty expired December 2025). Battery warranty (6 months) expired June 2025.

**What I've done:**

Filed a goodwill appeal with Future Motion making the case that a battery failure at 322 miles feels like a defect, not wear and tear. Waiting to hear back.

**Questions for the community:**

  1. Has anyone had FM extend goodwill on an out-of-warranty repair like this? What was your outcome?

  2. Are there reputable third-party battery options for the XR Classic that are significantly cheaper than OEM?

  3. Has anyone used ChiBatteries or a similar aftermarket option on an XR Classic — and does it require an OWIE/FFM chip on this hardware version?

  4. Any third-party repair shops in the LA area worth considering if FM doesn't budge?

Thanks in advance — this community has been more helpful than FM support so far.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 20:37

Republicans block resolution to take up the measure, which Democrats vow to bring up ‘again and again and again’

Senate Republicans on Wednesday blocked a measure that aimed to rein in Donald Trump’s power to wage war against Iran without congressional authorization.

The 53-47 vote against taking up the measure fell almost completely along party lines, with no movement from earlier this month when Republicans blocked Democrats’ bid to limit Trump’s war-making power in the days after the joint US-Israeli strikes, known as Operation Epic Fury, began across Iran.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 20:31

Kilmer's estate approves plans to use generative AI to resurrect the late actor for a role in the historical drama As Deep As the Grave.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-18 20:26

Easier logins are a key reason customers are happier with apps, according to a JD Power study.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 20:20

The family of an Afghan immigrant who died one day after being taken into custody by ICE in Texas says it has received no answers as to what caused the man's death.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-19 05:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 19, No. 746.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-19 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 19, No. 1,734.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-19 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 19 #1012.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-19 05:00

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 542 for Thursday, March 19.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 20:01

The Senate defeated a war powers resolution on Wednesday that aimed to block President Trump from ramping up the war with Iran​, as the operation approaches a fourth week.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:59

Thousands of police prepare to deploy to South Korea’s capital ahead of K-pop’s most anticipated comeback

Seoul has stepped up security ahead of BTS’s huge comeback concert on Saturday, which more than a quarter of a million fans are expected to attend, with authorities raising the terror alert in the area and preparing to deploy thousands of police to the capital.

South Korean president Lee Jae Myung warned at a cabinet meeting this week that “the issue is safety” and urged heightened vigilance by the interior ministry and emergency services to prepare for every possibility. He described the concert as an important occasion to reaffirm the country’s global cultural standing.

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2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:57

As attention focuses on Iran, the conflict between two of its neighbors is escalating.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:56

FBI director says agency does ‘purchase commercially available information’ from data brokers; Ron Wyden calls action ‘an outrageous end run around the Fourth Amendment’

Rand Paul seemed immediately frustrated with Mullin as he opened the hearing. While he was speaking, he suggested that Mullin wasn’t listening to his remarks, during which he pushed Trump’s nominee on his vote against Paul’s amendment to stop all funding for refugee welfare programs.

“You decided to transfer the blame. You told the media that I was a ‘freaking snake’ and that you completely understood why I had been assaulted,” Paul said, referring to when he was attacked by a neighbor in Kentucky in 2017, which resulted in Paul breaking several ribs and developing pneumonia.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 19:26

Admission came during questioning at Senate intelligence committee worldwide threats hearing

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has started buying location data on Americans, Kash Patel, FBI director, said under oath at the Senate intelligence committee worldwide threats hearing on Wednesday.

Patel’s admission came in response to a question from the senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who is a longtime opponent of the warrantless surveillance of Americans. Wyden told Patel that his predecessor, Christopher Wray, testified in 2023 that the FBI did not at that time purchase location data derived from internet advertising, although he acknowledged that it had done so in the past.

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2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:17

Illinois' heavily Democratic tilt means statewide candidates and those in the Chicago area and its suburbs are favored to win in November.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:08

The conflict continues to roil global energy markets. On Wednesday, an attack on Iran’s South Pars gas field sent energy prices soaring.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:02

Mayor of London says returning to EU now more desirable because of economic instability caused by Donald Trump

Labour should go into the next general election promising to rejoin the EU, Sadiq Khan has said.

The mayor of London has repeatedly made the case for joining the customs union and single market, but went much further on Wednesday night by suggesting the party should promise full membership at next ballot.

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2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 19:00

Cloudflare is appealing a 14.2 million-euro fine from Italy for refusing to comply with its "Piracy Shield" law, which requires blocking access to websites on its 1.1.1.1 DNS service within 30 minutes. The company argues the system lacks oversight, risks widespread overblocking, and could undermine core Internet infrastructure. Ars Technica's Jon Brodkin reports: Piracy Shield is "a misguided Italian regulatory scheme designed to protect large rightsholder interests at the expense of the broader Internet," Cloudflare said in a blog post this week. "After Cloudflare resisted registering for Piracy Shield and challenged it in court, the Italian communications regulator, AGCOM, fined Cloudflare... We appealed that fine on March 8, and we continue to challenge the legality of Piracy Shield itself." Cloudflare called the fine of 14.2 million euros ($16.4 million) "staggering." AGCOM issued the penalty in January 2026, saying Cloudflare flouted requirements to disable DNS resolution of domain names and routing of traffic to IP addresses reported by copyright holders. Cloudflare had previously resisted a blocking order it received in February 2025, arguing that it would require installing a filter on DNS requests that would raise latency and negatively affect DNS resolution for sites that aren't subject to the dispute over piracy. Cloudflare co-founder and CEO Matthew Prince said that censoring the 1.1.1.1 DNS resolver would force the firm "not just to censor the content in Italy but globally." Piracy Shield was designed to combat pirated streams of live sports events, requiring network operators to block domain names and IP addresses within 30 minutes of receiving a copyright notification. Cloudflare said the fine should have been capped at 140,000 euros ($161,000), or 2 percent of its Italian earnings, but that "AGCOM calculated the fine based on our global revenue, resulting in a penalty nearly 100 times higher than the legal limit." Despite its complaints about the size of the fine, Cloudflare said the principles at stake "are even larger" than the financial penalty. "Piracy Shield is an unsupervised electronic portal through which an unidentified set of Italian media companies can submit websites and IP addresses that online service providers registered with Piracy Shield are then required to block within 30 minutes," Cloudflare said. Cloudflare is pushing for the law to be struck down, arguing that it is "incompatible with EU law, most notably the Digital Services Act (DSA), which requires that any content restriction be proportionate and subject to strict procedural safeguards." In addition to appealing the fine, Cloudflare says it will continue to challenge Piracy Shield in Italian courts, engage with EU officials, and seek full access to AGCOM's Piracy Shield records.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 18:56

Lawyer says child left with scars, as parents seek damages for medical expenses, loss of income and ‘enjoyment in life’

A family is suing a US ski resort claiming the hot chocolate it sold them scarred their five-year-old daughter.

The lawsuit in California says that when Brittany Burns and Joshua Moran Burns took a mid-morning break from skiing with their child, they stopped for a drink at a cafe at Heavenly Mountain Resort.

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2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 18:52

March 18, 2026 — Smaller than the full-size system, the EAS gives NERSC staff and the system vendor, Dell Technologies, the opportunity to refine assembly, delivery, installation, and integration processes, paving the way for seamless deployment of the full-scale production system in late 2026. The EAS is currently being installed at NERSC, a U.S Department of Energy (DOE) user facility located at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).

The Cech early-access system is named for the chemist Thomas Cech, the chemist awarded a Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of the catalytic properties of RNA. Credit: Berkeley Lab.

“We are excited to take delivery of the early access system,” said NERSC Director Sudip Dosanjh. “This is an important step in deploying Doudna for NERSC’s 11,000-plus users. We plan to use the EAS to develop and test the software stack for Doudna in collaboration with Dell Technologies, NVIDIA, and our other partners. This opportunity to polish our processes helps ensure a great user experience when we deploy the full system.”

“NERSC is where the future of science becomes real,” said Paul Perez, Senior Fellow, Dell Technologies Federal. “The early access system is the first step toward Doudna, which will set the blueprint for how federal agencies scale HPC and AI – securely, efficiently, and at mission speed.”

A Stepping Stone to Doudna

The next NERSC supercomputer will be called Doudna after Jennifer Doudna, the biochemist honored with a Nobel Prize in recognition of her work on the gene-editing technology CRISPR. The EAS will be called Cech (pronounced “check”) in honor of Thomas Cech, the chemist awarded a Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of the catalytic properties of RNA. Cech’s work was a crucial stepping stone to Doudna’s research, making him a natural choice for the EAS’s namesake.

Cech spent time at Berkeley Lab as a summer intern in 1969 and then earned his Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1975. He later joined the faculty of the University of Colorado Boulder, where he became a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigator in 1988 and Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry in 1990. In 1982 Cech and his research group announced that an RNA molecule from the pond animal Tetrahymena could catalyze biochemical reactions, the first exception to the long-held belief that only proteins could act as enzymes. This work led to the 1989 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, shared with Sidney Altman of Yale University.

“Like supercomputers, each scientific discovery builds on the previous generation, and requires a community effort to lay the foundation for the next. Naming the EAS Cech is a great reminder of the connections between us and the impact of our contributions to the next generation,” said Rollin Thomas, NERSC-10 Project Director.

Testing Systems and Technologies

Deploying a new supercomputer is a complex process, and the EAS allows NERSC and Dell to test the entire process, from delivery and installation to software setup, before the full system arrives. This early hands‑on work ensures the final supercomputer integrates smoothly into NERSC’s operations.

Moreover, many of the technologies built into Cech are new: designed by Dell, powered by NVIDIA AI infrastructure, and operated by NERSC, with extreme-scale storage and data services provided by VAST Data, Cech is an example of a public-private partnership to deploy cutting-edge technologies in DOE’s state-of-the-art data centers. Cech includes 72 NVIDIA Grace CPUs and 144 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs – the precursors to the Vera-Rubin platform planned for the Doudna system –interconnected by the low-latency, high-throughput NVIDIA Quantum-X800 InfiniBand networking platform – within Dell’s energy-efficient IR7000-series direct liquid-cooled rack and the first U.S. deployment of Rittal’s in-row V3.5 coolant distribution unit. Cech will also feature one of the first deployments of Dell’s PowerCool Enclosed Rear Door Heat Exchanger (eRDHx), which is built to reduce cooling costs by 60% compared to traditional options. All these innovations hold enormous promise for users and for HPC in science.

“NERSC has a long history of deploying first-of-a-kind systems while pushing the boundaries of energy-efficient computing, and Cech is the latest example of this,” said NERSC-10 Deputy Director for Systems Brian Friesen. “Integrating these cutting-edge NVIDIA AI infrastructure with Dell’s pioneering liquid-cooling technology gives NERSC staff an incredible sandbox to test this powerful combination, and ensure a seamless, sustainable deployment for Doudna.”

Cech uses the VAST AI OS to deliver both high-performance scratch and quality-of-service (QoS) data services, accommodating the distinct I/O demands of traditional modeling and simulation alongside AI-intensive workflows. Sustaining utilization of GPU-accelerated systems at this scale requires an architecture designed to deliver consistent throughput and service differentiation under highly mixed workloads.

In itself, Cech provides 5.76 petaflop/s FP64 computing power for simulation and 1.44 exaflop/s NVFP4, making it a powerful AI system that will be used to support the Genesis Mission, the DOE’s AI initiative, after this initial development period.

“It’s amazing to see the systems progress that’s been made in recent years,” said Dosanjh. “A single cabinet of NVIDIA Grace-Blackwell nodes has as much FP64 computing capability as twice the entire Edison system, NERSC’s flagship system from 2014 through 2019, which filled the entire data-center floor.”

In addition to the new hardware, NERSC staff will use the EAS period for benchmarking and to test a slew of new software systems for Doudna. This includes the complex modular software stack based on Omnia and OpenCHAMI needed to orchestrate and manage a supercomputer and its user software environment. NERSC and Dell will use Cech to collaborate on monitoring, telemetry, and alerting software infrastructure for Doudna and future systems. Cech will also be used to identify the best ways to make decades of data stored on NERSC’s Community File System and HPSS archive available on Doudna, and to connect to external resources through ESnet, DOE’s dedicated network for science.

All together, these test processes are key to a successful deployment, paving the way for Doudna just as Thomas Cech’s research paved the way for Jennifer Doudna’s. And when Doudna arrives, NERSC will be ready.

“Getting Cech in the data center now is essential to ensure the successful deployment of Doudna coming up at the end of the year,” said Thomas.  “Since the priority is for NERSC and Dell to learn from the EAS process, there isn’t an immediate opportunity for users to get on the system. We hope users appreciate this period of intense preparation that will make deployment of Doudna as smooth as possible and make it a useful tool in the future as it supports the Genesis Mission and other groundbreaking research.”

More from HPCwire: Doudna: The DOE’s New Supercomputing Giant for the AI Age

About Computing Sciences at Berkeley Lab

High performance computing plays a critical role in scientific discovery. Researchers increasingly rely on advances in computer science, mathematics, computational science, data science, and large-scale computing and networking to increase our understanding of ourselves, our planet, and our universe. Berkeley Lab’s Computing Sciences Area researches, develops, and deploys new foundations, tools, and technologies to meet these needs and to advance research across a broad range of scientific disciplines.


Source: Berkeley Lab

The post Berkeley Lab Takes Major Step Toward Doudna with Delivery of Early Access System, Cech appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 18:50

TORONTO, March 18, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, today announced a novel quantum computational algorithm to accelerate the discovery and analysis of next-generation battery materials. Published as a pre-print article, Xanadu’s new research, in collaboration with the University of Toronto and the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) as part of the NRC’s Applied Quantum Computing Challenge program, demonstrates how fault-tolerant quantum computers can solve critical challenges to enable the practical application of higher-capacity lithium-excess cathode active materials for lithium batteries.

Resonant Inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) is a powerful tool for characterizing how high-capacity batteries degrade over time, a key component for evaluating their predicted performance. However, the lack of accurate simulations of RIXS spectra limits its usefulness for many practical use cases. This new research shows that quantum algorithms can unlock computational simulations that are beyond the reach of classical methods, accelerating the progress towards discovering next-generation battery materials.

Throughout this work, resource requirements have also been reduced so that it can run on early, utility-scale fault tolerant quantum computers. For a classically challenging example, such as the structures predicted to form in Li-rich NMC cathode active materials, the algorithm would require less than 500 logical qubits to run, well within the expected requirements for early fault-tolerant quantum computers.

“The development of high-energy-density batteries is important for driving the energy demands of the future,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “We believe our results position fault-tolerant quantum computing as an essential tool for the battery industry and next-generation battery materials development.”

“I am very excited about the results of our collaboration with Xanadu and the University of Toronto”, said Dr. Yaser Abu-Lebdeh, co-project lead, senior research officer and team lead of the battery materials innovation team at the NRC’s Clean Energy Innovation Research Center. “Through this partnership, we tackled a key challenge in battery research while demonstrating the transformative potential of quantum computing and simulation through advanced quantum algorithms. By combining our deep expertise in battery materials and electrochemical systems here at the NRC with quantum innovation, we’ve taken an important step toward accelerating the development of next-generation battery technologies.”

This research serves as a foundational step toward a quantum-aided pipeline for battery design, providing a pathway to stabilize next-generation materials for more efficient energy storage. As a partnership between the Government of Canada, private industry, and academia, this research demonstrates that quantum dynamics simulations can unravel undiscovered applications of quantum computing, in particular for battery simulations. Discovering algorithms to simulate quantum dynamics as a native application of quantum computers–which are strong candidates for outperforming classical methods–represents a valuable step forward in Xanadu’s mission to build quantum computers that are useful and available to people everywhere.

Pre-print Article: Quantum algorithm for simulating resonant inelastic X-ray scattering in battery materials

About Xanadu

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


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu Introduces Quantum Algorithm for Battery Materials Simulation and Analysis appeared first on HPCwire.

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

With the latest OS updates, Apple users on Family Sharing will be able to select their own payment options for new purchases.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 18:30

On March 17, the Senate began debate on the SAVE America Act, a Republican-backed voter identification and registration bill that passed the House last month. Here, we answer several questions about the legislation, many of them asked by our readers.

Previous versions of the bill, called only the SAVE Act, died in the Senate, where the measure hasn’t garnered 60 votes to overcome a filibuster and force a final vote. The new legislation could well face a similar fate — eventually — but the Republican leadership is holding a weeklong (or so) debate in an effort to attract support.

David Becker, founder and executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research, which works with election officials throughout the country, said in a March 18 media briefing that it was “extremely unlikely, if not impossible, that this passes.” He predicted that “next week, we’re not going to be talking about this.”

But this week, the Senate is going to be talking about it a lot. On the opening day of debate, Senate Majority Leader John Thune called the bill “a package of commonsense measures” that was about “ensuring that those who are registered to vote are eligible to vote – and that those who show up to vote at polling places are … who they say they are.” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called it “in every sense a voter suppression bill” that could “disenfranchise” millions of American citizens.

The SAVE America Act (or Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act), passed the House on Feb. 11. The bill aims to prevent voting in federal elections by people who aren’t U.S. citizens — something that election experts say is a rare occurrence. Unlike last year’s SAVE Act, the bill also would require voters to present photo identification before casting a vote, whether by mail or in person. And states would have to use a Department of Homeland Security system to check the citizenship status of people on their voter rolls.

President Donald Trump has demanded that other measures be added to the legislation, including abolishing most mail-in voting.

We’ll explain more about the bill below.

Would registered voters be required to reregister with proper documentation to vote?

There’s no requirement in the bill for all registered voters to reregister. However, if a voter did need to reregister for other reasons, such as moving or changing their name, they would have to show documentation proving their citizenship. “Under any method of voter registration in a State, the State shall not accept and process an application to register to vote in an election for Federal office unless the applicant presents documentary proof of United States citizenship with the application,” the legislation says.

Voting booths and voters at a polling location on Election Day, Nov. 5, 2024, in Beltsville, Maryland. Photo by Graeme Sloan/Washington Post via Getty Images.

Ceridwen Cherry, legal director of VoteRiders, a nonpartisan group that helps people get an acceptable form of identification so they can vote, told us that “any change to the registration would require documents to prove citizenship under the SAVE America Act. The statute is drafted broadly enough to encompass all changes to registration.” 

VoteRiders’ mission is “to eliminate ID barriers to the ballot box so every eligible voter can cast a ballot that counts,” and as such, it opposes this legislation.

Becker, who said the legislation would “expansively … alter voting in every single state,” costing “tens, perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars,” said voters would need to prove citizenship under the bill “any time you conduct what we call a registration transaction, which usually comes from a life event, a move or a change of name.” (He also said that “in talking with election officials across the country, I have yet to find really any election official who supports this on either side of the aisle. It would make their jobs extremely more difficult” while primaries are occurring and months away from the general midterm elections.)

Current federal law requires those registering to vote to attest that they are citizens under penalty of perjury. The SAVE America Act would require people to present citizenship documents in person to election officials, even if they are registering by mail.

What documents would be accepted to prove citizenship?

For most Americans registering to vote, proving citizenship would mean presenting either only a U.S. passport, or a certified birth certificate along with a driver’s license or other government-issued photo ID. The legislation lists requirements the birth certificate must meet, such as including the full names of at least one parent, the signature of an authorized government official, and the seal of the state or local/tribal government that issued it.

The Bipartisan Policy Center noted in a March 16 post that not all birth certificates include all of the criteria. About 53% of the U.S. population has a U.S. passport, according to Department of State data.

These are other types of documents besides a passport that would suffice to prove citizenship under the bill: a REAL ID driver’s license that indicates citizenship (five states have such “enhanced” driver’s licenses); a military ID and service record that says the person was born in the U.S.; or a government-issued photo ID that shows a U.S. birthplace. If presenting a government-issued photo ID that doesn’t say the person was born in the U.S. or has citizenship, a registrant would also need either the certified birth certificate or a hospital birth record, adoption decree, a consular birth report, a naturalization certificate, or an American Indian card with the classification “KIC,” which designates U.S. citizenship for Mexican-born members of the Kickapoo tribes of Texas and Oklahoma. 

The Bipartisan Policy Center analyzed the 2024 Survey on the Performance of American Elections conducted by the MIT Election Data + Science Lab and found that 12% of registered voters lacked either a passport or a birth certificate along with a government-issued photo ID — the most common ways people would prove citizenship under this bill. The analysis also found that “wealthier and more highly educated voters are more likely to have documentary proof than others.” It found that “registered Democrats are more likely to have a valid passport than registered Republicans” and “Republicans are more likely to have a birth certificate than Democrats.”

According to a 2023 survey by New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice and other groups, more than 9% of Americans of voting age, or 21.3 million people, didn’t have easy access to citizenship documents, meaning they wouldn’t be able to “quickly find” such documents if they “had to show it tomorrow.” The percentage was 11% for Americans who did not identify as white.

In a summary of the bill, the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service explains that if people lack valid documents, “the bill would require states to establish a process whereby applicants could submit other documentation and sign an attestation under penalty of perjury that the applicant is a U.S. citizen and eligible to vote in federal elections.” If the person lacks documentation, the bill also would require the election official to sign an affidavit saying the registrant sufficiently demonstrated citizenship.

What about married women or others who have changed their names?

We received several questions from readers who are married, or divorced, and have changed their names, asking about how they can prove citizenship and ensure they can vote, should this bill become law. We wrote about these concerns last year as well. The bill includes a provision on name discrepancies, requiring states to establish a process for those registrations. (Again, voters who are already registered wouldn’t need to prove citizenship under legislation unless they needed to reregister.)

Cherry, with VoteRiders, told us that “if a voter has experienced a name change they would not be able to use their birth certificate as their only proof of citizenship as this document does not get updated if someone changes their name through marriage or divorce. They also could not use any of the other listed documents (e.g. passport) as their sole proof of citizenship if their name on the document does not match their current legal name.”

The bill requires states to set up a process to accommodate this. “Voters will either be able to provide ‘additional documentation as necessary to establish that the name on the documentation is a previous name of the applicant’ or ‘an affidavit signed by the applicant attesting that the name on the documentation is a previous name of the applicant,'” Cherry said. “The bill text does not lay out exactly what this process will be or what additional documentation would be accepted. It also leaves open the possibility for inconsistent rules between states.”

In general, the bill calls for the federal Election Assistance Commission, an independent, bipartisan agency, to issue guidance to states on implementing the legislation within 10 days of its enactment.

When we wrote about the SAVE Act last year, Wendy Weiser, vice president for democracy at the Brennan Center, raised concerns about criminal penalties in the bill for election officials. That provision remains in this year’s legislation. Weiser told us, “Any state process would be severely undercut by another provision in the bill making it a federal crime for election officials to register anyone who does not present ‘documentary proof of citizenship.’ How many election officials would be willing to risk incarceration and steep fines to register someone whose documentation does not match their current name?”

In a statement to us last year, Republican Rep. Chip Roy of Texas, who introduced the SAVE Act in the House and this year’s SAVE America Act, said concern over married women not being able to register to vote was “absurd armchair speculation.” He said the bill “provides a myriad [of] ways for people to prove citizenship and explicitly directs States to establish a process for individuals to register to vote if there are discrepancies in their proof of citizenship documents due to something like a name change.” 

What identification would people need in order to cast a vote?

New in this year’s legislation is a nationwide voter photo ID requirement. Those voting in person would need to present “a valid physical photo identification” in order to cast a ballot. Those voting by mail would need to provide a copy of the photo ID.

Those who don’t have an ID for in-person voting could cast a provisional ballot and then would have three days to present their ID to election officials — or sign an affidavit “attesting that the individual does not possess the identification required … because the individual has a religious objection to being photographed.”

For by-mail voters, they also could submit the last four numbers of their Social Security number and an affidavit “attesting that the individual is unable to obtain a copy of a valid photo identification after making reasonable efforts to obtain such a copy.”

A valid photo ID for this purpose includes: a state-issued driver’s license or ID card issued by the motor vehicle agency that includes a photo and expiration date, a U.S. passport, a military ID, or a photo ID issued by a tribal government that includes an expiration date.

The National Conference of State Legislatures, which tracks state legislation, has said that these voter ID requirements “are stricter than those that exist in most states.” In a Feb. 19 post, NCSL staff wrote, “While 36 states currently have voter ID requirements to vote, state approaches vary. Just 10 states fall into the strict photo ID category, as defined by NCSL.”

An acceptable ID for these 36 states “often includes student IDs, hunting and fishing licenses or other state-specific identification cards.” Thirteen states accept non-photo identification, such as a bank statement. That’s broader than what the SAVE America Act would accept.

There are exceptions to the by-mail ID requirements for overseas uniformed services members and those who have the right to vote absentee via the Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped Act.

How often have noncitizens voted in federal elections?

We’ve written about this issue a few times. Last April, we explained that detailed audits of voting records by some states had found instances of noncitizens casting votes to be relatively rare. In some cases, officials in those states found hundreds of noncitizens on voter registration rolls, a fraction of whom also voted.

Noncitizens convicted of voting in federal elections face fines, jail time and deportation.

“The evidence is that the number of noncitizens illegally voting in federal elections is extremely low, not high enough to have changed the party outcome of any federal election in recent years,” Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute told us. “Audits and investigations in states like Ohio, Nevada, and North Carolina have found the numbers to be tiny in relation to votes cast. … The consistent experience has been that very few persons in this category mistakenly or deliberately vote.”

For instance, the Ohio Secretary of State announced in May 2024 that it found 137 people on the state’s voter registration rolls who had twice confirmed their noncitizenship status to the state motor vehicles bureau. The announcement didn’t say whether any had tried to actually vote. A grand jury indicted six people who legally and permanently immigrated to the U.S. for voting illegally as noncitizens between 2008 and 2020. In Georgia, a 2022 review found that 1,634 people had attempted to register to vote between 1997 and 2022 and could not be verified as citizens. None had voted. In October 2024, the Associated Press reported that Georgia election officials said 20 out of the 8.2 million on the state’s voter registration rolls were not U.S. citizens, and that nine had voted in previous elections.

The Bipartisan Policy Center analyzed a database of fraud cases compiled by the conservative Heritage Foundation and found “only 77 instances of noncitizen voting between 1999 and 2023.”

Last April, we were writing about unsupported claims from Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency to have found evidence of large-scale voting by noncitizens. DOGE said it provided data to federal prosecutors for investigation. But nearly a year later, nothing has been made public about that investigation.

More recently, a systematic review of claims about noncitizen registrants and voters in all 50 states by the Center for Election Innovation & Research, updated in February, found that “sweeping allegations about noncitizen registrations or voting appear to arise from misunderstandings, mischaracterizations, or outright fabrications about complex voter data. In every examined case, when claims about large numbers of noncitizens on voting rolls are subject to scrutiny and properly investigated, the number of alleged instances falls drastically.”

What do we know about the DHS citizenship verification system?

Numerous states recently have used a Department of Homeland Security program called the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements, or SAVE, to check the citizenship status of people on their voter rolls — something that the SAVE America Act would require. The bill says that states should use the system “for the purposes of identifying individuals who are not citizens of the United States and taking the necessary steps to remove such individuals who are not citizens from the official list, after notice is given to such individuals and such individuals are given the opportunity to provide documentary proof of United States citizenship.” The legislation doesn’t provide more information on how these notices and opportunities to fix a mistake would be carried out.

Recent reporting shows the SAVE database has flaws.

According to a January New York Times article, 49.5 million voter registrations have been checked in several states, and the Department of Homeland Security referred about .02%, or 10,000 cases, to investigators. The Times found that when some counties began looking into the cases, it turned out that only a fraction of them were potentially noncitizens. There was no indication of how many of those who may have improperly registered to vote actually voted.

Texas, too, found there were errors in DHS’ SAVE database. In October, the state said the database identified 2,724 potential noncitizens in its voter rolls of more than 18 million people, and it referred the cases to Texas counties. Many of those counties found U.S. citizens were among those flagged.

In February, ProPublica and the Texas Tribune wrote that their examination of the SAVE system “reveals that DHS rushed the revamped tool into use while it was still adding data and before it could discern voters’ most up-to-date citizenship information.

“As a result, SAVE has made persistent mistakes, particularly in assessing the status of people born outside the U.S., data gathered from local election administrators, interviews and emails obtained via public records requests show. Some of those people subsequently become U.S. citizens, a step that the system doesn’t always pick up,” the news organizations wrote.

Are a majority of voters in favor of the SAVE Act or the SAVE America Act?

Yes, according to a February Harvard CAPS/Harris poll, which found that 71% of the registered voters surveyed said that they supported the SAVE America Act, including 91% of Republicans, 69% of independents and 50% of Democrats.

The online poll conducted Feb. 25-26 asked 1,999 registered voters, “Do you support or oppose the proposed SAVE America Act that would: Require proof of citizenship to register to vote, Require voter ID, Require states to remove non-citizens from their voting rolls, Require states to share unredacted voting rolls with the Department of Homeland Security.”

Three out of the four proposals mentioned in that description of the bill appealed to an even larger group. A press release about the results of the Harvard CAPS/Harris poll said, “The majority of voters support specific requirements of the Act, including proof of citizenship (75%), voter ID (81%), states removing non-citizens from voter rolls (80%), and states sharing redacted voting rolls with the Department of Homeland Security (61%).”

Past polls have revealed similar levels of support for some of those policies.

A Pew Research Center poll from August found that 83% of those asked were in favor of a requirement for everyone to show government-issued photo identification before voting, including 95% of Republicans and 71% of Democrats. 

In addition, a Gallup poll from October 2024 found that 84% of surveyed adults supported “[r]equiring all voters to provide photo identification at their voting place in order to vote,” while 83% backed “[r]equiring people who are registering to vote for the first time to provide proof of citizenship.” About two-thirds of Democrats supported both ideas, more than 8-in-10 independents did, and nearly all Republicans were on board with each.

Becker, of the Center for Election Innovation & Research, noted that the results of these surveys depend on what questions are asked. “If you just ask the regular question in polls, do you support voter ID, you do see vast majorities of Americans say yes, including majorities of Democrats. If you ask people, should eligible voters without voter IDs be disenfranchised, you get very different responses.”

The Harvard CAPS/Harris poll also asked, “Which of the following is more important?,” giving two choices. A little more than half, 54%, said, “That we do everything possible to stop voter fraud and illegal immigrants from voting,” and 46% said, “That eligible citizens aren’t denied the ability to vote.”

What has Trump said about eliminating voting by mail?

Trump has proposed that the final version of the bill also eliminate mail-in voting with limited exceptions.

“We don’t want mail-in ballots,” Trump said while talking about his proposal during an interview with a Cincinnati news station on March 11. “We don’t want to have ballots coming from all different corners of the world. We want to have it accurate, and you can’t do that with mail-in ballots.”

In multiple posts on social media in March, the president has written, “NO MAIL-IN BALLOTS (EXCEPT FOR ILLNESS, DISABILITY, MILITARY, OR TRAVEL!).”

As is, the House-passed bill would not abolish mail-in voting, but it would require identification to both request and submit a mail-in ballot.

As we’ve reported, mail-in voting is used widely throughout the U.S. Eight states and Washington, D.C., conduct their elections mostly by mail, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. In addition, 28 states allow “no excuse” mail-in voting, which means that voters don’t need to provide a reason when requesting a mail-in ballot.

In the August Pew Research Center poll, 58% of respondents said they supported allowing any voter to vote by mail.

Elections experts have told us for years that while fraud is slightly more prevalent with mail-in voting than in-person voting, it is still relatively rare and not widespread.

What else does Trump want in the bill?

More recently, Trump has said that he wants the legislation to address two non-election-related issues.

“I added on no men playing in women’s sports, and I added in no transgender surgery, the mutilation of our children,” Trump said from the Oval Office on March 16, referring to his proposed ban on transgender women playing in women’s athletics and gender-affirming surgery for minors.

Those are the last two of Trump’s five-point plan for the bill, and Republican Sen. Eric Schmitt of Missouri has introduced an amendment to include all five parts in the final legislation.

“I’ve worked closely with President Trump and the White House to introduce a substitute amendment that will save our elections, save women’s sports, and save our children from gender mutilation surgeries. It’s time to get this done,” Schmitt said in a March 17 statement.

In all, Schmitt said his amendment would: “Require all voters to show ID,” “Require proof of citizenship to vote,” “End mail-in balloting with exceptions for military, illness, travel, and disability,” “Keep men out of women’s sports,” and “Protect children from transgender mutilation surgeries.”

Robert Farley contributed to this article.


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post Q&A on the SAVE America Act appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 18:23

The GNOME team has released GNOME 50, the latest version of what is probably the most popular open source desktop environment. It brings fine-grained parental controls, and the groundwork for web filtering so that in future releases, parents and guardians can set content filters for children. Our own kids are still way too young to have access to computers and the internet, but I’m not sure I’ll ever resort to these kinds of tools when the time comes. I didn’t have any such controls imposed upon me as a child on the early internet, but then, you can’t really compare the ’90s internet to that of today.

The Orca screen reader received a lot of attention in GNOME 50, with a new preference window, both global and per-application settings, and much more. There’s also a brand new reduced motion setting, which will tame the animations in the user interface. Document annotation has been overhauled and modernised, and the file manager has been optimised across the board for better performance and lower memory usage.

Remote Desktop also saw a lot of work in GNOME 50. It’s now hardware-accelerated using VA-API and Vulkan, and thanks to HiDPI support, the session will properly adapt to the screen being used. Kerberos Authentication support has been added, and you can now use the remote webcam locally. There’s way more here, like improved support for variable-refresh rates and fractional scaling, HDR screen sharing, fixes for weird NVIDIA driver nonsense, and much, much more.

As always, GNOME 50 will find its way to your distribution soon enough.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 18:13

The family of a University of Alabama student from Elmhurst, Illinois, who has been reported missing in Barcelona during a trip to Spain said his disappearance is "completely out of character."

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 18:12

New York Times report leads to multiple cancellations of events meant to celebrate the late labor organizer

Lawmakers, union leaders and several community organizations expressed their shock and disgust after several women shared allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior and abuse by the late labor organizer César Chávez.

The New York Times released an investigation on Wednesday detailing the allegations, which revealed that for years the co-founder of the United Farm Workers (UFW) union had groomed and sexually abused girls who were involved in the movement.

Continue reading...

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 18:06

Breakthroughs in Quantum Cryptography and Quantum Teleportation Redefined Secure Communication and Computing

NEW YORK, March 18, 2026 — ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, today named Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard as the recipients of the 2025 ACM A.M. Turing Award for their essential role in establishing the foundations of quantum information science and transforming secure communication and computing.

Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard are the recipients of the 2025 ACM A.M. Turing Award

The ACM A.M. Turing Award, often referred to as the “Nobel Prize in Computing,” carries a $1 million prize with financial support provided by Google, Inc. The award is named for Alan M. Turing, the British mathematician who articulated the mathematical foundations of computing.

Bennett and Brassard are widely recognized as founders of quantum information science, a field at the intersection of physics and computer science that treats quantum mechanical phenomena not merely as properties of matter, but as resources for processing and transmitting information.

In 1984, inspired by the insights of their late collaborator Stephen Wiesner, Bennett and Brassard introduced the first practical protocol for quantum cryptography, now known as BB84. The paper, “Quantum Cryptography: Public Key Distribution and Coin Tossing,” demonstrated that two parties could establish a secret encryption key with security guaranteed by the laws of physics, even against adversaries with unlimited computational power and technological sophistication such as a quantum computer.

In 1949, mathematician and computer scientist Claude Shannon proved that perfect secrecy in communications is only possible between parties who share ahead of time a secret key that is at least as long as the message itself. Public-key cryptography later provided a powerful workaround by relying on mathematical problems which were believed to be hard to solve—assumptions embedded in modern digital infrastructure but shown by Peter Shor as early as 1994 to become insecure when a full-size quantum computer is available. In sharp contrast, BB84 achieves information-theoretic security without computational assumptions, instead relying on a fundamental property of quantum information: it cannot be copied or measured without disturbance. Any attempt at eavesdropping leaves detectable traces before any information can be compromised.

As research advances toward large-scale quantum computers, governments and industry are reassessing the long-term resilience of widely deployed public-key cryptographic systems. Quantum cryptography, alongside emerging, hopefully quantum-resistant classical approaches for which no proofs of security are known, represents one pathway toward securing digital communications in the decades ahead. Variants of BB84 have already been implemented in operational quantum communication networks around the world, using both landlines via fiber and free space communication through satellites.

Beyond cryptography, Bennett and Brassard’s work reshaped the theoretical foundations of computing. In 1993 and with other collaborators, they introduced quantum teleportation, demonstrating how an arbitrary quantum state could be transmitted between distant parties using quantum entanglement—the surprisingly correlated behavior of particles too far apart to influence one another—and classical communication. This discovery showed that entanglement, once viewed primarily as a philosophical curiosity, could serve as a practical resource. Experimental verification of related phenomena was recognized by the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Their subsequent work on entanglement distillation in 1996 demonstrated how imperfect entanglement could be strengthened into high-quality entanglement, a critical step toward scalable quantum communication. These ideas underpin ongoing efforts to build quantum networks and ultimately a quantum internet capable of transmitting quantum information across global distances.

Over four decades, Bennett and Brassard’s collaboration bridged two previously distinct disciplines: physics and computer science. By incorporating quantum principles into computational models, their work has influenced cryptography, algorithm design, computational complexity, learning theory, interactive proofs, and mathematical physics. Their research helped catalyze a generation of physicists and computer scientists to work across disciplinary boundaries.

“Bennett and Brassard fundamentally changed our understanding of information itself,” said Yannis Ioannidis, President of ACM. “Their insights expanded the boundaries of computing and set in motion decades of discovery across disciplines. The global momentum behind quantum technologies today underscores the enduring importance of their contributions.”

Their recognition comes on the heels of the United Nations’ designation of 2025 as the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology, reflecting the growing global investment in quantum computing, communication, and sensing. Many of today’s ambitious efforts to build large-scale quantum systems trace their conceptual foundations to the theoretical breakthroughs pioneered by Bennett and Brassard.

Looking ahead, the next chapter of quantum information science includes the pursuit of fault-tolerant quantum computers, new quantum algorithms, and long-distance quantum communication enabled by satellites and quantum repeaters. Teleportation, entanglement swapping, and distillation—once abstract theoretical ideas—are now central components of practical quantum engineering.

“Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard’s visionary insights laid the groundwork for one of the most exciting frontiers in science and technology,” said Jeff Dean, Chief Scientist, Google DeepMind and Google Research. “Their work continues to influence both fundamental research and real-world innovation. Google is proud to support the ACM A.M. Turing Award and honor the pioneers shaping the future of computing.”

Biographical Background

Charles H. Bennett is an American physicist whose research has shaped the foundations of quantum information science, quantum cryptography, and quantum teleportation, and who has played a central role in establishing quantum information science as a rigorous scientific discipline. After earning his Bachelor’s degree from Brandeis University and his PhD from Harvard University, Bennett joined IBM Research in 1973 (and still works there today), where he has spent his career exploring connections between physics (especially thermodynamics and quantum mechanics) and computer science (cryptography, computability, computational complexity, and information theory), to advance the theoretical and practical understanding of computation and quantum mechanics. He is a recipient of several prominent awards including the Wolf Prize in Physics, the Micius Quantum Prize, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Basic Sciences, and the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. He is also a Member of the US National Academy of Sciences and a Foreign Member of the Royal Society.

Gilles Brassard is a Canadian computer scientist widely recognized as the first in the world to have delved into the uncharted territory of quantum information science. He earned his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from the Université de Montréal, and his PhD in theoretical computer science from Cornell University in 1979 under the direction of 1986 Turing Award laureate John E. Hopcroft. He joined the faculty of the Université de Montréal shortly thereafter and was Canada Research Chair in Quantum Information Science from 2001 to 2021. An Officer of the Order of Canada and of the Ordre national du Québec, Brassard has received numerous honors including the Wolf Prize in Physics, the Micius Quantum Prize, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Basic Sciences, and the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society and an International Member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.

About the ACM A.M. Turing Award

The A.M. Turing Award was named for Alan M. Turing, the British mathematician who articulated the mathematical foundation and limits of computing, and who was a key contributor to the Allied cryptanalysis of the Enigma cipher during World War II. Since its inception in 1966, the Turing Award has honored the computer scientists and engineers who created the systems and underlying theoretical foundations that have propelled the information technology industry.

About ACM

ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society, uniting educators, researchers, and professionals to inspire dialogue, share resources, and address the field’s challenges. ACM strengthens the computing profession’s collective voice through strong leadership, promotion of the highest standards, and recognition of technical excellence. ACM supports the professional growth of its members by providing opportunities for life-long learning, career development, and professional networking.


Source: ACM

The post ACM A.M. Turing Award Honors Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard for Foundational Contributions to Quantum Information Science appeared first on HPCwire.

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

SEOUL and SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 18, 2026 — Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. today announced it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with AMD to expand their strategic collaboration on next-generation AI memory and computing technologies.

The signing ceremony was held at Samsung’s most advanced chip manufacturing complex in Pyeongtaek, Korea, attended by Dr. Lisa Su, Chair and CEO of AMD, and Young Hyun Jun, Vice Chairman & CEO of Samsung Electronics.

“Samsung and AMD share a commitment to advancing AI computing, and this agreement reflects the growing scope of our collaboration,” said Young Hyun Jun, Vice Chairman & CEO of Samsung Electronics. “From industry-leading HBM4 and next-generation memory architectures to cutting-edge foundry and advanced packaging, Samsung is uniquely positioned to deliver unrivaled turnkey capabilities that support AMD’s evolving AI roadmap.”

“Powering the next generation of AI infrastructure requires deep collaboration across the industry,” said Dr. Lisa Su, Chair and CEO of AMD. “We are thrilled to expand our work with Samsung, bringing together their leadership in advanced memory with our Instinct GPUs, EPYC CPUs and rack-scale platforms. Integration across the full computing stack, from silicon to system to rack, is essential to accelerating AI innovation that translates into real-world impact at scale.”

Under the MOU, Samsung and AMD will align on primary HBM4 supply for the next-generation AMD AI accelerator, the AMD Instinct MI455X GPU, as well as advanced DRAM solutions for 6th Gen AMD EPYC CPUs, codenamed “Venice.” These technologies will support next-generation AI systems combining AMD Instinct GPUs, AMD EPYC CPUs and rack-scale architectures such as the AMD Helios platform.

Samsung and AMD are closely collaborating on advanced memory technologies for AI and data center workloads. As memory bandwidth and power efficiency become increasingly critical to system-level performance, this collaboration will help deliver more optimized AI infrastructure for customers.

An industry-first to enter mass production, Samsung’s HBM4 is built on its most advanced 6th-generation 10-nanometer (nm)-class DRAM process (1c) and a 4nm logic base die, featuring processing speeds of up to 13 gigabits-per-second (Gbps) and maximum 3.3 terabytes-per-second (TB/s) bandwidth that exceeds industry standards.

Powered by Samsung HBM4’s industry-leading performance, reliability and energy efficiency, the AMD Instinct MI455X GPU is expected to be the optimum solution for high-performance systems handling AI model training and inference.

The MI455X GPU will serve as a key building block for the AMD Helios rack-scale architecture, designed to deliver the performance and scalability required for next-generation AI infrastructure.

As part of their collaboration, Samsung and AMD will also work together on high-performance DDR5 memory optimized for the 6th Gen AMD EPYC CPUs. The companies aim to deliver industry-leading DDR5 memory solutions for systems built on the AMD Helios rack-scale architecture.

The two companies will also discuss opportunities for foundry partnership, through which Samsung would provide foundry services for next-generation AMD products.

Samsung and AMD have collaborated for nearly two decades across graphics, mobile and computing technologies, including Samsung serving as the primary HBM3E partner to AMD, powering the latest AMD Instinct MI350X and MI355X AI accelerators.

About Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.

Samsung inspires the world and shapes the future with transformative ideas and technologies. The company is redefining the worlds of TVs, digital signage, smartphones, wearables, tablets, home appliances and network systems, as well as memory, system LSI and foundry. Samsung is also advancing medical imaging technologies, HVAC solutions and robotics, while creating innovative automotive and audio products through Harman. With its SmartThings ecosystem, open collaboration with partners, and integration of AI across its portfolio, Samsung delivers a seamless and intelligent connected experience. For the latest news, please visit the Samsung Newsroom at news.samsung.com.

About AMD

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing. Learn more at www.amd.com.


Source: Samsung

The post Samsung and AMD Expand Strategic Collaboration on Next-Gen AI Memory Solutions appeared first on HPCwire.

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

March 18, 2026 – Giga Computing, a subsidiary of GIGABYTE and a leader in accelerated computing and infrastructure solutions, has announced new enterprise AI solutions that support NVIDIA Vera CPU and NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform, well as a new AI factory in Taiwan.

Credit: GIGABYTE

The GIGABYTE booth at NVIDIA GTC shows scalable AI solutions that not only focus on performance and efficiency but also incorporate the software and infrastructure needed to build AI factories and other large GPU clusters. The GIGABYTE booth staff is ready to introduce the latest hardware and software for success in deploying accelerated computing.

Overview of The Must See at GIGABYTE Booth #1413:

Personal AI Supercomputers

With products spanning all segments of the supercomputer space, Giga Computing showcases professional desktop and deskside solutions that are ideal for AI development and accelerating AI training and inference workloads. These solutions are being used by data scientists and researchers in research institutions, government agencies, and enterprises.

  • GIGABTYE AI TOP ATOM is a compact solution powered by NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip that is capable of up to 1 petaFLOPS of performance and has 128GB of unified memory.
  • GIGABYTE W775-V10-L01 is a deskside supercomputer that is built to develop and run frontier AI locally, providing up to 20 petaFLOPS of AI FP4 performance and capable of running up to 1 trillion parameter models powered by the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip with 748GB of coherent memory. This system also supports GPUs such as NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Workstation Edition GPU and NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Max-Q Workstation Edition GPU.

GIGABYTE and NVIDIA are working together on NVIDIA NemoClaw — an open source stack that simplifies running OpenClaw always-on assistants, more safely, with a single command. As part of the NVIDIA Agent Toolkit, it installs the NVIDIA OpenShell runtime — a secure environment for running autonomous agents, and open-source models like NVIDIA Nemotron.

As desktop AI compute becomes increasingly capable, NVIDIA NemoClaw enables a new class of always-on AI agents that run directly on local hardware. Use cases include personal research assistants, workflow automation agents, and private coding assistants. NemoClaw simplifies deployment of these intelligent agents for individuals and small teams, reducing reliance on enterprise scale cloud infrastructure, keeping data private and allowing full control over AI workloads. GIGABYTE’s personal AI supercomputers provide the desktop compute foundation to support the growing shift towards agentic AI.

Rack-scale AI Supercomputer

  • NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 platform is a rack-scale AI Supercomputer that is built for demanding large language models and succeeds by unifying technologies. A single rack unifies 36 NVIDIA Vera CPUs and 72 NVIDIA Rubin GPUs and is interconnected with NVIDIA NVLink 6 for exascale performance while running highly efficient with liquid cooling for CPUs, GPU, storage, NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNIC, and more.
  • In addition, attendees will see the new evolution of compute and switch trays for this powerful AI supercomputer.

Liquid-cooled and Air-cooled Clusters

GIGAPOD is GIGABYTE’s turnkey, rack-scale AI & HPC data center solution that clusters multiple GPU servers into a high-performance, scalable compute ecosystem. It integrates cutting-edge accelerators, networking, and GIGABYTE POD Manager (GPM) software for unified monitoring, orchestration, and deployment of AI workloads across supercomputing infrastructure. In collaboration with nVent, GIGABYTE hardware and software is paired with powerful liquid cooling technologies like the nVent CX121 CDU (at the GIGABYTE booth) that is modularized for variable uses and infrastructure.

Incorporated Into GIGAPOD and at the GIGABYTE Booth:

  • GIGABYTE POD Manager (GPM), a powerful infrastructure and workflow management platform that centralizes monitoring, orchestration, and automation across AI and HPC data centers. GPM streamlines deployment, resource utilization, and real-time insights, boosting efficiency for modern enterprise workloads.
  • GIGABYTE G4L4-SD3 is a powerful, liquid-cooled AI inference server. Supporting Intel Xeon CPUs paired with NVIDIA HGX B300 system, , this server is compute dense in a 4U design.
  • GIGABYTE G2L4-SD4 proves performance can increase while continuing to push the limits of compute density. Powered by NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform, NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8 platform supercharges training and inference for AI and HPC, enabling enterprises to break through performance and efficiency bottlenecks and deliver intelligence at scale. and is built for agentic AI and reasoning models. Notably, this new 2U GPU server incorporates an OCP busbar design.
  • GIGABYTE XN24-VC0 was the server selected by the RIKEN Center for Computational Science to advance scientific AI and quantum computing. Based on NVIDIA MGX modular architecture, it is a liquid-cooled solution for NVIDIA GB200 NVL4 system.
  • GIGABYTE XLS4-SX2 is an NVIDIA RTX PRO Server with liquid cooling technology powered by NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs, NVIDIA ConnectX-8 SuperNIC switch, Intel Xeon CPUs, NVIDIA BlueField-3 DPU, and system memory. Designed for demanding AI and graphics workloads, this server is built for AI factories and enterprise deployments.
  • GIGABYTE XL44-SX2 is the air-cooled version of the liquid-cooled XLS4. As a NVIDIA RTX PRO server, it was the first server to come to market with this hardware configuration mentioned above. The SuperNIC board supports 800Gb/s bandwidth and PCIe Gen6 connectivity to deliver high throughput and better scale-out capabilities.
  • GIGABYTE TO86-SD1 follows OCP ORV3 architecture and is ideal for scientific HPC and is great for double-precision workloads and compute-bound tasks with FP32 throughput. The system integrates NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs with Intel Xeon CPUs.

New AI Factory in Taiwan

To power the era of AI reasoning, Giga Computing is establishing the Giga Computing AI Factory Accelerator (GAIFA) in Taiwan. This project will become a centralized AI computing hub, where AI factories are built at scale and optimized for efficiency and high-performance. Combining engineering expertise and infrastructure capabilities, GAIFA delivers a full-stack solution powered by NVIDIA AI infrastructure (ex. NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPU), NVIDIA Quantum-X800 InfiniBand and Spectrum-X Ethernet networking, and NVIDIA AI Enterprise with GIGABYTE’s management software. The Taiwan-based facility will accelerate testing, validation, and deployment timelines, enabling faster and more seamless AI factory implementation for customers worldwide.

Other notable NVIDIA technologies at the GIGABYTE Booth

  • NVIDIA Vera CPUs integrated into motherboards for NVIDIA MGX for reinforcement learning, agentic AI, analytics and cloud as well as and NVIDIA HGX designs for AI and HPC workloads.
  • NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNIC that delivers 1.6 Tb/s throughput per GPU
  • NVIDIA BlueField-4 DPU for secure multi-tenant networking, rapid data access, and more
  • NVIDIA Quantum-X800 Q3450 CPO Switch is liquid-cooled and supports 144 800Gb/s ports
  • NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPU delivers breakthrough performance for demanding data processing, AI, video, and visual computing workloads in a single-slot, power-efficient design.

With a portfolio spanning personal AI supercomputers, rack-scale systems, and integrated liquid & air-cooled clusters, Giga Computing is determined in its commitment to scalable AI infrastructure. By combining NVIDIA Vera CPUs and Rubin GPUs with advanced networking, cooling, and management software, Giga Computing enables enterprises, researchers, and cloud providers to accelerate innovation with confidence. Visit Booth #1413 at NVIDIA GTC 2026 to see how Giga Computing is powering AI from edge to cloud at scale.

For queries or more information, please contact sales.


Source: GIGABYTE

The post Giga Computing Shows Comprehensive Data Center Portfolio and Infrastructure at NVIDIA GTC 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 18:01

Exclusive: Republican congresswoman started negotiations with Saudi Arabia without informing the White House

White House officials have grown increasingly frustrated with Republican congresswoman Nancy Mace, accusing her of complicating efforts to evacuate Americans stranded in the Middle East by attempting to conduct her own rescue missions, according to people familiar with the matter.

The irritation with Mace has been building for days after she traveled to the region to try to transport US citizens across international borders and engaged with foreign governments without informing the state department, which has been coordinating evacuation flights.

Continue reading...

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

Corporation welcomes three-year settlement as it continues to push for government to take on all of service’s costs

The BBC World Service will be given increased government funding as part of a three-year deal after ministers concluded it was needed to counter the rise of global disinformation.

The Guardian understands that Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, has agreed an additional £11m a year for the next three years on the government’s grant to the service.

Continue reading...

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

RICHLAND, Wash., March 18, 2026 — Open-source graphics processing unit (GPU) acceleration is coming to quantum-classical computing through a framework being developed by a team at the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory using NVIDIA NVQLink.

Conceptual image showing next-generation hybrid classical-quantum integration. Image by Ben Watson | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Announced this week at NVIDIA GTC 2026, this collaboration aims to lower barriers for scientists and engineers who want to explore quantum control and measurement in more detail than is typically possible through cloud-based services.

Specifically, the research team is developing a tight integration between NVIDIA GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips and a measurement and control system based on a field-programmable gate array (FPGA). An FPGA is a type of reconfigurable, programmable logic device that is often used inside a quantum instrumentation control kit that offers fast signal processing.

Adding a direct connection with GPUs introduces a powerful new element: high-throughput computing that can accelerate demanding numerical tasks with minimal delay. This so-called “tight integration” matters for quantum experiments where timing can be unforgiving and where the ability to process measurement results is crucial for achieving meaningful results.

The bridging model provides a practical path toward testing and debugging near-term quantum computers, an advance that could immediately be useful across science and industry applications.

“This collaboration employs the NVIDIA NVQLink platform to leverage high-performance classical GPU processors that meet the demanding real-time computational requirements of quantum processors,” said computer scientist Sam Stein, PNNL’s project lead. “We are excited to provide an open-source system grounded in accessible components that can be shared, extended and improved by researchers beyond PNNL.”

Making Quantum Computing Fast and Stable

The next-generation hybrid classical-quantum integration sets the stage for exploring how accelerated computing and AI integration can better support quantum measurement, control and software development. It will allow researchers to conduct more reliable quantum simulations that can eventually be applied to solving complex problems in science and creating new energy solutions for the nation.

Next steps include GPU-accelerated quantum error correction, where rapid decoding of quantum measurements is essential to keeping fragile quantum information intact.

“Control tasks like quantum error correction are one of the key steps in scaling quantum computing to useful applications, and their success hinges on real-time information flow between quantum processors and GPU supercomputing,” said Tim Costa, Vice President and General Manager for Quantum, NVIDIA.

The integration of GPU and the FPGA-based quantum measurement and control system is supported by DOE’s Quantum Science Center, which is led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

PNNL’s research is aimed at the quantum computing community’s goal of making calculations on a quantum computer practical in the next five years. The PNNL team continues to actively address critical gaps in quantum software tools. In addition to Stein, the team includes PNNL researchers Drew Rebar, Chenxu Liu, Aaron Hoyt, Sean Garner, Chunshu Wu, Marvin Warner, Mark Raugas, and Karol Kowalski.

More from HPCwire: Nvidia Introduces NVQLink to Connect Quantum Processors with GPU Supercomputers

About PNNL

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in energy resiliency and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle and supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit the DOE Office of Science website.


Source: Karyn Hede, PNNL

The post PNNL Brings Open-Source GPU Acceleration to Quantum with NVIDIA NVQLink appeared first on HPCwire.

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

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 18, 2026 — DDN has announced the launch of DDN Horizon, a market-leading, comprehensive orchestration platform that operationalizes AI-as-a-Service across the full AI lifecycle.

As AI infrastructure scales from pilot projects to national and commercial AI factories, the challenge is operational complexity and performance. NVIDIA Cloud Providers (NCPs), sovereign AI initiatives, and enterprises are investing heavily in GPU infrastructure. But without a unified AI control plane, they face fragmentation, underutilization, manual provisioning, and limited ability to monetize services.

“The next phase of AI isn’t about buying more GPUs—it’s about operationalizing them. Trillions in AI infrastructure investment must translate into real economic output, and that requires a unified control plane,” said Alex Bouzari, CEO and Co-Founder at DDN. “DDN Horizon transforms fragmented GPU clusters into secure, multi-tenant, revenue-ready AI platforms. Whether for sovereign AI, cloud providers, or enterprises, orchestration is the multiplier that turns infrastructure into an economic engine.”

DDN Horizon transforms large-scale GPU and data infrastructure into a secure, multi-tenant, revenue-ready AI platform. It enables providers to move beyond basic GPU rental and deliver full AI-as-a-Service offerings through:

  • Self-service provisioning of compute, storage, and AI workspaces
  • Policy-driven governance and tenant isolation
  • Lifecycle management from training through inference
  • Integrated usage tracking, chargeback, and billing

By simplifying provisioning at scale, DDN AI Horizon allows emerging NCPs to compete directly with hyperscalers while maintaining local control and differentiated service models — enabling revenue-ready AI clouds to launch in weeks, not quarters.

For Sovereign AI Initiatives

DDN Horizon provides the operational foundation to build nationally controlled AI clouds that are secure, compliant, and ecosystem-ready.

Governments and national operators can:

  • Deliver locally hosted AI platforms for regulated industries
  • Ensure data, models, and work products remain within national borders
  • Accelerate AI adoption across banking, telecom, public sector, research, and startup ecosystems

The result: sovereign AI infrastructure with economic impact at national scale.

For Enterprises

DDN Horizon enables a unified private AI cloud model that replaces fragmented infrastructure with:

  • Centralized governance and policy enforcement
  • Tenant isolation and observability
  • Transparent chargeback and cost allocation

Internal platform teams retain control, while developers and data scientists gain frictionless, self-service access to GPUs, storage, and AI pipelines.

The outcome:

  • Higher GPU utilization
  • Faster deployment cycles
  • Measurable ROI from AI investments

Platform Architecture

Built on DDN’s data intelligence foundation, DDN Horizon orchestrates:

  • Compute (GPUs and CPUs)
  • High-performance data services
  • Networking
  • End-to-end AI pipelines

It delivers a true Platform-as-a-Service experience for modern AI infrastructure consumers — providing secure, as-a-service access to infrastructure resources while eliminating operational complexity.

With DDN Horizon, organizations can offer AI practitioners a complete as-a-service model — from GPUs and storage to inference services and AI workspaces — with self-service provisioning across environments.

The result is simplified operations at scale, improved capacity planning, transparent cost allocation, and new revenue generation from AI services — allowing customers to focus on breakthroughs rather than infrastructure management.

DDN Horizon will be showcased at NVIDIA GTC 2026. To schedule a private demo or meet with DDN executives, visit booth #1621.

More from HPCwire

About DDN

DDN is the world’s leading provider of AI data storage and data management platforms, powering over 20 years of innovation across HPC, enterprise, and the largest AI deployments on Earth. With its EXA, Infinia, and intelligent data management platforms, DDN delivers unmatched performance, scale, and business value for customers building next-generation AI factories, hyperscale clouds, and Sovereign AI initiatives. DDN is the trusted partner for thousands of the world’s most data-intensive organizations, including the leading national labs, research institutions, enterprises, hyperscalers, financial firms, and autonomous vehicle innovators. For more information, visit www.ddn.com.


Source: DDN

The post DDN Unveils DDN Horizon to Turn AI Infrastructure into Revenue-Ready AI-as-a-Service Platforms appeared first on HPCwire.

