A new book recounts one of the most rambunctious moments on the floor of the House in modern history.
Burnham earlier hailed a ‘turning point’ for the country after a resounding victory over Reform UK and Restore
David Blunkett, the former Labour cabinet minister, has suggested that Keir Starmer should stand down after the Makerfield byelection.
In an interview on the BBC’s Newsnight, Blunkett suggested that Starmer standing aside would be the best option for the party regardless of whether Andy Burnham wins tonight or loses.
Continue reading...️ Updates from the second round at Shinnecock Hills
️ Day one report | Follow us on Instagram | Mail David
What about the weather today? I’ll give you how it’s described in USA Today. Kind of cutesy.
Friday, June 19: Stiff winds with clouds giving way to sun; gusty winds will continue to pose problems for golfers.
Continue reading...More than half of France’s population under severe weather warning with temperatures expected to exceed 40C
More than half of France’s population is under a severe weather warning as large swathes of western Europe endure the second extreme heat event of the year with temperatures expected to exceed 40C (104F).
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, called for “extreme vigilance from everyone”, asking citizens to “take care of our oldest and most vulnerable people” and follow government advice. “We are going through difficult days,” he said.
Continue reading...Simone Venturini says proposal aimed at discouraging arrivals in ‘periods of heightened tourist pressure’
Venice’s new mayor has said he hopes to raise a controversial entrance fee for day-trippers to the lagoon city to as much as €50 (£43).
Simone Venturini, the rightwing former tourism councillor who was elected mayor in late May, said the proposal was aimed at further discouraging arrivals “during periods of heightened tourist pressure”.
Continue reading...Italy’s foreign minister Antonio Tajani canceled his planned trip to the US in response to the ‘made up’ remarks
Italy’s defence minister Guido Crosetto reacted to the amusing crisis in relations with the US.
“I can’t imagine @GiorgiaMeloni asking anyone for a photo, not even under threat,” he said on X.
Continue reading...The Justice Department says it's released "every document required by the Epstein Files Transparency Act," but CBS News has identified numerous gaps.
Fifa has defended its Aramco sponsorship, saying revenues are reinvested back into football at all levels
As scorching temperatures beat down on World Cup soccer games across North America, climate activists – including former and current professional athletes – are calling for Fifa and other professional sporting organizations to cut ties with the oil and gas industry.
“Sport, especially football, has the power to influence and inspire billions of people,” said David Wheeler, an English former professional footballer, who supports the campaign. “Fifa should be harnessing that power to do good.”
Continue reading...Tories’ Douglas Lumsden says city has spoken ‘loud and clear’ in support of the North Sea oil and gas industry
The Scottish National party has lost the formerly safe seat of Aberdeen South in a shock loss to the Scottish Conservatives.
Douglas Lumsden beat the SNP’s Richard Thomson by 6,050 votes, with a 14.69% swing away towards the Scottish Tories, whose vote share was 49.51%. Lumsden’s vote tally was 14,308, with Thomson on 8,258. Jo Hart for Reform came a distant third with 2,478 votes. The turnout was just 38%.
Continue reading...IDF claims continuing strikes come after Iran-backed group repeatedly violated ceasefire; JD Vance cancels trip as US-Iran talks set for Friday cancelled
Inside the city of grief hit hardest by Israel strikes on southern Lebanon
As the procession wound its way through mounds of rubble, the crowd chanted and beat their chests, their lamentations echoed by the dull thud of shelling in the foothills just beyond the city.
Continue reading...The U.S.-Iran deal faces an early test as fighting in Lebanon between Israel and Hezbollah reignites and next-phase talks are postponed.
Nancy Napoles denied the accusation and said she was willing to cooperate with authorities to clarify what happened.
Scams are more advanced than ever, in large part thanks to AI. But there are still ways to identify them.
At every stage of childhood, the Trump administration is withdrawing a protection. It is also dismantling the tools that would measure the harm
A newborn’s first hours in a US hospital used to carry a quiet set of guarantees. A vitamin K injection against catastrophic bleeding. A hepatitis B vaccination. The assumption that whatever a family could afford, the country had already decided this child was worth protecting. I have spent more than 40 years in pulmonary and critical care medicine. I have seen children harmed by disease, poverty, by bad luck. I had not, until now, seen them harmed so methodically by their own government.
Read the headlines one at a time and the pattern disappears. A vaccine rule one week, a food program the next, the reorganization of an agency most people could not name. Each change arrives wrapped in a reasonable rationale: fiscal discipline, local control, parental choice. But arrange them in the order a child actually grows, and the rationales stop mattering. What you see instead is a sequence.
Continue reading...As datacenters’ connections to electric grids are held up, big tech is forced to throw money at producing its own power
Datacenters are driving unprecedented growth in the US clean energy industry, paradoxically boosting a sector that was sputtering before the artificial intelligence boom even as AI’s rollout creates immense environmental challenges.
However, observers caution that while the centers are propelling wind, solar, and other clean energy companies, datacenters remain a climate nightmare.
Continue reading...Depending on AI can also potentially decrease the ability to discern misinformation, research says
A new study from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is the latest research to find that relying too much on chatbots can diminish critical-thinking skills, and potentially decrease our ability to discern misinformation for ourselves.
As AI tools are becoming more sophisticated and accessible, manipulated images and misleading headlines are becoming more common. AI can be part of the solution, and has proved useful in helping users identify fake content – but there’s a cost to using it this way, the new research suggests. An over-dependence on AI to help figure out what’s real on the internet can lead to trouble making those judgments.
Continue reading...From premium steaks to budget-friendly bundles, these are the meat delivery services worth ordering from this summer.
If you're looking to escape ChatGPT or welcome it with open arms, here's how to export and import your data.
NASA has selected Relativity Space to build and launch Aeolus, a 2028 Mars orbiter that would provide daily global measurements of dust, winds, and atmospheric temperatures to support future robotic and human missions. TechCrunch reports: The structure of the contract is akin to the deals that NASA made with SpaceX to fly cargo to the International Space Station, or Firefly Aerospace to put a lander on the Moon. The government agency handles the science, while the private company provides low-cost infrastructure. Aeolus, as the mission is dubbed, will contain four instruments to measure and image Mars from orbit, providing what NASA expects to be the first daily, global view of dust, winds, and temperature in its atmosphere. The agency said that data will make it safer for landers and, someday, astronauts, to visit the surface of the Red Planet. By pairing NASA's world-class instruments with commercial innovation and investment, we can deliver more science, more often, and reduce the time it takes to get essential data into the hands of researchers preparing for future human missions to Mars," NASA administrator Jared Isaacman said in statement. The mission is set to launch in 2028 -- a rapid pace that will require Relativity to design and build the spacecraft to carry the Aeolus instruments, and finish building the rocket that will carry it to space, all on a tight timeline. NASA did not disclose how much it is paying Relativity for the mission, and Relativity did not respond to questions from TechCrunch. Relativity was founded in 2015 by two former SpaceX and Blue Origin engineers, with the idea of using 3D printing to its maximum potential as a path to building a cheaper rocket. The company's first design, Terran-1, launched in March 2023 and failed mid-flight. Relativity doubled down by moving on to a larger design, dubbed the Terran R. Before Relativity could get it to the launch pad, the company ran into fundraising challenges, and Schmidt took a majority stake in the company in it last year, installing himself as CEO. He's been tight-lipped about the investment but has expressed interest in orbital data centers, and is thought to be using Relativity to launch a space telescope, Lazuili, financed by his family philanthropy, Schmidt Sciences.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
U.S. and Iranian officials postponed negotiations planned in Switzerland on Friday about the details of their peace agreement as it faced a major test.
McKenna Wendel was last seen alive on March 14 and her body was found outside Brookings, an hour's drive north of Sioux Falls, on March 19.
This popular CGM can now be marketed for children 2 years of age and older who do not use insulin.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Construction trades are one of the last well-paying, blue-collar jobs in Delaware, regardless of whether working for a union or not. But a new legislative proposal could prioritize some of the most lucrative, taxpayer-funded projects in the state to a smaller number of unionized workers, which has drawn criticism from competitors.
A bill that would require school districts to use unionized laborers on major construction projects has split Delaware’s construction industry as lawmakers near the finish line in the debate.
While leaders of the competing factions have framed the issue in dramatic terms, interviews with 18 construction workers at various sites in Delaware this month showed that rank-and-file workers largely were not as ideological. Many workers said they are indifferent to being in a union, saying instead that they support whatever arrangement would bring them the biggest paychecks.
Senate Bill 272 would mandate that a school district sign an agreement with the Delaware Building and Construction Trades Council – the umbrella organization for the state’s various unionized trades – to use union labor for construction projects that cost at least $5 million and have at least two bidders. Those deals are known as project labor agreements, or PLAs.
If merit shops – or non-unionized construction companies – win a project bid covered by the bill, they would be required to hire a percentage of unionized workers. That percentage would be negotiated with the Delaware Building and Construction Trades Council, whose president, Jim Maravelias, told Spotlight Delaware that they would seek half of the available jobs.
An analysis using data from the monthly household Current Population Survey estimated that Delaware’s private construction industry was roughly 15% unionized, totaling about 4,000 members.
Multiple major industry groups, including the Associated Builders and Contractors of Delaware and organizations representing minority-owned businesses, are starkly opposed to the bill, and have been holding protests over it for months.
The prioritization of unionized labor on publicly funded projects has become a growing trend in the legislature in recent years.
Lawmakers piloted a version of SB 272 in 2023, when they required project labor agreements be used in the construction of three major state construction projects.
Since then, Sen. Jack Walsh (D-Stanton), a leader in the Delaware Building and Construction Trades Council, has continued to push for more requirements to support union labor.
Over the past year, he has filed and amended several versions of the current bill, settling on a proposed minimum of $5 million in aggregate project cost, limiting the requirement to school construction, and finally limiting PLAs to projects that have at least two bids.