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

With today's latest Stitch updates, Google is trying to make "vibe design" happen, reports The Verge's Jay Peters. The AI-native design platform encourages users to describe goals, feelings, or inspiration in "natural language," rather than starting with traditional blueprints. In a blog post, Google Labs Product Manager Rustin Banks says that Stitch can turn those inputs into interactive prototypes, automatically map user flows, and support real-time iteration. It introduces voice capabilities that allow users to "speak directly to [the] canvas" for feedback or changes. Tools like DESIGN.md also help users create reusable design systems across various projects.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 17:52

A barrel of Brent crude topped $111, while the U.S. benchmark also rose as the Iran war intensifies.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 17:49

UFW co-founder published her statement after sharing her story publicly for the first time with the New York Times

Labor rights activist Dolores Huerta said in a statement released on Wednesday that she was sexually abused by César Chávez, expanding on a New York Times investigation alleging the late labor leader groomed and abused young girls and women during his time as president of the United Farm Workers (UFW).

Huerta, co-founder of the UFW, published her statement on Medium after she shared her story publicly for the first time with the New York Times.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 17:43

Sergey Brin gives $25m on top of $20m he’s already given to Super Pac trying to block state’s proposed 5% wealth tax

A Google founder has more than doubled his financial contribution to the fight against a proposed wealth tax in California. New filings with the state show that former Alphabet president Sergey Brin donated $25m to a Super Pac dedicated to blocking the tax on top of $20m he had already given.

Brin is not alone among Google’s top brass in upping his financial stake in the campaign against the ballot proposal. The company’s former CEO Eric Schmidt donated $1.02m, adding to a previous $2m contribution.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 17:14

PosrtmarketOS, the Linux ‘distribution’ for mobile devices, now also has an immutable variant, called Duranium.

Duranium is an immutable variant of postmarketOS, built around the idea that your device should just work, and keep working. You shouldn’t need to know what a terminal is to keep your device running.

“Immutable” means the core operating system is read-only and can’t be modified while it’s running. System updates are applied as complete, verified images rather than individual packages. Either the new image works, or the system falls back to the previous one automatically. No partially-applied state. No debugging audio when you need to make a phone call and no fussing with a broken web browser when you just want to doomscroll cat photos. It also means developers can reproduce the exact state of a user’s device, making it much easier to track down and fix issues.

↫ Clayton Craft on the postmarketOS blog

Duranium is built around the various functionalities and tooling provided by systemd, meaning the project didn’t have to reinvent the wheel. It works similarly to other immutable distributions, in that images for the base are downloaded and installed as a whole, with the preferred application installation method being Flatpak. Security-wise, Duranium uses dm-verity to protect /usr, cryptographically verifying data as it’s read. The image simply won’t boot if anything’s been tampered with. LUKS2 is used to encrypt mutable user and operating system data and configuration on the root file system.

Duranium is still under heavy development, but it makes sense to implement something like this now, since in the world of mobile devices, this has become the norm. I’m glad postmarketOS is taking these steps, and I sincerely hope I’ll eventually be able to use a postmarketOS device with KDE’s Plasma mobile shell at some point in the near future in my day-to-day life. This requires both postmarketOS to improve as well as for the regulatory landscape to break the duopoly on banking and government applications held by Android and iOS, and with the state of the US government as it is, this might actually be something Europe’s interested in achieving.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 17:01

DOS didn’t have sudo yet. This gross oversight has been addressed.

SUDO examines the environment for the COMSPEC variable to find the default command interpreter, falling back to C:\COMMAND.COM if not set. The interpreter is then executed in unprotected real mode for full privileges.

↫ SUDO for DOS’ Codeberg page

A vital tool, for sure.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 17:00
Kel Marquez

KEL MARQUEZ
Staff Writer

Punxsutawney Phil predicted six more weeks of winter, which means the snow and ice have yet to melt away. Although winter is here to stay, I can already anticipate the warm weather and sunny days ahead. I believe there is no better way to spend this transitional period than by curating a list of albums perfect for the coming season. 

The folk, indie and dream pop music I listen to during the winter won’t be suitable for spring climates. On my radar is a list of bright, warm and lively albums with a chance of R&B, bedroom pop and indie pop showers. If you’re looking to expand your musical horizons this season, this is what you should listen to this spring.

1. “Charm” by Clairo

Maybe I’m a little biased (as Clairo has been one of my top five most-listened-to artists on Spotify for four years in a row), but this album adds the perfect “Charm” to spring. The tracklist, characterized by its exploration of soft rock, indie pop and jazzy undertones, is stunning from start to finish. The groovy melodies, flirty lyrics and bouncy instrumentals personify spring. If I could only listen to one album this spring, it would without a doubt be “Charm.” My top three song recommendations are: “Juna,” “Sexy to Someone” and “Thank You.”

2. “Sugar at the Gate” by TOPS

If you’re the type to listen to funky, upbeat music during the spring, “Sugar at the Gate”is the perfect pick for you. TOPS is a Canadian band known for its unique blend of indie rock and indie pop. The band’s genre pairs nicely with warmer weather, bringing energy and life to spring days. This album has a mix of groovy melodies and harmonies that are both stunning and colorful. My top three song recommendations are: “Dayglow Bimbo,” “Petals” and “Cutlass Cruiser.”

3. “For Young Hearts” by Soccer Mommy

Reminiscing on 2016 has become a big trend, giving me a great opportunity to include an album from that iconic era. “For Young Hearts” takes me back to a nostalgia-filled spring. Soccer Mommy’s bedroom pop sound makes me feel as though I’m at a house concert, which is exactly the place to be once the weather permits. Although it isn’t the most upbeat album, it still fits perfectly with the warmth and sentimentality of the coming season. My top three song recommendations are: “Crystal Eyes,” “Bloody Honey” and “Henry.”

4. “Sweet Boy” by Malcolm Todd

I just recently started listening to Malcom Todd after hearing his hit, “Sweet Boy.” After being entranced by this charming yet emotional song, I listened to the “Sweet Boy” album and fell in love with his music. The songs on this album have catchy guitar melodies, bouncy bass lines and an alternative R&B sound that make the coldest of days feel warmer. Todd is an upcoming artist everyone should have their eyes on, creating hits in just one day. My top three song recommendations are: “Rodrick Rules,” “Ladygirl” and “Sore Throat.” 


5. “Bird’s Eye” by Ravyn Lenae

If you’ve been on social media for the past few years, you’ve probably heard the trending hit “Love Me Not” by Ravyn Lenae. This catchy song comes from her album “Bird’s Eye,” featuring a list of tracks with a vibrant alternative, R&B and indie sound. Whenever I’m listening to this album in public, I have to hold back from dancing and reciting Lenae’s beautifully written lyrics word for word. Of course, in the safety of my room, I won’t shy away from going all out because this album puts me in a trance. My top three song recommendations are: “Love Is Blind,” “Candy” and “Genius.”

In the coming weeks, I hope you listen to these albums to get you in the spring mindset. If you’re like me, your music taste changes along with the seasons, making the anticipation even more exciting. Although the cold weather persists, I’m confident this music can fill you with warmth. 

It was a wonderful winter, but it’s time for spring to shine. 


Five albums to listen to this spring was first posted on March 18, 2026 at 4:00 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

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 17:00

Longtime Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes: Users of Samsung PCs are reporting the inability to access the C: drive after the Windows 11 February update. The bug seems to be in connection with the Samsung Galaxy Connect app, which allows Samsung phones and tablets to connect to Windows machines. [A previous stable version of the app has been re-released to prevent this problem from spreading.] This parody explains the situation with humor. The issue stems from update KB5077181 and is impacting Samsung PCs running Windows 11 25H2 or 24H2. Microsoft and Samsung have confirmed the issue and published a workaround, but as PCWorld notes, it will take some time. The workaround "requires removing the Samsung application, then asking Windows to repair the drive permissions and assigning a new owner, then restoring the Windows default permissions, including patching in some custom code that Microsoft wrote."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 16:53

Metropolitan police say men were arrested and detained as part of an investigation into alleged surveillance of locations

Two men have been charged with spying for Iran over alleged surveillance of the Jewish community in London, police said.

Nematollah Shahsavani, 40, a dual Iranian and British national, and Alireza Farasati, 22, an Iranian national, have both been charged with engaging in contact likely to assist a foreign intelligence service between 9 July and 15 August last year.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 16:45

If you own a Garmin smartwatch, you'll now be able to keep up with your WhatsApp messages even while out on a run.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 16:41

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 16:19

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:42

Jerome Powell resists Trump pressure as policymakers weigh energy shock against a weakening US jobs market

The US Federal Reserve held interest rates steady for the second time this year, a widely expected move amid turmoil in the Middle East and rising energy prices.

Fed officials faced a confluence of issues to consider in their meeting this week: soaring oil and gas prices, fluctuating inflation that still remains above the Fed’s target of 2%, and a weakened job market that unexpectedly saw 92,000 losses last month.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 20:37

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard told senators that the Iranian regime "appears to be intact but largely degraded" by ongoing U.S. and Israeli strikes.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 20:42

Travelers hoping to bypass some of the increasingly long wait times at U.S. airports can enroll in the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID program, which is now operating at 65 locations.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:21

Sen. Ron Wyden says he believes the government had "ample evidence" that Epstein was involved in drug trafficking.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:53

Fed officials are grappling with a host of economic challenges, from stubborn inflation to a slowing job market.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 20:28

A long-duration heat wave is taking shape over the western half of the U.S. and forecast to stick around in the days ahead.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 21:17

In a resignation letter, Joe Kent said Iran "posed no imminent threat to our nation," and he asserted that "we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby."

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 16:03

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:01
Loud weird sound when stopping abruptly

I was riding inside today and heard this sound. I didn’t notice it until now. I also just badgered the board.

submitted by /u/Signal_Pick3414
[link] [comments]

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:00

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:00

Gold, CDs and stocks each offer different levels of safety and growth. Here's how retirees should weigh the risks.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Britain plans to consider requiring labels on AI-generated content to protect consumers from disinformation and deepfakes, the government said on Wednesday, as it outlined other areas of focus to tackle the evolving global challenge. Technology minister Liz Kendall stressed the need to strike the right balance between protecting the creative industries and allowing the AI sector to innovate, saying in a statement that the government would take time to "get this right." The next phase of the government's work on copyright and AI would also look at the harms posed by digital replicas without consent, ways for creators to control their work online and support for independent creative organizations, she said. [...] Louise Popple, a copyright expert at law firm Taylor Wessing, noted that the government had not ruled out a broad exception that would allow AI developers to train on copyright works. "That's a subtle difference of approach and could be interpreted to mean that everything is still up for grabs" she said. "It feels very much like the hard issues are being kicked down the road by the government." In 2024, Britain proposed easing copyright rules to let developers train models on lawfully accessed material, with creators able to reserve their rights. On Wednesday, Kendall said that having engaged with creatives, AI firms, industry bodies, unions and academics, the government had concluded it "no longer has a preferred option." "We will help creatives control how their work is used. This sits at the heart of our ambition for creatives – including independent and smaller creative organizations -- to be paid fairly," she said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 15:54

There is growing confidence that the 20 people diagnosed with the illness have not infected anyone outside the area

Health officials increasingly believe they have contained the fatal outbreak of meningitis in Kent, with no cases emerging that are not linked to the original cluster of 20.

In another boost to efforts to contain the infection, the bug that caused it has been identified as a known strain of meningitis B, the Guardian understands.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 15:47

The interest earnings on either account this year could be significant. Here's what savers should consider now.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 15:43

PM will consider exempting large numbers from proposed changes, which would leave people waiting 10 years for settled status

Keir Starmer is hoping to soften the impact of his government’s changes to the immigration system after a backlash from Labour MPs and a dramatic intervention from his former deputy Angela Rayner.

The prime minister is considering exempting large numbers of people from the proposed changes, which would make it harder to achieve settled status in the UK, as he attempts to keep his restive party onboard.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 15:42

Once again, social media giants Facebook and TikTok have been caught red-handed.

More than a dozen whistleblowers and insiders have laid bare how the companies took risks with safety on issues including violence, sexual blackmail and terrorism as they battled for users’ attention.

An engineer at Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, described how he had been told by senior management to allow more “borderline” harmful content – which includes misogyny and conspiracy theories – in user’s feeds to compete with TikTok.

“They sort of told us that it’s because the stock price is down,” the engineer said.

↫ Marianna Spring and Mike Radford at the BBC

Meta, TikTok, and Twitter are criminal enterprises, and their executives should be trembling in court instead of scheming on yachts. Their role in legitimising far-right extremism will eventually catch up to them, and once that happens, no yacht is going to keep them safe.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 15:41

Stream out-of-market Major League Baseball games for free with this popular deal.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 15:30

Glasses use verbal cues and floating text to assist wearers and are expected to be available in early 2027

AI software that can be embedded into smart glasses has won a £1m prize for technology to help people with dementia.

Built into chunky, black-rimmed frames that have a camera, microphone and speakers, the tech – known as CrossSense – guides wearers through everyday life by means of a chatty assistant called Wispy.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 15:26

I wanted a more secure way to store files. Here's how zero-knowledge, post-quantum encryption is different and what to know about future privacy risks.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 15:25

Death confirmed of Esmail Khatib, the third senior Iranian figure killed in 24 hours, as Israel also launches intense airstrikes on Lebanon

Israel struck Iran’s giant South Pars gasfield on Wednesday, marking a major escalation of the war, hours after Israeli forces killed the regime’s intelligence minister and launched some of the most intense airstrikes in Beirut for decades.

The attack on the Pars site in the Persian Gulf, which Iran shares with Qatar and constitutes the world’s largest natural gasfield, prompted Tehran to warn neighbouring states that their energy infrastructure could be targeted “within hours”, and triggered furious rebukes from Qatar and other nations in the region.

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In December, Attorney General Pam Bondi ordered law enforcement officials to prioritize efforts to probe and prosecute groups and individuals belonging to the antifa movement or are deemed "extremist."

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Former Sinn Féin leader, who is being sued for symbolic damages, also denies any prior knowledge of the attack

Gerry Adams has told the high court he was stunned by the 1996 Docklands bombing as he denied being at the nerve centre of the IRA’s operations.

The former Sinn Féin leader also denied having any prior knowledge of the bombing of the commercial district of east London, which shattered a 17-month-old ceasefire.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Campaigners have been fighting proposals to build traffic tunnel under the world heritage site since 1994

A controversial plan to build a tunnel under the Stonehenge site has been officially cancelled after millions were spent on the doomed project.

Campaigners have been fighting proposals to dig a tunnel for cars under the location of the world heritage site since the idea was first proposed in 1994.

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2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-18 15:06

National intelligence director says Iran’s conventional military projection capabilities had been ‘largely destroyed’

Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence who in 2019 was selling “No War With Iran” T-shirts, told the Senate intelligence committee on Wednesday that US strikes on Iran had been a strategic success.

“I’d like to remind those who are watching what I am briefing here today conveys the intelligence community’s assessment of the threats facing US citizens, our homeland and our interests,” Gabbard told the committee, “not my personal views or opinions.”

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2026-03-18 16:04
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SEC now classifies crypto into five categories, with securities laws only applicable to one: digital securities

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Tuesday issued an interpretation clarifying which types of cryptocurrencies are considered securities and how a “non-security” digital asset could meet certain conditions to become an investment contract.

The SEC’s new interpretation – which the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission also joined – classifies crypto tokens into five categories: digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins and digital securities, with the agency specifying that federal securities laws only apply to digital securities.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Meta is shutting down its VR social platform Horizon Worlds, which was once a key piece of the pivot to the metaverse. The company said the app will be taken off the Quest store at the end of March, and fully removed from Quest headsets by June 15. After that date, it will shift to a standalone "mobile-only experience." CNBC reports: The shift for Horizon Worlds, which was once a central part of the company's push into virtual reality, comes weeks after Meta cut over 1,000 employees from Reality Labs, the unit responsible for the metaverse. [...] The social platform has never drawn more than a couple hundred thousand active users a month, CNBC previously reported. The virtual 3D social network where avatars could interact and play games with other users officially launched in late 2021. It operated exclusively on the Quest VR platform until Meta launched a mobile app version in September 2023. The mobile version of Horizon Worlds was built to provide an entry point for users without VR headsets, functioning similarly to Roblox.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 20:04
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Senator backs restructuring disaster agency but dodges questions on staffing, leaving officials uneasy over readiness and leadership

The confirmation hearing for Markwayne Mullin, Donald Trump’s pick to replace Kristi Noem as the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), left disaster management officials and experts concerned about what his tenure would mean for the future of the main US disaster response agency.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), which DHS oversees, coordinates federal response efforts to disasters such as hurricanes, floods and wildfires.

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Noise issue

Over 2k miles now this noise- any ideas?

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

2026-03-18 16:04
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Finding suggests as many as 155,000 deaths, likely occurring outside of hospitals, not recognized as Covid related

The Covid-19 pandemic’s early death toll was much higher than the official US count, according to a new study that spotlights dramatic disparities in the uncounted deaths.

About 840,000 Covid-19 deaths were reported on death certificates in 2020 and 2021. But a group of researchers – using a form of artificial intelligence – estimate that as many as 155,000 unrecognized additional deaths likely occurred in that time outside of hospitals. That would mean about 16% of Covid-19 deaths went uncounted in those years.

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 14:52

Officials say military planners liaising with US Central Command but situation remains too dangerous for anything to happen soon

Britain has said it remains involved in discussions with the US and European allies over escorting merchant shipping through the strait of Hormuz but the situation remains too dangerous for it to happen soon.

Iran is still considered to pose a threat and to have a wide range of weapons available – from cruise missiles to sea drones – despite 19 days of US-led bombing of its navy and coastal sites.

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 14:51

Fears of ecological disaster as vessel continues to drift after being struck by suspected drone attack

A severely damaged Russian tanker carrying liquified natural gas that has been adrift in the Mediterranean for two weeks, raising concerns of an ecological disaster, has floated into Libyan waters, Italy’s civil protection agency said on Wednesday.

The Arctic Metagaz was part of a Russian “shadow fleet” used to circumvent sanctions imposed on the country’s oil and gas after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. It was struck in a suspected drone attack close to Maltese waters earlier this month, causing a huge hole. The crew is believed to have been rescued between Malta and Libya.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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The Apple CEO discussed a range of topics on Good Morning America.

2026-03-19 16:04
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Foreign minister Anita Anand says she has drafted principles to reduce risk of regional spillover and wider shocks

Canada is pushing for a collective G7 and Middle East approach to de-escalating the Iran war, including off ramps that could bring an end to the conflict, the Canadian foreign minister, Anita Anand, has said.

In London to meet the UK foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, after talks with her Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan, Anand told the Guardian she hoped a G7 meeting chaired by France, this year’s president of the group, might start to build a broader collective approach to the crisis.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Iran war has split some Maga conservatives from Trump and alienated young voters. What will it mean in the midterms?

The American right wing has forgiven Donald Trump for his affairs, impeachments, mass deportations and the platforming of JD Vance.

But having stuck with him through all that unpleasantness, it seems that we may have discovered the one thing that is capable of splitting some Maga conservatives from Trump: all it took was him starting a war in the Middle East.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Attempt to ‘decapitate’ state may harden resistance instead of destabilising regime

Israel’s decision to authorise its military to kill any senior Iranian official on its assassination list has raised significant new questions about its so-called decapitation strategy and what it is intended to achieve.

Privately, Israeli officials have briefed their US counterparts that in the event of an uprising, Iran’s opposition would be “slaughtered”. That appears to be at odds with Benjamin Netanyahu’s strategy to pursue regime change by targeting senior figures in Iran’s political and security apparatus.

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2026-03-18 20:04
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ELMSFORD, N.Y., March 18, 2026 — SEEQC today announced a significant advancement in the development of scalable, chip-based quantum computers, with results published in a peer-reviewed study in Nature Electronics. The publication reports the first demonstration of a full-stack quantum computing system with digital superconducting logic for qubit control operating reliably at millikelvin temperatures in the same cryogenic environment as quantum bits (qubits).

The study details experimental results from a novel “active” quantum processor developed by SEEQC that integrates superconducting digital control circuits directly with a quantum chip. By demonstrating that digital logic can function alongside qubits at millikelvin temperatures, the work addresses a central systems-level challenge in scaling superconducting quantum computing architectures.

“Quantum computing progress has largely focused on improving individual qubits,” said Dr. Shu-Jen Han, Chief Technology Officer of SEEQC and corresponding author of the study. “Our results show that digital qubit control logic can operate at millikelvin temperatures alongside the qubits themselves. By integrating superconducting digital control with the quantum processor, we establish a path toward quantum systems engineered and scaled more like modern integrated circuits.”

From Room-Sized Machines to Quantum Computers on a Chip

Today’s superconducting quantum computers rely on room-temperature electronics connected to ultra-cold qubits through thousands of individual control lines. As systems scale, this architecture drives increases in wiring density, thermal load, engineering complexity, physical footprint, and energy consumption.

In contrast, SEEQC’s architecture integrates superconducting digital qubit control electronics directly with the quantum chip at cryogenic temperatures, through chip-to-chip bonding. Using digital multiplexing, multiple qubits can be controlled through shared pathways, significantly reducing the need for a one-control-line-per-qubit approach and mitigating the linear wiring growth that has constrained prior system designs.

Because superconducting quantum processors must operate near absolute zero, conventional room-temperature control systems introduce heat and complexity that fundamentally limit scale. By moving digital control into the cryogenic environment, SEEQC’s approach reduces interconnect density, lowers thermal load and simplifies system integration — key requirements for transitioning quantum computing from laboratory prototypes to data-center-class systems.

Peer-Reviewed Validation of a Scalable Architecture

The peer-reviewed results published in Nature Electronics experimentally validate a fully integrated quantum processor. This milestone supports SEEQC’s long-standing strategy of building quantum computers as chip-based systems, integrating quantum and classical functionality within the same cryogenic platform.

By demonstrating that digital superconducting logic can coexist and operate reliably with qubits in the milliKelvin regime, SEEQC provides experimental evidence for an architecture designed to enable scalable, energy-efficient quantum computing infrastructure.

The advance marks a foundational step toward quantum computers engineered with the manufacturability, integration density, and system discipline that defined the evolution of classical semiconductor computing.

How the System Works – and What the Study Demonstrates

In the Nature Electronics study, SEEQC researchers built and tested a five-qubit superconducting quantum processor integrated with a separate control chip containing digital superconducting logic. The two chips were stacked into a single module and operated inside a dilution refrigerator at 10 millikelvin.

Rather than generating control signals at room temperature and transmitting them down individual wires, the system generated control signals locally using Single Flux Quantum (SFQ) digital pulses, an ultra-low-power superconducting technology suited to cryogenic operation. The researchers performed standard quantum benchmarking experiments to evaluate gate fidelity, signal crosstalk, power dissipation, and thermal impact, demonstrating that digital qubit control electronics can operate in the same cryogenic environment without degrading qubit performance.

According to the research paper, the system demonstrates:

  • Qubit charge control by SFQ digital pulses at millikelvin temperatures
  • Multi-qubit operation with integrated digital demultiplexing
  • Single-qubit gate fidelities exceeding 99.5%, with peak results above 99.9%
  • No detectable quasiparticle poisoning that can degrade qubit coherence
  • Ultra-low power dissipation, measured in nanowatts per qubit
  • Reduced wiring and thermal load compared with conventional room-temperature and cryo-CMOS control systems

“This publication validates digital charge control at millikelvin temperatures, which is a foundational step,” added Shu-Jen Han, PhD. “Our next milestones include integrating digital flux control and digital qubit readout directly on die, enabling a more fully integrated and scalable quantum system architecture.”

Implications for Scalable Quantum Computing

While many recent advances in quantum computing focus on improving individual qubit performance, this study addresses the broader system architecture required for large-scale machines. Superconducting qubits require operation at millikelvin temperatures and scaling them to hundreds or thousands of qubits has been limited by the complexity of routing control signals from room temperature into cryogenic environments.

By demonstrating that digital control electronics can function at millikelvin temperatures and multiplex signals locally, the work establishes a practical architectural pathway toward larger, more integrated quantum processors. Reducing wiring density, thermal load, and system overhead is critical for building quantum computers that move beyond laboratory prototypes toward manufacturable, repeatable platforms.

Citation

Jordan, C., Bernhardt, J., Rahamim, J. et al. A quantum computer controlled by superconducting digital electronics at millikelvin temperature. Nat Electron (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41928-026-01576-6

About the Publication

The study, titled “A Quantum Computer Controlled by Superconducting Digital Electronics at Millikelvin Temperature,” appears in Nature Electronics and reports experimental results from a five-qubit quantum processor integrated with digital superconducting control electronics.

About SEEQC

SEEQC is building quantum computers on a chip. SEEQC’s digital chip technology is designed to make quantum systems scalable, energy efficient, and commercially viable. The company operates advanced chip development and fabrication facilities in the United States and Europe. More than three-quarters of SEEQC’s workforce hold Ph.D. degrees across physics, electrical engineering, materials science, computer science, and related disciplines.


Source: SEEQC

The post SEEQC Reports 1st Quantum Computer with Integrated Qubit Control on a Chip at Millikelvin Temperatures appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 16:04
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These are the best 4K TVs out of the hundreds of televisions we have tested in the CNET lab, from Samsung, LG, TCL and more.

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Steady UK opposition to the war and the US president’s insults mean MPs are finding it easier to point out the obvious

When is a U-turn definitely a U-turn? To the consternation of politicians through the ages, this is rarely something within their control, but decided instead by the herd. And thus it is with Kemi Badnoch over Iran and Donald Trump.

The Conservative leader would very much like it to be known that she had not changed her stance on the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, or on the US president.

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Swarmer is likely to be the first of many: a Ukrainian defense startup with an American face that leans on U.S. capital to scale production for both the Ukrainian and American militaries.

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The $16 billion Hudson Tunnel Project, under construction between Manhattan and New Jersey, will improve passenger rail service, an important issue for New York City commuters. It would seem to have nothing to do with what’s happening in northern Wisconsin. 

But after the White House froze federal grant funding for the project in the fall, citing concerns about diversity and equity measures, lobbyists with an interest in the tunnel donated $2,500 to a political novice running in the Republican primary in Wisconsin’s 7th Congressional District. 

The young candidate, Michael Alfonso, has no sway over the matter. However, his father-in-law does: Sean Duffy is secretary of the U.S. Department of Transportation.

The contributions are among dozens to Alfonso’s campaign from lobbyists, business executives and political action committees tied to industries — from rails and highways to shipping and air travel — that Duffy’s department funds and regulates. His department also oversees the Federal Aviation Administration.

Duffy held the 7th Congressional District seat for nearly a decade before resigning in 2019. He was succeeded by Tom Tiffany, who is now running for Wisconsin governor, leaving the seat open again. Alfonso, 26, who has worked in construction and podcasting, has been endorsed by  President Donald Trump. 

A ProPublica analysis found that many of the Alfonso donors with transportation interests had never given to Duffy or Tiffany. While legal, such donations set up the appearance that helping Alfonso might assist the donors with issues influenced by Duffy. (Politico has reported on some of these contributions.)

“The law, as it stands, provides very little constraint,” said Daniel Weiner, director of the Elections and Government Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, a law and policy institute based in New York. “There’s a very large gulf between what is legal and what is ethical. Obviously, this raises numerous ethical questions.”

This is not the first time a Cabinet secretary’s relative has created thorny ethical issues. During the first Trump administration, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao made headlines for appearing to give preferential treatment to Kentucky officials for millions of dollars in infrastructure grants. Kentucky is the home state of her husband, Mitch McConnell, then Senate majority leader. At the time, Chao’s office denied showing any favoritism, saying that Kentucky’s share was not out of the ordinary.

And in 2012, under President Barack Obama, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, an Iowa Democrat, fielded questions about the separation between U.S. Department of Agriculture business and the campaign of his wife, Christie, who was running for Congress. Christie Vilsack told ProPublica in an interview that the couple was careful about making sure her husband was not involved in the campaign, other than to support her at some debates and on election night. He “never did any fundraising at all,” she said.

An influential member of Trump’s Cabinet, Duffy has been openly assisting his son-in-law’s campaign. The notice for a November “meet and greet” with Alfonso in Wausau, Wisconsin, mentioned that Duffy would be a special guest, as did an invitation for another December fundraiser. 

Among the sponsors for the December event was the political action committee for Delta Air Lines. The invitation included a caveat: “Sean Duffy is not soliciting funds in connection with this event.” 

Alfonso’s campaign did not respond to requests from ProPublica for an interview or for comment. A spokesperson for Duffy, Nathaniel Sizemore, provided a written statement saying: “The Secretary attends fundraising events in his personal capacity. Regulatory decisions are guided by career safety professionals, the law, and the facts.”

Nothing in law bars Duffy from campaigning for his son-in-law, so long as he goes about it on his personal time, does not use government resources and does not promise to take some official action in exchange for a contribution. 

Alfonso is using the same fundraising consultant, Kirstin Hopkins, that Duffy employed, Federal Election Commission records show. In addition, Alfonso has received help with ads and mailers from a super PAC, the Northwoods Future PAC, that is funded with $1 million from Duffy’s former campaign committee. Alfonso’s familial advantage has irked some Wisconsin Republicans who don’t want the newcomer to glide into such an important position.

Through his own campaign committee, Alfonso had raised a little over $305,000 as of the end of 2025, the latest filing available. By law, contributions for each election are limited to $3,500 from individuals and $5,000 from political action committees. Donors can contribute to more than one election at the same time, such as a primary race and a general.

Alfonso’s donors include lobbyist Jeffrey Miller, a finance chair of Trump’s most recent inaugural committee. In December, Miller and his company’s chief operating officer donated separately to Alfonso, for a combined $8,500. No one listing their firm, Miller Strategies, as an employer had donated to either Duffy or Tiffany in the past, according to FEC records. 

Lobbyist disclosure reports show that Miller lobbied the Transportation Department in 2025 on behalf of at least nine companies, one New York county and one Native American tribe. The issues included airport signage regulation, aviation permitting for the developer of a supersonic airliner and advancements in GPS technology. Miller reported advocating for Archer Aviation regarding electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft technology, known as eVTOL — the basis for future flying cars.

Earlier this month, Duffy announced a first-of-its-kind FAA pilot program to test eVTOL technology in eight demonstration projects across 26 states. Archer was among the companies selected to participate, according to the Transportation Department. In a video accompanying the announcement, Duffy spoke enthusiastically about the technology, envisioning “Ubers in the air” taking people from one airport to the next and beyond. He said, “eVTOLs are going to make the airspace far more interesting and far more fun, and we have to be prepared for that.” 

Miller did not return calls or emails seeking comment. 

Alfonso graduated in 2022 from the University of Wisconsin with a math degree. He moved to Florida for a time to help produce a popular podcast hosted by Dan Bongino, a Trump supporter who later served a brief stint as deputy director of the FBI. (Bongino is back podcasting again.) 

By Alfonso’s account, he and Trump first met in 2022 at Alfonso’s wedding to Duffy’s daughter, Evita. The reception took place at one of Trump’s New Jersey golf courses.

Alfonso has said that in an Oval Office meeting after he decided to run for Congress, he pledged loyalty to the president. “I promised him that I would always be America first, I would always fight for his agenda and that nobody would ever outwork me,” Alfonso told Mark Halperin, another podcaster.

On social media in November, Alfonso thanked Duffy for coming to his first campaign event in Wausau, the city where the candidate met his future wife while they were in middle school.

A screenshot of a post to X from @MikeAlfonsoWI with text that reads, “Huge thank you to Sean Duffy and everyone who came out to our first official campaign event in my hometown of Wausau! Grateful for the support — and fired up for what’s ahead! 🇺🇸” and four photographs of a political campaign event taking place in a conference room.
In a post on X, Alfonso thanked his father-in-law for joining him on the campaign trail in Wisconsin last November. X

The following month, the transportation secretary appeared at a campaign fundraiser for Alfonso at a hotel in Green Bay, near the storied Lambeau Field. The donors in attendance included Sharad Tak of Bethesda, Maryland, the CEO of ST LNG, a company seeking a DOT-issued license to construct and operate a deep-water port offshore of Matagorda, Texas, to load liquefied natural gas onto carriers. 

Tak gave $500 to the campaign, and his wife, Mahinder, who did not attend the function, gave $7,000. Neither had donated to Duffy or Tiffany. 

Tak did not reply to ProPublica’s request for an interview but asked a longtime friend of his, Ann Murphy of Green Bay, who works as a consultant for him, to respond. Tak owns a paper mill in Oconto Falls, north of Green Bay. It is not in the 7th Congressional District. But Murphy said Tak was visiting the state and agreed, at her request, to attend the fundraiser for Alfonso. 

She said in an interview that the Texas liquefied natural gas project had no bearing on Tak’s campaign contribution. “Absolutely not.” 

It’s typical, she said, for Tak and his wife to support causes, both political and philanthropic, that Murphy and her husband find worthwhile — and vice versa.

“We were very excited about Michael,” Murphy said of Alfonso, likening him to Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA who inspired many young people before being killed last year. “And he does have the endorsement of President Trump.”

Others donating to Alfonso’s candidacy include political action committees for employees of the military jetmaker Lockheed Martin, which is subject to FAA safety regulations and has lucrative government contracts, and for T-Mobile, which is working on a DOT project to enhance the resilience of critical 5G infrastructure. PACs for unions and trade associations for heavy equipment operators, engineers, aeronautical services and the travel industry have also pitched in. 

The PAC for Brightline, a high-speed train service in Florida, also donated, giving $2,500 in December. Brightline trains have struck and killed more than 180 pedestrians or drivers at crossings since 2017, according to an investigation by the Miami Herald and WLRN. Duffy promised at a congressional committee hearing in July to work to “drive down the number of deaths.” In September, he announced that his department would distribute $42 million to improve safety along the line. In a statement to the Florida news organizations, Brightline officials blamed the deaths on suicides and the “reckless” behavior of people who put themselves in harm’s way. 

Brightline, T-Mobile and Lockheed Martin did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment. On its website, Lockheed notes that it complies with all applicable laws and regulations with regard to its political and public policy activities. 

Alfonso’s campaign has drawn donations from others in the heavily regulated railroad sector. They include Peter Bartek, founder of FTS Rail, which manufactures battery-powered railroad repair tools and sensors that detect rail breaks caused by extreme heat or cold. He gave $3,644  in November. Duffy appointed Bartek last July to serve on a DOT advisory committee. 

Bartek had never given to a candidate in the district before. In an interview, he said he read a news article about Alfonso’s campaign and decided to donate. “I like Secretary Duffy very much,” he said, “and I thought very simply, boy, if he’s anything like his father-in-law, it would be nice to support him as well.”

He said in a text that he didn’t know Duffy personally and was not involved in Alfonso’s campaign or fundraising.

In New York, construction on the Hudson Tunnel Project to improve commuter rail service came to a screeching halt in early February after the federal government cut off funds. A court intervened, ordering the money released, and work resumed. A bistate commission overseeing the project warned this month that it could face disruptions again in upcoming months if federal disbursements do not continue.

In response to outreach from ProPublica, an executive at Venture Government Strategies, whose lobbyists for the tunnel project gave a combined $2,500 to Alfonso, said in an email the company had no comment. 

On his campaign website, Alfonso lists a dozen issues “that matter to us” — ranging from education and health care to immigration. He wants to “make farms and families strong,” “give Gen Z a voice” and work against access to abortion. 

Transportation issues are not among those priorities, but he still is getting support from General Motors, which regularly lobbies DOT on various issues, including fuel economy, vehicle safety and emissions standards, and other mandates. The giant car manufacturer also gave to Duffy when he was running for the congressional seat, and the transportation secretary has become a booster. (GM did not respond to ProPublica’s request for comment.)

In mid-December, viewers of social media saw Duffy slide behind the wheel of a sleek, black, limited-edition Corvette, imbued with patriotic insignia to celebrate the nation’s upcoming 250th birthday. 

“Over 1,000 horsepower,” Duffy said in a promotional video, emphasizing the dynamic features of the $200,000 supercar. “We’re going to take this bad boy on a little test drive to the Army-Navy game.” Off he went. 

The video, uploaded to the social media platform X, highlighted a travel app the carmaker made in partnership with the Department of Transportation, while also showcasing Chevrolet’s automotive series dubbed Stars and Steel. 

The post received over 130,000 views: valuable advertisement for the storied carmaker, General Motors. A couple of weeks later, GM’s political action committee donated $1,000 to Alfonso.

The post Transportation Lobbyists Have Donated Thousands to Sean Duffy’s Son-in-Law as He Runs for Congress appeared first on ProPublica.

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

Trump pick to replace Kristi Noem signaled he’d avoid her mistakes but defends president’s immigration campaign

Markwayne Mullin defended his ability to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and expressed regrets for comments he made about a US citizen killed by immigration agents at his confirmation hearing on Wednesday, which began on an unusually quarrelsome note when a fellow Republican senator accused him of encouraging violence.

Donald Trump earlier this month nominated Mullin, a first-term Republican senator from Oklahoma, to lead DHS, after the president ousted Kristi Noem amid public blowback against the administration’s aggressive approach to its mass deportation agenda and the deaths of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.

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

CHICAGO, March 18, 2026 — memQ, an industry leader in quantum networking solutions for distributed quantum computing, has announced its roadmap for Extensible Distributed Quantum Compiler (xDQC), built upon the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform. This novel approach to quantum workload distribution allows workloads to be distributed across multiple quantum processors in a system or a network, based upon qubit modality and availability, to achieve significantly higher throughput for the most demanding problems.

Quantum computing is the next major shift in computing, forecasted to become a $100B market by 2035 according to McKinsey & Company. Of that, the quantum communications subsector alone is projected to reach up to $15B. Key workloads include distributed quantum computing and blind quantum cloud computing, each of which requiring the ability to execute circuits and gates across a quantum network based upon unique properties of the workload as well as the system resources available to it. “We see the emergence of a ‘right qubit for the right task’ paradigm which leverages systems of different qubit modalities – and possibly different vendors – as quantum workloads increase,” stated Andre Konig, CEO of Global Quantum Intelligence. “This aligns with DARPA’s position that by leveraging advances in photonic integration, quantum interconnects, and quantum circuit design, we have the potential to overcome the current scaling and performance bottlenecks in quantum systems.”

The memQ xDQC solution is a network-and hardware-aware orchestration layer that treats QPU-QPU links in quantum circuits as first-class components of the quantum equation that can be optimized for scale and performance. The xDQC allows users to profile a workload across qubit resources available, evaluate various routing and computational assignments, and select the one with optimum performance and resource utilization. The simulation recommendations are based upon hardware-aware noise models which simulate real interconnect conditions – essentially a “digital twin” of distributed quantum processors in a physical network. Once selected, the compiler can assign workload tasks to various QPUs for execution, then recompile the individual responses for a total result with greater performance and ROI than a monolithic approach.

“The industry approach to ‘scale’ is shifting from monolithic architectures – which will find a hard ‘ceiling’ – to modular, distributed computing. And the missing piece in scaling isn’t just adding more qubits, it’s leveraging the complex networks that connect them to unlock new applications. We’re building a full-stack simulation toolkit that lets researchers co-design hardware and architecture for distributed quantum systems at scale,” said Sean Sullivan, CTO of memQ. “We chose CUDA-Q as the foundation for this solution due to its open ecosystem, backend flexibility, and GPU-accelerated simulation capabilities that allow us to profile key dynamics such as modality, circuit type, topology, and resource loads in a comprehensive way. By making it open source, we’re opening the ability to co-design at scale to the entire community.”

“CUDA-Q is built to support developing workloads for at-scale hybrid quantum-classical systems,” said Sam Stanwyck, Director of Quantum Product at NVIDIA. “memQ’s use of CUDA-Q to provide access to QPU-to-QPU interconnected systems is a key step towards scaling and integrating quantum processors to work with tomorrow’s supercomputers.”

memQ’s xDQC will complement the company’s xQNA portfolio which includes chip-scale solutions for quantum network interface controllers (QNICs), quantum memory modules (QMMs), and quantum control systems (QCS). The CUDA-Q based xDQC is expected to be available for preview in the first half of 2026.

More from HPCwire

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 memQ Targets Multi-QPU Orchestration with xDQC Compiler Built on CUDA-Q appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 20:04
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March 18, 2026 — Today’s state-of-the-art quantum computers rely on powerful classical high‑performance computers for control, calibration, and error correction. As quantum processing units (QPUs) grow from dozens to thousands of qubits, the real‑time measurement and processing demands placed on classical central processing units (CPUs) spike. This pressure is intensified because quantum states are sensitive to their environment, typically lasting less than a few milliseconds, placing even greater strain on the already extremely tight feedback loop between the quantum and classical systems.

Berkeley Lab’s QubiC (Quantum bit Controller) at AQT with NVIDIA DGX Spark and NVIDIA NVQLink. Credit: Keegan Houser / UC Berkeley.

A new collaboration between Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and NVIDIA, announced in October 2025, is working to overcome key challenges in hybrid quantum–classical computing. Its goal is to enable QPUs and graphics processing units (GPUs) to operate together in real time, with shorter delays (latency) and far greater data throughput (bandwidth). The interdisciplinary research team at Berkeley Lab has successfully connected the lab’s quantum control stack for QPUs, QubiC (Quantum bit Controller), to NVIDIA DGX Spark GPU using the NVIDIA NVQLink platform for low-latency, high-bandwidth GPU-QPU communication. Hardware testing is expected to conclude in early March, positioning the collaboration for cutting-edge AI-enhanced quantum experiments that will continue to advance the nation’s leadership in scientific discovery and innovation.

An Open Quantum-GPU Computing Workflow

Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, QubiC is an open‑source control and measurement system that has been deployed and tested at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Quantum Testbed (AQT) by users from national labs, universities, and industry. Inspired by Berkeley Lab’s expertise in controls for particle accelerators, and supported in part by the Quantum Systems Accelerator, QubiC’s modular framework allows quantum and classical workflow components to be replaced or modified independently. QubiC’s open design philosophy has enabled seamless integration with the NVIDIA NVQLink open system architecture, coupling AQT’s QPU with the NVIDIA DGX Spark.

This tightly integrated quantum-classical architecture at AQT facilitates high-bandwidth, low-latency data exchange needed for real-time quantum computing controls. Using a high-speed 100-gigabit networking link, quantum data can flow directly from the QPU to GPU memory with minimal CPU involvement, significantly reducing latency. This efficient feedback loop enables the NVIDIA DGX Spark GPU to analyze results in real time and send updated instructions to the quantum hardware. To push this hybrid architecture even further, the AQT team is integrating NVIDIA’s high-speed networking technology, Hololink IP, into the QubiC gateware to accelerate quantum workloads with classical supercomputing.

“This integration milestone at AQT demonstrates a future where GPUs participate directly in real-time quantum control, enabling researchers to run experiments and error-correction workloads on the same GPU-based platforms used for modern AI and high‑performance computing,” explained Yilun Xu, a research scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Accelerator Technology & Applied Physics (ATAP) Division and co-principal investigator of QubiC.

The Road to AI-Enhanced Quantum Control

Novel quantum experiments at AQT increasingly demand rapid decisions using classical hardware. To meet the broader scientific community’s evolving needs, the QubiC team will continue supporting cutting-edge research through open access and collaboration with industry, academia, and national laboratories. By open-sourcing the QubiC design early in its development and throughout its integration with industry hardware such as NVIDIA accelerated computing, the Berkeley Lab team hopes that other quantum hardware groups will explore GPU-accelerated hybrid quantum–classical workflows.

“By using high-performance networking technologies rather than custom, one-off connections, quantum researchers can scale the approach from a single testbed to large orchestrated systems where a single GPU system can coordinate multiple quantum control boards and experiments using familiar supercomputing tools,” said Gang Huang, key investigator to the development of QubiC and ATAP staff scientist.

Building on the need to integrate quantum computers with classical supercomputers, the next frontier in quantum control is to harness AI. This emerging phase in AI-enhanced quantum control can pave the way beyond small quantum prototype systems with dozens or hundreds of physical qubits toward large-scale quantum computers built from error-corrected logical qubits.

The QubiC team at AQT will continue exploring AI-enhanced quantum control by deploying pre-trained neural network models on the NVIDIA DGX Spark. In particular, they plan to investigate applications such as readout classification, gate tuning, and real-time error correction decoding. They will also test new hybrid quantum–classical algorithms and adaptive techniques to improve quantum computing performance.

Through support from the DOE Office of Science, Berkeley Lab’s collaboration with NVIDIA advances quantum–classical research to enable next-generation discovery. By uniting national laboratory expertise with leading industry capabilities, the collaboration reinforces U.S. leadership in scalable, AI-driven computing. This effort aligns with the goals of the DOE Genesis Mission, which seeks to integrate AI, high-performance computing, and quantum technologies to accelerate the productivity and impact of American innovation.

“Quantum processors are working hand-in-hand with state-of-the-art accelerated computing through the low latency and high throughput connectivity provided by the NVIDIA NVQLink platform,” said Tim Costa, Vice President and General Manager for Quantum, NVIDIA. “By using NVQLink to run real-time workloads between quantum processors and GPUs, Berkeley Lab is performing the groundwork needed to turn today’s supercomputing systems into tomorrow’s quantum-GPU supercomputers.”

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About Computing Sciences at Berkeley Lab

High performance computing plays a critical role in scientific discovery. Researchers increasingly rely on advances in computer science, mathematics, computational science, data science, and large-scale computing and networking to increase our understanding of ourselves, our planet, and our universe. Berkeley Lab’s Computing Sciences Area researches, develops, and deploys new foundations, tools, and technologies to meet these needs and to advance research across a broad range of scientific disciplines.


Source: Monica Hernandez and Yilun Xu, Berkeley Lab

The post Berkeley Lab and NVIDIA Accelerate US Leadership in Hybrid Quantum–Classical Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 16:04
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Groups that oppose transgender athletes in girls’ sports petitioned to put the issue to voters in Maine and Colorado, part of a wave of new ballot initiatives.

2026-03-18 16:04
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A memorial will be built on the site, with final plans to be revealed in May and completion scheduled for fall 2027

Demolition of Pulse, the LGBTQ+-friendly nightclub in Florida where 49 people were killed in 2016, began on Wednesday, bringing a symbolic end to an almost decade-long wrangle over the future of the building that some residents and its former owners wanted to be preserved as a memorial for the victims.

A new $12m permanent memorial will be built on the site, with final plans expected to be revealed in May, and its completion scheduled for fall 2027.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Longtime Slashdot reader internet-redstar writes: Nearly a trillion dollars has been wiped from software stocks in 2026, with hedge funds making billions shorting Salesforce, HubSpot, and Atlassian. At FOSDEM 2026, cURL maintainer Daniel Stenberg shut down his bug bounty program after AI-generated slop overwhelmed his team. A new article on HackerNoon argues that most commercial SaaS could inevitably become OpenSource, not out of ideology but economics. The author points to Proxmox replacing VMware at enterprise scale and startups like Holosign replicating DocuSign at $19/month flat as evidence. The catch, the article claims, is that maintainers who refuse to embrace AI tools risk being forked, or simply replicated from scratch, by those who do.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Powering it is probably easy. Keeping things cool in a vacuum is the hard part.

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Sen. Markwayne Mullin appeared before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee as the Senate considers his confirmation to replace Kristi Noem as DHS secretary.

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Horizon Worlds will no longer be accessible on Quest headsets but will continue on phones.

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Gold has slipped dramatically since hitting a new record high, but this pullback could present a rare opportunity.

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The Pentagon has prepared multiple options for President Trump as potential next steps in the Iran war.

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After 17 months of negotiations, the WNBA and its players have agreed to a new CBA. From salaries to revenue sharing, here’s what’s changing and why it matters

The WNBA and its players’ union (WNBPA) have reached a verbal agreement on a new collective bargaining agreement, ending 17 months of negotiations after players opted out of the previous deal and averting mounting fears of a strike.

The agreement would be the sixth in league history and is being framed by both sides as a major step forward for player empowerment and the league’s growth.

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2026-03-18 20:04
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Democrats would have to convince at least four Republicans to join their discharge petition to force a floor vote.

2026-03-18 16:04
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Allegations of abuse of women and girls by union leader Cesar Chavez were first reported by the New York Times​ on Wednesday.

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Can Igor Tudor's embattled Spurs make a comeback after last week's disastrous first leg?

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Dave Knott shares a report from the New York Times: On Wednesday, the Association for Computing Machinery, the world's largest society of computing professionals, said Drs. Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard had won this year's Turing Award for their work on quantum cryptography and related technologies. The Turing Award, which was introduced in 1966, is often called the Nobel Prize of computing, and it includes a $1 million prize, which the two scientists will share. [...] The two met in 1979 while swimming in the Atlantic just off the north shore of Puerto Rico. They were taking a break while attending an academic conference in San Juan. Dr. Bennett swam up to Dr. Brassard and suggested they use quantum mechanics to create a bank note that could never be forged. Collaborating between Montreal and New York, they applied Dr. Bennett's idea to subway tokens rather than bank notes. In a research paper published in 1983, they showed that their quantum subway tokens could never be forged, even if someone managed to steal the subway turnstile housing the elaborate hardware needed to read them. This led to quantum cryptography. After describing their new form of encryption in a research paper published in 1984, they demonstrated the technology with a physical experiment five years later. Called BB84, their system used photons -- particles of light -- to create encryption keys used to lock and unlock digital data. Thanks to the laws of quantum mechanics, the behavior of a photon changes if someone looks at it. This means that if anyone tries to steal the keys, he or she will leave a telltale sign of the attempted theft -- a bit like breaking the seal on an aspirin bottle.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 16:04
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No need to filter through the thousands of desk options available, our experts have found the best desks of 2026.

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Five-day cessation announced as mass funeral held for some of hundreds of victims of airstrike on rehab centre

Pakistan has announced a five-day pause in strikes against neighbouring Afghanistan, as a mass funeral was held for some of the hundreds of victims killed in Monday’s attack on a drug rehabilitation centre in Kabul.

The Afghan Taliban government has said more than 400 people were killed and 265 others wounded in that attack, which took place as people at the centre were praying days before the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Apple calls these updates "lightweight" fixes between software updates.

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This is everything you need to know about the AI industry's new darling, OpenClaw.

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anyone know if this will ever be a thing? also Tfl, this would be amazing

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Stand for good health, fatigue prevention and relaxed shoulders with the best standing desks of 2026.

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These are the best laptops my colleagues and I have reviewed, from basic models to high-powered gaming systems and everything in between.

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As Disney CEO, Josh D'Amaro will be in charge of a massive entertainment empire that includes parks, movies and a streaming service.

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The new AI technology makes some big changes to video game graphics that hardly anyone seems to like.

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Italian soldiers are patrolling Rome's ancient Jewish quarter and Belgian troops will help secure Jewish sites as an official warns the threat of antisemitic violence "is very real."

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Acting deputy TSA administrator Adam Stahl says the situation will get worse the longer the agency and the Department of Homeland Security​ don't receive funding.

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The director of national intelligence provided the Senate Intelligence Committee with mixed messages about the state of Iran’s nuclear program before the war began.

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ProPublica reports that federal cybersecurity reviewers had serious, yearslong concerns about Microsoft's GCC High cloud offering, yet they approved it anyway because the product was already deeply embedded across government. As one member of the team put it: "The package is a pile of shit." From the report: In late 2024, the federal government's cybersecurity evaluators rendered a troubling verdict on one of Microsoft's biggest cloud computing offerings. The tech giant's "lack of proper detailed security documentation" left reviewers with a "lack of confidence in assessing the system's overall security posture," according to an internal government report reviewed by ProPublica. For years, reviewers said, Microsoft had tried and failed to fully explain how it protects sensitive information in the cloud as it hops from server to server across the digital terrain. Given that and other unknowns, government experts couldn't vouch for the technology's security. Such judgments would be damning for any company seeking to sell its wares to the U.S. government, but it should have been particularly devastating for Microsoft. The tech giant's products had been at the heart of two major cybersecurity attacks against the U.S. in three years. In one, Russian hackers exploited a weakness to steal sensitive data from a number of federal agencies, including the National Nuclear Security Administration. In the other, Chinese hackers infiltrated the email accounts of a Cabinet member and other senior government officials. The federal government could be further exposed if it couldn't verify the cybersecurity of Microsoft's Government Community Cloud High, a suite of cloud-based services intended to safeguard some of the nation's most sensitive information. Yet, in a highly unusual move that still reverberates across Washington, the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, or FedRAMP, authorized the product anyway, bestowing what amounts to the federal government's cybersecurity seal of approval. FedRAMP's ruling -- which included a kind of "buyer beware" notice to any federal agency considering GCC High -- helped Microsoft expand a government business empire worth billions of dollars. "BOOM SHAKA LAKA," Richard Wakeman, one of the company's chief security architects, boasted in an online forum, celebrating the milestone with a meme of Leonardo DiCaprio in "The Wolf of Wall Street." It was not the type of outcome that federal policymakers envisioned a decade and a half ago when they embraced the cloud revolution and created FedRAMP to help safeguard the government's cybersecurity. The program's layers of review, which included an assessment by outside experts, were supposed to ensure that service providers like Microsoft could be entrusted with the government's secrets. But ProPublica's investigation -- drawn from internal FedRAMP memos, logs, emails, meeting minutes, and interviews with seven former and current government employees and contractors -- found breakdowns at every juncture of that process. It also found a remarkable deference to Microsoft, even as the company's products and practices were central to two of the most damaging cyberattacks ever carried out against the government.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 16:04
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Reform UK leader was paid to make remarks about imprisoned rapper and ex-Honduran president in Cameo videos

Nigel Farage called for the release of the imprisoned rapper Sean “Diddy” Combs and commended the efforts to free a former Honduran president jailed in the US for drug trafficking.

The Reform UK leader was paid to make the remarks on the personalised video platform Cameo, which allows users to commission celebrities and public figures to record short video clips.

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2026-03-18 16:04
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Thomas Abt, a researcher, says online taunts and barbs from songs can intensify shootings in underserved areas

Whenever the US tries to make sense of a high-profile mass shooting, it inevitably turns to one source: the social media accounts of the suspect. Law enforcement, reporters and the public scrutinize these digital footprints, hoping to find clues about a possible motive.

Less explored, however, is the role social media platforms like Instagram and YouTube play in shootings that happen in underserved Black and Latino communities and are scarcely covered outside of local crime news. These shootings, Thomas Abt, the lead author of a new Violence Reduction Center white paper on the topic told the Guardian, are increasingly being fueled by online disputes and barbs being traded back and forth in songs and music videos and shared online.

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2026-03-19 12:04
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A Haitian-born man from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, was stripped of his U.S. citizenship after defrauding COVID-19 relief programs of millions and lying during the naturalization process, federal prosecutors said.

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Nick Timothy said an event attended by the mayor of London that included prayers was an ‘act of domination’

Polanski says the government should be doing more to improve home insulation, and on the drive towards renewable energy.

And he says the government should commit to ensuring energy bills do not rise above the April-June price cap.

The government should guarantee right now that it will not allow energy bills to rise beyond the April-June price cap – instead setting aside approximately £8.4bn to prevent a rise of up to £300 per household that could be coming down the track.

No, it’s not cheap. But the alternative is unacceptable: if the price cap rises, we will see interest rate rises. Mortgage rates up. Bond yields up. And inflation up – and we will be back into the doom loop that has done untold damage to our economy and caused misery for households across the UK for years now.

There are ways to pay. Instead of scrapping the windfall tax on energy companies, as this government is planning to do, we should be strengthening it instead. We need a real, loophole-free windfall tax with no exemptions for reinvesting in fossil fuels. A robust tax that claws back every single pound of reckless profiteering from this crisis and repurposes it immediately to protect every home in the country. And while taxing extreme wealth in the ways we need to will take time to implement, there are levers the government could pull right now – like equalising capital gains tax with income tax and reforming the base, to raise £12bn.

It’s time for the government to act decisively, eliminate the uncertainty that is plaguing people and the markets and insulate us from some of the worst economic effects of Trump’s war.

This was not a war of self-defence, there was no imminent threat. Negotiations were ongoing. It was, as the BBC’s international editor said, a war of choice.

People across the Middle East are terrified of what Trump and Netanyanhu’s war will mean for them and their loved ones. And the repercussions are echoing across the world as instability spreads and oil prices spike.

People are already struggling so hard just to make ends meet. People feel like they’re running every day just to stay in the same place. The idea that yet again – for the second time in just a few years – that we are going to have to deal with another enormous spike in the cost of the basics is unacceptable.

It’s unacceptable because we didn’t need to be here. It’s unforgivable that just four years after we last saw an energy price shock, that one triggered by Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, far too little has been done to protect this country, its people, and its economy – from the impact of yet another energy price shock.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:45

Offer to reform taxes, tackle ‘rip-off Britain’ and overhaul fiscal rules could tempt exasperated Labour supporters

The venue for Zack Polanski’s economic speech on Wednesday – a sunny north London garden centre – could hardly have been more different to the sombre City backdrop for Rachel Reeves’s Mais lecture a day earlier.

The chancellor was, as it happens, the last politician to give a major economic speech at the New Economics Foundation (NEF), the leftwing thinktank that invited the Green party leader, Polanski, to set out his stall as part of its 40th anniversary celebrations. Back in 2018 it hosted the speech in which, as a backbencher, Reeves called for an “everyday economy” that would prioritise the needs of low-paid workers.

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2026-03-18 12:04
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Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

UK mortgage rates have climbed again today, as lender pull their cheaper deals from the market.

Data provider Moneyfacts reports that the average 2-year fixed residential mortgage rate today is 5.30%, up from 5.28% on Tuesday.

Average 2-year fix has risen from 4.83% at the start of March to 5.30% today. It’s highest since February 2025.

Average 5-year fix has risen from 4.95% at the start of March to 5.35% today. It’s highest since August 2024.

“The rapid disappearance of sub-4% mortgage deals shows just how quickly market sentiment has shifted. Nine days ago (9 March), well-positioned borrowers could choose from hundreds of fixed rate deals priced below 4%, but that has now dwindled to just two.

“The financial effects of ‘Trumpflation’ are already hitting home as the conflict in Iran is driving inflation concerns. That has forced markets to rethink the outlook for rate cuts, pushing borrowing costs higher and prompting lenders to pull and reprice deals at speed. For borrowers, it means the window for ultra-competitive sub-4% rates has been slammed shut, at least for now.”

Iranian crude exports through the corridor accounts for nearly three-quarters of the 27.2 million barrels that have left the Persian Gulf since March 1, data from intelligence firm Kpler Ltd. show. That amounts to about 1.2 million barrels a day of crude for Tehran, compared to a pre-war daily level of 1.5 million barrels.

By contrast, nearly three weeks into the war, cargoes from others in the region added up to just 400,000 barrels a day, versus an average 14 million barrels per day in peace time.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:33

A HELOC could be your most affordable borrowing option now. Here's how far costs have fallen in the last two years.

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The bloc’s foremost troublemaker could lose April’s election, but the headaches he’s caused will not necessarily disappear with him

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How do you solve a problem like Viktor Orbán? By crossing your fingers and hoping it disappears in just over three weeks’ time. But even if the European Union’s disruptor-in-chief is ousted in elections next month (which is far from certain), Europe’s Hungary problem is unlikely to vanish overnight.

EU leaders will gather in Brussels on Thursday and Friday for yet another summit that will be at least partly hijacked by Orbán, Hungary’s illiberal prime minister.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:29

Josh D'Amaro, who oversees Disney theme parks and dozens of resort hotels worldwide, will become the next Disney CEO.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:29

Sen. Markwayne Mullin is appearing before the Committee on Homeland Security after President Donald Trump nominated him to replace Kristi Noem​ as the Homeland Security Secretary.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:28

President Trump on Wednesday temporarily eased a century-old law that limits shippers from transporting energy products around the U.S.

2026-03-18 12:04
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IDF is attempting to gain control of border towns, in particular the strategic hilltop city of Khiam

Israel and Hezbollah are engaged in intense ground clashes in at least three strategic areas in south Lebanon as Israel pushes on with its ground invasion of its neighbour, according to a Lebanese security source and residents of the affected towns.

Much of the fighting was concentrated around the strategic hilltop city of Khiam, with the Israel Defense Forces carrying out an air and artillery campaign against Hezbollah fighters dug into the city. Fighting escalated there after days of clashes, with a Hezbollah spokesperson acknowledging there were “heightened clashes” on the eastern and northern outskirts of the city.