Rep. Edward Osienski, the lead House cosponsor and a retired union tradesman, testified at a June 10 committee hearing that the bill aimed to resolve frequent claims of unpaid claims to construction workers.
According to data from the Department of Labor’s Construction Enforcement Office, 66% of sites it inspected led to investigations. The department has $385,000 in outstanding wages owed to workers – a big reason why he helped propose the legislation.
“The Department of Labor has been very active, but they can’t go to them all – that’s one of the issues,” Osienski said. “We can’t just depend on the Department of Labor to police what’s going on out there.”
On the grounds of construction projects, many workers said they are indifferent to being in a union.
About five non-unionized workers told Spotlight Delaware they don’t think much about the union versus non-union issue. A couple unionized workers said they benefit from protections like the ability to walk off a job out of safety concerns without being fired.
A few workers had strong opinions.
A group of commercial plumbers expressed disapproval of unions. One plumber who used to be in a union remembered when he was sent two hours away to do work for $7.50 an hour, which he felt he could not do comfortably.
Brian Valdelamar, another one of the plumbers, argued unionized workers are less efficient – and may even “milk jobs out.”
“They might take three years to build this, we did it in roughly three or four months,” Valdelamar said.
Asked about the implications of the bill on his work, Valdelamar said he does not think the requirement of a project labor agreement would be fair.
James Mitchell, a non-unionized electrician, said he had heard about the bill and believes it is unfair because it could cut small companies, like his, out from bids.
“I guess they would get dibs on all of it then,” Mitchell said. “It cuts the other guys out.”
In particular, Mitchell said the cost of living was so high right now that it was financially “hard to live.”
“Paying [union] dues for somebody else to retire sounds crazy to me right now. I need that money for myself,” he said.
Local non-unionized general contractor Tommy Ogden said he’s conflicted on whether he’d support the measure, believing the state’s prevailing wage – an average of all wages paid in an industry in each county – is a “happy compromise.” Delaware law requires workers on state-funded projects that meet certain cost thresholds to be paid fairly.
For example, carpenters would earn about $62 an hour and electricians nearly $87 an hour for prevailing wage work in New Castle County or $52 and $87 in Sussex County, respectively.
However, unions have helped raise wages and standards for union and non-unionized workers alike, Ogden noted. He believes that if it had been solely left up to “the businesspeople,” tradespeople may be working 80 to 100 hours per week to support their families.
“Now, they can work 40 hours and be home for dinner,” Ogden said.
During public comment in the June labor committee hearing, a couple union workers voiced support for the bill citing fair wages and worker protections, but most speakers were opposed to the measure.
State Budget Director Brian Maxwell warned legislators that the cost of school construction projects with PLAs would be higher than without the agreements. A fiscal note on the impact of the bill likewise suggested more costs in negotiating the PLAs but couldn’t estimate an impact.
Mary DuPont, the executive director of La Plaza, a nonprofit advocacy organization for Delaware’s Latino community, opposed the bill, citing Delaware’s 2022 Disparity Report which found that less than 3% of state construction contracts went to minority-owned businesses.
She told Spotlight Delaware that in Sussex County, a large proportion of construction projects are done by small Latino-owned businesses that are not likely to be unionized. DuPont added that some minority-owned businesses have told her of unpleasant experiences in unions.
“They’re not exactly waiting with welcome signs for minorities to join the union,” she said.
Ayanna Khan, founder and CEO of the Black Chamber of Commerce, told Spotlight Delaware that because minority-owned businesses are more likely to operate in a deficit, they wouldn’t want to pay the additional expense of union dues, especially when the cost of living has significantly increased due to gas and utility prices.
She also said unions are historically composed of “middle-aged white men,” as unions discriminated against Black workers in the early 20th century.
However, according to an analysis, Black males were more likely to be in a union than White males in 2025. Nationwide, 10.3% of white men were union members compared to 12.3% of Black men and 8.6% of Hispanic men.
Maravelias, the leader of the trade union organization, denied the assertion of minority groups and associations that because most Black and Latino workers are not part of unions, the bill would harm them.
“We don’t need a minority contractor to hire minority workers,” Maravelias told the committee. “Let’s not bring race into this.”
Maravelias told Spotlight Delaware he believes that the business owners’ race or ethnicity does not have as much of an influence on who they hire,
“That little riff they want to put in there about Black, white, Latino, brown, whatever, they can take that and throw it in the garbage, because it doesn’t exist,” he added.
The bill includes a provision where PLAs could include protections for minority-owned businesses, which Maravelias hopes contractors see through. But one of his biggest problems with non-unionized labor is the proliferance of out-of-state workers who would contribute less to the state’s economy.
“Unlike the out-of-state worker, the Delaware worker will pay taxes and spend his money in Delaware, where the other guy stays here for the week in a motor lodge and then takes off,” he said.
The post Lawmakers debate whether to prioritize union labor on major projects appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Kareem’s Daily Quote: Are we building museums that let people truly inhabit the past, or just warehouses for history’s leftovers?
Back where we started: Instead of unconditional surrender from Iran, we’ve settled for reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
Newsom says DOJ is investigating him and his wife: When investigations start to look like presidential score-settling.
When sports integrity becomes negotiable: College football’s gambling fiasco lands on the NFL’s doorstep.
The Manchurian Candidate (2004): Denzel Washington and Meryl Streep are worth watching, but the remake can’t match the original’s menace.
“I Can’t Get Started With You” (1938): Billie Holiday and Lester Young turn a song that began as a joke into a gentle exploration of heartbreak.
“Real museums are places where Time is transformed into Space.” Orhan Pamuk
There’s a museum in Istanbul where a single glass case holds 4,213 cigarette butts, each one catalogued, each one pinned. Orhan Pamuk created The Museum of Innocence as a physical companion-piece to his 2008 novel of the same name, winning the European Museum of the Year Award for 2014 to go with his 2006 Nobel Prize in literature. He was proving a principle through accumulation and intention: the most throwaway object imaginable can become something you have to stand in front of and reckon with, resurrecting vanished worlds through the emotional resonance of artifacts that have survived the elements and time.
But what does Pamuk mean when he makes a distinction between “real” and unreal museums? What is the difference between a building that merely stores the past and one that allows you to inhabit it? Most of what we call museums are, if we’re being honest, impressive warehouses with good lighting. A real museum, in the sense that Pamuk is getting at, invites you into the world where the objects it holds were once alive. The air in the room changes. The weight of the room changes. What you’re experiencing is a kind of resurrection rather than mere storage, and those are fundamentally different interactions with the past.
Which leads to a harder question: whose time gets transformed into permanent, walkable space, and whose time gets left on the cutting room floor of history? Every museum is an argument for this and against that, whether its curators acknowledge it or not. The choice about what deserves its own display case and what gets a footnote in the catalogue represents a distinct worldview. When I was deep in the weeds of my book On the Shoulders of Giants: My Journey Through the Harlem Renaissance, I realized that I needed to render the full texture of the period—the music pulsing out of this legendary nightclub doorway, the argument enlivening that specific corner barbershop. Strip out those real world elements and you’re left with formal commemoration: accurate perhaps, but airless. Without that texture, a book or a museum can only honor a period at a respectful distance; it can’t break down that distance between the past and the present.
The National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington gets this right in a way that stops you cold. They have a restored railroad car from the Jim Crow period in there, full scale. Walk up to it, and the meaning lands without explanation: who built the railway line, who carried the luggage and stoked the engine, who drank cocktails in the club car and dozed in a sleeper? The thing itself does something that mere language or pictures can’t ever approach.
The Obama Presidential Center, which opens this Juneteenth on Chicago’s South Side, will test this principle of “real” museums. Outside, it’s as real as can be, a fortress-like edifice that has divided public opinion. But inside, it’s the first truly digital presidential museum, with no official papers on display. Can digital simulations perform the same alchemy as actual artifacts? The objects around us are witnesses. A cigarette butt, a rail car, a worn book with someone else’s handwriting in the margins: each holds the minutes of a life that actual people lived. Carefully curated in what Pamuk calls a “real museum,” they can transform present space into the closest replica we can achieve of the past.
Do we really want to play dice with our planet?
A series in the Guardian recently declared “it’s time to talk about geoengineering.” So let’s talk about it. And let us start with some simple truths about this cluster of techno-optimistic “quick fixes” which purport to somehow offset our slow progress towards zeroing out planet-warming carbon emissions.
Solar geoengineering proposals – reducing sunlight – have received the most attention, but a host of desperate schemes have been proposed in an effort to “fix” the disruption of climate caused by the growing burden of carbon dioxide human activities add to the atmosphere.
Continue reading...South Siders voice concerns about gentrification, housing and affordability as they celebrate opening of the Obama Presidential Center
Pastor Jeffery Campbell has deep ties to Chicago’s Woodlawn neighborhood. He was raised in the South Side neighborhood, and has served as pastor at Woodlawn Baptist Church for 22 years.
And for the past decade, he’s attempted to protect its residents from displacement and gentrification. He’s seen rising rents, residents squeezed by university development and life becoming more unaffordable. Now, there’s a new challenge: the opening of the Barack Obama Presidential Center – part of a 19-acre, $850m campus – that has transformed life in the neighborhood, as well as the adjacent South Shore and Hyde Park, long before this Friday’s opening to the public.
Continue reading...Marine veteran James Brown rescued a driver with a piece of metal lodged in his leg
A US military veteran and trucker recently used his battlefield medical training to save the life of a fellow truck driver whose leg was impaled by a piece of metal after a crash, earning him official recognition as an “angel” of the nation’s highways.
As the organization honoring him tells it, James Brown was driving for Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Melton Truck Lines through torrential rain – as well as low visibility – on 22 May when he saw another trucker lose control, leave the roadway and overturn about 40 miles east of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Continue reading...The US–Iran memorandum of understanding nods to international law. Can that be taken seriously? Expert comment jon.wallace
The memorandum restores the prohibition on the use of force, seeks a binding resolution at the UN to endorse a ‘final deal,’ and relies on multilateral institutions to implement it. But are the US and Iran really returning to compliance with international law?
Making peace is more difficult than starting wars. President Donald Trump has found this to be painfully true over the past months.
Now that a ceasefire arrangement, or memorandum of understanding (MoU), has been made public, it is possible to measure what has been agreed against the standards of international law and practice.
The 14-point document accommodates virtually the full catalogue of Iranian demands, which would have seemed entirely unrealistic when made during the active conflict. The US is losing its key pressure points, whether economic or military. And Iran’s nuclear obligations are yet to be determined. Other war aims, like stopping Iranian support for proxy forces, do not feature in the instrument.
But is this a legally binding agreement at all? An MoU can be a political or a legal undertaking. But a formal treaty would require advice and consent from the US Senate. In its opening sentence, the MoU confirms that the US and Iran ‘have jointly agreed,’ which might suggest an informal legal agreement – one which rests on ‘good faith’. This is probably as far as the sides could go to avoid giving the impression of a formal treaty, while indicating their intention to comply.
The sides commit to negotiating a ‘final deal’ – not exactly a technical legal term for a comprehensive peace settlement – within a maximum of 60 days. The ‘final deal’ is to be endorsed by a ‘binding’ resolution of the UN Security Council. This would compensate for the ambiguous legal nature of any final settlement by confirming that its legally binding character will ultimately emanate from the UN Charter.
But the Trump administration and Iran have shown contempt for the UN Charter: The US attacked Iran without permissible cause and assassinated much of its leadership; Iran attacked its neighbours – non belligerents – and closed the Strait of Hormuz. It has also massacred thousands of its own citizens. How seriously can an agreement between such parties be taken? And what does the MoU tell us about the state of international law?
Parts of the memorandum cover the initial period of 60 days until the final deal is reached. However, many of its provisions are permanent.
This includes the declaration of a ‘permanent’ termination of military operations on all fronts, which is not contingent on achieving the final deal. There is also a pledge by the parties not to initiate any war or military operation against each other in the future.
By doing so, the sides are restoring the obligation under the UN Charter that prohibits the threat or use of force among states other than in self-defence. This undertaking is to be ‘confirmed’ in the final deal – though Iran will have little faith in US commitments, having been attacked twice over the past year.
The MoU promises that the US will not deploy additional forces to the region, thus renouncing further threats of force to enforce the final deal. Indeed, it will remove ‘its forces from the proximity’ of Iran within 30 days after the final deal. How does this relate to US deployments in the region? Presumably it includes naval assets, but how about its Gulf military bases, and what precisely lies within the ‘proximity’ of Iran? But, by accepting that its deployments of whichever kind will be limited in deference to Iranian security concerns, the US has made a major concession.
The MoU also extends beyond the US and Iran, as it references their ‘allies in the current war.’ This would exclude further Israeli strikes against Iran. Israel, not a party to the deal, must also refrain from the use of force against Lebanon and respect its territorial integrity. Such restraint by Israel looks unlikely, rendering this provision a permanent, destabilizing element in the deal.
The US also expressly undertakes to refrain from interfering in the internal affairs of Iran as required by international law – another rather extraordinary turn of events, given President Trump’s encouragement of a popular revolt in February.
In the memorandum the US pledges to remove its naval blockade of Iranian harbours within 30 days. During that period, Iran will restore traffic through the Strait of Hormuz to pre-war levels. The troublesome element arises afterwards: the MoU obliges Iran to use ‘its best efforts’ to allow the safe passage of commercial vessels with no charge for 60 days only.
Beyond that, the instrument could entitle Iran to define the ‘future administration of maritime services’ in the Strait of Hormuz in dialogue with Oman. This can be seen as an implied licence for Iran and Oman to impose a fee for the administration of passage.
It is accepted in international law that countries bordering straits that require complex navigation or are subject to a special treaty regime can charge modest fees to cover pilotage charges or the cost of maintaining navigations aids.
However, there were no fees charged for maritime services relating to the Strait of Hormuz before the war. And no needs for additional services have arisen since.
Yet the MoU implies that Iran may begin collecting a disguised toll after all. This would further dilute the firm obligation in international law that coastal states must not interfere with maritime traffic through straits used for international navigation.
The US will now immediately lift restrictions on Iranian oil exports and associated services, allowing vast income to flow into the Islamic Republic. The US also pledges to lift all sanctions according to a schedule to be agreed in the final deal. There is also provision for early work on releasing Iranian frozen assets.
Short of the option of threatening or using force again, or re-instituting a blockade, which the US has now disowned, this prospect alone seems to be the incentive for Iran to abandon plans for a nuclear weapon – supposedly the principal war aim of the US.
Iran pledges in the memorandum that it will not acquire nuclear weapons. But this is no achievement – that has been its formal position for many years.
The US opened the negotiations demanding that Iran must surrender all highly enriched nuclear material for treatment abroad. But according to the MoU, the material may now be down-blended in Iran under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The US had also wanted Iran to renounce future nuclear enrichment for several decades. This is now to be discussed in view of ‘Iran’s nuclear needs’ – hardly a pointer towards total abandonment of enrichment.
Has the Trump administration really embraced the UN principle that the use of force must not be used to settle international differences? It seems unlikely: the president threatened to attack Iran again on signing the agreement.
It is possible to conclude that the MoU is more of a face-saving device, with the purpose of allowing the Iranian military to accept a deal. Many US commitments to restoring compliance with key obligations under international in relation to Iran are words only. If so, there is in fact little agreement and there seems little prospect the gaps in the MoU can be filled over the next 60 days.
Much is left impossibly vague. This lack of detail is already creating political problems in Washington and among US allies, particularly the $300 billion the MoU allocates ‘for the reconstruction and economic development of Iran’. Where will this money be collected, and from whom?
Moreover, the MoU relies on the agreement of others not involved in it. Sanctions relief beyond the US requires agreement from the UN Security Council and from the European Union. Frozen Iranian assets are held in many jurisdictions beyond the US. Peace in Lebanon relies on compliance from Israel, when ties appear strained.
Perhaps most importantly, the MoU requires the IAEA to arrange for the supervision of Iran’s nuclear programme. This is an independent agency loosely within the ambit of the UN – precisely the kind of multilateral institution the Trump administration distrusts.
Ironically, to extricate itself from its war, the US has been forced back into reliance on international cooperation and the institutions of the international system. And it is being forced to accept, at least nominally, the principles of the international order it had cast aside.
After January’s forcible extrication of President Maduro from Venezuela, it may have seemed to the president that force was once again a useful tool. But this memorandum suggests war is every bit as undesirable as the founders of the UN system believed.
Juneteenth will affect banking, mail service and financial markets, although retailers and restaurants are largely staying open.
Over the last few years, the world has seen unspeakable violence, death, and devastation from Israel’s war on Gaza. During that time, global perception has shifted as the scale of Israel’s destruction grew, with the death toll climbing to more than 73,000 people. Since the October 2025 “ceasefire,” Israeli military attacks have killed more than 1,000 Palestinians in Gaza.
“Spending years building a movement for an end to this genocide around the slogan ‘Ceasefire now’ alone, it was successful in building quite a substantial following,” Tariq Kenney-Shawa, an associate fellow at Palestinian think tank Al-Shabaka, tells The Intercept Briefing. “It was vague enough to bring a lot of people into the movement against genocide — because who’s going to disagree with calling for an end to war?”
“But at the end of the day, what it really laid the groundwork for was … the potential of signing this empty ceasefire agreement, in which there is an agreement on paper, there is a framework, and a phased approach to this.”
Since the U.S.-brokered ceasefire last year between Israel and Hamas, Gaza has largely fallen out of the news, as Israel, along with the U.S., launched attacks on Iran and Lebanon. But Israel’s genocidal assault on Palestinians never really stopped. “Palestinians continue to be killed every single day, albeit at a more piecemeal slower pace that is more difficult for the international community to oppose,” says Kenney-Shawa.
This week on the podcast, Intercept reporter Jonah Valdez speaks to Kenney-Shawa about how the fight for Palestinian rights and sovereignty can’t end at demands for ceasefires and conditioning aid — and should shift to sanctions and arms embargoes — and about how Gaza fits into Israel’s ambitions for the region and efforts to more deeply enmesh the U.S. and Israeli military.
“This is the most important thing to look at in the course of the next few months and few years,” says Kenney-Shawa, warning of new Israel-led initiatives like Section 224, an unprecedented integration of the U.S. military–industrial complex and Israeli defense and technology sectors. Israel and American leaders “recognize the fact that criticism of Israel in the U.S. is skyrocketing. … In many ways, they’ve recognized the need to shift this U.S.–Israel relationship from one of dependency, both militarily and financially, to one of further entrenchment.”
“Obviously, it’s a very strategic move by the Israelis to take advantage of this period in time where there is this huge chasm between public opinion and actual policy,” says Kenney-Shawa. “They’re essentially recognizing that, ‘Hey, we might not have total impunity in the United States forever, but we do for now while establishment Democrats and Republicans are running the ship. We have a Trump administration that’s essentially willing to do whatever we want.’ So what they’re trying to do now is essentially push this process through while Trump is in power, while Republicans have a majority in the Senate and the House.”
For more, listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.
Jessica Washington: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing, I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.
Jonah Valdez: I’m Jonah Valdez, also a reporter at The Intercept, and I cover politics and Israel and Palestine.
JW: Glad to have you here, Jonah.
So on Wednesday, President Donald Trump signed an interim ceasefire to end military operations in both Iran and Lebanon for 60 days. The agreement would reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and bars Iran from having a nuclear weapon. The White House agreed to end their blockade and waive economic sanctions against Iran.
The deal also requires the U.S. and regional partners to develop a “mutually” agreed upon reconstruction and economic development fund worth at least $300 billion. However, the U.S. is not required to contribute.
Jonah, earlier this week on a special live Intercept Briefing, you spoke to Al-Shabaka U.S. Policy Fellow Tariq Kenney-Shawa about the particulars of ceasefires especially when it comes to Iran, Lebanon, and most notably Gaza.
In your conversation, you talk about the role the term “ceasefire” plays in our political imagination. Jonah, should a “ceasefire” be the end goal, or is there something more we need to push for here if what we’re really looking for is an end to the suffering?
JV: I think anyone should see even the recent deal between the U.S. and Iran with some skepticism as far as whether it will hold, given previous ceasefires it’s been a part of.
The term “ceasefire” has been weaponized against those that it’s supposed to bring peace to.
Something that Tariq Kenney-Shawa and I talk at length about during our conversation is how this term “ceasefire” has been — in many ways, in an Orwellian way — weaponized against those that it’s supposed to bring peace to. That’s exactly what we saw in Gaza.
The term “ceasefire” was this massive slogan — a very effective slogan — throughout the 2024 presidential campaign cycle, as well as congressional races that year. Pro-Palestinian protesters, the movement at large, was really pushing and using a ceasefire as a rallying cry to get people to care about Palestinian rights.
What conversely happened is you get this Trump-concocted ceasefire with a lot of hands from the Israeli government, which is essentially a fake ceasefire. They’ve continued the bombing campaign in Gaza. Since the ceasefire that was signed in October of last year, more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli strikes. So I think the term “ceasefire” just completely doesn’t apply in Gaza.
As a part of the Iran war, they have also invaded and are occupying southern Lebanon, and of course, Israel and the U.S. and their joint strikes in Iran. I think it’s important to see Gaza in this context of a broader conflict that Israel is trying to push on the region.
JW: On a related note, I know that you’ve consistently covered a lot of the momentum around calls for an arms embargo to Israel. I know this came up in your conversation with Tariq as well.
Are we giving an arms embargo too much weight, or to put another way, are we giving politicians who say they agree with an arms embargo the ability to skirt the actual issue here, which is our decades of perpetuating and being complicit in violence in the Middle East? What’s your take on that?
JV: This is a difficult one that Tariq and I had a really good back and forth about. An arms embargo, similar to a ceasefire, has been a huge rallying cry for the movement for Palestinian rights, for Palestinian sovereignty, really for decades now. Past U.S. governments have used an arms embargo [at] varying degrees of effectiveness of leverage against the Israeli government when the U.S. government wants Israel to do certain things.
It is still worth mentioning that Israel is still very reliant on the U.S. government for its military capabilities. Just the very fact of defending against Iranian attacks, that’s made possible because of U.S. weapons. Its ability to have a chokehold on Gaza and the West Bank, also due to U.S. weapons. Its ability to even strike in Iran and Lebanon, a lot of that is U.S. weapons capabilities. A lot of the aggression we’re seeing is because of its partnership with the U.S.
Again, there’s this danger, though, similar with the ceasefire, where an arms embargo might not be enough, and that’s what Tariq gets at as well, which is something he’s been saying since even before October 7, which is, the movement might have to go further than an arms embargo.
The reason is what we’re already seeing with certain conversations in Congress is there’s real efforts by Israel supporters and the Israeli government to further enmesh the U.S. and Israeli militaries in a way where even if we were to have a halt to weapon sales to Israel, even if we were to stop the flow of taxpayer dollars to Israel, they can still acquire weapons through a new kind of partnership they’re trying to form through the Pentagon directly.
This is something where, it could also be the case, where the movement gets what it wants. Again, this is a very effective rallying cry. We’re having an arms embargo, at least calls for stopping offensive weapons to Israel as a huge litmus test in the midterm elections. And it’s I think affecting the outcome of a lot of elections as we’ve seen in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and beyond.
It is having a lot of ripple effects in U.S. politics right now, and halting it would be a big deal. But, further down the line, Israel is already anticipating the halt of the flow of weapons or at least the flow of taxpayer dollars to Israel and is looking to create an even deeper relationship with the U.S. that could last indefinitely, really.
JW: This does really seem to be a cyclical issue in U.S. politics and in organizing. You pick an endpoint and of course, your enemies, they move around that endpoint. So, you may reach the goal, but what you actually wanted to achieve still feels elusive.
Jonah, thanks for giving us that preview. We’re going to hear your conversation with Tariq Kenney-Shawa, an Al-Shabaka U.S. policy fellow and co-host of Al-Shabaka’s Policy Lab series. Let’s listen to that now.
JV: Tariq, to start, I just want to give a little background on when you and I first connected. It was last summer, so July 2025, thereabouts, and it was the height of Israel’s manufactured famine in Gaza that, at the time, there seemed to be a huge shift toward how people in the U.S. were viewing Gaza.
You had mainstream media airing images of starving Palestinians. You had even more moderate Democratic leaders criticizing Israel. More lawmakers were referring to the conflict as a genocide for the first time. In the Senate, a historic vote, a majority of Democrats for the first time voted to block some weapon transfers to Israel.
But amid all that, you told me even then you were worried about a scenario where Israel would enact what you called a “performative ceasefire,” where Israel would continue the bombing and the blockades on humanitarian aid, the ethnic cleansing, but in your words, “a bit more piecemeal and gradual.”
So sure enough, several months later, last October, we got this iteration of a ceasefire, and here we are. The scenario you worried about is unfolding. So question to you, I’m wondering: In the last seven months, what’s been affirmed for you, and what has been more surprising?
Tariq Kenney-Shawa: It’s pretty clear that, yeah, everything that we were as a movement warned about — that these meaningless, toothless ceasefires can be agreed to and then not actually implemented — that has actually, as we’ve seen over the last couple months since October ’25, that’s played out exactly as expected.
What it’s really showed me was that, or what it’s really confirmed, was that spending years building a movement for an end to this genocide around the slogan “Ceasefire now” alone, it was successful in building quite a substantial following. It was vague enough to bring a lot of people into the movement against genocide because who’s going to disagree with calling for an end to war, calling for a ceasefire, right?
But at the end of the day, what it really laid the groundwork for was — again, like you just mentioned, and like I said last year — the potential of signing this empty ceasefire agreement, in which there is an agreement on paper, there is a framework, and a phased approach to this.
However, Israel has refused to implement any steps of the ceasefire agreement, and that includes continued carrying out daily airstrikes across the Gaza Strip. They’ve continued expanding the land they control. At the beginning Israel controlled about 53 percent of the Gaza Strip, delineated with that yellow line that people keep talking about that chopped Gaza in half. And now they’ve been, bit by bit, inching that line further and further westward and forcing 2 million Palestinians into an ever-shrinking strip of land that is now about 40, 30 percent of what the Gaza Strip was prior to the genocide.
Israel has also refused to let in the full agreed amount of humanitarian aid. They flood the Strip with commercial aid that people can’t really afford, but they refuse to let in sustainable products and things that people need to survive. Tents, building material, equipment to dig people’s bodies out of the rubble. What that has done is put those 2 million Palestinians who are caged in on that other side of the yellow line into a state of deliberate purgatory.
Since October 2025, that’s what we’ve seen. Palestinians continue to be killed every single day — albeit at, again, a more piecemeal slower pace that is more difficult for the international community to oppose. A lot of people within the now quite large movement in support of Palestinian rights and an end to a genocide, they look at the situation now and they say, “Well, they agreed to a ceasefire. What else can we do? What’s the next step for us?” At the end of the day, this is exactly what we were worried about last year.
We know Israel’s history of how Israel engages with ceasefires. The fact that Israel doesn’t abide by ceasefires historically and often uses it as a period to expand the facts on the ground that fundamentally change the equation of the conflict.
Now we’re in this really difficult position in which other regional issues have come to the fore in terms of attention and media coverage, and Gaza has really slipped away from the public’s attention. Not that at the end of the day that really stopped a genocide, but there was a lot of movement in terms of this gradual push to hold Israel accountable.
The fact that we really predicated our entire movement around nothing really more than achieving a ceasefire has really come at the detriment of the Palestinians who are now living under this pseudo-ceasefire, while the movement in support of them abroad is a little bit in limbo, immobilized, and unsure of how to move forward.
“The fact that we really predicated our entire movement around nothing really more than achieving a ceasefire has really come at the detriment of the Palestinians now living under this pseudo-ceasefire.”
JV: It’s this Orwellian situation of language being weaponized in a way.
TKS: Absolutely.
JV: Out of that came the “Board of Peace” set up by the Trump administration that is supposed to govern this so-called ceasefire. Speaking of deals, this week we’re seeing a deal between the U.S. and Iran in, supposedly, ending the war there.
That war itself dominated the headlines and drew a lot of the attention away from Gaza. But now that the U.S. and Iran seem very close on this deal to end the war, Netanyahu, for his part, he said that he won’t withdraw Israeli troops from Lebanon despite this deal. And of course, the Israeli military continues to occupy more than half of Gaza.
How should we be viewing Gaza in the context of the Iran war or vice versa?
TKS: It’s important to see Gaza as the elephant in the room and just really part of this cycle of war. The fact that Israel was able to agree to this pseudo-ceasefire in Gaza allowed it to direct and move a lot of its attention, a lot of its resources, a lot of its military manpower to these other fronts that opened up. It was able to dedicate more time and energy to fighting this war in Iran, to going on this offensive against Hezbollah in Lebanon. And also, can’t ignore the fact that Israel is also holding occupied territory in Syria. So it’s really important to view this as a cycle.
It’s obviously very early, we don’t quite know what’s going to happen with the MOU [memorandum of understanding] between the U.S. and Iran. But if it does move forward, and if that front does shut down and quiet down — unfortunately, what that likely means is that Israel is going to have a lot more resources, a lot more manpower to turn its attention back to Gaza.
“The fact that Israel was able to agree to this pseudo-ceasefire in Gaza allowed it to direct and move a lot of its attention, a lot of its resources … to fighting this war in Iran.”
That shift in the regional wars that are ongoing is also coinciding with the fact that we’re basically in the run-up to Israeli election season. The opposition is really in a dead heat against the current far-right Israeli government. But the opposition in Israel isn’t criticizing Netanyahu because they’re against these forever wars that Israel is fighting. They’re criticizing Netanyahu because they just don’t like the way he’s conducting them. Just the other day, one of the main opposition candidates posted about how basically the war against Iran is going to basically reignite when there’s a new government in power in Israel.
“Israelis … are supportive of this concept of total victory that is quite elusive.”
That just goes to show that Israelis by and large are supportive of these war processes. They are supportive of this concept of total victory that is quite elusive. Netanyahu in particular, and the far-right coalition that he leads, is going to be particularly thirsty to, again, prove themselves in the face of these narratives that are coming out in light of the potential Iran deal that this was a strategic loss for Israel.
What Netanyahu and his coalition are thinking is, “OK, if we have to wind down our offensive activities in Iran and potentially even Lebanon, how else are we going to prove that we are the right party and the right people to defend Israel from our perceived threats?” They’re going to do that by reigniting their assault and genocide in the Gaza Strip. How they’re going to justify that is where we are at right now in terms of the ceasefire process itself. Despite the fact that Israel has not implemented any of the phase one parts of the agreement, they’re now demanding that Hamas agree to a component of phase two, which was disarmament.
But Hamas is basically putting its foot down and saying, “Listen if you guys aren’t going to adhere to stopping the bombing campaigns, if you guys aren’t going to let in humanitarian aid like you allowed to, if you guys are still eating up land every single day and not even adhering to phase one of the agreement, then basically why should we agree to phase two if there’s no mutual engagement on that side?”
Unfortunately, it does not bode well for Palestinians in Gaza because they’re the punching bag that Israel will turn its attention to undoubtedly.
“It does not bode well for Palestinians in Gaza because they’re the punching bag that Israel will turn its attention to.”
JV: Thanks for walking us through the political landscape in Israel. Sometimes we in the U.S. run the risk of overstating the influence of U.S. politics on Israel, specifically when it comes to Netanyahu’s decision-making and how he’s coming to those decisions. And we don’t talk enough about Israeli politics.
But I wanted to zoom in on something that you mentioned just a second ago about Hamas and their position right now and why ongoing negotiations with the “Board of Peace” continue to fall apart. For those who don’t know: The “Board of Peace” was set up as a part of the ceasefire and is supposed to, on paper, move the ceasefire process and rebuilding process of Gaza forward. It has a footnote essentially of like toward some further-off notion of Palestinian statehood.
I don’t think we talk enough about Hamas as a political entity and what its position is right now. What leverage does it have right now? What are they actually trying to argue for? Also, with other Palestinian factions, as trying to be a voice of what they see as this is the last remaining resistance of Palestinian freedom, in this context here, what does that look like? And, how is that stalling within this “Board of Peace,” very flawed structure?
TKS: It’s pretty obvious that Hamas itself doesn’t really have much leverage at all. They never had many offensive weapons to begin with. If you could consider the homemade makeshift rockets that they fire at Israel to be offensive; many of them have been depleted. I think it’s also important to be clear that Hamas is open, has explicitly stated that they are open to handing over their offensive weapons.
But they have clearly tied this to the process that was agreed upon. They very much see that as the only tidbit of leverage that they have left in this process. Basically, their argument is saying, “Listen, we’re open to handing over our weapons, but Israel has to withdraw as agreed upon in the ceasefire agreement, or there have to be steps that make it clear that Israel will be held accountable to the standards that was agreed upon.”
It’s really important to bring in the role of the “Board of Peace” here. It’s a misconception that the “Board of Peace” has been designed and will operate with the objective of building a new Gaza for Palestinians. What the “Board of Peace” exists to achieve is to create, effectively, this wonderland that Trump and Israel have agreed to.
What that looks like if you look at the presentations that, for example Jared Kushner has pushed out and the Trump administration has presented on how they view the Gaza Strip in 10, 20 years down the line — very little of it is actually for the Palestinians who live there, who will be basically concentrated into these disparate camps that are spread out throughout the Gaza Strip, put under intense surveillance, and basically serve as cheap labor for these luxury resorts and hotels and apartment complexes and data centers that Israel and the U.S. envision building in the Gaza Strip.
Palestinians will “basically serve as cheap labor for these luxury resorts and hotels and apartment complexes and data centers that Israel and the U.S. envision building in the Gaza Strip.”
When we think about the “Board of Peace” is, that shrinking territory that Hamas does still control of is basically the only thing that is stopping the Trump administration and Israel from embarking further on that dystopian future of, again, herding Palestinians into these effectively concentration camps distributed throughout the Gaza Strip and having them just serve as cheap labor for this personal enrichment opportunity for the Trump administration and his Israeli partners.
JV: You’ve written about your own experiences growing up a Palestinian American. Your grandfather, I believe, was the former mayor of Gaza City, Rashad Shawa. Your father is from Gaza. Your aunt, Laila Shawa, is a renowned Palestinian visual artist, also from Gaza. You have another aunt, Rawya Shawa, a Palestinian journalist and legislator.
There’s a lineage to the work you do. Could you talk a bit about your family, your father, how you came to start doing this work advocating for Palestine?
TKS: I’m Palestinian American. I was born in New York. Something that I’ve asked my parents about — they never wanted to make me feel like I had to advocate for Palestinian rights. They were always hoping that I wouldn’t have to do any of this and that eventually it would be figured out someday, and that we wouldn’t have to make this our lives or our careers. But I first started becoming aware of the politics of my heritage when I was very young.
I was in middle school. I remember this one time I went to a friend’s place. He introduced me to his parents, and his dad asked where I was from, and I said, “Palestine.” He said, “What is that? It doesn’t exist.” I was a middle schooler, so at the time it was shocking, and I didn’t really understand it. Only later in life did I realize that that was pointed and had a lot of history behind it.
As you mentioned, my father grew up in Gaza until he was about college age and came to the U.S. Just hearing about the stories about growing up in Gaza and then seeing his reaction to later events, for example, the 2008 Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip — really, that kind of ended up awakening me to the real weight behind being Palestinian and pushed me to obviously get involved.
“That’s been one of the most difficult parts of, in addition to obviously just all the loss, is just knowing that we might never, never go back.”
The past two years have been extremely difficult just because there’s always been that hope of being able to return to Gaza and see the land that my father grew up in, my grandfather grew up in, my great-grandfather grew up in and played these really central roles in governance.
But it’s now — Gaza effectively doesn’t exist in the way it once did. So part of that process is just wrapping your mind around that as well. That’s been one of the most difficult parts of, in addition to obviously just all the loss, is just knowing that we might never, never go back. And if we do, it won’t be the Gaza that my father left and my grandfather led and all that.
JV: Your Aunt Rawya, she lost her home in that 2008 offensive from an Israeli strike?
TKS: Yep. And it wasn’t the first time. Israeli tanks had shelled her home before. That was the culmination of that whole process.
“ I very quickly had to become an expert in Palestinian history in order to defend myself.”
So it was very visceral for me at a very young age. But also, the fact that I was witnessing it all from a distance also played another role too. Because as a Palestinian American growing up in New York City, again, it very quickly became about defending myself. I very quickly had to become an expert in Palestinian history in order to defend myself from the people like my friend’s father who claimed I didn’t exist and my people didn’t exist.
So it’s also interesting to just look back at how much has changed in the discourse around Israel and Palestine, in New York City, in the United States, since I became politically aware and started getting involved in these debates in middle school, early high school.
Something that gives me hope in terms of the direction things are headed is that back in 2011, 2012, when I was a high schooler, the parameters for discussion around the Palestinian right to resist occupation, around some of the myths of Israel’s existence — for example, the myth that they made the desert bloom, or that it was a land without a people for a people without a land — so much of those have been eroded.
So much of American public opinion has, over the course of obviously two and a half years of genocide, shifted. There is much more space for having real conversations about this. More importantly, sharing the Palestinian perspective, which is very fundamentally different than it was even five, 10 years ago.
JV: Those shifts are incredible. Recent polling has shown time and time again that the vast majority of Democratic voters, somewhere north of 70 — more than 70 percent — in the U.S. see Israel unfavorably.
It’s playing a big role in U.S. electoral politics, whether or not a candidate supports blocking military aid to Israel has really become a litmus test in many of these races.
Some Democrats have found success in their primary elections running on that as a part of their platform and winning. You have Adam Hamawy in New Jersey, former Army surgeon who volunteered in Gaza; he won his primary against a moderate Democrat a couple weeks ago. Last month in Pennsylvania, you have Chris Rabb, whose campaign not only called for an arms embargo on Israel, but also — controversially for a lot of people — the right of return for Palestinians under international law.
I’m wondering, how would you diagnose this moment the Democratic Party is in with its attitude toward Israel–Palestine? Or do you see this as more than a moment? I’m curious how lasting you think these shifts will be.
TKS: I definitely see this as more than just a moment. It’s not just Democrats and people on the left who are feeling more pro-Palestinian than ever before. It’s across the political spectrum. It was Pew or Gallup, I forget which one, their most recent poll on where American sympathies lie between Israelis and Palestinians. For the first time ever, more Americans sympathize with Palestinians than with Israelis, and that’s across the political spectrum. Obviously that’s a lot more skewed when it comes to Democratic voters or progressives and people on the left. But it very much is across the political spectrum.
It’s more useful to look at the polling that we’re seeing around actual policy measures. For example, arms embargo or “block the bombs” and calls to actually either at the very least condition U.S. military aid to Israel, but, even better, cut it entirely. We’re seeing upwards of 60, 65 percent of Americans, again, across the political spectrum, who support these types of actual, solid policies.
That’s the difference right now between when you’re looking at just sympathy and people who are actually willing to potentially even make voting decisions out of what they’re seeing right now and out of the outrage that they’ve been witnessing when it comes to two and a half years of genocide. They also are now more cognizant of the fact that we send Israel billions of dollars to do that genocide and to engage in forever wars across the region that many Americans see or believe Israel is dragging the U.S. into. That is the bigger change that we’re seeing, and that arguably might be a little bit more lasting, is that more and more Americans today are critical of Israel and critical of that “special U.S.–Israel relationship.”
What concerns me sometimes is that a lot of the shift in public opinion isn’t necessarily tied to support for Palestinians, and we’re obviously seeing that on the right. On the far right, where we’re seeing a rise in actual antisemitism. Across the right, we’re seeing just a general rise in the “America-first — MAGA — we don’t want to be sending anyone our tax dollars,” and they’re now starting to include Israel in that.
But the other thing I will mention is, what we’re seeing right now in the Democratic Party is really a widening chasm between the Democratic establishment and the voting base. The Democratic establishment, some of the older representatives that we have in Congress — Chuck Schumer is a great example of some of these more old-school politicians who are resistant to recognizing this new reality. What I’m trying to say is that, there is this very, very big generational gap that is emerging. So despite the fact that we are seeing such a substantial shift in U.S. public opinion, we’re not seeing it in policy. That’s largely because these establishment Democrats remain in power.
But what I hope to see over the next five, 10 years is that that starts to fundamentally change when the younger generation emerges as the bigger voting bloc. Unfortunately, these policy changes are glacial. It’s too late to end the genocide.
The one thing I am hopeful for in that long-term process, is that long-term movement that we have built and are continuing to build that will be borne out by these younger generations as they rise into political power.
JV: All this discussion around blocking military aid to Israel is as old as the state of Israel itself. You had President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the 1950s threatening an arms embargo as leverage against Israel and other presidents after that.
We’ve been mostly talking about a post-October 7 world where it’s been this rallying cry for anti-genocide protesters, progressive lawmakers in the U.S., and, as I’ve mentioned, we saw Democrats win primary elections running on this. The message is pretty clear: Our taxpayer dollars are being used to help Israel acquire weapons from American companies to commit a genocide. All the while, there’s this economic side of it — all the while our economy suffers, people are struggling to afford rent, just daily life, healthcare. So let’s use the leverage we have as Americans and stop the flow of weapons.
To your point, a lot of it is leaning toward anti-Israel, not so much for the Palestinian people. And yet there is this huge shift. But now we’re increasingly hearing Netanyahu and the Israeli government, and supporters of the Israeli government signal that they are getting ready and almost championing a world without the same funding from the U.S., and basically a post-State Department funding mechanism where the same amount of taxpayer dollars isn’t flowing into Israel as much so that they could buy these weapons.
And in Congress you’re seeing a lot of pro-Israel lobbying happening around a new bill, and it would essentially intertwine the U.S. and Israeli militaries and weapons industries in a new way — we don’t do this with any other ally, it’s worth mentioning — in a new way that will reshape how Israel gets weapons. Could you talk about the dangers of that and where things are headed?
TKS: To be completely honest with you, and we’ve talked about this before, this is the most important thing to look at in the course of the next few months and few years. That’s the difference between conditioning U.S. military funding and aid to Israel, and completely cutting U.S. military weapons to Israel through an arms embargo.
I argued as early as summer 2023 — and this was before the genocide — that even conditioning U.S. military aid to Israel would not go far enough if the objective is for Israel to end the occupation. And that was prior to the genocide. It’s also important to recognize that the Israeli military is deeply dependent on U.S. weapons, U.S. military cooperation, intel sharing.
If the U.S. withdrew that relationship or fundamentally changed it or stopped providing Israel with the weapons — whether through conditioning that aid or cutting it entirely — that would fundamentally alter Israel’s ability to get away with whether it’s genocide in Gaza or regional wars.
However, conditioning doesn’t go far enough because if Israel’s committing a genocide, and if we recognize that, then selling Israel the weapons on the open market is arguably just as bad as giving those weapons to Israel for free with U.S. tax dollars.
“Selling Israel the weapons on the open market is just as bad as giving those weapons to Israel for free with U.S. tax dollars.”
It’s avoiding another movement trap that is reminiscent of the “Ceasefire now” trap. Because if we get stuck in limiting ourselves — our movement — to simply calling for conditioning U.S. military aid to Israel on Israel adhering to international law, or U.S. law even, then there are so many ways for Israel to wriggle around that.
More importantly, at the end of the day, Israel can continue to buy the weapons it needs to get away with genocide on the open market, and that’s the problem.
Right now, there are a couple Israel-led initiatives that actually recognize this moment we’re in. So Israel’s leaders Benjamin Netanyahu, and a lot of American — some of the most stalwart pro-Israel figures in the U.S., Lindsey Graham comes to mind — recognize the fact that criticism of Israel in the U.S. is skyrocketing; and potentially the future of this formerly special “U.S.–Israel relationship” is not sustainable in the long run, especially as more Republicans turn against this status quo. In many ways, they’ve recognized the need to shift this U.S.-Israel relationship from one of dependency, both militarily and financially, to one of further entrenchment.
How they’re going to do that, there’s basically two concurrent initiatives that are ongoing right now. The first and the most important one probably, is the fiscal year 2027 National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA. In specific, Section 224, which is proposing basically an unprecedented integration of the U.S. military–industrial complex and Israeli defense and technology sectors. That’s dangerous because what that does is that entrenches the U.S. military within the United States military–industrial complex, and gives it access that no country has, not even the U.K., not even France, not even these core allies that the U.S. has built their relationships with over decades.
Apart from that, why that is dangerous is that it becomes much harder for the pro-Palestine movement, or the movement in support of Palestinian rights and an end to genocide, to decouple that new much more entrenched relationship. That would mean that we would have to then go up against the U.S. military as well as the Israeli military and make that case to Americans.
Obviously, it’s a very strategic move by the Israelis to take advantage of this period in time where there is this huge chasm between public opinion and actual policy. Because they’re essentially recognizing that, “Hey, we might not have total impunity in the United States forever, but we do for now while establishment Democrats and Republicans are running the ship. We have a Trump administration that’s essentially willing to do whatever we want.” So what they’re trying to do now is essentially push this process through while Trump is in power, while Republicans have a majority in the Senate and the House.
Another example is the negotiations that are ongoing around the memorandum of understanding, the MOU, between Israel and the US. The last one being signed under the Obama administration, which was a 10-year MOU that agreed to basically be giving Israel $3.8 billion every year of U.S. tax dollars. What the new MOU that they’re thinking about is a 20-year MOU in which a couple years of increase in U.S. military aid before it eventually decreases. They also pursue this entrenchment approach, making the two militaries more dependent on each other rather than this Israel dependency relationship.
JV: There’s this really fantastic archival footage you shared on Twitter sometime last year showing your grandfather, former mayor of Gaza City — again, Rashad Shawa — talking about the annexation of Gaza. This was in the 1980s, more than 40 years ago. Here we are having similar discussions, if not in a more dire place.
I’m wondering where you think the movement goes from here. And, with thinking about BDS — Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions — if Israel doesn’t care about its place on the international stage as much as it used to, as that increasingly isn’t playing a factor, as the U.S. is more officializing its entrenchment with the Israeli military, where do you see the movement going from here?
TKS: Israel remains very much dependent on the United States and its relationship with the West, and I’m talking about mainly Western Europe. Yes, they are recognizing that their relationships based on impunity are not a given forever, which very much explains why they are effectively going so hard across the region right now. They very much see this as a moment of opportunity for them that they might not have forever. They might not have a Trump administration in the White House forever that is effectively willing to allow them to get away with whatever they want. That’s why they are taking these unprecedented steps ranging from the genocide in Gaza to the war in Iran that no other U.S. president agreed to, except for Trump.
“That’s why I spend so much time advocating for arms embargoes, for economic sanctions, anything that goes past these previous demands that we’ve had.”
That is why it’s all the more important that we recognize that the movement itself — the movement in support of Palestinian rights — has made huge strides over the last couple of years. And now, however, it’s increasingly important to shift our efforts to punitive measures — sanctions — everything in our power to hold Israel accountable through actual punitive measures like economic sanctions, arms embargoes that make it more difficult for Israel to get away with the war crimes and atrocities and genocides it’s committing.
That’s why I spend so much time advocating for arms embargoes, for economic sanctions, anything that goes past these previous demands that we’ve had — the “Ceasefire now” demands, the conditioning aid demands.
It’s increasingly important now that we take these steps and hold Israel accountable through arms embargoes and sanctions so that we don’t get to the point in the future where Israel can live its “super Sparta” strategy that it is really investing in. Basically creating a world in which Israel can carry out these forever wars and these genocides without the U.S.’s and the West’s permission. It’s really imperative that we see these changes sooner than later because time is not on our side in terms of that process.
JV: I hate to be the pessimist in the room here, but aren’t we there already where Israel can just — maybe it’s not its fullest iteration, not fully evolved Sparta form, as you mentioned — but aren’t we there already where they’re acting outside of the U.S. interest?
TKS: Yeah. Everything we’re doing, it’s too late to stop the genocide in Palestine. An inconceivable number of Palestinians have been killed, and they’re not coming back. Gaza is — we’ve lost so much of it. A lot of this accountability is already too little too late.
But it’s also very important to recognize that, again, Israel remains very much dependent on the United States in particular, not even to mention just Europe and Western Europe, for its military activity and military prowess and being shielded on the international stage.
Just look at the Iran war, for example. There’s no way that Israel would have been able to sustain this type of regional conflagration without the U.S. This ranges from the offensive strikes that the U.S. was partnering directly with Israel on, the intelligence sharing, and the defensive capabilities that the U.S., its vassal states in the region, like Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and then even other European countries that ended up sending missile defense systems and naval ships to defend Israel from the rockets that were coming from Iran.
“Israel is very much still basically like a U.S. military outpost.”
So it’s very much like, we’re in this moment right now — and we will be for many years to come — in which Israel is still extremely dependent on U.S. on the U.S. military umbrella. Israel is very much still basically like a U.S. military outpost. So these types of actions — arms embargo and sanctions — can have an effect on Israel.
The timeline for Israel to be fully self-sufficient in its military procurement system and its own economy — that’s a far way off. Israel is a very integrated economy, and economic sanctions would have a very substantial effect on Israel’s ability to wage war and genocide. However, it is imperative that the sooner we can do this, the better.
JW: That was Intercept reporter Jonah Valdez and Al-Shabaka U.S. Policy Fellow Tariq Kenney-Shawa speaking at a special live Intercept Briefing earlier this week. If you don’t want to miss the next Intercept Briefing live, sign up for our newsletter at theintercept.com.
Also we want to know what issues you’re following in the midterms. Send us an email or leave us a voicemail at 530-POD-CAST, that’s 530-763-2278.
That does it for this episode.
This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our managing editor. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. William Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.
Slip Stream provided our theme music.
This show and our reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join.
And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. Do leave us a rating or a review, it helps other listeners to find us.
Let us know what you think of this episode, or If you want to send us a general message, email us at podcasts@theintercept.com.
Until next time, I’m Jessica Washington.
The post The Performative Ceasefire in Gaza appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Overharvesting once threatened the horseshoe crab population, which is a staple to the Delaware Bay’s ecosystem. But state protections put in place over 20 years ago appear to be helping Delaware’s “living fossil” rebound.
On a windy night in mid-May, about a dozen volunteers gathered at the James Farm Ecological Preserve near Ocean View, wielding charts, thermometers and a white square made of PVC pipe.
The volunteers placed the plastic square on sections of the beach, then counted the number of male and female horseshoe crabs inside of it.
“I like seeing the surprise on everyone’s faces when they see how many there are,” said Lorie Whitehaus, a team lead on the survey.
The scene was part of a statewide effort to monitor the horseshoe crab population in Delaware, run jointly by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, and by the Center for the Inland Bays.

And these counts recently have sparked optimism among marine biologists about the 450 million-year-old species, often referred to as “living fossils” because they are one of the oldest living species on the planet, dating back to about 100 million years before dinosaurs appeared.
The Delaware Bay’s horseshoe crab population is close to reaching its historic population, said Jordan Zimmerman, a horseshoe crab biologist for the state of Delaware.
The bay hosts the world’s highest concentration of the species. They also remain a key part of the local estuary ecosystem. But the number of horseshoe crabs in the Delaware bay dipped drastically in the 1990s due to overharvesting.
In response, Delaware and neighboring states imposed restrictions about 30 years ago on harvesting the arthropods. The population has now almost reached its 1990 levels, Zimmerman said.
The rebound marks a rare success story in environmental management.
“We don’t get too many of those,” Zimmerman said. “It’s very difficult to manage natural resources.”

DNREC monitors commercial horseshoe crab fishing through a mandatory reporting system and check stations. There is a cap on the number of male horseshoe crabs that can be harvested. It is illegal to catch and keep females.
Blue box: The best places to view horseshoe crabs are during high tide at the DuPont Nature Center (from the observation deck or the live cam), Slaughter Beach, Kitts Hummock or Pickering Beach, near the Town of Little Creek, according to DNREC.
The drop in the horseshoe crab population happened for two main reasons: fishermen harvested them to be used as bait, and biomedical companies harvested them for their blood.
In the 1960s, scientists discovered horseshoe crab blood contains an extract called limulus amebocyte lysate, or LAL, which clots in the presence of pathogens.
This substance helps scientists detect bacteria and toxins in virtually every drug, making horseshoe crab blood one of the most valuable liquids in the world. LAL can sell for up to $60,000 a gallon.
Scientists collect the blood without killing the animal and return them to the ocean, although studies suggest about 15% of crabs die during the process.

Still, Zimmerman said it is hard to know if that number is accurate because the horseshoe crabs are treated differently in the studies than in the actual blood collection process.
“If we want to get an idea of the industry impacts on them, then we need to use crabs that are handled the exact same way,” he said.
Scientists have also developed a synthetic alternative to the LAL in horseshoe crab blood, which may decrease the need to harvest them.
Last year, the U.S. Pharmacopeia, which helps to ensure drug quality, determined the synthetic alternative is just as effective at detecting pathogens as the extracted material from horseshoe crab blood.
Every full or new moon in the horseshoe crabs’ peak mating season of May and June, volunteers go out whenever the tide peaks at night — whether that be 7 p.m. or midnight.
The volunteers often find the beaches covered in dozens or even hundreds of horseshoe crabs.
“There’s nothing that can replace the experience of seeing them in the wild,” said Nivette Pérez-Pérez, manager of community science at the Center for Inland Bays.
People come from all over the country to volunteer, Zimmerman said, hoping to experience the unique phenomenon for themselves.