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 11:25

Beijing seeks to decipher effect of Iran war on US midterms and best way to apply pressure when Trump meets Xi

The White House said on Wednesday that China had agreed to postpone Donald Trump’s visit to Beijing, as war in the Middle East rages on, complicating the US president’s position at home and abroad.

China has not yet commented on the delay to the highly anticipated trip, in which Trump and the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, will meet in person for the first time since October. Trump previously said he hoped to delay the trip, originally scheduled to run from 31 March to 2 April, for “five or six weeks”.

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 11:24

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 18, 2026 — Super Micro Computer, Inc. is announcing new additions to its broad portfolio of enterprise solutions to meet the growing demands of today’s AI-enabled and graphical computing applications, in a wider range of enterprise environments.

Supermicro Enterprise-Optimized Solutions

The new systems bring the acceleration power of NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs in form factors which are optimized for enterprise data centers and the edge, where space, power, and cooling limitations have previously restricted the deployment of high-density compute infrastructure. For enterprises seeking turnkey, full stack solutions, Supermicro offers NVIDIA-Certified Systems that have been tested and validated for compatibility with NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs, NVIDIA networking, and NVIDIA AI Enterprise and NVIDIA Omniverse libraries. Additionally, Supermicro’s NVIDIA-Certified Systems are NVIDIA accelerated application-ready, supporting a wide range of certified third-party applications to accelerate enterprise workloads.

“As enterprises of all shapes and sizes continue to increase their pace of AI adoption, Supermicro is again leading the industry in bringing new NVIDIA acceleration technologies to market, balancing performance and efficiency to enable accelerated compute where it is needed most,” said Charles Liang, president and CEO of Supermicro. “With our range of flexible, modular Building Block Solutions architectures supporting NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs, we are helping enterprises shorten Time-to-Online so that they can realize value from their infrastructure investment sooner.”

In addition to Supermicro’s existing enterprise AI solutions based on the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPU, the expanded portfolio adds support for the new NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPU and NVIDIA Vera CPU, providing even more deployment-specific customization options for a range of enterprise workloads including LLM fine-tuning, AI inference, Gen AI, VDI, data analytics, media transcoding, cloud and mobile gaming, and FP32 HPC.

Supermicro systems with NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs can directly replace standard 1U and 2U rackmount enterprise servers to provide significant workload-specific acceleration improvements compared to CPU-only compute, easily integrating into existing data centers and requiring minimal to no modifications to existing rack, power, or cooling infrastructure. Supermicro also offers storage solutions with leading ISVs based on NVIDIA AI Data Platform reference architecture, which incorporate GPU acceleration into the storage platform to accelerate data vectorization, vector database searching, and inference workloads.

The new NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell GPUs deliver breakthrough performance for demanding data processing, AI video, and inference workloads in a single‑slot, power‑efficient design. Supermicro NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell solutions are offered in industry-standard form factors that can directly replace existing CPU-only compute servers and are available with curated NVIDIA software packages, reducing the complexity of creating full-stack AI solutions.

Supermicro’s expanded portfolio of accelerated systems is now available to address the full spectrum of enterprise deployment requirements, including:

  • Large-scale AI solutions: 4U and 5U systems designed for maximum GPU capacity and optimized for thermal performance in traditional air-cooled environments. Supporting up to 8 NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs per node, these solutions are ideal for large-scale AI inference, virtualization, and media/graphics workloads, and include NVIDIA-Certified Systems that can serve as the foundation for full-stack AI factory solutions.
  • Enterprise AI and data center solutions: Industry-standard 1U and 2U form factors designed for easy replacement of legacy CPU-only compute hardware without the need to redesign the data center. Systems support up to 6 NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs for balanced acceleration and efficiency ideal for traditional data center environments with limited space, rack power, and cooling infrastructure. The portfolio also includes the new 2U NVIDIA Vera CPU-based architecture, a purpose-built AI compute system for organizations targeting next-generation agentic AI deployments.
  • Compact edge AI solutions: Efficiency-optimized systems designed to bring powerful acceleration to edge environments where significant thermal and power limitations often exist. Available in 1U and 2U short-depth chassis form factors and supporting up to 4 air cooled NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs, these solutions deliver powerful AI acceleration while operating at power levels as low as 165 watts per GPU. This enables organizations to process AI inference requests and graphics workloads closer to the source, reducing latency and data transfer costs while meeting the strict power and thermal constraints common in edge deployments.

For more information on Supermicro’s complete range of enterprise AI and accelerated systems, please visit https://www.supermicro.com/en/accelerators/nvidia/supermicro-rtx-pro-bse

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, Asia, 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 Expands Enterprise Systems with NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell GPUs appeared first on HPCwire.

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

The skeleton is the latest in a series of bodies discovered in the city of Dijon that were mysteriously buried in a seated position while facing west.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:16

Some states give creditors less time to sue over credit card debt. Here's where the deadlines are shortest.

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

From intelligence to research and grant applications, artificial intelligence is playing a bigger role in government and military operations.

2026-03-18 12:04
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Producers say alleged victim of grooming was ready to tell his story and show raises urgent issues around online safety

Channel 5 has defended its controversial drama about the downfall of Huw Edwards, saying it raises the “urgent” issue of grooming and online safety and gives voice to his alleged victim, who worked with the programme to tell his side of the story so “no one who has been silenced feels they are alone”.

Starring Martin Clunes as the disgraced former BBC newsreader, the drama charts the claim of a relationship and texts between Edwards and a vulnerable young man who was at the centre of a scandal reported by the Sun in 2023, which alleged the presenter made payments to a 17-year-old for sexually explicit images.

Power: The Downfall of Huw Edwards will air at 9pm on 24 March on Channel 5.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:00

In this week’s newsletter: the creators of All Will Rise on standing up to the tech giant – and joining the No Games for Genocide movement

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Video games are in a funding crisis. Investor money flowed freely during the pandemic gaming boom, but now the well has run dry. It is increasingly difficult, for indie developers especially, to get the capital to make games. It is extremely unusual, then, to hear of a developer returning an investor’s money. Yet that is what Speculative Agency, developers of All Will Rise, have just done.

Last year, All Will Rise, a deck-building game about a team of activists fighting for the future of their oligarch-run city, received money from Microsoft as part of a developer acceleration programme. In late-2025, however, the team became aware of No Games for Genocide, a collective of developers, journalists, union organisers and others that came together as a result of Israeli assault on Gaza to protest against “material and commercial ties between the games industry and enabling genocide, war crimes, and the military industrial complex”.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Musi, a free music streaming app that had tens of millions of iPhone downloads and garnered plenty of controversy over its method of acquiring music, has lost an attempt to get back on Apple's App Store. A federal judge dismissed Musi's lawsuit against Apple with prejudice and sanctioned Musi's lawyers for "mak[ing] up facts to fill the perceived gaps in Musi's case." Musi built a streaming service without striking its own deals with copyright holders. It did so by playing music from YouTube, writing in its 2024 lawsuit against Apple that "the Musi app plays or displays content based on the user's own interactions with YouTube and enhances the user experience via Musi's proprietary technology." Musi's app displayed its own ads but let users remove them for a one-time fee of $5.99. Musi claimed it complied with YouTube's terms, but Apple removed it from the App Store in September 2024. Musi does not offer an Android app. Musi alleged that Apple delisted its app based on "unsubstantiated" intellectual property claims from YouTube and that Apple violated its own Developer Program License Agreement (DPLA) by delisting the app. Musi was handed a resounding defeat yesterday in two rulings from US District Judge Eumi Lee in the Northern District of California. Lee found that Apple can remove apps "with or without cause," as stipulated in the developer agreement. Lee wrote (PDF): "The plain language of the DPLA governs because it is clear and explicit: Apple may 'cease marketing, offering, and allowing download by end-users of the [Musi app] at any time, with or without cause, by providing notice of termination.' Based on this language, Apple had the right to cease offering the Musi app without cause if Apple provided notice to Musi. The complaint alleges, and Musi does not dispute, that Apple gave Musi the required notice. Therefore, Apple's decision to remove the Musi app from the App Store did not breach the DPLA."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:57

Marius Borg Høiby accused of 39 offences, but denies the most serious charges of four rapes

Marius Borg Høiby, the son of Norway’s crown princess, should receive more than seven years in prison if he is found guilty of 39 offences, including four rapes and assaults, according to prosecutors.

On Wednesday, the penultimate day of the more than six-week-long trial at Oslo district court, the prosecution said it believed that Høiby was guilty of 39 of the 40 offences with which he was charged, which, as well as rape and domestic abuse, include multiple breaches of restraining orders, assault, drug and driving offences.

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 10:54

Move comes as president attempts to mitigate rising price of oil while carrying out war on Iran

Donald Trump is trying to make it easier for foreign tankers to move around the US, temporarily allowing foreign-flagged ships carrying oil and gas to travel between US ports, the White House announced Wednesday.

The move comes as the president tries to manage a delicate balancing act, attempting to mitigate the increasing price of oil while also carrying out the US-Israel war on Iran.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:46

Front light on XR started to flash when in use, replaced Ferrit Ring but light still flashing.
Does anyone have any other recommendations to fix this?

submitted by /u/NSchuMedia1
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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:45

The Magpies head to Camp Nou for this delicately poised last-16 decider.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:44
Tahoeeeeeee

Came up midweek and am so glad we did! It’s like summertime!! Nothing like an early morning rip around Tahoe Vista.

submitted by /u/Beginning-Buy8632
[link] [comments]

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 10:43

Cable news network plans for a new morning show hosted by Stephanie Ruhle, taking hour back from Morning Joe

MS Now, the liberal cable news network known until last November as MSNBC, on Wednesday announced its first significant programming changes since being spun off as part of a new media company called Versant.

The network announced that Morning Joe, its flagship breakfast program, will shift back from being four hours to three hours, as Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough, married co-hosts, have talked about the strain of hosting a four-hour-long show every day.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:41

Government’s first published land use framework maps how land is used and how it can be adapted to meet changing needs

About 7% of England’s land – an area roughly two-and-a-half times the size of Cornwall – will need to be given over to nature, forests and renewable energy, to meet the UK’s environmental targets, new data shows.

But there will still be enough land to grow the food needed, and to house a growing population, according to the government’s first land use framework, published on Wednesday.

Placing a high priority on restoring peatland, all but 13% of which is degraded across England, but this will not include an outright ban on development such as wind or solar farms.

Encouraging the “multi-use” of land, for instance with livestock grazing alongside wind and solar farms, and wildlife protection and nature restoration on arable land.

Encouraging local authorities to put nature reserves in urban areas as well as in the countryside.

Grouse moors to come under closer scrutiny and tighter regulation, which will go further than EU rules.

No new “right to roam” is included in the framework, but there will be a consultation on “making landowner liability more proportionate”, which could open up areas for public access.

A national soil map will be published.

A new land use unit will be established.

Government planning for changes to the UK’s landscape under global heating of 2C above preindustrial levels, and of much higher heating of 4C.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:38

Modern kernel anti-cheat systems are, without exaggeration, among the most sophisticated pieces of software running on consumer Windows machines. They operate at the highest privilege level available to software, they intercept kernel callbacks that were designed for legitimate security products, they scan memory structures that most programmers never touch in their entire careers, and they do all of this transparently while a game is running. If you have ever wondered how BattlEye actually catches a cheat, or why Vanguard insists on loading before Windows boots, or what it means for a PCIe DMA device to bypass every single one of these protections, this post is for you.

↫ Adrián Díaza

I hate that we need proprietary rootkits just to play competitive multiplayer games – we can chalk this up to a few sad people ruining the experience for everyone else, as so often happens. I have a dedicated parts bin Windows box just to play League of Legends (my one vice alright, nobody’s perfect) so I don’t really care if it has a proprietary rootkit running in the background as there’s not a single bit of valuable data on that machine, but for most people, that’s not realistic.

Virtually every League of Legends player hands over control of their entire computer to a proprietary rootkit developed and deployed by a company from China, whereas players of other popular online multiplayer games must install rootkits from companies from the United States. If anyone inside the governments of these countries ever wants to implement a backdoor in dozens (hundreds?) of millions of Windows machines, this is the way to go.

It’s an absolutely bizarre situation.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 10:37

SAXONBURG, Pa., March 18, 2026 — Coherent Corp., a global leader in photonics, has announced it will showcase breakthrough innovations powering the next generation of AI-driven datacenter and communications networks at OFC 2026, March 17 –19, at the L.A. Convention Center in Los Angeles, California, Booth #1401.

From 400G/lane, 3.2T transceivers and emerging architectures for 12.8T and beyond, to advanced co-packaged optics (CPO), multi-rail transport, and open optical networking platforms, Coherent will demonstrate how its vertical technology stack – spanning materials, devices, modules, and systems – is redefining performance, scalability, and energy efficiency for the AI era.

“At OFC 2026, we are demonstrating how Coherent’s innovation engines, from advanced materials to fully integrated optical systems – are enabling the infrastructure backbone of AI,” said Dr. Sanjai Parthasarathi, CMO at Coherent. “Our technologies are driving the bandwidth, power efficiency, and scalability required for the next decade of optical networking.”

In addition, Coherent executives and technology leaders will take center stage across plenaries, executive forums, panels, and technical sessions, helping shape the future roadmap of optical networking.

Technology and Product Demonstrations

  • Multi-Technology CPO Demonstration: A powerful showcase of silicon photonics, VCSEL, and InP-on-silicon technologies operating within a co-packaged optics architecture – advancing energy-efficient scaling for AI fabrics.
  • High-Performance 400G/Lane Optical Link: Enabling next-generation switch ASIC connectivity at 400G/lane leveraging both 400G Differential EML as well as a silicon photonics PIC implementation based on Coherent’s 400G pure silicon PN junction Mach-Zender Modulator.
  • New XPO Pluggable MSA Form Factor: Demonstrating the new multi-lane XPO transceiver for 12.8T and beyond, to enhance system design agility while optimizing power and performance.
  • Multi-technology 1.6T Transceivers: Featuring multiple 1.6T transceivers encompassing several types of electrical interfaces and DSP chips from three industry leaders, all in the OSFP form factor.
  • Next-Generation Multi-Rail Enhancements: New advancements in multi-rail optical transport dramatically increasing fiber capacity and system efficiency (4 rails in 1RU) for scale-across networks.
  • Thermo-Electric Generator (TEG): Innovative thermal energy harvesting technology that converts waste heat into usable electrical power, improving system-level efficiency in next-generation AI datacenters.

Partner Demo

  • OIF Interoperability: Contributing to a multi-vendor interoperability demo features 40 member companies and highlights 800ZR, 400ZR, Multi-span optics.
  • Scalable Quantum-Safe Network: Demonstrating a quantum-safe networking solution that can be deployed efficiently and at scale without disrupting existing infrastructure, in partnership with CUBiQ Technologies, HPE and Liberty Global.

MSA Announcements

  • Coherent joined the recently announced XPO MSA as founding member to enable 12.8Tbps liquid cooled optics module that supports a front panel density of 204.8Tbps per open compute rack unit, to meet the increased density requirements of the AI datacenters.
  • Coherent is one of the founding members of the Open CPX MSA (Open Co-Packaging Multi-Source Agreement) to develop the specifications for optical engines required to enable a broad ecosystem of interoperable co-packaged and near-package interconnect solutions.

Industry Leadership at OFC 2026

Coherent executives will play a prominent role across OFC’s most influential stages, including:

  • OPTICA EXECUTIVE FORUM

    Topic: CEO Panel
    Speaker: Jim Anderson
    Monday, March 16th, 4:40 pm – 5:40 pm

    Topic: Scale Out Data Center Networks
    Moderator: Dr. Sanjai Parthasarathi
    Panelist: Vipul Bhatt
    Monday, March 16th, 10:50 am – 12:00 pm

    Topic: Fireside chat with CTO
    Speaker: Dr. Julie Eng
    Monday, March 16th, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm

  • INVITED SPEAKER: DATACOM SUBSYSTEMS AND SYSTEMS

    Invited Speaker: Dr. Anna Tatarczak
    Monday, March 16th, 12:00 pm – 12.30 pm

  • PLENARY SESSION

    Topic: Scaling the Optical Future: Optical Technologies Driving AI, Data Centers and Communications Networks
    Speaker: Dr. Julie Eng
    Tuesday, March 17th, 8:00 am – 10:00 am

  • MARKET WATCH

    Topic: State of the Industry: Now and in 2031
    Moderator: Vipul Bhatt
    Tuesday, March 17th, 10:30 am – 12.00 pm

  • DATA CENTER SUMMIT (DCS)

    Topic: Scaling AI Clusters: Challenges in Scale-Up and Scale-Out for Future Growth
    Speaker: Dr. Steffen Koehler
    Tuesday, March 17th, 2:15 pm – 3.45 pm

  • YOLE MARKET EVENT

    Topic: Scaling datacom optical technologies for next generation networks​
    Speaker: Dr. Sanjai Parthasarathi
    Wednesday, March 18th, 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

  • OIF SPECIAL EVENT

    Topic: 800ZR/LR and 1600ZR/ZR+/CL – Changing the Game…Again
    Speaker: Dr. Georg Clarici
    Wednesday, March 18th, 11:45 am – 12:45 pm

  • GSA & IEEE EVENT

    Topic: Bridging Silicon and Light Innovations at the Intersection of Semiconductors and Photonics
    Speaker: Dr. Julie Eng
    Wednesday, March 18th, 12:45 pm – 1:45 pm

  • OCP SESSION

    Topic: AI Scale-Up Opportunities with Short-Reach Optical Interconnects​
    Speaker: Vipul Bhatt
    Thursday, March 19th, 12:15 pm – 1:15 pm

  • CONFERENCE – WORKSHOP

    Topic: Chasing the Limit: On the Path to Photonic Scale-Up with Ultra-Low-Energy/Bit
    Speaker: Dr. Chris Kocot
    Sunday, March 15, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Visitors to OFC 2026 can experience Coherent’s innovations at Booth #1401. For more information, visit www.coherent.com.

About Coherent

Coherent (NYSE: COHR) is the global photonics leader. We harness photons to drive innovation. Industry leaders in the datacenter, communications, and industrial markets rely on Coherent’s world-leading technology to fuel their own innovation and growth.


Source: Coherent

The post Coherent Showcases AI-Scale Optical Innovations and Industry Leadership at OFC 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 10:30

If Europe is sucked into this illegal conflict with Iran, public support for rearmament could collapse – and only Putin will benefit

Once again, Donald Trump has deployed Nato as leverage to get the US’s European allies to submit to his will. After launching an unprovoked war against Iran, in response to which Tehran’s closure of the strait of Hormuz to shipping has sent oil prices soaring, Trump now wants his Nato allies in Europe to step in to help clean up his mess. Europeans should do nothing of the kind.

Trump’s war of choice with Iran is not going well. Iran has retaliated by targeting US assets and allies in the Gulf. At least 13 US service members have so far been killed in this conflict – a figure dwarfed by more than 1,200 civilian Iranian deaths. The US has spent $16.5bn on just the first 12 days of the war, more than its total humanitarian assistance budget for 2024. Prolonged high oil prices could lead to a recession in Europe and parts of Asia.

Armida van Rij is a senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 10:24

Oklahoma senator has repeatedly made cryptic claims about ‘overseas’ work and war experience, while refusing to explain them

Markwayne Mullin, the Oklahoma senator chosen by Donald Trump to lead the Department of Homeland Security who will be considered by the Senate on Wednesday, has never served in the US military, but he routinely speaks as if he did in interviews.

Two days after the US attacked Iran, for instance, Mullin told Fox News: “War is ugly. It smells bad. And if anybody has ever been there and been able to smell the war that’s happening around you and taste it, and feel it in your nostrils, and hear it, it’s something you’ll never forget. And it’s ugly.”

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:22

Emanuel Fabian says his routine report became focus of wager with $23m at stake on online prediction platform

An Israeli journalist received threatening messages from users of the online prediction platform Polymarket after one of his reports, on a minor missile strike near Jerusalem, suddenly became the focus of an unresolved bet about the Israel-Iran conflict.

“After you make us lose $900,000 we will invest no less than that to finish you,” said one message to the journalist, Emanuel Fabian.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:20

The Department of Energy has announced a $293 million funding opportunity to advance the Genesis Mission, continuing the agency’s push to build a nationwide AI-driven discovery platform spanning supercomputers, scientific data systems, and advanced research infrastructure.

The DOE is inviting applications from interdisciplinary scientific teams that can use AI models and frameworks to address pressing issues in 20 critical fields – including advanced manufacturing, biotechnology, critical materials, nuclear energy and quantum information science. A Request for Application (RFA) is now available for research efforts that combine AI, HPC, and large scientific datasets to accelerate the pace of scientific discovery.

The Phase I awards will range from $500,000 to $750,000 and will support a nine month project period. Phase II awards will range from $6 million to $15 million over a three year project period. The applications for Phase I and letters of intent for Phase II are due April 28, 2026. Phase II applications are due May 2026.

Darío Gil, Under Secretary for Science at the U.S. Department of Energy

The funding call highlights that the national laboratory system is central to the success of the Genesis Mission. The stakeholders will need to leverage DOE user facilities, such as exascale supercomputers and large experimental datasets generated across the lab network, to support AI-driven research.

“The Genesis Mission has caught the imagination of our scientific and engineering communities to tackle national challenges in the age of AI,” said Darío Gil, Under Secretary for Science and Genesis Mission Director.

“With these investments we seek breakthrough ideas and novel collaborations leveraging the scientific prowess of our National Laboratories, the private sector, universities, and science philanthropies.”

The Genesis Mission was launched by executive order late last year, marking one of the most significant shifts in U.S. science policy in recent memory. The goal, according to the order, was to launch a “dedicated, coordinated national effort to unleash a new age of AI‑accelerated innovation and discovery that can solve the most challenging problems of this century.”

Some called this the largest coordination of federal scientific resources since the Apollo space program in the 1960s. Others have been more cautious, pointing out that execution will be the real test.

At the center of it is a plan to rebuild the research ecosystem itself. The idea is to connect massive, and often underused, scientific datasets across agencies like the DOE, NIH, and NOAA to national lab supercomputers and wrap it all into an AI experimentation platform that supports scientific discovery. The policy outlined key players – public research agencies, academic institutions, and a few hand-picked private partners.

Earlier this year, the DOE announced 26 science and technology challenges that it described as being of national importance to advance the Genesis Mission and accelerate innovation and discovery through AI. Several of the challenges focus on reducing the time required to move from theory to validation.

(VideoFlow/Shutterstock)

Commenting on the challenges, Dr. Gil emphasized that “these challenges represent a bold step toward a future where science moves at the speed of imagination because of AI.”

“It’s a game-changer for science, energy, and national security. By uniting the U.S. Government’s unparalleled data resources and DOE’s experimental facilities with cutting-edge AI, we can unlock discoveries that will power the economy, secure our energy future, and keep America at the forefront of global innovation.”

The $293 million in new funding is one of the largest individual investments in the Genesis Mission, and is a signal that the program is moving steadily from the planning phase to the operational phase. A core theme with the initiative is that rather than focusing on individual projects, the government wants to build momentum toward a nationwide collaboration to accelerate scientific discovery.

The post DOE Announces $293M Funding Opportunity as Genesis Mission Moves Toward Operational Phase appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 10:11

Browser-based access streamlines interactive workflows across diverse systems and user communities

COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 18, 2026 — At the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, advanced computing powers research across disciplines, institutions and experience levels. Founded in 1986 as one of the original supercomputer centers established under the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Supercomputer Centers Program, NCSA provides high performance computing, data, networking and visualization resources to scientists and engineers across the United States.

Computing systems at NCSA support a growing community of researchers working across disciplines and institutions. Image Credit: NCSA.

Researchers access NCSA’s nationally allocated systems through programs such as the NSF ACCESS initiative, while campus and industry users engage through institutional partnerships. Supported by the NSF, the state of Illinois, and the University of Illinois, the center enables work in fields ranging from artificial intelligence and astrophysics to digital agriculture and health sciences.

As demand for machine learning and data-driven workflows increased, NCSA recognized that traditional access models were becoming a barrier for many of its users. Researchers without extensive command-line experience often struggled to take full advantage of advanced computing resources, prompting the team to look for a more accessible way to interact with these systems.

Broadening Access Across a National Research Community

To address that challenge, NCSA implemented Open OnDemand, a browser-based interface designed by the Ohio Supercomputer Center to simplify access to high-performance computing systems. The platform’s initial deployment at NCSA in 2019, alongside its HAL cluster, an NSF-funded system developed to support machine learning research, marked a shift in how users accessed computing resources and helped set the model for broader adoption across the center.

As machine learning tools became more widely adopted across disciplines, including biology, geospatial science, social science, and digital humanities, NCSA saw an increasing number of researchers who relied on interactive environments rather than traditional command-line workflows.

“Many of our HAL users are people who want to train models, but they are not all computer science or engineering majors,” said Volodymyr Kindratenko, director for NCSA’s Center for AI Innovation (CAII). “They tend to have difficulty logging in and working through the terminal and beyond.”

Before Open OnDemand, users had to follow a series of manual, command-line-based steps to launch interactive sessions – a process that was often fragile and difficult to troubleshoot. Even small missteps could derail the workflow entirely. “We constantly had users who mistyped something or did something different,” Kindratenko said. “It just never worked for them.”

Lowering Barriers for Interdisciplinary Researchers

With Open OnDemand in place, the way researchers interacted with NCSA’s systems began to change almost immediately. Tasks that once required multiple manual steps could now be launched through a web browser, reducing friction and lowering the barrier to entry for interactive computing.

“The very first most useful application for us was the ability to launch a Jupyter notebook,” Kindratenko said. “You click a button, your Jupyter is there, on a compute node with whatever resources you need.”

The impact was decisive. Experienced users who preferred working through the command line continued to do so, while a large and growing group of researchers gravitated to Open OnDemand as their primary entry point to NCSA’s systems. Over time, the center expanded the set of interactive applications available through the platform to include JupyterLab, TensorFlow, H2O, and, later, a VS Code server.

“Once we deployed it, there was no way to go back,” Kindratenko said. “We had users who demanded it.”

What began as a solution for a single system soon became a model for the rest of NCSA’s computing ecosystem.

Scaling a Consistent Interface Across Multiple Systems

Across NCSA’s campus and nationally allocated platforms, Open OnDemand has supported approximately 1,700 unique users and more than one million jobs since 2019, with steady growth in adoption across the center.

Today, Open OnDemand is deployed across six NCSA computing environments, each serving different communities, funding models, and research needs, including NSF-funded national systems, campus clusters, geospatial research platforms and infrastructure supporting private-sector partners.

“All of these are different resources with very diverse users,” said Gregory Bauer, senior technical program manager at NCSA. “But once one of them learned how to deploy and operate Open OnDemand, the expertise spread quickly.”

Because many of the same system administrators support multiple resources, early experience with Open OnDemand enabled rapid replication. Rather than building heavily customized portals for each system, the team focused on consistency, providing a familiar interface and a shared set of interactive tools wherever possible.

“We would characterize our efforts as modest customization,” Bauer said. “But that’s actually been an advantage. We didn’t need to reinvent the interface every time.”

The result is a familiar interface that supports a wide range of users and workflows without fragmenting the experience. Whether working on campus or remotely, researchers can launch interactive sessions through a web browser, reducing technical overhead while preserving flexibility for more advanced use cases.

“During recent travel, I didn’t have my work laptop,” Bauer said. “I used Open OnDemand on a tablet through the browser to access a cluster, and it worked.”

Beyond usability, Open OnDemand has also helped NCSA scale access without proportionally increasing support demands. By standardizing how users launch and interact with applications, the platform reduces the number of custom workflows that staff must troubleshoot, an important consideration for shared systems running with finite operational resources.

At the same time, NCSA views Open OnDemand as part of a broader strategy to expand participation in advanced computing.

“We’re trying to broaden participation and lower the barriers to entry for new users,” said Brett Bode, assistant director of NSF’s Delta and Delta AI systems at NCSA. “Open OnDemand is one of the routes we’re using to achieve that.”

Building on Community-Driven Innovation

Looking ahead, the team is exploring new interactive applications, particularly in genomics and other data-intensive research areas, by drawing on tools developed and shared by the Open OnDemand community. That collaborative ecosystem, they say, continues to strengthen the platform’s value over time.

“One of the attractive features of Open OnDemand is this large community of developers that contribute interactive apps and make them available,” Bauer said. “We can build on what other institutions have already done.”

For NCSA, Open OnDemand has evolved from a targeted usability solution into a foundational access layer – one that supports beginners and experts alike, spans multiple systems and adapts as research needs continue to grow. While the resources it supports may differ, the goal remains consistent: meeting researchers where they are and lowering barriers to advanced computing.

About OSC

The Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) addresses the rising computational demands of academic and industrial research communities by providing a robust shared infrastructure and proven expertise in advanced modeling, simulation and analysis. OSC empowers scientists with the services essential to making extraordinary discoveries and innovations, partners with businesses and industry to leverage computational science as a competitive force in the global knowledge economy and leads efforts to equip the workforce with the key technology skills required for 21st century jobs.


Source: Lexi Biasi, Ohio Supercomputer Center

The post Open OnDemand Enables Broad Access to High Performance Computing at NCSA appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 10:00

Exclusive: Drug users face felonies and prison under Prop 36, with analysis showing racial disparities and little help

California prosecutors have filed nearly 20,000 drug possession felony cases under a tough-on-crime measure passed in 2024. But despite promises to get people into services, the vast majority of those arrested have not received drug treatment, state data reveals.

Proposition 36, a state ballot measure, enacted harsher penalties for minor theft and drug offenses, with proponents pledging the crackdown would lead to “mass treatment to keep people alive, out of jail, and off our streets”.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:58

Scientists trying to work out why Gauls chose to bury some of their dead in seated position facing west

Children at a primary school in eastern France found a strange attraction next to their playground this week: a skeleton sitting upright, peeking out of a circular pit.

It is the latest in a series of bodies discovered in the city of Dijon that were buried in a seated position facing west.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:56

IRVINE, Calif., March 18, 2026 — Menlo Microsystems Inc. (Menlo Micro), a leader in high-performance electronic switches, has announced a strategic partnership with Rosenberger to jointly develop a Multichannel Ultra-Low Power Switch Module for Quantum Computing, planned to accelerate scalable quantum systems.

The partnership combines Menlo Micro’s Ideal Switch MEMS technology with Rosenberger’s precision high-density Multichannel WSMP RF connector and industrialization expertise, addressing a critical bottleneck in quantum system interconnect and control infrastructure.

This partnership positions Menlo Micro and Rosenberger to accelerate the commercialization of quantum computing by delivering modular, high-performance cryogenic switching solutions while providing the industry with a pathway to deploy practical, scalable quantum systems faster.

As quantum computing systems scale, managing RF signal routing at cryogenic temperatures becomes increasingly critical. Traditional switches generate thermal loads that can compromise qubit coherence and system stability.

The planned Ultra-Low Power Switch Module is designed to integrate Menlo Micro’s ultra-low-power Ideal Switch platform, capable of operation down to 10 millikelvin (mK), with Rosenberger’s precision high-density 16- and 32-Multichannel WSMP RF connector, engineered to deliver reliable, low-loss, and reproducible RF connections in cryogenic environments.

To further support precise measurements, the module will include built-in Open-Short-Load (OSL) RF calibration standards, enabling rapid and repeatable system verification. By minimizing Joule heating and maintaining near-zero temperature disturbance during switching, the solution is expected to improve thermal efficiency, simplify system design, and offer a compact, dilution refrigerator-compatible form factor that supports higher-density characterization and production workflows and help accelerate the development of next-generation quantum systems.

The partnership also underscores a strategic business opportunity in the rapidly growing quantum computing market. By combining Menlo Micro’s leading-edge switching technology with Rosenberger’s proven global interconnect solutions, the companies aim to reduce system complexity, accelerate development cycles, and support broader adoption of scalable quantum architectures.

As quantum computing transitions from research systems toward commercial deployments, the companies view this collaboration as an opportunity to establish a foundation for future product offerings that support long-term growth in quantum infrastructure markets.

“This partnership marks a major milestone in making scalable quantum systems more practical and efficient,” said Russ Garcia, CEO of Menlo Micro. “By combining our Ideal Switch technology with Rosenberger’s world-class cryogenic interconnects, precision connectivity, and proven reliability, we aim to provide a modular solution that reduces system complexity and helps quantum system developers shorten development cycles and accelerate time to market for their applications.”

For more information on the partnership and the planned Ultra-Low Power Switch Module for Quantum Computing, visit Rosenberger at Booth #2302 during the APS Global Physics Summit 2026.

About Menlo Micro   

Menlo Micro sets a new standard for switches with the Ideal Switch, a chip-scale platform that overcomes performance, efficiency, and scalability bottlenecks of electromechanical relays (EMRs) and semiconductor-based switches. It’s the first disruptive switching technology in over 30 years and the only platform scalable across both power and frequency domains. The Ideal Switch enables smaller, lighter, faster, more reliable, and energy-efficient systems. From AI to aerospace, defense and power electronics, the Ideal Switch eliminates bottlenecks and reduces the total cost of ownership across today’s most demanding applications. Menlo Micro unlocks new possibilities.


Source: Menlo Micro

The post Menlo Micro and Rosenberger Partner to Advance Cryogenic Switching in Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 09:47

To secure critical minerals supply governments need to take a stake in industry Expert comment jon.wallace

To establish some measure of control of minerals supply, market-oriented governments are starting to directly invest in mining projects. Governments that don’t are placing their manufacturing sectors, energy security, and national defence at risk.

Mining lithium sulfate in Atacama Salt Flat, Chile, July 2024. (Photo by Lucas Aguayo Araos/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The scramble to secure critical minerals has reignited a wave of resource nationalism, with states intervening in private entities across the mining sector. 

This is part of a decisive shift, as market-oriented economies move from incentivizing private actors towards taking a direct financial stake in their operations – in order to influence supply. 

The traditional drivers of state intervention have been to protect the mining industry, get projects off the ground, or expectations that governments can benefit economically from extraction. 

New drivers of intervention are far more concerned with control over minerals flows – to address vulnerabilities caused by the dominance of China in supply chains and the volatility emanating from intervention from other players.  

The US is acting with remarkable urgency to increase production and secure supply. That means that governments that do not have an equity stake in supply chains risk being left behind in the race for material security, placing their manufacturing jobs, many of which rely on supply of minerals, in jeopardy – consigning themselves to trajectories of deindustrialization. 

Countries like the UK and blocs like the EU are following Washington’s example by accepting the need for relatively risky minerals investments. In doing do, they must be guided by a desire for control as much as – if not more than – a search for the best value, especially given current low prices.  

Increasing volatility and political risk

The geopolitical vulnerability of minerals supply is clear. China is the world’s biggest miner and dominant processor of critical minerals. Beijing’s use of export controls, soft barriers to trade such as export licensing requirements, and trade dumping to reduce prices mean that consistent supply is no longer guaranteed. 

US action to counter this dominance will mitigate their own supply risks, but at high cost. The US is leveraging several funding mechanisms, including $15 billion in letters of interest from its Export Import bank EXIM, and $7 billion in loans from the department of energy. The pentagon has also committed $2.8 billion in equity and debt to eight mining and refining projects. 

The US is distinct from other partners as they have a higher risk appetite, and they are strategically leveraging Gulf State sovereign funds. Their goal is control, via significant shareholding in mining concerns, seats on their boards, and through that the ability to control flows of critical minerals. 

For example, the agreement for the US Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and UAE-backed Orion consortium’s 40 per cent share of Glencore’s copper operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) was tied to them being able to choose the export destination for the copper. 

Similarly, the US Department of War provided support measures lasting over a decade to MP Metals for Neodymium-Praseodymium oxide and manufactured magnates – while including an offtake agreement to ensure that it could have access to the finished product. 

This US policy is a major political risk. Even if these efforts mitigate supply risks, they will still fall far short of overtaking China as a dominant producer of critical minerals. 

Other countries, such as the UK, EU countries and others, cannot match the scale of what the US is attempting and have a difficult ask of their taxpayers; to pour money into an industry with low project success rates and high environmental costs.  

But government investment is what is required to get mining projects off the ground and establish some measure of control over mineral supply flows. That in turn will ensure national access to industry-critical materials and protect jobs. But it will also likely cause further volatility, as states pressure companies to serve national needs in addition to market forces. 

State involvement can influence companies’ decision making. In February 2026 French firm Imerys Lithium placed its project in Cornwall, UK, on care and maintenance due to financing constraints. At the same time, the Banque des Territoires, acting on behalf of the French government, acquired a minority stake in another Imerys Lithium project located in France. The French project with state support pulled through. 

The UK’s National Wealth Fund has similarly put money into domestic critical minerals projects. That includes Cornish Lithium, a separate project close to the Imerys site. 

However, to genuinely protect supply, the scale of financing must increase, and equity ownership strategies cannot only take place within national borders. Countries like the UK must mobilize politically guided capital instruments to gain direct influence in mining operations across the global supply chain. 

Funds such as British International Investment should seriously consider taking investment positions overseas that complement other instruments such as UK Export Finance – so that the UK has a stake in – and access to – mineral production it cannot achieve domestically.

Control over value

If the UK and EU are serious about improving minerals access, then they must also seek to increase control through equity. 

There is precedent: shared private/ government ownership structures are commonplace in the oil industry. The mining industry is moving towards this model, and governments should take advantage of the shift. Representatives of national oil companies that sit on boards and engage in corporate governance as non-operating partners bring significant skills and knowledge. For the UK, EU and others, there is a need to bring technical skills into government, that can then be deployed into such positions. 

Government investment at an early stage has other benefits: It can de-risk mining projects by providing patient capital and committing to purchase a portion of the mine’s future production. This can make projects more economically viable and attractive to others. But governments must also go into projects with their eyes open. They are not picking winners seeking short term gains. Rather, they are giving projects an improved chance of long-term success. 

Government intervention should not be guided by a desire for profit or job creation. A measure of long-term control of supply chains should be the objective.

Countries like the UK and EU member states can also provide important means for greater democratic oversight of Environmental, Social and Governance criteria and responsible performance standards in the mining sector. They can also be important representatives of indigenous peoples’ rights, while promoting environmental protections, and pushing for more sustainable practice. 

However, government intervention should not be guided by a desire for profit or job creation. A measure of long-term control of supply chains should be the objective for industrial EU countries and the UK, serving the more pressing need: to protect critical industries and manufacturing jobs that depend on mining sector products. 

Governments that take stakes in critical minerals ventures in developing countries must strike a careful balance. In many cases their investments will be welcome, as the financial liability of investing in mining is even greater for developing nations and is normally not the most effective way to invest their money. But international partners should work to build triangulated state-backed joint ventures, balancing their desire for security of supply with exporting countries’ demands for control over national resource wealth.  

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:45

Leader uses first major economic speech to prioritise public services and reduction of inequality over growth

A government led by the Green party would not set targets for GDP growth but would instead focus on people’s mental health, social cohesion and community welfare, Zack Polanski has said in a major speech to set out his plans for the economy.

In his first policy address since taking over as leader of the Greens in England and Wales six months ago, Polanski condemned what he called “rip-off Britain”, where a minority of asset owners benefited at the expense of people obliged to pay unaffordable sums for housing and other basics.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:44

Venezuela played with heart, Italy sipped espresso and the Dominicans showed off their verve at the tournament. America wanted to concentrate on war

On the morning of the World Baseball Classic final between the United States and Venezuela, the headline of the New York Times daily briefing read, “America, alone,” in reference to the unwillingness of the country’s traditional allies to join the war with Iran. The revived rhetoric of America First, once a restoration of the isolationist, often Nazi-sympathetic sentiments of the 1930s, has coalesced into current policy, status, attitude: America by itself, making its own rules, intent on largely playing alone by them.

Venezuela won the final, thrillingly, 3-2 over Team USA, but not before the hosts extended that isolationism with a sourness that produced a comically vapid extension of American bravado, and nearly undermined a tournament that in its 20th year is at last becoming one of baseball’s great successes.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:40

Cuba “can’t fix” its economy, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, as President Donald Trump said his administration will be “doing something with Cuba very soon.”

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:39

Ilya Remeslo sends Telegram post titled ‘Five reasons why I stopped supporting Vladimir Putin’ to his 90,000 followers

For years, Ilya Remeslo was a reliable pro-Kremlin operator, going after critics of the regime and smearing independent journalists, bloggers and opposition politicians.

Then the 42-year-old lawyer abruptly turned on the country’s most powerful man. Late on Tuesday, Remeslo posted a manifesto to his 90,000 Telegram followers titled: “Five reasons why I stopped supporting Vladimir Putin.”

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:34

LOS ANGELES, March 18, 2026 — Marvell Technology, Inc., a leader in data infrastructure semiconductor solutions, has announced Marvell Structera S 30260―a new 260-lane CXL switch device that enables rack-level memory pooling. Working in concert with Marvell Structera A near-memory accelerators, Structera X memory-expansion controllers and Alaska P PCIe/CXL retimers, the new switch allows data center operators to further increase memory bandwidth and capacity by providing access to disaggregated memory resources outside the server.

CXL switching has long supported traditional CPU computing architectures and has also now become essential for accelerated AI data center infrastructure. As AI clusters expand dramatically in scale and complexity, memory capacity has hit a wall, becoming a primary constraint on the performance and efficiency of these systems. Exploding large language model (LLM) sizes, expanding context windows and growing key-value cache requirements are driving unprecedented memory demands. Traditional approaches are becoming increasingly inefficient and costly, and they cannot support the massive capacity required by these larger and more complex AI workloads.

Leveraging industry-leading switch solutions through the recent acquisition of XConn Technologies, the Structera S CXL switch device enables true memory pooling across the rack, allowing hyperscalers and data center operators to dynamically expand and allocate memory resources across CPUs, GPUs, XPUs and other accelerators without replacing existing platforms or relying solely on HBM stacking. It enables a large scalable, composable resource that can deliver higher memory utilization, improved data flow efficiency and AI application performance, greater infrastructure design flexibility and scalability, and reduced overall total cost of ownership.

“Breaking through the AI memory wall requires a fundamental architectural change,” said Rishi Chugh, vice president and general manager, Data Center Switch Business Unit at Marvell. “The Structera S CXL switch is the first true CXL switching solution purpose-built for AI. By enabling composable memory across the fabric, we are fundamentally reshaping and improving memory pooling efficiency as AI infrastructure scales.”

“KV‑cache is driving an exploding demand for memory capacity to support LLM inference,” said Gerry Fan, senior vice president, engineering, Scale-up Switching at Marvell. “The CXL switch offers an ideal solution by providing a near‑local, shared memory pool with sub‑microsecond access, which eliminates multi-hop data movement and unlocks higher throughput, longer context and improved GPU utilization.”

“Limited availability of DRAM in the market and runaway pricing, compounded with broader macroeconomic and supply chain issues, are upending the plans of data center operators as they rush to scale infrastructure to support rapidly expanding AI workflows,” said James Sanders, senior analyst at TechInsights. “Industry adoption of CXL 3.0-compliant technologies, including the Structera S CXL switch, can help alleviate these issues, giving operators the flexibility to scale infrastructure as needed to meet future AI infrastructure demand.”

Industry’s First Comprehensive CXL Portfolio

With CXL 3.0 support and aggregate bandwidth up to 4TB/s, the Structera S CXL switch bolsters the existing Marvell CXL product family, which includes Marvell Structera A CXL near-memory accelerators and Structera X CXL memory-expansion controllers. It also includes Marvell Alaska P PCIe/CXL retimers and copper and optical cable solutions from Marvell ecosystem partners. The PCIe/CXL cable solutions scale connections between GPUs, CPUs, XPUs, CXL memory, SSDs, and other PCIe components, enabling low-power, high-speed and low-latency connectivity that scales within servers and clusters to power accelerated AI data center infrastructure.

The addition of XConn Technologies CXL switches to the existing Marvell CXL portfolio creates a complete end-to-end CXL fabric architecture spanning expansion, acceleration and pooling, supporting both traditional compute and next-generation scale-up AI environments.

Availability

The Marvell Structera S 30260 CXL switch is expected to begin sampling to customers in calendar Q3 2026. The Structera S 20256 CXL 2.0 switch is currently in production.

Marvell will showcase its end-to-end connectivity portfolio at OFC 2026, March 17–19, at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California. Visit the Marvell booth #1600 to learn how the company is enabling the next generation of data center and AI infrastructure.

About Marvell

To deliver the data infrastructure technology that connects the world, we’re building solutions on the most powerful foundation: our partnerships with our customers. Trusted by the world’s leading technology companies for over 30 years, we move, store, process and secure the world’s data with semiconductor solutions designed for our customers’ current needs and future ambitions. Through a process of deep collaboration and transparency, we’re ultimately changing the way tomorrow’s enterprise, cloud and carrier architectures transform—for the better.


Source: Marvell

The post Marvell Introduces Structera S CXL Switch for Rack-Scale Memory Pooling in AI Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:25

We explored virtual reality, got red light therapy, ate barbecue and heard about visions of technology's future.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:24

I asked career cooks what they actually think about electric can openers, mixers and pepper mills -- and whether or not they're worth the splurge.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:19

More than 200 Americans at Balad site say they have no evacuation plan as fears grow of a post-Ramadan assault

Hundreds of US contractors are stranded on a major military base near Baghdad, Iraq, with no evacuation plan, while local Iran-backed militants are possibly making plans to attack the base, three sources said.

The contractors are employed on the Martyr Brigadier General Ali Flaih Air Base, formerly Balad Air Base, to support the Iraqi government’s F-16 fighter jet program.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:15

USPS Postmaster General David Steiner said raising the price of stamps would "largely solve" the agency's financial woes.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:00

Cybertrucks have locked passengers inside and burned so hot they’ve disintegrated drivers’ bones. Victims’ families blame what they say is the faulty design of a truck Elon Musk calls ‘apocalypse-proof’

When sheriff deputies arrived at the scene of a late-night crash off a desolate Texas road in August 2024, they could see a giant pyre through heavy smoke.

According to police reports detailing the events of that night, the officers tried to approach the vehicle, but the fire burned too intensely. They saw it was a Tesla Cybertruck and couldn’t see anyone inside. So they combed the surrounding area for the driver.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:00

Japan’s super-popular prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, will visit the White House on Thursday, as President Donald Trump looks to allies for military help against Iran.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 09:00
Shira Lerner

SHIRA LERNER
Staff Reporter

Despite the cold, overcast weather in Newark recently, a group of 16 dedicated volunteers met up on Feb. 19 at White Clay Creek State Park to remove invasive plants.

They congregated around a car, taking gloves and tools out of the trunk and catching up with one another. While they normally work on a trail in the woods, the rapidly melting snow moved the group to the roadside for the week. 

This is the Volunteer Environmental Stewardship team, led by Terri Tipping, dedicated to removing invasive plants in the Judge Morris Estate (JME) area of the park.

“While the work is endless, after a period of time we can actually see progress,” Bill McGonegal, who has been a member of the group for almost five years, said. 

McGonegal was looking for volunteer work to do as he entered retirement and stumbled across the JME group while walking his dog one day. He volunteered on the first Thursday after he retired and has come back ever since.

Tipping founded the group 10 years ago as a way to keep busy after her own retirement. The Volunteer Environmental Stewardship team has grown from 746 volunteered hours in 2017 to nearly 5,000 in 2024, and over 500 volunteers participated in 2024 alone.

This number includes one-time volunteers who come from companies like Delmarva and Chemours, schools and other organizations, along with the regular weekly volunteers.

Although Tipping founded the group, various volunteers have grown confident in their skills and become captains of smaller teams in order to tackle other areas of the park. These teams include DeVine Intervention, started by volunteers who joined the cause specifically to fight invasive vines, and Barberry-Anns, a group named after the invasive plant Japanese Barberry.

Most of the regular volunteers are retirees, many of whom had no previous knowledge of invasive plants. Others were familiar with the work, but joined the group looking for community or a way to get fresh air and exercise.  

Peter Saenger is in his eighth year as a regular volunteer with the Environmental Stewardship team. He was doing work to control invasive species in his own yard, but then heard about the group and decided to join.

“It’s a wonderful combination of being outside, being with people, and doing good work,” Saenger said.

On Feb. 19, the group was spread along Polly Drummond Hill Road, cutting and discarding invasive plants. 

“We’ve been cutting the multiflora and the honeysuckle and the mulberry,” Tipping said. “I contacted the park and it’s the white mulberry that they want us to get out of here.”

According to Brian Kunkel, the university’s ornamentals integrated pest management extension specialist, invasive plants and insects can make their way around the world in a variety of ways. 

Commonly, plant nurseries can become infested with invasive insects that spread to customers, or through mail-order decorative plants for their yards. This exacerbates the issue, as invasive plants can serve as a food source for invasive insects. 

“Nature does well on its own,” Kunkel said. “Problems come about when we get in the way.”

“The old concept of a preserve meant you set aside this piece of land, you don’t allow people to build things on it and ruin it, you just walk away and it’ll be okay,” Laura M. Lee, park superintendent IV at White Clay Creek State Park, said. “That is not the case anymore, you can’t just walk away. Even a preserve needs care or nothing in there is gonna be preserved, it’s getting all choked out.”

Invasive plants have always been present due to global trade and travel, but the problem in Delaware parks has gotten progressively worse in recent years. One of the ways volunteers in the Environmental Stewardship team prevent the invasive plants from growing back after they have been removed is by using bingo daubers — small plastic bottles with sponge tips that release product when squeezed — to paint the stumps with the pink-dyed herbicide Vaslan.

“Before this, we had to wait for the park people to come and spray,” Saenger said. “But this thing puts the herbicide just exactly where you want it, it doesn’t leak because you have to apply pressure, and because of the color you know where it is.”

Delaware State Parks have reduced spraying of chemicals for safety reasons, and currently the park mainly sprays for legally noxious weeds. Additionally, anyone spraying chemicals needs to be a certified pesticide applicator, which can slow down the treatment process due to a limited number of certified applicators. 

As long as a certified pesticide applicator is present and monitoring use of daubers, multiple volunteers can be applying the chemicals at a time, making the process much more thorough and efficient. The daubers also apply the chemical directly to the plant’s stump, preventing chemicals from being released into the air.

“Getting involved is a really good way to learn,” Lee said. 

The Volunteer Environmental Stewardship team meets every Thursday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the parking lot of the JME. There are also volunteer opportunities along Creek Road for university students who do not have access to transportation.

“We just have limited resources,” Lee said. “We’ll never have enough people or manpower or money to effectively control them all.”


Citizens take action to reduce invasive species in White Clay Creek State Park was first posted on March 18, 2026 at 8:00 am.
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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-18 09:00

Cut off from Europe by Brexit and cast adrift by Donald Trump, maintaining diplomatic expertise and connections is crucial

Of all the concerns in the world, the demise of the Ferrero Rocher ambassador might not be top of the agenda. In days gone by, thanks to an excruciating TV advert, the chocolate with the golden wrapping was synonymous with the diplomatic circuit. You really had made it if you offered them up to your bejewelled and bemedalled guests.

That was the 1990s. Almost all diplomats I have met over the years are very serious and very hardworking. They still must schmooze and dress up on occasion, but most of their time is spent trying to fathom out what’s going on and reporting that back to base, often from difficult places.

John Kampfner’s latest book, Braver New World, is published in April

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 08:41

Snub comes as Iran vows revenge for killing of Ali Larijani. Plus, judge orders reinstatement of Voice of America staff

Good morning.

Donald Trump has said the US does not need Nato, after a number of the organization’s members rejected his call to send their warships to reopen the strait of Hormuz.

How many people have been displaced in Iran? Up to 3.2 million people, according to the UN’s refugee agency. Here, Tehran residents speak about their daily life under bombardment.

For the latest updates, follow our liveblog.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 08:16

Sky News Arabia has been accused of broadcasting propaganda and whitewashing genocide in Sudan

Sky is considering terminating its joint venture with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) after accusations it is involved in broadcasting propaganda and genocide denial.

Sky is in talks with its partner in the UAE on Sky News Arabia over the potential termination next year of the licence to use its brand.

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2026-03-18 08:04
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Google says Fitbit's AI Coach will offer improved sleep insights and use your medical records for more personalized advice.

2026-03-18 08:04
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The WNBA and its players' union reached a verbal agreement on a transformational new collective bargaining agreement early Wednesday morning, both sides said.

2026-03-18 08:04
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The 2026 Illinois primary results in the race for governor set up a rematch between Gov. JB Pritzker and his 2022 Republican challenger Darren Bailey.

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Don't let fear or frustration force you to give up something you love. It may be a process of adaptation and discovery, but ultimately, it's still about fun.

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Omni-Man has returned to Earth -- but is he really here to help save it?

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 08:00

Instead of regime change, all the bombing has produced so far is regime reinforcement and no end in sight

With the US-Israeli bombing of Iran now in its third week, its costs are mounting, its purpose is increasingly muddled and potential off-ramps have become frustratingly elusive. Yet rather than succumb to despair, we should urgently press for this destructive war to end.

Iran never engaged in an actual or imminent attack that would justify a war of self-defense. The best that Donald Trump could muster was an argument of prevention – that Iran’s missile program and capacity to disrupt the Middle East must be curtailed, along with its ability to build a nuclear weapon. But the UN charter does not permit armed attacks for mere preventive purposes; that would open the door to endless armed conflicts. And even by the standard of Trump’s inadequate justification for war, his bombing has been a fiasco.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 08:00

$11.3bn more than enough to fund EPA or National Cancer Institute, where administration sought to slash budgets

The US spent $11.3bn on just the first week of its military assault on Iran. This huge expenditure dwarves the annual budgets of many of the public health and scientific agencies the Trump administration has sought to cut, raising stark questions about the country’s priorities.

In the six days that followed the US and Israel’s joint attack on Iran on 28 February, $11.3bn was spent on American taxpayer-funded bombs that hit the country and caused hundreds of deaths, the Pentagon has told lawmakers. This figure does not capture the full cost of the conflict, such as deployment of forces, and will now be far higher given the ongoing nature of the war.

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 08:00

Florida restricted teaching around sex, gender and race. Lux is now giving students a forum for these issues

On a Tuesday night, at Florida’s only public liberal arts college, a small group of students gathered in a classroom to discuss issues deemed “controversial” on state campuses: transgender rights, feminism, immigration. But perhaps what they wanted to address most was how to combat despair.

“It’s important to stand and resist,” said Nya Jacobson, a New College of Florida senior. “But this place is a lost cause.”

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2026-03-18 12:04
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It’s that time of year when people start giving up on their New Year’s resolutions. Here’s how I stay focused -- and how you can, too.

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Never worry whether your garage is closed again with these high-tech smart motors and retrofits.

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City lawyers say former mayor is not entitled to public-funded defense over alleged 1993 sexual assault

The administration of New York City’s mayor, Zohran Mamdani, wants to stop representing Eric Adams in a lawsuit that alleges the former mayor sexually assaulted a woman more than three decades ago, according to a court filing on Tuesday.

The move comes just a few months after Mamdani took office, following a bitter campaign season last year that had the two Democrats taking turns bashing each other in often caustic and personal terms.

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2026-03-18 12:04
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The movement-based Nex Playground might be the antidote to parental screen time guilt.

2026-03-18 16:04
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The WNBA and its players’ union reached an agreement in principle on a new collective bargaining agreement early Wednesday morning.

Specifics still need to be finalized over the next few weeks as lawyers on both sides work on the new deal. A term sheet should be completed in the next day or two. It will then need to be ratified by the players and then approved by the league’s Board of Governors.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-18 07:12

The Iran war should boost security cooperation by US Pacific allies like Japan, the Philippines and South Korea  Expert comment jon.wallace

The war is fuelling worries about US commitment to its Pacific partners. The ‘triangle’ of US-aligned countries must use the moment to strengthen their mutual defence. 

Philippine Navy sailors hold a Japanese flag in front of a Hyuga-class helicopter destroyer of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, in Manila on 21 June 2025. (

The US war with Iran is shaking up security in the Indo-Pacific. Earlier this month, it was reported that the US had begun pulling THAAD and Patriot missile-defence systems from South Korea to boost its defences in the Middle East – even as North Korea continued cruise missile tests. 

The Pentagon also redirected around 2500 marines and an amphibious warship from Japan to the Arabian Sea – at a time when Tokyo’s relations with Beijing are under significant strain.

Such moves raise questions in the wider region about the US’s reliability as a security partner. For decades, the US invested time, money, and troops to develop a strong web of security relationships across East Asia that countries have come to rely on – particularly Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines. As President Donald Trump wages war in the Middle East, that carefully constructed Pacific web is overshadowed by significant uncertainty. US allies in the region should meet this new security environment by boosting their interoperability.  

Worries over US commitment 

For now, the new liberal leadership in Seoul is presenting a strong front about US redeployments. But missile defence systems like THAAD are a vital buffer against ever growing aggression from their northern neighbour. Reportedly, concerns were raised strongly to the US but were overruled, highlighting the vulnerability of relying upon easily movable US assets. 

This has caused additional consternation as these missile systems came at significant political and economic cost to South Korea. Following the purchase of THAAD, China punished Seoul with economic sanctions, indicating its displeasure at having US capabilities so close. 

US and Korean forces are continuing to carry out military drills as scheduled. And for now, Washington has reaffirmed its commitment to helping to maintain peace on the peninsula. But any US move to redeploy assets away from South Korea will feed anxieties about a US administration that has repeatedly criticized Seoul for its defence spending.

In Tokyo, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has signalled interest in further cooperation with the US, by getting involved in Trump’s ambitious Golden Dome initiative.

Takaichi has also promised to accelerate an increase in Japanese defence spending, acknowledging US pressure for allies to do more on defence. But the Iran war is creating economic pressure for the prime minister at a time when she is trying to move forward an ambitious reform agenda. And Trump’s recent call for Japanese warships and others to help secure the Strait of Hormuz sits uneasily with Japan’s pacifist constitution – creating a rather complicated picture for Takaichi to navigate. 

The Philippines is yet to see any US deployments change as a result of the Iran war. But concerns are rising. The longer the war continues, the more pressure will grow on US munitions stockpiles. That could yet affect the Philippines. As tensions continue with China over sovereignty disputes in the South China Sea, reliance on US for defence essentials is coming to be viewed as more of a risk, and anxiety is starting to grow in Manila.

Meanwhile, all three countries are facing increasing economic pressure caused by skyrocketing oil prices.

Domestic concerns 

The war, and US deployments, also create domestic political issues. The head of Japan’s main opposition party, Junya Ogawa, signalled frustration following the US redeployment of assets, saying that Japan did not allow US troops on to their territory ‘so they can sortie from those bases to fire missiles towards the Middle East’. 

In South Korea, where President Lee Jae-Myung is striving to rebuild trust in Korean democracy following an attempted coup by his predecessor last year, some conservative news outlets are anxious that recent US actions have diminished the country’s ability to defend itself. 

In the Philippines, dependence on the US has long been a point of attack used against the administration of President Ferdinand ‘BongBong’ Marcos Jr – who is currently battling corruption allegations. And the war has ignited worries that ties with the US place a target on Filipino soil, should Iran choose to attack US assets in Asia. 

The war in Iran also cuts more personally for the Filipino public. Around one in four seafarers are Filipino, and many now face danger and uncertainty as tensions continue to flare in the Strait of Hormuz. 

Yet, even as these leaders share a common security challenge and domestic pressures, they also have a unique opportunity to overcome this predicament – together.

Establishing a triangle trilateral would benefit all (including the US)

Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines have been described by US military commanders as forming a security ‘triangle’ in the Indo-Pacific because of their strategic locations and important role in balancing Chinese power. 

Yet, for all their mutual interests, the three allies do not have a trilateral security arrangement, only numerous bilateral agreements. 