Center for the Inland Bays volunteer Cathy Hutchins said some people don’t like having horseshoe crabs on their beaches, especially during the surge of mating season.
“But I know if you don’t have them, you’re not going to have the birds,” Hutchins said.
Female horseshoe crabs lay about 80,000 eggs per year, Pérez-Pérez said, providing an important food source for migratory shore birds like red knots or sanderlings.
While the horseshoe crab population is increasing, other factors like climate change, pollution and coastal development could threaten their numbers in the future, Pérez-Pérez said.
The nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity recently filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration for failing to classify horseshoe crabs as a threatened or endangered species.
Pérez-Pérez said the main way people can help horseshoe crabs is by flipping them over if they are on their backs. Many die when they are unable to flip themselves over and become stranded on the beach at low tide.
The best way to flip them over is by grabbing the edge of their shells, not by their tails, she said.
The post Delaware Bay horseshoe crab population nears recovery, surveys find appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Defendants in the Minneapolis case say the Trump administration labeled them “antifa” to criminalize dissent.
Prime minister suggests he will not ‘walk away’ despite Burnham’s comfortable victory in Makerfield byelection
Keir Starmer has said he will stand in a Labour leadership contest should one be triggered after Andy Burnham’s decisive victory in the Makerfield byelection, adding he will not “walk away”.
He also warned that such a contest would “plunge us into chaos” and that Labour needed to “pull together” to contest the byelection to replace Burnham as the mayor of Greater Manchester.
Continue reading...From public ownership to devolution and the cost of living, the policies of the potential Labour leadership challenger will face intense scrutiny
Andy Burnham’s victory in Makerfield sets up a battle for Downing Street. Allies of the outgoing Greater Manchester mayor want him to be installed as prime minister as quickly and painlessly as possible, while those close to Keir Starmer want the Labour leader to fight on.
If he does become prime minister, Burnham will be expected to deliver on the “change” he promised after his win on Thursday night. But what would that look like, and what policies would his government be likely to pursue?
Continue reading...Thangam Debbonaire and Sarah Pochin argue in Sky News interview at Makerfield byelection count
The Labour peer Thangam Debbonaire has clashed with Reform UK’s Sarah Pochin at the Makerfield byelection count, asking the MP: “You don’t like being on television with brown people, do you Sarah?”
The row erupted during a testy interview on Sky News that included an exchange about the £5m personal gift that Nigel Farage accepted from Thailand-based crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne in the months before he stood as an MP in the 2024 general election. The gift, first revealed by the Guardian, is now under investigation by the parliamentary standards commissioner, which will examine whether or not it ought to have been declared.
Continue reading...JD Vance’s staff were at an airbase ready to fly to summit in Obbürgen before trip was suddenly cancelled
Talks due to take place on Friday between the US and Iran in Switzerland to implement a peace deal were cancelled as Hezbollah killed four Israeli soldiers and Israel carried out a wave of retaliatory airstrikes in south Lebanon and the Bekaa valley that killed at least 18 people.
The talks had been due to begin in the Swiss village of Obbürgen two days after the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) that opened a 60-day window to negotiate a permanent understanding over Iran’s nuclear programme, while getting oil traffic moving through the strait of Hormuz.
Continue reading...A crypto super PAC that has praised President Donald Trump and previously endorsed an all-Republican slate of candidates has finally found a Democrat it can get behind: New York Rep. Ritchie Torres.
The Fellowship PAC dropped $300,000 on Monday to boost Torres in the final days of his reelection primary campaign, funneling its ad spend through a firm co-founded by Trump’s former top crypto adviser.
The super PAC’s largest funder is Cantor Fitzgerald, the investment bank helmed by the sons of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
Torres is not expected to face serious opposition in the June 23 primary in New York. The sole public poll of the race put him far ahead of his leading opponent, former Democratic National Committee vice chair Michael Blake.
Torres, the Fellowship PAC, and Blake did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The spending is another sign of bond between crypto firms and Torres, a member of the key House Committee on Financial Services who has been one of the industry’s most vocal Democratic supporters. Torres was a co-founder of the Congressional Crypto Caucus.
Still, the primary intervention still comes as something of a surprise given that, in the past, the Fellowship PAC only doled out campaign funds on behalf of Republicans. Reporting on its creation, the New York Times described the PAC as “more aligned with the Republican Party and President Trump than Fairshake, which is the dominant, pro-crypto super PAC.”
The PAC signaled support for Trump in a press release announcing its creation in September, praising him for putting “America on the path to become the global crypto capital.” In the months since then, however, the odds that Republicans will control the House after the midterm elections have dimmed.
The Fellowship PAC, which spends on ads rather than giving directly to campaigns, put Torres’s picture on its endorsement page in recent weeks, according to an archive of its website. Other candidates the group has endorsed include Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, R-Texas, in their Senate races.
The Fellowship PAC is not the only crypto campaign organization spending on behalf of Torres. Protect Progress, which is affiliated with the juggernaut crypto super PAC Fairshake, buoyed the Bronx Democrat with nearly $1.4 million in advertising.
The two super PACs are aligned with different factions of the crypto industry. The Fellowship PAC’s chair is the vice president of regulatory affairs for Tether, a massive stablecoin company that is trying to break into the U.S. market after years of scrutiny over its use by money launderers, including terror groups.
Although Tether has not donated directly to the Fellowship PAC, the PAC received $10 million from the financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald, which is the custodian of billions of dollars of U.S. Treasury bills on behalf of Tether. Lutnick, Trump’s commerce secretary, stepped down as the head of the banking firm and divested his assets to join the Cabinet.
The media buy on behalf of Torres was made through Nxum Group, which was co-founded by Bo Hines, a former Republican congressional candidate who served as the executive director of Trump’s Council of Advisers on Digital Assets last year. Hines is the CEO of Tether U.S., the American division of the El Salvador-based firm.
Protect Progress and Fairshake, meanwhile, have been funded by the crypto exchange Coinbase and the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. Fairshake and its affiliates have spent money on both sides of the aisle, although it was criticized in 2024 for helping tip the Senate in favor of Republicans.
The post Trump-Loving Crypto Super PAC Finally Backs a Democrat: Ritchie Torres appeared first on The Intercept.
When a company decided to shut down an online game’s servers, there wasn’t much the players who had bought that title could do – until a group called Stop Killing Games began lobbying for new consumer protection laws
You can never be sure how long an online video game will last. Developer BioWare shut off sci-fi shooter Anthem’s servers in January, after seven years. Electronic Arts discontinued access to The Sims Mobile the same month. Wildlight Entertainment shuttered its Highguard servers in March, mere months after the game’s release. Activision Blizzard took Call of Duty: Warzone Mobile offline in April. Dozens more games have had their servers shut down in the first six months of 2026, adding to an already long list of video games that are no longer playable.
There is little that players can do when a company decides to stop supporting online play. Communities work hard to keep their favourite games online, sometimes keeping dead games running on private servers, though that may not necessarily be entirely legal. Generally, though, when a game goes offline it is dead and it’s not coming back.
Continue reading...The Braves pitcher has always been different from the average baseball player. He talks to Joseph Palmer about his motivations on and off the field
Spencer Strider made an impression in 2022, his first full season in Major League Baseball: he was runner-up for National League Rookie of the Year. In 2023 he was ever better, leading the majors in wins and strikeouts and earning a spot on the All-MLB first-team.
But what set him apart from many of his peers wasn’t his athletic ability but his life away from baseball. In a sport that is often socially conservative, the Atlanta Braves pitcher was a vegan Bernie Sanders supporter who was just as likely to discuss indie music as his fastball.
Continue reading...Few grill brands command more respect from seasoned pitmasters and backyard cooks alike. Here's what sets Weber apart, and why it keeps earning our recommendation year after year.
Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, is now positioned to challenge Prime Minister Keir Starmer for leadership of the governing Labour Party and to seize the top job.
The remnants of Tropical Storm Arthur were battering parts of the southeastern U.S. with heavy rain, sparking flash flooding.
Strong winds and heavy rain batter Slovenia, while France experiences atypical heatwave
Severe thunderstorms swept across the Balkans last week, bringing widespread destruction to parts of the region. The storms developed as unstable hot air lingered over the Adriatic Sea while a cold front plunged south-eastward.
The front began its journey on 10 June in Slovenia, where the Slovenian Environment Agency recorded 65mph gusts at Ljubljana airport. Heavy rain also fell widely across the region with 23mm reported in Kranj.
Continue reading...People in Nabatieh mourn the recent dead in religious ceremony held amid empty streets and shattered buildings
As the procession wound its way through mounds of rubble, the crowd chanted and beat their chests, their lamentations echoed by the dull thud of shelling in the foothills just beyond the city.
“This is the tragedy of Karbala, O Imam Hussein, look. This is the tragedy of Karbala,” the crowd cried in the opening procession of Ashura, in the city of Nabatieh, southern Lebanon.
Continue reading...He lambasted Jimmy Carter during the 1980 hostage crisis; now Trump’s presidency could be similarly blemished
It began with the fate of hostages.
Donald Trump’s first recorded foray into politics was sparked by the 1979 takeover of the US embassy in Tehran, which saw 52 American diplomats held incommunicado for 444 days.
Continue reading...The negotiations were expected to start as soon as this weekend, but Vice President Vance's trip there was put off and Switzerland said the negotiations have been postponed.
It’s an excellent time to stock up on your essential beauty products and support Black businesses with these brands.
I’ve found farther beyond just jumping off. I don’t know what I’ve done, but now I get this shudder whenever I don’t have both sensors engaged. Even far beyond 10mph, even with Posi enabled.
Screen recording of bug
Investigation: The entrepreneur was once the toast of London’s tech scene, a ‘global leader of tomorrow’ who starred on Dragons’ Den and promised untold riches for the startups she championed. But people she worked with in the last decade, from Malta to Switzerland, describe a very different reality
Julie Meyer is sitting in a starkly lit attic, surrounded by piles of £50 notes. A California blond in a crisp, white shirt, her long, stockinged legs crossed at the knee, she listens intently to the young man standing before her. As he talks, she sizes him up. Eventually, she tells him: “I’m going to make you an offer.” It could be a scene from a heist movie, but Meyer is in a BBC studio, shooting a 2009 episode of the TV show Dragons’ Den. A celebrated entrepreneur with a venture capital fund, she is ready to invest in whichever contestants catch her eye. For the viewers, she has some advice: “What is success? A lot of it is self-belief. Continuing on when most rational people would stop.”
This is an online spin-off from the original Dragons’ Den series, so the stakes are a little lower. But for Lex Deak, a 23-year-old with a big idea for a social media website, what happens in this room today could be make or break. He desperately wants to work with Meyer.
Continue reading...Rolls-Royce SMR has secured a multibillion-pound agreement to build three small modular reactors on Sweden's west coast, "marking a major step in the British engineering group's ambition to become a leading supplier of the technology in Europe," reports Euronews. From the report: Following a rigorous selection process that started in 2022, UK engineering giant Rolls-Royce's nuclear division, Rolls-Royce SMR, won the contract to build nuclear reactors for Sweden. As part of the deal, the group, selected by Videberg Kraft as its partner, will deliver three Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) to Sweden's west coast, at the Varo Peninsula. "The Videberg Project will build Sweden's first new nuclear power plant in more than forty years, supporting industries and households in southern Sweden," a press statement from Rolls-Royce said. The partnership with utility Vattenfall and developer Karnfull Next is seen as one of the most advanced opportunities for deployment outside of the UK. [...] The European Commission considers small modular reactors (SMRs) to be a promising low-carbon technology that could help support the bloc's clean energy and energy security goals. In order to remove regulatory barriers, the EU's SMR strategy was adopted in March 2026 to accelerate the development and deployment of the technology across Europe. SMRs are smaller than conventional nuclear power plants, typically generating between 20 and 300 megawatts of electricity. At the upper end of that range, a reactor could produce around 7.2 million kilowatt-hours of electricity per day -- enough to power hundreds of thousands of homes. The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that more than 1,000 small modular reactors could be deployed worldwide by 2050 under a supportive policy scenario, requiring cumulative investment of around $670 billion.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Tanker owner trade body says centre of strait will remain closed for ‘some time’, with vessels risking running aground by taking Omani route
The centre of the strait of Hormuz is blocked with about 80 mines that will need clearing for normal shipping to resume, the independent tanker owner trade body has said.
Several vessels began to exit the Gulf through the key maritime chokepoint on Thursday, after the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the US and Iran.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Telegram urged to clarify how it detects illegal incitement after attacks were coordinated using app
Telegram is facing questions from Ofcom over how it detects and prevents illegal incitement after a Ukrainian man was found guilty of carrying out arson attacks on a car and property associated with Keir Starmer.
A spokesperson for the regulator said it had contacted the messaging app “to seek further clarification” because the arsonist had been directed on Telegram by a handler linked to Russia.
Continue reading...Soccer – football to many – may be the most played youth sport in the US but it still sits behind the NFL, basketball and baseball in the battle for mainstream attention. Longtime sports writer John Shea of the San Francisco Standard says the current World Cup buzz resembles the fleeting interest generated by the Olympics before Americans return to their sporting staples. That imbalance shapes the experience of players and fans alike. Bernardo Ramallo, who works with non-profit Soccer Without Borders says young soccer players have long endured jibes that the sport is ‘weak’ compared with American football.
Forget the confected World Cup hostility, the US and Australia mirror each other
Continue reading...Progressive Jewish group calls for more focus on the threat from the far right and the recognition of a diversity of views within the community
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Far-right extremism and the conflation of Jewish identity with Israel are the main drivers of antisemitism in Australia, the Jewish Council of Australia (JCA) says.
In its submission to the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion, the liberal Jewish group calls for more focus on the “often overlooked” threat from the far right, and recognition of the diversity of views within the Jewish community instead of the “tendency to treat Jews collectively as representatives of Israel”.
Continue reading...Equilibrium with Iran is the best America can do.
How to counter an insidious global threat.
The right time to refinance depends on a few factors, experts say, including your current mortgage loan rate.
HELOC and home equity rates have been on the move lately. Here's where those rates could head next.
Cuban lawmakers Thursday adopted nearly 200 historic free-market reforms aimed at rescuing the communist island from a severe crisis aggravated by a U.S. oil blockade.
At Summer Game Fest, the mechanics of the cozy horror game become more clear -- both in murder and in love.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: In May, the federal government announced without warning that it would take apart a network of ocean monitoring systems that it had spent over $350 million to build. No reason was given for the decision to shut down the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI), but suspicion immediately focused on the network's role in tracking climate change. But the OOI also provides data that's useful for weather forecasting and fisheries management, leading to widespread opposition. Today, it appears that the opposition has won, as the government will announce that it's reversing the decision. The big remaining question is how much damage the OOI took during the intervening month. [...] The OOI is a federally supported resource that provides ocean data for use by academic researchers, government planners, and private companies. It consists of arrays of monitoring systems in several locations in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans that can track things like currents, salinity, chemical levels, temperatures, and tectonic activity. (There are over 100 individual entries on the page that display the data gathered by the system.) Obviously, there are many potential uses of that data. The fact that it has been gathered continuously for a decade means it can help track changes in how carbon dioxide and heat enter the oceans. This is probably what made it a target for the climate change denialists who helped set the Trump administration's policy. Those policymakers are perfectly happy to annoy people with environmental concerns, but they apparently neglected to consider how upset everyone else would be about losing access to the other data. The ensuing public backlash led the Senate on Wednesday to unanimously agree with a measure that would block the government from taking down the OOI. Today's decision may indicate that the administration recognized it had gotten itself into a fight it knew it was losing. The National Science Foundation formally announced the decision, stating: "effective immediately, [it] will not proceed with further removal or descoping of equipment from the remaining arrays and will continue operations including planned maintenance." The agency added that it "appreciates the concerns raised by the range of stakeholders that have informed us they rely on data" from the OOI. The NSF also said it would "issue a Dear Colleague Letter to collect input from stakeholders and convene an expert panel to assess observational needs, evaluate available data sources, consider responses ... and help the agency identify a sustainable path for NSF's ocean observing systems."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware is finalizing its Fiscal Year 2027 budget, which hovers right around $7 billion. It’s an increase compared to the previous year as two of the state’s largest departments continue to grow.
The Delaware Senate approved on Thursday a $6.99 billion operating budget for Fiscal Year 2027, which starts July 1 – exceeding a spending goal set by Gov. Matt Meyer earlier this year.
The final budget proposal written by the General Assembly would increase spending by 6.32% over the current fiscal year. The governor had sought to keep spending growth below 5%, while the state’s independent financial analysts recommended growth of no more than 3.9%.
The ballooning amount of spending has become a major point of contention for some legislators, particularly
Lawmakers also approved $146.2 million for the annual supplemental budget, which is how the state funds one-time expenditures like equipment and technology purchases, pilot programs, and short-term projects.
The final operating budget adds $58.4 million to a previous version of the budget presented earlier this year by Gov. Matt Meyer. Both the supplemental and operating budgets require approval in the House of Representatives, and will likely be heard early next week, as lawmakers look to tie up the legislative year that ends June 30.
Delaware’s operational increases were relatively modest compared to previous years, but increases in education and health spending contributed to some of the largest spikes in this year’s budget.
Delaware will spend $2.51 billion on public education, a 5.38% increase compared to FY 2026’s operating budget, with $100 million going to increase teachers’ salaries and $26 million allocation toward district operations.
The budget for Delaware’s Department of Health and Social Services, the state’s second largest department, will grow by 11.2% in 2027 following a $128 million increase in Medicaid spending. Spikes in Medicaid represent the first year Delaware has to reconcile with federal cuts to the program, as well as rising healthcare costs.
For Fiscal Year 2027, like other years, health and education spending are the largest budget items for the state. Both of the departments will consume more than 63% of the total operating budget in the coming year.
Still, the state invested in multiple programs within its other agencies. One of the largest allocations includes pay raises for state employees and teachers, totalling more than $146 million.
Outside of the operating budget, Delaware spent an additional $100 million in its one-time supplemental bill to fund adjustments to its state education funding formula as it tries to reconcile an allocation method that has historically left smaller, poorer districts with inadequate funding.
The supplemental budget would allocate millions of dollars to multiple education initiatives across the state including SAT reform, operational support for Delaware State University, as well as funding for teacher projects.
This year’s budget also marks a first for a new state agency, which was signed into law last summer. The Office of Inspector General, which is meant to be a government watchdog independent from other agencies, received its first budget appropriation of $1.4 million this year.
The budget vote
During the Senate hearing, Sen. Trey Paradee (D-Dover), the top Senate lawmaker on the budget-writing Joint Finance Committee, said this year’s budget bill represents “thousands” of hours of work and said both healthcare and education were some of the key cost drivers.
He also expressed appreciation for the governor’s office and for delivering lawmakers a “really excellent” budget earlier this year.
During his presentation, Paradee pointed to efforts by the state to save taxpayers money and bring down its overhead as spending continues to outpace revenues. He said the state eliminated 37 different positions that had sat vacant for multiple years and found $5 million in contractual savings.
Still, Senate Republicans pointed to the gap between spending and revenues, saying the state needs to work to lower recurring expenses.
Sen. Eric Buckson (R-South Dover) pointed to progress made in this year’s budget to close the spending gap, and said lawmakers should continue to reconcile the difference so they don’t have to ask taxpayers for more money every year.
Paradee agreed, adding that legislators passed “very few bills” with recurring expenses, and that dozens of bills may not pass this year because of their fiscal impacts.
A spokesperson for Meyer’s office said they want to see the final budget passed in the House of Representatives before commenting on the governor’s position on whether he’d sign it.
In an interview after the hearing, Paradee said of all the budgets he’s worked on in eight years on the powerful Joint Finance Committee he’s “most proud” of this one.
He was optimistic about Delaware’s finances, pointing to its revered corporate franchise, as well as its low tax burden to constituents. But he also said that lawmakers have to continue making “smart investments” to keep the state stable.
“It’s all very fragile, and, and we need to make sure that good decisions are made in this building,” he said.
The post Education, healthcare costs drive 2027 Delaware budget increases appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 19.
Vice-president says Israeli cabinet members shouldn’t attack the country’s ‘only powerful ally’ left; Iran says it will impose fees on strait of Hormuz – key US politics stories from Thursday 18 June
JD Vance has sharply rebuked Israeli government critics of the US deal with Iran, saying the cabinet members should remember that two-thirds of the defensive weapons that have protected Israel “have been built by American hands and paid for by American tax dollars”.
The US vice-president, asked about a report that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was fuming over the agreement, told reporters at the White House: “If I was in the cabinet of the Israeli government, I might not be attacking the only powerful ally that I have anywhere left in the entire world.”
Continue reading...This blog is now closed.
He calls the situation a “win-win” for the US.
Vance is here, and he starts by claiming that Trump’s peace deal with Iran “is already bearing real fruits for the American people”, with 12.5m barrels going through the strait of Hormuz last night and gas prices dropping below $4 today for the first time since the conflict began.
Continue reading...The "Pink Planet," formally known as GJ504b, was discovered in 2013 and is technically not a planet but rather a "planetary-mass companion."
Attack brings to at least 211 number of people killed as Trump administration targets alleged ‘narcoterrorists’
The US military attacked a boat accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Thursday, killing three people, as the Trump administration wages a months-long campaign against alleged traffickers in Latin America.
The latest attack brings the number of people the US military has killed in boat strikes to at least 211 since the Trump administration began targeting people it calls “narcoterrorists” in early September.
Continue reading...Carlos Mencia is accused of failing to report $8.7 million in income over a six-year period.
Still using Microsoft Office 2019 for MacOS and iOS? Your files may soon become read-only.
This meal kit service turned me into a confident cook.
Wealth tax criticized by billionaires and Gavin Newsom would levy a one-time 5% tax on residents worth over $1bn
A popular proposal in California to impose a wealth tax on billionaires has gained enough signatures to qualify for the ballot in November, state officials announced on Wednesday.
The news is set to intensify an already heated debate around the tax, which has pitted tech moguls and the state’s governor, Gavin Newsom, against the labor union backing the measure.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 19, No. 1,826.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 19, No. 1,104.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 19, No. 634.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 19, No. 838.
When the U.S.-Iran conflict began, President Trump laid out a litany of aggressive war aims. Here's what the president and his top aides said then — and how their views have changed.
If you're searching for an espresso machine for your dad this Father's Day, here are the best options, tested and reviewed by CNET editors.
Republican Senators Bill Cassidy, Thom Tillis, Ted Cruz and Tom Cotton have been critical of the 14-point memorandum of understanding signed on Wednesday.
In a sharp rebuke to critics of Trump’s deal with Iran, the vice-president referenced the billions in defence aid Israel recieves from the US
News: Iran announces plans to bring in maritime fees for strait of Hormuz
Analysis: Iran peace deal makes clear how far US has been forced to retreat since 2025
US vice-president JD Vance has lashed out at Israeli critics of the Iran deal, saying Donald Trump is Israel’s only ally left in the world, in a sharp rebuke that referenced the billions in defence aid the country receives from America.
Vance was defending the deal reached this week to end the war with Iran that critics in the US and Israel have slammed for failing to curb Iran’s missile program and providing no clear path to dismantling its nuclear facilities, while constraining Israel in its war with Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.
Continue reading...️ Updates from the opening round at Shinnecock Hills
️ Preview | Follow us on Instagram | Mail Matt
Good news! “Round 1 of the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills will resume at 9:05 a.m. ET.” So says the official tweet. That’s just over 15 minutes away.
Weather delay in the golf but they’re playing at the Oval. Should be the other way round surely?
Continue reading...⚽️ Kick-off time: 7pm local/9pm EDT/2am BST/11am AEST
⚽️ Player guide | Bracketology | Golden Boot | Mail Jonathan
⚽️ Jonathan Wilson: From frustration to party time: Mexico ready for lift-off
Lionel Messi began the World Cup with a brilliant hat-trick but concerns over his father’s health threaten to overshadow his participation.
Lionel Messi’s father is undergoing medical treatment for an undisclosed illness and his family asked the media for “humanity” on Thursday amid rumours about Jorge Messi’s health while his son competes at the World Cup. “Jorge is going through a health situation,” the Messi family said in a statement.
The family did not specify the illness that the 68-year-old Jorge Messi is suffering from. “He is currently under medical observation, recovering and progressing favourably within his current condition,” the statement said.
Mexico moved the ball upfield slower than any other team. They could afford to take their time as South Africa offered next to no threat.
South Korea were worthy winners, with the 25-pass buildup to Hwang In-beom’s equaliser the joint-fifth longest passing sequence leading to a goal in the World Cup since records begin in 1966.
Continue reading...Musical stars and retired politicians from less polarised era seeming antidote to cage fights on White House lawn
The Barack Obama presidential center opened in Chicago on Thursday after more than a decade in the making amid a musical fanfare and paeans to democratic principles that evoked a previous age, all while delivering an implied rebuke to Donald Trump.
Featuring appearances by a cast of musical stars and retired politicians from a less polarised era, it was a seemingly perfect antidote to the crass spectacle of cage fights on the White House lawn.
Continue reading...Shark's three-in-one ChillPill personal fan shines because of its three cooling attachments.
Pulisic has been training individually all week
US face Australia at 3pm ET in Seattle on Friday
US men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino offered very little clarity on the injury status of playmaker Christian Pulisic on Thursday, casting further doubt on his availability before the Americans’ second World Cup group-stage match against Australia on Friday.
“I think as you know he was training individually all week,” Pochettino told reporters at his pre-match press conference. “Like always, I think tonight or the day before the game we have a meeting with our medical area, we will assess the whole group, and tomorrow we will communicate if we agree on something tonight. He is evolving, he is much better from Friday, we’ll see.”
Continue reading...Adobe is expanding its Firefly AI assistant into Premiere, Illustrator, InDesign, and Frame.io, where it can automate all sorts of tasks such as organizing clips, renaming assets, adding interview markers, rearranging layers, and finding missing fonts. It's available starting today as part of a public beta. TechCrunch reports: Adobe is slowly transforming Firefly to increasingly resemble Canva, at least when it comes to AI features, loading up the app with AI tools that can generate images, videos and storyboards. The company is now adding a new feature called Elements that can save AI-generated characters, objects and locations for later use. Firefly is also getting a Projects feature that can store existing assets in one place, and share context. This could be useful for teams creating a video series or brand campaigns. Both of these features are currently available in a private beta. The company said users can now describe a brand and its style, or upload existing collateral, in Firefly to have it generate a brand kit, complete with logos, brand identity and color palettes, or even generate product videos from photos. Users can also create storyboards to create videos.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Score one for effective e-waste recycling.
Officers arrest man on suspicion of attempted murder as child is treated in hospital for serious injuries
A man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a three-year-old boy ended up in a crocodile enclosure, Cambridgeshire police said.
The force said officers were called to Johnsons of Old Hurst zoo in Huntingdonshire at 1.24pm on Thursday over “reports of an incident involving a three-year-old boy, during which he ended up in the crocodile enclosure”.
Continue reading...In a ceremony at the White House, the president paid tribute to retired Marine Corps Maj. James Capers Jr., retired Army Maj. Nicholas Dockery and Marine Col. John W. Ripley, who died in 2008.
Legal team of alleged gunman, 28, reverses position on ‘extreme emotional disturbance’ defense after one day
In a stunning reversal, Luigi Mangione’s legal team said on Thursday they would no longer pursue a psychiatric defense in his upcoming state trial over the killing of the UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Just one day earlier, Mangione’s lawyers told Judge Gregory Carro they would pursue a defense claiming the 28-year-old was suffering an “extreme emotional disturbance” at the time of Thompson’s killing on 4 December 2024.
Continue reading...Luigi Mangione's legal team says they withdrew a psychiatric defense in his New York state murder trial one day after telling the court they would use it.
Several inches of rain expected in south-eastern US as forecasters expect storm to cause life-threatening flooding
Tropical Storm Arthur was downgraded from a cyclone to a low pressure area along the upper Texas coast as it made landfall and lost wind intensity on Thursday.
Forecasters still expect the storm to cause life-threatening flooding, property damage and disruptions to commerce and travel.
Continue reading...The Office of Legal Counsel opinion released Thursday said states aren't required by law to integrate mentally disabled patients with their peers by providing community or home-based care.
Judge’s order finds officials probably retaliated for Salah Sarsour’s advocacy for Palestinian rights
A federal judge has ordered the release of the president of Wisconsin’s largest mosque, after finding that immigration officials probably detained him in retaliation against his public advocacy for Palestinian rights, suppressing his first amendment rights in the process.
The US district judge James Patrick Hanlon’s order on Thursday marked a sharp rebuke against Trump officials, including the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who had tried to paint Salah Sarsour as a national security threat.
Continue reading...
An ad by Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff says his Republican opponent, U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, revealed information about President Donald Trump and the Epstein files.
The ad said Collins covered for Trump and other powerful men when he voted against releasing the Epstein files, a cache of documents and recordings released by the federal government beginning in December 2025 from investigations of financier and deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Collins "even admitted Trump was in the files," the June 17 ad said.
Ossoff’s ad includes a clip of Collins saying: "Yeah, I’m sure he’s in there."
The Collins audio was leaked in August 2025, when little was known about the files’ contents and speculation was rampant. Collins’ comments were recorded at an Aug. 13, 2025, campaign stop at a Muscogee County GOP meeting on the Tennessee border, and the media outlet Heartland Signal released the full exchange.
The ad gives the impression that Collins is saying Trump is in the files for nefarious reasons. Many powerful political and business people have been linked to files and stepped down or were fired from their jobs. But the ad omits what Collins said next. Here are his comments in full:
Unidentified speaker: "…the Epstein files, do you think Trump’s in there?"
Collins: "Yeah, I’m sure he’s in there. Because he was the one telling the FBI about it. He’s the one that kicked the guy out of Mar-a-Lago and then called the FBI. Yeah, yeah, he’s in there."
As Epstein's crimes became public in 2006, Trump told a South Florida police chief that he was glad Epstein was being investigated and that "everyone" knew of his crimes, the Miami Herald reported that the chief said.
Collins later said in the conversation with at least one other person that he wanted the Epstein files to be made public: "Oh, we need to release them."
Ossoff’s campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
An Ossoff ad says Collins "admitted" Trump was in the Epstein files.
Collins did speculate that Trump was in the files. But the ad omits that Collins said it’s logical Trump would be in there because he had flagged Epstein’s criminal behavior. Without this information, the ad gives the impression that Collins thinks Trump is in the files because of criminal behavior.
The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False.
The robotaxi company issues a recall on 3,871 vehicles that could make incorrect decisions while driving in highway construction zones.
California's proposed "billionaire tax" has gathered enough signatures to qualify for the November ballot, setting up a major fight between labor unions and some of Silicon Valley's richest figures. From the report: The California Billionaire Tax Act, colloquially known as the billionaire tax, would levy a one-time 5% tax on any California resident worth more than $1bn. The proposal is backed by the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West as a means of funding California's strained healthcare and education programs. The proposal has become one of the state's biggest political flashpoints as it gained momentum throughout the year, with prominent billionaires, such as the Google co-founder Larry Page, making moves to cut ties with the state and Newsom vowing to block it from going to a vote. Although it has gained enough signatures for the ballot, the groups backing the measure have until June 25 to decide whether to move forward or potentially strike a deal with the state. While unions backing the group have framed the proposal as a way of getting the ultra-rich to pay their fair share, many of the state's tech elites have condemned the tax and spent millions attempting to crush it. The Google co-founder Sergey Brin has spent $82m alone on efforts to fight the tax, while joining other Silicon Valley billionaires in declaring he will leave California if it goes through. The Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel, crypto billionaire Chris Larsen and Ring founder James Siminoff are among the other tech moguls who have made huge political donations to groups opposing the tax. California has the most billionaires out of any state, many of whom have increased their wealth in recent years amid the AI boom.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Reports say Texas recruits ill from outbreak, which comes weeks after defense secretary made flu vaccine optional
An influenza outbreak has reportedly sickened more than 150 recruits in training at Lackland air force base in San Antonio, Texas.
The outbreak comes just weeks after the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, ended mandatory flu vaccination for the military, citing the need for bodily autonomy for servicemembers.
Continue reading...Dozens of service members at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas have fallen ill with the flu in the weeks since Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth rescinded the vaccine mandate, sources familiar confirmed to CBS News.
As US lifts its blockade, Tehran says fees to cover cost of managing waterway will come into effect at end of 60-day negotiation period
Iran has announced plans to introduce a system of maritime fees in the strait of Hormuz in two months, after the 60-day period of negotiation that has been triggered by the signing of the memorandum of understanding.
Tehran, claiming a historic victory over the US, said the strait was under its control and a European plan for a naval mission to escort ships though the strait would not be welcome. The US on Thursday lifted its blockade of Iran, and oil tankers began freely moving through the critical channel.
Continue reading...Five years after releasing the Amiga 1000, Commodore was about to launch the Amiga 3000, their first real high-end Amiga. With a 68030 processor, on-board SCSI and a slightly updated graphics chipset, all in a sleek desktop case, the Amiga was truly ready for the era of professional 32-bit computing. But Moore’s law wasn’t the only thing thad had been pressuring Commodore since the release of the Amiga 1000: The desktop metaphor had matured even further, and the competition had been hard at work. IBM had launched OS/2, Windows 3.0 had turned Microsoft’s offering from a proof of concept into something actually usable, and new players had entered the scene – among them NeXTStep, with its polished 3D look.
It was time to bring AmigaOS, too, into the 1990s.
↫ Carl Svensson
It’s interesting – there’s a lot of focus on the first version of the Amiga operating system and the third one, but you don’t hear a lot about AmigaOS 2.x. It turns out this is rather odd, because as Svensson details, this version came with an absolute ton of changes and improvements, from an entirely new widget toolkit to a brand new file system, and so much more. The new widget toolkit and accompanying style guide also ensured that the operating system looked, felt, and behaved consistently.
Remember when we cared about that?
There’s so much more cool features, though, like command history, line editing, universal clipboard support and more just for the CLI, as well as something called Commodities. These were tiny little programs managed from a central location, which didn’t even need a GUI to work. Commodities included by default were things like ClickToFront, a focus-follows-mouse option, and more. Oh and of course, BASIC was replaced by ARexx.
The list just keeps going, and you should really read Svensson’s article.
Even with an open-ended viral prompt, the chatbot "immediately went to the darkest pits of humanity."
Building on the Pilot edition of the BSC AI Factory Acceleration Programme, this initiative now expands to give BSC AI Factory startups direct access to the NVIDIA ecosystem, with Pier07 in Barcelona as the physical hub where these teams and startups will collaborate
June 18, 2026 — The BSC AI Factory, the European high-performance AI infrastructure powered by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS), today announces a broader initiative with NVIDIA aimed at maximizing the impact of its services for startups, SMEs, and public sector organizations, following the BSC AI Factory’s mission to democratize access to AI tools and HPC across Spain and Europe.
The initiative spans multiple areas of activity and is designed to deliver a more comprehensive, higher-value experience for all the customers of the BSC AI Factory, from advanced technical training to business mentoring and startup acceleration.
A Multi-Dimensional Cooperation Effort in Service of the AI Ecosystem
These are the key areas where this joint activity will start to take shape:
As the BSC AI Factory and NVIDIA initiative deepens, so will the value delivered to BSC AI Factory customers.
The BSC AI Factory Acceleration Programme Pilot Initiative: 15 Startups, Two Months of Transformation
The Pilot edition of the BSC AI Factory Acceleration Programme is the foundation on which this broader initiative with NVIDIA has been built. Organized by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center with the cooperation of NVIDIA, AWS and SeedRocket, and the support of ACCIÓ, Cuatrecasas and Tech Barcelona, this first edition has shaped the joint working model the two organizations are now scaling across the BSC AI Factory Services.
This Programme is supporting 15 startups over more than two months through an intensive, multidisciplinary programme. As a key partner, NVIDIA will provide Business and Technical Excellence by leveraging expertise from NVIDIA Inception, NVIDIA Technology Center (NVAITC), NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute and the Open Hackathon program.
Selected startups will receive after eligibility and compliance with the general terms and conditions of the BSC AI Factory:
The program will conclude with a DemoDay on July 23 at Pier07, Tech Barcelona, where participating startups will showcase their progress and projects to investors, corporations, media and key actors from the Catalan, Spanish and European tech ecosystem.
Cristian Canton, BSC Associate Director, commented: “Europe’s AI future depends on equipping startups, SMEs and public bodies with the infrastructure, talent, and support networks they need to compete at a global level. This initiative with NVIDIA, AWS and SeedRocket means combining world-class supercomputing capabilities with one of the most powerful ecosystems in the industry and placing that combination at the service of the innovators building the next generation of AI solutions in Europe. ”
Howard Wright, NVIDIA Senior Startups VP, said: “Startups are critical to turning AI breakthroughs into real-world impact,” said Howard Wright, vice president of Startup Ecosystem at NVIDIA. “Through our collaboration with the Barcelona Supercomputing Center and the BSC AI Factory, we’re helping give Europe’s startups access to the AI expertise, technical resources and high-performance computing infrastructure they need to accelerate innovation, scale their solutions and strengthen the region’s AI ecosystem.”
About BSC AI Factory
The BSC AI Factory is Spain’s high-performance artificial intelligence platform, selected and co-funded by the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking, and powered by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – National Supercomputing Centre (BSC-CNS). Conceived as a one-stop-shop for access to AI in Spain and Europe, the BSC AI Factory provides startups, SMEs, researchers and public sector organisations with the supercomputing infrastructure, AI models, training services and expert support needed to develop, scale and deploy artificial intelligence solutions in a sovereign, ethical and competitive way.
The BSC AI Factory is headquartered at Pier07, Tech Barcelona, the epicenter of Barcelona’s technology and innovation ecosystem, and operates in close collaboration with the Catalan, Spanish and European academic, institutional and business communities.
Source: BSC-CNS
The post BSC AI Factory and NVIDIA Collaborate to Accelerate AI Adoption for Startups appeared first on HPCwire.
Labour’s Greater Manchester mayor predicted to beat Reform but Keir Starmer is unlikely to easily step aside
Polls have closed in Makerfield, Aberdeen South, and Arbroath and Broughty Ferry, with the result in the north-west of England constituency byelection poised to decide the future of UK politics.
The population of Makerfield, a constituency sitting just outside Wigan, has found itself at the centre of the British political world in recent weeks after Andy Burnham quit as mayor of Greater Manchester to contest the seat that he hoped would lead him not only to Westminster, but to the front door of 10 Downing Street.
Continue reading...Midjourney is expanding beyond AI image generation with plans for a medical-imaging business built around a water-based, full-body ultrasound scanner that uses hundreds of thousands of sensors and AI to reconstruct MRI-like images. "As you descend into the water, hundreds of thousands of tiny elements take turns, sending out waves, listening together, compressing and then streaming data to a massive cluster where thousands of computers split the task," Midjourney explained in the announcement. "By looking at how the shapes of all the waves change, we reconstruct a detailed map or 'image' which basically lets us figure out what's in there." The company hopes to open a San Francisco scanning "spa" in late 2027, with 50,000 or more deployed around the world by 2031. The Register reports: It's not clear how fast the process is with the prototype unit, but Midjourney said its goal is for the whole thing to take around a minute. "We think it's completely possible that with enough early imaging in the future, the world could avoid 30% of all deaths and 50% of all healthcare costs," the company added. According to a "technical" video included in the announcement, there's a ring of 40 scanners included in the prototype unit the company has built. That ring of 40 elements contains 358,000 ultrasonic elements made up of tiny transducers that create ultrasound waves in water while listening for how they change when they slap the body of whoever is in Midjourney's dunk tank up to a thousand times a second. [...] Midjourney said that it's planning to open its first ultrasound scanner spa at the end of 2027, but it has another hurdle to jump: FDA approval. Beyond improving its tech so that the second-generation scanner is ready for its 2027 spa date, "regulation is the next limit," the company said. "Normally, for every diagnostic medical capability you need FDA approval," Midjourney explained. "We're starting by just giving you detailed body composition maps -- and we'll be submitting regular test results to the FDA for increased capabilities." Midjourney also fails to mention how it will store and secure those scans, whether it will use said scans to train its body composition-detection algorithms, and how it's ensuring those algorithms get things right that it usually take a human a few years of education and training to learn.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Labour mayor giving advisory roles to ex-Bank of England economist and others seen as attempt to reassure markets
Three economic heavyweights have been brought in to advise Andy Burnham as he attempts to reassure the markets before his possible return to parliament on Friday and challenge to Keir Starmer.
Burnham is understood to be getting advice from Andy Haldane, a former Bank of England chief economist, as well as Richard Hughes, a former chair of the Office for Budget Responsibility and Jim O’Neill, a crossbench peer and former Treasury minister who worked on George Osborne’s “Northern Powerhouse”.
Continue reading...Interior department insists water at Washington landmark is ‘crystal clear’ as witnesses report murky green pool
US federal government workers continue to take on the green hue that has swept across Washington’s reflecting pool, an increasingly fiendish battle the Trump administration compared to its war with Iran.
After Donald Trump ordered a $14.2m refurbishment to turn the monument “American Flag blue” in time for the country’s 250th birthday celebrations, the administration encountered a formidable foe: algae.
Continue reading...Discovery isn’t slated to go online until 2028. But the Department of Energy is already lining up applications to run on the exascale machine, which will be the successor to Frontier at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and a key asset of the Genesis Mission and its goal to accelerate science and engineering through AI.
The DOE announced Discovery and another supercomputer called Lux last October, just before the Genesis Mission was unveiled by the White House. Discovery will be based on HPE Cray’s new GX5000 platform and will be powered by AMD’s new “Venice” EPYC CPUs and upcoming AMD Instinct MI430X GPUs. The water-cooled system will utilize the HPE Slingshot interconnect, the Cray K3000 storage system, and utilize the new Distributed Asynchronous Object Storage (DAOS) parallel file system as well as Lustre.
Development of the system is ongoing, but scientists are already champing at the bit to get access to the new super. Today, the DOE announced the first nine projects that will be developed through the Discovery Center for Accelerated Application Readiness (CAAR), a program at ORNL’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF).
“Our goal is to develop a suite of leadership-class computing applications that are ready to run science campaigns on day one,” Reuben Budiardja, CAAR programming lead and group leader for ORNL’s Advanced Computing for Nuclear, Particle, and Astrophysics Group, said in a press release. “We want to demonstrate Discovery’s full potential from the very moment it becomes available to users.”
Here are the first nine applications that will be running on Discovery as part of the CAAR project, as described by ORNL and the Discovery CARR team:

Large eddy simulations (LES) are being used to evaluate flows in gas turbine engines and to capture the effects of turbulence, secondary flows, and film cooling flows on performance and component temperatures. They offer better accuracy than standard Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes simulation, but it’s still rather computationally expensive.
This program, which is being led by Kenji Miki of NASA, is targeted at enabling NASA’s GlennHT solver to run on Discovery and take advantage of its AMD GPUs, thereby enabling NASA to “perform routine LES for turbomachinery at unprecedented scale and complexity.”

We know some things about dark matter, but many aspects of dark matter remain a mystery. The purpose of GIZMO, which is being led by Philip Hopkins of the California Institute of Technology, is to model cosmological physics across the full range of elements, from the cosmic web down to supermassive black holes.
Specifically, the project will utilize the massive computational power of Discovery to build a larger, more detailed simulations with richer physics, as well as testing GIZMO’s ability to link small, fast effects, like jets and accretion flows, to large cosmic structures.

Gaining better understanding of how quantum materials behave, including magnetism and conductivity, could enable the creation of new technologies, such as new materials and quantum computing. However, current modeling and simulation is limited by the amount of computational power available to it.
The goal with QMCPACK, with is being led by principal investigator Paul Kent of ORNL, is to unleash the power of Discovery to run more accurate, larger, and faster simulations. The hope is that Discovery will also allow QMCPACK to test new ideas, benchmark other methods, and deliver results that can accelerate the development of new technologies such as quantum computing and new materials formulations with fewer critical elements.

Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the fundamental theory of the strong force that binds quarks to form subatomic particles. The theory is needed to explain phenomena, including how protons and neutrons interact.
Scientists attempting to model QCD interactions have been limited in part because of the huge computing power required to calculate quantum masses with any degree of accuracy. However, with QUDA_LAPH, which is headed by Principal Investigator Andre Walker-Loud of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the hope is that Discover will enable scientist to run larger simulations with far fewer approximations.

Discover will also assist with the Active Learning Framework (ALF), a project that helps scientists run atomistic simulations, which is useful in a variety of fields. Getting accurate simulations requires precise calculation of total energy and atomic forces. One useful technique for atomistic simulations is called machine learning interatomic potentials (MLIPs), which bridges classical force fields and quantum mechanical (QM) methods. However MLIPs requires large, high-quality QM training datasets.
The hope with this project, which is overseen by Richard Messerly of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is that Discover will speed up ALF’s entire workflow, including selecting data, running QM calculations, and training models, enabling scientists to build MLIPs faster using smaller, more manageable datasets.

Next-generation flex-fuel gas turbines could help with the energy crunch, but the amount of nitrogen oxides pollutants they generate is not well understood. The goal with S3D-Regent is to build a better model to simulate the turbulent flame mixing and complex chemistry that takes place inside the turbine.
Specifically, this project, which is being led by Jacqueline Chen of Sandia National Laboratories, will utilize the massive computational power of Discovery to run direct numerical simulations at both the large-scale turbulence and small-scale instabilities, thereby capturing extreme turbulence and detailed chemistry, leading to cleaner, safer, and more efficient turbines.

The advent of open-fan engines holds the possibility of reducing fuel consumption for planes by 20%. However, detailed simulations that examine airflow around the engine and the entire aircraft are so demanding that no current supercomputers can run them.
General Electric is seeking to run such a simulation on Discovery. The project, which is led by Principal Investigator Eduardo Jourdan de Araujo Jorge Filho of GE Aerospace Research, will integrate machine learning and AI models with a state-of-the-art LES solver. The goal is to track trillions of variables over billions of time steps to capture the full complexity of turbulence, potentially paving the way for new planes based on open-fan engines.

Fusion energy holds the potential to provide nearly unlimited amounts of clean energy, but there remain major technical obstacles along the way. One of those obstacles is figuring out what is the optimal design for fusion reactors, including materials and geometries for advanced nanostructured targets, one promising technique for laser-driven fusion reactors.
The goal with PIConGPU project–which is headed up by Principal Investigator Sunita Chandrasekaran of the University of Delaware and also includes Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf research laboratory in Dresden, Germany–is to use the unprecedented horsepower of Discovery, along with AI optimizations, to perform high-fidelity simulations to identify the most effective target designs faster and with fewer simulations.

Converting methane into methanol is a longstanding goal in the energy industry, but serious chemical engineering barriers exist that have thus far prevented a path from being discovered. The challenge is that scientist don’t fully understand the exact copper-oxygen structure inside the copper-zeolite catalysts that facilitate the carbon-hydrogen bond activation. Experimental results don’t aling with density functional theory (DFT) calculations.
The goal with SPARC, which is headed by Principal Investigator Phanish Suryanarayana of the Georgia Institute of Technology, is to run many-body random phase approximation calculations, which are more accurate than typical DFT approaches, thereby delivering more reliable benchmark reaction energies and activation barriers and pointing the way to truly stable and catalytically active sites.
The post Genesis Application: Here Are the First Nine Programs Slated for ORNL’s New Discovery Supercomputer appeared first on HPCwire.
More than 500 guests gathered at the Obama Presidential Center along the Lake Michigan shoreline in the city that launched Barack Obama’s trajectory to the White House as the country’s first Black president.

Pennrose and JPMorganChase help neighborhoods – and residents – thrive.
Finding an affordable place to live continues to be a challenge for many as widespread housing shortages persist across the U.S. Rising home prices and high interest rates have made homeownership inaccessible for a large portion of the population. Meanwhile, as rental demand increases, the number of renters facing affordability challenges is also on the rise.
The State of the Nation’s Housing 2025 by Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies reveals that cost burdens for renters reached another record high in 2023. Similarly, the JPMorganChase Institute reports that renter affordability is declining and forcing people to devote more of their take-home pay to housing costs. There is a growing need for affordable housing across the U.S., and that rings true here in Wilmington.
To close that gap, it’s essential that all Wilmington residents share in its growth with housing options that accommodate a range of needs and budgets. For the Pennrose real estate firm, this meant delivering a concrete solution to the local community, resulting in housing for individuals and families who otherwise might not have been able to live in the area.
In Wilmington, the Riverside redevelopment initiative is focused on neighborhood stability at a scale that can be felt across generations – bringing housing, education and community resources together so families can remain rooted and move forward. Imani Village, developed by Pennrose in partnership with the Wilmington Housing Authority and nonprofit community organization REACH Riverside and constructed with support from JPMorganChase, is part of this broader effort, which is expected to create more than 600 high-quality, mixed-income homes while also enhancing and expanding EastSide Charter School and Kingswood Community Center to help establish a “cradle to college/career readiness education pipeline.”
By tying new housing to strengthened local institutions, the redevelopment aims to reduce the pressure that forces families to relocate and instead keep children closer to school, neighbors closer to one another and residents connected to the services that help them thrive. In practical terms, Imani Village represents not just additional homes, but a commitment to building a neighborhood where opportunity is easier to access and easier to keep.
“We’re proud of the far-reaching impact this project will have. It reflects Pennrose’s mission to uplift our communities and expand the supply of high-quality, affordable homes,” said Brett Macleod, Community Development Banking, J.P. Morgan. “Every additional housing unit matters – and increasing the number that are affordable is critical.”
While Imani Village is foundational, the vibrancy of a community depends on much more. In Delaware, the firm provides banking services to 215,000 customers and works across sectors to expand economic opportunity. Over the last five years, JPMorganChase has invested more than $25 million in local nonprofit organizations, supported 25,000 small business clients and delivered financial health education to thousands of residents to broaden access to banking, financial health resources, homeownership and other wealth-building tools.
“As we work with local stakeholders to expand housing options, JPMorganChase’s goal is to create inclusive economic opportunity for all,” said Don Mell, Location Management, Americas East Region Lead and member of the Delaware & Philadelphia Market Leadership Team at JPMorganChase. “When our communities thrive, we all thrive.”
Learn more about affordable housing and community development at jpmorgan.com/commercial-real-estate.
The post From blueprint to breakthrough: Tackling affordable housing in Wilmington appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Musicians and production team understood to be facing same punishment after livestream of patriotic song
The Iranian singer Parastoo Ahmadi and eight members of a production team, including musicians, have been reportedly sentenced to 74 lashes for performing in a concert livestreamed on Ahmadi’s YouTube channel in 2024.
According to court documents, the criminal court of Qom province sentenced the artists to flogging, a two-year ban on leaving the country and a two-year ban on engaging in artistic activities on charges that include offending public decency through the production and publication of “vulgar and immoral content” online.
Continue reading...June 18, 2026 — At VivaTech, AI Factory France (AI2F), led by GENCI, announced the launch of a program—unprecedented in Europe—to accelerate AI innovation in France in partnership with NVIDIA. This initiative, initially announced during the Adopt AI Summit in Paris in November 2025, is now entering an operational phase by providing startups and small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) with streamlined access to cutting-edge computing infrastructure and specialized AI services to accelerate their development and readiness for market entry.
The program bridges NVIDIA’s global innovation ecosystem with France’s national and European AI resources. NVIDIA Inception members conducting open research with R&D based in Europe can now freely leverage French and European NVIDIA AI supercomputers alongside a comprehensive suite of services including data and software services, training programs, expert support and co-development opportunities to accelerate the development, deployment, and adoption of artificial intelligence across a diversity of sectors.
Early access to this program has already benefited several startups including Pleias, Nebula and Ryax Technologies to accelerate their roadmap. “What makes this program meaningful for a startup like Pleias is that it goes well beyond compute. The combination of infrastructure, tools, engineering environments, and the direct support of NVIDIA’s solution architects is what created the foundation for transforming a compute grant on Jean Zay into Nemotron-Personas-France and Nemotron-Personas-Belgium. For European startups building open AI Software infrastructure, that kind of end- to-end support is the difference between access and acceleration, ” said Anastasia Stasenko, Pleias CEO.
This pioneering collaboration underscores France’s leadership and driving role in shaping the European AI Continent. This announcement will be followed swiftly by another European AI Factory’s enrollment in the program under the same model, marking its first European-scale expansion. “Building on our long-standing partnership with NVIDIA and the many successes we have supported across our startup and SME community, this joint program will nurture our ecosystem and accelerate the momentum towards broader AI-driven innovation and transformation.” Cédric Auliac, AI Program Manager at GENCI and Coordinator of AI Factory France.
“France has a strong foundation for the next wave of AI innovation — world-class research, ambitious startups and SMEs, and a growing open ecosystem,” said Howard Wright, vice president of Startup Ecosystem at NVIDIA. “Through this collaboration with GENCI and AI Factory France, NVIDIA Inception is helping connect entrepreneurs with the accelerated computing infrastructure, technical expertise and startup support they need to move faster from experimentation to deployment and bring real-world AI innovation to market across France and Europe.”
About AI Factory France (AI2F)
AI Factory France is a European-scale platform co-funded by the French government and the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking. It sets a one stop shop providing public and private actors with the computing resources and related services (training, mentoring, technical support) they need to accelerate their research on AI development and deployment. Led by GENCI, it brings together a consortium of 16 prestigious partners including large research organizations (Inria, CNRS, CEA, AMIAD), French Universities and innovation partners, fostering AI adoption among 12 verticals including Health, Materials Science, Robotics, Defense & Cybersecurity, Finance, Earth Science or Aerospace.
Source: GENCI
The post NVIDIA and GENCI Expand Access to AI Compute Through AI Factory France appeared first on HPCwire.
The dating app company Match Group asked 1,000 singles about AI and dating. Some things are fine. Some are deal-breakers.
The New York Knicks went up New York City's famous Canyon of Heroes for a massive ticker-tape parade celebrating the 2026 NBA champions.
The Obama Presidential Center's grand opening ceremony featured a lineup of tributes from his family and closest colleagues, and musical performances by Bruce Springsteen, The Roots and more.
US president says he encourages Middle East countries to ‘maintain commitment to allowing our negotiations to beautifully unfold’
Reaction: Donald Trump’s Iran deal met with anger, relief and incredulity
Analysis: Trump’s Iran deal is result of unrealistic ambitions for an untenable war
Donald Trump had urged Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “stop blowing up buildings” during a phone call about Israel’s military campaign in Lebanon, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
The newspaper cited sources who overheard the phone conversation between the two leaders, whose relationship has grown increasingly hostile as the war raged on.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: As artificial intelligence companies reshape the economy and race toward trillion-dollar valuations, Sen. Bernie Sanders is proposing a sweeping transfer of wealth and power from the industry to the American public. The legislation, shown first to The Associated Press, would create a sovereign wealth fund overseen by an independent commission and financed through a one-time 50% tax on the stock of the largest AI companies. Sanders estimates that the tax would create a nearly $7 trillion fund that would generate hundreds of billions of dollars annually in direct payments to Americans and programs such as health care, education and housing. [...] The 50% tax would apply to AI companies that reach $200 million in annual AI sales. Any new AI company that reaches that benchmark would also be subject to the tax. It would create a sovereign wealth fund -- similar to those used by countries around the world and some U.S. states -- that Sanders estimates would be worth around $7 trillion. Unlike a traditional tax, the proposal would require companies to transfer stock rather than cash, effectively making the American public a major shareholder in the country's largest AI firms. A seven-person independent commission -- nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate -- would manage the fund and use its voting shares "to block decisions that hurt the American people and to push for policies that help them," the bill summary says. Sanders proposes that a 5% annual dividend from the fund would provide direct payments of more than $1,000 to every American. If companies grow, the gains would be used for public goods such as education, housing and health care. Sanders argues taxpayers would not bear the losses if AI company valuations decline. "We're not going to lose any money, even if there is a bust in the bubble," Sanders said. The commission would be directed to "to block decisions that hurt the American people and to push for policies that help them," according to the summary. "The benefits cannot simply go to the handful of wealthy corporations. They will be shared by the American people," the independent Vermont senator said in an interview Wednesday. "The public has got to have a significant seat at the table to make sure that terrible things do not happen to ordinary people, and that in fact, AI benefits ordinary people, not hurts them," Sanders said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
After Mauricio Pochettino’s passionate half-time speech last October, the USA shaped up and started on the path to a rematch against the Australians in Seattle
Haji Wright’s finish was cool, but Mauricio Pochettino’s reaction was cooler. It was the 35th minute of the US men’s national team’s friendly against Australia last October, and the Coventry City striker had just equalized after Jordan Bos put the Socceroos up earlier in the half. Wright celebrated by walking calmly away, while his coach had a blank expression on the sideline.
Pochettino’s mind may have been on Australia’s aggressive approach, including one challenge that forced Christian Pulisic out of the match midway through the first half. Or he may have been focused on his team’s reaction.
Continue reading...Drivers feel some relief but prices still a dollar more per gallon overall since before US-Israel attack on Iran
The average price of US gasoline fell to just under $4 a gallon on Thursday for the first time since March, following the announcement of a preliminary agreement between the US and Iran to end the war and reopen the strait of Hormuz.
The development has provided some relief to drivers who have seen soaring costs amid Washington’s war with Iran. But filling up still remains more expensive than it was before the conflict began.
Continue reading...MP for Tewkesbury understood to have been arrested by Gloucestershire police on Wednesday night
A Liberal Democrat MP has had the whip and membership of the party suspended after he became the subject of a police investigation.
Cameron Thomas, the MP for Tewkesbury, was arrested by Gloucestershire police on Wednesday night, it is understood.
Continue reading...If you're F1-curious, this is a great chance to start your engines.
Not every savings account is favorable in today's high-rate climate. Here's one you should specifically avoid now.
Kenyan McDuffie said he called Janeese Lewis George "to congratulate her on her victory and wish her success as she prepares for the general election."
Move to dismantle $368m sea observatory initiative faced opposition from experts and lawmakers
The Donald Trump administration has reversed its decision to dismantle a $368m deep-sea observation system following an outcry from lawmakers and ocean experts.
On Thursday, the National Science Foundation announced that it would halt plans to dismantle the Ocean Observatories Initiative, stating: “effective immediately, [it] will not proceed with further removal or descoping of equipment from the remaining arrays and will continue operations including planned maintenance”.
Continue reading...Hundreds of thousands of fans packed lower Manhattan after team’s historic NBA championship win
Continue reading...Former first lady Michelle Obama delivered a loving and heartfelt tribute to her husband at the Obama Presidential Center's grand opening ceremony in Chicago Thursday.
City councillor who ran on expanding childcare, education and housing slated for office after opponent concedes
Democratic socialist Janeese Lewis George is slated to be the next mayor of Washington DC after her opponent conceded on Thursday.
Lewis George, a city council member, ran on a platform of expanding childcare, education and housing, and revoking the district’s cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
Continue reading...Apple is allowing iPhone developers in Brazil to distribute apps through authorized alternative marketplaces and use third-party payment systems following action by the country's competition regulator. "In other words, developers in Brazil will be able to circumvent the App Store and Apple's in-app purchase system, but there are still fees," reports MacRumors. Apple will collect commissions ranging from 5% on externally distributed apps to as much as 26% for some App Store transactions using its payment system. From the report: Alternative app marketplaces will have to be authorized by Apple and will need to meet ongoing requirements. For apps that are still distributed through the App Store, developers will be able to include an alternative payment processing method in their app and/or link users to a website to complete a transaction. These changes are available on iOS 26.5 and later, and they are the result of regulatory action from Brazil's competition regulator. Apple has added a new page on its website with additional details for developers in Brazil. Apple said these changes introduce privacy and security risks for users, including children. The company has introduced safeguards to mitigate these risks, including a notarization process for iOS apps, an authorization process for app marketplaces, and limitations on external links and alternative payments for users under the age of 18. Apple has already allowed alternative app stores and/or third-party payment systems on iOS in the EU, Japan, and South Korea, and it will likely be forced to do so in the UK and Australia too, due to similar regulations in those countries.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Republican Rep. Tom Kean Jr. of New Jersey will return to Congress on June 30, his spokesperson said, after being away since March in an unexplained absence that has confounded Capitol Hill.
Number of people infected now tops 1,000 though health officials say the global risk remains low
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will tap $107m in emergency funding for Ebola outbreak response in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda, officials said on Thursday.
The continued Ebola outbreak in the DRC comes as Canada, Mexico and the US jointly host the Fifa World Cup, attracting visitors from around the world. The officials said the outbreak, now the third largest on record, required “strong immediate support”, but that the global risk remained low.
Continue reading...The Fed held rates steady again this week, but a few borrowing options are still cheaper than you may expect.
Supermodel ‘completely abdicated’ her trustee responsibilities at Fashion for Relief, Charity Commission tells hearing
Naomi Campbell showed herself to be unfit to run a charity after the supermodel “completely abdicated” her responsibilities as a trustee of her now defunct Fashion for Relief project, according to the charity watchdog.
The Charity Commission told a tribunal that Campbell, who is trying to overturn a five-year ban on running a charity, was “highly culpable” for mismanagement and misuse of funds at Fashion for Relief, the former charity she founded in 2015.
Continue reading...The tech was developed at University of California, Berkeley, and it's currently still in the testing phase.
The memorandum of understanding requires numerous steps by Washington including lifting sanctions and freeing billions in frozen assets, while Iran was required only to open the Strait of Hormuz.
BBC says vetting process ‘clearly failed’ after Guardian reveals presenter’s past comments about women
Warning: this article contains sexually explicit, offensive language
The BBC has pulled a documentary series with its controversial presenter Ashley Cain after revelations over his history of abusive and misogynistic comments about women.
In a statement late on Thursday, the BBC said its vetting requirements had “clearly failed” in the case of Cain, who was lauded by executives at the corporation for his ability to connect with young men. It added the BBC had “no plans” to broadcast a new series of Ashley Cain: Into the Danger Zone, a BBC programme that was filmed earlier this year at various locations across the world.
Continue reading...York Revolution were celebrating Pride Night
MLB players have also pushed back on Pride
A professional baseball team has chosen to forfeit a game after some of its players refused to participate in the club’s Pride Night.
York Revolution had arranged for players to wear uniforms with rainbow sleeves during their game against the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs on Thursday as part of the team’s 11th annual Pride Night. However, the Revolution said several players had refused to wear the jerseys and the club cancelled the game. The team instead made the night “a free and fun celebration of recognition and inclusion”.
Continue reading...Daryl McLune was 16 when he was held for 23 hours on suspicion of attempting to murder his mother after she tried to take her own life
A teenager who was wrongly arrested for the attempted murder of his mother minutes after she had tried to kill herself has won a race discrimination claim against the Metropolitan police.
A jury found that the Met discriminated against Daryl McLune, who was 16 at the time, because he was black.
Continue reading...US defence secretary addresses allies in latest attempt to get Europe to raise military budgets
Pete Hegseth has announced a review of the US military presence across Europe, in a combative address to Nato allies where he threatened to cut force numbers in countries spending the least on defence.
The US defence secretary, speaking at a meeting of Nato defence ministers in Brussels, accused some countries of “free riding” and others of being shameful for not allowing their airbases to be used by US jets bombing Iran in the spring.
Continue reading...PALO ALTO, Calif., June 18, 2026 — Architect Labs, a foundational lab to accelerate custom silicon development, emerged from stealth today with $24 million in seed funding. The round was led by Kindred Ventures, with participation from TQ Ventures, Race Capital, Together Fund, and key figures in modern computing and AI, including Srinivas Narayanan, Lukasz Kaiser, Aravind Srinivas, Kunle Olukotun, Trevor Blackwell, Dr. Alex Wissner-Gross, Shaad Khan and other executives from NVIDIA, Google, OpenAI, and more. Kindred founder and managing partner Steve Jang joined Architect Labs’ board.
The World Needs More Chip Designs Than Can Be Produced Today
The rapid growth of AI has fundamentally changed the economics of hardware infrastructure. Computing has shifted from a basic GPU-CPU-memory configuration into massive, scalable, integrated environments built around custom silicon. General-purpose hardware can no longer keep up with AI’s complex demands for specialized compute, advanced networking, and high-speed connections. This trend isn’t just limited to datacenters; it’s expanding into robotics, autonomous systems, spatial computing, defense, personal devices, and wearables.
Yet designing a chip remains one of the most gated efforts in technology: years of development, hundreds of millions in investment, and a shrinking pool of experts concentrated in a few companies.
Architect Labs is building the AI system to design custom chips and full-stack silicon solutions for organizations pushing beyond the limits of off-the-shelf hardware. Architect Labs partners with companies, AI labs, and nations to turn demanding workloads into purpose-built chips, dramatically accelerating the chip development timelines.
Two decades ago, the fabless model let companies design chips without owning a fab. TSMC made world-class manufacturing available to anyone with a chip design. Architect Labs will do the same for design itself: make world-class chip design available to anyone with a workload. The company calls this the designless semiconductor industry, a world where organizations no longer have to become chip companies, make decade-long bets on an architecture, or carry the risk of a failed tape-out just to get the silicon their workload demands.
“AI models have advanced dramatically across nearly every field, yet chip development cycles remain equally slow and painful,” said Ebrahim Hussain, co-founder of Architect Labs. “Unlocking AI-first semiconductor design requires a first-principles rethink of the entire design process, not forcing AI agents into workflows that were never built for them.”
Closing the Loop Between Hardware and AI
Over time, the company plans to extend its partnership and the capabilities of its AI system across the full computing stack, from silicon to co-designing compilers, runtimes, system software, and eventually co-optimizing the AI models themselves. When chip design moves closer to the pace of software, models, architectures, and silicon can be truly co-optimized together. Hardware stops being a constraint that AI must work around and becomes part of the iteration loop itself: a tightening flywheel that accelerates the industry’s path to superintelligence.
“We are just now entering into an era of custom chips for various systems and workload types. To achieve this ideal diversity of AI infrastructure, research labs, software platforms, robotics makers, and cloud operators all need to be able to iterate on novel chip hardware at the same pace and creativity as model development,” said Steve Jang, founder of Kindred Ventures. “Using AI for chip co-design, Architect Labs proposes to deliver on this vision of ultra-low latency, energy-efficient, and affordable intelligence at scale.”
This shift expands access to custom silicon far beyond a small set of companies, enabling more organizations to build specialized hardware infrastructure superior in economics, performance, and power efficiency.
The Team
Architect Labs was founded by Ebrahim Hussain and Aaditya Subedi. Hussain skipped high school to enroll in college at 15 and went to work on custom chips at Apple and Tesla. Subedi was an AI researcher at Harvard, working on code verification using AI. The two met at Stanford, where their research focused on building AI systems for chip design and verification. Noticing the gap between the rate of AI progress and underlying hardware, they dropped out of school to start Architect Labs.
The founders have assembled a team of frontier AI researchers, former professors, chip designers, and systems engineers. The team has collectively taped out 80+ production chips, ran $10B+ product lines at Intel’s Data Center Division, taped out one of the first neuromorphic chips at Intel’s AI lab, been core contributors to Meta’s custom silicon, led ML research teams at Anthropic, DeepMind, and xAI, and contributed to core AI research at nearly every frontier lab.
Architect Labs will use the funding to scale its compute infrastructure, deepen its AI research, and co-design production silicon with early industry partners.
About Architect Labs
Architect Labs is building an AI system that designs and verifies chips end-to-end, enabling partners to transform demanding workloads into production-ready silicon while dramatically accelerating development timelines. By making custom silicon more accessible, Architect Labs aims to enable a future where every important workload can run and co-evolve alongside the hardware purpose-built for it. Beginning with chip design and expanding across the broader compute stack, the company is reimagining how computing systems are built for the age of superintelligence. Architect Labs was founded by Ebrahim Hussain and Aaditya Subedi and is based in Palo Alto, California.
Source: Architect Labs
The post Architect Labs Raises $24M Seed to Democratize Custom Chip Design appeared first on HPCwire.
The memorandum of understanding signed in Versailles lays bare US failure and the pointlessness of this illegal war
Donald Trump’s wishful thinking, as much as Benjamin Netanyahu’s persuasion, was responsible for their illegal war on Iran. The US president wanted regime change, the eradication of Tehran’s ballistic missiles programme, to prevent it from ever building a nuclear bomb, and demilitarisation of its proxies. He announced that he would accept nothing less than unconditional surrender.
The memorandum of understanding with Iran which Mr Trump signed on Wednesday – in Versailles; perhaps not the best augury of lasting diplomatic achievement – was evidence that even he can only deny reality for so long. Given the human and broader costs of the war, a deal to end it has been long overdue. But the text exposes the sheer pointlessness of this conflict. Continuing the war might have led to “worldwide depression”, the US president said, though his concern is for the impact on the pockets of his voters rather than the poorest and hungriest globally. A disgruntled base and the looming midterms have forced him into compromises loathed by Republican hawks. Mike Pence, his former vice‑president, said that it “smacks of appeasement”.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Interest rates on CDs will stay high after this week's Fed meeting. Here's how to find the highest ones right now.
Media-shy financier Stephen Feinberg has quietly amassed extraordinary influence over US military spending
The only available video over the last 15 months of the official who really wields power in Donald Trump’s Pentagon is a cartoon animation. Released in May on X by the US government, it shows a silver haired figure in a grey suit lighting up a cigar and sitting at a massive wooden desk with a nameplate: DEPSECWAR FEINBERG.
Stephen Feinberg, the 66-year-old billionaire founder of the private equity giant Cerberus Capital Management, has served as the deputy secretary of defense since March 2025. His boss, the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, makes frequent appearances working out with troops or insulting reporters at press conferences, and posts often on social media. But Feinberg does not show his face. He has been obsessively media shy for decades, and is so reclusive that since his confirmation hearing he has not testified to a single committee on Capitol Hill, has held no press conferences and given no interviews. His press spokesperson left the government months into his tenure and has not been replaced.
Continue reading...Former negotiator believes in an unstable world, it is ‘perfectly possible’ the UK can rejoin the EU with old opt-outs
A couple of years ago, Michel Barnier spent a weekend with Boris Johnson’s father, Stanley. It was not some ghoulish Brexit spin-off of The Traitors, but the result of the former EU negotiator’s wife, Isabelle, being a close friend of Johnson’s French cousin, Anne du Boucheron, the owner of Château de la Baronnière, a 19th-century estate in Mauges-sur-Loire, in western France.
“We spent a weekend together in a French castle. Very friendly. Long promenades in the forest,” Barnier recalls of Johnson senior, with whom he discussed the former prime minister’s motivation to back Brexit. “It was interesting. Boris was much more European at the beginning. Even if he was critical. I don’t see it as a motivation but it is, perhaps, a method or attitude: to be pragmatic in some way. Cynical. Cynical to get power.”
Continue reading...Exclusive: Former chief Brexit negotiator says staying out of euro and Schengen area would be ‘perfectly possible’
Michel Barnier has said Britain could regain its special terms if it rejoined the EU and claimed it was becoming clearer every day to the British people that they would be stronger in Europe.
In an interview before the 10th anniversary of the Brexit referendum next week, the EU’s former chief Brexit negotiator said he could not see any obstacle to the UK keeping the pound and remaining outside the passport-free Schengen travel area should the country rejoin.
Continue reading...Sunscreen protects you from UV rays, but the message is getting lost in translation on social media.
Google has begun rolling out Android 17, the June Pixel Feature Drop, and Wear OS 7 simultaneously across supported Pixel phones and watches. Highlights include floating app bubbles, improved foldable multitasking and gaming, tighter location and contact permissions, stronger lost-device protections, new Pixel AI tools, and up to 10% better Pixel Watch battery life. PhoneArena reports: Pixel owners are the clear winners, since everything here reaches Pixel first and a lot of it goes back to the Pixel 6. Fold owners get the most toys, with the Bubble Bar and foldable gaming mode built for the big screen. Watch wearers get the quietly important upgrade. Better battery and Live Updates make an everyday wearable easier to rely on, especially if you keep it on overnight. Google's latest Pixel Drop combines several AI-powered tools with a broader slate of Android 17 upgrades. Pixel owners gain Lyria 3 for generating music from text or images, Gemini Omni for creating custom video clips, enhanced call translation and screening, AirDrop-compatible Quick Share, expanded Magic Cue support, and conversational photo editing. Android 17 builds on those additions with floating app Bubbles, selfie-camera Screen Reactions, and a split-screen gaming mode for foldables, while also strengthening privacy and security with more granular location and contact permissions, improved lost-device protection, tighter PIN-guessing limits, and enhanced threat detection. Other additions include expanded parental controls, separate assistant volume and app memory settings, and an option to hide app names for greater privacy. You can read more about everything new in Android 17 in Google's blog post.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Exclusive: Richard Hermer’s office understood to be first in government to restrict use after recent riots
The attorney general for England and Wales has told his office to no longer post on X, making it the first UK government department to stop using the Elon Musk-owned platform amid increasing worries about its use to incite violence and racism.
Richard Hermer’s office last posted on X on Friday, and it is understood that officials have been told to no longer use the site, unless for the specific purpose of combatting disinformation there.
Continue reading...Updated document, which emphasises harm done to African women, is being considered by other Caribbean countries
Barbados’s prime minister, Mia Mottley, has announced a new manifesto from Caribbean leaders asserting the “moral, ethical and legal case” for reparations over damage caused by hundreds of years of enslavement.
Mottley was speaking at a “historic” conference in Ghana to advance the push for reparatory justice after the United Nations adopted a landmark resolution declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans as the gravest crime against humanity.
Continue reading...The Pentagon is launching a six-month review of U.S. forces and bases in Europe, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Thursday at a meeting of NATO defense ministers.
Gallup found that only 49% of Americans were "cost-secure" last year, with concerns about medical bills and prescription costs rising across income groups.
Many people are spending more time on screens, but also doing more physical activities, a new CBS News poll finds.
Sennheiser's Accentum Clip open-ear true wireless earbuds are set to ship on July 23, but not to the US.
On Thursday, a unanimous Supreme Court said that part of a federal law could not be used to prosecute a man solely for possessing a gun and a controlled substance at the same time.
In United States v. Hemani, the Court upheld a U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit bench opinion that struck down part of a federal law, U.S.C. 922(g)(3), known as the “unlawful user” provision.” It banned anyone who is an “unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” from possessing firearms or ammunition.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested Ali Danial Hemani after it obtained a warrant to search his home. Agents found a 9mm pistol, 60 grams of marijuana, and 4.7 grams of cocaine in Hemani’s possession, according to court documents. The government believed that Hemani was a habitual marijuana user.
A grand jury found that Hemani had violated the unlawful user provision by possessing a handgun while in possession of marijuana. Hemani said that U.S.C. 922(g)(3) didn’t apply to his case and that the arrest violated his rights under the Second Amendment, which protects an individual’s right to keep and bear arms. The Fifth Circuit court agreed with Hemani.
In his opinion for the Supreme Court, Justice Neil Gorsuch held that “the government’s prosecution of Mr. Hemani under §922(g)(3)’s unlawful user provision is inconsistent with the Second Amendment.”
“The Second Amendment protects the right of ‘all Americans’ to keep and bear firearms for self-defense, though like most individual rights it has its limits,” Gorsuch said. “The government bears the burden of showing its regulatory efforts are ‘consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation,’” he added, quoting the Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen.
“The government construes §922(g)(3) to automatically ban an individual from possessing a gun from the moment he becomes an unlawful user of any controlled substance and remains in effect until he ceases being one, regardless of what controlled substance an individual uses, in what amounts, whether his drug use has ever made him a danger to himself or others, why he keeps a gun, or how safely he does so,” Gorsuch stated.
Rejecting the government’s use of “habitual drunkard” laws to make its case, Gorsuch concluded that “the government’s analogy fails on every metric it invites the Court to consider. Taken cumulatively, these problems prove fatal to the government’s prosecution of Mr. Hemani.”
Gorsuch also added that the decision was narrow and did not apply to laws that ban addicts or those intoxicated from possessing a firearm, or other laws “Congress might adopt after determining that users of a particular drug pose a special risk of misusing firearms.”
In his concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas agreed with the Court’s opinion, and he also thought the law violated the Constitution’s Commerce Clause. “Congress lacks the power to regulate the possession of firearms solely on the ground that they crossed state lines at some point in the past,” he stated.
In another concurring opinion, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, wrote to confirm that the appeals court properly applied the Bruen precedent and United States v. Rahimi (2024), another ruling that an individual found to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of another person may be temporarily disarmed. However, Jackson still argued that the Bruen ruling was flawed, and its “history and tradition” requirement was problematic.
And Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Justice Elena Kagan, said he would have rejected the appeal because the government’s reliance on the habitual drunkard laws ignored substance use in a current context. “Marijuana use today is like alcohol use at the founding. It is widespread and increasingly considered socially acceptable in many quarters. And from a practical standpoint, law enforcement widely tolerates the use of marijuana,” he concluded.
The case had attracted a considerable amount of attention, with groups like the National Rifle Association (NRA), the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), the New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, and the Cato Institute filing briefs supporting Hemani. In addition to United States Solicitor General John Sauer, a group of 19 states, Everytown for Gun Safety, and the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence support the federal government’s position.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
June 18, 2026 — Women in High Performance Computing (WHPC) is excited to announce a packed program of events for ISC High Performance 2026, June 22-26 in Hamburg, Germany. WHPC is looking forward to connecting with colleagues, collaborators, and community members from around the world next week.
Where to Find WHPC at ISC 2026
Tuesday (June 23, 2026) is all about community – reconnecting with familiar faces, welcoming new members, and creating spaces where people can learn from and support one another.
On Wednesday (June 24, 2026), WHPC celebrates its mission and the people who are shaping the future of the community.
WHPC Moderators
This year, the WHPC x ISC partnership is taking an exciting step forward. WHPC is delighted to announce that select volunteers from the community have been working with ISC to help shape some of this year’s most popular sessions, stepping into roles in panel moderation and audience facilitation.
Across the Vendor Showdown, Vendor Roadmaps, Midweek Keynote, Technical Papers and Fishbowl Panel, WHPC volunteers will be part of the sessions that bring energy, challenge ideas, and connect communities. All of this is made possible not only by those stepping into visible roles but also by ISC leadership and the support network that enables it.
Learn more about each event through the ISC 2026 webpages: https://womeninhpc.org/events/isc-2026
Thank You to ISC 2026 Sponsors and Supporters
Sponsors and Supporters power everything WHPC does, helping to connect, support, and elevate people across the global HPC community. WHPC’s work is all about opening doors, building networks, and supporting career growth at every stage.
Learn more about WHPC sponsorship levels and how to get involved in future events through the 2026 Prospectus.
Thank You to the Volunteer Committee
Last but not certainly not least, thank you to WHPC’s amazing volunteer committee.
It truly takes a village to bring the WHPC program of events to life. Behind every session, meet-up, and initiative is a dedicated group of volunteers working tirelessly to support the community.
Thank you to each and every one of you for your dedication, friendship, and continued support: Ayesha Afzal, Buket Benek Gursoy, Cristin Merritt, Eleanor Broadway, Elsa Gonsiorowski, Sarah Johnston, Karina Pesatova, Valerie Rossi, Vijeta Sharma, Katya Zossimova
Explore the WHPC ISC 2026 Committee here.
About WHPC
Women in High Performance Computing (WHPC) was created with the vision of encouraging women to participate in the HPC community by providing fellowships, education, and support to women and the organizations that employ them. Through collaboration and networking, WHPC strives to bring together women in HPC and technical computing while encouraging women to engage in outreach activities and improve the visibility of inspirational role models.
About ISC 2026
ISC 2026 returns to the Congress Center Hamburg from June 22 – 26 for its 41st edition. Since its inception in 1986, it has been recognized as the world’s oldest and Europe’s most attended event for the HPC community, and increasingly for AI and quantum professionals interested in performance, energy efficiency, and cost-effectiveness.
Source: WHPC
The post WHPC Announces Event Program for ISC 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
Security researcher Justin O'Leary says Google initially accepted his Config Connector privilege-escalation report as a high-priority, high-severity bug, then denied a bounty by declaring the behavior "working as intended." According to The Register, a Google rep initially praised O'Leary's report with a "Nice catch!" before the cloud giant reversed course, declaring that no vulnerability existed and therefore no fix or reward was warranted. "The bug report, however, is still marked high-priority and accepted," the publication notes. The alleged flaw, dubbed ConfigConfusion, could let a Kubernetes namespace user exploit an overprivileged service account to become a GCP organization owner with only a few lines of YAML and little apparent audit visibility. O'Leary details the incident in a blog post. The Register reports: According to O'Leary, Config Connector doesn't perform an authorization check, and this allows any Config Connector service account with org-level permissions to bypass Identity and Access Management (IAM) authorization and gain the highest level of control (roles/owner) to an entire GCP Organization -- the root node of all of a company's resources within Google Cloud. On March 27, a Google security engineer accepted O'Leary's report and told him: "Nice catch!" The employee said that they filed a bug based on O'Leary's report with the relevant product team and assured him the Chocolate Factory's security squad would work with relevant Google Cloud people to fix the flaw. "We'll work with the product team to ensure this issue is address. We'll let you know when the issue was fixed," the engineer said. "In the meantime, review the payment option selected in your bughunters.google.com profile." Google assigned the bug P1 priority and S1 severity, signifying a flaw worthy of urgent repair because it affects a large percentage of users and can disrupt core organizational functions. "I figured that was the end of that," O'Leary said in a phone interview with The Register. Eleven days later, on April 7, he received a new message from a Google Security Bot reversing the earlier decision. The Reg viewed the email, and O'Leary included a screenshot in his Thursday writeup. The message said that the Cloud Vulnerability Reward Program panel decided that the "security impact of this issue does not meet the criteria to qualify for a reward." After reviewing the bug report, Google determined the software "is working as intended," the message continued. It also noted that the program's decision not to pay a bounty "does not mean that the product team won't fix the issue." Nearly three months later, the case remains P1/S1 with the status "in progress (accepted)." Google hasn't assigned a CVE or issued a fix. O'Leary didn't receive any reward for his research. [...] "This is a pattern," O'Leary told [The Register]. "This is just how these trillion-dollar companies deal with people like me. In my day job, we use GKE, and it's incredibly frustrating on my end, when I find a critical vulnerability in the system that's being widely used, and I can't even get the vendor to patch their own stuff." A Google spokesperson told The Register: "The issue reported does not qualify for a reward because the GCP IAM authorization bypass is only exploitable if an attacker has access to a Config Connector Service Account that's been granted the Organization Admin role by the organization (i.e., it is privileged). Additionally, an attacker would first need to gain entry to an organization's environment (e.g., an exposed container) in order to leverage the privileged Config Connector instance and execute commands with administrative authority, such as the IAM bypass. Granting this level of access to the Config Connector Service Account goes against Google Cloud's publicly shared best practices and the principle of least privilege."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Achieves a maximum speed of 16Gbps per pin with improvements in both performance and efficiency
SEOUL, South Korea, June 18, 2026 — SK hynix Inc. has announced that it has shipped samples of HBM4E, a next-generation DRAM for AI, to major customers.
“The company was able to deliver samples of the 12-stack HBM4E on schedule thanks to its advanced HBM development and production expertise for HBM,” said SK hynix, adding that “We will work closely with partners for mass production in a timely manner.”
The 12-layer HBM4E shows improvements in both performance and power efficiency. The product features a maximum data processing speed of 16Gbps per pin and power efficiency that is up more than 20 percent from previous models. These enhancements improve data processing capabilities for AI training and inference.
The HBM4E reduces data transfer latency through its latest interface and design optimization while maintaining stable operation in high-bandwidth environments. This enables customers to increase efficiency in processing data for AI data centers and large-scale computing systems.
SK hynix utilizes Advanced MR-MUF technology for HBM4E products to achieve a 48GB capacity in a 12-layer stack while ensuring structural stability. In particular, the company has also improved heat resistance by 17 percent, compared to the preceding HBM4, enabling stable operation of memory chips in high-performance computing environments.
SK hynix has successfully supplied optimized memory solutions to customers based on its expertise in the mass production and supply of HBM3, HBM3E, and HBM4. Leveraging its market-proven product reliability and supply capabilities, the company will support the development of next-generation infrastructure while helping address AI system bottlenecks.
“SK hynix has laid the foundation to strengthen its AI leadership with HBM4E based on its market-leading technological capabilities and manufacturing expertise,” said Ahn Hyun, President and Chief Development Officer, adding, “Through close collaboration with our partners, we will deliver the value needed in the market while reinforcing our technology leadership as a full-stack AI memory creator.”
About SK hynix Inc.
SK hynix Inc., headquartered in Korea, is the world’s top-tier semiconductor supplier offering Dynamic Random Access Memory chips (“DRAM”) and flash memory chips (“NAND flash”) for a wide range of distinguished customers globally. The Company’s shares are traded on the Korea Exchange, and the Global Depository shares are listed on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange.
Source: SK hynix
The post SK hynix Ships 12-Stack HBM4E Samples to Major AI Customers appeared first on HPCwire.
Award-winning research unveiled at ICDE 2026 could help scientists, businesses and AI systems analyze complex data faster and more efficiently across multiple database platforms.
June 18, 2026 — Researchers at the University of California San Diego have developed a new system designed to solve one of modern computing’s growing challenges: how to efficiently analyze data spread across multiple types of databases.