Japan, South Korea and the US undertook naval exercises in 2025. And Japan and the Philippines conducted joint naval exercises in June the same year. But ‘triangle’ joint naval exercises have not taken place without a US presence. More and better integration is needed.

A formal and binding trilateral security arrangement is necessary to ensure strong interoperability, intelligence sharing, advanced military tactics and munitions supplies. 

In order to bridge the gap the US might leave in coming years, a formal and binding trilateral security arrangement is necessary to ensure strong interoperability, intelligence sharing, advanced military tactics and good munitions supplies. 

There is a clear foundation for such an agreement: the three countries’ mutual cooperation with the US exhibits commitment to shared norms and principles, providing them with an excellent basis for multi-layered and trust-based cooperation. 

The Philippines has enjoyed good bilateral relations with Japan and South Korea. And although Tokyo and Seoul have had a difficult history, their current leaders have shown commitment to bettering relations, sealed by a drum duet earlier this year. This foundation of friendship and respect will certainly smooth the process of integrating into a shared security community. Expanding current bilateral agreements to include a third country would accelerate this process as well. 

For example, by extending the current Japan–Philippines reciprocal access agreement to include South Korea, waters within the triangle would see smoother movement of military vessels and more frequent joint training exercises. Disaster response would also likely improve. 

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:04

If you're thinking of popping popcorn in an air fryer, you'll want to read this expert advice first.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:01

Samsung, Apple and Google have unveiled their early-2026 phones but gear up for the rest of the year. We're in for some very exciting foldables and Ultra camera phones.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:01

Commentary: Foldables are everywhere now and Apple is the only major phone-maker without one.

2026-03-18 08:04
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Pardoned by Trump after violating US banking law, Ben Delo provides funding, networking, and podcasting space for a range of groups, including those with hardline views on migration and abortion

A British billionaire convicted in the US for failing to implement adequate money-laundering controls on his cryptocurrency business is funding a political base in the heart of Westminster used by “anti-woke” and rightwing activists.

Ben Delo, 42, who was pardoned by Donald Trump last year, has given support in kind to Rupert Lowe, the anti-migration MP challenging Nigel Farage from the right – while also connecting with mainstream figures including the Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch and former cabinet minister Michael Gove.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:00

Ottawa wants to modernize a region in the north that’s about six times the size of Texas, ‘just like in the 1800s’

Picture an Arctic territory, marginalized by its own country, almost entirely lacking roads, ports and power sources, but rich in mining potential and suddenly feeling vulnerable to outside threats.

It’s not Greenland; it’s the Canadian Arctic.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:00

Use AI as a brainstorming partner and organizer, but don’t outsource your judgment

Three years on from the release of ChatGPT, two broad camps have formed: those people who refuse to use it, and those who use it every day.

A 2025 survey by the Pew Research Center found that one-third of US adults say they have been using ChatGPT. This includes 58% of US adults under 30 – roughly double the share two years ago.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:00

Tasteless political merch is nothing new to Donald Trump, but it’s a particularly bad look if you’re married to Bill Clinton

We live in a golden age of tasteless political merchandise. This is largely thanks to Donald Trump: over the years the president’s official store has flogged everything from hoodies with Joe Biden falling downstairs on them to a T-shirt with a version of the mugshot from his 2023 booking on felony charges (Trump denied wrongdoing).

Trump isn’t the only one. Back in 2019, Senator Mitch McConnell, then Senate majority leader, sold more than 2,000 T-shirts referencing “Cocaine Mitch”. This had nothing to do with his hobbies; it was in response to a nickname given to McConnell by a political rival off the back of a baseless allegation. “One of the things we learned with this whole ‘Cocaine Mitch’ phenomenon is that people are really engaged,” one of the staffers involved in the T-shirt sales said at the time. “They want merchandise.”

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2026-03-18 08:04
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Records shed light on how Scott Brown – then Trump’s New Zealand ambassador, now running for Senate – responded to Kennedy’s 2019 Samoa trip ahead of measles outbreak

When Robert F Kennedy Jr ran for president as a Democrat in 2023, he found an unexpected ally in Scott Brown. A former Republican senator, Brown had begun a tradition of hosting Republican presidential candidates for barbecues in his New Hampshire back yard, where they could stump for votes and get attention ahead of the state’s crucial primary.

Kennedy became Brown’s first Democratic invitee. His appearance in September 2023 drew hundreds of people, Brown’s biggest crowd ever. Kennedy held Brown in such high regard that after he decided to run instead as an independent, he reportedly reached out to Brown as a possible vice-presidential running mate, though Brown declined.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:00

Sociology faculty are refusing to alter syllabi, even as state targets how race, gender and inequality are taught

Across Florida universities, some sociology professors are quietly choosing not to alter their courses in response to new state guidelines restricting how topics like race, gender and sexuality can be discussed. Rather than rewriting syllabi or removing foundational material, as the new demands would call for, they say they are continuing to teach their classes as designed. The professors view the preservation of their curricula not as an act of defiance, but as a professional responsibility to provide students with a full and rigorous education.

In late January, Florida’s department of education introduced what many professors are calling a censored sociology textbook for use in the state’s public colleges and universities, along with a list of proposed guidelines at state schools, restricting various discussions related to systemic discrimination, gender and sexual identity, race-conscious remedies, and the structural causes of inequality. Faculty members say this move reflects a broader effort to narrow academic freedom in higher education and follows several years of legislation aimed at reshaping public university curricula under the banner of combating “woke ideology”.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 07:00

Guardian analysis of more than a million emails reveals financier’s deep and longstanding ties with the wealthy and powerful

The release of the Epstein files has reverberated around the world, leading to at least nine resignations and investigations into high-profile figures, including the former UK ambassador to Washington, Peter Mandelson, and the ex-prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

The deluge of information has made it hard to assess the extent of the connections but a Guardian data analysis reveals how frequent, deep and longstanding his ties were to a number of high-profile figures.

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2026-03-18 08:04
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London Marathon runners will be the first to experience this partnership during the upcoming April race.

2026-03-18 08:04
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From favorite streaming services to voice assistant tasks, these smart speakers wowed us in our testing.

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sciencehabit shares a report from Science.org: In The Martian, fictional astronaut Mark Watney survives the wasteland of Mars by growing potatoes in lunar soil -- with a bit of help from human poop. The idea may not be so far-fetched. In a preprint posted this month on bioRxiv, researchers show potatoes can indeed grow in the equivalent of Moon dust, though they need a lot of help from compost found on Earth. To make the discovery, scientists first had to re-create lunar regolith -- the loose, powdery layer that blankets the Moon's surface. To replicate that in the lab, David Handy, a space biologist at Oregon State University (OSU), and his colleagues used a mix of crushed minerals and volcanic ash that matched the chemistry of the Moon. But lunar regolith is entirely devoid of the organic matter that plants need to grow. "Turning an inorganic, inhospitable bucket of glorified sand into something that can support plant growth is complex," says Anna-Lisa Paul, a plant molecular biologist at the University of Florida not involved with the work. So Handy and his colleagues added vermicompost -- organic waste from worms -- into the regolith. They found that a mix with 5% compost allowed the potatoes to grow while still emulating the stressful conditions of the lunar environment. After almost 2 months of growth, the team harvested the tubers, freeze-dried them, and ground them up for further testing. Analysis of the potatoes' DNA showed stress-related genes had been activated. The potatoes also had higher concentrations of copper and zinc than Earth-grown ones, which may make them dangerous for human consumption. The plants' nutritional value, though, was similar to traditional potatoes -- a surprise to the scientists, who expected lower levels of nutrition "because the plants might have been working overtime to overcome certain stressors," Handy says.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 16:04
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Untold numbers will get sick as a result. Clinics are scrambling, and no one seems to be able to explain why this is happening

They’re calling it a funding cliff for sexual health in America. Pap smears and HIV tests will be cancelled. IUD appointments will have to be rebooked; condoms and birth control pills that used to be free will now come with a price tag. Maternal health outcomes will worsen, and STDs will spread. Some nurses, doctors, and other health clinic staff will be laid off, and clinic hours will be slashed. The long-term impacts for public health could be horrific.

On 31 March, millions of Americans may lose access to birth control and STD screening services provided by the Title X program, a $286m annual public health investment that provides sexual and reproductive care for Americans, mostly women, who are low-income or lack health insurance. More than 2 million people used the program in 2023; now, they are likely to be denied care – being forced to pay out-of-pocket for services that used to be free, or to make the decision to go without.

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2026-03-18 08:04
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This easy meal kit service was never my favorite. Here's how Home Chef fared in our most recent testing.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 06:51

Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton is projected to win the heated and crowded Democratic primary race for the U.S. Senate seat that Dick Durbin has held for nearly 30 years, according to CBS News analysis.

2026-03-18 08:04
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An Arkansas law requiring that the Ten Commandments be prominently displayed in public school classrooms has been struck down by a federal judge.

2026-03-19 08:04
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Jessie Holmes is the third competitor in the 54-year history of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race to repeat the year after winning for the first time.

2026-03-18 08:04
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Thousands of students to be offered vaccines in response to quickest-growing outbreak experts have seen

The number of meningitis infections linked to Kent continues to grow, with five confirmed new cases on Wednesday, in what experts have described as the quickest-growing outbreak of the disease they have seen.

The UK Health Security Agency said that as of 5pm on Tuesday there were 20 cases of invasive meningococcal disease, up from 15. Nine have been confirmed in the laboratory, while a further 11 are under investigation. Six are confirmed to be the meningitis B strain, also known as MenB, which is the most common form of invasive meningococcal disease.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 06:15

Over the next week, around 800 high temperature records are forecast to be neared, tied or broken at 165 locations in Western and Central states.

2026-03-18 08:04
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Stick vacuums are a convenient alternative to corded designs, but which model wins for overall cleaning prowess? Our expert reveals all

The best robot vacuums
How to make your vacuum last longer

Choosing a cordless vacuum isn’t a decision that should be taken lightly. You’re likely to keep a vacuum cleaner for years, relying heavily on its ability to suck up dust, crumbs, mud, pet hair and any other dry spillages or sheddings that end up on your floor. Choosing the right model can be the difference between an effective cleaner that’s a delight to pull out of the cupboard and a dud that you dread having to unblock, detangle and clean after every use.

In this review, I took 15 of the leading cordless vacuum cleaners from a range of manufacturers and at various prices and inflicted the same cleaning tests on each one. That takes all the guesswork out of picking your next cleaner: I can tell you exactly which ones picked up the most mess.

Best cordless vacuum cleaner overall:
Shark PowerDetect Clean & Empty IP3251

Best budget cordless vacuum cleaner:
Vax HomePro Pet-Design

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 06:00

Fans love watching an underdog cause an upset. The problem is that unbeaten teams are unbeaten for a reason

A classic narrative, dating back to the classic matchup of David v Goliath, is the underdog v the favorite.

The only problem is that the underdog is an underdog for the reason. Sure, everyone loves it when a David wins, but Goliath usually swats him away with predictable ease and then pounds him into the dirt. Which leads to a problem: who, other than devoted fans of the team in question, roots for the perennial champions? Isn’t that a bit like watching Hoosiers and rooting for the big kids to beat Gene Hackman’s scrappy underdogs? Or watching Rocky IV and rooting for Drago?

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 06:00

The US president is using the language and the strategy of authoritarians once again

There’s nothing completely new in Donald Trump’s latest attacks on reporters.

But they’re more extreme now and ever more indicative of what he wants: a docile press that provides propaganda – not factual journalism – for everything he does, including for his misguided war in Iran.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 06:00

Sara Brannon alleges high school overseen by the Roman Catholic archdiocese was negligent in treatment of her 17-year-old son

A suburban New Orleans woman whose teenaged son died by suicide hours after his Catholic school expelled him in the wake of what he termed a shoving match with a campus bully is pursuing a wrongful death lawsuit against the local archdiocese.

Sara Brannon contends that Rummel high school in Metairie, Louisiana, was negligent in its treatment of her son, 17-year-old Devon Shelton, and is therefore owed damages, including for mental anguish as well as physical pain and suffering.

In the US, you can call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org. In the UK, the youth suicide charity Papyrus can be contacted on 0800 068 4141 or email pat@papyrus-uk.org, and in the UK and Ireland Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org

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2026-03-18 08:04
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AT&T customers have a new app for managing their accounts, including some parental controls and access to more data.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 06:00

Amid signs that Republicans may lose some of the Latino support that the party picked up in 2024, grassroots organizations are stepping in to boost GOP Senate candidates in key midterm races.

2026-03-18 08:04
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President Trump is likely to make less of an impact on the federal bench in his second term because of fewer vacancies, a slower pace of retirements and the potential for Democrats to regain control of the Senate in November.

2026-03-18 12:04
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First-of-its-kind framework enables seamless integration of quantum computers with advanced accelerators to support AI-native and QEC-native quantum computing at scale

DENVER, March 18, 2026 — Quantum Machines has launched The Open Acceleration Stack, a first-of-its-kind framework allowing users to integrate any classical processor (XPU) into their quantum control stack. This novel architecture allows quantum computers not only to be Quantum Error Correction (QEC)-ready and AI-ready, but also QEC- and AI-native.

Credit: Quantum Machines

The Open Acceleration Stack marks a significant expansion of Quantum Machines’ Orchestration Platform, the industry’s leading hardware and software framework for the control and operation of quantum processors. Using Quantum Machines’ OPNIC (OPX Network Interface Card) and NVIDIA NVQLink, the framework enables an ultra-low, microsecond-level latency link between its proprietary Pulse Processing Unit (PPU) and high-performance accelerators, including GPUs, CPUs, FPGAs and ASICs.

Important computational tasks, such as decoding for real-time QEC and advanced AI-native QPU and circuit calibration, require a variety of processors and accelerators to work in harmony and communicate with low latency, high bandwidth and synchronization with the PPU, which runs the quantum program. Quantum Machines’ Open Acceleration Stack enables this hybridization, allowing users to develop and deploy complex hybrid workloads.

Users can deploy CPU-GPU-QPU integration using NVIDIA NVQLink through co-development by Quantum Machines and NVIDIA.

With this solution now evolving into an Acceleration Stack with an open, modular architecture, labs and enterprises will be able to integrate a range of classical processors, from CPUs by companies like AMD, as well as FPGAs, high-performance NVIDIA GPUs, and real-time quantum error correction systems from partners such as Riverlane. This allows users to right-size their setup to meet specific performance and budget requirements and choose the optimal architecture for their applications.

“The Open Acceleration Stack reflects the industry’s shift from quantum computing demonstration to scaling and integration,” said Yonatan Cohen, CTO and Co-Founder, Quantum Machines. “It meets the needs of two critical areas of quantum development: real-time error correction and advanced qubit calibration,

and provides the framework to scale both hardware and software with user experience and performance in mind. We are very excited to engage with our customers and the entire quantum community around these tools and their utilization to advance the field and bring useful quantum computation closer.”

Industry partners highlighted the importance of tightly integrating accelerated computing infrastructure with quantum control systems to enable scalable hybrid architectures.

Sam Stanwyck, Director of Quantum Product at NVIDIA, commented: “GPU computing is integrating deeply with quantum processors to scale logical qubits. With NVIDIA NVQLink, Quantum Machines is delivering the low-latency, high-bandwidth performance to power real-time quantum error correction and calibration – bringing practical, large-scale quantum-GPU supercomputing closer to reality.”

“The path to scalable quantum computing depends on heterogeneous architectures that combine quantum processors with high-performance classical compute,” said Madhu Rangarajan, Corporate Vice President, Computing, Enterprise and AI technologies, AMD. “The Open Acceleration Stack enables integration of AMD CPUs and adaptive computing technologies into the quantum control layer, supporting demanding workloads such as real-time error correction and complex hybrid algorithms. By bringing leadership high-performance compute into quantum control systems, AMD is helping enable the next phase of scalable quantum research and deployment.”

As the industry moves toward fault-tolerant quantum computing, fast and reliable quantum error correction will be essential for building large-scale systems. “Fault-tolerant quantum computing depends on fast, reliable quantum error correction running in real time,” said Steve Brierley, Founder & CEO of Riverlane. “Delivering that capability requires specialized classical infrastructure tightly integrated with the quantum control stack to produce reliable logical qubits at scale. Open frameworks such as Quantum Machines’ Open Acceleration Stack help enable this level of integration, representing an important step toward scalable, error-corrected quantum computers.”

Quantum Machines will be hosting live demonstrations of the new Open Acceleration Stack at the APS Global Physics Summit (March 15-20, 2026, Denver, CO) on booth #1607. The first will showcase a fault-tolerant quantum phase estimation using an OPX1000-based system, and the second will remotely connect to live qubits at the IQCC to demonstrate real-time qubit calibration.

About Quantum Machines

Quantum Machines (QM) is a global leading provider of quantum control solutions, driving the advancement of quantum computing with its hybrid control approach. By harmonizing quantum and classical operations, hybrid control eliminates friction and optimizes performance across hardware and software, enabling researchers and builders to iterate at speed, resolve setbacks, and bring visionary ideas to life. Quantum Machines’ Orchestration Platform supports any type of quantum processor, empowering the industry to scale systems, accelerate breakthroughs, and push the boundaries – previously impossible. Learn more at: https://www.quantum-machines.co.


Source: Quantum Machines

The post Quantum Machines Launches Open Acceleration Stack Alongside NVIDIA, AMD and Riverlane appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware Secretary of Education Cindy Marten will announce a decision Thursday about the future of the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence. If she follows a state recommendation to close the school, it would mean that more than a hundred families will have to search for new places to send their kids. 

A state decision scheduled for Thursday of whether to force the closure of the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence highlights the sometimes volatile nature of charter schools in Delaware. 

In contrast with traditional public schools, those independently operated, publicly funded entities can be shuttered when state officials determine they haven’t sufficiently served students – or don’t have a sustainable path to do so in the future. 

Advocates say the model creates a competitive market that ensures that only the best charter schools survive and thrive. 

“If we’re not doing great things for kids, we’ve got to figure out a better way to either do it — or to just stop doing it,” said Charter Schools Network Executive Director Kendall Massett, who advises the nearly two dozen charter schools in Delaware.

But the model has also left some Delaware families scrambling to find new places to send their children following past closures. 

Over the previous decades, more than 10 charter schools have closed in Delaware as a result of low enrollment, financial instability, or academic performance concerns. Each one has uprooted students from their daily routines.  

Last week, during a meeting of state officials investigating the Bryan Allen Stevenson school, one mom expressed concern that a move back to traditional public education could cause her daughter’s academic performance and confidence to regress.  

“Behind every data point is a family or a child like ours,” the mother, Candace Kinsler, said.  

U.S Deputy Secretary for Education Cynthia "Cindy" Marten is seen smiling in her official portrait photo.
Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten has the final say in whether to shutter the Bryan Allen Stevenson School for Excellence. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DDOE

In February, Delaware education officials recommended the state close the Georgetown school, commonly referred to as BASSE, at the end of the 2025-26 school year — citing low enrollment.

The recommendation now goes before Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten, who will announce a final decision on Thursday. Last week’s hearing marked the final chance for families and school community members to voice their thoughts before the final decision is made. 

If Marten does close BASSE, it would mark the first charter closure in the state in seven years – and the first to be closed by Delaware regulators in a decade.

It would also leave Sussex County with just two charter schools, compared to six in Kent County and 15 in New Castle County.

A rocky few decades

Charter schools first began operating in Delaware in the 1990s. Since then, several have thrived. But there also have been waves of closures at others. 

The Charter School of Wilmington, which shares a building with the Cab Calloway School of the Arts, has been among the highest rated Delaware high schools. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JULIA MEROLA

In 1996, Delaware approved a school choice program, allowing families to enroll their children in district and charter schools outside of their designated feeder patterns. That same year, the Charter School of Wilmington opened. It has since become among the highest rated high schools in the state. 

Delaware’s first charter closure occurred in 2000 when the Richard Milburn Academy – a Wilmington school operated by a national organization — relinquished its charter after a year of operation. It marked the first of several closures to occur in Delaware’s largest city.  

Two years later, Georgetown Charter School garnered national attention when state officials shuttered its doors after finding the school was more than $1.5 million in debt, according to reports. 

By 2008, the Marian T. Academy in Wilmington closed after the State Board of Education voted not to renew its charter. 

As WDEL reported at the time, then-Education Secretary Valerie Woodruff expressed concern about poor student performance, saying the school failed to meet the standards of the Delaware Student Testing Program or the No Child Left Behind Act. 

The following decade marked an even more tumultuous time for charters, with nine schools closing between 2013 and 2019. 

In 2013, state officials cited low student proficiency rates, and what they described as a lack of recruitment plans and economic viability when they closed the Pencader Business & Finance Charter High School in New Castle, according to a state report

Low test scores were also concerns at the Maurice J. Moyer Academic Institute in Wilmington when it closed at the end of the 2014-15 school year, as reported by The News Journal.  

That same year, it was a federal judge who made the final decision to close the Reach Academy for Girls in Wilmington. 

Over the following four years, low enrollment or low test scores continued to plague certain schools, contributing to the closure of six additional charters. 

Those were the Delaware College Preparatory Academy in Wilmington; the Delaware MET in Wilmington; Delaware STEM Academy in New Castle; Prestige Academy in Wilmington; the Delaware Academy of Public Safety and Security in New Castle; and Newark’s Design Thinking Academy. 

The former Delaware College Preparatory Academy on West 28th Street is seen in September 2024.
The former Delaware College Preparatory Academy sits on West 28th Street in Wilmington. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

The Delaware Academy of Public Safety and Security closure was particularly jarring for students, as it happened without warning during the school year, as reported by The News Journal.   

The school sent a letter to families at the time stating that its board had just learned of “new financial information” that showed a budget deficit to be “far greater than previously believed.” 

By contrast, then-Secretary of Education Susan Bunting credited Design Thinking Academy’s early decision to close “recognizing that the low enrollment would inevitably lead to financial challenges that would make it impossible for the school to provide its students with the academic program they deserve.” 

Is more oversight an answer?

For some families and staff at BASSE, a potential closure would be premature. 

During last week’s meeting, they noted that the school has struggled with enrollment, but said it needs more than two years of classes to become successful. More guardrails from the state could also help the school thrive, they said. 

In particular, one teacher said during the meeting that allowing the school to remain open with “clear oversight” would strengthen its accountability by “ensuring progress is measured and transparency is maintained.”

The school’s enrollment has sat at 123 students in recent months, compared with 230 students during the school’s first year in operation in the fall of 2024, according to state records.

State funding at charter schools is determined by the number of students enrolled. The independently operated schools are not eligible to receive taxpayer dollars for facilities and capital projects. 

Currently, a sign outside the main school building reads, “Come take your place at BASSE!”

The school is named after the prominent civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson who was born in nearby Milton. Among its founders is State Rep. Alonna Berry (D-Milton).

The post Sussex school closure decision highlights volatility of Delaware charters appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-18 06:00

The nation’s largest health records company, Epic Systems, sued firms including GuardDog Telehealth, alleging they improperly accessed personal medical records.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-18 06:00

In late 2024, the federal government’s cybersecurity evaluators rendered a troubling verdict on one of Microsoft’s biggest cloud computing offerings.

The tech giant’s “lack of proper detailed security documentation” left reviewers with a “lack of confidence in assessing the system’s overall security posture,” according to an internal government report reviewed by ProPublica.

Or, as one member of the team put it: “The package is a pile of shit.”

For years, reviewers said, Microsoft had tried and failed to fully explain how it protects sensitive information in the cloud as it hops from server to server across the digital terrain. Given that and other unknowns, government experts couldn’t vouch for the technology’s security.

Such judgments would be damning for any company seeking to sell its wares to the U.S. government, but it should have been particularly devastating for Microsoft. The tech giant’s products had been at the heart of two major cybersecurity attacks against the U.S. in three years. In one, Russian hackers exploited a weakness to steal sensitive data from a number of federal agencies, including the National Nuclear Security Administration. In the other, Chinese hackers infiltrated the email accounts of a Cabinet member and other senior government officials.

The federal government could be further exposed if it couldn’t verify the cybersecurity of Microsoft’s Government Community Cloud High, a suite of cloud-based services intended to safeguard some of the nation’s most sensitive information.

Yet, in a highly unusual move that still reverberates across Washington, the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, or FedRAMP, authorized the product anyway, bestowing what amounts to the federal government’s cybersecurity seal of approval. FedRAMP’s ruling — which included a kind of “buyer beware” notice to any federal agency considering GCC High — helped Microsoft expand a government business empire worth billions of dollars.

“BOOM SHAKA LAKA,” Richard Wakeman, one of the company’s chief security architects, boasted in an online forum, celebrating the milestone with a meme of Leonardo DiCaprio in “The Wolf of Wall Street.” Wakeman did not respond to requests for comment.

It was not the type of outcome that federal policymakers envisioned a decade and a half ago when they embraced the cloud revolution and created FedRAMP to help safeguard the government’s cybersecurity. The program’s layers of review, which included an assessment by outside experts, were supposed to ensure that service providers like Microsoft could be entrusted with the government’s secrets. But ProPublica’s investigation — drawn from internal FedRAMP memos, logs, emails, meeting minutes, and interviews with seven former and current government employees and contractors — found breakdowns at every juncture of that process. It also found a remarkable deference to Microsoft, even as the company’s products and practices were central to two of the most damaging cyberattacks ever carried out against the government.

This is not security. This is security theater.

Tony Sager, former NSA computer scientist

FedRAMP first raised questions about GCC High’s security in 2020 and asked Microsoft to provide detailed diagrams explaining its encryption practices. But when the company produced what FedRAMP considered to be only partial information in fits and starts, program officials did not reject Microsoft’s application. Instead, they repeatedly pulled punches and allowed the review to drag out for the better part of five years. And because federal agencies were allowed to deploy the product during the review, GCC High spread across the government as well as the defense industry. By late 2024, FedRAMP reviewers concluded that they had little choice but to authorize the technology — not because their questions had been answered or their review was complete, but largely on the grounds that Microsoft’s product was already being used across Washington.

Today, key parts of the federal government, including the Justice and Energy departments, and the defense sector rely on this technology to protect highly sensitive information that, if leaked, “could be expected to have a severe or catastrophic adverse effect” on operations, assets and individuals, the government has said.

“This is not a happy story in terms of the security of the U.S.,” said Tony Sager, who spent more than three decades as a computer scientist at the National Security Agency and now is an executive at the nonprofit Center for Internet Security.

For years, the FedRAMP process has been equated with actual security, Sager said. ProPublica’s findings, he said, shatter that facade.

“This is not security,” he said. “This is security theater.”

The U.S. Capitol building at night with a red light in the corner.
Despite a “lack of confidence in assessing” the security of Microsoft’s GCC High, FedRAMP authorized the product anyway. Alex Wong/Getty Images

ProPublica is exposing the government’s reservations about this popular product for the first time. We are also revealing Microsoft’s yearslong inability to provide the encryption documentation and evidence the federal reviewers sought.

The revelations come as the Justice Department ramps up scrutiny of the government’s technology contractors. In December, the department announced the indictment of a former employee of Accenture who allegedly misled federal agencies about the security of the company’s cloud platform and its compliance with FedRAMP’s standards. She has pleaded not guilty. Accenture, which was not charged with wrongdoing, has said that it “proactively brought this matter to the government’s attention” and that it is “dedicated to operating with the highest ethical standards.”

Microsoft has also faced questions about its disclosures to the government. As ProPublica reported last year, the company failed to inform the Defense Department about its use of China-based engineers to maintain the government’s cloud systems, despite Pentagon rules stipulating that “No Foreign persons may have” access to its most sensitive data. The department is investigating the practice, which officials say could have compromised national security.

Microsoft has defended its program as “tightly monitored and supplemented by layers of security mitigations,” but after ProPublica’s story published last July, the company announced that it would stop using China-based engineers for Defense Department work.

In response to written questions for this story and in an interview, Microsoft acknowledged the yearslong confrontation with FedRAMP but also said it provided “comprehensive documentation” throughout the review process and “remediated findings where possible.”

“We stand by our products and the comprehensive steps we’ve taken to ensure all FedRAMP-authorized products meet the security and compliance requirements necessary,” a spokesperson said in a statement, adding that the company would “continue to work with FedRAMP to continuously review and evaluate our services for continued compliance.”

But these days, ProPublica found, there aren’t many people left at FedRAMP to work with.

The program was an early target of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, which slashed its staff and budget. Even FedRAMP acknowledges it is operating “with an absolute minimum of support staff” and “limited customer service.” The roughly two dozen employees who remain are “entirely focused on” delivering authorizations at a record pace, FedRAMP’s director has said. Today, its annual budget is just $10 million, its lowest in a decade, even as it has boasted record numbers of new authorizations for cloud products.

The consequence of all this, people who have worked for FedRAMP told ProPublica, is that the program now is little more than a rubber stamp for industry. The implications of such a downsizing for federal cybersecurity are far-reaching, especially as the administration encourages agencies to adopt cloud-based artificial intelligence tools, which draw upon reams of sensitive information.

The General Services Administration, which houses FedRAMP, defended the program, saying it has undergone “significant reforms to strengthen governance” since GCC High arrived in 2020. “FedRAMP’s role is to assess if cloud services have provided sufficient information and materials to be adequate for agency use, and the program today operates with strengthened oversight and accountability mechanisms to do exactly that,” a GSA spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

The agency did not respond to written questions regarding GCC High.

A “Cloud First” World

About two decades ago, federal officials predicted that the cloud revolution, providing on-demand access to shared computing via the internet, would usher in an era of cheaper, more secure and more efficient information technology. 

Moving to the cloud meant shifting away from on-premises servers owned and operated by the government to those in massive data centers maintained by tech companies. Some agency leaders were reluctant to relinquish control, while others couldn’t wait to.

In an effort to accelerate the transition, the Obama administration issued its “Cloud First” policy in 2011, requiring all agencies to implement cloud-based tools “whenever a secure, reliable, cost-effective” option existed. To facilitate adoption, the administration created FedRAMP, whose job was to ensure the security of those tools

FedRAMP’s “do once, use many times” system was intended to streamline and strengthen the government procurement process. Previously, each agency using a cloud service vetted it separately, sometimes applying different interpretations of federal security requirements. Under the new program, agencies would be able to skip redundant security reviews because FedRAMP authorization indicated that the product had already met standardized requirements. Authorized products would be listed on a government website known as the FedRAMP Marketplace.

On paper, the program was an exercise in efficiency. But in practice, the small FedRAMP team could not keep up with the flood of demand from tech companies that wanted their products authorized. 

The slow approval process frustrated both the tech industry, eager for a share in the billions of federal dollars up for grabs, and government agencies that were under pressure to migrate to the cloud. These dynamics sometimes pitted the cloud industry and agency officials together against FedRAMP. The backlog also prompted many agencies to take an alternative path: performing their own reviews of the products they wanted to adopt, using FedRAMP’s standards. 

It was through this “agency path” that GCC High entered the federal bloodstream, with the Justice Department paving the way. Initially, some Justice officials were nervous about the cloud and who might have access to its information, which includes highly sensitive court and law enforcement records, a Justice Department official involved in the decision told ProPublica. The department’s cybersecurity program required it to ensure that only U.S. citizens “access or assist in the development, operation, management, or maintenance” of its IT systems, unless a waiver was granted. Justice’s IT specialists recommended pursuing GCC High, believing it could meet the elevated security needs, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters.

Pursuant to FedRAMP’s rules, Microsoft had GCC High evaluated by a so-called third-party assessment organization, which is supposed to provide an independent review of whether the product has met federal standards. The Justice Department then performed its own evaluation of GCC High using those standards and ruled the offering acceptable.

A smiling woman with long brown hair wearing a pink shirt and silver necklace poses in front of a U.S. flag.
Melinda Rogers, former chief information officer for the Department of Justice U.S. Department of Justice archives

By early 2020, Melinda Rogers, Justice’s deputy chief information officer, made the decision official and soon deployed GCC High across the department.

It was a milestone for all involved. Rogers had ushered the Justice Department into the cloud, and Microsoft had gained a significant foothold in the cutthroat market for the federal government’s cloud computing business. 

Moreover, Rogers’ decision placed GCC High on the FedRAMP Marketplace, the government’s influential online clearinghouse of all the cloud providers that are under review or already authorized. Its mere mention as “in process” was a boon for Microsoft, amounting to free advertising on a website used by organizations seeking to purchase cloud services bearing what is widely seen as the government’s cybersecurity seal of approval.

That April, GCC High landed at FedRAMP’s office for review, the final stop on its bureaucratic journey to full authorization. 

Microsoft’s Missing Information

In theory, there shouldn’t have been much for FedRAMP’s team to do after the third-party assessor and Justice reviewed GCC High, because all parties were supposed to be following the same requirements.

But it was around this time that the Government Accountability Office, which investigates federal programs, discovered breakdowns in the process, finding that agency reviews sometimes were lacking in quality. Despite missing details, FedRAMP went on to authorize many of these packages. Acknowledging these shortcomings, FedRAMP began to take a harder look at new packages, a former reviewer said.

This was the environment in which Microsoft’s GCC High application entered the pipeline. The name GCC High was an umbrella covering many services and features within Office 365 that all needed to be reviewed. FedRAMP reviewers quickly noticed key material was missing.

The team homed in on what it viewed as a fundamental document called a “data flow diagram,” former members told ProPublica. The illustration is supposed to show how data travels from Point A to Point B — and, more importantly, how it’s protected as it hops from server to server. FedRAMP requires data to be encrypted while in transit to ensure that sensitive materials are protected even if they’re intercepted by hackers.

But when the FedRAMP team asked Microsoft to produce the diagrams showing how such encryption would happen for each service in GCC High, the company balked, saying the request was too challenging. So the reviewers suggested starting with just Exchange Online, the popular email platform.

“This was our litmus test to say, ‘This isn’t the only thing that’s required, but if you’re not doing this, we are not even close yet,’” said one reviewer who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal matters. Once they reached the appropriate level of detail, they would move from Exchange to other services within GCC High.

It was the kind of detail that other major cloud providers such as Amazon and Google routinely provided, members of the FedRAMP team told ProPublica. Yet Microsoft took months to respond. When it did, the former reviewer said, it submitted a white paper that discussed GCC High’s encryption strategy but left out the details of where on the journey data actually becomes encrypted and decrypted — so FedRAMP couldn’t assess that it was being done properly.

A Microsoft spokesperson acknowledged that the company had “articulated a challenge related to illustrating the volume of information being requested in diagram form” but “found alternate ways to share that information.”

Rogers, who was hired by Microsoft in 2025, declined to be interviewed. In response to emailed questions, the company provided a statement saying that she “stands by the rigorous evaluation that contributed to” her authorization of GCC High. A spokesperson said there was “absolutely no connection” between her hiring and the decisions in the GCC High process, and that she and the company complied with “all rules, regulations, and ethical standards.”

The Justice Department declined to respond to written questions from ProPublica.

A Fight Over “Spaghetti Pies”

As 2020 came to a close, a national security crisis hit Washington that underscored the consequences of cyber weakness. Russian state-sponsored hackers had been quietly working their way through federal computer systems for much of the year and vacuuming up sensitive data and emails from U.S. agencies — including the Justice Department

At the time, most of the blame fell on a Texas-based company called SolarWinds, whose software provided hackers their initial opening and whose name became synonymous with the attack. But, as ProPublica has reported, the Russians leveraged that opening to exploit a long-standing weakness in a Microsoft product — one that the company had refused to fix for years, despite repeated warnings from one of its engineers. Microsoft has defended its decision not to address the flaw, saying that it received “multiple reviews” and that the company weighs a variety of factors when making security decisions.

In the aftermath, the Biden administration took steps to bolster the nation’s cybersecurity. Among them, the Justice Department announced a cyber-fraud initiative in 2021 to crack down on companies and individuals that “put U.S. information or systems at risk by knowingly providing deficient cybersecurity products or services, knowingly misrepresenting their cybersecurity practices or protocols, or knowingly violating obligations to monitor and report cybersecurity incidents and breaches.”

Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said the department would use the False Claims Act to pursue government contractors “when they fail to follow required cybersecurity standards — because we know that puts all of us at risk.”

A woman with chin-length brown hair in a blue blazer looks toward the camera. Abstract blue and red light patterns blur in the foreground and background.
Former Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. After Russian state-sponsored hackers stole sensitive data from U.S. agencies, Monaco said the Department of Justice would hold government contractors accountable for failing to uphold cybersecurity standards. Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

But if Microsoft felt any pressure from the SolarWinds attack or from the Justice Department’s announcement, it didn’t manifest in the FedRAMP talks, according to former members of the FedRAMP team.

The discourse between FedRAMP and Microsoft fell into a pattern. The parties would meet. Months would go by. Microsoft would return with a response that FedRAMP deemed incomplete or irrelevant. To bolster the chances of getting the information it wanted, the FedRAMP team provided Microsoft with a template, describing the level of detail it expected. But the diagrams Microsoft returned never met those expectations.

“We never got past Exchange,” one former reviewer said. “We never got that level of detail. We had no visibility inside.”

In an interview with ProPublica, John Bergin, the Microsoft official who became the government’s main contact, acknowledged the prolonged back-and-forth but blamed FedRAMP, equating its requests for diagrams to a “rock fetching exercise.” 

“We were maybe incompetent in how we drew drawings because there was no standard to draw them to,” he said. “Did we not do it exactly how they wanted? Absolutely. There was always something missing because there was no standard.”

A Microsoft spokesperson said without such a standard, “cloud providers were left to interpret the level of abstraction and representation on their own,” creating “inconsistency and confusion, not an unwillingness to be transparent.” 

But even Microsoft’s own engineers had struggled over the years to map the architecture of its products, according to two people involved in building cloud services used by federal customers. At issue, according to people familiar with Microsoft’s technology, was the decades-old code of its legacy software, which the company used in building its cloud services. 

One FedRAMP reviewer compared it to a “pile of spaghetti pies.” The data’s path from Point A to Point B, the person said, was like traveling from Washington to New York with detours by bus, ferry and airplane rather than just taking a quick ride on Amtrak. And each one of those detours represents an opportunity for a hijacking if the data isn’t properly encrypted.

Other major cloud providers such as Amazon and Google built their systems from the ground up, said Sager, the former NSA computer scientist, who worked with all three companies during his time in government.

Microsoft’s system is “not designed for this kind of isolation of ‘secure’ from ‘not secure,’” Sager said.

A Microsoft spokesperson acknowledged the company faces a unique challenge but maintained that its cloud products meet federal security requirements.

“Unlike providers that started later with a narrower product scope, Microsoft operates one of the broadest enterprise and government platforms in the world, supporting continuity for millions of customers while simultaneously modernizing at scale,” the spokesperson said in emailed responses. “That complexity is not ‘spaghetti,’ but it does mean the work of disentangling, isolating, and hardening systems is continuous.”

The spokesperson said that since 2023, Microsoft has made “security‑first architectural redesign, legacy risk reduction, and stronger isolation guarantees a top, company‑wide priority.”

Assessors Back-Channel Cyber Concerns

The FedRAMP team was not the only party with reservations about GCC High. Microsoft’s third-party assessment organizations also expressed concerns.

The firms are supposed to be independent but are hired and paid by the company being assessed. Acknowledging the potential for conflicts of interest, FedRAMP has encouraged the assessment firms to confidentially back-channel to its reviewers any negative feedback that they were unwilling to bring directly to their clients or reflect in official reports.

In 2020, two third-party assessors hired by Microsoft, Coalfire and Kratos, did just that. They told FedRAMP that they were unable to get the full picture of GCC High, a former FedRAMP reviewer told ProPublica.

“Coalfire and Kratos both readily admitted that it was difficult to impossible to get the information required out of Microsoft to properly do a sufficient assessment,” the reviewer told ProPublica.

The back channel helped surface cybersecurity issues that otherwise might never have been known to the government, people who have worked with and for FedRAMP told ProPublica. At the same time, they acknowledged its existence undermined the very spirit and intent of having independent assessors.

A spokesperson for Coalfire, the firm that initially handled the GCC High assessment, requested written questions from ProPublica, then declined to respond. 

A spokesperson for Kratos, which replaced Coalfire as the GCC High assessor, declined an interview request. In an emailed response to written questions, the spokesperson said the company stands by its official assessment and recommendation of GCC High and “absolutely refutes” that it “ever would sign off on a product we were unable to fully vet.” The company “has open and frank conversations” with all customers, including Microsoft, which “submitted all requisite diagrams to meet FedRAMP-defined requirements,” the spokesperson said.

Kratos said it “spent extensive time working collaboratively with FedRAMP in their review” and does not consider such discussions to be “backchanneling.”

FedRAMP, however, was dissatisfied with Kratos’ ongoing work and believed the firm “should be pushing back” on Microsoft more, the former reviewer said. It placed Kratos on a “corrective action plan,” which could eventually result in loss of accreditation. The company said it did not agree with FedRAMP’s action but provided “additional trainings for some internal assessors” in response to it. 

The Microsoft spokesperson told ProPublica the company has “always been responsive to requests” from Kratos and FedRAMP. “We are not aware of any backchanneling, nor do we believe that backchanneling would have been necessary given our transparency and cooperation with auditor requests,” the spokesperson said.

In response to questions from ProPublica about the process, the GSA said in an email that FedRAMP’s system “does not create an inherent conflict of interest for professional auditors who meet ethical and contractual performance expectations.”

GSA did not respond to questions about back-channeling but said the “correct process” is for a third-party assessor to “state these problems formally in a finding during the security assessment so that the cloud service provider has an opportunity to fix the issue.”

FedRAMP Ends Talks

A silhouette of a person wearing a shoulder bag is surrounded by shadow. Behind the person is a large building full of windows and a blue sky.
FedRAMP is housed under the General Services Administration within the federal government. Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The back-and-forth between the FedRAMP reviewers and Microsoft’s team went on for years with little progress. Then, in the summer of 2023, the program’s interim director, Brian Conrad, got a call from the White House that would alter the course of the review.

Chinese state-sponsored hackers had infiltrated GCC, the lower-cost version of Microsoft’s government cloud, and stolen data and emails from the commerce secretary, the U.S. ambassador to China and other high-ranking government officials. In the aftermath, Chris DeRusha, the White House’s chief information security officer, wanted a briefing from FedRAMP, which had authorized GCC.

The decision predated Conrad’s tenure, but he told ProPublica that he left the conversation with several takeaways. First, FedRAMP must hold all cloud providers — including Microsoft — to the same standards. Second, he had the backing of the White House in standing firm. Finally, FedRAMP would feel the political heat if any cloud service with a FedRAMP authorization were hacked.

DeRusha confirmed Conrad’s account of the phone call but declined to comment further.

Within months, Conrad informed Microsoft that FedRAMP was ending the engagement on GCC High.

We can’t even quantify the unknowns, which makes us very uncomfortable.

FedRAMP reviewer of GCC High

“After three years of collaboration with the Microsoft team, we still lack visibility into the security gaps because there are unknowns that Microsoft has failed to address,” Conrad wrote in an October 2023 email. This, he added, was not for FedRAMP’s lack of trying. Staffers had spent 480 hours of review time, had conducted 18 “technical deep dive” sessions and had numerous email exchanges with the company over the years. Yet they still lacked the data flow diagrams, crucial information “since visibility into the encryption status of all data flows and stores is so important,” he wrote.

If Microsoft still wanted FedRAMP authorization, Conrad wrote, it would need to start over.

A FedRAMP reviewer, explaining the decision to the Justice Department, said the team was “not asking for anything above and beyond what we’ve asked from every other” cloud service provider, according to meeting minutes reviewed by ProPublica. But the request was particularly justified in Microsoft’s case, the reviewer told the Justice officials, because “each time we’ve actually been able to get visibility into a black box, we’ve uncovered an issue.”

“We can’t even quantify the unknowns, which makes us very uncomfortable,” the reviewer said, according to the minutes.

Microsoft and the Justice Department Push Back

Microsoft was furious. Failing to obtain authorization and starting the process over would signal to the market that something was wrong with GCC High. Customers were already confused and concerned about the drawn-out review, which had become a hot topic in an online forum used by government and technology insiders. There, Wakeman, the Microsoft cybersecurity architect, deflected blame, saying the government had been “dragging their feet on it for years now.”

Meanwhile, to build support for Microsoft’s case, Bergin, the company’s point person for FedRAMP and a former Army official, reached out to government leaders, including one from the Justice Department.

The Justice official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter, said Bergin complained that the delay was hampering Microsoft’s ability “to get this out into the market full sail.” Bergin then pushed the Justice Department to “throw around our weight” to help secure FedRAMP authorization, the official said.

A man with short black hair and goatee and wearing glasses and a suit slightly smiles in front of a U.S. flag and another flag.
John Bergin in 2019, while serving as deputy assistant secretary of the Army for financial information management. He was later hired by Microsoft and served as the company’s liaison with FedRAMP during the GCC High debate. Defense Visual Information Distribution Service

That December, as the parties gathered to hash things out at GSA’s Washington headquarters, Justice did just that. Rogers, who by then had been promoted to the department’s chief information officer, sat beside Bergin — on the opposite side of the table from Conrad, the FedRAMP director.

Rogers and her Justice colleagues had a stake in the outcome. Since authorizing and deploying GCC High, she had received accolades for her work modernizing the department’s IT and cybersecurity. But without FedRAMP’s stamp of approval, she would be the government official left holding the bag if GCC High were involved in a serious hack. At the same time, the Justice Department couldn’t easily back out of using GCC High because once a technology is widely deployed, pulling the plug can be costly and technically challenging. And from its perspective, the cloud was an improvement over the old government-run data centers.

Shortly after the meeting kicked off, Bergin interrupted a FedRAMP reviewer who had been presenting PowerPoint slides. He said the Justice Department and third-party assessor had already reviewed GCC High, according to meeting minutes. FedRAMP “should essentially just accept” their findings, he said.

Then, in a shock to the FedRAMP team, Rogers backed him up and went on to criticize FedRAMP’s work, according to two attendees.

In its statement, Microsoft said Rogers maintains that FedRAMP’s approach “was misguided and improperly dismissed the extensive evaluations performed by DOJ personnel.”

Bergin did not dispute the account, telling ProPublica that he had been trying to argue that it is the purview of third-party assessors such as Kratos — not FedRAMP — to evaluate the security of cloud products. And because FedRAMP must approve the third-party assessment firms, the program should have taken its issues up with Kratos.

“When you are the regulatory agency who determines who the auditors are and you refuse to accept your auditors’ answers, that’s not a ‘me’ problem,” Bergin told ProPublica.

The GSA did not respond to questions about the meeting. The Justice Department declined to comment.

Pressure Mounts on FedRAMP

If there was any doubt about the role of FedRAMP, the White House issued a memorandum in the summer of 2024 that outlined its views. FedRAMP, it said, “must be capable of conducting rigorous reviews” and requiring cloud providers to “rapidly mitigate weaknesses in their security architecture.” The office should “consistently assess and validate cloud providers’ complex architectures and encryption schemes.”

But by that point, GCC High had spread to other federal agencies, with the Justice Department’s authorization serving as a signal that the technology met federal standards.

It also spread to the defense sector, since the Pentagon required that cloud products used by its contractors meet FedRAMP standards. While it did not have FedRAMP authorization, Microsoft marketed GCC High as meeting the requirements, selling it to companies such as Boeing that research, develop and maintain military weapons systems.

But with the FedRAMP authorization up in the air, some contractors began to worry that by using GCC High, they were out of compliance. That could threaten their contracts, which, in turn, could impact Defense Department operations. Pentagon officials called FedRAMP to inquire about the authorization stalemate.

The Defense Department acknowledged but did not respond to written questions from ProPublica.

Rogers also kept pressing FedRAMP to “get this thing over the line,” former employees of the GSA and FedRAMP said. It was the “opinion of the staff and the contractors that she simply was not willing to put heat to Microsoft on this” and that the Justice Department “was too sympathetic to Microsoft’s claims,”  Eric Mill, then GSA’s executive director for cloud strategy, told ProPublica.

Authorization Despite a “Damning” Assessment 

In the summer of 2024, FedRAMP hired a new permanent director, government technology insider Pete Waterman. Within about a month of taking the job, he restarted the office’s review of GCC High with a new team, which put aside the debate over data flow diagrams and instead attempted to examine evidence from Microsoft. But these reviewers soon arrived at the same conclusion, with the team’s leader complaining about “getting stiff-armed” by Microsoft.

“He came back and said, ‘Yeah, this thing sucks,’” Mill recalled.

While the team was able to work through only two of the many services included in GCC High, Exchange Online and Teams, that was enough for it to identify “issues that are fundamental” to risk management, including “timely remediation of vulnerabilities and vulnerability scanning,” according to a summary of the team’s findings reviewed by ProPublica.

Those issues, as well as a lack of “proper detailed security documentation” from Microsoft, limit “visibility and understanding of the system” and “impair the ability to make informed risk decisions.”

The team concluded, “There is a lack of confidence in assessing the system’s overall security posture.” 

A Microsoft spokesperson said in a statement that the company “never received this feedback in any of its communications with FedRAMP.”

When ProPublica read the findings to Bergin, the Microsoft liaison, he said he was surprised.

“That’s pretty damning,” Bergin said, adding that it sounded like language that “would’ve generally been associated with a finding of ‘not worthy.’ If an assessor wrote that, I would be nervous.”

Despite the findings, to the FedRAMP team, turning Microsoft down didn’t seem like an option. “Not issuing an authorization would impact multiple agencies that are already using GCC-H,” the summary document said. The team determined that it was a “better value” to issue an authorization with conditions for continued government oversight.

While authorizations with oversight conditions weren’t unusual, arriving at one under these circumstances was. GCC High reviewers saw problems everywhere, both in what they were able to evaluate and what they weren’t. To them, most of the package remained a vast wilderness of untold risk.

Nevertheless, FedRAMP and Microsoft reached an agreement, and the day after Christmas 2024, GCC High received its FedRAMP authorization. FedRAMP appended a cover report to the package laying out its deficiencies and noting it carried unknown risks, according to people familiar with the report.

It emphasized that agencies should carefully review the package and engage directly with Microsoft on any questions.

“Unknown Unknowns” Persist

Microsoft told ProPublica that it has met the conditions of the agreement and has “stayed within the performance metrics required by FedRAMP” to ensure that “risks are identified, tracked, remediated, and transparently communicated.”

But under the Trump administration, there aren’t many people left at FedRAMP to check.

While the Biden-era guidance said FedRAMP “must be an expert program that can analyze and validate the security claims” of cloud providers, the GSA told ProPublica that the program’s role is “not to determine if a cloud service is secure enough.” Rather, it is “to ensure agencies have sufficient information to make these risk decisions.”

The problem is that agencies often lack the staff and resources to do thorough reviews, which means the whole system is leaning on the claims of the cloud companies and the assessments of the third-party firms they pay to evaluate them. Under the current vision, critics say, FedRAMP has lost the plot.

“FedRAMP’s job is to watch the American people’s back when it comes to sharing their data with cloud companies,” said Mill, the former GSA official, who also co-authored the 2024 White House memo. “When there’s a security issue, the public doesn’t expect FedRAMP to say they’re just a paper-pusher.”

When there’s a security issue, the public doesn’t expect FedRAMP to say they’re just a paper-pusher.

Eric Mill, former GSA executive director for cloud strategy

Meanwhile, at the Justice Department, officials are finding out what FedRAMP meant by the “unknown unknowns” in GCC High. Last year, for example, they discovered that Microsoft relied on China-based engineers to service their sensitive cloud systems despite the department’s prohibition against non-U.S. citizens assisting with IT maintenance.

Officials learned about this arrangement — which was also used in GCC High — not from FedRAMP or from Microsoft but from a ProPublica investigation into the practice, according to the Justice employee who spoke with us.

A Microsoft spokesperson acknowledged that the written security plan for GCC High that the company submitted to the Justice Department did not mention foreign engineers, though he said Microsoft did communicate that information to Justice officials before 2020. Nevertheless, Microsoft has since ended its use of China-based engineers in government systems.

Former and current government officials worry about what other risks may be lurking in GCC High and beyond.

The GSA told ProPublica that, in general, “if there is credible evidence that a cloud service provider has made materially false representations, that matter is then appropriately referred to investigative authorities.”

Ironically, the ultimate arbiter of whether cloud providers or their third-party assessors are living up to their claims is the Justice Department itself. The recent indictment of the former Accenture employee suggests it is willing to use this power. In a court document, the Justice Department alleges that the ex-employee made “false and misleading representations” about the cloud platform’s security to help the company “obtain and maintain lucrative federal contracts.” She is also accused of trying to “influence and obstruct” Accenture’s third-party assessors by hiding the product’s deficiencies and telling others to conceal the “true state of the system” during demonstrations, the department said. She has pleaded not guilty.

There is no public indication that such a case has been brought against Microsoft or anyone involved in the GCC High authorization. The Justice Department declined to comment. Monaco, the deputy attorney general who launched the department’s initiative to pursue cybersecurity fraud cases, did not respond to requests for comment.

She left her government position in January 2025. Microsoft hired her to become its president of global affairs.

A company spokesperson said Monaco’s hiring complied with “all rules, regulations, and ethical standards” and that she “does not work on any federal government contracts or have oversight over or involvement with any of our dealings with the federal government.”

The post Federal Cyber Experts Thought Microsoft’s Cloud Was “a Pile of Shit.” They Approved It Anyway. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-18 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Roughly a quarter of Delaware’s land mass is made up of wetlands – marshy ecosystems saturated with water that improve water quality, prevent floods and store carbon. But not all wetland types are afforded the same legal protections. Environmental rule changes at the federal level are prompting state lawmakers to find local solutions to protect some of the most vulnerable — and valuable — wetlands left behind.

As the Trump administration continues efforts to roll back environmental regulations, a gap in policies at the state level could leave some of Delaware’s most vulnerable wetland habitats protected only by the owners of the land where they are found.

State Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown) is hoping to change that.

For months, the chair of the Senate’s Environment, Energy & Transportation Committee has been workshopping a bill that would create a new regulatory committee tasked with developing a program within the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) that would oversee the state’s nontidal wetlands – the kinds of marshy ecosystems found across the state that are not connected to rivers or bays but can still help improve water quality and prevent floods.

“This is a bill that’s going to set the bones of a wetlands program for the state of Delaware,” Hansen said.

The idea, she added, is to combine the state’s existing tidal wetlands program — for marshes that do connect with rivers or bays — with a yet-to-be-created non-tidal program.

While it will be up to a regulatory advisory committee to actually create the new program, the idea is that it would govern how non-tidal wetlands are identified and protected if, say, a development were being proposed for the same spot. 

These marshy areas can be home to some of the rarest state species, like the Eastern tiger salamander in northern Delaware, but also can be found on the fringes of some of the state’s southern farmlands.

But Hansen’s proposal could fall squarely in the midst of a decades-long struggle between environmentalists and private land owners.

Generational Delaware farmers like Jay Baxter understand what is at stake. The father of four said some of his best times are spent with his boys exploring the outdoors. But he also worries about state regulators overstepping future farming and property rights. Farmers and developers alike have raised alarms about giving DNREC too much additional regulatory discretion.

And since marshy spaces are widespread in a coastal state like Delaware, figuring out exactly how to appropriately regulate — and even how to accurately identify and rank — certain types of wetlands means contending with those competing land use interests. 

Why do wetlands matter?

Not only do wetlands provide habitats to unique plants and animals, but they also can act as sponges during storms to absorb floodwaters and filter pollutants. That has become increasingly important as more and more of the state, particularly in Sussex County, sees increased development and greater flood risks due to increased impervious surfaces, climate change and rising sea levels.

But Sussex County has historically fought more stringent protections along its waterways. In 2008, the county sued state regulators who tried to set buffers along Inland Bays waterways as part of a pollution control strategy. The county prevailed in court, with the Delaware Supreme Court ruling it was up to the county to develop land-use policies.

At the federal level, the Trump administration has nixed efforts by Democratic predecessors to apply more protections to “Waters of the United States” under the Clean Water Act. The public comment period for the newly proposed rule, which would exclude protections for many of America’s seasonal and nontidal wetlands, closed in early January.

This also is not the first time Hansen has introduced a freshwater wetlands program bill. In 2024, she introduced Senate Bill 290 to regulate non-tidal wetlands, but it did not make it out of committee.

Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown) is the leading proponent for environmental concerns in Delaware, and she wants to create new protections for non-tidal wetlands. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

That bill’s fiscal note ranged from about $1.5 million to $3 million annually to create, grow and administer a program that would have processed an estimated 700 permit applications each year.

Securing funding may not be the only hurdle this new bill would face. During stakeholder group meetings about the issue, local farmers and developers have continued to raise concerns about future regulatory restraints that could apply to how they have already been using the land for years.

“Work needs to be done to make it something palatable,” said Baxter, who grows a variety of vegetables, including corn and soy, and chickens. 

He pointed to historic drainage pathways as being a potential sticking point in the proposed legislation. Such areas, which fill with water in storms but may otherwise be dry, were a major sticking point for critics of the federal WOTUS rule.

“This is very important to future generations of agriculture in the state of Delaware,” Baxter said after a late January meeting. “We must have proper drainage. The rules as they stand don’t allow us to maintain drainage.”

Delaware’s wetland gaps

In Delaware, state-level protections are already afforded to tidal marshes — those connected to tidally influenced bodies of water like rivers or the Delaware Bay — as well as large freshwater wetlands with over 400 contiguous acres, which largely only applies to the Great Cypress Swamp stretching across Delaware’s southernmost border into Maryland.

County-level protections can be more stringent. Both Kent and New Castle counties have mandatory buffers for all waterways and wetlands. 

But in Sussex, there’s only a 100-foot buffer required for developers building along tidal waterways. Delaware is also alone in the mid-Atlantic region when it comes to its lack of state-level protections. Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia and even Pennsylvania all have varying levels of non-tidal wetland programs.

Meanwhile, most of Delaware’s wetlands are on private land; only about 20% are owned by the state or federal government, according to DNREC.

“The analogy is we’re standing out in the middle of the woods naked as it relates to our protection of non-tidal wetlands here in Delaware,” said Christophe Tulou, executive director of the Delaware Center for the Inland Bays, which advocates for the protection of the Rehoboth, Indian River and Little Assawoman bays in Sussex County.

Tulou said efforts to protect Delaware’s freshwater wetlands date back decades, even before he formerly served as DNREC secretary in the 1990s.

“This is not new,” he said. “And the reason it’s not new is because people have known for a long, long time that freshwater wetlands are hugely important.”

Editor’s Note: An earlier version of this story used an outdated figured for Sussex County’s required waterway buffers. It was extended to 100 feet in 2022.

Transparency Notice
Maddy Lauria previously worked for the Delaware Center for the Inland Bays from 2020 to 2021. She is currently an independent journalist based in Dover.

The post Sen. Hansen wants state protections to extend to non-tidal wetlands appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-20 08:04
2026-03-18 06:00

Footage of women walking between bars and clubs in UK city centres, often filmed covertly, is proliferating online – attracting thousands of views and profits for those who post them. Can anything be done to stop the creepshots?

‘My friend just sent me this video, told me she’d found me in it,” read the text. “As I was looking for myself, I noticed you’re in it too. I didn’t know I was being filmed, guess you don’t either, just wanted to let you know …”

When Nancy Naylor Hayes received the message in November 2023, she felt a twinge of fear. It was from an acquaintance she hadn’t heard from in years. “I was panicking,” she says. The text pointed her to a Facebook link, which led to a montage of clips of women filmed on the streets of Manchester during nights out.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 05:33

German food delivery firm’s share price has plummeted by 93% since 2021 boom during Covid lockdowns

HelloFresh has reported a sharp decline in sales as the struggling food delivery company battles falling demand after the pandemic-era meal kit boom.

The German company was forced to make 900 UK job cuts last year with the closure of a delivery site in Nuneaton, and the demand for meal kits tumbled as revenue fell by more than 11% during 2025.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 05:30

Dear current and former members of the inspectors general community,

Last year, in a highly unusual move, President Donald Trump fired more than 18 inspectors general without specific justifications, as the law requires, and replaced several of them with political loyalists. Over the past weeks, we have spoken with dozens of people who have experience in this field. They have given us important context on how these offices work. Some have expressed concerns that these new federal government watchdogs may be unable to independently carry out their critical oversight duties. 

We recognize the longstanding reluctance of inspectors general and their staffs to speak with the media. But this is an extraordinary moment. As ProPublica journalists, we share a common purpose with inspectors general: to hold our government accountable by identifying any waste, fraud or abuse — and to be thorough, fair and accurate. For these reasons, we are asking for your help understanding and presenting a comprehensive picture of what’s happening, or not happening, in these offices as they face unprecedented change. To do this work, it is critical that we speak to as many people as possible.

If you work in or have recently left the office of a federal inspector general, we want to hear about your experience. Have important projects been halted? Have staff been asked to do work that wouldn’t have typically been done by an inspector general’s office in the past? What is working well, or better than it has previously? Are you facing obstacles that impact your ability to do your work? 

We welcome general as well as specific tips and take confidentiality seriously. Both of us have extensive experience covering sensitive topics and government agencies. We are happy to answer questions you may have about ourselves and our project. Please reach out to us on Signal or email, and share this letter with anyone who should see it. 

Signed,

  • Sharon Lerner
    • Signal: sharLerner.76
    • Email: sharon.lerner@propublica.org
  • Raquel Rutledge
    • Signal: 202-886-9630
    • Email: raquel.rutledge@propublica.org

The post An Open Letter to the Inspectors General Community appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 05:30

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., March 18, 2026 — GMI Cloud, a leading full-stack AI infrastructure provider, has announced an ongoing global initiative to architect and deploy sovereign AI Factories for countries worldwide. As the critical backbone of these initial buildouts, GMI Cloud is bringing significant capacity of the newly announced NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 online, establishing a standard for national-scale artificial intelligence deployments. This initiative for sovereign AI Factory buildouts is already underway.

The global shift towards sovereign AI is driven by a consensus that AI computing power is a fundamental pillar of national security, economic competitiveness, and cultural preservation in the foreseeable future. Governments are moving decisively to mitigate the strategic risks of depending on foreign-controlled platforms, recognizing that true independence requires localized infrastructure, data jurisdiction, and full control over the intelligent systems underpinning their critical industries.

GMI Cloud’s motto, “Build AI Without Limits,” is dedicated to bringing accelerated computing to every industry across the globe. This transformation begins by first building robust AI infrastructure for everyone, everywhere, ensuring that no country is left behind in the AI industrial revolution.

“Nations around the world are recognizing that AI sovereignty is as critical as energy or food security,” said Alex Yeh, CEO of GMI Cloud. “Every country needs to own the production of its intelligence. GMI Cloud’s role is to build these sovereign AI Factories from the ground up, providing the full-stack infrastructure governments require to protect their data and secure their competitive future.”

As a pioneer in next-generation hardware deployment, GMI Cloud is utilizing the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform as the foundational architecture for these sovereign buildouts. Rather than simply supplying raw compute power, GMI Cloud leverages NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 to solve the core challenges nations face when building AI Factories at scale: data security, operational cost, and energy sustainability.

Crucially for sovereign applications, the Vera Rubin architecture provides hardware-level data protection across the entire system, ensuring that a nation’s most sensitive data and proprietary models remain entirely secure within their borders. Furthermore, the architecture delivers a generational leap in compute efficiency, drastically reducing both the hardware footprint required to train complex models and the ongoing cost of running highly interactive, agentic AI. This allows nations to scale their AI capabilities aggressively while adhering to strict sustainable computing and energy efficiency mandates.

GMI Cloud, a Reference Platform NVIDIA Cloud Partner, delivers a complete, end-to-end AI stack: from bare-metal infrastructure to the inference and workflow layers. This proven experience in deploying and operating AI infrastructure across multiple continents and complex regulatory environments positions GMI Cloud as the partner of choice for countries seeking rapid, reliable paths to technological independence.

About GMI Cloud

Silicon Valley-based GMI Cloud delivers full-stack inference-first AI infrastructure to build sovereign and commercial AI deployments. With proven experience deploying AI infrastructure across multiple continents and regulatory environments, GMI Cloud enables nations, enterprises, and research institutions to build AI capabilities without dependence on foreign platforms. For more information, visit https://gmicloud.ai.


Source: GMI Cloud

The post GMI Cloud Bringing NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 Online in Global Sovereign AI Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 05:28

Governments in countries heavily reliant on Middle Eastern oil introduce measures to shield public from soaring costs

In Thailand, news anchors ditched their jackets on air as the government called on the public to reduce their use of air conditioning to save energy. In the Philippines, many government workers are now operating on a four-day week. In Vietnam, officials have urged employers to allow staff to work from home.

Across south-east Asia, governments are scrambling to find ways to conserve energy and shield the public from soaring costs as war in the Middle East causes what the International Energy Agency has described as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 05:00

Who are the players to watch? Which Cinderella team could break your bracket? Our contributors pick the winners, sleepers and upsets for this year’s men’s NCAA Tournament

The annual bevy of trivia that accompanies an NCAA Tournament. Have you heard there are two Miamis? Did you know Nebraska have never won a men’s tournament game? Are you aware that the Queens Royals have a “spirit animal” called Buddy the Street Dog? Even more importantly, I’m looking forward to watching enough basketball over the next three weeks to crack 68/68 on the Sporcle quiz of this year’s mascots. EB

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 05:00

The militant group’s attacks on Israel have sparked anger even among its most loyal Shiite supporters in Lebanon, weakening its clout as the war widens.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 05:00

In a post on X, the hotel magnate lambasted the president for not considering collateral damage, although he later told The Post: “I blame Trump, but I blame the Iranians more.”

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 04:51

Greater Manchester mayor adds to Rayner’s criticism of planned immigration changes, which she has called ‘un-British’

Andy Burnham has backed stark criticism of the direction of Keir Starmer’s government by Angela Rayner after she said the very survival of the Labour party was at stake.

Rayner, the former deputy prime minister and an influential backbencher, used a speech on Tuesday night to warn that the prime minister “cannot go through the motions” in the face of declining support.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 04:46

Thomas Corbett-Dillon, who claims to have advised Boris Johnson, says immigrants could ‘turn’ on white population

GB News is facing a backlash after a commentator on one of its shows suggested there is “a genocide happening” against white people in England and that immigrants could “turn” on the white population.

Ofcom, the media regulator, has received a series of complaints about the comments by Thomas Corbett-Dillon.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 04:09

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 04:01

Trying to get myself a onewheel after reading it kinda feels like snowboarding (been doing that for 19 years...) :D

It's difficult for me to make a first purchase though! The market in Finland is pretty scarce too...

Here's what my options look like right now:

XR classic "used" from Bananaway for 1800e, I have no clue about how used though, they don't mention it on the site :D

Pint X for ~ 1300e new, a few different sites selling that

XR used (1000km) for 900e, from a "local" marketplace (2h drive), the seller didn't budge on the price :D

Plus (not xr!) that I could maybe haggle down from 500e and mod with an ego battery or something, I could probably do it but it's not gonna be good, neat or even cheap lol

Non-onewheel things seem to be out of stock and pricier anyway?

submitted by /u/jonihallivuori
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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 03:29

Researchers say their prototype is a big step towards fully functioning batteries with rapid charging times

Australian scientists have developed what they say is the world’s first proof-of-concept quantum battery.

Quantum batteries, first proposed as a theoretical concept in 2013, use the principles of quantum mechanics to store energy, and have the potential to be more efficient than conventional batteries.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 03:20

Aircraft carrier has been participating in strikes on Iran, after previously taking part in the operation to seize Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro

A fire onboard the USS Gerald R Ford, injuring sailors and destroying 100 beds, is the latest mishap to plague the world’s largest aircraft carrier on a marathon deployment some argue has sapped crew morale.

At sea for almost nine months, and currently stationed in the Red Sea to support the war on Iran, the carrier will reportedly set sail for Crete for repairs.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 03:00

Last year it was China’s answer to tariffs, now it’s Iran’s retaliation to airstrikes – ‘America First’ keeps foundering on global economics

Donald Trump is teaching the world a lesson, but not the one he thinks. The attack on Iran was meant to be a dazzling display of military supremacy. It has instead illuminated chinks in the US’s armour.

The US president’s formidable arsenal cannot summon up an insurrection from Iran’s tyrannised and leaderless opposition. It cannot force merchant ships to run a gauntlet of missile and drone attacks in the strait of Hormuz. The government in Tehran and the facts of geography that give it leverage over global trade are unchanged. Trump’s exasperation is showing. He urges tanker crews to “show some guts” by sailing into harm’s way. He calls on Nato members to provide naval chaperones and accuses them of cowardice and ingratitude for refusing. He comes across as peevish and flustered. Impotence is not a good look in a potentate.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 03:00

Nvidia unveiled its Vera Rubin Space-1 system for powering AI workloads in orbital data centers. "Space computing, the final frontier, has arrived," said CEO Jensen Huang. "As we deploy satellite constellations and explore deeper into space, intelligence must live wherever data is generated." CNBC reports: In a press release, the company said that its Vera Rubin Space-1 Module, which includes the IGX Thor and Jetson Orin, will be used on space missions led by multiple companies. The chips are specifically "engineered for size-, weight- and power-constrained environments." Partners include Axiom Space, Starcloud and Planet. Huang said Nvidia is working with partners on a new computer for orbital data centers, but there are still engineering hurdles to overcome. "In space, there's no convection, there's just radiation," Huang said during his GTC keynote, "and so we have to figure out how to cool these systems out in space, but we've got lots of great engineers working on it."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 02:19
  • Harris lifts Howard to first NCAA win in history

  • UMBC rally falls short in tense First Four loss

  • Mark buzzer-beater sends Texas past NC State

Bryce Harris had 19 points and 14 rebounds, and he sank a turnaround jumper with 13 seconds remaining that sent Howard to its first NCAA Tournament victory in program history, 86-83 over UMBC in the First Four on Tuesday night.

Ose Okojie scored a career-high 23 points to lead the Bison (24-10), who entered with an 0-4 record in March Madness and had to hold off a late rally by the Retrievers (24-9).

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 02:00

A 2006 Guardian interview with Iran’s slain security chief now reads as a grim warning of the conflict that killed him

Deep down, Ali Larijani always believed that the western powers were bent on destroying Iran’s revolutionary regime, for which he had fought on the battlefield.

The prescience of that inner conviction has now been vindicated in lethal fashion as Larijani has become the latest establishment figure to die at the hands of Israel, killed in an apparently targeted airstrike, according to reports.

Robert Tait was the Guardian’s correspondent in Tehran from February 2005 until December 2007

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 01:00

Show in part a rediscovery of more than 40 mostly forgotten women who plied their trade in the Low Countries

Judith Leyster, an artist of the Dutch golden age, was thought to be about 21 when she painted her self-portrait in 1630. In the picture she presented to the world, Leyster exudes cheerful confidence. Clad in shimmering silks and a stiffly starched lace collar, she leans back in her chair, palette and brushes in hand, a painting by her side.

This work, completed in the year she was admitted to a painters’ guild in Haarlem, proclaimed her arrival as an established artist. It was one of the first self-portraits by an artist in the Dutch republic, a device most male painters did not adopt until years later.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 00:42
Is my Onewheel damaged beyond repair?

Every time I hop on it this insane sputter makes it completely unrideable. It had occasionally happened here and there for several months but has progressively gotten worse to where it's in this state constantly now. Anyone have an idea of what's busted here, and is it worth getting a repair done or is it cooked?

I've put a few years on this, so it's definitely beyond warranty.

Thanks for any help!

submitted by /u/etherealpenguin
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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-18 00:36

Primaries acted as test of the style of politics voters are looking for ahead of midterms, when Democrats hope to regain control of Congress

Democratic voters in Illinois handed the party’s nominations for five open seats in the House of Representatives to candidates that included Daniel Biss, Evanston’s mayor, and Donna Miller, the Cook county commissioner, after heated and at times bitter campaigns that saw significant spending by outside groups, most controversially the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac).

The primaries acted as a test of the style of politics voters were looking for ahead of the midterm elections in November, when Democrats hope to regain control of Congress. All five districts are heavily Democratic, making the primary victors favorites to triumph in the general elections.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 00:00

Both Russia and Ukraine will struggle to reintegrate millions of veterans.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 00:00

America can make it easier for Iranians to revolt.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-18 00:00

The Iran war is returning the Gulf to a more insular, conflict-prone era.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-17 23:52

Meta’s announcement comes after years of criticism from child safety groups over feature

Instagram will stop encrypting private messages between users from May, after enduring years of criticism from law enforcement and child safety groups over the feature.

Meta quietly announced this month on its help page for Instagram and in an updated 2022 news post that end-to-end encryption would no longer be available on direct messages between users on Instagram from 8 May 2026.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 23:31

The Senate voted to begin a marathon debate on the SAVE America Act, an elections bill that President Trump has been pressing Republicans to pass.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 23:31

Candidates for governor, U.S. Senate, U.S. House, and Cook County Board President were among the races on the ballot in the 2026 Illinois primary election on Tuesday.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-17 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media, written by Jason Koebler: Over the last few months, various academics and AI companies have attempted to predict how artificial intelligence is going to impact the labor market. These studies, including a high-profile paper published by Anthropic earlier this month, largely try to take the things AI is good at, or could be good at, and match them to existing job categories and job tasks. But the papers ignore some of the most impactful and most common uses of AI today: AI porn and AI slop. Anthropic's paper, called "Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence," essentially attempts to find 1:1 correlations between tasks that people do today at their jobs and things people are using Claude for. The researchers also try to predict if a job's tasks "are theoretically possible with AI," which resulted in this chart, which has gone somewhat viral and was included in a newsletter by MSNOW's Phillip Bump and threaded about by tech journalist Christopher Mims. (Because everything is terrible, the research is now also feeding into a gambling website where you can see the apparent odds of having your job replaced by AI.) In his thread, Mims makes the case that the "theoretical capability" of AI to do different jobs in different sectors is totally made up, and that this chart basically means nothing. Mims makes a good and fair observation: The nature of the many, many studies that attempt to predict which people are going to lose their jobs to AI are all flawed because the inputs must be guessed, to some degree. But I believe most of these studies are flawed in a deeper way: They do not take into account how people are actually using AI, though Anthropic claims that that is exactly what it is doing. "We introduce a new measure of AI displacement risk, observed exposure, that combines theoretical LLM capability and real-world usage data, weighting automated (rather than augmentative) and work-related uses more heavily," the researchers write. This is based in part on the "Anthropic Economic Index," which was introduced in an extremely long paper published in January that tries to catalog all the high-minded uses of AI in specific work-related contexts. These uses include "Complete humanities and social science academic assignments across multiple disciplines," "Draft and revise professional workplace correspondence and business communications," and "Build, debug, and customize web applications and websites." Not included in any of Anthropic's research are extremely popular uses of AI such as "create AI porn" and "create AI slop and spam." These uses are destroying discoverability on the internet, cause cascading societal and economic harms. "Anthropic's research continues a time-honored tradition by AI companies who want to highlight the 'good' uses of AI that show up in their marketing materials while ignoring the world-destroying applications that people actually use it for," argues Koebler. "Meanwhile, as we have repeatedly shown, huge parts of social media websites and Google search results have been overtaken by AI slop. Chatbots themselves have killed traffic to lots of websites that were once able to rely on ad revenue to employ people, so on and so forth..." "This is all to say that these studies about the economic impacts of AI are ignoring a hugely important piece of context: AI is eating and breaking the internet and social media," writes Koebler, in closing. "We are moving from a many-to-many publishing environment that created untold millions of jobs and businesses towards a system where AI tools can easily overwhelm human-created websites, businesses, art, writing, videos, and human activity on the internet. What's happening may be too chaotic, messy, and unpleasant for AI companies to want to reckon with, but to ignore it entirely is malpractice."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 23:24
Pint foot senser

I have a onewheel pint and recently it keeps giving me error 15 it thinks I'm on the sensor when I'm not, like during startup. sometimes it works but still if I take a break the blue bar shows be that it thinks I'm standing on one side of it. not sure what pint model I'll add photos and also do you guys have any solutions? or has this happened to you? thanks!

submitted by /u/Timbitbear
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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 23:20

With the game tied going into the 9th, Eugenio Suárez smacked a double into left-center field to score pinch runner Javier Sonoja for what would prove to be the winning run.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:57

The 2026 Democratic primary campaign in Illinois for retiring Sen. Dick Durbin's Senate seat — won by Lt. Gov. Lisa Stratton — could set the tone for other midterm primaries.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:50

The leader of Cuba is vowing to put up "resistance" against the U.S. as President Trump suggests he may "take" the island nation, whose communist government has faced intense U.S. pressure and languished under energy shortages.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:49

Military officials say a shooting at a U.S. Air Force base in New Mexico has left one person dead and another wounded.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-17 22:44

Stratton, a progressive with the support of the governor, JB Pritzker, won the race to succeed Dick Durbin

Juliana Stratton, the Illinois lieutenant governor, won the Democratic primary race to succeed Illinois’ US Senator Dick Durbin, beating out US Representative Raja Krishnamoorthi.

With nearly 90% of the vote tallied, Stratton was leading Krishnamoorthi by more than six percentage points on Tuesday night, according to the Associated Press.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:16

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 18.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:04

Director of national intelligence wrote on social media that Trump ‘is responsible for determining what is and is not an imminent threat’

A top counter-terrorism official in the Trump administration has resigned over the ongoing war on Iran.

Joe Kent, who reported to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, said he “cannot in good conscience” support the conflict, adding that the US started this war “due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby”.

You can reverse course and chart a new path for our nation, or you can allow us to slip further toward decline and chaos. You hold the cards.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:01

Democratic voters in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District chose Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss as their nominee to replace retiring Rep. Jan Schakowsky Tuesday night, dealing a simultaneous defeat to progressives who rallied behind Palestinian American activist Kat Abughazaleh and pro-Israel interests that pushed to elect state Sen. Laura Fine.

Biss’s victory came amid mixed results for outside spending groups representing pro-Israel, artificial intelligence, and cryptocurrency interests — with crypto regulation supporter and state Rep. La Shawn Ford winning in the 7th Congressional District while the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s favored candidates, Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller and former Rep. Melissa Bean, won in the 2nd and 8th. In the closely watched Senate race, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton received AIPAC’s congratulations for her win over Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi and Robin Kelly.

With five open House seats and one open Senate seat heavily favored for Democrats, the Illinois primaries presented a test for the future of the party — and became a top target for outside groups that poured more than $50 million into races throughout the state. The infusion of outside cash included more than $35 million in spending from groups linked to the AIPAC and the cryptocurrency and AI industries. 

Dozens of super PACs in Illinois sought to influence the competitive Democratic primaries, often while concealing both their donors and broader intentions. In the 9th District, AIPAC used groups with uncontroversial titles like “Elect Chicago Women” and “Chicago Progressive Partnership” to boost its pick, Fine, and pit progressive candidates against one another. The spending appeared to come up short Tuesday night, when Fine finished in third.

The groups’ competing ads at times inflamed and at times distracted from voter concerns over civil liberties, the economy, bipartisan fealty to corporations and wealthy donors, and now the unfolding war in Iran.

The Illinois primaries presented a test for AIPAC in particular, which with its affiliated groups spent more than $22 million in races in and around deep-blue Chicago while obscuring the pro-Israel lobby’s involvement amid growing criticism. In several races, AIPAC donors have funneled money to candidates where it did not officially endorse, including in the U.S. Senate race, The Intercept reported. 

The crypto industry spent more than $13 million in Illinois races through the super PAC Fairshake, including close to $10 million against Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton in the Senate race and more than $3 million in two races attacking candidates who have voted for consumer protection regulations on cryptocurrency. The AI industry poured in another $2.5 million into two House races.

Detailed results from the Senate race and the 2nd, 7th, 8th, and 9th districts are below.

Senate: After Laying Low, AIPAC Congratulates Stratton

Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton defeated Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi and Robin Kelly in the highly anticipated Democratic primary to replace retiring Sen. Dick Durbin. The often bitter race was defined by debates over dark money, establishment endorsements, and race and identity. 

Stratton won just shy of 40 percent of the vote in the crowded 10-way race. While AIPAC publicly stayed out of the contest, suggesting that the group had become politically toxic with Democratic primary voters, reporting from The Intercept found that at least 27 AIPAC donors gave to Stratton’s campaign.

On Tuesday night, AIPAC publicly congratulated Stratton for her primary win over Kelly, writing on X that Kelly’s “most recent actions have undermined the U.S.-Israel alliance,” and that the group looks “forward to continuing our long-standing partnership” with Stratton.

Related

AIPAC Is Staying Out of Illinois Senate Race — But Its Donors Back Juliana Stratton

Neither Stratton nor Krishnamoorthi have called Israel’s actions in Gaza a genocide or said they would push to condition aid to Israel, as Kelly repeatedly pointed out in her attempts to carve out a lane to their left. 

Stratton’s victory does represent an early defeat for the crypto industry, which spent millions against her candidacy. The industry’s main PAC, Fairshake, spent nearly $10 million against Stratton, in a move that likely favored Krishnamoorthi. The Illinois congressman is known as a top fundraiser, with a massive $30 million war chest. 

In addition to concerns over the influence of money in politics, the race was also plagued by questions over the role of establishment endorsements. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker endorsed Stratton, his longtime running mate, and donated $5 million to Stratton’s super PAC, spurring controversy about the perception of establishment Democrats throwing around their political weight. 

But Stratton’s most controversial endorsement of the cycle was an alleged posthumous endorsement from the late Rev. Jesse Jackson, whose family later said he did not come to a decision about the race before his death.

The fight for support from Black voters was already a highly contentious issue within the primary, with concerns that Kelly and Stratton, who are both Black, would split the Black electorate in Illinois. Kelly took offense to those comments, arguing at a recent campaign event that “no one talks” about spoilers “when two white men are running.” 

Illinois has not sent a Republican to the Senate since the 1990s, and Stratton is expected to easily win her general election in November. 

2nd District: AIPAC Beats AI PAC

Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller fended off a comeback attempt from former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. in a race that pitted AIPAC against the artificial intelligence industry.

Miller was backed heavily by a PAC affiliated with the pro-Israel group, while Jackson drew support from an AI PAC funded by tech leaders.

Jackson had the star power of his civil rights activist father’s name but was tarnished by a federal fraud conviction for misusing campaign funds over a decade ago during his previous stint as a U.S. representative.

AIPAC’s role in the race made headlines in February, when retiring U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, vacating her 9th Congressional District seat, withdrew her endorsement of Miller over the group’s support for her.

Meanwhile, the progressive standardbearer in the race — state Sen. Robert Peters — was trailing far behind on Tuesday night, despite endorsements from Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.

Peters made the involvement of outside groups ranging from AIPAC to cryptocurrency to artificial intelligence PACs a theme of his campaign, blasting his opponents for relying on their support.

7th District: AIPAC and Crypto Lose Despite Heavy Spending

State Rep. La Shawn Ford beat Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin the primary to succeed retiring longtime Rep. Danny Davis Tuesday night, despite the nearly $5 million AIPAC spent to boost her and nearly $2.5 million a crypto PAC spent against him.

Conyears-Ervin conceded early in the night, before the Associated Press called the race for Ford.

Related

Crypto Spends Big in Illinois House Races to Say Consumer Rights Supporters Are Corrupt

Ford was the target of heavy spending from the cryptocurrency industry PAC Fairshake because of his support for state-level consumer protections. Ford told The Intercept earlier this month that the money spent against him underlined the need for campaign finance reform.

“We are a grassroots campaign that is struggling to get our message out and make sure that people know that our experience and our platform is out there,” he said. “We don’t have a budget to counter lies.”

The crowded race made polling difficult, and the heavily Democratic nature of the district, which stretches from Chicago’s Loop and South Side to leafy suburbs to the west, meant that several candidates were competing for the progressive lane.

AIPAC donors backed former real estate mogul Jason Friedman early in the race, but the pro-Israel group’s campaign arm later spent nearly $60,000 opposing him and $4.8 million boosting Conyears-Ervin, according to a tally by political consultant Frank Calabrese.

Ford and Conyears-Ervin both brought ethical baggage to the race: He successfully fought off a raft of federal bank fraud charges more than a decade ago, pleading to a single misdemeanor count, while she was forced to pay a $30,000 fine to settle two ethics cases, including one involving the firing of two whistleblowers who warned her not to use city resources to organize prayer events on Facebook, according to WTTW Chicago.

Anthony Driver, executive director of the Service Employees International Union Illinois State Council, drew heavy spending support from his union and an endorsement from the Congressional Progressive Caucus. He finished well behind the leading candidates.

8th District: Former Blue Dog Beats Would-Be Squad Member

Former U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean took a big step closer to a comeback Tuesday night by defeating Junaid Ahmed, a progressive backed by the group Justice Democrats.

Bean, a previous member of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition, drew a big assist from more than $4 million in spending from AIPAC-affiliated PACs, as well as spending from crypto and AI PACs.

Both candidates were vying to replace Krishnamoorthi.

9th District: Anti-AIPAC Candidates in Top Slots

Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss prevailed in a crowded Democratic primary race largely defined by outside spending from groups associated with AIPAC, which spent millions targeting Biss and Palestinian American activist and journalist Kat Abughazaleh, who came in second. 

Biss, a former math professor who stressed his anti-war bonafides on the campaign trail, sought to define himself as the tested progressive favorite while Abughazaleh’s campaign gained steam.

Initially, AIPAC-affiliated groups focused their attacks on Biss, who is Jewish, because of his support for conditions on aid to Israel. The AIPAC-affiliated group Elect Chicago Women spent nearly $1.5 million to oppose Biss and over $4 million to boost state Sen. Laura Fine, who came in third. But as the race heated up, Abughazaleh, who drew a harder line on Israel, surged forward in the polls and became their central target. 

In his victory speech Tuesday night, Biss said he had been pressured to move away from what he called a nuanced view on Israel and Palestine. He also took a direct swipe at AIPAC.

“This district understands nuance and wants someone who accepts the reality of competing, even contradictory-sounding priorities and values and realities,” Biss said. “Now, that point of view is not the point of view of AIPAC. AIPAC spent an unbelievable amount of money — over $7 million — to try to buy this seat, to support the idea that we can’t accept nuance.”

The district is deep blue, and Biss is expected to handily win his general election. He becomes the Democratic nominee on the heels of a scandal that broke in the final hours of the race, after his former student, Megan Wachspress, went public about a past relationship with Biss on Monday in a Bluesky post

“If he’s going to get a national profile on the strength of a younger woman’s campaign,” wrote Wachspress, who is now a lecturer at Stanford Law School, referring to Abughazaleh, “I’m going to come out and say it: during his short-lived tenure as a math professor, Biss had an inappropriate romantic relationship with one of his undergraduate students. I was that student.” 

Biss acknowledged the relationship on Tuesday, calling it “ill-advised.”

Related

Kat Abughazaleh on the Right to Protest

Though Abughazaleh earned key progressive endorsements, including from the group Justice Democrats and Reps. Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, Biss pulled Schakowsky’s support, as well as that of the Congressional Progressive Caucus and Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

The Chicago Progressive Partnership, another AIPAC-affiliated group, spent roughly $1.2 million in the latter half of the race to counter Abughazaleh. The former journalist also faced alleged “dark money” spending from the PAC Democracy Unmuted, which she claimed was paying influencers $1,500 to push negative rhetoric about her on social media. 

AIPAC also spent money boosting Bushra Amiwala, a progressive Muslim activist, who was seen as a potential spoiler for Abughazaleh. When the race was called, Amiwala was in sixth place and had received just over 5 percent of the vote — a share larger than the difference between Biss, at just shy of 30 percent, and Abughazaleh, slightly under 26.

AIPAC, for its part, put a positive spin on the results Tuesday night.

“While disappointed that Laura Fine did not prevail, voters rejected two anti-Israel candidates in this race,” the group posted on X. “We were especially proud to help defeat Abughazaleh.”

In his victory speech, Biss said he would fight for self-determination and justice for everyone in the Middle East and beyond. “AIPAC found out the hard way: The 9th District is not for sale,” he said in his closing remarks.

Biss also thanked J Street, which was founded as a liberal counterweight to AIPAC, for wading into the race to back him. J Street’s President, Jeremy Ben-Ami, said in a statement that the group had bundled more than $200,000 for Biss’s campaign while an affiliated super PAC spent $150,000.

“AIPAC and its affiliates poured more than $7 million into a Democratic primary to stamp out opposition to Netanyahu’s policies — using shell PACs to obscure their involvement — and the voters rejected that effort,” Ben-Ami said. “Tonight’s results should send a clear message to candidates across the country: you do not have to fear AIPAC’s spending or intimidation.”

This developing story has been updated.

The post Illinois Results: Daniel Biss Beats Kat Abughazaleh in Blow to Left and AIPAC Alike appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 22:00

With the release of the new M5 MacBook Air, has the time come to replace your current model? Join me as I go through each of the past four generations to help you answer that question.

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-17 21:30

March 17, 2026 — Oracle and NVIDIA today announced expanded AI capabilities on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) that help redefine scalable AI performance, accelerate vector database operations, and simplify enterprise AI deployment using cloud-native services. Together, Oracle and NVIDIA are enabling organizations to move from AI experimentation to production at extraordinary scale, speed, and efficiency.

Organizations training and serving frontier AI models require infrastructure engineered for extreme throughput, consistently ultra-low latency, and massive GPU scale. OCI Superclusters are built to meet that demand—engineered to connect hundreds of thousands of GPUs into a single AI supercomputer and support an unprecedented level of performance, with over 17 zettaFLOPS of peak performance, up to 131 Pb/s of cluster front-end throughput for massive scale-out, and up to 2.1 Eb/s of RDMA throughput with sub-10 microsecond latency for fast, efficient scale-in.

Next-Gen AI Performance: OCI Delivers Nearly Limitless Supercomputing Scale

At the core is the Oracle Acceleron network architecture, designed for predictable, high-bandwidth communication across large clusters. By combining RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE), Converged Network Interface Card (CNIC) offload, and a multiplanar network design, Oracle Acceleron delivers deterministic performance and ultra-low-latency GPU-to-GPU connectivity at scale. This helps customers train larger models faster, run high-throughput inference more efficiently, accelerate multimodal and scientific workloads, and improve cluster utilization across Oracle’s distributed cloud.

Introducing the Next OCI Supercluster—Powered by NVIDIA Vera Rubin

Today, Oracle is introducing a next-generation OCI Supercluster powered by the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform, including NVIDIA Rubin GPUs, NVIDIA Vera CPUs, NVIDIA BlueField-4 DPUs, sixth-generation NVLink, NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNICs, and NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switches, purpose-built to accelerate next-generation training and high-throughput inference workloads.

The system integrates thousands of Rubin GPUs to deliver breakthrough AI compute performance at scale, while NVIDIA BlueField-4 DPUs and ConnectX-9 SuperNICs offload networking, security, and data movement from host CPUs to help increase throughput, improve workload isolation, and maximize usable GPU capacity across large-scale clusters.

Together, these technologies extend Oracle Acceleron’s multiplanar network architecture, using dedicated RoCE fabrics and direct GPU-to-GPU communication paths to reduce latency and increase bandwidth across thousands of nodes. By combining Oracle Acceleron’s deterministic networking with BlueField-4 data processing and Rubin GPU performance, OCI Superclusters delivers ultra-low-latency communication, higher cluster utilization, improved resilience across network planes, and optimized power efficiency at hyperscale.

From frontier model training to high-throughput inference and extreme-scale supercomputing, OCI Supercluster is built to help customers move faster, scale bigger, and push AI further.

Accelerating Oracle AI Database Embedding and Vector Index Creation

As organizations deploy retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) and AI-driven search applications, rapidly generating embeddings and maintaining large-scale vector indexes has become critical to delivering more accurate and responsive AI systems. Oracle AI Database can now use NVIDIA AI infrastructure and NVIDIA cuVS to accelerate large-scale embedding generation and vector index creation, helping reduce time-to-value for AI-driven applications.

With Oracle AI Database, developers can run vector similarity search directly in SQL or access capabilities through APIs and SDKs, allowing AI functionality to be integrated seamlessly into existing enterprise applications and workflows. GPU acceleration helps improve performance for embedding pipelines and indexing operations, enabling organizations to continuously refresh vector indexes as enterprise data grows.

Customers are leveraging Oracle AI Database with NVIDIA AI infrastructure and NVIDIA cuVS acceleration to power advanced knowledge retrieval, AI copilots, document intelligence, and real-time data exploration—unlocking faster insights and more efficient AI-driven operations.

OCI Generative AI Expands Open Model Innovation with NVIDIA Nemotron

OCI Generative AI continues to broaden how developers and enterprises use open-weights foundation models. Oracle Cloud Infrastructure recently announced support for the NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super model through a new Model Import capability in OCI Generative AI.

Soon planned to be available on Oracle Government Cloud in addition to commercial cloud regions, NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super is the first model from NVIDIA available through OCI Generative AI Model Import and demonstrates how organizations can continue to run advanced reasoning models on OCI while maintaining control over customization and deployment.

Model Import allows customers to bring supported models into OCI Generative AI and run them through the same managed service used for Oracle-hosted models. This combines the flexibility of open models with a consistent API, enterprise security model, and operational experience.

Oracle Government Cloud operates government cloud regions in the US, UK, and Australia and provides governments worldwide with a way to run generative AI models that still address local data residency, classification, operational, and security requirements.

These capabilities extend beyond infrastructure into enterprise applications. NVIDIA Nemotron models are now available to support Oracle Fusion Applications, augmenting generative AI-powered capabilities across business workflows such as finance, HR, supply chain, and customer experience. By combining Nemotron reasoning capabilities with Oracle’s enterprise application data, organizations can power intelligent automation, document understanding, and contextual decision-making directly within operational systems.

Oracle AI Database can access Nemotron models by calling NVIDIA NIM containers, enabling developers to build retrieval- augmented generation (RAG) applications using built-in vector search, embeddings, and AI-powered data processing. Together, OCI Generative AI, Oracle AI Database, and NVIDIA Nemotron models create a unified approach where enterprises can build AI applications that securely combine foundation models with enterprise data—helping accelerate development of intelligent applications across industries including financial services, healthcare, telecommunications, and media.

With these advancements, Oracle and NVIDIA continue to push the boundaries of enterprise AI—delivering supercomputing-scale performance, accelerated vector intelligence, and simplified cloud-native AI innovation in one integrated platform.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.

About Oracle

Oracle offers integrated suites of applications plus secure, autonomous infrastructure in the Oracle Cloud. For more information about Oracle (NYSE: ORCL), please visit us at www.oracle.com.


Source: Oracle

The post Oracle and NVIDIA Collaboration Delivers Scalable Supercomputing, Accelerated Vector Workloads, and AI Applications appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:57

New Zealand economic growth tipped to overtake Australia’s this year but Middle East conflict casts a shadow over outlook

Just as New Zealand’s fragile economic recovery shows flickers of improvement – with economists predicting its annual growth could surpass that of its larger neighbour Australia – it is facing a new threat: the war in the Middle East.

New Zealand is particularly exposed to the energy shocks produced by the conflict – and to economic crises generally – with the small, isolated nation highly dependent on global trade and tourism. It is susceptible to disruptions in supply chains and shipping.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:55

Some residents immediately feared the sound was an explosion, according to CBS affiliate WOIO, but weather service officials say it appears to have been a meteor.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:30

Experts say attacks on Afghanistan are ‘defensive, not offensive’ but carry a risk of spiralling cycle of violence

An escalating Pakistani campaign of airstrikes against targets in Afghanistan is aimed at forcing the Taliban authorities to abandon their support for Pakistani militants, according to officials and experts.

The strategy is to impose such a steep cost on the Taliban administration that they act to prevent attacks emanating from Afghanistan. Yet it carries the risk of spiralling violence.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:30

March 17, 2026 — The next step in the UK’s plans for Quantum technology will help deliver personalized treatments,  potential cures for diseases, safeguard  national security and deliver high-paid jobs – revolutionizing the health and wealth of hardworking people across the UK and delivering on the government’s Modern Industrial Strategy.

Credit: Shutterstock

A pioneering program worth up to £2 billion of government investment announced by the Technology Secretary and the Chancellor today, will ensure the UK stays at the forefront of Quantum innovation. The UK will  become the first country to benefit from revolutionary Quantum computers, sensors and networks, and support the emergence of the next generation of leading British companies who will help shape the curve of progress.

Quantum is technology’s next great generational leap and will rival AI as the defining technology of the future. While a traditional computer solves problems using a one-by one approach, a Quantum system explores thousands of potential answers at once -slashing the time it takes to reach a solution. That will accelerate how we can drive growth, investment, and national renewal for future generations, delivering new, life-changing breakthroughs in the process.

As of today, the UK is the first country in the world to commit to an advanced procurement to build large-scale quantum computers on our shores by the early 2030s. Joining R&D, manufacturing, software, hardware and procurement into a single program, we will be world leaders in developing and deploying large-scale Quantum computers.

These systems will be built in Britain – creating British jobs, new opportunities for British businesses, and opening new routes of investment to flow into our economy from all over the world.

Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said: “I am determined this country grasps the benefits will Quantum computing will bring. It is only by keeping pace with technological progress that we can deliver the high-paid jobs, cutting-edge public services, and innovations which change lives. Today’s announcements are an investment in our future - unlocking better health, wealth, and more opportunities for communities across the country. This government is ushering in a Quantum leap – making the choice today to back UK scientists, companies, and innovators so we can deliver a future that works for all.”

This first of its kind procurement program, ”ProQure: Scaling UK Quantum Computing” will launch next week, where companies will be invited to table proposals to partner with us to deliver state of the art prototypes for evaluation.

Prototypes will then be assessed, with the most promising companies invited to deliver larger scale machines for use by scientists, researchers, the public sector, and businesses, as part of our national computing infrastructure – transforming the UK into a hotbed for the latest, cutting-edge Quantum technology.

This will also accelerate growth of the UK’s already thriving Quantum industry-supporting homegrown firms as they scale-up and grow while building an environment which encourages private backers from around the world to pour money into the sector, capturing everything from hardware, processors and manufacturing through to sustained investment in UK supply chains.

Estimates show Quantum could boost productivity by 7% in the next 2 decades, creating more than 100,000 jobs in the process. That would mean £212 billion worth of economic impact – the equivalent of adding the combined annual GDP of Wales and Northern Ireland.

The technology is already being put to work across the country, with Q-BIOMED researchers at the University College London exploring wearable brain scanners to support people suffering from epilepsy.

Laying the foundations which will give the UK a rich pool of Quantum talent, the government’s flagship TechFirst program will launch new partnerships with companies in the sector – offering up to 100 fully funded internships. This will give people the tools they need to embark on future, high-paying careers in the field.

The UK is already a global powerhouse in the technology, launching a first of its kind National Quantum Technologies program in 2014 which has already been backed by more than £1 billion in public funding to support skills, research, and infrastructure. Our credentials as a global magnet for private investment are also thriving. Coinciding with today’s announcements, several global companies are announcing technical breakthroughs delivered in the UK, as well as new and recent investment commitments including:

  • Infleqtion have delivered a 100qubit quantum computer at our National Quantum Computing Centre, marking a significant step forward in developing large-scale systems for operational capability
  • Vescent has selected the UK’s National Physical Laboratory for its next office outside the US, backing world-leading talent and expertise across UK institutions
  • IonQ have formed a major strategic research partnership with Cambridge University. This will create the IonQ Quantum Innovation Centre, hosting IonQ’s most advanced 256-qubit computer, accelerating research and discovery in the UK

The raft of measures set out today not only lay the foundations for new investment, jobs, and improved public services across the country, but cement the UK’s position as a global leader in the emerging technologies which will shape the future.

Further Details

In addition to the £1 billion for procuring large scale quantum computers, the investments announced today include:

Over £1 billion over the next 4 years to support our leading companies and researchers to put Quantum into action by investing at scale in technology development, skills and facilities. Specifically:

  • Over £500 million dedicated to Quantum computing – helping companies scale and develop new uses for the technology in areas like pharmaceuticals, financial services, and energy
  • Over £400 million to support breakthroughs in sensing and navigation and the skills and infrastructure needed to bring these technologies to market
  • Dedicated funding of £125 million for Quantum networking and £205 million for Quantum sensing and navigation to ensure we are poised to accelerate innovations in medical diagnostics, greenhouse gas monitoring, and ultra-secure communications. This will transform our ability to diagnose and treat medical conditions like childhood epilepsy and potentially Alzheimer’s in the years to come – transforming outcomes for patients
  • An extra £13.8 million injected into the UK’s 5 National Quantum Research Hubs delivered by UK Research and Innovation, with researchers working in healthcare, clean energy, and national security projects among the first to get access to the most powerful technology in the world
  • Fresh support for the Quantum Software Lab based in Edinburgh will accelerate the discovery of new applications for Quantum computers in sectors such as financial services, life sciences and advanced manufacturing
  • An additional £90 million to fund quantum infrastructure and meet the scaling needs of industry along with £20 million in skills and commercialization programs.

More from HPCwire: UK Government Invests £45M in ‘Sunrise’ AI Supercomputer for Fusion Research


Source: UK Government

The post UK Government Commits £2B to Quantum Computing Procurement and Industry Scale-Up appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:29

The companies will share fraud intelligence and coordinate responses as AI makes scams faster, cheaper and harder to detect.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:27

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — Flex has announced its 800 VDC Power Rack developed in collaboration with NVIDIA to support the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform. As part of Flex’s AI Infrastructure Platform, the 800 VDC Power Rack extends the company’s portfolio of products and services for accelerating AI infrastructure deployment at global scale.

Traditional in-rack power distribution systems, designed for kilowatt-scale racks, can no longer support the megawatt-scale demands of modern AI workloads. As power density and system complexity increase to support performance and energy efficiency advances, the 800 VDC architecture announced by NVIDIA has emerged as the new benchmark for AI infrastructure.

“Megawatt-scale AI workloads are redefining what’s required from data center power infrastructure,” said Chris Butler, President, Embedded and Critical Power, Flex. “Flex’s 800 VDC Power Rack pairs advanced power products with global manufacturing scale to enable efficient, scalable power delivery and faster deployment of next-generation infrastructure.”

The 800 VDC Power Rack uses a disaggregated architecture and features Flex’s power shelf for the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform. By shifting power products out of the IT rack, this architecture maximizes space for compute, allowing more GPUs to be packed densely, communicate more efficiently, and deliver greater value from the IT hardware. The 800 VDC Power Rack enables current data centers to support high power density, next generation accelerated computing racks without costly retrofits.

When deployed with a future GPU platform, this architecture increases available compute power per rack from approximately 125 kW to up to 880 kW. Flex also offers Battery Backup Units (BBUs) and Capacitor Backup Units (CBUs) as enhanced options for the 800 VDC Power Rack, improving resiliency by protecting critical AI workloads from outages and grid disturbances.

The 800 VDC Power Rack is supported by Flex’s global manufacturing and supply chain network, providing the speed, scale, and resilience required to deploy next-generation AI infrastructure. This global footprint includes the ability to manufacture the 800 VDC Power Rack in North America, giving customers flexibility to manufacture in-region.

The Flex 800 VDC Power Rack will be showcased at NVIDIA GTC, March 16–19, 2026. Visit Flex at Booth 138 to learn more.

About Flex

Flex (Reg. No. 199002645H) is the manufacturing partner of choice that helps leading brands design, build, and manage products that improve the world. With a global footprint spanning 30 countries, Flex delivers advanced manufacturing and supply chain solutions, innovative products and technology, and lifecycle services that support customers from concept to scale. In the AI era, Flex is helping customers accelerate data center deployment by solving power, heat, and scale challenges through cutting-edge power and cooling technology and scalable IT infrastructure solutions.


Source: Flex

The post Flex Launches 800 VDC Power Rack for Next-Gen NVIDIA AI Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:27

March 17, 2026 — Kvantify, Atom Computing, and the Department of Chemistry at Aarhus University have launched a joint project focused on advancing quantum computing methods for drug discovery. Innovation Fund Denmark is investing DKK 30 million (~US$4.63 million) in the effort.

Pharmaceutical development remains constrained by low success rates, timelines that can span 10 to 15 years, and costs that often exceed DKK 15 billion per drug.

Molecular simulation is a core component of drug discovery, and improving the accuracy of these methods is considered key to addressing these challenges.

“With the potential to perform computations that are currently impossible, quantum computing offers a promising technological path forward for drug discovery. But to facilitate the impact, new accurate quantum-ingrained chemistry methods are required as the basis for hardware-optimized quantum algorithms,” said Ove Christiansen, Professor at the Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University.

These methods must also be implemented in software that is accessible to industry specialists and can be integrated into existing workflows.

Quantum Computers: Pushing the Boundaries of Molecular Simulation

A key computational challenge in drug discovery is accurately predicting how strongly a candidate molecule binds to its target protein, known as binding affinity. The EarlyBIRDD project, supported by Innovation Fund Denmark, brings together an international consortium to address this problem.

The effort focuses on advancing computational chemistry methods, co-developing quantum hardware and algorithms, and integrating these capabilities into practical software tools for pharmaceutical applications.

“Molecular simulations are extremely hard for classical computers but naturally translate into the language of quantum computers,” said Nikolaj Thomas Zinner, CSO and co-founder of Kvantify and project leader of EarlyBIRDD. “This makes computational chemistry a very promising place to look for first use cases of quantum computing with high business value.”

Potential to Reduce Industry Costs

Advances in computer-assisted drug development are expected to reduce R&D costs, potentially by as much as 50%. The EarlyBIRDD project is intended to contribute to these efforts. Over the longer term, the initiative also aims to support economic activity by advancing the use of quantum computing in the pharmaceutical sector, which accounts for approximately 10% of Denmark’s GDP.

“Quantum computing hardware will remain in-development for years to come, but with the so-called early fault-tolerant quantum computers we are entering a regime where we expect to see industrial impact,” Zinner said. “However, making an early bird tap into this imminent business potential requires dedicated co-development across the entire chain – from problem and method formulation to algorithm development, hardware implementation, and software integration.”

Collaboration Between Research, Technology, and Industry

With support from Innovation Fund Denmark, the EarlyBIRDD project brings together Aarhus University’s expertise in theoretical quantum chemistry, Kvantify’s quantum software and algorithms, and Atom Computing’s scalable quantum computing hardware into a single coordinated effort.

To align development with industry needs, the consortium plans to engage stakeholders for input on software functionality and performance requirements, with support from the Alexandra Institute on user interface design.

The project is expected to contribute to Denmark’s position in quantum computing while supporting industry adoption of emerging technologies.

Further Information

Contact
Project leader: Nikolaj Thomas Zinner, CSO & Co-founder, Kvantify ApS
Mail: ntz@kvantify.dk

Facts
Innovation Fund Denmark’s investment: DKK 30.0 million
Total budget: DKK 37.7 million
Duration: 4 years, starting April 2026
Official title: Early fault-tolerant quantum computing – Bringing Impact by Revolutionizing Drug Discovery (EarlyBIRDD).

More from HPCwire

About Kvantify

Kvantify is a Danish startup that develops software and algorithms coupling the speed and accuracy of quantum computers with the power of classical computing clouds with the goal of transforming molecular discovery. Incorporated in 2022, Kvantify now employs more than 40 specialists in quantum algorithms, chemistry, drug discovery, and computer science.

About Atom Computing

Atom Computing is a global leader in development of quantum computing hardware based on trapped neutral atoms. The company is based in Boulder, Colorado and employs more than 100 people. Atom Computing has recently set up an office in Copenhagen and will deliver the quantum computer Magne to be commissioned in Denmark in late 2026.

About the Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University

The Department of Chemistry at AU is home to one of the world’s most advanced scientific communities in theoretical chemistry. Essential for the project, the department will contribute leading expertise on quantum chemistry and force-field development that will be a cornerstone for computational speed-ups and development of novel quantum algorithms.


Source: Kvantify

The post Kvantify Collaborates with Atom Computing and Aarhus University on Quantum Drug Discovery Research appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:26

NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform now available through PsiQuantum’s software platform Construct and Workbench tool, accelerating large scale quantum algorithms research

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 17, 2026 — PsiQuantum has announced the integration of NVIDIA CUDA-Q with Construct, PsiQuantum’s software suite for fault-tolerant quantum application development. The integration enables GPU-accelerated state-vector simulation of large-scale quantum algorithms, delivering up to 450x faster performance compared to CPU-based simulation.

Construct users can now request early access to GPU-accelerated simulation capabilities within their existing workflows via CUDA-Q. This new integration allows developers to validate and benchmark complex quantum algorithms at scales that were previously impractical when using CPU-based simulators. Integrating CUDA-Q into Construct will provide users with tunable acceleration based on their specific needs, ranging from an 8x speedup to up to 450x for best-in-class multi-GPU nodes.

“As the industry moves toward utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computing, rigorous verification of large-scale quantum applications is essential,” said Sam Pallister, VP of Quantum Applications at PsiQuantum. “By integrating NVIDIA CUDA-Q’s GPU-acceleration into Construct, we are giving developers the ability to simulate and stress-test algorithms at an advanced scale, mitigating deployment risk.”

CUDA-Q is the NVIDIA platform for hybrid quantum-classical computing, designed to enable developers to build and simulate quantum algorithms alongside GPU-accelerated classical workloads. By integrating CUDA-Q into its software development kit, PsiQuantum enables Construct users to perform optimized GPU state-vector simulation, leveraging the NVIDIA cuQuantum simulation engine without a single change to users’ existing code.

“Simulating future quantum workloads means modelling a complex hybrid quantum-classical environment,” said Tim Costa, Vice President and General Manager for Quantum at NVIDIA. “By integrating the CUDA-Q platform into their workflow, PsiQuantum is able to run GPU-accelerated simulations at the magnitudes they need to deploy large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum applications.”

Utility-scale quantum computing demands a shift from small experimental circuits to production-grade quantum applications whose correctness and performance must be established long before execution on hardware. High-performance classical simulation plays a pivotal role in this transition, enabling developers to stress-test algorithms, explore parameter regimes, and de-risk deployment at scale. By bringing NVIDIA’s accelerated computing platform into Construct, PsiQuantum is establishing the simulation infrastructure required to support the next generation of fault-tolerant quantum applications.

PsiQuantum launched Construct in September 2025, with users across industry and academia actively using the tools. In February 2026, PsiQuantum announced a stand-alone, open-access web application of its Circuit Designer tool. Circuit Designer is the fastest and easiest way to create and share quantum circuit diagrams commonly found in academic research, allowing users to prototype new quantum algorithms and advance quantum algorithm development.

Early access to the integration is available by request, allowing Construct users to experience the benefits of GPU acceleration for their largest simulation tasks.

About PsiQuantum

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


Source: PsiQuantum

The post PsiQuantum Construct Enables Utility-Scale Quantum Application Development with CUDA-Q Integration appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:21

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — At NVIDIA GTC 2026, Compal Electronics is showcasing its high-density AI server solution based on NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8, aligning with the NVIDIA’s “Six New Chips – One AI Supercomputer” NVIDIA Vera Rubin architecture and demonstrating its engineering readiness for next-generation AI supercomputing infrastructure.

Compal Introduces High-Density NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8 Integrated Solution at GTC 2026

The NVIDIA Vera Rubin architecture integrates the NVIDIA Vera CPU, NVIDIA Rubin GPU, NVIDIA NVLink 6 Switch, NVIDIA BlueField-4 DPU, NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet and NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNIC to form a comprehensive heterogeneous computing architecture. Powered by NVLink 6 switching technology, the NVL72 rack-scale configuration delivers up to 260 TB/s of total bandwidth and enables 3.6 TB/s of all-to-all bandwidth per GPU, supporting MoE models and large-scale training and inference workloads.

Compal is introducing the SG231-2-L1, based on NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8. The core value of the SG231-2-L1 includes:

  • High-Density Accelerated Architecture: Integrates eight NVIDIA Rubin GPUs within a 2U chassis, maximizing compute density and space efficiency.
  • Advanced Inference Performance: Delivers up to 400 petaFLOPS (NVFP4), supporting LLM training and inference, generative AI, and HPC workloads.
  • High-Bandwidth GPU Interconnect: Powered by NVIDIA NVLink 6, enabling up to 28.8TB/s of GPU-to-GPU bandwidth for enhanced multi-GPU scalability.
  • Scalable Memory Architecture: Supports up to 2.3TB of GPU memory and 176TB/s of memory bandwidth for memory-intensive AI applications.
  • High Power Density with Liquid Cooling: Sustains approximately 24kW of system power through optimized direct liquid-cooling design for stable, sustained performance.
  • Rack-Level Deployment Readiness: Designed for seamless integration into high-density AI racks, supporting scalable expansion from single nodes to data center deployments.

In its booth, Compal is also featuring an NVIDIA Vera CPU HPM module based on NVIDIA HGX system, highlighting engineering readiness and manufacturing capabilities aligned with the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform. As heterogeneous computing architectures continue to evolve, coordinated CPU-GPU design has become a critical factor for data centers.

Complementing this showcase, Compal is also introducing support for the new NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition—featuring 32GB GDDR7 memory and up to 800 GB/s bandwidth, enabling efficient acceleration for AI inference, data processing, and visual computing workloads.

Alan Chang, Vice President of Compal’s Infrastructure Systems Business Group, stated: “Competition in AI infrastructure has shifted from single-node performance comparisons to overall deployment efficiency and long-term scalability. As the NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8 platform advances in both performance and power density, data center architecture must evolve accordingly. We are strengthening not only compute capability, but also the load-bearing and expansion capacity of the entire infrastructure stack, enabling customers to establish sustainable deployment models for next-generation AI workloads.”

As AI workloads continue to scale, data center competitiveness is increasingly defined by ecosystem alignment and holistic architectural integration. Through its showcase at GTC 2026, Compal demonstrates engineering strength in high-density GPU systems and liquid cooling solutions while reinforcing its long-term strategic engagement within the NVIDIA technology ecosystem.

About Compal

Founded in 1984, Compal is a leading manufacturer in the notebook and smart device industry, creating brand value in collaboration with various sectors. Its groundbreaking product designs have received numerous international awards. In 2025, Compal was recognized by CommonWealth Magazine as one of Taiwan’s top 7 manufacturers and has consistently ranked among the Forbes Global 2000 companies. In recent years, Compal has actively developed emerging businesses, including cloud servers, auto electronics, and smart medical, leveraging its integrated hardware and software R&D and manufacturing capabilities to create relevant solutions. More information, please visit https://www.compal.com.


Source: Compal

The post Compal Introduces High-Density NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8 Integrated Solution at GTC 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:17

Law enforcement sources told CBS News that additional images were obtained from surveillance cameras installed at Guthrie's Tucson home, but they showed nothing suspicious.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:11

The Cuban government is planning to allow Cuban nationals who live abroad to invest in the island, a government official told NBC News, as the country faces economic collapse and pressure from the Trump administration.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-17 20:07

Postmaster general David Steiner has called for change to federal law that caps USPS’s borrowing at $15bn

The US Postal Service (USPS) will run out of funds within a year, unless lawmakers lift a cap on how much money the agency can borrow, according to the postmaster general.

In an interview with the Associated Press, David Steiner warned that the postal service – which relies on stamps and service fees rather than tax dollars to deliver mail six days a week to every address in the country – would run out of cash for employees and vendors by February next year.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-18 05:00

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 18, No. 541.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-18 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 18, No. 1,733.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-18 05:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 18, No. 745.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-18 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 18 #1011.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-19 15:07

A federal judge has ordered the Trump administration to restore the government-run Voice of America to full operations, putting hundreds of journalists who have been on administrative leave for a year back to work.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 20:01

Study highlights the movements in people’s gait that give away most about their emotional state

A long face is not the only sign that someone is down in the dumps. How people walk is revealing too, particularly the swing of the arms and legs, researchers say.

Scientists asked volunteers to guess people’s emotions from video clips of them walking and found that bigger swings portrayed more aggression while smaller swings implied fear and sadness.

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2026-03-19 08:04
2026-03-17 20:00

We went through more than a decade of official records to understand how congressional time actually works. The answer is weirder than expected.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 19:59

Healthcare AI is no longer relegated to analyzing images or predicting outcomes. At Nvidia’s GTC conference this week, the company described collaborations in areas like protein modeling, drug discovery, surgical robotics and hospital simulation. Nvidia’s life sciences announcements reflect its strategy of connecting accelerated computing, simulation and AI models across the full healthcare timeline, from early-stage discovery through clinical delivery and manufacturing.

One substantial update revolves around protein folding. Since 2020, when deep learning models like AlphaFold demonstrated high-accuracy protein structure prediction, the method has become foundational for drug discovery and disease research. Nvidia announced it is working with Google DeepMind, EMBL’s European Bioinformatics Institute and Seoul National University to expand the AlphaFold Protein Structure Database with 1.7 million high-confidence protein complex predictions and roughly 30 million additional structures available for bulk download.

(Shutterstock)

Nvidia says the expanded dataset will act as a comprehensive resource for modeling protein-to-protein interactions at a large scale. Using Nvidia’s accelerated compute workflows, including optimized inference libraries and faster OpenFold implementations, the collaborators have precomputed structures that researchers can use as starting points for hypothesis generation. These precomputed structures serve as starting hypotheses, allowing researchers to move more quickly into experimental testing. The dataset prioritizes reference proteomes and pathogens on the World Health Organization’s priority list to support infectious disease research. By providing the precomputed structures, it could also lower research barriers for groups without access to large-scale computing infrastructure.

Along with the dataset, Nvidia said it is continuing to build out its BioNeMo platform as an open development environment for life sciences. The platform aggregates models and datasets for tasks such as molecular modeling, drug discovery and multimodal biomedical analysis. One example highlighted at GTC is Proteina-Complexa, a generative model designed to create protein binders for therapeutic development. Early adopters, including pharmaceutical and biotech firms, are using the model to design candidate molecules that can then be experimentally validated.

Nvidia’s healthcare announcements also extend into robotics, where the company introduced a set of domain-specific tools for surgical and clinical environments. The release includes Open-H, a dataset of more than 700 hours of surgical video; Cosmos-H, a family of models for generating synthetic surgical data; GR00T-H, a vision-language-action model for translating clinical instructions into robotic actions; and Rheo, a simulation framework for modeling hospital environments.

(Image courtesy of Nvidia)

These models are designed to be a foundation for training and evaluating robotic systems in settings where real-world data is difficult to collect and standardize. Synthetic data generation and simulation have become important in robotics for addressing the gap between training environments and real-world deployment. By combining real surgical footage with physics-based simulation, Nvidia appears to be encouraging more robust training for clinical robotics.

Several medical device companies and platform developers are already experimenting with these tools. Surgical robotics firms, including CMR Surgical, Johnson & Johnson MedTech, Moon Surgical and Rob Surgical, are contributing data and using simulation to evaluate control policies. Software developers like PeritasAI and Proximie are building systems that integrate computer vision, language models and real-time coordination in operating rooms. Some collaborations focus on providing real-time decision support to surgical teams, while others are developing robots that can perform defined tasks under human supervision.

Another major component of Nvidia’s healthcare strategy is infrastructure, as illustrated by a large-scale deployment with Roche. The pharmaceutical company is expanding its use of Nvidia GPUs to more than 3,500 Blackwell GPUs across hybrid cloud and on-prem environments. This infrastructure will support a wide range of workloads, including foundation model training, drug discovery, diagnostics and manufacturing optimization.