Xiuwen Zheng started her research at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) as a CSE M.S. student and then continued into the Ph.D. program at CSE. She was co-advised by Amarnath Gupta of SDSC and Arun Kumar of CSE and Halıcıoğlu Data Science Institute (HDSI), which is part of the Halıcıoğlu School of Data Science and Computing.
The team’s paper, MICRO: A Lightweight Middleware for Optimizing Cross-Store Cross-Model Graph-Relation Joins, won the Best Paper Award at the 2026 IEEE International Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE), one of the field’s leading conferences.
Today, organizations rarely store all of their data in a single system. Traditional relational databases manage structured information such as financial transactions and medical records, while graph databases specialize in mapping relationships between entities — an increasingly important capability for applications such as fraud detection, cybersecurity, recommendation engines and scientific knowledge graphs.
But querying data across both platforms is often slow, expensive and technically difficult, especially when a query requires data movement across platforms.
“Our work addresses a problem affecting industries ranging from healthcare and finance to scientific computing and artificial intelligence,” said lead author Xiuwen Zheng, a doctoral graduate from the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering Department of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE).
To address that challenge, Zheng and her collaborators developed MICRO, a lightweight middleware platform that enables relational and graph databases to work together more efficiently without requiring organizations to rebuild existing infrastructure.
“Instead of forcing all data into a single platform, MICRO intelligently coordinates how queries run across multiple systems,” Zheng said. “The middleware analyzes workloads, determines where operations should execute and optimizes how data moves between graph and relational stores.”
The result is faster, more efficient analytics across increasingly complex data environments — an advance with significant implications for high performance computing, AI and data-intensive scientific research.
Modern scientific workflows routinely combine diverse forms of information, including simulation outputs, sensor streams, metadata catalogs and relationship-based knowledge graphs. Fields such as fusion energy research and drug discovery all depend on connecting structured datasets with complex networks of relationships.
AI systems face similar challenges. Large language models, recommendation engines and autonomous agents increasingly rely on interconnected data ecosystems rather than isolated databases. As data volumes continue to grow, efficiently linking these specialized systems has become a major bottleneck.
Rather than replacing existing databases, MICRO is designed to improve interoperability across heterogeneous and distributed data systems. The approach reflects a broader shift in modern computing, where organizations increasingly rely on specialized tools working together instead of one-size-fits-all platforms.
“By reducing the complexity of cross-system analytics, our goal is for systems like MICRO to help scientists and organizations spend less time managing infrastructure and more time extracting insights from data,” Zheng said.
MICRO is part of a longer research arc at UC San Diego known as Project AWESOME to help domain scientists analyze large multi-model social media datasets and later extended to applications in cybersecurity and beyond. The path to ICDE 2026 was not a straight line: the broader line of work faced multiple close rejections at major database venues before this paper was recognized.
“Xiuwen soldiered on, resolutely believing in the project vision, demonstrating technical creativity, and delivering on its potential,” said CSE and HDSI Associate Professor Arun Kumar about the work’s trajectory. “Her tale of perseverance is one I hope is helpful to students and researchers everywhere. This work also exemplifies the interdisciplinary research ethos across SDSC, HDSI and CSE. I am excited to see more such fruitful interdisciplinary collaborations across campus spanning engineering, the sciences, and the new Halıcıoğlu School of Data Science and Computing.”
SDSC Research Scientist Amarnath Gupta, who leads Project AWESOME, added that collaborations with domain scientists — including Professor Molly Roberts in Political Science and HDSI, whose group works with large-scale social media data — were instrumental in surfacing the cross-store, cross-model challenges that MICRO ultimately addresses. The project is supported by the National Science Foundation.
Xiuwen Zheng received her Ph.D. and M.S. from UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering CSE Department in 2025 and 2019, respectively. Her Ph.D. work was co-advised by her publication co-authors Amarnath Gupta of SDSC and Arun Kumar of CSE and HDSI.
Source: Kimberly Mann Bruch, UCSD
The post UC San Diego Researchers Win Best Paper Award for New Approach to Connecting Complex Data Systems appeared first on HPCwire.
Donald Trump is claiming his Iran peace plan is a victory for Washington, despite the 14-point agreement revealing significant concessions to Tehran. Under the deal, Iran will reopen the strait of Hormuz in exchange for sanctions relief and the release of frozen assets, while talks will continue over the fate of Iran’s nuclear programme. Nosheen Iqbal speaks to the Guardian diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour
Continue reading...Detectives with the Newark Police Division of the city’s Department of Public Safety went undercover to infiltrate protests outside U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Delaney Hall detention facility earlier this month, according to court records obtained by The Intercept.
At the June 3 protests outside the detention center sparked by a hunger strike inside, detectives in plainclothes worked alongside uniformed officers to arrest Samuel Becker, a protester alleged to have thrown items into a fire days earlier, according to a criminal complaint.
The protests had taken place for nearly a month outside Delaney Hall, a privately run ICE facility located on an industrial corridor in Newark, New Jersey, where detainees and their families have complained of poor conditions and retaliation by staff.
“The use of plainclothes officers presents the concern of people constantly being surveilled when they are engaging in First Amendment-protected activity.”
The operation was strictly aimed at arresting Becker, 30, who is accused of dragging a tarp into a fire during a raucous protest several days earlier, according to the complaint filed in Newark Municipal Court by police officer Elddy Torres.
“A PLAN WAS DEVISED TO DEPLOY TWO UNDERCOVER NEWARK POLICE DETECTIVES TO MONITOR AND REPORT REAL TIME INFORMATION TO SURVEILLANCE UNITS,” Torres wrote, describing what happened after Becker was identified. “AS THE UNDERCOVER DETECTIVES REMAINED WITHIN THE CROWD, BECKER WAS OBSERVED COORDINATING PROTESTERS PAST THE BARRICADED PROTEST ZONE.”
Law enforcement presence at protests can have a chilling effect, said Amol Sinha, the executive director of the New Jersey chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, who declined to discuss the specifics of the arrest, with which he was not familiar. The psychological effect of undercover officers — and the fear of undercovers — stands out as especially problematic.
“The use of plainclothes officers presents the concern of people constantly being surveilled when they are engaging in First Amendment-protected activity,” Sinha told The Intercept. “These are moments that should be celebrated as part of democracy and not viewed through the lens of suspicion.”
While the use of undercover officers at protests is not unusual, advocates said the tactic could raise questions about suppression of speech if the aim goes beyond keeping the peace, according to Aedan Neary, a defense attorney in Kearny, who is not involved in the case.
“The concern arises out of the question of, at what point do the actions of these undercover agents become a pressure tactic as opposed to a law enforcement tactic?” Neary told The Intercept. “Is this being used to ensure that things remain peaceful? Or is this more about gathering intelligence?”
The arrest and police report also raise thorny questions about cooperation between ICE and local authorities, which is prohibited for immigration matters by a New Jersey state law passed in March.
According to Becker and two eyewitnesses to the arrest, ICE agents led the ambush that led to Becker’s detention and initially took him into custody.
“An ICE agent chased and grabbed me and quickly handed me over to an NPD officer,” Becker told The Intercept in a written statement. “The NPD officer brought me back over to the other side of the street and sat me down on the side of the ICE minivan that led the ambush.”
“An ICE agent chased and grabbed me and quickly handed me over to an NPD officer.”
While Newark police and Becker’s accounts align on basic details — such as the time and location of the arrest behind Delaney Hall, where protesters had gone to monitor vehicle traffic in and out of the facility — the complaint by Torres, the officer, says the arrest was the work of Newark police with the support of Essex County Police, omitting ICE’s role.
“ONE OF THE NPD UNDERCOVER DETECTIVES ADVISED US THAT THE GROUP WAS PLANNING TO LIGHT THE DUMPSTER ON FIRE AND PUSH IT IN THE REAR FENCE EXIT. A PLAN WAS DEVISED TO INTERRUPT THE GROUPS CONDUCT AND DISPERSE THEM BEFORE THEY COULD HURT ANYONE OR CAUSE ANY DAMAGE,” said Torres’s complaint. “NUMEROUS NPD DETECTIVES AND ESSEX COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE SWAT PERSONNEL RESPONDED TO THE AREA TO MOVE THE GROUP ALONG.”
At least one of the vehicles that arrived in the convoy to make the arrest, Becker told The Intercept, was driven by ICE agents, converging on the group at the rear of Delaney Hall.
According to Becker, his interaction with that initial ICE agent making the arrest indicated some degree of intelligence sharing between federal authorities and local police.
“As I was surrounded by ICE agents and the arresting officer, one of the ICE agents accused me of [setting a] fire a different night,” Becker told The Intercept in a statement. “The ICE agent’s words matched the language NPD used when it put out a statement about my arrest the next day.”
In a statement made in a Facebook post announcing Becker’s arrest, Newark Public Safety Director Emanuel Miranda said, “He was identified by Newark Police as the individual responsible for setting a dumpster fire during the weekend protest at Delaney Hall and also attempting to start a second fire there on Wednesday night.”
The two eyewitnesses, who asked for anonymity for fear of retribution, confirmed Becker’s account of the arrest in interviews with The Intercept.
While no law in New Jersey prohibits local police from cooperating with ICE on non-immigration matters, such collaboration has become a hot button for Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, who oversaw a zealous crackdown on protests outside the facility despite publicly opposing President Donald Trump’s deportation blitz.
The recent sanctuary law prohibits New Jersey police from assisting immigration agents in enforcement of federal immigration law, but leaves room for exceptions, including the enforcement of state criminal law.
The ACLU’s Sinha said that his organization had pushed for a broader version of the law that would have prohibited any collaboration between police and ICE.
“This is why we were advocating for an end to collaboration, period,” said Sinha. “We wanted to make sure that there was no instance of collaboration between immigration enforcement and law enforcement, and the fuller version of the law that did not ultimately make its way through the legislature would have prevented that sort of collaboration.”
Catherine Adams, a spokesperson for Miranda, the public safety director, told The Intercept, “To ensure that public safety is provided to peaceful protesters in accordance with their First Amendment rights, and for the safety of other members of the public, as well as the Officers at Delaney Hall, we deploy plainclothes officers, cameras, drones, etc., to identify those at the protest site who unlawfully damage property, start fires, or commit other crimes.”
Demonstrations outside Delaney Hall were relatively small but attracted attention due to the ferocious responses from ICE agents and employees of GEO Group, the private prison firm that operates the jail.
Over the course of several weeks, ICE agents repeatedly charged protesters in an effort to clear them from the entrance to allow vehicles to move in and out of the facility, often deploying batons, pepper spray, and pepper balls against demonstrators, as well as taking some into custody.
Becker suffered an injury during a charge by ICE agents, when one agent swung a baton so hard that it fractured Becker’s shoulder, according to his account. On the night of his arrest, Becker’s arm was in a sling.
After initially keeping a wide berth from the clashes, state and local police operating under orders from Baraka and New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill — both of whom are Democrats who have spoken out against ICE crackdowns — involved themselves in policing the protesters in late May. The scene immediately became even more volatile, with police firing tear-gas canisters, charging protesters on horseback, and kettling dozens of protesters for mass arrest.
On May 31, Baraka instituted a curfew in the vicinity of Delaney Hall, and Newark police set up barricades to keep protesters more than half a mile away from the facility for several days. In the weeks since the curfew ended, protests have continued sporadically, but with less intensity or energy as in the initial weeks.
Baraka has repeatedly sought to minimize the city’s role in policing the protests, claiming he was trying to “bring down the temperature,” not bring an end to protests. That posture eventually shifted.
“It is not the responsibility of the Newark Police Division to secure a private facility,” Baraka said in a June 4 statement. “Our intention was never to protect Delaney Hall or HSI” — ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations division — “but to bring calm. It is a clear contradiction to the city’s position with GEO group to remain there.”
For Becker and many other protesters, the presence of police from various agencies in New Jersey were a godsend to ICE and GEO Group — not to public safety.
“State and local police ramped up their repression of the protestors because ICE agents were having an increasingly difficult time carrying out their daily operations at Delaney Hall by themselves,” Becker said. “Without the ramped-up support of the state and local police, ICE and GEO would have continued to encounter growing difficulty suppressing the strike and operating the concentration camp.”
The post Undercover Cops Infiltrated Delaney Hall ICE Protest to Spy and Make Arrest appeared first on The Intercept.
When a spouse dies with debt, creditors could still come calling. Here's what surviving spouses should know.
Parents and their kids, new and old fans and a few celebrities gathered to honor the team’s NBA Championship
Thousands of Knicks fans – decked out in blue and orange jerseys, shorts, hats, necklaces and more – gathered in downtown New York City on Thursday to celebrate the team’s NBA championship in a lively ticker-tape parade.
All along Church Street, the street running parallel to the parade route, fans lit joints, threw back shots of Fireball whiskey and drank Coronas, within view of bemused and outnumbered New York City police officers. Some fans climbed atop police cruisers and posed for photos.
Continue reading...It isn't easy being green: The UK's net zero trilemma Audio sseth.drupal@c…
In this episode of Independent Thinking, our experts discuss the decline of the cross-party consensus on net zero.
Can Labour’s prized plans to decarbonize power generation by 2050 withstand growing demands for extra defence spending – an acrimonious argument that has already claimed two senior defence ministers? Or pressure to preserve and extend welfare benefits from the party’s left and the unions, many of whom see net zero as a job killer? Plus: China’s colossal subsidization of green technology has created a surplus of cheap equipment for clean power. Would Britain be wise to take advantage?
Bronwen Maddox is joined by Pelin Zorlu and Chris Aylett of Chatham House’s Climate and Energy team, plus special guest Archie Hall, acting economics editor of The Economist.
Produced by Podmasters for Chatham House, with thanks to Stephen Farrell and Sara Seth.
Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.
More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Explore our other Chatham House podcasts.
President Donald Trump has touted more than $500 billion in prescription drug savings over 10 years from his policies. But the savings are largely aspirational, and not based on the more limited actions the administration has taken so far.
The administration’s most favored nation policy seeks to bring down drug prices to levels paid in other countries. The bulk of the savings, estimated in a May 5 report by the White House Council of Economic Advisers, comes from assuming that all new drugs will be sold in the U.S. at MFN prices going forward, saving $529 billion. A smaller amount of savings, $64.3 billion, comes from applying MFN pricing to Medicaid.

“People are saving a lot of money,” Trump said at a May 18 event announcing the addition of more drugs to TrumpRx, the administration’s website directing people to cash prices for prescription drugs. “Over the next 10 years, the Council of Economic Advisers estimates that our most favored nation drug policies will save Americans over $500 billion. And this has been the greatest breakthrough in lowering healthcare costs in modern history.”
“Think about the $600 billion of savings to the average American over the next 10 years,” Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said on June 2 at an event announcing further additions to the TrumpRx website, while calling on Congress to codify MFN pricing.
“It’s just a massive number that they voluntarily, sort of, gave back because the president went after them and said: ‘You got to deal with this problem,’” Oz continued, referring to the president’s negotiations with drug companies.
There isn’t evidence that drug companies have agreed to give back $600 billion in savings to Americans, much less savings that will go to “average” Americans. So far, the administration has made voluntary deals with 17 drug companies to lower drug prices. The White House and the companies have reported commitments to launch new drugs at MFN prices, as well as to offer MFN prices to states for Medicaid. However, the details of the deals have not been disclosed, and some companies have reported that they end after three years.
“Right now we just have a lot more questions than we have answers, and that makes it really difficult to assess the validity or accuracy or even ballpark-ness of this very large estimate of savings in the White House report,” Juliette Cubanski, vice president and director of the Program on Medicare Policy at the health policy organization KFF, told us. She added that it’s difficult even to evaluate the impact of the current voluntary deals given a lack of answers to key questions, such as “how many of these manufacturers’ drugs are subject to MFN pricing.”
When asked for more details on what has been done so far to achieve the savings in the report, White House spokesperson Kush Desai told us that “the research report lays out all of the assumptions underlying this analysis.” CMS did not respond to our request for comment.
The hundreds of billions in savings calculated in the CEA report do not come from offering people discounts on TrumpRx. As we’ve written previously, the prices on the site for brand-name drugs negotiated under the administration’s voluntary deals only represent savings for individuals in a few specific situations, such as when paying for fertility or weight loss drugs not covered by insurance, since many people will get better prices by using insurance rather than paying in cash. The CEA analysis only attempted to calculate 10-year savings from TrumpRx for Americans paying for fertility treatments, estimating these savings at $4.6 billion.
TrumpRx also recently started pointing people toward existing websites to access discounts on generic drugs. But as the CEA analysis itself acknowledged, generics are already cheaper in the U.S. than in other high-income countries, and they are not a target of MFN policies.
The U.S. does generally pay more for brand-name drugs than other nations. Prices in 2022 for these drugs were more than three times higher in the U.S. than in other high-income nations after adjusting for rebates, according to an analysis from the research organization RAND. But it is not clear how policies aiming to equalize drug prices will play out. As we have written previously, the president has repeatedly claimed broad victories over drug prices, even though they are hardly a done deal. There are significant uncertainties with his MFN approach, which still requires legislative action to further implement.
“We’ve seen no indication from pharma, from other key stakeholders, that this $600 billion number is real,” Jeromie Ballreich, an associate professor in the department of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told us, saying that one would expect companies to disclose to shareholders such an impact, which would be about 10% of U.S. pharmaceutical company revenue. “You would hear it outside of the White House, because $600 billion is, as Trump would say, huge.”
Experts told us that it is difficult to evaluate the estimated nearly $600 billion in savings without more information on the president’s current or future MFN policies.
“This report is partly a report and mostly a press release,” Joseph Antos, a senior fellow emeritus at the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute, told us, adding that it is not possible to do an independent analysis based on the information provided.
Andrew Mulcahy, a senior health economist at RAND, told us that the hundreds of billions in savings are theoretically possible with a broad MFN policy but he said the administration’s actions so far only have “semblances” of accomplishing such a policy.
“Other countries’ prices are much lower than ours, and if policies are designed to piggyback on those prices, you can get savings in this order of magnitude,” he said. “That said, I don’t think that what’s happened so far — or plans for what will happen in the future — will align with that estimate in the CEA report for a variety of reasons.”
One key question is the length of the voluntary deals the administration has made with drug companies.
To get to nearly $600 billion in savings, the “key assumption” is that MFN pricing “will be implemented through legislation and affect all new product launches going forward,” Jens Grueger, a partner at Boston Consulting Group and affiliate professor at the University of Washington, told us in an email. The deals, however, appear to be limited to Trump’s time in office, he said.
Filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission from some of the companies have indicated the deals are limited overall, with two companies specifying they only last three years, STAT reported.