Roche’s approach highlights how AI is being integrated into enterprise-scale scientific workflows. In drug discovery, the company is using AI within a “lab-in-the-loop” framework that connects computational models with experimental data in iterative cycles. According to Roche, most eligible small-molecule programs now incorporate AI, with reported gains in development timelines for certain candidates. These examples suggest that AI is beginning to influence not just early research but also decision-making processes throughout the development pipeline. The same infrastructure is being applied to Roche’s manufacturing through digital twins, where virtual models of production facilities are being used to simulate and optimize operations. In diagnostics, AI models are being used to analyze pathology images and large-scale biological datasets, with these capabilities being deployed across Roche’s global operations.

(gguy/Shutterstock)

Across Nvidia’s healthcare announcements is the company’s consistent theme of AI that works through connecting data, models and compute. The company is presenting an interconnected AI stack spanning biological modeling, simulation, robotics and enterprise infrastructure. The strategy depends on the assumption that advances in one layer, such as faster protein modeling or improved simulation environments, will reinforce progress in others. And though these AI capabilities in healthcare are exciting, there are practical constraints that will influence how quickly they translate into clinical use. In drug discovery, biological complexity and regulatory requirements can limit the speed of development. In robotics, clinical validation and safety standards can create high barriers to deployment. Clinical environments are highly variable, high-risk and subject to strict regulations. Even with large-scale infrastructure, bringing AI into existing workflows takes time and continued investment. 

Despite the remaining challenges, AI in healthcare is moving beyond narrow applications toward systems that combine prediction, simulation and physical interaction. Nvidia’s GTC announcements suggest it intends to play a large role in that transition, as the company does in many other industries, by providing both the underlying compute and the software frameworks that connect these domains. Whether the company’s signature integrated approach leads to measurable improvements in patient outcomes will depend on how these tools are adopted and used, but initial projects are already revealing where AI may have the most immediate impact in healthcare.

The post Nvidia Details Its Healthcare AI Stack at GTC appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 19:56

So I’ve had my pint x for a while now, like 3 years and I’m still on the original firmware. I never get prompts to update on the app and tried everything. Even contacted them and sent diagnostics and FM Just stopped responding. Am I better off or am I missing out on customization?

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 19:54

Republican appointee rules attempts to shutter federal agency are illegal and mandates workers return by 23 March

A Republican-appointed federal judge has ordered that more than 1,000 Voice of America (VOA) employees be reinstated after a Trump administration order effectively dismantled the radio network, triggering mass layoffs.

In two separate rulings made Tuesday, the US district judge Royce Lamberth said that attempts to shut down operations of the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM), an independent federal agency that oversees VOA, are illegal and mandated that employees return to work by 23 March.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 19:44

Israel announced earlier that he was killed in overnight strike on Tehran

The head of the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) has said that naval escorts through the strait of Hormuz will not “100% guarantee” the safety of ships attempting to transit the waterway, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

Military assistance was “not a long-term or sustainable solution” to opening up the strait, Arsenio Dominguez told the newspaper.

We are collateral damage of a conflict when the root causes have nothing to do with shipping.

Remaining in the area of the specified buildings exposes you to danger

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 19:00

Arizona has filed criminal charges against Kalshi, accusing it of operating an illegal gambling business. "Kalshi may brand itself as a 'prediction market,' but what it's actually doing is running an illegal gambling operation and taking bets on Arizona elections, both of which violate Arizona law," Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes said in a statement. The case could ultimately head to the Supreme Court to decide whether federal oversight by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission overrides state gambling laws. Bloomberg reports: While state regulators have taken steps to crack down on what they say is unlicensed betting on Kalshi's site, Arizona appears to be the first state to escalate to criminal charges. The charges cited in the complaint are misdemeanors, which carry less serious penalties than felonies. [...] Prediction market exchanges like Kalshi have said they should continue to be regulated by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission despite opposition from some state officials, who argue the trading should come under state gambling laws. Arizona's criminal complaint follows Kalshi's move last week to block the state's gaming department from taking enforcement action against the company. "These are the first criminal charges of any kind filed against Kalshi in any court in the United States, but it will likely be the first of several," said Daniel Wallach, a sports and gaming attorney.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 18:44

MSPs reject bill after concerted campaign to block it and despite amendments intended to placate critics

The Scottish parliament has voted against legalising assisted dying after critics and religious groups led a concerted campaign to block the measures.

MSPs voted 69 to 57 to reject the proposals in a late night vote on Tuesday – a larger margin than expected, despite a series of last-minute amendments designed to placate critics of the private member’s bill.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 18:42

Former deputy prime minister says Labour’s immigration changes are ‘un-British’ and Starmer must respond to fall in party’s popularity

Angela Rayner has said the very survival of the Labour party is at stake and warned Keir Starmer that he “cannot go through the motions” in the face of declining support.

In a speech at campaign group Mainstream’s spring reception, the former deputy prime minister said she believed the government was “running out of time” to show it can deliver the change that the public needs.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 18:23

Musician, AKA Michael Tyler, faces up to 20 years after entering plea in state court outside Baton Rouge, Louisiana

The US rapper Mystikal on Tuesday pleaded guilty to third-degree rape in connection with a case that led to his arrest in 2022.

Mystikal – whose given name is Michael Tyler – faces up to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty in a state courthouse outside Baton Rouge, Louisiana, according to reports from local news outlets WBRZ and WAFB.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 18:15

Fi Intelligence allows you to ask questions of a specially tailored pet health chatbot, but it's not meant to replace vet visits.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 18:09

Tribblix, the Illumos distribution focused on giving you a classic UNIX-style experience, has released a new version.

There are several noticeable version updates in this release. The graphical libraries libtiff and OpenEXR have been updated, retaining the old shared library versions for now. OpenSSL is now from the 3.5 series with the 3.0 api by default. Bind is now from the 9.20 series. OpenSSH is now 10.2, and you may get a Post-Quantum Cryptography warning if connecting to older SSH servers.

↫ Tribblix m39 release notes

If you’re already running Tribblix, updating is easy, and if you want to try it out, head on over to the downloads page. Rests me to say that Tribblix is a treasure, and it must be protected at all costs. It’s rare to see a passion project like this maintain such a steady pace.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 18:02

Close ally of president was set to testify at antitrust trial of Ticketmaster parent company later this month

Kid Rock thinks it’s bawita-bad that the US Department of Justice reached a shocking settlement with Live Nation one week into its antitrust trial.

A close ally of Donald Trump, the rightwing rocker expressed bewilderment over the settlement, telling former Rolling Stone editor-in-chief Noah Shachtman that he was shocked by the news.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 18:00

Residents in rural Ohio are pushing a constitutional amendment to ban large data centers over 25 megawatts, citing concerns about energy use, water consumption, and lack of transparency around proposed projects. "My biggest concern is because I love Adams County," Nikki Gerber told Cleveland.com. "What it feels like they are doing is just taking advantage of the unzoned rural areas of Ohio, where they can go ahead and put in whatever they want." From the report: Gerber and a handful of residents from Adams and Brown counties gathered about 1,800 signatures in eight days to start the ballot process. They submitted those petitions to the Ohio attorney general's office on Monday. That's the first step before supporters can begin collecting signatures statewide. State law requires at least 1,000 valid voter signatures to begin the process. The petitions must also include the full text of the proposed amendment and a summary explaining what it would do. Attorney General Dave Yost's office now has 10 days to decide whether the summary fairly and truthfully describes the proposal. If it does, the measure will move to the Ohio Ballot Board. Supporters would then need to gather about 413,000 valid signatures by July to place the amendment before voters this November. The report notes that a 25-megawatt limit "would effectively block most modern data centers from being built in Ohio."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:56

The retailer says the one-hour option is available in hundreds of cities, with discounted shipping for Prime members.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:48

The Department of Homeland Security is using discretionary funding to continue paying active-duty U.S. Coast Guard personnel during the department's ongoing shutdown, even as civilian employees remain unpaid.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:38

The lawsuit continues a trend of content owners suing AI companies for copyright infringement.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:35

Larijani was killed by an Israeli airstrike and is the most senior Iranian fatality since Ali Khamenei on first day of war

Iran’s supreme national security council has confirmed the death of its chief, Ali Larijani, after Israel said it had killed him in an airstrike.

“The pure souls of the martyrs embraced the purified soul of God’s righteous servant, Martyr Dr Ali Larijani,” the council said on Tuesday evening, adding that his son and his bodyguards had died with him.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 17:34

Trump has expressed frustration over a lack of military assistance from allies, but European leaders are reluctant to join a conflict he started without consulting them.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:32

Java 26 delivers thousands of improvements that boost developer productivity, simplify the language, and help developers integrate AI and cryptography functionality into their applications. To help developers further streamline and enhance their development initiatives, Oracle is also announcing the new Java Verified Portfolio, which provides developers with a curated set of Oracle-supported tools, frameworks, libraries, and services, including commercial support for JavaFX, a Java-based UI framework, and Helidon, a Java framework for microservices. In addition, Oracle intends to align Helidon’s release cadence with Java releases and propose Helidon as an OpenJDK project.

↫ Oracle’s Java 26 press release

Oracle’s press releases lists the most important JDK Enhancement Proposals in this release, as do the release notes and the project page at OpenJDK. In addition, Java developer Hanno Embregts published a detailed blog post that dives deeper into this new release.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:19

I have a used XR that had 340 miles on it, I hit 440 today!

I’m a bigger guy, but I am now crushing at 10-13mph comfortably.

I’ve just been riding around my neighborhood with little to no traffic.

Also been practicing transitioning from the sidewalk to the street going up and down driveways. It’s really fun to carve up a driveway then cruise back down onto the street 😂

All in all I’m loving this hobby, it’s helping me get out the house on my days off and it’s been a good thing for my mental health.

I work 3 miles from my house and plan to ride it to work when I am more comfortable around cars and what not!

To anyone having any doubts and want to give up, don’t. It gets better and way easier with time.

Float on everyone!!!!

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:15

Nvidia balanced the debut of its Vera CPU and NemoClaw agent stack against a wave of gamer backlash over its "cinematic" DLSS 5 technology.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:14
Problem with XRC or stance

I just got this XRC yesterday and I got to ride it today. I first tried to get on and it never activated (without and with shoes). And I tried again and it didn’t activate until I kind of stood on it had the weight of the front and let it fall kinda (kinda hard to explain). Is it a problem with my stance? Or is it a defective front pad?

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:09

Roberts did not name Donald Trump, but US president has decried ‘corrupt judges’ who ruled against him

The chief justice of the United States, John Roberts, said on Tuesday that hostility directed in personal terms at judges is “dangerous, and it’s got to stop”.

The comment came just days after Donald Trump’s latest social media broadside against judges who have ruled against him and his administration.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:01

One Nation and Coalition adopting reactionary tactics to win over frustrated and fearful voters, frontbencher Andrew Giles says

Pauline Hanson and rightwing populists are cynically exploiting the frustrations of Australians who feel forgotten by government or left behind by poor education and job opportunities, Labor frontbencher Andrew Giles says.

Accusing One Nation and the Coalition of adopting cynical and reactionary tactics to win over frustrated and fearful voters, Giles says better education is critical to stopping disenfranchisement with government and a weakening of democracy in Australia.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:00

WASHINGTON, March 17, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced funding to advance the Genesis Mission’s efforts to tackle the nation’s most complex science and technology challenges. This includes a $293 million Request for Application (RFA),“The Genesis Mission: Transforming Science and Energy with AI.” Through this RFA, DOE invites interdisciplinary teams to leverage novel AI models and frameworks to address over 20 national challenges spanning advanced manufacturing, biotechnology, critical materials, nuclear energy, and quantum information science.

“The Genesis Mission has caught the imagination of our scientific and engineering communities to tackle national challenges in the age of AI,” said Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil and Genesis Mission Director. “With these investments we seek breakthrough ideas and novel collaborations leveraging the scientific prowess of our National Laboratories, the private sector, universities, and science philanthropies.”

The RFA is open to interdisciplinary teams from DOE National Laboratories, U.S. industry, and academia. Phase I awards will range from $500,000 to $750,000 and will support a nine month project period. Phase II awards will range from $6 million to $15 million over a three year project period. Teams may apply directly to either phase in FY 2026, and successful Phase I teams will be eligible to compete for larger Phase II awards in future cycles.

Phase I applications and Phase II letters of intent are due April 28, 2026. Phase II applications are due May 19, 2026. DOE plans to hold an informational webinar about this RFA on March 26, 2026.

For full eligibility, application instructions, and challenge details, see the official NOFO: DE-FOA-0003612. Registration instructions and other details will be posted here.

More from HPCwire


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Announces $293M in Funding to Support Genesis Mission National Science and Technology Challenges appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 17:00

Kyle Orland writes via Ars Technica: Since deep-learning super-sampling (DLSS) launched on 2018's RTX 2080 cards, gamers have been generally bullish on the technology as a way to effectively use machine-learning upscaling techniques to increase resolutions or juice frame rates in games. With yesterday's tease of the upcoming DLSS 5, though, Nvidia has crossed a line from mere upscaling into complete lighting and texture overhauls influenced by "generative AI." The result is a bland, uncanny gloss that has received an instant and overwhelmingly negative reaction from large swaths of gamers and the industry at large. While previous DLSS releases rendered upscaled frames or created entirely new ones to smooth out gaps, Nvidia calls DLSS 5 -- which it plans to launch in Autumn -- "a real-time neural rendering model" that can "deliver a new level of photoreal computer graphics previously only achieved in Hollywood visual effects." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said explicitly that the technology melds "generative AI" with "handcrafted rendering" for "a dramatic leap in visual realism while preserving the control artists need for creative expression." Unlike existing generative video models, which Nvidia notes are "difficult to precisely control and often lack predictability," DLSS 5 uses a game's internal color and motion vectors "to infuse the scene with photoreal lighting and materials that are anchored to source 3D content and consistent from frame to frame." That underlying game data helps the system "understand complex scene semantics such as characters, hair, fabric and translucent skin, along with environmental lighting conditions like front-lit, back-lit or overcast," the company says. Nvidia's announcement video and detailed Digital Foundry breakdown can be found at their respective links. "Reactions have compared the effect to air-brushed pornography, 'yassified, looks-maxed freaks,' or those uncanny, unavoidable Evony ads," writes Orland. "Others have noted how DLSS 5 seems to mangle the intended art direction by dampening shadows in favor of a homogenized look." Thomas Was Alone developer Mike Bithell said the technology seems designed "for when you absolutely, positively, don't want any art direction in your gaming experience." Gunfire Games Senior Concept Artist Jeff Talbot added that "in every shot the art direction was taken away for the senseless addition of 'details.' Each DLSS 5 shot looked worse and had less character than the original. This is just a garbage AI Filter." DLSS 5's "AI dogshit is actually depressing," said New Blood Interactive founder and CEO Dave Oshry, adding that future generations "won't even know this looks 'bad' or 'wrong' because to them it'll be normal."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:58

In letter to justice secretary, groups say judge-led decisions more likely to be influenced by bias than those made by 12 random people

Thirty organisations representing victims of violence against women and girls (VAWG) have written to the justice secretary, David Lammy, urging him to drop plans to significantly reduce the number of jury trials.

The groups said that the proposals, which will affect court cases in England and Wales, will deepen mistrust in the justice system among victims and distract from measures designed to reduce offending.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:56

MUNICH, March 17, 2026 — SimScale, the world’s first AI-native cloud engineering simulation platform, has announced a strategic collaboration with AI Engineering GmbH to integrate the PAMICS solver into the SimScale ecosystem. Leveraging accelerated computing on NVIDIA AI infrastructure, the integration removes meshing bottlenecks and dramatically reduces simulation runtimes for complex industrial applications that have traditionally struggled with grid-based methods, delivering simulation speeds 10-20x faster.

By combining AI Engineering’s state-of-the-art Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) solver with SimScale’s cloud-native infrastructure, this partnership aims to democratize access to high-fidelity, meshless Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD).

This performance leap further positions SimScale as a high-velocity source of synthetic physics data, enabling teams to generate the scale and fidelity required for Physics AI model training and predictive Digital Twins. By combining cloud-native simulation, centralized data management, and accelerated computing, SimScale helps lay the foundation to train the next generation of AI models. This foundation supports downstream Physics AI workflows across the NVIDIA ecosystem, including physics-informed models built directly in SimScale with NVIDIA PhysicsNeMo.

The integration also supports advanced visualization workflows across the NVIDIA ecosystem, including compatibility with applications built on NVIDIA Omniverse libraries to deliver photorealistic, physically-based rendering and immersive review of simulation results. This allows engineering teams to more easily visualize, communicate, and validate complex fluid behavior as part of broader Digital Twin workflows.

Designed to handle complex, highly dynamic fluid behavior that is difficult to capture with traditional simulation methods, the PAMICS solver utilizes a Lagrangian Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) approach, allowing engineers to simulate fluid dynamics directly from raw CAD geometries without the need for meshing. This accelerates simulation workflows for complex multiphase and free surface flows, particularly in scenarios involving arbitrary motion, fluid-structure interaction and splashing that are difficult or impractical to model with traditional grid-based methods. Critical use cases include:

  • Rotating Machinery & Powertrains: Accurately predicting oil lubrication and cooling in complex gearboxes and high-power electric motors without geometry simplification.
  • Industrial Mixing & Processing: Modeling multiphase flows, surface tension effects, and non-Newtonian fluids in mixers, agitators, and food processing equipment.
  • Water Management: Simulating vehicle wading, soiling, and contamination management for consumer, off-highway and industrial vehicles.

“At SimScale, our mission is to empower engineers to explore thousands of engineering decisions in seconds,” said David Heiny, CEO of SimScale. “By integrating AI Engineering’s sophisticated PAMICS solver, we are bringing a true ‘no-mesh’ workflow to the cloud, removing one of the biggest bottlenecks when it comes to simulating complex fluid dynamics with moving assemblies. Combined with accelerated computing on GPUs and Physics AI workflows, this enables our customers to build their own synthetic data engines, accelerating their path to predictive Digital Twins.”

“We developed PAMICS to handle the most demanding fluid dynamics challenges where traditional methods fail—specifically where complex motion and free surfaces interact,” said Dr.-Ing. habil. Stefan Adami, CEO of AI Engineering GmbH. “Joining forces with SimScale allows us to scale this technology globally. As a member of NVIDIA Inception, we have optimized PAMICS to extract maximum performance from NVIDIA GPUs. Delivering this through SimScale’s browser-based platform means engineers in the industrial and manufacturing sectors will be able to access high-end SPH capabilities instantly, without investing in expensive local hardware.”

This integration is being showcased at NVIDIA GTC, attendees can visit SimScale at booth 168 for a preview of the new SPH capabilities running on NVIDIA infrastructure.

About SimScale

SimScale is the world’s first AI-native cloud platform for engineering simulation. Trusted by over 800,000 users globally, SimScale empowers engineering teams to innovate faster by exploring thousands of design decisions in seconds. By integrating Engineering AI workflows with high-fidelity CFD, FEA, Electromagnetics, and Thermal simulation in a single cloud platform, SimScale eliminates the constraints of on-premise hardware and software, helping customers engineer the irreplaceable. For more information, visit www.simscale.com.

About AI Engineering GmbH

AI Engineering GmbH is a pioneer in advanced simulation solutions, specializing in Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) and AI-enhanced engineering tools. AI Engineering leverages cutting-edge GPU acceleration to deliver PAMICS, a robust meshless solver designed for complex industrial fluid dynamics. For more information, visit www.ai-eng.com.


Source: SimScale

The post SimScale Partners with AI Engineering GmbH to Unlock Meshless SPH Simulation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:55

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — AI-optimized memory and storage have become strategic assets driving system performance to enable AI workloads and infrastructure to deliver real-world value. Micron Technology, Inc. has begun volume shipment of its HBM4 36GB 12H in the first quarter of calendar year 2026 and is designed for NVIDIA Vera Rubin. With HBM4, Micron achieves over 11 Gb/s pin speeds, enabling a bandwidth greater than 2.8 TB/s, representing a 2.3 times bandwidth and greater than 20% power efficiency improvement over its HBM3E.

Credit: Micron

Looking towards further HBM cube capacity expansion, Micron has demonstrated advanced packaging capability of stacking 16 die of HBM by shipping samples of HBM4 48GB 16H to customers. This milestone delivers a 33% increase in capacity per HBM placement compared to the HBM4 36GB 12H offering.

“The next era of AI will be defined by tightly integrated platforms developed through joint engineering innovations across the ecosystem. Our close collaboration with NVIDIA ensures that compute and memory are designed to scale together from day one,” said Sumit Sadana, executive vice president and chief business officer at Micron Technology. “At the heart of this is Micron’s HBM4, the engine of AI, delivering unprecedented bandwidth, capacity and power efficiency. With HBM4 36GB 12H, alongside the industry’s first SOCAMM2 and Gen6 SSD now in high-volume production, Micron’s memory and storage form a core foundation that unlocks the full potential of next-generation AI.”

Micron SOCAMM2 is designed for NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 systems and standalone NVIDIA Vera CPU platforms, enabling up to 2TB of memory and 1.2 TB/s of bandwidth per CPU.

Micron is the first company to mass-produce a PCIe Gen6 data center SSD. The Micron 9650 is optimized for energy efficiency and liquid-cooled environments, delivering high-speed, low-latency data access for AI training and inference workloads with the NVIDIA BlueField-4 STX reference architecture, supporting up to 28 GB/s sequential read throughput and 5.5 million random read IOPS. Micron 7600 and 9550 SSDs offer customers PCIe Gen5 SSDs, increasing their architectural design choices.

Showcasing Micron innovation at NVIDIA GTC 2026

At NVIDIA GTC 2026, Micron will showcase how its advanced memory and storage portfolio enables end-to-end AI acceleration from the data center to the edge. Attendees can find detailed information at the Micron booth, 1407.

About Micron Technology, Inc.

Micron Technology, Inc. is an industry leader in innovative memory and storage solutions, transforming how the world uses information to enrich life for all. With a relentless focus on our customers, technology leadership, and manufacturing and operational excellence, Micron delivers a rich portfolio of high-performance DRAM, NAND and NOR memory and storage products. Every day, the innovations that our people create fuel the data economy, enabling advances in artificial intelligence (AI) and compute-intensive applications that unleash opportunities — from the data center to the intelligent edge and across the client and mobile user experience. To learn more about Micron Technology, Inc. (Nasdaq: MU), visit micron.com.


Source: Micron

The post Micron in High-Volume Production of HBM4 Designed for NVIDIA Vera Rubin, PCIe Gen6 SSD and SOCAMM2 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:53

Lawmakers on both sides of aisle have criticized justice department’s improper redaction of information

Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, has been formally subpoenaed to appear before a House panel to answer questions about the justice department’s handling of the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and its release of the Epstein files.

The move came amid growing criticism from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle over the justice department’s compliance with a law passed last year requiring the full release of Epstein-related files.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:46

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — Cadence has announced an expansion of its broad collaboration with NVIDIA to accelerate Cadence’s Design for AI and AI for Design strategy. The next generation of agentic AI design solutions includes autonomous, long-running agents that require accelerated, trusted, physics-grounded engines to translate design intent into automated flows, generate designs and debug errors, and manage long, complex, end-to-end workflows. Cadence’s leadership in agentic AI is expanded by integrating its portfolio of industry-leading chip and system design solutions with NVIDIA’s accelerated computing stack.

“The fusion of agentic AI and physics-based design is transforming how the world’s most advanced chips are engineered,” said Anirudh Devgan, president and CEO of Cadence. “Through our expanded collaboration with NVIDIA, we’re bringing together Cadence’s expertise in agentic IC design and physics-driven optimization with NVIDIA’s accelerated computing to advance a new era of AI-driven chip innovation. Together, we’re enabling customers to design more intelligent, efficient silicon that will power the next generation of computing and AI infrastructure.”

“AI is driving the largest infrastructure buildout in history—spurring the creation of new chips, systems, and AI factories around the world,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Together, NVIDIA and Cadence have created the Cadence Millennium M2000—a revolutionary AI supercomputer built to tackle the immense scale and complexity of designing the world’s next generation of infrastructure.”

Broadest-Ever Portfolio of Accelerated Design Solutions

To give agents and engineers the tools they need, Cadence has expanded its design solutions accelerated with NVIDIA Grace CPUs and NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs—and as a turnkey deployment on the Cadence Millennium M2000 Supercomputer—delivering up to 80X greater throughput and up to 20X lower power consumption. This expanded offering now spans analysis, optimization and design, with key solvers deeply optimized with NVIDIA CUDA-X. One example is the Cadence Clarity 3D Solver demonstrating that a Millennium M2000 system configured with 8X NVIDIA RTX pro 6000 GPU servers is up to 5X faster, or 4X better cost iso-performance, compared to an equivalent CPU-based solution, when extracting complex and large-scale designs.

Cadence accelerated solutions that will be available in 2026 include:

  • Electronic Design Automation (EDA): The industry’s leading place-and-route solution, Innovus Implementation System; chip, chiplet and 3D-IC analysis and optimization with Celsius Thermal Solver and Voltus IC Power Integrity Solution; advanced memory and circuit analysis with EMX Planar 3D Solver and Liberate MX Memory Characterization; and Spectre X Simulator and Quantus Field Solver for circuit analysis.
  • System Design Automation (SDA): Industry-leading advanced package and PCB optimization with the Allegro X Design Platform, Clarity 3D Solver, Celsius EC Solver; system-level multiphysics analysis with Fidelity CFD Software; and Cadence MSC Actran for physical AI system analysis and optimization.
  • Life Sciences / Bio: ROCS X is an AI-enabled virtual screening solution that enables scientists to conduct 3D searches of over 200 trillion drug-like molecules. Target X is a physics-based AI solution that detects potential druggable pockets, achieving a success rate of over 90%.

The Cadence Allegro X Design Platform and the Cadence Reality Digital Twin Platform also integrate with NVIDIA Omniverse libraries for photo-realistic visualization, critical for multi-disciplinary engineering and design. Cadence’s MSC Virtual Test Drive (VTD) is being integrated with NVIDIA Cosmos and NVIDIA Omniverse NuRec for advancing the state of the art in physical AI.

Design for AI and AI for Design

Industry leaders use Cadence’s full suite of accelerated agentic solutions to design the next generation of AI infrastructure. The Cadence Reality Digital Twin Platform helps teams use physics-based models and AI to design and operate AI factories, accelerating deployment timelines and unlocking new revenue streams across the data center portfolio.

Cadence is advancing AI-driven engineering with its agentic AI solutions, led by the Cadence ChipStack AI Super Agent, to help engineers deliver higher quality, more complex designs. Cadence and NVIDIA are also collaborating on future agentic AI innovations in custom and analog design and building deep research and long-running agents for engineering NVIDIA NemoClaw, an open source stack that simplifies running OpenClaw always-on assistants, more safely, with a single command. As part of the NVIDIA Agent Toolkit, it installs the NVIDIA OpenShell runtime—a secure environment for running autonomous agents, and open source models like NVIDIA Nemotron.

For more information, visit https://www.cadence.com/en_US/home/company/nvidia.html.

About Cadence

Cadence is a market leader in AI and digital twins, pioneering the application of computational software to accelerate innovation in the engineering design of silicon to systems. Our design solutions, based on Cadence’s Intelligent System Design strategy, are essential for the world’s leading semiconductor and systems companies to build their next-generation products from chips to full electromechanical systems that serve a wide range of markets, including hyperscale computing, mobile communications, automotive, aerospace, industrial, life sciences and robotics. In 2024, Cadence was recognized by the Wall Street Journal as one of the world’s top 100 best-managed companies.


Source: Cadence

The post Cadence and NVIDIA Unveil Accelerated Engineering Solutions for Agentic AI Chip and System Design​ appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:41

The deal will give fans more ways to engage with the tournament.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:39

Senate voted 51-48 to begin discussion on bill that would require proof of citizenship for new voters

The Senate voted on Tuesday to debate a sweeping restrictive voting bill that would require proof of US citizenship for new voters, among other measures.

The Senate voted 51-48 to begin debate on the Save America Act, a rebranded version of the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility act, or the Save Act, which has been circulating through Congress in some iteration for more than two years.

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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 16:29

A meteor that fell over the Cleveland area on Tuesday shook homes and startled residents, who heard a sonic boom that some compared to an explosion. The American Meteor Society said it received reports from Wisconsin to Maryland

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2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-17 16:28

Trump administration officials have claimed that they are saving Americans over $1.3 trillion by ending regulation of greenhouse gas emissions from cars and trucks. But the figure does not incorporate any benefits of the emissions standards. By one of the Environmental Protection Agency’s own calculations, getting rid of the standards could cost billions.

On Feb. 12, the EPA announced that it was revoking the 2009 endangerment finding, which allowed the agency to regulate greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide that trap heat and cause climate change. Without that policy in place, the agency said it was terminating its rules that limit such pollution from vehicles. The regulation has primarily acted to increase fuel efficiency, since more efficient cars and trucks burn less gas and release less carbon pollution. 

Since unveiling the finalized rulemaking last month that eliminates the emissions standards, officials have frequently touted an alleged savings of $1.3 trillion.

“This action will save American taxpayers over $1.3 trillion,” EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in the press conference announcing the policy change. “What that means is lower prices, more choices, and an end of heavy-handed climate policies. With today’s announcement, American families will save over … $2,400 for a new vehicle.”

In the same briefing, President Donald Trump and Russell Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, also mentioned the $1.3 trillion figure. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has similarly referred to it, and in official communications, the EPA has also emphasized it.

But the $1.3 trillion is not a net total. It only includes the added cost of making cars and trucks more fuel efficient over a period of nearly three decades, without considering any of the benefits, such as reduced fuel or maintenance costs. One of the agency’s own estimates, which also ignores any health or environmental benefits, shows that repealing the policy could ultimately cost Americans $180 billion.

“This is a very biased and misleading way to talk about the effects of this rollback,” Jason Schwartz, regulatory policy director at New York University School of Law’s Institute for Policy Integrity, told us of the $1.3 trillion framing. “It’s actually worse than only looking at one half of the equation because they’ve also left a bunch of really important effects off the other side of the equation.”

“I honestly can’t recall another rulemaking where the focus of all of the fact sheets and press releases was ONLY about the costs of the policy,” Kenneth Gillingham, a Yale University economics professor, told us in an email.

With the elimination of these standards, soon there will be effectively no fuel efficiency standards in place on American cars and trucks. While the Department of Transportation’s fuel economy standards still technically exist, with the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act earlier this year, Congress set the compliance penalties in the program to zero. The Trump administration is also now working to finalize significant rollbacks to the standards.

Here, we’ll take a closer look at the EPA’s calculations and explain why the administration’s singular focus on $1.3 trillion is misleading.

EPA’s Math 

According to an EPA fact sheet, the $1.3 trillion in alleged savings for U.S. consumers includes about $1.1 trillion in avoided vehicle technology costs and $200 billion in avoided electric vehicle charger and equipment costs between 2027 through 2055.

Those figures are taken from the agency’s regulatory impact analysis. The analysis modeled four different scenarios, making different assumptions about the future cost of gasoline and to what degree fuel savings are counted, under two discount rates. (A discount rate is how much future money is discounted on an annual basis to convert it to a present value.) For each of the scenarios at the 3% discount rate, the EPA estimated a “savings” of either $1.29 trillion or $1.34 trillion.

But those estimates are only one half of the EPA’s ledger. Partially or fully offsetting the alleged savings are a variety of increased costs as a result of undoing the standards, primarily due to higher fuel and maintenance costs (electric vehicles are cheaper to maintain). In no case is there a net savings of $1.3 trillion.

Most of the EPA’s modeled scenarios do show a net savings in repealing the greenhouse gas emissions standards. However, as we said, that analysis does not factor in any health or environmental benefits.

“A correct cost-benefit analysis – even under the Trump Administration’s Circular A-4 guidance document – must include all relevant benefits and costs,” Gillingham told us, referring to the Office of Management and Budget’s guidance for such analyses. “In this rule, they are simply arguing that the benefits don’t exist. The science is not on their side on this one.”

Heavy traffic in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo by Sean Davis / stock.adobe.com.

Even still, one of the agency’s key estimates — one using the Energy Information Administration’s best guess for future fuel prices — shows that rescinding the policy will cost Americans $180 billion on net. Even with nearly $1.3 trillion in savings, there will be almost $1.5 trillion in costs under that scenario.

The other scenarios assume either lower fuel prices or only factor in fuel savings for 2.5 years, or both — each of which lowers the benefits of any fuel efficiency policy and makes the standards appear more expensive.

In response to a series of questions about the agency’s calculations and why the agency is using the $1.3 trillion number when it is not a net figure, the EPA press office told us that the analysis included eight projected net impacts under different modeling assumptions (four scenarios under two discount rates). “We didn’t single out scenarios to suit a narrative, we followed the data,” the agency said in an email, which again highlighted the $1.3 trillion. 

Although the agency and officials routinely refer to “over” $1.3 trillion in savings by ending the emissions standards program, only two of the EPA’s four scenarios at the 3% discount rate actually top $1.3 trillion in terms of the avoided higher technology costs that make vehicles more fuel-efficient. And at the 7% rate, those avoided costs never go above $870 billion.

“Rescinding the 2009 Endangerment Finding means real dollars back in the pockets of American families and unleashing consumer choice. Now, Americans will be able to buy the car they want, including newer, more affordable cars with the most up to date safety standards and that emit fewer criteria and hazardous air pollutants,” the agency continued, adding that the action “does not affect regulations on any non-GHG air pollutants.”

It’s true that the EPA retains its other regulations on vehicles that limit the release of so-called criteria air pollutants, such as ozone and fine particle pollution. But it’s not the case that ending the emissions standards will have no effect on those pollutants. Schwartz said the standards “would have had important indirect impacts on criteria pollutants.”

He cited an analysis by the Environmental Defense Fund, which estimated that with a repeal of the greenhouse gas emissions standards, there would be up to 58,000 more premature deaths and as many as 37 million more asthma attacks through 2055.

In its final rule, the EPA argued that removing the standards would have “only marginal and incidental impacts” on non-greenhouse gas emissions. The agency also said it “is no longer monetizing benefits” from reducing particle and ozone pollution because of uncertainty in how to do those calculations precisely.

“In the past, EPA has always considered air pollution benefits as part of a cost vs benefit sort of study. Here the assumption is that the pollution benefits are all zero,” Mark Jacobsen, an economist at the University of California, San Diego, told us, adding that the benefits are not just to the climate, but to air quality, which the EPA “has typically found to be quite important.”

In its 2024 rule finalizing increased greenhouse gas emissions standards under then President Joe Biden, the EPA estimated that those standards would provide $200 billion in health benefits due to less particle pollution and $1.6 trillion in climate benefits (in 2022 dollars, 3% discount rate). The overall net benefit was estimated at $2 trillion.

Even without factoring in health or environmental benefits, the EPA two years ago found a $62 billion net benefit to the increased standards, with higher vehicle technology and battery port costs more than offset by lower fuel, repair and maintenance costs.

‘Deeply Flawed’

This gets at problems several experts identified in the EPA’s analysis. Jacobsen told us that the agency’s estimates are “deeply flawed.”

Jacobsen, along with Gillingham and other economist and mechanical engineer co-authors, several of whom the EPA has frequently cited in its rulemaking, wrote a comment to the EPA explaining their criticisms of the agency’s proposed rule in September. While not all of the issues still apply to the revised final rule, some remain.

One of the biggest issues affects half of EPA’s scenarios, which only factor in 2.5 years of the standards’ fuel savings. In these scenarios, the fuel savings are dramatically reduced.

Gillingham, who said there were “many issues” with the EPA’s analysis, said this is “simply incorrect and flips it from how it has always been done.” 

A major question for the cost-benefit analysis is why consumers undervalue fuel efficiency. As noted in the EPA’s regulatory impact analysis, some evidence suggests that buyers are only willing to pay for about 2.5 years’ worth of fuel savings upfront for a more fuel-efficient car. If it’s a market failure and buyers are simply not properly considering the benefits of better gas mileage for the lifetime of the car, then a cost-benefit analysis should factor in the fuel savings beyond the first 2.5 years. But if consumers dislike the features of fuel-efficient cars, then they could be already valuing and “paying” for those future fuel savings in the form of a less desirable vehicle, so those fuel savings should not be counted.

For half of its scenarios, the EPA assumes that the latter is true in full, so it doesn’t include fuel savings beyond the 2.5 years in its cost-benefit calculation.

“This makes a gigantic difference to the costs and benefits,” Gillingham told us.

Jacobsen, Gillingham and colleagues note in their comment that this assumption “is not supported by the economics literature.” Moreover, they said, the EPA is ignoring that some electric vehicle attributes are superior to conventional gasoline vehicles.

In its analysis, the EPA defended its approach on undervaluation, noting that it uses scenarios that both likely overestimate and underestimate the costs of the rule, and that it views them as “a form of a bounding exercise.”

Schwartz, of NYU, independently flagged the same concern about zeroing out most fuel savings as well. “They’re saying there must be $900 billion in lost vehicle features,” he said of the EPA. “That is absolutely not the case.”

At the same time, when the EPA estimates the cost of making vehicles more fuel efficient, the agency assumes that manufacturers preserve vehicle performance, and don’t opt for cheaper solutions, such as lowering a car’s horsepower, Schwartz said.

“By modeling both extra costs to maintain performance and assuming additional costs of alleged performance losses,” an economic report from Schwartz’s group explains, the EPA is “effectively double-counting costs.”

Gillingham and Jacobsen noted the same problem, calling it an “inconsistent combination” that makes the cost of regulation appear high and the benefits appear small.

Half of the scenarios also assume a “low” oil price to “take into account the policies being implemented by President Trump that are intended to drive down the price of gasoline and diesel,” according to the regulatory impact analysis.

But as Schwartz noted, and as we have explained before, oil is a global commodity. The price is set based on worldwide supply and demand. Economists and energy experts told us during the 2024 presidential campaign that Trump’s plans to reduce prices by increasing production are unlikely to be very successful over the long term. U.S. and global producers wouldn’t be incentivized to produce more if prices are low. In a world with less-fuel-efficient vehicles, demand will also be higher, driving up the cost of gasoline — a feature the EPA also did not fully account for in some scenarios, Schwartz said.

The various oil prices used are projections from the Energy Information Administration. Although the EIA also projects a “high” oil price, EPA did not use it for any of its scenarios.

“Every step of this analysis is biased in an effort to make their repeal look as favorable as possible and to hide from the public the real costs to consumers, to public health, and to the environment, that [are] going to result from this rollback,” Schwartz said.

Misleading Per-Vehicle ‘Savings’ Figure

Along with the $1.3 trillion, officials have often referred to an average per-vehicle savings of “over” $2,400 by eliminating greenhouse gas emissions standards. Zeldin gave this figure during the policy repeal announcement, and an agency fact sheet includes it.

In the announcement press conference, Trump also said that the repeal would “help bring car prices tumbling down dramatically. … You’re going to get a car that starts easier, a car that works better for a lot less money.”

But this figure, too, is not a net number and only captures the costs of the regulation, ignoring all benefits. The EPA’s estimate of $2,400 appears to comes from dividing the $1.1 trillion in reduced new vehicle costs by its estimated figure of how many new vehicles will be purchased.

As Gillingham told us, the savings “comes from fuel-saving technology not being installed. It definitely would not be reducing the price of a car by $2,400. It would mean that cars would not increase in price as quickly and that car buyers would lose out on a lot of fuel savings.”


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post EPA’s Misleading Claim of $1.3 Trillion in Deregulatory ‘Savings’ appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:26

Authorities are investigating a shooting at a Veterans Affairs clinic in Jasper, Georgia, where police say a suspected gunman was shot and killed by officers after reports of gunfire at the facility.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:24

Progressive and green groups join call for tax on major fossil-fuel companies to help offset rising living costs

With big oil companies poised to reap billions of dollars in profits from the war in Iran, Democratic lawmakers and progressive groups are calling for a windfall tax on major fossil fuel companies.

The US-Israeli strikes on Iran have triggered the largest ever disruption to fuel supply, according to the International Energy Agency, sending crude costs surging over $100 per barrel in recent days. Those high prices have hit US pocketbooks, with average domestic gas prices topping $3.70 a gallon, and Americans spending more than an additional $2bn to fill their tanks in the past fortnight according to one estimate.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:18
Is it: What can you do for your community or What can your community do for you?

Just interested in conversating about what the community thinks a non-profit local group is expected to maintain?

I started Onewheel AZ shortly after I received my pre-order XR. I wanted to build a local community to explore trails, and rides, bring people together with a shared interest, and have fun. I've tried to be considerate throughout and believe I have built a great foundation for the community to grow with.

My question is: What level of activity is required for a group to be considered active?

From my perspective, the community is now self-sustaining. Foundational rules and attitudes have been used, and trolling attitudes get handled, so everyone feels as inclusive as possible. I have a family and don't get paid to run a community, and share hours of my time, weekly for many years, moderating and keeping trolls at bay.

We do event rides ( like Halloween ), trick clinics, anniversary rides, stoke racers for events like Let It Ride, get sponsors to donate and share products, run the Underground racing scene, and have smaller impromptu trail rides with anyone stoked enough to go out and have fun while possibly pushing their limits.

Overall, I am proud of what we have been doing for over 8 years, but I still feel like: If I am not doing weekly rides and hand-teaching every rider in AZ, I am not doing well enough or letting the community down. No one says that, but it's just this feeling of disappointment I have because I can't be everything for everyone, all the time.

What do you think?

submitted by /u/OWbraCommander
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2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 16:16

Joe Kent, a close aide to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, cited deliberate Israeli “misinformation” and lies to President Donald Trump about a “swift path to victory.”

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:10

Leaks reveal that Anker's new Liberty 5 Pro and Pro Max earbuds will feature an in-house-developed AI chip called the Anker Thus.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:09

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang pulled the covers back a bit on the GPU giant’s roadmap during his keynote at the GTC show this week. Nvidia plans to build a host of new chips to address insatiable demand for compute, including new GPUs, CPUs, LPUs, and DPUs. The company is also making a big push into silicon optics, including to build a scale-up NVLink system with more than 1,000 GPUs.

The chips, racks, and systems are flying out of Nvidia these days as the AI boom continues to build. Yesterday the GPU giant revealed the seven new chips at GTC, which includes the Rubin GPU, the Vera CPU, a Groq language processing unit (LPU), BlueField-4 data processing units (DPUs), NVLink 6 Switch, ConnectX-9 SuperNICs, and SpectrumX Photonics, a co-packaged optics (CPO) Ethernet switch unveiled at GTC25. It also revealed new NVL systems, a slew of new MGX racks for Vera, Groq, and DPUs, as well as a new supercomputer that combines various Nvidia MGX racks in a Pod configuration.

But over the next two years, Nvidia will roll out a slew of new chips, systems, and MGX rack systems. Huang shared during his GTC keynote. For starters, Nvidia plans to roll out Rubin Ultra later this year. We’ll also see another Groq LPU chip, the LP35, which is designed for low-precision 4-bit NVFP4 AI workloads.

Feynman, which is the next generation of Nvidia’s GPU, will debut in 2028 and feature die stacking and a custom HBM, Huang said. Nvidia is also developing a version of the Groq LPU that plugs into NVLink, the LP40. The follow-on to the Vera CPU will be called Rosa. There’s also a BlueField-5 DPU in the works and CX10 SuperNIC.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang shared this roadmap during his keynote at GTC26

In 2028, we’ll also see NVLink8 CPO, a co-packaged optic ASIC that brings silicon photonics to Nvidia’s scale-up NVLink interconnect. We’ll also see Spectrum7 204T, the next version of its CPO switch for scale-out Ethernet deployments.

Huang is fond of saying that Nvidia is not a GPU company, but an AI factory company. To that end, the company is rolling out new racks, including NVL72 based on the Vera Rubin superchip. With the launch of Rubin Ultra, we’ll also see an NVL576 “Oberon” system, which combines “eight separate MGX NVL racks, each with 72 Rubin Ultra GPUs, all in a single 576-GPU NVLink domain with copper and direct optical connections,” the company said in a blog post this week. Nvidia is demonstrating this NVL576 Oberon system with Polyphe, a prototype of a GB200 multi-rack NLV576 system (see feature image above).

Nvidia also touted the MGX NVL, which are new “Oberon” generation racks designed to provide scale-up capability based on its NVL interconnect. It’s also launching MGX ETL racks, which provide scale-up racks in the MGX form-factor but featuring a Spectrum-X Ethernet spine (or a direct chip-to-chip spine).

Nvidia Kyber NVL1152 (Image courtesy Nvidia)

 

Nvidia is in the process of moving to the next-generation “Kyber” systems as the follow-on to Oberon. Kyber will first be introduced with Vera Rubin Ultra as a standalone NVL144 system, and eventually it will provide customers with three options for Vera Rubin Ultra NVLink scale-up domains, including NVL72, NVL144, and the flagship NVL576.

Eventually Nvidia will take it all up a notch with Kyber NVL1152, which is “the next-generation MGX NVL rack design that will double the NVLink domain per rack to fit 144 GPUs,” Nvidia said in its blog. “Kyber will scale up into a massive all-to-all NVL1152 supercomputer using similar direct optical interconnects for rack-to-rack scale-up.”

Silicon photonics looms heavy over the computer industry, which is rapidly awakening to the realization that the physical limits of copper will soon be reached, if they haven’t already. While copper-based electrical connections have taken us very far, copper has limits when it comes to speed, latency, reach, and energy. The benefits of silicon photonics have long been known, but the costs and complexity were typically too high to justify using it.

Nvidia is already in production with Spectrum-X Photonics, which is co-packaged optics (CPO) Ethernet switch unveiled at GTC25 that connects GPUs and memory over glass strands with up to 400 Tb per second of throughput in a scale-out manner. The company also announced the Quantum-X Photonics InfiniBand switch, which delivers up to 800 Tb per second of scale-out throughput using its proprietary scale-out interconnect.

Nvidia Quantum-X (left) and Spectrum-X photonics chips (Image courtesy Nvidia)

Nvidia invested $4 billion in a pair of silicon photonics companies two weeks ago, including Lumentum and Coherent. It also has investments in other silicon photonics outfits, including Scintil Photonics, among others.

Nvidia is moving forward with a strategy of supporting copper and silicon photonics, for both scale-up and scale-out connections, Huang said in his GTC keynote.

“A lot of people have been asking, Jensen, is copper going to still be important? The answer is yes,” he said. “Jensen are you going to scale up optical? Yes. Are you going to scale out optical? Yes. And so for everybody who’s in our ecosystem, we need a lot more capacity. And that’s really the key. We need a lot more capacity for copper. We need a lot more capacity for optics. We need a lot more capacity for CPO.”

The post Huang Shares Nvidia Roadmap Showing More Chips, NVL1152, Scale-Up CPO appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-18 13:15

The 10-inch device cost nearly $3,000 and will no longer be available to buy in the US or South Korea.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-18 08:24

The complaint includes 20 separate counts against Kalshi, claiming the company accepted bets from Arizona residents in violation of state law.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-19 07:33

Many Americans feel like they live in a "hamster wheel economy," said one expert who studies economic security.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-18 06:54

Israel says it killed Iran's top security official Ali Larijani, as America's European allies reject President Trump's demands for help in the Strait of Hormuz.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 17:03

The State Department order to review security at “ALL posts worldwide” follows persistent attacks on U.S. embassies, with almost 300 reported in Iraq alone.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 18:45

Ali Larijani, Iran’s lead security official, and Basij commander Gholamreza Soleimani were “eliminated,” Israel said. Iran has not commented on the strikes.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal: A battle of insults and threats has broken out between the tech world and Wall Street. What's got everyone so worked up? The same thing that starts most fights: business software. A series of social-media posts went viral in recent days with claims that AI has created a worthy -- and way cheaper -- alternative to the Bloomberg terminal, a computer system that is like oxygen to professional investors. Now "Bloomberg is cooked," some posters argued as they heralded the arrival of a newly released AI tool from startup Perplexity. [...] The finance bros who worship at the altar of Bloomberg have declared war on the tech evangelists who have put all their faith in AI. To suggest that the terminal is replaceable is "laughable," said Jason Lemire, who jumped into the conversation on LinkedIn. (Ironically or not, his post also included an AI-generated image of churchgoers praying to the Bloomberg terminal). "It seems quite obvious to me that those propagating that post are either just looking for easy engagement and/or have never worked in a serious financial institution," he wrote. [...] Morgan Linton, the co-founder and CTO of AI startup Bold Metrics and an avid Perplexity Computer user, said it's rare for a single AI prompt to generate anything close to what Bloomberg does. That said, he added that tools like this can lay "a really good foundation for a financial application. And that really has not been possible before." Others aren't so sure. Michael Terry, an institutional investment manager who used the terminal for more than 30 years, said he used a prompt circulating online to try to vibe code a Bloomberg replica on Anthropic's Claude. "It was laughable at best, horrific at worst," he said. Shevelenko acknowledged there are some aspects of the terminal that can't be replicated with vibe coding, including some of Bloomberg's proprietary data inputs. The live chat network, which includes 350,000 financial professionals in 184 countries, would also be hard to re-create, as well as the terminal's data security, reliability and robust support system. "I love Bloomberg. And I know most people that use Bloomberg are very, very loyal and extremely happy," said Lemire. His message to the techies? "There's nothing that you can vibe code in a weekend or even like over the course of a year that's going to come anywhere close."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 15:59

Russian billionaire accused of missing ‘last chance’ to release money to help victims of Ukraine war

UK officials are preparing for a possible court case against Roman Abramovich after he missed a deadline to release £2.4bn he raised from selling Chelsea FC.

The Russian billionaire failed to hand over the money by the deadline of 17 March, amid a dispute over how it will eventually be used.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 15:56

Union says claims involving young women and minors are serious enough to halt annual tributes and open an inquiry

The United Farm Workers union has cancelled celebrations honoring Cesar Chavez, the organization’s co-founder, following “troubling allegations” that Chavez was involved in the abuse of young women or minors.

“We have not received any direct reports, and we do not have any firsthand knowledge of these allegations,” the UFW said in a statement on Tuesday. “However, the allegations are serious enough that we feel compelled to take urgent steps to learn more and provide space for people who may have been victimized to find support and to share their stories if that is what they choose.”

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 15:55

Airport security professionals just missed their first paychecks due to the ongoing partial US government shutdown.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:53

Gold IRA minimums can vary widely by provider. Here's what investors should understand before opening an account.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:48

Supplies becoming sparse amid rise in demand since Kent outbreak, which has killed two and left 13 seriously ill

Worried parents are contacting pharmacies in an “increasingly desperate” effort to get their children vaccinated against meningitis after the outbreak in Kent that has killed two young people and left 13 seriously ill.

The surge in demand has led to stocks of the vaccine running so low that many pharmacies cannot get hold of supplies from wholesalers.

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2026-03-17 20:04
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The retailer also announced a limited-time trade-in bonus on the consoles and other older gaming equipment.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:41

What’s goin on, I’m in the Fayetteville NC area and was wondering if there’s any local places in NC that do tire replacements. I was going to do the replacement through the onewheel website, but I’m military and still haven’t been provided with a permanent address so shipping is a little wonky. Also, I think there’s gotta be a cheaper way to do it… any suggestions/referrals are appreciated!

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:40

Vaccination programme to be launched on Canterbury campus as strain B of disease identified in fatal outbreak

Students in Kent are to be offered a targeted vaccination against meningitis B after two more cases in the deadly outbreak were confirmed and pharmacies ran out of vaccine doses.

Government scientists have said two people who died in the outbreak had bacterial strain B of the disease, for which most people have not been vaccinated.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:38

Ukraine’s president says mass attacks on civilians are no longer the preserve of a ‘madman like Putin’

European nations should prepare for attacks by non-state actors including criminal networks, terror groups and lone attackers as drone technology advances, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has warned.

The Ukrainian president said it was no longer just “a wealthy madman like Putin” who could afford mass attacks as he demonstrated the latest technology to British MPs and peers.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 15:38
X7LR build

Here we go, after about 30mi the thunder tire is broken in. Not too bad. Hit some sand and it skid way too easily, but its not as terrible as people say. (I’m biased, the GT 6.5” hub and tire was terrible so even the Thunder is better!)

Looking forward to cruising on this bad boy!

https://preview.redd.it/c5nicfanrnpg1.jpg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=cf04d2101af130a7953ba18b9773269b9d9c4182

https://preview.redd.it/3hcj4fanrnpg1.jpg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f18e2d97c37def459df60661b494a67fc21008ec

https://preview.redd.it/hx147fanrnpg1.jpg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=86a372335644338cfce43e445835eaadb38cdecd

submitted by /u/lyfeTry
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2026-03-17 16:04
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Experts say Nigel Farage’s party is not being transparent about how it will use data it collects on people’s voting habits

Reform UK risks breaching data protection laws with its competition to win free energy bills for a year, lawyers and data experts have warned.

Nigel Farage announced the lottery on Tuesday as a way to advertise his latest policy to cut energy bills. The Reform leader encouraged British people to sign up via a website for a chance to have their energy bills paid for a year, as well as those of their entire street.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:28

Tory leader says US president’s words ‘completely wrong’ as she tries to distance herself from his war on Iran

Kemi Badenoch has called Donald Trump’s repeated criticisms of Keir Starmer “childish”, as the Conservative leader continued her recent moves to distance herself from the US president and his military action against Iran.

Speaking shortly before Trump yet again singled out Starmer for condemnation to say the prime minister had not been sufficiently supportive of the US war, Badenoch used a social media video to describe Trump’s actions as counterproductive.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 15:27

Pipeline, closed since 2015 after huge oil spill, reopens after president cites need to boost US supply amid war on Iran

Oil has begun to flow from a controversial California pipeline system for the first time in an more than decade following a Trump administration order, despite state officials decrying the move.

Sable Offshore Corporation, the Houston-based owner of the coastal pipelines, announced on Monday that offshore oil was now flowing through its Santa Ynez unit and Santa Ynez pipeline system, which runs through several California counties.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:21

Gio Reyna is in the squad for friendlies against Belgium and Portugal, while top prospect Noahkai Banks hasn’t yet decided if he’ll represent the US or Germany

Mauricio Pochettino made clear Tuesday that his 27-man squad is not a carbon copy of his expected roster for the 2026 World Cup. There will be cuts and corresponding recalls made from the roster for the friendlies against Belgium and Portugal at the end of the month in Atlanta.

The latest roster includes four goalkeepers and 10 changes from the squad that notched impressive wins over Uruguay and Paraguay in November. Ultimately, the US men’s national team boss is trying to complete his assessments of several players, whether they’re mainstays at their clubs or struggling to see the field often enough for his liking.

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2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 15:18

National power outage is making life extremely difficult and may force Havana into biggest economic changes in 67 years

Just a few hours after a nationwide electricity blackout struck Cuba, Donald Trump hinted at an even darker future for the island’s rulers.

The country’s entire electricity system had collapsed on Monday afternoon, leaving about 10 million people without power. Emergency teams were still struggling to restore it when the US leader made his latest threat.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:06

Amid escalation of Middle East crisis, US president describes rejection of call for help as a ‘foolish mistake’

Donald Trump has said the US does not need Nato after being rebuffed by a number of the organisation’s member countries over his appeal for a multinational naval force to reopen the key strait of Hormuz trade route closed by Iran.

Speaking to reporters from the Oval Office, the US president described the rejection of his calls as a “very foolish mistake”, adding without evidence: “Everyone agrees with us, but they don’t want to help. And we, you know, we as the United States have to remember that because we think it’s pretty shocking.”

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:04

An NWS office posted video of the meteor shooting across the sky, but says no report of debris found as it likely burned

A meteor over Ohio caused a large boom that jolted people as far away as Pennsylvania on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service (NWS) and reports.

The meteor entered the atmosphere at about 9am local time on Tuesday, producing a sonic boom felt across a wide swath of northern Ohio and beyond. Reports poured in from Cleveland and other sectors as far east as Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and into New York state.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:02

Clare Dupree, 48, who had severe mental illness, died after using a vape to start blaze at prison in Gloucestershire

There were “missed opportunities” that could have prevented the death of a woman with severe mental illness from “sustained inhalation of smoke” after a fire in her prison cell, an inquest has found.

Clare Dupree, 48, from Cardiff, died after she used a vape to start a fire at HMP Eastwood Park in Gloucestershire just after Christmas 2022.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 15:00

Samsung is reportedly ending sales of the Galaxy Z TriFold just months after launch, likely due to "high production costs" and limited supply. 9to5Google reports: The Galaxy Z TriFold launched in South Korea barely four months ago, arriving in Samsung's home market ahead of a larger debut in the U.S. and other markets in January. The $2,899 smartphone brought an entirely new form factor to the foldable market, but it's apparently very short-lived. Korean media reports (via SamMobile) that Samsung is planning to end sales of the Galaxy Z TriFold in Korea, with one more restock coming in the country this week. In the United States, the report mentions that the TriFold will be available until "the current production volume is sold out," which sounds like we might only get another restock or two here as well.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:59

Brent crude price climbs as operations suspended at Shah gasfield in UAE after Iranian strike

Oil and gas prices rose again on Tuesday after Iran carried out attacks on production facilities for the first time since the start of the war with the US and Israel.

Brent crude, the international benchmark oil price, climbed 2.3% to almost $103 (£77) a barrel and was up nearly 50% from levels before the war began on 28 February. Wholesale gas prices rose nearly 3% to €52 (£45) a megawatt hour, compared with about €30 before the war.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:59

US President Donald Trump signs an executive order during a US ambassadors meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, March 25, 2025. Trump directed the Treasury Department to modernize and centralize its payment system in an effort to root out fraud as money is transferred throughout the federal government. Photographer: Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Donald Trump signs an executive order on March 25, 2025, directing the Treasury Department to modernize and centralize its payment system. Photo: Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Trump administration is on its way to creating every authoritarian’s dream: a centralized database containing intimate details about every resident of this country, fully searchable by artificial intelligence. This powerful tool would empower the government to conduct previously unimagined levels of surveillance and harassment against its own people. 

Freedom of the Press Foundation is suing the administration for documents behind the database. We know that this isn’t just something that the Trump administration would exploit; once built, it’s unlikely any administration could resist the urge to weaponize our personal information. 

This nightmare privacy scenario began one year ago, when President Donald Trump issued an executive order that expanded data sharing across the federal government. The administration touted the order, “Stopping Waste, Fraud, and Abuse by Eliminating Information Silos,” as a way to target fraud within a supposedly bloated government.

The order was no such thing.

Instead, it took a machete to long-standing privacy protections that mandate agencies can only share our data when absolutely necessary, to install a massive data-mining operation in their place. 

To do so, Trump’s executive order required agency heads to submit reports to the Office of Management and Budget on the following:

  1. Which agency regulations governing unclassified data access should be eliminated or modified.
  2. Which policies governing the sharing of classified information need to be scrapped to meet the administration’s goals.



The public has never seen the reports agencies submitted by OMB, despite their impact on our privacy. However, thanks to intrepid reporting and litigation, we do have glimpses of how this is starting to play out:

  • The Central Intelligence Agency has been granted increased access to domestic law enforcement databases, further blurring the line between foreign intelligence and domestic policing.
  • The so-called Department of Government Efficiency got direct access to Treasury Department payment systems, including Social Security numbers, names, and birthdays, according to a whistleblower.
  • Immigration and Customs Enforcement got access to Medicaid recipients’ data and banking information
  • The Transportation Security Administration is now sharing biometric passenger info with immigration enforcement, turning every airport check-in into a potential trap.

But these incursions are only the tip of the iceberg

Reports indicate the administration’s goal for dismantling privacy protections is to build a centralized national database, which would allow the administration to create detailed reports on every American, potentially for political purposes, including retaliation, harassment, and imprisonment. 

At the same time this database is becoming a reality, the Department of Homeland Security is rapidly expanding its surveillance capabilities, and the administration is unleashing AI across federal systems to analyze the data points they are harvesting from our private lives. 

Perhaps worst of all, by “eliminating information silos,” the administration is creating a single point of failure for the privacy of every American. A centralized database that compiles our most intimate information, from our health to our finances, doesn’t just make us vulnerable to government abuse; it creates a massive, singular target for hackers and foreign adversaries.

“‘Information silos’ aren’t an inefficiency. They are a bulwark against the exact kind of abuses and negligence the Trump administration has engaged in,” said Ginger Quintero-McCall, a public records attorney with the Free Information Group. “Preventing easy, frictionless, unaccountable access to troves of sensitive data isn’t a bug — it’s a feature.”

And while the Trump administration recklessly seeks and compiles our data, it has simultaneously stopped sharing its data with the public. Vital information about the climate, immigration, federal spending, and the economy has been pulled from public view. 

The government is turning into a one-way mirror: They see everything, while we see nothing.

This is an untenable and anti-democratic information imbalance. To fight back, we need to fully understand just how badly our data and our privacy has been compromised. The agency reports submitted to the OMB are essential for this investigation — which is why Freedom of the Press Foundation is filing a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against OMB for these records.

This suit will not only force the disclosure of these important documents, but it will also serve to remind the administration that the federal government is required to safeguard the personal data we entrust to it. It is not allowed to become a data-mining firm that leverages our information for political gain while hiding its work from the public.

Related

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

As Kevin Bell, one of our counselors at Free Information Group, said, “This threat to Americans’ very right to an individual identity has never been so dire. The Trump administration is correlating each of its citizens’ with their transactions, emails, location tracking, missed car payments, online views or posts, and entire personal histories; the President has ordered the collection and free dissemination of every bit of data about every one of us held anywhere for any reason.”

The public deserves to see these documents. We intend to compel them to show us — and all Americans.

The post Trump Wants to Put You in a Massive, Secret Government Database appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:51

Relations deteriorate as Gustavo Petro claims government of Trump ally Daniel Noboa bombing targets in Colombia

President Gustavo Petro has accused Ecuador of bombing targets inside Colombian territory, saying later that the burned remains of nearly 30 people had been found near the border, in a sharp deterioration in relations between the two neighbouring countries.

The Colombian leader said on Tuesday that an attack which had left “27 charred bodies” did not appear to have been carried out by Colombia’s own forces or any illegal armed groups which he said do not have armed planes.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:51

The subpoena​ issued by GOP Rep. James Comer of Kentucky requires Bondi to appear for a deposition on April 14.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:49

A medical examiner ruled Eric Richins, a Utah father of three, died of a lethal dose of fentanyl. His wife Kouri was charged in his death.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 14:46

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — HPE today announced the HPE AI Grid, an end-to-end solution built on the NVIDIA reference architecture to securely connect AI factories and distributed inference clusters across regional and far‑edge sites. The HPE AI Grid enables service providers to deploy and operate thousands of distributed inference sites, turning AI installations into a single intelligent system.

AI‑native applications require predictable, low‑latency, distributed infrastructure. The HPE AI Grid solution, part of NVIDIA AI Computing by HPE portfolio, delivers predictable, ultra‑low latency performance at scale for real‑time AI services, zero‑touch provisioning, and automated security with integrated orchestration.

“We’re redefining how AI is delivered by moving intelligence to where data and users live and making the network the dependable fabric for real-time experiences,” said Rami Rahim, executive vice president, president and general manager, Networking, HPE. “HPE AI Grid with NVIDIA gives service providers a secure, scalable way to operate distributed inference as a single system—delivering predictable, ultra-low latency performance so customers can innovate faster, reduce risk, and create new services.”

“An AI Grid unifies geographically distributed AI clusters to place AI workloads where they run best—balancing performance, cost, and latency across AI factories, regional sites, and the edge,” said Chris Penrose, global vice president, Telco, NVIDIA. “Together with HPE, we’re bringing that vision to life by combining NVIDIA’s accelerated computing and networking with HPE’s telco‑grade multicloud routing and edge infrastructure to create a single, intelligent fabric for distributed inference.”

HPE Delivers End-to-End AI Grid Solution That Speeds Time to Value for Deployment

The HPE AI Grid aligns with NVIDIA AI Grid reference architecture to provide a unified hardware and software stack for service providers. The HPE AI Grid is differentiated by HPE’s ability to offer full-stack AI servers and AI networks. The HPE AI Grid includes:

  • HPE Juniper’s telco-grade multicloud routing and coherent optics for predictable long-haul and metro connectivity; cloud-native and multi-tenant security; firewalls; WAN automation; and orchestration to deliver zero-touch deployment and lifecycle operations
  • HPE ProLiant Compute edge and rack servers with NVIDIA accelerated computing, including NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs, as well as NVIDIA BlueField DPUs, Spectrum-X Ethernet switches, Connect-X SuperNICs, and AI blueprints for rapid AI inference

HPE AI Grid Creates New Opportunities for Service Providers

Service provider use cases—from retail personalization and predictive maintenance to edge healthcare and carrier‑grade AI services—demand predictable, ultra‑low latency connectivity. HPE AI Grid lets operators convert existing sites with power and connectivity into RAN‑ready AI grids, enabling distributed inference and new services at scale.

As part of advancing its AI grid strategy, Comcast announced today new AI field trials on its highly distributed network for real-time edge AI inferencing to unlock faster, more responsive experiences for the next wave of AI applications. The initial trials addressed several use cases, including leveraging HPE ProLiant servers running small language models from Personal AI, part of HPE’s Unleash AI parter program, on NVIDIA GPUs to deliver AI-powered “front desk” services for small businesses.

Industry Reactions to HPE AI Grid with NVIDIA

“HPE and NVIDIA have been strategic partners in building TELUS’ Sovereign AI Factory, Canada’s fastest and most powerful supercomputer, which is enabling researchers, businesses, and institutions to innovate at scale,” said Nazim Benhadid, Executive Vice-president and Chief Technology Officer, TELUS. “As TELUS looks to bring AI closer to customers, advance AI-powered network optimization and deliver faster service, HPE AI Grid powered by NVIDIA is a solution we are interested in exploring further as we continue our transformational AI journey.”

“Our customers increasingly expect millisecond responsiveness, low-latency connectivity and comprehensive security to support their applications and services,” said Neil McRae, CTIO at CityFibre. “We’re exploring how AI Grid from HPE, based on NVIDIA’s reference architecture, could support distributed AI inferencing and bring intelligence closer to users and data. By leveraging our fiber network assets, we see potential to combine high-performance connectivity with intelligent services for customers.”

HPE Financial Services Accelerates AI-Ready Networking and Distributed AI Infrastructure

To further accelerate adoption of AI‑ready networks and distributed AI infrastructure, HPE Financial Services is also extending its 0% financing on networking AIOps software including HPE Juniper Networking Mist, and its financing providing the equivalent of 10% cash savings on AI‑ready networking leases.

More from HPCwire: HPE Bolsters Server, Software Lineup for AI and HPC

About HPE

HPE (NYSE: HPE) is a leader in essential enterprise technology, bringing together the power of AI, cloud, and networking to help organizations achieve more. As pioneers of possibility, our innovation and expertise advance the way people live and work. We empower our customers across industries to optimize operational performance, transform data into foresight, and maximize their impact. Unlock your boldest ambitions with HPE. Discover more at www.hpe.com.


Source: HPE

The post HPE Launches AI Grid Built on NVIDIA Architecture for Distributed Inference at Scale appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:32

Amazon is speeding deliveries, putting pressure on other retailers. Here's where 1- and 3-hour delivery options are available and how much the service costs.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:21

The two-month offer expires at the end of March.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:14

Senate Democrats sent counteroffer on Monday aimed at resolving budget standoff

Negotiations for Congress to fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) – which oversees airport security officers – remained ongoing as the airport in Atlanta, the world’s busiest, dealt with long security lines on Tuesday.

A White House official confirmed that Senate Democrats sent a counteroffer on Monday aimed at resolving a budget standoff that led to a DHS shutdown into its second month. A Trump administration official confirmed to the Guardian that the offer by Democrats was under review, though Republican lawmakers were quick to dismiss the proposal.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:11

Moving $20,000 into a money market account this year could make sense. Here's how much interest you could earn.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:06

"Their lives have been shattered," the filing says, by the creation and sharing of "sick, fetishized and unlawful images."

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:06

The Defense Department inspector general found Major General Antonio Aguto in separate incidents improperly handled classified documents and engaged in the "overindulgence of alcohol."

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:03

Family of then PM, Patrice Lumumba, welcome decision to charge Étienne Davignon as ‘beginning of a reckoning’

A former Belgian diplomat, 93, should stand trial over alleged complicity in the 1961 murder of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister of what was then the newly independent Congolese state, a Brussels court has ruled.

Étienne Davignon, the only person still alive among 10 Belgians the Lumumba family accuses of involvement in the killing, is charged with participation in war crimes.

The illegal transfer of Lumumba and his associates from Léopoldville (now Kinshasa) to Katanga.

The “humiliating and degrading treatment” of the men.

Depriving them of a fair trial.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 14:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang threw out a lot of numbers -- mostly of the technical variety -- during his keynote Monday to kick off the company's annual GTC Conference in San Jose, California. But there was one financial figure that investors surely took notice of: his projection that there will be $1 trillion worth of orders for Nvidia's Blackwell and Vera Rubin chips, a monetary reflection of a booming AI business. About an hour into his keynote, Huang noted that last year Nvidia saw about $500 billion in demand for its Blackwell and upcoming Rubin chips through 2026. "Now, I don't know if you guys feel the same way, but $500 billion is an enormous amount of revenue," he said. "Well, I'm here to tell you that right now where I stand -- a few short months after GTC DC, one year after last GTC -- right here where I stand, I see through 2027, at least $1 trillion."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:58

SAN JOSE, Calif.March 17, 2026Cisco has announced a major expansion of its Secure AI Factory with NVIDIA, giving customers a framework for deploying AI across their entire infrastructure – from central data center to local sites where data is created and decisions are made.  Enterprises, neoclouds, sovereign clouds, and service providers can now move AI from pilot to full-scale production without stitching together disconnected systems, compressing deployment timelines from months to weeks and embedding security from the start.

“Most organizations understand the potential for AI to transform their businesses, but they’re navigating how to deploy the technology safely and at scale,” said Chuck Robbins, Chair and CEO, Cisco. “In partnership with NVIDIA, we’re solving that challenge with an architecture that sets a new standard for performance – making it simpler to deploy, operate, and secure AI infrastructure.”

“AI factories are transforming every industry, and security must be built into every layer—from silicon to software—to protect data, applications, and infrastructure,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Together, NVIDIA and Cisco are building the secure foundation for AI infrastructure—core to edge—so companies can scale intelligence with confidence.”

AI That Runs Everywhere, Not Just in the Data Center

AI inference happens where data lives and decisions can’t wait, whether on the hospital floor or for analyzing video of a factory floor in real-time to keep workers safe. This reality fundamentally reshapes infrastructure by requiring inference workloads to operate locally — closer to the data, the devices, and the moment a decision must be made. Cisco and NVIDIA are enabling organizations to support edge inferencing use cases by:

  • Transforming the Enterprise Edge: Now supporting NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs across the Cisco UCS and Cisco Unified Edge portfolios, Cisco enables enterprises to run mission-critical AI workloads at the edge without the energy cost and footprint of data center-scale hardware.
  • Transforming the Service Provider Edge: Today Cisco announces the Cisco AI Grid with NVIDIA reference design that combines the power of Cisco’s Mobility Services Platform with NVIDIA RTX PRO Blackwell Series GPUs. This enables service providers to leverage their existing networks to offer managed services for edge AI applications with carrier-grade reliability and sovereignty.

Driving Performance and Efficiency for Massive-Scale AI Factories

Building on the momentum of the recently launched systems powered by Cisco Silicon One G300 for scale-out and P200 for scale-across, Cisco continues to raise the performance ceiling while making the whole process faster and simpler.

  • Next-Generation Performance: Cisco’s latest high-speed switches power the most demanding AI workloads, including a new 102.4Tbps Cisco N9100 powered by NVIDIA Spectrum-6 Ethernet switch silicon. This joins the now generally available 800G N9100 powered by NVIDIA Spectrum-4 Ethernet switch silicon.
  • Rapid Deployment: Cisco Nexus Hyperfabric, now a part of Cisco Nexus One, will support Cisco N9000 Series switches, including the N9100 Series powered by NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet silicon. Now organizations can transform a complex, multi-vendor integration puzzle into a simple, full-stack solution to cut deployment times and reduce the burden on IT.

Customers building large AI factories now have two validated paths to choose from: an AI factory based on a reference architecture compliant with the NVIDIA Cloud Partner (NCP) program, and a Cisco Cloud Reference Architecture built on Cisco Silicon One that adheres to the same design tenets.

Security Fused into Every Layer

In an era where AI models are high-value assets and agents are more autonomous, taking actions, making decisions and interacting with other agents – security can’t be an afterthought. Cisco is embedding protection into the fabric of the Secure AI Factory with NVIDIA to safeguard against both external threats and rogue agent behavior, including:

  • Securing AI infrastructure: AI is only as safe as the hardware running it – and attackers know it. Cisco Hybrid Mesh Firewall delivers consistent security policies across a diverse set of enforcement points: network switches, workload agents, and more. Greater coverage means fewer gaps for attackers to exploit. Today, Cisco is extending the Cisco Hybrid Mesh Firewall solution to enable policy enforcement on NVIDIA BlueField data processing units (DPUs) embedded in NVIDIA GPU servers connected to Cisco Nexus One fabrics. Threats are blocked at the server level before they ever reach an organization’s data.  The result: AI workloads that can be protected from the inside out, with zero performance trade-off.
  • Securing AI agents: Cisco AI Defense delivers model security, automated vulnerability testing, and now purpose-built guardrails for AI agents at the edge through integration with NVIDIA NeMo Guardrails, a part of NVIDIA AI Enterprise software. This helps AI developers and security teams stay ahead of emerging threats and maintain trust in AI. AI deployments are becoming increasingly distributed, with agents at edge locations often interacting with those at the core to accomplish tasks and execute workflows. AI Defense, as a part of the Cisco Secure AI Factory with NVIDIA, now extends to securing those agent-to-agent interactions.

Cisco Secures Enterprise AI Agent Development

Building on Cisco’s commitment to fuse security into all layers of AI infrastructure, as well as the agentic workforce, Cisco also announced today that Cisco AI Defense will support and secure NVIDIA’s OpenShell runtimes – part of the NVIDIA Agent Toolkit – adding controls and guardrails to govern agent and claw actions. By continuously monitoring and validating every tool and action an agent performs, Cisco AI Defense ensures that enterprises can confidently deploy AI agents to manage critical workflows without compromising security. This integration bridges the gap between innovation and risk, allowing organizations to trust their autonomous systems to operate reliably and securely.

About Cisco

Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is the worldwide technology leader revolutionizing the way organizations connect and protect in the AI era. For more than 40 years, Cisco has securely connected the world. With its industry-leading AI-powered solutions and services, Cisco enables its customers, partners, and communities to unlock innovation, enhance productivity, and strengthen digital resilience.


Source: Cisco

The post Cisco Expands Secure AI Factory with NVIDIA Across Core and Edge Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:57

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — NVIDIA has announced NVIDIA Dynamo 1.0, open source software for generative and agentic inference at scale, with widespread global adoption. Together with the NVIDIA Blackwell platform, Dynamo 1.0 enables cloud providers, AI innovators and global enterprises to deliver high-performance AI inference with unmatched scale, efficiency and speed.

Credit: Shutterstock

As agentic AI systems move into production across industries, scaling inference within a data center has become a complex challenge of resource orchestration, with requests of varying sizes and modalities, as well as performance objectives, arriving in unpredictable bursts.

Just as a computer’s operating system coordinates hardware and applications, Dynamo 1.0 functions as the distributed “operating system” of AI factories, seamlessly orchestrating GPU and memory resources across the cluster to power complex AI workloads. In recent industry benchmarks, Dynamo boosted the inference performance of NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs by up to 7x, lowering token cost and increasing revenue opportunity for millions of GPUs with free, open source software.

“Inference is the engine of intelligence, powering every query, every agent and every application,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “With NVIDIA Dynamo, we’ve created the first-ever ‘operating system’ for AI factories. The rapid adoption across our ecosystem shows this next wave of agentic AI is here, and NVIDIA is powering it at global scale.”

Dynamo 1.0 splits inference work across GPUs by adding smarter “traffic control” and the ability to move data between GPUs and lower-cost storage, reducing wasted work and easing memory limits. For agentic AI and long prompts, it can route requests to GPUs that already have the most relevant “short-term memory” from earlier steps, then offload that memory when it is not needed.

NVIDIA Inference Platform Gains Momentum

NVIDIA is accelerating the open source ecosystem by integrating Dynamo and NVIDIA TensorRT™-LLM library optimizations into popular frameworks from providers such as LangChain, llm-d, LMCache, SGLang, vLLM and more. Core Dynamo building blocks like KVBM for smarter memory management, NVIDIA NIXL for fast GPU-to-GPU data movement and NVIDIA Grove for simplified scaling are also available as standalone modules. NVIDIA also contributes TensorRT-LLM CUDA® kernels to the FlashInfer project so they can be natively integrated into open source frameworks.

The NVIDIA inference platform is supported across the AI ecosystem, including:

  • Cloud Service Providers: Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, OCI
  • NVIDIA Cloud Partners: Alibaba Cloud, CoreWeave, Crusoe, DigitalOcean, Gcore, GMI Cloud, Lightning AI, Nebius, Nscale, Together AI, Vultr
  • AI-Native Companies: Cursor, Hebbia, Perplexity
  • Inference Endpoint Providers: Baseten, Deep Infra, Fireworks
  • Global Enterprises: AstraZeneca, BlackRock, ByteDance, Coupang, Instacart, Meituan, PayPal, Pinterest, Shopee, SoftBank Corp.

Chen Goldberg, executive vice president of product and engineering at CoreWeave, said: “As AI moves from experimental pilots to continuous, large-scale production, the underlying infrastructure must be as dynamic as the models it supports. Supporting NVIDIA Dynamo allows us to offer a more seamless, resilient environment for deploying complex AI agents. This foundation provides the durability and high-performance orchestration required to move the industry’s most ambitious agentic workloads into global production.”

Danila Shtan, chief technology officer of Nebius, said: “Delivering reliable AI inference at scale isn’t just about powerful GPUs, it’s about the software that turns that performance into real customer outcomes. We value how NVIDIA’s software stack, from Dynamo to TensorRT-LLM, brings deep optimization, predictable performance and faster time to deployment, helping us offer customers a simpler, higher-performance path to production AI.”

Matt Madrigal, chief technology officer of Pinterest, said: “Delivering an intuitive, multimodal AI experience to hundreds of millions of users requires real-time intelligence at global scale. As a significant adopter in open source, we’re committed to building scalable AI technologies. With NVIDIA Dynamo optimizing our deployment, we’re expanding the seamless and personalized experiences we deliver, powered by high-performance AI infrastructure.”

Vipul Ved Prakash, cofounder and CEO of Together AI, said: “AI natives require inference that can reliably and efficiently scale with their application. NVIDIA Dynamo 1.0, combined with cutting-edge inference research from Together AI, helps us deliver a high-performance stack to offer accelerated, cost-effective inference for large-scale production workloads.”

Dynamo 1.0 is available today to developers worldwide. To learn more and get started, read the blog and visit the Dynamo webpage.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA Enters Production with Dynamo, the Broadly Adopted Inference Operating System for AI Factories appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:57

BOULDER, Colo., March 17, 2026 — Atom Computing has announced the successful integration of NVIDIA NVQLink – a low latency, high-bandwidth communication interface – into Atom Computing’s proprietary control-systems stack. With NVQLink’s ultra-low-latency data pathways, the company is unlocking new performance thresholds essential for next-generation quantum information processing. This enhanced architecture enables accelerated scaling of Atom Computing’s high-performance logical-qubit systems while increasing logical cycle speeds.

As part of the development effort, Atom Computing’s team successfully implemented a fully integrated, end-to-end NVQLink workflow and completed comprehensive latency measurements validating the advantages of this architecture. These results demonstrate NVQLink as a promising technology for the company’s scaling strategy.

“Integration of NVIDIA NVQLink provides a boost to the speed and scalability of our quantum systems, strengthening our path toward utility-scale performance,” said Dr. Ben Bloom, CEO and Founder of Atom Computing. “We’re excited for the breakthroughs this architecture will enable as we advance the frontier of quantum computing.”

With NVQLink, Atom Computing will continue to pursue major advances in system scale, control fidelity, and quantum-error-correction throughput, including:

  • Large-scale routing and control of many thousands of qubits
  • Increased logical cycle speeds through accelerated syndrome extraction for quantum error correction
  • Deeper integration with the broader NVIDIA CUDA-Q ecosystem for hybrid quantum-classical supercomputing

By adopting state-of-the-art technologies such as NVQLink into its QPU stack, Atom Computing continues to push the boundaries of practical quantum computation. These efforts directly support the company’s mission to build and deliver utility-scale quantum computers, a mission highlighted by its Stage B participation in the DARPA Quantum Benchmarking Initiative.

About Atom Computing

Atom Computing is developing large-scale quantum computers to enable companies and researchers to achieve unprecedented computational breakthroughs. Utilizing highly scalable arrays of optically trapped neutral atoms, the company has developed systems with over 1,000 qubits, featuring advanced capabilities towards fault-tolerant quantum computing. Atom Computing’s on-premises systems provide customers with new computational tools and logical qubit capabilities to address increasingly complex applications and to grow their quantum ecosystem. QuNorth, a Nordic quantum initiative funded by EIFO and Novo Nordisk Foundation, recently announced the purchase of Atom Computing’s on-premises system. The system, to be named ‘Magne’, will be installed and brought online in Copenhagen, Denmark.


Source: Atom Computing

The post Atom Computing Integrates NVIDIA NVQLink to Accelerate Scaling of Its Quantum Computers appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:56

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 – Supermicro, Inc. today unveiled one of the industry’s first context memory (CMX) storage server as part of NVIDIA STX reference architecture announced NVIDIA GTC 2026. STX is a new modular reference architecture from NVIDIA which is designed to accelerate the full lifecycle of AI.

“Supermicro continues to be first to market with new rack scale architectures designed to exceed the needs of a rapidly evolving AI Factory customer base,” said Charles Liang, president and CEO of Supermicro. “Building upon last year’s introduction of the Petascale JBOF (Just a Bunch of Flash), where we proved the feasibility of a JBOF powered by NVIDIA BlueField-3 DPUs, we have developed the CMX storage server. Our prototype of the latest storage architecture demonstrates the level of our collaboration with NVIDIA, and our commitment to be first-to-market with game changing technologies.”

For more information about the new Supermicro storage server built on the NVIDIA STX reference architecture please visit: www.supermicro.com/en/solutions/ai-storage.

Leveraging the STX architecture, the CMX server is designed to address the challenge of long-lived AI queries and multi-stage chain-of-thought agentic workloads, which require the prior and intermediate tokens associated with the user’s query to be accessed. This solution both accelerates the results and reduces the power which would otherwise be required to recompute the results when the local storage required for the tokens is exceeded. This storage of tokens, called Key Value (KV) cache, is managed by NVIDIA Dynamo, NVIDIA’s inference orchestration layer.

As the STX solution comes to market, Supermicro will be working with these software partners and others on porting and validation. Additionally, Supermicro long-standing relationships with leading SSD providers such as Micron, Samsung, Phison, and others will enable testing for the specific STX architecture requirements.

At GTC 2026, Supermicro also announced seven AI Data Platform solutions based on the RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPU with NVIDIA and storage partners such as Cloudian, DDN, Everpure (formerly Pure Storage), IBM, Nutanix, VAST Data, and WEKA. The AI Data Platform enables enterprises to process their data for AI workloads. The CMX server is being shown in Supermicro booth #1113, and at the NVIDIA exhibit, at the NVIDIA GTC 2026 March 16-19.

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 Unveils NVIDIA BlueField-4 STX Storage Server to Improve AI Inference Performance appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:56

Debt collectors have limits under federal law and there are certain behaviors that cross the line into harassment.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:46

Prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre says files show sex offender’s connection to those in ‘trusted and central positions’

The Norwegian parliament has voted unanimously to appoint an independent investigative commission to look into connections between its foreign office and the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaking before the vote on Tuesday, the prime minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, paid tribute to Epstein’s victims and said that the files released by the US Department of Justice had clearly shown “it is possible to buy and abuse influence if you are rich enough”.

Continue reading...

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:39

Kalshi calls Arizona’s case ‘paper-thin’ and says the platform should not be overseen by ‘inconsistent state laws’

Arizona’s attorney general on Tuesday filed criminal charges against Kalshi, accusing the prediction markets platform of operating an illegal gambling business in the state and unlawfully allowing people to place bets on elections.

The charges filed by Kris Mayes, the Arizona attorney general, marked the first time a state has pursued a criminal case against Kalshi, which has been at the center of an escalating battle over the ability of state gaming regulators to police prediction markets operators.

Continue reading...

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:39

President Trump has slammed the Supreme Court justices who voted to strike down most of his tariffs, claiming they "openly disrespect the Presidents who nominate them."

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SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — CoreWeave, Inc. has announced an expansion of its purpose-built AI cloud platform at NVIDIA’s GTC conference. The expansion brings NVIDIA HGX B300 to the CoreWeave Cloud, unlocking a new generation of performance for AI workloads, alongside new Weights & Biases capabilities that streamline reinforcement learning (RL) and agent development workflows.

NVIDIA HGX B300, now generally available on CoreWeave.

As the industry shifts from large-scale training to iterative RL, infrastructure requirements are rapidly evolving. By combining the latest hardware with CoreWeave’s AI optimized cloud services and advanced development workflows, CoreWeave is closing the gap between training and production to support the next generation of self-improving agents and physical AI workloads.

“The next phase of AI is being defined by how efficiently AI systems can run and scale in production,” said Michael Intrator, CEO, co-founder, and chairman at CoreWeave. “By pairing the massive compute power of NVIDIA’s latest hardware with CoreWeave’s cloud services, we’re enabling enterprises to build and refine autonomous agents faster and more reliably than ever before. This expansion reinforces our position as the essential partner for any organization navigating the complexities of frontier-scale AI.”

“The era of AI is shifting from training models to operating agents at scale,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO, NVIDIA. “CoreWeave is a world-class new generation AI-Native cloud. We are thrilled to partner with them to build out NVIDIA computing infrastructure to power the world’s AI.”

Purpose-Built for Agentic AI: NVIDIA HGX B300

CoreWeave Cloud unlocks NVIDIA HGX B300 performance at scale, marking a major step forward for frontier and agentic workloads. With the general availability of NVIDIA HGX B300, part of the NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra platform, customers will have access to:

  • Performance Leap: NVIDIA HGX B300 is designed for AI reasoning and inference with enhanced compute and increased memory.
  • Massive Memory: Featuring 2.1 TB of HBM3e memory—a 50% increase over HGX B200 instances—enabling teams to run long-context inference with low latency and train models with 100B+ parameters on a single node.
  • Unprecedented Bandwidth: Next-generation NVIDIA Quantum-X800XDR InfiniBand support doubles node-to-node bandwidth, eliminating interconnect bottlenecks.
  • Liquid-Cooled Reliability: Every HGX B300 server on CoreWeave Cloud is managed by state-of-the-art liquid cooling to eliminate thermal throttling and allow sustained peak performance.

“We’ve already run production workloads with CoreWeave on NVIDIA HGX B200, and that experience built real confidence in their ability to operate at scale,” said Aman Sanger, Co-Founder of Cursor, an AI-powered code editor. “We’re focused on collaborating with companies who deliver predictable performance, operational reliability, and ongoing support as our requirements evolve. As we move toward HGX B300, that proven operating model gives us confidence to focus on building more capable AI code generation systems rather than infrastructure risk.”

CoreWeave also expects to be among the first cloud providers to deploy the NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 platform and NVIDIA Vera CPU rack in production in the second half of 2026. This expansion will further support large-scale inference, reasoning, and the most demanding agentic AI applications.

Direct “On-the-Job” Training for Agents with Environment-Free RL

RL is the most effective method for post-training LLMs on agentic tasks, but it traditionally requires costly, time-consuming, and difficult-to-model simulated environments. Weights & Biases now addresses this with environment-free training in its Serverless RL offering, eliminating the need to build simulated environments, and allowing agents to learn through continual “on-the-job” training.

  • Efficiency: Achieve 1.4x faster training at up to 40% lower cost compared to self-managed clusters.
  • Superior Results: Deliver inference with up to 5x lower cost and up to 60x lower latency without quality loss.

Production Agent Evaluations Accelerate Agent Development

Research evaluations often rely on limited datasets and synthetic scenarios, leaving agents unprepared for real-world production. This gap makes it difficult to feed production insights back into the research loop, slowing time-to-market and resulting in agents that fail to meet expectations.

Production agent evaluations in W&B Weave close that gap, connecting research and production, enabling teams to learn from real user interactions. It automatically detects production failure modes, alerts researchers, and feeds insights back to improve evaluation datasets and accelerate iteration. By closing this loop, W&B Weave helps teams ship more reliable agents faster.

  • Agent Self-Improvement: Incoming traces are automatically scored by LLM judges. Lower-quality outputs are routed for human review and turned into test cases, making evaluation suites smarter over time. Specialized classifier models then analyze the production traces and identify failure modes.
  • Accelerated Development: Smart alerts notify when new failure modes are detected, allowing customers to refine agents in production using data from real user interactions and continuous monitoring.

Accelerating Robotics AI Development

W&B Models now allows robotics and embodied AI customers to track, compare, and reproduce multimodal experiments faster. Teams can log training metrics, simulation outputs, and video in a single workspace, and use a new comparison panel to evaluate up to four images or videos side-by-side. In collaboration with NVIDIA, Weights & Biases is releasing two blueprints for scalable training of RL and Vision-Language-Action (VLA) models using NVIDIA Isaac Lab simulations. These blueprints outline a full-stack workflow to help teams quickly start training and fine-tuning embodied AI models.

Monitor Training Anywhere With the First Weights & Biases Mobile App

To enable AI pioneers to manage these massive production runs from anywhere, CoreWeave introduced the first iOS app designed specifically for AI model development. The Weights & Biases iOS app provides a mobile-first experience to track training runs in real time, allowing researchers to spot issues early and make confident decisions without being tethered to a desktop.

CoreWeave’s AI cloud delivers industry-leading performance and efficiency through an end-to-end technology stack optimized for AI workloads. It has achieved top MLPerf benchmark for AI workloads, Platinum rankings in both SemiAnalysis ClusterMAX 1.0 and 2.0, and NVIDIA Exemplar Cloud validation for training and inference on GB200 NVL72. Visit us at booth #913 at NVIDIA GTC to learn more about today’s announcements.

About CoreWeave

CoreWeave is The Essential Cloud for AI. Built for pioneers by pioneers, CoreWeave delivers a platform of technology, tools, and teams that enables innovators to move at the pace of innovation, building and scaling AI with confidence. Established in 2017, CoreWeave completed its public listing on Nasdaq (CRWV) in March 2025. Learn more at www.coreweave.com.


Source: CoreWeave

The post CoreWeave Advances AI-Native Cloud Platform for the Next Phase of Production-Scale AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:22

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 17, 2026 — DDN has launched two new IndustrySync Pipelines. The pipelines – validated, industry-specific AI blueprints, initially available in the Financial Services and Life Sciences verticals – can be deployed on existing customer infrastructure in days rather than months. The pipelines are aligned to industry-specific business outcomes, running seamlessly on DDN and NVIDIA’s validated, fully orchestrated technology stack.

IndustrySync Pipelines are pre-integrated, production-validated workflows that are available immediately for DDN Enterprise AI HyperPOD deployments, with available expansion to NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD & NVIDIA HGX environments, as well as sovereign AI factories. Each pipeline is designed as a flexible, extensible foundation — built to adapt to your specific environment, data, and workflows.

“Enterprises are not limited by AI models—they are limited by how quickly they can operationalize AI infrastructure and data to achieve the promise of AI-assisted business outcomes,” said Alex Bouzari, CEO and Co-Founder at DDN. “IndustrySync Pipelines provide a validated path from experimentation to production AI in a matter of days, so every enterprise can move from experimenting with AI to running it in an accelerated manner.”

“Supermicro has collaborated closely with DDN and NVIDIA on developing the HyperPOD, an AI Data Platform solution which combines GPU-accelerated compute with DDN’s data platform software,” said Vik Malyala, President & Managing Director EMEA, SVP Technology & AI, Supermicro. “The integrated HyperPOD solution using Supermicro servers with the IndustrySync solutions are a perfect complement to provide ready-to-run industry-specific AI solutions for these and future workflows.”

IndustrySync Financial Services Pipeline

The DDN IndustrySync Financial Services (FSI) Pipeline enables financial institutions to operationalize AI-driven risk intelligence at market speed, transforming how capital is modeled, managed, and optimized.

Business Outcomes

  • Up to 150× faster risk simulations, converting overnight batch jobs into continuously updated intraday intelligence
  • Expected shortfall and risk regime calculations refreshed every five minutes across all GPUs
  • Faster response to market volatility with real-time capital and liquidity insights
  • Accelerated move from AI experimentation to production deployment — in days, not months
  • Deterministic performance and built-in governance to meet strict regulatory and risk requirements
  • Immediate infrastructure readiness with a data layer operational from day one

By eliminating infrastructure complexity and performance bottlenecks, IndustrySync allows institutions to focus on what drives competitive advantage: faster decisions, improved capital efficiency, and measurable shareholder value.

IndustrySync Life Sciences Pipeline

The DDN IndustrySync Life Sciences Pipeline is a production-ready blueprint, built on NVIDIA industry reference architectures and integrated with NVIDIA BioNeMo, enabling research institutions to operationalize AI-driven drug discovery at scale.

Research & Business Impact

  • Accelerates genomics, protein structure analysis, and foundation model workflows
  • Shortens time from data ingestion to model training and inference
  • Reduces time-to-insight for therapeutic candidate discovery
  • Enables multi-modal biomedical AI at production scale
  • Eliminates infrastructure rebuilds between experimentation and deployment
  • Deployment completed in days, not months

Operational Advantages

  • Integrated high-performance storage and GPU acceleration
  • Deterministic performance from day one
  • Scalable architecture validated for production environments
  • Removes data bottlenecks that slow AI-driven discovery

By removing infrastructure complexity and enabling predictable, high-performance execution, IndustrySync allows researchers to focus on accelerating scientific breakthroughs rather than managing systems.

Expanding Industry AI Deployment

DDN plans to expand IndustrySync Pipelines throughout 2026 with additional industry workflows, including expanded financial services use cases and intelligent video and surveillance pipelines.

“Enterprises are not limited by AI models, they are limited by how quickly they can operationalize data and infrastructure,” said Alex Bouzari, CEO and Co-Founder at DDN. “IndustrySync Pipelines provide a validated path from experimentation to production AI, so every enterprise can move from experimenting with AI to running it.”

Early Adopter Program now open: Apply today. To accelerate customer adoption, DDN is launching a 90-day IndustrySync Financial Services Early Adopter Program, allowing select institutions to deploy and evaluate the pipeline in their own environments ahead of general availability. Participants receive:

  • Deployment of the IndustrySync FSI Risk Pipeline on HyperPOD
  • A 500TB DDN Infinia license during the evaluation period
  • Integration support with existing data and compute environments
  • Direct collaboration with DDN’s enterprise AI engineering team

Applications are now open at ddn.com/financial-ai-pipeline. Availability is limited. Visit the DDN Booth #1621 at GTC.

More from HPCwire

About DDN

DDN is the world’s leading AI and data intelligence company, powering the world’s most demanding AI workloads by keeping GPUs fed, efficient, and productive—at massive scale—so organizations can train, checkpoint, and infer faster with less footprint and power while achieving tremendous ROI from their AI investments. From hyperscalers and next-gen cloud builders to enterprises, governments, and research institutions, DDN delivers proven data intelligence at exabyte scale across hundreds of thousands of GPUs—so customers can deploy AI with confidence, accelerate time-to-value, and realize outsized returns.


Source: DDN

The post DDN Launches IndustrySync Pipelines for Financial Services and Life Sciences AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:21

President Trump said Tuesday that China is "fine" with a delay.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:01

Doing a lot of work and need it done fast? Meet GPT-5.4 mini and nano.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:01

The Blues need to overturn a three-goal deficit at home against the defending champs.

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Can Pep Guardiola's team overturn a three-goal deficit at the Etihad Stadium?

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2026-03-17 13:00
Rachel Sidrane

RACHEL SIDRANE
Staff Writer

“We Were Liars,” a novel originally published in 2014 by E. Lockhart, took the young adult reading world by storm, quickly becoming a bestseller and garnering many positive reviews. Praised for its poetic writing style, emotionally intense story and a plot based on a compelling mystery, the popularity of the novel led to the release of a prequel a few years later, and most recently, a TV series on Amazon Prime. 

The big questions are, how do the novel and the series compare, and what are the differences between the two? 

The story surrounds a wealthy family, the Sinclairs, who maintain the perfect image and spend their summers on Beechwood, the private island they own off the East Coast. Yet, a mysterious accident occurs one summer, leaving the protagonist, Cadence Sinclair, with memory loss and a brain injury that makes it difficult for her to piece together the events of the previous summer. 

The audience follows Cadence through the summer of her accident and the summer she returns to Beechwood as she attempts to understand the reason for her brain injury –– which her family and friends (who refer to themselves as “the Liars”) refuse to tell her. 

Both the novel and the series explore themes of family dynamics and secrets, love, mental health and the corruption from wealth and privilege. I am a firm believer that the book is always better than the movie — or in this case, the show — but I really enjoyed the series. 

The story itself is beautiful as each of the characters are crafted to have a number of layers peeled back throughout its course. I feel as though the book focused more on Cadence and her internal thoughts, while the series delved further into the other characters and their stories, extending the plot and the depth of the characters. 

The length of the series, compared to the individual novel, allowed more time for the audience to build an attachment and connection to the other characters. Warning: There are spoilers ahead. 

The show presents a shortened time period that flips between summer 16 and summer 17 —  summer 16 being when Cadence gets into her accident and summer 17 when she returns to Beechwood. 

However, in the novel, Cadence’s accident occurs in summer 15 and she travels through Europe with her father in summer 16, finally returning to the island in summer 17. The novel leaves the injury and amnesia unsolved for a longer period of time, presenting the incident as seemingly more traumatic and providing more reasoning for her unreliable narration. 

A big difference that sets the book apart from the series is the storytelling element. Every few chapters in the book, Cadence would tell allegorical fairy-tale-like stories that reflected the dynamic between her power-hungry grandfather and his three daughters. In the novel, these stories provide a sense of depth by serving as a coping mechanism for Cadence to process her trauma. 

The characters in the show, specifically the rest of the Liars — Gatwick, Cadence’s love interest, and her two cousins, Johnny and Mirren — developed more in-depth storylines of their own in the show. 

For example, the show highlighted Mirren’s love for painting and her mother’s blatant disapproval of it, better presenting the tension between her and her mother, one of the Sinclair daughters. Their arguments and strained relationship further highlighted the tension of the Sinclair family dynamic, a focal point of the storyline.  

Mirren was also presented as a girl with big dreams who felt invisible to everyone until she developed a romance with Ebon, a boat boy, who pushes Mirren to be her authentic self and reflect on her facade of a perfect life. 

This extension of Mirren’s storyline in the show allows the audience to build a stronger connection to her and better understand her story. Consequently, they feel deeply for her death at the end of the series. 

Johnny, Cadence’s other cousin, is also further represented in the TV series. While embodying the same snarky and unserious personality he has in the book, the show better displays his violent streak which results in a legal dispute. This provides more depth to his character and raises the stakes for his mother, heavily contributing to her drug addiction.

 The dispute also forces Johnny’s mother to leave her husband of Indian descent in order to secure her family inheritance, highlighting the racial bias in the Sinclair family. The addition of this plot really emphasizes how drug addictions, anger issues and racism impact family dynamics, which are all critical parts of the story and aren’t as glaringly present in the novel. 

Though Johnny identifies as straight in the novel, his character is bisexual in the show which not only becomes an internal struggle for him, adding to the complexity to his character, but it also adds more layers to his individual plotline, like his romantic conflict with his tennis partner. His mother’s denial of his coming out also emphasizes the tension in their relationship. 

Gatwick’s love for Cadence is seemingly more represented in the show, especially in a sacrificial manner. He passes up an incredible scholarship opportunity to check in on Cadence when he thinks she may be in trouble. Also, during the fire in the novel, he got trapped while in the basement, while in the series, he got trapped in the fire when he chivalrously entered the house to find Cadence. 

The show also displays more of the family disputes and tensions. In one scene, the show features an annual lemon hunt, a tradition that is not practiced in the novel, where the Liars end up coming together to stand up to Harris Sinclair, the grandfather of the cousins and the head of the family. This instance foreshadows their final act of rebellion — the house fire that ultimately resulted in Cadence’s “accident.” 

The use of timeline and flashbacks is different in the two portrayals of the story. The timeline is more blurred in the book, with unreliable narration, that allows the readers to experience the confusion of Cadence’s mind. In the series, the timeline is more logical, clearly shifting between two summers, which makes for an easier following of the story. 

The elements incorporated in the novel versus the show allow them to explore different parts of the story.  The series has more time to develop the stories of characters beyond Cadence, providing more depth and exploration of themes like racism, classism and personal identity. 

The focus on Cadence in the novel, however, allows for more expanded literary elements, like the poetic fairy tales, unreliable narration and vivid metaphors. 

I enjoyed both the novel and the series, and ultimately believe that despite the differences, the series did a great job of carrying over the storyline and expanding it to fit the screen time.


“We Were Liars” novel vs. TV series was first posted on March 17, 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

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 13:00

"There are countless upgrades you could make to your gaming setup," writes PC Gamer's Jacob Ridley. "A wireless this, a bigger that, a faster thing. But how do you know what's going to be a genuine upgrade worth investing in? Personally, I think it might be split spacebars." His argument centers on the fact that spacebars take up a "greedy" amount of keyboard space -- space that could instead be divided into multiple keys for different actions, such as voice chat or melee attacks. From the report: While it's often very easy to reprogram your spacebar to do a different action via your keyboard's software, it's a lot harder to reprogram your brain to hit any other key when you try to jump in game. Spacebar makes you jump. Everyone knows that; it's practically etched onto your brain if you're a long-time mouse and keyboard player. So, why does a split spacebar help with that? It comes down to this: once you know which side of a spacebar you tend to thwack with your thumb, you can program the other side to do whatever you want. I hit the right-side of my spacebar every time when I'm typing. Therefore, when I started using a Wooting 60HE v2 with a split spacebar, I set the left-side to be the delete key; the keyboard lacking a dedicated delete key for its 60% size. Though for gaming, the split spacebar offers much more varied purpose. People do strange things with the WASD keys that I won't litigate here, but I'm pretty sure most gamers use their left thumb to strike the spacebar for gaming. Right? Right. If you fall into this category, you have the option of using the right-side spacebar for things like a chunky melee key, or, my personal favorite, an in-game voice chat key.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 12:58

AI and other technologies can help you manage your financial life. But don't rely exclusively on such tools for money matters.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 12:51

Foreign secretary says one third of those who were in region have left as MPs press for support for those still stranded

The number of UK nationals flown back from the Middle East since the start of the conflict with Iran reached 100,000 on Tuesday, Britain’s foreign secretary has said.

Yvette Cooper told parliament this is a third of the 300,000 who were in the region at the outset of hostilities, many of whom were stuck when airspace was closed. The figure included tourists and Gulf residents who have temporarily left.

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2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-17 12:49

https://theonewheel.shop/

100% a fake scam website! They "offer" almost anything that's available for purchase at the official Onewheel website (which is https://onewheel.com/), with the pictures copied over, but the prices are about 90% lower than they would actually be. Red flags all over.

Update: Site is no longer available, so it seems like it got taken down.

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

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 12:38

While the health secretary posts shirtless workouts and AI videos, he should be focusing on soaring cases of measles

Vladimir Putin loves bombing Ukraine and taking his shirt off – not necessarily in that order. The Russian leader is well known for his macho photoshoots, including that infamous shot of him horse-riding bare-chested in Siberia. While various politicians have mocked Putin for his posing, others have been taking notes. And by others I mean Robert F Kennedy Jr, who has spent a large portion of his time in politics spamming social media with increasingly weird footage of him working out.

In 2023, when Kennedy ran for president, he posted a video of himself doing shirtless push-ups in an empty car park as preparation for his debate with Joe Biden – bizarrely, he was wearing blue jeans for the stunt. Now that Kennedy is the US health secretary, the videos are coming at a faster clip.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 12:34

The University of Florida campus group says the suspension over an off-campus post violated free speech

A dispute among student Republican groups in Florida over alleged antisemitic behavior is heading for a courtroom after a chapter at the state’s flagship university was suspended for an online post featuring two people giving Nazi salutes.

On Saturday, University of Florida (UF) blocked campus operations of the school’s College Republicans after the group’s state leadership said it had disbanded the chapter for engaging in “a pattern of conduct that violated its rules and values, including a recent antisemitic gesture”.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 12:34

STUTTGART, Germany, March 17, 2026 — Q.ANT today announced the deployment of its second-generation photonic processors in a high-performance computing (HPC) environment at the Leibniz Supercomputing Center (LRZ). This deployment marks an important step toward integrating light-based co-processing into production data center operations to reduce the escalating energy and performance constraints of AI workloads. Photonic computing architectures can enable up to 90x lower power consumption per workload and up to 100x greater data center capacity, driven by higher computational density and increased calculation speed.

An LRZ engineer working with Q.ANT’s second Generation photonic processor

Building on its first-generation system at LRZ, Q.ANT’s Gen 2 Native Processing Units (NPUs) act as photonic AI accelerators, delivering higher computational throughput and improved energy efficiency. Installed via standard PCIe interfaces, the processors integrate into existing HPC systems and operate alongside CPUs and GPUs under AI and scientific simulation workloads.

“AI is pushing data center power consumption to unprecedented levels, and energy has become a major limiting factor in scaling next-generation computing infrastructure,” said Bob Sorensen, Hyperion Research’s Senior Vice President for Research. “What makes this deployment significant is that it moves photonic co-processing beyond proof-of-concept and into production HPC environments. Demonstrating measurable energy reduction and performance gains under real-world workloads signals that alternative architectures like photonics are becoming a practical path forward for scaling AI infrastructure.”

In benchmark evaluations at LRZ, Q.ANT’s Gen 2 architecture demonstrated significant improvements over its first-generation NPUs, marking the next milestone in the company’s aggressive product development roadmap. Results include:

  • More than 50x higher throughput of matrix multiplications
  • 25x faster inference on a ResNet-18 convolutional neural network
  • 6x lower energy consumption for typical workloads
  • Enhanced analog units optimized for nonlinear functions, reducing parameter counts and training depth
  • Accuracy sufficient to support state-of-the-art AI applications

Unlike electronic processors that rely on transistor switching, Q.ANT’s photonic NPUs execute mathematical operations directly in the optical domain using Thin-Film Lithium Niobate (TFLN) photonic integrated circuits, eliminating on-chip heat generation and cooling requirements.

“Adding more digital hardware no longer solves the compute scaling problem in AI,” said Dr. Michael Förtsch, CEO of Q.ANT. “If we continue to scale with brute-force transistor logic, we simply turn electricity into heat. At LRZ, we’re proving that light-based co-processing can integrate with today’s infrastructure and deliver measurable efficiency gains under real workloads. This is how AI can continue to scale without scaling its energy footprint.”

LRZ runs large-scale scientific simulations, AI research, and data-intensive applications under the most demanding operational standards. The installation enables LRZ to rigorously test photonic co-processing under production conditions, benchmarking performance, precision and energy efficiency within heterogeneous HPC architectures.

“This deployment highlights the technological progress from the first to the second generation of Q.ANT’s processors,” said Prof. Dr. Dieter Kranzlmüller, Chairman of the Board of Directors of LRZ. “Our evaluation is conducted under real production workloads and operational requirements. Photonic co-processing represents a promising approach to addressing the performance and energy challenges increasingly defining modern high-performance computing.”

The LRZ installation helps tackle industrial challenges in compute-intensive applications such as drug discovery, materials design, and adaptive optimization, where nonlinear complexity and energy efficiency are critical.

More from HPCwire

About The Leibniz Supercomputing Centre

The Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ) is a leading European high-performance computing facility serving universities and research institutions across Bavaria and Germany. As a member of Germany’s Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS), LRZ provides large-scale computing infrastructure supporting scientific research, AI development, and data-intensive applications.

About Q.ANT

Q.ANT is a Stuttgart-based photonics company developing photonic AI accelerators for AI and high-performance computing, delivering a scalable alternative to transistor-based systems. Its Native Processing Units (NPUs) use Thin-Film Lithium Niobate photonic integrated circuits to perform mathematical operations directly in the optical domain, enabling energy-efficient co-processing for complex computational workloads. Q.ANT operates its own TFLN chip pilot line in collaboration with IMS CHIPS.


Source: Q.ANT

The post Q.ANT Deploys 2nd-Gen Photonic Processors at Supercomputing Center LRZ appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 12:24

Spring break "takeovers," which are massive gatherings organized on social media, are overwhelming some top destinations and posing dangers.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 12:17

US-Israel war on Iran: How is Tehran's regional 'axis of resistance' responding? 23 March 2026 — 1:30PM TO 2:45PM Anonymous (not verified) Online

Panellists discuss how axis actors are reacting, adapting, and surviving, and examine implications for the region’s political and security landscape.

Panelists examine how axis actors are reacting, adapting, and surviving, and implications for the region’s political and security landscape.

For more than two decades, the ‘axis of resistance’ functioned as Iran’s forward defense. Since October 7, that model has come under unprecedented strain. Israel and the US have explicitly sought not just to degrade individual members but to dismantle the network as a whole and shift the locus of confrontation toward Iran itself.

The June 2025 12-day war marked an inflexion point, with Iranian officials signalling that they would act directly and alone. However, axis actors, including Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Popular Mobilization  Force (PMF) in Iraq, and the Houthis in Yemen, have not disappeared.

As the ongoing war between the US, Israel, and Iran is becoming a regional war, some Iran-aligned groups are fighting. Others are holding back. Despite years of decapitation campaigns, they still endure.

In this webinar, a panel of experts will examine how axis actors are reacting, adapting, and surviving. Panellists will also discuss the implications of the axis’s persistence and evolution for US and allied policy, and what it means for the region’s political and security landscape in the years ahead.

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-17 12:12

The Trump administration is drastically undercounting the price tag of the U.S. war with Iran, peddling fragmentary estimates that offer Americans a skewed understanding of the costs.

The Pentagon on Thursday said the U.S. spent about $11.3 billion in just one week of its war on Iran; Trump economic adviser Kevin Hassett similarly put the figure at $12 billion on Sunday.

But these sums are dwarfed by estimates offered by experts in the costs of war, lawmakers experienced with the Pentagon budget, and two government officials briefed on Operation Epic Fury who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

At the very least, they say the war is burning through between $1 billion and $2 billion per day — or roughly $11,500 to $23,000 per second. The cost, the officials told The Intercept, could rise to a quarter trillion dollars or more over the coming months.

Even that is a drop in the bucket compared to the long-term expenses, which could cost the U.S. trillions of dollars in the decades to come. One of the officials lamented that Americans would be paying off the war for generations.

“If this war takes months rather than weeks, the costs will become astronomical,” said Gabe Murphy, a policy analyst at Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan budget watchdog advocating for an end to wasteful spending,

Jules Hurst III, the War Department’s acting comptroller and chief financial officer, called the Pentagon’s initial $11.3 billion estimate a “ballpark number,” speaking at the Reagan Institute’s National Security Innovation Base Summit. Hurst said a more comprehensive figure would be provided with a supplemental budget request, which he said the Pentagon plans to soon submit to the White House and Congress.

Democratic lawmakers believe the true number is far higher because the Pentagon estimate did not include many expenses, including the massive buildup of military assets, weapons, and personnel in the Middle East ahead of the conflict. Lawmakers have said they expect the Iran War supplemental request to reach at least $50 billion — on top of a $1.5 trillion War Department budget request for 2027.

When he appeared before the House Armed Services Committee recently, Elbridge Colby, the under secretary of war for policy, said that the military campaign against Iran had been “scoped out” for up to five weeks, but that the president could extend it. He was, however, unable to tell Rep. Sara Jacobs, D-Calif., the cost. “I can’t give you an answer at this point,” he said. The Office of the Secretary of Defense as well as Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson were no more forthcoming with The Intercept.

Jacobs told The Intercept that Americans had been conned into an open-ended conflict, with unclear goals and no exit plan.

“We haven’t gotten sufficient details in public or behind closed doors about the strategy, the objectives, the length of the operation, or how much this will cost taxpayers,” she told The Intercept. “The American people are demanding an end to this illegal war to prevent more killings of children, retaliation against U.S. service members, skyrocketing costs to U.S. taxpayers, and yet another endless war.”

Hassett, the director of Trump’s National Economic Council, said the war was still expected to take four to six weeks. But without accurate information from the Pentagon on the cost of the war, experts, lawmakers, and government officials have stepped into the breach with estimates of the financial burden of Trump’s war with Iran — his second war on the country within the span of a year.

The numbers are immense.

A three-week conflict could cost taxpayers between $60 billion and $130 billion, according to the two government officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak freely, with both stressing that the estimates were speculative. “It’s a back of the napkin estimate,” said one official.

“They really have no idea of the real cost.”

A five-week war could top out at $175 billion. Eight weeks could put the total at $250 billion. “They really have no idea of the real cost,” said one of the officials, noting that bookkeeping is not a Pentagon strong suit. The self-styled War Department has never passed an audit, despite almost a decade of attempts.

The Pentagon’s pre-war military buildup — which is missing from the $11.3 billion estimate — had already cost taxpayers an estimated $630 million, according to Elaine McCusker, a former senior Pentagon budget official now at the American Enterprise Institute. (McCusker said those costs are likely to be absorbed within the Pentagon’s existing $839 billion 2026 budget.) Initial estimates of the first 100 hours of the war tacked on around $3.7 billion in operational costs, munitions, and damaged or destroyed equipment, according to a cost breakdown by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, or CSIS. This and other estimates turned out to be drastic undercounts as Pentagon officials, in classified briefings, disclosed that the military burned through $5.6 billion worth of munitions in just the first two days of the war. An updated analysis by CSIS now estimates that Epic Fury cost $16.5 billion by its 12th day. 

Estimates by Linda Bilmes, the co-author of “The Three Trillion Dollar War,” are in line with the government officials’ projections. Bilmes, a former assistant secretary and chief financial officer of the U.S. Department of Commerce under Bill Clinton and currently a public policy professor at the Harvard Kennedy School, says that the price tag of the war will exceed $50 billion if the conflict stretches into its third or fourth week. “Probably higher,” she added.

Bilmes cautioned that enormous short-term expenses — like spent munitions, the deployments of aircraft carrier strike groups, and aircraft shot down — will be eclipsed by even more significant expenditures like the long-term costs of veterans’ benefits and interest on the debt to pay for the war. The ultimate cost, Bilmes says, may reach into the trillions of dollars.

Related

Over Two Decades, U.S. Global War on Terror Has Taken Nearly 1 Million Lives and Cost $8 Trillion

Bilmes first called attention to the immense hidden costs of America’s wars in her groundbreaking analyses of the Iraq War. The George W. Bush administration initially put the likely cost of the Iraq War at $40 billion. By 2008, Bilmes and economist Joseph Stiglitz discovered that the real cost would be at least $3 trillion. By 2021, that figure had ballooned to around $8 trillion.

Asked about the analogous long-term costs of the Iran war by The Intercept, the Office of the Secretary of War clammed up. “We have nothing to provide,” a spokesperson told The Intercept.

“The majority are being exposed to toxins, contamination, acid rain, dust from infrastructure destruction, and burning oil fumes.”

Bilmes notes that around 50,000 U.S. troops are deployed around the Middle East as the United States and Israel, as well as Iran and its proxies, strike fuel depots, oil facilities, and military sites — all of which release noxious substances shown to negatively affect human health. “The majority are being exposed to toxins, contamination, acid rain, dust from infrastructure destruction, and burning oil fumes, so we can estimate that at least one-third will be claiming disability benefits under the PACT Act,” she said, referring to a landmark 2022 law expanding health care and benefits for veterans exposed to burn pits, Agent Orange, and other toxic substances. “That is a major long-term cost that almost nobody looks at.” Bilmes said that if veterans claim benefits at the rate of the extremely short 1990 Gulf War — 37 percent of whom receive compensation today — this alone would add around $600 billion in costs over their lifetimes. 

The Iran war also increases the likelihood that Congress will approve a larger Pentagon budget than Trump would have secured without it, Bilmes said. “If the budget would have increased by $100 billion, this war might bump it to $200 billion,” she told The Intercept. “That becomes the base budget and, over a decade, it’s another trillion dollars added to the defense budget.”

“ Now the gross debt is $38 trillion — and about 30 percent of that is due to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.”

Bilmes explained that these long-term costs are exacerbated by the fact that all the money is borrowed. “Back in 2004, the public debt was below $4 trillion. Now the gross debt is $38 trillion — and about 30 percent of that is due to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,” she said. A key contributor to that spike is the fact that the United States went to war in Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 while simultaneously cutting taxes — increasing spending while reducing revenues. “This combination had never happened before in the history of U.S. wars,” she said. With interest rates almost double what they were in the 2010s, Bilmes notes that 14 percent of the federal budget already goes to interest payments, which are destined to rise further with the Iran war.

Hurst, the War Department comptroller, declined to specify exactly how much money the War Department would ask for in the supplemental request. Most sources say it will top $50 billion. Asked about the likelihood the Iran war supplemental request would pass, given Democrats’ opposition to the conflict, Rep. Rob Wittman, R-Va., was optimistic due to bipartisan concerns about weapons stockpiles. “There is a need that was there before the Iran conflict,” said Wittman, the vice chair of the House Armed Services Committee, at the Reagan Institute summit last week. “There’s a need there to build our weapons magazine depth. There’s a need there to make sure we’re building more expendable and attritable platforms. So those things extend even beyond the Iran conflict. This just makes it more immediate.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., pushed back on talk of additional funding. “The administration has not even made the case to the American people as to why we are spending billions of dollars and dropping bombs every day in Iran,” he said during a Monday press conference. “So the notion that they would come up here and ask for additional money is beyond the pale at this moment.”

Murphy, the policy analyst at Taxpayers for Common Sense, noted that the reconciliation bill enacted last summer included over $60 billion for munitions, missile defense, and low-cost weapons. The lack of specificity in the bill would allow the Pentagon to easily utilize that, plus the remaining $90 billion from reconciliation, for Trump’s war of choice with Iran, he said.

“Billions of taxpayer dollars have already been spent on this unauthorized war. We’re facing a spiraling debt crisis, skyrocketing health care premiums, dire food insecurity, and natural disasters that are growing more frequent, extreme, and costly. These are national security issues,” Murphy told The Intercept. “If Congress believes this war is a good use of taxpayer dollars, it should vote on an authorization for the use of military force. Congress has a duty to consider any supplemental funding requests, but absent an AUMF, Congress shouldn’t approve additional funding.”

The Pentagon, Murphy said, “got a boatload of extra cash, more than $150 billion, in last summer’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act.”

With the goals of the war undefined, there is no way to project how long the war on Iran will rage on. “There will be no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!” Trump wrote on Truth Social on March 6, following a statement that the war could go on “forever.” 

Murphy told The Intercept that the White House needed to provide far more clarity. “Taxpayers deserve answers on the precise costs and timeline for this war,” he said. “‘Indefinitely’ isn’t an answer.”

Related

Pentagon Report: U.S. Military Fired Missile at Elementary School in Iran

More recently, the president seemed to indicate that there has been no reason to fight since the first day of the war. “Let me say, we’ve won,” Trump said last week. “You know, you never like to say too early you won. We won. We won, in the first hour it was over, but we won,” Trump said. Jacobs highlighted this uncertainty underlying the conflict, noting that Americans have been “misled into another regime-change war in the Middle East under false pretenses and with fairy tale ideas about what will happen next.”

The Intercept presented Bilmes’s long-term cost estimates to one of the government officials who offered the more immediate quarter-trillion-dollar estimate. That official agreed that Americans would be paying massive sums of money for generations to finance Trump’s second war with Iran. “These costs aren’t known to the American people. You’re never going to hear about them from the White House or the DoD,” said the official of the long-term expenses highlighted by Bilmes. “My kids’ kids, and probably their kids, are going to be paying for this.”

Correction: March 17, 2026, 5:06 p.m. ET
The article has been updated to correct the year Laura Blimes and Joseph Stiglitz determined the cost of the Iraq War would be at least $3 trillion; it was 2008, not 2015.

The post Trump’s War on Iran Could Cost Trillions appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 12:00

Berkeley is adopting the ‘Zone 0’ regulation, which mandates first 5ft around the home in high-risk areas should be clear of combustible material

Michel Thouati went through the five stages of grief before he ripped his beloved fig tree from the earth. There was a persimmon and an elderberry too, nestled close to his hillside home in Berkeley,California, and they all had to go.

The plants thriving on his small property had become overshadowed by the dangers growing with them: an emerging body of research had found landscaping can help fuel the disastrous fires sweeping out of the wildland and into neighborhoods like his. Tucked into the ridges overlooking California’s San Francisco Bay and against an expansive nature area, the house Thouati and his wife have owned for 30-some years sits in one of the highest wildfire-threat areas in the state.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 11:57
  • Miami also receive third- and fourth-round picks

  • Denver fell one win short of Super Bowl last season

  • Eagles add receiver Hollywood Brown

The Denver Broncos have reportedly traded for Miami Dolphins receiver Jaylen Waddle, a move that would add offensive firepower to a team that fell one win short of the Super Bowl last season.

ESPN reports that the Broncos will send first-, third- and fourth-round picks in this year’s draft to the Dolphins in return for Waddle. The Broncos will also receive Miami’s fourth-round pick as part of the deal. If the deal is confirmed, the Dolphins will own the 11th and 30th picks in the first round of this year’s draft as they attempt to build around newly acquired quarterback Malik Willis.

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2026-03-20 12:04
2026-03-17 11:45

Brexit was ‘a colossal mistake’, says President Stubb of Finland – but Europe should build a flexible partnership with the UK News release jon.wallace

During a speech at Chatham House the president outlined why the EU must embrace ‘flexible integration’ to forge closer relations with the UK and countries like Ukraine.

President Stubb speaking at Chatham House on 17 March 2026

President Alexander Stubb visited Chatham House on 17 March 2026 to discuss EU–UK relations, EU enlargement, ‘flexible integration’, Brexit and other issues. Describing a world in which Europe is squeezed between an aggressive Russia and a US in transition, he addressed the impact of Brexit and the opportunities for Europe and the UK.

After outlining his personal links to the UK, President Stubb said:

‘I think Brexit was a colossal mistake… I do think it’s not only shooting yourself in the foot,’ he said, ‘but it’s like amputating your leg without a medical reason for doing it’.  

But, he added, there was ample space to forge a more flexible partnership between the EU and the UK.

‘We need to get out of the mindset which I quite often see on extremes on the continent and here –  whereby you need to continue to punish the UK for having this self-inflicted pain.’  

He said there was a need for a pragmatic closening of ties in areas such as security, technology and the economy, including customs and the internal market.

‘Get out of the mindset that the UK should not be part of the customs union or the UK should not be part of the internal market. Think about a flexible way of dealing with it,’ he added.  

alt

President Stubb speaks at Chatham House.

‘The world is changing, our interests in Europe and the UK are the same. Our values in Europe and the UK, are the same. We need a UK voice in Europe – we really miss you guys, I’m serious, we really do. On the internal market, on competition, on reform, all on these things – on climate change. That’s why I think we should be pragmatic.’

During his speech, President Stubb also discussed the end of an era of peace in Europe, the weaponization of trade, energy and currency, Ukraine peace negotiations – and how best to exploit the EU’s changing economic and political power.

Watch the event in full here.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 11:37

Writers Guild of America East says management failed to offer fair wages and basic job protections

Workers at CBS News walked out for 24 hours on Tuesday after a new contract agreement was not reached following the expiration of the contract last week.

About 60 workers at the streaming service CBS News 24/7 are represented by the Writers Guild of America East. The union is holding rallies and walkouts at the CBS News broadcast center in Manhattan, New York, and at KPIX-TV CBS News Bay Area in San Francisco, California.

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2026-03-19 16:04
2026-03-17 11:19

Tinubu’s UK state visit: diplomacy alone won’t fix Nigeria’s problems Expert comment thilton.drupal

The Nigerian president’s visit is his latest high-profile foreign policy moment on the world stage. But his diplomatic engagements have not produced concrete benefits for most ordinary Nigerians.

King Charles III greets Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s state visit to the UK this week is the first by a Nigerian leader since General Ibrahim Babangida in 1989. 

Hosted by King Charles III, a state visit is the UK’s highest level of diplomatic visit and uses royal ceremony to signal and strengthen relations with key partners. It is being framed in Abuja as a landmark moment, showcasing the ‘unique bond’ between the two countries and inaugurating ‘a new era of cooperation’.

Tinubu’s visit will provide an opportunity to further operationalize the Nigeria-UK Strategic Partnership, signed in November 2024 during Foreign Secretary David Lammy’s visit to Nigeria, and the February 2024 Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership (ETIP).

The visit is also in line with Tinubu’s embrace of a foreign policy approach that centres high-profile meetings and visible diplomacy. Tinubu’s foreign policy has been rhetorically polished and sometimes strategically astute; it reflects Nigeria’s profile as a regional power and a key Commonwealth state, and has opened channels for deeper economic and security cooperation.

But nearly three years into Tinubu’s presidency, the key question is whether this visibility-driven foreign policy has delivered domestic gains. So far, the president’s prominent international profile has not largely translated into improvements in material conditions for most Nigerians. 

High-profile diplomacy, uneven domestic dividends

Tinubu has engaged in frequent presidential travel, maintaining a visible presence at summits across Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Africa. His trips – and those of senior officials – have drawn criticism for their cost amid rising poverty, hunger and falling purchasing power back home.

Foreign minister Yusuf Tuggar has articulated a ‘4D Foreign Policy’ – built on democracy, development, demography and diaspora – and advocated for Nigeria’s strategic autonomy. But in practice, Nigeria’s diplomatic capacity has lagged behind its rhetoric. Ambassadorial appointments have been slow or seen as politicized, weakening diplomatic capacity to implement the administration’s agenda.

Tinubu’s administration has also sought international validation for its key domestic reforms – fuel subsidy removal, naira devaluation and tax reform. His team cites various policy achievements as proof of success. These include headline inflation falling from above 30 per cent in 2024 to around 15 per cent last month; a stabilizing naira; Nigeria’s removal from the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) grey list; S&P raising its outlook to ‘positive’; and renewed investor interest.

However, for many Nigerians, the combination of subsidy removal, devaluation and tougher taxation with weak safety nets recalls the ‘shock therapy’ of the late 1980s, when IMF-aligned reforms under General Babangida produced lasting social costs.

Poverty remains high, food insecurity has risen, household spending remains weak and credit remains expensive for small firms. Growth is concentrated in capital-intensive sectors such as finance and ICT, while agriculture remain constrained by insecurity and structural bottlenecks. Nigeria’s deficits in education, skills and health are having a more negative impact on future earnings than in other comparable economies. 

Investment welcome, but deeper trade issues remain

Tinubu’s London visit will likely focus on leveraging the UK-Nigeria ETIP to attract investment in energy, infrastructure, technology and services – sectors where UK firms are competitive. However, any potential investments are unlikely to fix Nigeria’s struggling economy or reverse the structural drivers of migration, such as rampant insecurity and weak public services.

UK-Nigeria trade is significant, but not top-tier. It reached £8.1 billion in figures for 2025, up 11.4 per cent on the preceding year. Nigeria is the UK’s 36th largest trading partner, with the balance of trade in the UK’s favour. In comparison, Nigeria’s trade with China exceeded $22 billion (around £16.5 billion) between January and October 2025.

The UK is also a major source of FDI and a key destination for Nigerian migrants. Nigerians were one of the largest non-EU nationalities to immigrate to the UK in 2025, and remittances form an important element of Nigeria’s external accounts.

Most of Nigeria’s work needs to be done back home. 

However, much of Nigeria’s non-African commerce is still dominated by hydrocarbons and imported manufactured goods, rather than higher-value non-oil exports. This pattern leaves the country vulnerable to commodity price swings and reflects structural constraints at home: roughly 85 million Nigerians still lack access to grid power. Despite a new Electricity Act in 2023, outcomes remain poor, with frequent outages.

Nigeria’s trade with other African countries also remains low. Nigeria earned roughly $478 million from exports to ECOWAS markets in 2025 – a comparatively modest amount. Despite Abuja’s vocal support for the African Continental Free Trade Agreement and its plans to host the fifth Intra-African Trade Fair (IATF) in 2027, African markets remain underexploited.

While Tinubu may secure UK investment during his visit, these deeper patterns raise doubts about whether this economic diplomacy is reducing Nigeria’s reliance on non-African trade or its exposure to global shocks. Instead, more focus is needed on tackling long-term structural challenges – especially in electricity, education and health. 

Security cooperation

Security should also be a key focus of the visit. Nigeria remains locked in conflicts across multiple fronts. The jihadist insurgency in the northeast continues, while organized criminality and kidnappings plague the northwest and central Nigeria. Nigeria ranks 6th on the 2025 Global Terrorism Index.

alt

In early February, Nigeria’s Ministry of Defence announced the deepening of defence cooperation with the UK, building on existing training, intelligence, counterterrorism and maritime cooperation. The state visit is expected to formalize and expand this agenda, potentially improving operational capabilities.

So far, security partnerships with the UK and others have improved technical capacity – particularly in maritime security, counter-IED work and some aspects of air operations. But they have not produced discernible improvement in everyday security.

Killings, kidnappings and displacement remain widespread. ACLED data indicates at least 12,860 people were killed in political violence in the past year.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 11:12

Beats and Nike have collaborated to bring us the Powerbeats Pro 2 -- Nike Special Edition. I go hands-on with them.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 11:06

Security chief’s huge influence on many levels of Iranian politics and abroad will make his killing devastating

Israel’s assassination of Ali Larijani, the secretary of Iran’s supreme national security council and one of the linchpins of Iranian politics, will be a devastating body blow to the country and probably a bigger reverse than the loss of the supreme leader Ali Khamenei at the outset of the war.

Larijani would always have been a prime target in any attempt to decapitate the Iranian leadership, largely because of his ability to straddle so many levels of politics and his huge personal influence not just in Iran but with foreign states including China and Russia.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 11:00

Robert Allbritton’s Notus plans to double its newsroom staff, which includes hiring prominent ex-Post journalists

Robert Allbritton, the billionaire media entrepreneur, said he was “pained” by the Washington Post’s decision to lay off a large chunk of its newsroom in early February. But he also saw it as an opportunity to hire some of the Post’s most well-known journalists, including many who would have been hard to poach in previous years.

“Opportunity knocks, and you’re going to decide if you’re going to answer the door or not,” Allbritton, 57, said. “I’m always the one that says: ‘Look, if an opportunity like this comes up, you ought to go on ahead and see what you can do with it and take it on full throttle, because these things don’t come along very often.’”

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2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-17 10:50

Weekly news magazine’s parent company makes third significant ownership shake-up in its 183-year history

The Canadian billionaire Stephen Smith has bought a stake in the parent company of the Economist, held by Lynn Forester de Rothschild, in only the third significant ownership structure shake-up in its 183-year history.

Smith and his family holding company, Smith Financial Corp, which owns financial businesses, including a co-ownership of the influential proxy advisory group Glass Lewis, has acquired a 26.9% stake in the Economist Group (TEG) for an undisclosed sum.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 10:04

Borrowers face losing hundreds of dollars a month in higher repayments and rising pump rices will add to the pain, economists warn

Surging interest rates and petrol prices have stripped more than $1bn a month from Australian household budgets as economists warn of recession risks.

Consumers are preparing for rates to surpass their recent highs after the Reserve Bank delivered back-to-back hikes ahead of an inflation spike driven by the US war on Iran.

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2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-17 09:00
Aliyah Jackson

ALIYAH JACKSON
Co-Managing Mosaic Editor

I don’t really want to get out of bed, but I should start my day. First, I need to pick out an outfit that draws the least amount of attention to my body as possible. Okay, now to look in the mirror over and over again to reassure myself that I look fine. Is this outfit alright? Is it too feminine? Too masculine? Whatever, I need to get to class. I would rather die than be late. I can’t deal with all those eyes staring at me when I walk through the door.

I never leave my room without my headphones — the barrier between me and the outside world. What if a group of people laugh at me when I walk by or someone decides to randomly say something mean? At least I won’t be able to hear them, or have to sit in silence with my thoughts for too long. Maybe it’ll deter people from talking to me entirely. Hopefully.

My professor asks a question — I stay silent. I knew the answer. I was correct. Why didn’t I raise my hand? What if I was wrong? What if I embarrassed myself? Oh no, they want us to discuss. I have to find someone to talk to. Everyone seems to already be talking. It would be weird to cut in now, but I look weirder just sitting here in silence. God, what is wrong with me? Think of a distraction. Something happy, like my dog. I miss him. I wish I were with him instead of being here. He’s quite old now and he probably won’t live much … actually, let’s think about something else.

At least it’s time for lunch. Should I be eating more? Should I be eating less? Is my food healthy enough? I need to lose weight. That might solve some of my problems. I struggle with that, though. I’d probably just end up with an eating disorder. Oh my god, just eat your food.

I’ve made it to band rehearsal. I’ve done this a million times. I wish I had more close friends in marching band. I should go up and talk to some people. No, that would be weird. People already think I’m weird. Why does that guy not like me? Am I really that bad of a person? I don’t think so. It’s fine, he doesn’t matter anyway. Look at that guy over there instead. He’s cute. I want to talk to him. I’m going to do it. Actually, no. He might think I’m a creep or I might get rejected. I’m probably not his type anyway. There’s a lot of things I need to change about my appearance before I even try. Maybe one of my friends can talk to him for me.

My friends, I love my friends! Well, they’re sort of my friends. Sometimes I wonder if they would care if I disappeared. Probably not. They all have friends whom they are so much closer with. I miss my best friends. I wonder if they will replace me with someone else from their schools. I hope I’m not that disposable. Sometimes it feels like I am.

Finally, I’ve made it back to my bed. It’s too quiet in here. I’m thinking too much. I kind of want to cry. Did I take my meds? Yes, I did. Are they working? I should up my dose. Why do I still feel like this? What if they take away my sparkle? Honestly, take it. Anything has to be better than this. I can’t wait for therapy. Sometimes it feels like that’s the only time anyone actually listens to me. I wish I were well-liked. I wish people cared.

It’s fine. You’re strong. You just need to get out of this school, out of this state. But, what if that doesn’t fix anything? … It’s late, I should go to bed. I need to get more sleep. I can’t wait to do this all again tomorrow.


Prisoner of the mind: Life with an anxiety disorder was first posted on March 17, 2026 at 8:00 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

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 08:15
  • Iran FA president said negotiations being held with Fifa

  • Trump said Iran should not play for their ‘life and safety’

Fifa is unwilling to switch Iran’s World Cup matches to Mexico despite the country’s football federation ­claiming it is in discussions with the world governing body about moving their games outside the US.

Iran are due to play two fixtures in Los Angeles and one in Seattle but their participation in the tournament has been placed in doubt by the US’s joint airstrikes on the country with Israel.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 07:43

What does China’s new Five-Year Plan mean for the climate? Audio thilton.drupal

Anna speaks to James Kynge and Lauri Myllyvirta (CREA) about what the plan reveals about China’s climate and clean tech ambitions, as well as it’s broader geopolitical goals.

China is the world’s largest emitter and dominates global production of green technology. A few days ago, the National People’s Congress approved the country’s 15th Five-Year Plan, China’s main economic and policy blueprint for the period 2026–2030. What does the new plan say about China’s climate and clean tech ambitions? And what does it reveal about China’s broader geopolitical and foreign policy goals?

To discuss this, Anna is joined by James Kynge (Senior Research Fellow for China in the World at Chatham House’s Asia-Pacific Programme) and Lauri Myllyvirta (Lead Analyst at and Co-founder of the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, CREA).

Want to learn more? Please see:

-    The expert comment ‘China’s Five Year Plan commits to economic resilience – as the Iran war exposes the fragility of global supply’, by Dr Yu Jie (Senior Research Fellow on China, Chatham House). Available here. 
-    The article ‘China’s 5-Year-Plan: Latest draft shows emission targets out, clean energy targets in’, by Bernice Lee (Distinguished Fellow, Chatham House). Available here. 
-    The article ‘Can the West recover from China’s hi-tech knockout blow?’, by James Kynge (Senior Research Fellow for China in the World, Chatham House). Available here.

About The Climate Briefing  

The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world. 
 
You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify 

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 07:00

That $11.3bn doesn’t include any estimate of repairing facilities or replacing losses

Generally speaking, when you bomb another country, and that country retaliates, you call it a “war”. Very simple word. Three letters. Even Donald Trump knows how to spell it.

But be careful about calling the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, which have expanded into an Israeli ground invasion of Lebanon, a “war”. The geniuses in the White House can’t seem to figure out what the hell they’re doing. The House speaker, Mike Johnson, announced on 5 March that “we are not at war” and that the US has “no intention of being at war”. Some lawmakers, such as Senator Cynthia Lummis, meanwhile, are arguing that the US has been in “forever war” with Iran for decades.

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 06:07

US President Donald Trump speaks as Attorney General Pam Bondi smiles during a press conference in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on October 15, 2025. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP) (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)
Donald Trump speaks as Pam Bondi smiles during a press conference at the White House in Washington on Oct. 15, 2025. Photo: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

It started on President Donald Trump’s very first day in office in 2017. Over 200 Inauguration Day protesters were mass arrested and charged with hefty riot and conspiracy felonies for simply being present and wearing black at a rowdy demonstration.

Since then, the government has sought and failed to convict left-wing activists on thin, unconstitutional claims of collective guilt.

Just as the J20 prosecutions, as the inauguration cases were known, fell apart, so too did cases accusing dozens of participants in the Atlanta-based Stop Cop City movement of domestic terrorism, racketeering, and conspiracy.

It became a pattern of sorts. Prosecutors on both the federal and state level throwing extreme and overreaching charges at leftists, based on infirm theories of collective liability, aiming to paint antifascist, anti-racist movements as criminal terrorist networks. The evidence marshaled in these cases was consistently no more than typical First Amendment-protected activity, like making protest signs, raising bail funds, or being present at a demonstration. The cases drained movement energies and resources.

Again and again, though, they failed.

This was the pattern repeated in the malign, overreaching cases against protesters in Fort Worth, Texas. The anti-ICE activists had mounted a demonstration at a U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement jail in nearby Alvarado.

There were consistencies with other anti-protest cases. There had been some illegal activity outside the Prairieland Detention Facility last July, and a police officer was shot. The government latched onto these circumstances to build its strategy of criminalizing dissent through guilt by association.

Even in conservative Texas, I didn’t think a jury would buy the government’s case that these defendants were “North Texas Antifa Cell operatives” — an organization fabricated whole cloth by the Trump administration — who had orchestrated an elaborate ambush of the ICE facility.

Related

Anti-ICE Protesters Convicted on Terrorism Charges for Wearing All Black

Last week, a jury found eight of the defendants guilty of terrorism charges for simply being present and wearing black at the protest. The government scored a resounding victory: A few of the protesters, none of whom had fired any weapons, were acquitted of attempted murder charges, but the Justice Department won on almost all the other charges.

“Most people looking at this case are still stuck on the shooting aspect, but the jury decided the shooting was beside the point,” a member of a support group for the defendants told me. “The verdict is that a normal noise demo deserves to be called terrorism and people should spend potentially the rest of their lives in prison. The implications of this are obvious, and people should know that the DOJ is going to try this again.”

Grim Precedents

The convictions mark a number of grim precedents. It was the first successful effort in court to paint anti-ICE, antifascist protest activity as not only criminal but also terroristic; the first time federal terrorism charges have been deployed in association with the “antifa” label; and the first time the Trump government’s collective guilt strategy won in court.

The terrorism-related charges in the case were filed just a month after Trump announced that he was designating antifa, which is not an organization, a “major terrorist organization” — a designation that does not exist under law for domestic groups.

It’s little wonder that the Justice Department is celebrating the convictions. Trump’s Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement that the “verdict on terrorism charges will not be the last as the Trump administration systematically dismantles Antifa and finally halts their violence on America’s streets.”

The prosecution’s case was extraordinarily weak — all they really proved was that the activists, some of whom knew each other, planned and attended a late-night demonstration during which certain illegal acts took place.

Related

Trump Calls His Enemies Terrorists. Does That Mean He Can Just Kill Them?

If that can be sold to juries as the work of an organized terrorist cell, deserving of decades in prison, then Trump’s fantasy of rounding up and imprisoning leftists en masse becomes a reality. This was entirely the idea behind Trump’s National Security Presidential Memorandum 7, or NSPM-7, released last September, which directs federal law enforcement agencies to target left-leaning groups and activities. One of the defense attorneys involved in the Prairieland cases told news outlet NOTUS that it “wouldn’t be a terrorism case if it weren’t for that memo.”

The prosecution treated it as a given that antifascist, anti-government, left-wing sentiment was itself evidence of criminal conspiracy.

Throughout the trial, the prosecution treated it as a given that antifascist, anti-government, left-wing sentiment was itself evidence of criminal conspiracy. As The Intercept’s Matt Sledge reported, “prosecutors bombarded jurors with images of radical zines” and “anti-government internet memes, drawings of burning cop cars, and a video of an unidentified street brawl between far-left and far-right protesters.”

The fact that demonstrators wore black and covered their faces — a reasonable tactic in an era when federal forces are filming and openly harassing legal observers and anti-ICE protesters — was presented as material support for terrorism, for which the jury convicted eight defendants.

Another defendant was convicted for the crime of moving a box of zines and pamphlets.

What should have at most been individualized cases relating to a shooting and minor property damage were instead spun by the government into a delusional story of a planned ambush involving “explosives” — protesters set off retail fireworks — and “terroristic acts,” according to a Justice Department statement.

Whether certain illegal activity took place outside the Prairieland Detention Facility last July 4 was never up for debate in this case. Protesters spray-painted vehicles in the parking lot, and a police officer was shot in the neck by one protester, Benjamin Song. (Song was convicted of one count of attempted murder and could face up to life in prison.)

Keep Up the Fight

The material support for terrorism and related convictions must be challenged in appeal. They are unconstitutional and were obtained in a trial riddled with irregularities.

For one, the Trump-appointed judge, U.S. District Court Judge Mark Pittman, abruptly declared a mistrial during jury selection based on the initial jury pool reportedly showing too little sympathy for ICE.

When the trial restarted, the judge himself took charge of jury selection — a highly unusual move.

Pittman also barred Song from presenting a self-defense argument. In closing arguments, his defense attorney said that Song only shot at the ground after police officers fired first, and that the injured cop was grazed by a ricocheted bullet.

And access to the court for supporters, observers, and the media was also extremely limited.

“All the odds were stacked against the defendants from the start,” Xavier T. de Janon, a defense attorney representing one of the defendants, told Unicorn Riot. “The rulings of the judge, the way the courtroom was closed, the fact that the first jury was declared a mistrial, where this was happening, the very strict rules on who can even take these cases in north Texas, the sanctions that the judge imposed on defense attorneys for filing very normal motions — all of this piled up to end in this result.”

It’s notable, too, that the defense attorneys did not mount a defense in court. Once the prosecution rested its ideology-drenched and inconsistency-filled case, the defense rested too, and closing arguments proceeded.

“We do not know how things would have gone otherwise, but the assumption that the state’s glaringly weak case was enough to convince a North Texas jury pool to vote not guilty was delusional,” a close friend of a number of the defendants who helped with court support efforts told me. “This is not merely 20/20 hindsight, many of the supporters and loved ones of the defendants disagreed with the decision when it happened.”

With the Prairieland defendants also facing state charges, and with appeals processes ahead, there is a clear need to present a robust case against the government’s pernicious and dangerous lawfare. Outside of future trials and court challenges, it is crucial that anyone invested in challenging Trump’s fascist deportation machine understand the stakes of these cases and show solidarity with defendants accordingly.

The Prairieland case, as I’ve previously noted, provided a convenient testing ground for state repression, in part because it has not been lifted up as a national cause célèbre against Trumpian overreach. The reasons why should be obvious: not only were there acts of minor vandalism, but also a police officer was shot — a highly unusual event at these sorts of demonstrations.

No matter how unique, however, the Texas case reveals precisely the strategies the Trump administration will use, with the assistance of state forces, to target whole movements and communities with prosecutorial overreach and a logic of guilt by association. In the face of Trump’s escalations, this is no time for anti-ICE activists to distance themselves from protests where militant activity might occur; this is the chilling effect the government seeks.

It is the nature of contemporary far-right governance to throw everything against the wall, repeatedly, until something sticks to achieve its goals. Anti-trans laws that once roundly failed are now on the books in multiple states; once-constitutionally protected reproductive rights have been decimated.

With brute force, repetition, and relentlessness, Trump and his acolytes hack away at established protections. First Amendment-protected protest activity is no different. The Trump regime has been seeking to criminalize leftist dissent since the president’s first inauguration. For years, nothing stuck. We cannot let Prairieland be the turning point.

The post Why We Have to Fight Back Against ICE Protesters’ Terror Convictions appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 06:00

If Brendan Carr and the US president’s attacks on the press aren’t stopped, the outcome could be dire

Over the weekend, Donald Trump fumed on Truth Social about newspapers covering attacks on US tanker aircrafts in Saudi Arabia. Within hours, the Federal Communications Commission chair, Brendan Carr, reposted Trump’s rant and vowed to revoke the licenses of broadcasters who air what he called “fake news”. For some extra brownie points, Carr tossed in a line about Trump’s “landslide election victory”, too.

Early on Monday, Trump completed the sycophantic cycle with a second post announcing that he was “thrilled” by Carr’s threats and accusing unnamed media outlets of “treason” and a lack of patriotism for reporting on AI fakes linked to Iran. (It’s not clear what Trump was referring to, since the media has regularly reported on those fakes to debunk them.)

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2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-17 06:00

New Jersey’s statewide battle over growth, rooted in a once loosely enforced 1970s law against racial segregation, has turned “vicious” in Princeton.

2026-03-18 08:04
2026-03-17 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Granary at Draper Farms is one of the largest master-planned communities to have ever broken ground in Delaware, and its ambitious builder has a unique view on how it should fit into the greater community.

Colby Cox is a fourth-generation Miltonian who left his mark on his hometown two decades ago, when he built Cannery Village. Today, the master-planned community surrounds the Dogfish Head brewery and helped launch the intimate, mixed-use development concept to Delaware.

He’s recently kickstarted work on his latest Delaware project, The Granary at Draper Farms – a massive project on Milton’s southwest side, which will likely double the town’s population in the next decade.

Cox discussed the project, how he approaches building a community, how to view Sussex County’s building boom and more in a sit-down interview with Spotlight Delaware.

The entire conversation can be heard in an exclusive podcast. A selection of the conversation, edited for length and clarity, is offered here.

So we’re here in Milton as you kick off sales in The Granary at Draper Farm, a 451-acre planned community with 1,350 residences and 60,000 square feet of commercial space. There’s a lot to unpack, but I really want to start at the beginning, because this land has been in your family for about 80 years. Can you give us the background of Draper Farms?

My family’s been in Delaware for a long, long time, hundreds of years, but Milton became a place that a big portion of my family settled. My great grandmother was born here, just up Federal Street. My grandmother was born in that house, which is still there to this day and a lot of my extended family has lived here. I lived here for a while at one point in the early 2000s

And my great grandfather started a tomato company and canned tomatoes, which ended up becoming the Draper Canning Company and later Draper King Cole. My grandfather took it over in the ‘40s, when he moved down here after playing football at the University of Maryland, and took that from a tomato company to agriculture in general, and vertical integration with rail cars, manufacturing and owning his own soybean and corn farms. He was a major supplier across the U.S. of canned goods for about 40 years, until the industry started to transition and frozen food became popular. 

I’ve heard that there were about 140 canneries on the Delmarva Peninsula at one time, and today there are none. So that went away, and then through some kind of weird serendipity, I ended up purchasing that property back in the early 2000s, tore down that factory, and then turned that into a community, which is where Dogfish Head brewery is today, and a housing community called Cannery Village.

You mentioned earlier that this is not your first development in Milton. Convergence Communities also did the Cannery that surrounds the Dogfish Head campus today. Did you learn any lessons from that project that you hope to carry over to The Granary? 

Some of the stuff that we did in there has worked very well. I was very into New Urbanism and traditional neighborhood design at the time. I’d been studying projects under Andrés Duany and some of the projects that he had worked on. I worked with a group out of Washington, D.C., at the time called Rogers Consulting that had really worked closely with Duany. 

This is more common now, but back in the early 2000s this was kind of cutting-edge. These concepts were really developed in the late ‘80s and it had never really been done here. There was one project in DC that I was able to get some inspiration from, but it was a big sell. 

The mayor and town council originally did not like the concept. My pitch was, ‘All I’m trying to do is implement a lot of the same values, architecture and design principles that exist in Milton as it was designed hundreds of years ago.’ Well, then engineers get involved and they’re like, ‘Yeah, but what about the 100-year snowstorm? And what about this? And, how’s the fire truck going to swing around this 90-degree radius with a median in the middle of it?’

Those are all practical concerns, but I realized the only thing I could do is take them somewhere and show them what it looks like, what it feels like. So, I ended up convincing the mayor and council at the time to get on a bus and we all drove to a master-planned project called Lakelands and Kentlands in Maryland.

We walked around for a day in this community. And they finally started to see that houses fronting on the street with alleyway access behind can work. And 5 feet between residences actually breeds more human connection than fences everywhere and distance between people. And so they got it, and they ultimately bought in. And I think that that has worked very well. 

We can’t let engineers control the way that we live, because a lot of times what feels best in terms of the way we live isn’t the most practical in terms of trash pickup and snow removal.

Cannery Village has really transformed Milton in many ways, bringing new life to an area that was largely kind of forgotten, but it also really introduced master-planned communities to Delaware in a way that hadn’t existed beforehand. Now there are many communities around the state using that model.

What is it about mixed-use or master-planned communities that convinces you this is not just a fad, but something that people are going to want for generations?

I’ve spent a lot of time all over Europe, Asia, and South America, and there’s some real common elements that you see in the way that people live that hammers in the general idea that there are a couple things that people need.

People need to feel that they can readily connect with nature, with each other, and with themselves or their spirit — those three things are very important for the development of self love and human happiness. 

When Convergence says we want to “create conscious communities,” it is designed around those very specific things.

Our goal in all of our projects is for people to see their home as the place where they sleep and have some time with their family, but the most important thing is for people to come out of their home and engage with other people and do things out in the natural world. 

We want you to have opportunities to sit quietly with yourself, without a phone or a computer in front of you, and sit in stillness and really kind of discover your inner voice and answer some of the big questions in life. That is the driving mission of The Granary. 

And so the entire planning around The Granary is about really giving people very accessible opportunities to connect with other people, to feel part of a community. And a key component of that is making sure that the Town of Milton feels as connected with the project as the project feels with the town.

The Granary was supported by a special development district that puts some of the cost of new infrastructure and amenities onto homeowners in the community through a special tax. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

There was some minor controversy over Convergence’s decision to seek a special development district to help pay for The Granary’s infrastructure like roads, sewer and amenities, which essentially puts the cost on future homeowners rather than on the developer upfront. We don’t see a lot of those special tax districts in Delaware. What went into that decision? 

Yeah, I think part of the reason why we don’t see more creativity in projects is because there’s a feasibility analysis that’s done that says, this is the amount of infrastructure benefits, recreational uses, or whatever, that this project can support based on what homebuilders are willing to pay for lots and, ultimately, what buyers are willing to pay for homes. 

That equation has resulted in a lack of creativity, not just here in Delaware, but most of the places that I go.The standard practice in a community is to now build a clubhouse that nobody’s going to use, a pool that people only use twice a year, and a hotel-style gym that’s too small.

That’s kind of the standard amenity package that people are being offered, and it’s absurd; it’s weak.

So, how do we deliver a product at a reasonable price that people are willing to pay for and afford all of these things? Well, there’s another mechanism, and we’ve used that in other areas. 

I’ve used it in Texas, and I’m currently involved in a project in Colorado where we’re looking at this tool. The best way to do that is to spread those costs out over time, have those costs borne by a combination of the developer and the new residents in the community, and actually be able to afford to pay the town for some of the impacts to the town, but also bring a litany of other amenities and uses to the community that otherwise would not make any economic sense. 

A lot of the stuff we’re doing, like the recreational athletic fields, the amphitheater, the bouldering field, the skate park, the outdoor basketball courts, the 3 miles of walking trails, preservation of 20 acres of waterfront — all of this is being funded by us in combination with this public financing program. The risk is borne, ultimately, by me, but it’s my ability to sell to these new homeowners, and then once they purchase a home, they pay their annual fee, and they pick up some of the expense. Until that happens, I’m paying all of that. 

Would the public financing up front allow you to build some of those amenities earlier in the process?

It does. It advances some of those funds, and it does allow us to move substantially faster with some of those things.

So you’re getting those things earlier, and then you’re paying for it in the long run with an additional tax on top?

Yeah, and the beauty is that there’s no risk to the town, and the risk is all on the residents and the developer of the new project. This is where we get into the win-win. 

The current residents of Milton are going to be getting a bunch of additional things that are public access and that the new residents are paying for – and they should be paying for it. That’s their contribution to this community, and it’s OK for them to have a bit of an entrance fee because somebody else built all of this.

Here in Sussex County, it seems there’s increasingly a tough climate for builders in  criticism from residents, even around some mixed-use projects like Belle Mead and Cool Spring Crossing. What have you learned as you look at those debates, and do you feel like the conversation is changing around development?

Well, I think to be truthful in a conversation about growth, you have to recognize both sides of the equation. It is not true that all development is good, and it is not true that all development is bad. There are ways of doing things that are mutually beneficial. 

I think the standpoint that “I’m here and nobody else should come” is unreasonable in any community. Communities need to welcome people that want to come and join, but they have to accept the values of that community. 

There’s a lot of benefits that have come with growth. That said, not every community should be developed. I believe wholeheartedly that the best growth is growth that occurs around already existing infrastructure, and frankly, towns. I do not believe that we should just allow people to develop green fields in the middle of nowhere. 

Now, you have to balance that with the fact that this is traditionally a farming community. These farmers have worked very hard to survive for many years, they have value in their property, and that value should not be taken away without just compensation. And there are ways to do that. 

There are transfer of development rights (TDR) programs and other things that can be done to protect these people who have owned this property for a very long time, and they deserve to be able to continue to farm, and they deserve to be able to have some value for what they have long term that isn’t just legislated into nothing.

There’s not a strong TDR culture in Delaware. Is that something Delaware should put more thought into as other states have?

No matter where I go — I develop in Texas, I’ve done some stuff in the Carolinas, I live in Jackson Hole, Wyoming — I run into a lot of the same concerns in a lot of these places.

How do we deal with growth? 

And yes, there are ideas that have worked well and transfer development rights programs have worked well. For people who don’t really know what that is, it’s the idea that you can put something that is not in a growth area under permanent preservation, but then you can monetize the development rights that you’re giving up for that by allowing somebody to purchase those and use those rights in an area that is more designed for growth. 

And I think that Delaware should very strongly consider that concept, especially here in Sussex County. I think it’s a potential solution for a lot of issues, and I think it can preserve a lot of the rural character of this place without destroying the value that the rural community has right now in their property. 

People probably aren’t used to hearing this from people like me, but I do not believe that growth should be occurring outside of the annexation area of towns. I think that that is where growth should occur. 

The town of Milton has fewer than 4,000 residents, but the addition of The Granary could easily double that sum. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

You and your family have been here for generations. When you look at Milton today, what do you think about in terms of how it’s changed over the decades?

I used to live at 424 Chestnut St. I drove by it yesterday. Every time I come to town, I kind of take a look at it as the first home I ever owned. It’s pretty humble, but I have a lot of nostalgia there. I have a lot of nostalgia for this town. 

I used to go to King’s Ice Cream when I was a kid. It’s been here forever. I remember my grandfather taking me on tours of the factory when I was 6 or 7 years old.

I think it’s a uniquely special place, and it’s different from some of these other towns in southern Delaware. They all have their own cool and unique attributes, but Milton in particular has this history of industry and culture and arts, and there’s a lot of really creative people in this town. 

You run into these very interesting people who are highly intelligent, highly creative, and they just happen to be in this town because there’s something about it that seems to draw those types of people in. It’s always been that way. 

But I do think there is something unique about Milton, and my mission with this project is to make sure that is preserved and enhanced.

The post Granary developer Colby Cox talks designing community, planning growth appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-19 12:04
2026-03-17 04:34

The Iran war is exacting a heavy toll on Gulf oil and gas exporters – and creating risk and opportunity in North Africa Expert comment jon.wallace

The war unleashed on Iran by Israel and the US will have profound implications for Middle East economies – mainly negative for both producers and consumers.

A plume of smoke rises from the port of Jebel Ali following a reported Iranian strike in Dubai on March 1, 2026.

For the oil and gas exporters in the Gulf, the US-Israeli war with Iran has already exacted a heavy toll through lost revenue. Matters could get even worse if major installations are seriously damaged.

Regional energy importers, meanwhile, are facing stresses from higher fuel costs and losses of foreign currency earnings, which will push up inflation and aggravate socio-economic tensions.

It is striking that amid the crisis, while its economy is being badly damaged by the war, Iran is still exporting oil to China using the Strait of Hormuz – even as it closes the passage to Gulf countries’ shipping.  

It’s possible the US is refraining from attacking Iranian traffic in hopes of preserving the infrastructure that any new Iranian regime would depend upon. Gulf Arab states’ fear of further escalation, and Trump’s wariness of antagonizing China prior to a planned summit later this month, may also be playing a part.

Gulf state losses

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are managing to sell reduced volumes via pipelines to terminals outside the Strait of Hormuz. The East-West pipeline across Saudi Arabia to Yanbu on the Red Sea has the capacity to deliver 5 million barrels/day (b/d), while the line from Abu Dhabi to Fujairah, on the Arabian Sea, can carry 1.5 million b/d.

Yet even at full capacity these routes can only cover about one-quarter of the oil that normally goes through the Strait of Hormuz. And they are vulnerable to attack by Iran, and by Yemen’s Houthis. The Yemeni group has yet to enter the fray, but if it does, it could disrupt Saudi exports from Yanbu to Asia.

Saudi Arabia will be able to claw back some of its revenue losses thanks to higher oil prices. But its financial position was already showing signs of strain before the war.

The fiscal deficit was 5.3 per cent of GDP in 2025, and capital spending was being cut back. The kingdom has become increasingly reliant on capital inflows, including external borrowing, which has reached $156 billion. The net foreign assets of its commercial banks showed a deficit of $57 billion at the end of January. Foreign lenders and investors will be reappraising Saudi risk, even if oil exports climb back to pre-war levels within a few months.

The UAE has a more diversified economy than Saudi Arabia, and a smaller national population, and so it is less reliant on oil. Yet its Jebel Ali trading and manufacturing hub has been hit hard by the disruption to shipping, as have tourism, retail, aviation and the property market. And the UAE’s role as a services and trade outpost for Iran will be called into question by the war.

Qatar’s financial loss from a one-month interruption to its liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports will be a relatively modest $4 billion (assuming 6 million tonnes at $14/mmBtu). This could easily be recouped with a return to business as usual.

However, Qatar and the UAE’s long-term plans for major expansions to their LNG exports face uncertainty. The start-up of Qatar’s own expansion project has already been delayed to mid-2027. And assumptions about the prospect for a steady increase in Asian demand now look much less sure.

Asian buyers have the option of increasing imports from other producers, such as the US, Australia, Canada and Russia. And utilities in Asia can continue to rely on coal for electricity generation, while increasing investment in renewables, batteries and nuclear power. In order to safeguard market share, Qatar may have to soften its commercial terms, which are less flexible than those offered by US exporters.

Iraq’s economy is the most oil-dependent in the wider Gulf region. Some 90 per cent of its budget revenue derives from crude exports. The bulk flows from the Basra Oil Terminal and through the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.

The oil is produced in southern fields, which are not linked to pipeline systems in the north. Limited volumes are now flowing from smaller northern fields through the pipeline to Turkey. And some oil from the south is being moved by road tanker to Jordan. But a prolonged loss of oil revenue would make it hard for the government to cover public salaries and pensions, which account for over half of budget expenditure.

North Africa

Outside the Gulf, Egypt has been hit hard by rising oil and LNG prices and the loss of Qatari LNG. Egypt is a net oil importer, and depends on imports for about one-third of its natural gas supply. Roughly half of this comes from Israel, with LNG making up the remainder. Israeli supplies have been suspended, while Qatar accounted for a large chunk of LNG shipments that Egypt had ordered to boost its summer supply.

Foreign portfolio investors, on whom Egypt relies heavily to finance its fiscal deficit, have pulled some $6 billion out of the Egyptian market because of concerns about the impact of higher import costs, the potential loss of revenue from tourism and the Suez Canal, and the risk of a fall in remittances from Egyptians working in the Gulf.

The central bank has allowed the Egyptian pound to depreciate in response to these pressures, rather than releasing reserves. This has provided some assurance to investors, and there have been recent reports of a modest recovery in foreign purchases of government securities.

The net effect on Egypt will be negative, with higher inflation and the possibility of a rise in interest rates.

But the war has also created some opportunities. Egypt is in a position to provide alternative logistical services to the Gulf via Jordan and Saudi Arabian ports. Use of the Suez Canal to transport Saudi oil from Yanbu to the Mediterranean could increase. The Sumed pipeline, which runs from the Gulf of Suez across Egypt to the Mediterranean coast, could also see increased flows.

Additionally, Egypt’s exports of fertilizer and aluminium will command higher prices, as sales from the Gulf are blocked. And the tourism sector could benefit from the misfortune of Dubai.

However, the net effect on Egypt will be negative, with higher inflation and the possibility of a rise in interest rates. That would push up already high public debt-service costs while stifling private sector investment.

Among energy exporting countries in the region, Algeria stands to benefit most from the Iran war, although its ability to cash in on higher oil and gas prices is constrained by its limited ability to increase production – it is already producing at full capacity.

The impact on Morocco, which relies heavily on energy imports, will be mixed. It will be hit hard by the increase in oil prices, but this will be offset to some extent by the surge in fertilizer prices: Morocco is one of the world’s largest exporters of phosphatic fertilizers. However, production costs will be inflated by the requirement to import ammonia.

Lasting effects

If the intense phase of the conflict winds down over the next few weeks, and structural damage to energy infrastructure in the Gulf remains limited, confidence could gradually return to region’s energy sector and to an economic model that remains hugely dependent on oil and gas, for all the efforts at diversification.

2026-03-18 20:04
2026-03-17 01:00

Numerous faked images and a string of startlingly inaccurate responses from Gemini and Grok are part of a tidal wave of AI slop engulfing coverage of the Iran war

The graves, freshly dug, lie in neat rows of 20 across. More than 60 have already been carved out of the earth, with a few clusters of people standing gathered around them. Dozens more are marked out on the ground in front: small chalk rectangles, with diggers poised to complete their task.

The cemetery of Minab, photographed as it prepares to bury more than 100 of the town’s young girls, is one of the defining images of the US-Israeli war on Iran, bluntly capturing the devastating civilian toll.

Continue reading...

2026-03-17 16:04
2026-03-16 19:52

Pair attempt to strike united front amid reports vice-president skeptical over US-Israeli attack on Iran

Donald Trump revealed that he had asked China to delay his forthcoming visit to Beijing while the war with Iran was continuing, as he attempted to strike a united front on Monday with his vice-president, JD Vance, who is believed to have been skeptical over attacking Tehran’s regime.

Appearing together with Vance for the first time in two weeks, Trump said he did not think the conflict – which started on 28 February after the US and Israel opened hostilities – would be over this week but predicted victory would be achieved soon.

Continue reading...

2026-03-18 12:04
2026-03-15 09:48

Takaichi takes on Trump Expert comment jon.wallace

Iran adds a new layer of difficulty to an increasingly unstable US–Japan relationship, as the Japanese prime minister prepares to visit Washington.

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If President Donald Trump is expecting effusive praise for his war on Iran when Japan’s prime minister arrives in Washington on Thursday, he is likely to be disappointed. Sanae Takaichi, re-elected in February in a landslide victory, says she intends to be ‘candid’ in pointing out that Japan’s oil-dependent economy is suffering badly from the conflict. 

Takaichi, Japan’s first female prime minister, has won a remarkable mandate and is known for her conservative policies and forthright views. But she cannot afford to be cavalier about this White House visit. Oval Office encounters have become bear traps for many foreign leaders. 

She will want reassurance about the US’s security umbrella, the cornerstone of Japanese foreign policy since 1945. Trump is likely to repeat instead his demand for Japan to pay more for its own defence. 

That exacerbates the already difficult questions facing Japan: how assertive should it choose to be with China? And how can it make more of its other alliances around the world if the US has become a less reliable partner?

Economic troubles

At a Ministry of Finance conference in Tokyo on 9 March, snow falling just days before the first cherry blossom is due, the impact of the US–Iran conflict injected new concern into an already difficult economic picture. 

Japan is the fifth largest importer of oil in the world. 95 per cent of that comes from the Middle East. And prices are spiking as supplies are stuck in the Strait of Hormuz, with the weakness of the yen increasing the import bill further. 

Takaichi, like other prime ministers…is finding that a war in which her country has no part is driving up the cost of living. 

This potential hit to growth comes as Takaichi plans a 21.3 trillion yen ($134 billion) investment programme to stimulate the economy that is already worrying investors. Bond yields reached record highs in January, reflecting that new concerns have been added to long-standing ones about Japan’s ability to carry its debt with an ageing population. 

Takaichi, like other prime ministers (the UK’s included), is finding that a war in which her country has no part is driving up the cost of living and potentially, despite her recent electoral victory, driving down her ratings too. 

Takaichi will want to use the good rapport she struck up with the US president at a meeting in October to make the point about the impact of the war on other countries. 

After a week of exultant rhetoric from Trump and US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth about killing Iranian leaders, that may strike a jarring note. She is likely to emphasize Japan’s considerable new commitments: accelerating a target to reach 2 per cent of GDP on defence spending, a pledge to develop aerial defences as part of Trump’s ‘Golden Dome’ missile defence plan, and an agreement to invest $550 billion in the US in return for lowering tariffs from 25 per cent to 15 per cent last year.

China

So far, so predictable. The interest for the wider world hangs more on their exchanges about China. Takaichi provoked a furious response from Beijing when she declared in November that if China moved to take over Taiwan, it could prompt a military response from Japan. 

That is little more than a repetition of Japan’s established stance. But China’s fury was audible at the Munich Security Conference in February when Wang Yi, China’s top diplomat, after a stately, scripted speech about relations with the US, lashed out at Japan in answer to a final question, proclaiming it ‘a militaristic nation’ and invoking Pearl Harbour.  

Takaichi will want to probe Trump’s stance towards China. Many in the region question whether the US lacks the resources or desire to contest China’s assertiveness in the South China Sea – let alone Taiwan. Japan has noted – as have other regional leaders – that the two US destroyers normally based in Japan were in the Arabian sea last week, according to the US Naval Institute. 

Her encounter with Trump comes just two weeks before he visits President Xi in China, a visit whose lack of prepared agenda and unpredictability is attracting widespread comment in the region. 

China is balancing the value of US distraction – as Iraq and Afghanistan showed – with Trump’s unpredictability and apparently growing taste for sudden military action. 

For Japan, these considerations mark a decisive if unwanted shift in its relations with the US and its wider foreign policy. The US’s defence protection has underpinned Japan’s profound post-Second World War pacifist stance. 

Japanese governments had gradually been toughening that stance given China’s expansion of claims in neighbouring waters – but Trump’s conviction that allies have been free-riding on the US and must now pay more has brought an acceleration of that movement. 

There is an urgency in Japan’s government about the need to look for more allies, on both economic and security fronts, to uphold the rules-based international order which it has supported and needs. 

China’s economic coercion – threatening to withhold critical minerals from companies if they do not relocate to China or from the country overall if it objects to its policy – has led to recent new minerals deals with Australia. 

Japan’s role in the CPTPP trade group, where it stepped into the leadership when the US quit, is one prime tool, particularly given the rising influence of Canada (another CPTPP member) in searching for new alliances. 

2026-03-17 20:04
2026-03-13 16:57

The Food and Drug Administration on March 10 changed the approval for a version of the prescription drug leucovorin to include people with a very rare genetic condition. FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary had previously implied that the drug’s new label would cover a much broader group of people with autism, saying that “hundreds of thousands of kids” would benefit. 

The condition targeted in the FDA approval is a genetic version of cerebral folate deficiency, caused by mutations in a folate receptor gene. People with CFD — whether from genetic or other causes — have low levels of folate in their cerebrospinal fluid, which leads to reduced folate in the brain. This affects brain development. Patients with genetic CFD can experience developmental delays, movement disorders and seizures. Some behaviors are similar to those with autism.

However, this form of genetic CFD is estimated to occur in 1 in a million people, according to the FDA. That would translate to around 70 kids in the U.S. — far from “hundreds of thousands of kids.” Leucovorin had already been used for decades to treat genetic CFD via off-label prescribing, a common practice when evidence shows a drug approved for one condition improves another.

Makary speaks during a Sept. 22 press conference on autism. Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images.

Despite this limited approval, Makary had initially implied a more substantial change. “Today the FDA is filing a Federal Register notice to change the label on an exciting treatment called prescription leucovorin so that it can be available to children with autism,” Makary said in a Sept. 22 press conference. “We are going to change the label to make it available,” he went on to say. “Hundreds of thousands of kids, in my opinion, will benefit.”

This was the same press conference in which President Donald Trump and others touted an unproven link between autism and the use of Tylenol, or acetaminophen, during pregnancy. 

Makary later referred to a subset of people with autism with antibodies that block their own folate receptors, called autoantibodies. Some researchers have hypothesized that a subset of people with autism have CFD caused by these autoantibodies, but this is not well-established, as we will explain.

The FDA “is approving prescription leucovorin for treatment of autistic children,” Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said at the same event. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the treatment “may benefit large numbers of children who suffer from autism.” He had previously vowed by September to identify “what has caused the autism epidemic.” 

The Federal Register notice Makary referred to described data on the rare genetic form of CFD, however. The notice also stated that data on leucovorin for people who have symptoms with “autistic features” along with antibodies targeting the receptor “is limited” and that “additional studies are needed.” 

The then-head of the FDA’s drugs division, Dr. George Tidmarsh, also subsequently clarified that the new indication was the rare genetic one. “We’re not proposing to approve leucovorin for [people with] the diagnosis of autism,” he told the autism publication the Transmitter in an interview for a story published Oct. 2.

When asked this week about the discrepancy between Makary’s earlier comments about broad benefits for kids with autism and the ultimate FDA approval for a rare genetic condition, a spokesperson from the Department of Health and Human Services told us that Makary previously had been talking about an antibody-related form of CFD, and not the rare genetic disorder.

“Dr. Makary was referring to cerebral folate deficiency — which can be caused by antibodies blocking folate receptors — rather than cerebral folate transport deficiency, which is caused by a specific genetic mutation,” the HHS spokesperson wrote in an email. 

However, as we’ve said, the idea that a large subset of people with autism have CFD and can benefit from leucovorin has not been well-established.

“There is no substantive evidence that cerebral folate deficiency (CFD) plays a role in the pathogenesis of autism,” two researchers with expertise in folate and cancer treatment wrote in a January perspective in the New England Journal of Medicine. They also said that despite claims that antibodies against folate receptors play a role in autism, most experts consider this conclusion to be “inconclusive.” They added that the presence of the antibodies doesn’t necessarily mean that folate is low in the cerebrospinal fluid, which is the defining feature of CFD.

The new approval was for GSK’s Wellcovorin, a brand-name version of leucovorin that has long been off patent and that is no longer made by the company. Leucovorin remains available in generic versions. It is mainly used for cancer patients alongside certain chemotherapy regimens to reduce toxicity or to improve effectiveness. 

Unsupported Claims About Broad Benefits in Autism

While clarifying that Makary’s remarks about broad benefits applied to a different form of CFD, the HHS spokesperson also said that the rare genetic form of CFD “was the focus of the September announcement about this drug.” 

But during the Sept. 22 press conference and subsequent media appearances, Makary repeatedly emphasized potentially sweeping benefits of the new leucovorin label.

“​​For many kids with autism, it will provide some improvement in their symptoms, and for some subset, marked improvement,” Makary said in a Sept. 22 NewsNation interview, urging people to talk to their doctors. “There are 2.5 million kids suffering, and I hope hundreds of thousands of them will see some improvement with this new treatment that we’re going to approve in about two to three weeks,” he went on to say.

“I think the biggest story today was that the FDA is taking action to make leucovorin available to kids with cerebral folate deficiency,” he told ABC News that same day. “That may be 20% to 50% of kids with severe autism, and they have a clinical improvement in studies.” In a Sept. 25 interview on C-Span, he gave an even larger estimate, saying “we are going to approve a drug called leucovorin for the treatment of autism” and that it “may help 50% or 60% of kids with autism.”

There is very limited evidence to support the assertion that wide groups of kids with autism could benefit, as we wrote in September. David S. Mandell, a psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and director of the Penn Center for Mental Health, told us then that the evidence on leucovorin “as a treatment for autism is very weak.”

Other researchers told the Transmitter in September that the literature on autism and leucovorin was “meager” and that it would be “extremely premature” for the administration to recommend the treatment for autism.

“These leucovorin studies are small, lack validated biomarkers or outcome measures, and certainly are not generalizable to all children with autism,” Dr. Shafali Jeste, a neurologist at UCLA, told the Transmitter. “The over-simplified conclusions and media hype from these studies take advantage of vulnerable families who are searching for answers and hope.”

At the time, this evidence included a small collection of studies that looked at the impact of leucovorin on communication and other characteristics in children with autism. One of these studies — among the largest, with 80 participants recruited — has since been retracted due to concerns about its data and statistical analysis, according to a notice on the journal website. Another of the studies had been terminated for “investigator non-compliance,” although the authors still published results.

“Larger, well-designed, multisite trials using objective outcome measures are necessary to determine whether leucovorin is safe and effective in autism and in which subgroups it may be most beneficial for,” says an FAQ page from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Despite these uncertainties and the lack of a broad approval, people appear to have heeded Makary’s advice to talk to their doctors about leucovorin. New outpatient prescriptions of the drug increased by 71% in children ages 5 and older in the first couple of months following the September announcement, according to a study published March 5 in the Lancet.


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The post No Broad Autism Approval for Leucovorin, Despite FDA Commissioner’s Prior Suggestions appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-18 16:04
2026-03-13 07:28

Kazakhstan referendum: The new constitution demonstrates a diminishing interest in Western values Expert comment LToremark

The changes will cement Tokayev’s grip on power and could cause tensions with the West as Kazakhstan seeks to emulate the state-led economies of China and the Gulf.

A man leaves a voting booth to cast his ballot at a polling station during the constitutional referendum.

On 15 March, voters in Kazakhstan approved the most comprehensive overhaul of its constitution since its adoption in 1995 under former president Nursultan Nazarbayev. This radical revamp of 80 per cent of the constitution will lay out the future trajectory for Kazakhstan – and provide a legacy for President Kassym Zhomart Tokayev. Now in the seventh year of his presidency, he has successfully navigated a series of crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2022 protests and coup attempt, and the ongoing war in Ukraine. However, Tokayev has struggled to define his presidency and move away from the personalist rule of his predecessor and the political system that he established.  

Alongside structural change to the political system, Tokayev wishes to imprint some key themes from his presidency on the political culture of Kazakhstan. These include a strong, legalistic state focused on social stability, secularism, environmental protection and digital progress. The government claims that the new constitution will modernize and streamline the political system. But this brand of modernization, which is already in process, entails a move away from Western-led liberal economic models which emphasize privatization, deregulation and foreign investment. Instead, it will move Kazakhstan towards a more institutional, less personalist authoritarian system – similar to the political economy of its neighbour, China. Tokayev appears to admire the technocratic authoritarianism of China, where he served as counsellor to the Soviet ambassador in the late 1980s. Instead of looking west, the Tokayev administration, supported by large parts of the professional class, now looks to emulate the state-led economies of China and the Gulf.

Russia will be wary that the new constitution cements Kazakhstan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of increasing Russian attempts to assert its influence. 

The constitutional changes include a transition to a unicameral parliament, the Kurultai, and the creation of the Halyk Kenesi, a new representative body of citizens. There will also be a redistribution of powers between the president and parliament with the president retaining significant powers while creating a more balanced system of checks and balances on paper. The president’s new powers mean he will be able to appoint all candidates for the Supreme Court, as well as members of the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Audit Chamber and the Central Election Commission, subject to Kurultai approval. These officials will also play a pivotal role in assuring Tokayev remains in power. Furthermore, constitutional amendments will now only be approved through a referendum, rather than by parliament, which the president says will prevent ‘certain political groups’ from amending the constitution. 

The constitutional changes strengthen the power of the presidency and present several possible scenarios for succession. President Tokayev could use the results of the constitutional referendum as justification for a new seven-year term. Tokayev’s current – and final – mandate ends in 2029, by which time he will be 76 years old. Or he could step down early and assume the position of vice president, with his successor installed as president. The latter would enable him to manage Kazakhstan’s complex foreign affairs, without the pressure of day-to-day domestic duties. 

Tokayev is likely to win extensive internal and external support for an extension of his tenure as president. Both Russia and China would favour continuity in their relations with Kazakhstan, viewing Tokayev as a productive partner. Russia, in particular, views Tokayev as a guarantor against a wave of anti-Russian popular sentiment. A veteran diplomat, Tokayev has also managed to work well with Western governments, most notably the administration of US President Donald Trump.

China is likely to welcome the transition to a more stable and institutionalized system more akin to its own. But Russia will be wary that the new constitution cements Kazakhstan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of increasing Russian attempts to assert its influence. The new constitution also proposes making Kazakh the country’s main language, while retaining Russian as another, albeit downgraded, official language.    

Human rights groups, meanwhile, have raised concerns over the changes. Although the text emphasizes the importance of human rights and clarifies constitutional mechanisms, they claim that it also gives the government more leverage to crack down on freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association. The changes include a ban on foreign financing of political parties and trade unions. In the run-up to the hastily scheduled vote, there have been instances of police intimidation and journalists criticizing the proposed changes have been arrested, hardly signs of a more open society.

The new constitution also removes a reference to international law taking precedence over domestic law. At present it is unclear whether this is directed at investors or whether it is intended to limit the application of international human rights law in Kazakhstan. But the changes could have a major impact on investors, particularly those in the extractives sectors – the largest investors in the country. The current wording could allow domestic law to supersede Kazakhstan’s treaty obligations, such as bilateral investment treaties and the Energy Charter Treaty. This will complicate the enforcement of international arbitral awards. Kazakh lawmakers would also not have to consider the nation’s treaty obligations when developing new legislation, given that domestic law would have de facto supremacy.  

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