“It’s very unclear how you can estimate savings over a 10-year period based on deals that we understand to be lasting only for three years, unless you assume that Congress will actually codify MFN pricing,” Cubanski said. Meanwhile, she added, many Republicans in Congress even oppose legislation that allows the government to negotiate drug prices, much less price-setting.
Rena Conti, a health economist at Boston University Questrom School of Business, told us that the assumption of MFN legislation was “hypothetical at best, as there is no movement in Congress to pass legislation.”
A second question is what exactly the companies agreed to in their commitments to price newly launched drugs at MFN prices. As we’ve said, the bulk of the savings — $529 billion — estimated in the report come from assuming new drugs will be broadly offered at MFN prices over 10 years.
While Trump has claimed his administration has achieved the lowest drug prices in the world, the CEA report explained that his administration’s MFN pricing policies ask that companies offer U.S. payers the second-lowest drug prices among those paid in a small collection of countries: the G-7 nations, plus Switzerland and Denmark. The approach uses net prices after adjusting for gross domestic product per capita in comparison to the U.S., the report said.
The CEA report estimated the 10-year savings from new drug launches at MFN prices by comparing historical prices in these countries between 2021 and 2025 and imagining that this MFN policy had been applied, the report explained. (The analysis omitted Denmark due to a lack of data.) The White House economists then extended their estimate to 10 years, assuming a 3% growth rate.
In coming up with the hundreds of billions of dollars in savings, the CEA report “essentially said it’s going to be the second-lowest price out of the reference basket,” said Ballreich, the pharmaceutical policy researcher from Johns Hopkins. “There’s a number of question marks about whether or not these drug companies that came and met with the White House and did this agreement actually agreed to this.”
Some of the White House announcements of the deals specify commitments companies have made to provide MFN prices on “all new innovative” or “all new” medicines. However, SEC filings have sometimes indicated limitations, saying that companies agreed to “price certain future medicines” at or below MFN levels or mentioning “certain exceptions” to promises to price new products at these levels.
Three companies recently declined to tell STAT whether three new drugs would be launched at MFN prices.
There are similar questions about the $64.3 billion in estimated savings for Medicaid.
Press releases on the voluntary deals with drug companies indicate that the companies will provide MFN prices to state Medicaid programs for at least some drugs. CMS is launching GENEROUS, a voluntary Medicaid initiative running five years, and the companies that have signed deals are expected to participate for at least some of this time, according to a May 8 analysis from KFF. However, the KFF analysis said that it is unclear how many drugmakers and states will ultimately participate in GENEROUS and for how long, as well as which drugs will be included.
The prices states pay for Medicaid drugs are not publicly disclosed, but they are generally already the lowest in the U.S., researchers have previously told us, making it difficult to assess whether the MFN deals will be better than existing Medicaid prices.
“It feels very difficult to believe that companies are actually giving up a good chunk of revenue with these deals,” Mulcahy said. “What seems far more likely is that they are finding a way to formalize the discounts they are already offering” to Medicaid.
Ballreich said that in a study that has not yet been published, he and his colleagues had estimated savings in the first year of the GENEROUS program at “just about a third” of what the CEA report projected for that timeframe. His group’s estimate assumed complete participation in GENEROUS by drug companies and states but also attempted to take into account some mechanisms Medicaid already has to reduce drug prices.
Even assuming the Trump administration enacted policies to require all drug companies to offer MFN prices to all payers, it’s not clear how much money the U.S. would save. MFN policies could affect global drug prices in ways the report did not take into account.
Trump has suggested that companies would make up for losses in revenue in the U.S. by increasing prices in other countries. However, researchers expressed skepticism that other high-income countries would agree to significantly higher prices.
In addition, Antos of AEI pointed out that MFN policies could lead some drugs to never make it to market. “I don’t believe they try to take into account the effects of this process on future innovation,” he said, referring to the CEA estimate.
A June 10 release from the White House listing Trump’s “recent wins” said his MFN initiative was “projected to save Americans $500 billion over the next decade while protecting innovation and expanding access.”
Cubanski, however, said that if the report is correct, and prices fall some 30%, “we’d be looking at a pretty significant hit to revenues for pharmaceutical companies, and that could translate to somewhat less innovation, or maybe significantly less innovation.”
The estimate also doesn’t take into account how drugmakers and other countries might push back against the policies.
The CEA report “assumes that companies continue launching products in reference countries and that prices in these countries would converge towards US prices,” Grueger said. He suggested that this could happen for some products “that address a high unmet medical need and provide transformative benefits for patients.” Other countries consider benefits to patients relative to costs in determining what they will pay for drugs.
“However, for the majority of products this will be difficult to achieve, and companies might consider not launching these products outside the US to protect US prices,” Grueger said, citing recent statements from pharmaceutical executives suggesting such delays. “As a consequence, lower prices in reference countries would not be available and prices in the US would not drop as much as projected in the CEA report.”
“Not only would you potentially impede access to new medications in other countries, but we wouldn’t end up with lower prices here in the US either,” Cubanski said. She added that it is already typical for drugs to launch in the U.S. before they are in other countries, making it difficult to figure out how to set an MFN price for new drugs in the first place.
The researchers also questioned the administration’s ability to assess whether companies had fulfilled promises to offer drugs at MFN prices.
Companies provide list prices for drugs, but these are rarely paid. The CEA analysis said that drugmakers will report net prices, taking into account various forms of discounts. But experts said it was unclear how the government will independently evaluate these prices.
“The government obviously can try to compel [drug companies] to report this information, and there is some wording in there about auditing, but I don’t know how you audit something when you don’t have full disclosure or any basis for really determining in a systematic way whether numbers are correct or not,” Antos said.
Antos called it “telling” that the CEA analysis itself does not rely on net prices for its analysis. Rather, the report says, because of “the confidential nature of rebates, there are no existing data sets with net pricing information.”
Mulcahy explained that instead, the data the CEA used has gross prices a healthcare data company derives using complicated and varying methodologies in different countries. In general, he said, the numbers are based on invoices at various stages of the drug supply. He said that this dataset is the “best we’ve got” and is what he and his colleagues at RAND have used for international comparisons of drug prices, but it has limitations.
“If you can put whatever number down you want on an invoice and then negotiate something secret later, you can make it look like you’re saving a ton of money,” Mulcahy said, expressing concern that the MFN pricing deals would incentivize even more secrecy about international drug prices.
“I think there will be ways to hide discounts and backchannel funds for this,” Ballreich said, suggesting various ways drugmakers could give money back to payers outside the U.S. For example, they could institute rebates or taxes that are not drug-specific. He also said that drugmakers will be restricted from disclosing the true price of their drugs in other countries due to confidentiality agreements and laws in those countries.
“If you want to make a claim about how launch prices are going to change or if a company wants to promise to change launch prices … that’s easy to fudge,” Mulcahy said. “And then you find creative ways on the back end to make yourself whole again.”
“It’s kind of like everyone wins except for consumers,” he added.
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 The Shaky Assumptions Behind Trump’s Over $500 Billion in Projected Drug Savings appeared first on FactCheck.org.
The Obama Presidential Center, museum and library opens in Chicago with a star-studded grand opening ceremony and public watch party on Midway Plaisance.
‘Mastermind’ Dawie Groenewald given fine of 2m rand or four-year jail term almost 16 years after arrest
Two traffickers of rhino horns have been sentenced by a South African court in what police said was the world’s largest such case, partly bringing to an end an almost two-decade legal saga.
Dawie Groenewald and Tielman Erasmus had faced more than 1,700 charges ranging from illegally hunting and dehorning rhinos to racketeering and money laundering.
Continue reading...With sanctions-relief and a US promise to avoid further meddling, the conflict has been settled on Tehran’s terms
Donald Trump is running fast to escape the catastrophic war on Iran that he and Benjamin Netanyahu started four months ago. He is saying anything that appears to suit the moment. In fact, he clearly feels he can now ditch his friend, the Israeli prime minister. He is offering Tehran’s military regime a $300bn rebuilding fund, an end to economic sanctions and a promise not to interfere in its internal affairs. All this is declared a “major win”. If so, fine. The next 60 days of negotiations will be tortuous and unpredictable. But at least they are pointing in a plausible – and hopefully irreversible – direction.
For once, a US president seems ready to accept defeat in a potentially forever war before it gets out of hand. Iran is not to be another Vietnam, Afghanistan or Iraq. More than that, in the course of the past week, Trump seems to have soured on America’s closest ally. Furious at Netanyahu’s ceaseless bombing of Lebanon, he remarked: “You don’t have to knock down an apartment house every time you’re looking for somebody” – somebody to kill, that is – because “there are a lot of people in those apartment houses and they’re not all Hezbollah”. For all this moral grandstanding, Trump’s military forces, along with Israel, have killed more than 3,300 Iranians, according to the country’s authorities – among them more than 100 children in a girls’ school – and injured many more.
Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...All you need to take to the virtual skies now is a browser.
The Supreme Court on Thursday ruled in favor of a Texas man who challenged a federal law that bars certain drug users from having firearms.
The recall follows multiple incidents in which Waymo robotaxis drove past ramp-closure signs and into freeway construction zones.
Tornadoes were reported in Illinois, Iowa and several other states Wednesday as severe weather slammed a large swath of the Midwest and Southeast.
The national average for a gallon of regular gas in the U.S. drops to $3.99, the lowest since March 30.
After weeks of intensifying bombing of Kyiv, Ukraine hit back with a swarm of drones, damaging buildings and igniting an oil refinery.
The United States will review force levels and is immediately cutting the number of assets it would activate for the continent in a crisis.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from MacRumors: Apple is raising its prices to offset the high cost of memory and storage, CEO Tim Cook told The Wall Street Journal. Apple is no longer able to absorb the increased prices and will need to pass some of the cost on to consumers. "Unfortunately, price increases are unavoidable," said Cook. "We're doing our best to mitigate the huge increases that are being passed to us, and we've been trying to shield our customers from the increases, but the situation has become unsustainable." Growing demand for memory and storage chips from AI companies has led to chip shortages and higher costs. The Wall Street Journal suggests Apple will need to increase device costs "substantially" to maintain its current profit margins given the cost of memory chips and SSDs. Research firm TechInsights claims Apple will need to make the iPhone 18 Pro around $270 more expensive to keep its existing profit margin. Apple is struggling more with memory chips, but storage chips are also an issue. "There's less supply at a time when consumers want devices and the memory guys are passing along huge price increases," Cook told The Wall Street Journal. Cook said Apple will use its cash to increase memory supply, but he did not give details on what that means. Apple does not plan to create its own memory and storage factories. "We can't do everything," Cook said. "We know what we're good at." Cook likened the memory shortages to a hundred-year flood. "I've never seen anything like it in any area in over 40 years," he said. Further reading: Smartphone Market To Shrink 15% This Year Due To Memory Crisis
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A prospecting company’s search for gold has the town of Lone Pine and Indigenous leaders on edge, as the Trump administration greenlights new projects across the American west
Lone Pine, population 1,882, lies along a stretch of California highway framed by the vast Inyo mountains and a sweeping desert landscape of sagebrush and dunes.
It’s the type of small town tourists drive through en route to Death Valley; where hikers get a motel room between Pacific Crest Trail treks. But amid the quiet downtown strip of bars and shops, there are signs of a battle brewing under the town’s sleepy surface.
Continue reading...Bubbles is a smoother, more intuitive way to multitask on Pixel phones, and I'm loving it already.
Hi all, I've owned my dear pintx since it launched and have a humble 1300 miles on it. I mostly ride around for fun and run nearby errands. I have enjoyed every mile on it but thinking it's time to get another board.
Any suggestions or recommendations? Mileage has never been an issue but occasionally wished for more foot room and steadyness and slight more torque.
Any help is appreciated
Cook is at the center of a supreme court case focused on whether Trump’s firing of her from the Fed board was legal
The Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook faced more than $1.3m in legal and security fees after coming under attack from the Trump administration, according to ethics disclosures that were filed on Wednesday.
The White House targeted Cook last summer as Donald Trump ramped up his unprecedented campaign to push the Fed to cut interest rates.
Continue reading...Plan is admission US could not achieve what it sought through war as red line after red line has been erased
Only a man with an unparalleled ignorance of history such as Donald Trump would have signed America’s peace treaty with Iran at Versailles, the byword for national humiliation. And only a man with an impish sense of humour such as Emmanuel Macron would have suggested it.
It is easy to cast Trump in the role of the humiliated and hurt German count Ulrich von Brockdorff-Rantzau. The treaty of Versailles, after all, was based on 14 points, just as the memorandum of understanding has 14 clauses.
Continue reading...Funds meant for Secret Service were transferred to project president promised would be financed by private donations
Donald Trump’s administration has quietly redirected $352m in federal funds designated for the Secret Service toward the president’s controversial White House ballroom project, despite repeated promises by Trump that the construction would be financed by private donations
The funds were drawn from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Trump’s signature tax legislation passed last summer on Republican-only votes. The law stipulates the money may only be spent on Secret Service personnel, training facilities, technology and related costs, not construction.
Continue reading...Data shows that the increase in at-home living stems from high housing costs rather than labor market conditions
A record number of the US’s young adults were living with their parents last year, according to new data from Realtor.com, as high housing costs pushed the milestone of independent living out of reach.
A third of young adults between the ages of 25 and 35 – 25.2 million people – were living with their parents in 2025. Of those, 70% had jobs, and many held college degrees, highlighting that the increase in at-home living stems from high housing costs rather than labor market conditions.
Continue reading...Education secretary cites admissions data for England since tax imposed showing falling applications to state sector
Adding VAT to private school fees has failed to trigger an exodus of pupils into the state sector despite widespread speculation that it would, the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, has said.
The Labour government applied 20% VAT to private school fees from the start of 2025. They had previously been exempt from the tax. Newly published admissions data for England showed there had been no influx towards state schools since then.
Continue reading...The Trump administration expects to try to revoke the U.S. citizenship of more than 250 foreign-born citizens by October, a Justice Department official said.
Labour and Tories claimed Green party leader breached London assembly ethics code over non-payment of tax
Zack Polanski has been cleared by an ethics inquiry looking into complaints that he did not pay council tax while living on a houseboat.
A report by the Greater London authority’s monitoring officer found that the circumstances of the Green party leader’s living arrangements were beyond its scope and he had therefore not breached the code of conduct for London assembly members.
Continue reading...Bankruptcy could shield many retirement assets, but the level of protection it offers depends on the account.
Andy Burnham hopes a successful byelection will mean he can encourage Keir Starmer to step aside as prime minister
The trial of two Russian-linked arsonists who targeted property connected to Keir Starmer shows that the UK is under attack from bad actors who want to “exploit division” and “destabilise our democracy”, the prime minister has said.
Roman Lavrynovych, 22, from Ukraine, and Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, from Romania, were found guilty on Monday of conspiring to carry out arson attacks on property linked to the prime minister, and appear to have operated under the instruction of an online handler with links to Russia.
Continue reading...Ukraine’s president ramps up rhetoric after overnight drone strikes on Russian capital
Hegseth makes it clear that the review will not be just a box-ticking exercise.
“It’s a review that some countries will fail and others will pass with flying colours. In the end, the review is intended to both improve US force posture and basing and strengthen Nato 3.0.”
“It will be designed to ensure that Nato is moving fast and irreversibly toward Europe leading, stepping up to take primary responsibility for the defence of Europe.”
“Where other allies do not spend with urgency, our dues, contributions will go down. Nato will be a two-way street.”
Continue reading...Peter Wai and Bill Yuen sentenced to 10 and eight years at Old Bailey in first convictions under National Security Act
A UK Border Force officer and a Hong Kong trade official based in London have been jailed for spying for China in the first such conviction in British criminal history.
Peter Wai, who conducted “shadow policing” operations on Chinese dissidents in the UK, was sentenced to 10 years, while his handler, Bill Yuen, received an eight-year term.
Continue reading...Have $50,000 that you're looking to grow further? Here's how much interest you can earn with four different accounts.
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, including the latest UK jobs report and the Bank of England’s interest rate decision
Tesco’s UK sales growth has more than halved as it said the conflict in the Middle East had created “ongoing uncertainty for many households”, knocking its shares in early trading.
The UK’s biggest retailer said comparable sales rose 1.8% to £13.4bn in the three months to the end of May, below both the 4.2% reported in the previous quarter and the 2.3% growth City analysts had expected.
Continue reading...Andrew Bailey says ‘still inflationary pressure in pipeline’ despite US and Iran nearing peace deal as interest rates kept on hold
The governor of the Bank of England has warned consumers to expect higher costs this year as a result of the conflict in the Middle East, despite falling oil prices as the US and Iran near a peace deal.
Speaking after the Bank kept interest rates on hold at 3.75%, Andrew Bailey said there was “still some inflationary pressure in the pipeline” after the conflict pushed up energy prices.
Continue reading...Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from PetaPixel: China dominates the consumer drone market, so it is perhaps surprising that it is no longer possible to fly or even purchase a drone in Beijing. The new law that passed last month makes it illegal to buy, rent, or fly a drone without prior approval from the authorities. Users must also complete an online training session and pass a test on drone regulations. Under the new rules, drone users are also not allowed to repair or replace their drones in Beijing. Not only that, but a drone in a repair shop must be picked up in-person, rather than sent back by delivery. The BBC reports that drones must now be registered before being brought into and out of the Chinese capital. "I have to apply for permission for each flight, which is very inconvenient," drone enthusiast Steven Wang tells CNN. "And starting this year, the wait time is getting longer, and the reasons for rejection are becoming more vague." Despite China being the birthplace of the consumer drone industry, it is increasingly difficult for hobbyists to fly there. Beijing authorities say that the rules are made to "strengthen the management of unmanned aerial vehicles" and "safeguard the security of the capital."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
RAMageddon strikes again: Cook told The Wall Street Journal that rising memory prices have made current prices "unsustainable."
Miguel Díaz-Canel cites China and Vietnam as possible models for opening up the country’s economy
Cuba’s economy needs urgent changes to overcome a crisis intensified by a US oil blockade, the president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, has said in a speech to Communist party leaders.
“The situation calls for urgent and necessary changes,” Díaz-Canel told the party’s politburo in his frankest admission yet of the need to overhaul the country’s communist model.
Continue reading...Other lawmakers respond with ‘shame on you’ in heated confrontation over passing of plan to increase deportations
Rightwing MEPs have come under fire after they celebrated a vote aimed at increasing deportations across the EU with chants of “send them back”, leading other lawmakers to respond with cries of “shame on you”.
The heated confrontation in the European parliament came on Wednesday after lawmakers voted 418 to 218 to approve controversial measures aimed at increasing deportations of undocumented people.
Continue reading...You don't need a physical scanner to quickly sign, scan and send official documents -- just use the iPhone in your pocket.
In a social media post, President Trump touted the U.S. government's 10% stake in Intel, noting that it is now worth $60 billion.
PALO ALTO, Calif., June 18, 2026 — D-Wave Quantum Inc. today announced its forthcoming gate-model quantum computing simulator, which is expected to be the first of its kind designed for error-aware programming. The announcement marks the next step in D-Wave’s gate-model roadmap and comes just weeks after the Company outlined its differentiated approach to fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Built around D-Wave’s dual-rail technology, the simulator is expected to enable error-aware programming, giving developers visibility into errors so they can design applications and workflows that respond to real processor behavior. By combining error detection and real-time control, the simulator will give developers new tools and data to better understand quantum behavior, prototype quantum applications and error-correction routines and explore advanced workflows.
D-Wave will offer new quantum development bundles that provide access to its forthcoming gate-model quantum simulator and systems. Designed to support customer success, the bundles will include Starter and Premium packages, with monthly access allocations and guidance from D-Wave’s team of experts to streamline onboarding, perform flexible R&D and maximize customer value. Pricing is available upon request.
“D-Wave’s gate-model quantum simulator is an important step in bringing our gate-model roadmap to customers,” said Dr. Trevor Lanting, chief development officer at D-Wave. “What makes our approach different is that error awareness is built into the architecture through dual-rail technology, giving developers access to error-detection data and real-time control capabilities that can help them design more resilient quantum applications. This simulator is intended to help customers start building that expertise now, in advance of our forthcoming gate-model quantum systems.”
Once available in D-Wave’s Leap cloud platform, the simulator will provide a rich quantum programming toolkit with error-aware capabilities, including tools for modeling quantum processor behavior, error detection and real-time control. This includes support for up to 21 qubits, ideal and hardware emulation modes, Monte Carlo simulation of real-time quantum system dynamics and integration with familiar development tools, including D-Wave’s Ocean SDK. Access to the simulator is scheduled to begin in September 2026.
The quantum development bundles are designed to support a range of customer needs, from initial exploration to more advanced research and development. D-Wave’s simulator and systems bundles are expected to give customers the budget predictability and dedicated access needed to run more workloads, iterate more freely and accelerate quantum application progress, while helping them spend less time managing usage and more time advancing algorithm and application development.
Customers can sign up here to request future access to D-Wave’s forthcoming gate-model quantum simulator and systems.
About D-Wave Quantum Inc.
D-Wave is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum computing systems, software and services. It is the world’s first commercial supplier of quantum computers and the first and only to offer dual-platform quantum computing products and services, spanning both annealing and gate-model quantum computing technologies. D-Wave’s mission is to help customers realize the value of quantum today through enterprise-grade systems available on-premises and via its Leap quantum cloud service, which offers 99.9% availability and uptime. More than 100 organizations across commercial, government and research sectors trust D-Wave to address complex computational challenges using quantum computing. Learn more about realizing the value of quantum computing today and how D-Wave is shaping the quantum-driven industrial and societal advancements of tomorrow: www.dwavequantum.com.
Source: D-Wave
The post D-Wave to Launch Gate-Model Quantum Simulator with Dual-Rail Error Detection appeared first on HPCwire.
Love or hate Amazon, its 23-26 June Prime Day event is a good time to snag discounts on tech, fashion and more, including much-loved brands such as Anyday and Caraway
You don’t have the wait until after Turkey Day: early summer is actually one of the best times of the year to snag a deal. Amazon is kicking off its annual summer sale on 23 June, and just as Christmas songs start playing in stores two months early, the company and many other retailers are slashing prices in advance.
We’ve handpicked 31 of the best deals based on products the Filter has tested and loved in the past, including discounts on some of our favorite brands such as Field Company, Anyday and Caraway. If you want to shop at Amazon, we’ve handpicked products that are actually worth your money, and very few require a Prime subscription. If you prefer other retailers, we have oodles of those too.
Best tech deal:
AirPods Pro 3
Best home deal:
Levoit Tower Fan
The next installment of the Grand Theft Auto series is poised to dominate 2026. Here's what we know so far.
| My Onewheel GT is less than 3 weeks old… brand new board with only 130miles on it. Currently it’s already on its way back to FM, but just wanted to see what everyone’s experience has been. How quickly is this turned around and have they ever tried to void warranty for stupid reasons? [link] [comments] |
The FTC is leveraging another act to stop costly cancellation confusion, but that's not all.
A number of poorly timed announcements have forced Senate Republicans to squander carefully laid plans, exposing a widening rift within the party.
Exclusive: Event co-founded by Jordan Peterson will bring together rightwing figures, US state officials and anti-abortionists in London
Nigel Farage and fellow Reform UK MPs Sarah Pochin and Andrew Rosindell will be there. As will a plethora of Reform advisers, backroom staff and figures, such as Ben Delo, a British crypto billionaire who has given £4m to Nigel Farage’s party.
Yet as populist-right politicians from across the globe and their multimillionaire backers prepare for this year’s Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (Arc) – a rightwing London summit labelled an “anti-woke Davos” – others whose expected attendance has not been publicised potentially raises more questions.
Continue reading...Kyiv says attack, which also forced evacuation at Russia’s biggest airport, was in response to strike on historic monastery
Ukrainian drones have hit several locations across Moscow in Kyiv’s biggest air raid on the city since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion, setting a major oil refinery on fire and forcing evacuations at the country’s largest airport.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the attack as a response to Russia’s strike on a historic Kyiv monastery complex earlier this week. “We do not want this war and never did,” the Ukrainian president said in a voice message to journalists. “But if Ukraine is going to burn, your Moscow will burn too … It is time to end the aggression, time to end this war.”
Continue reading...In the early hours of January 6, 2026, two 911 callers near Ypsilanti, Michigan, reported a white van driving erratically.
Within an hour, police had found a white van, crashed into it twice on purpose, and fired 27 shots at the driver while the vehicle lay on its side, burning. At least eight cops watched as 34-year old Navy veteran John Andrew Jenuwine bled out and died inside.
Of several inconsistencies in the police response, one stood out: The only physical description provided to the dispatcher was that “two Black guys” were driving the van, and a caller said they’d brandished a handgun at his wife. Jenuwine was white, driving alone, and unarmed.
That’s not what police told Jenuwine’s parents when they contacted them the following evening, 17 hours after killing their son.
“We were told that there was an exchange of gunfire, and that John was killed,” John’s father, Larry Jenuwine, told The Intercept. “Call it naïveté or whatever you want to call it, but our first thoughts were, ‘Oh my God, what did he do, why did he cause this?’”
On the phone with Larry and Kelly, John’s mother, a deputy with the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office claimed their recently deceased son had a gun. But Jenuwine, an industrial field engineer traveling to repair million-dollar lasers, just had his work equipment; no gun was ever found in his van. And the officers who caused two intentional collisions appear to have violated their own policies, which the department updated after the police killing of George Floyd — testing the limits of post-2020 police reforms.
“We were told that there was an exchange of gunfire, and that John was killed. Come to find out, he didn’t do anything to cause any of this.”
The Jenuwine family is now suing Washtenaw County and eight sheriff’s deputies who responded to the case for wrongful death; for violating John’s constitutional rights to protection under the law, and against unreasonable searches and seizures; and for gross negligence and willful misconduct, including improper use of deadly force. The suit seeks to hold the county responsible for what it calls the sheriff’s failures to train officers and enforce its policies.
“Come to find out, he didn’t do anything to cause any of this,” Larry said. “He was not the guy that they were supposed to be chasing.”
Less than 15 minutes elapsed between the time Washtenaw County Sheriff’s deputies incorrectly identified Jenuwine’s van and when they started shooting. Officers fired their first shots seconds after causing Jenuwine’s vehicle to flip on its side and catch fire.
Only seven out of the 27 shots fired hit Jenuwine. None of them alone was responsible for killing him, according to an independent autopsy obtained by Jenuwine’s family and described by their attorneys in a press conference last week, which found he bled out and died over time. While Jenuwine struggled and died, dashcam footage shared with The Intercept recorded officers outside discussing whether any of the shots had hit him.
After several minutes had passed, one officer said over the radio, “He’s kicking around inside the vehicle right now.” None of them called for emergency services.
According to the footage, an edited version of which was viewed by The Intercept, Jenuwine lay dying in the van for at least five minutes.
“The cruelty of it, I suppose, is what strikes me the most,” said Maura Battersby, one of the attorneys representing the family. “If aid had been rendered, he may have survived this.”
Of the four deputies attorneys said fired shots, two names have been publicly released: Jacob Gombos and Jonathan Early. Both received awards in 2024 for distinguished service; Gombos got the department’s Life Saving Award.
“If aid had been rendered, he may have survived this.”
The sheriff’s office placed Gombos, Earley, and the other deputies involved on paid administrative leave pending an investigation by Michigan State Police, which was completed last month and is now pending review by the Michigan attorney general. The state AG will decide whether to bring criminal charges against any of the officers in the case.
A spokesperson for the Michigan State Police confirmed that their investigation is closed and referred questions to the attorney general’s office, which did not respond to a request for comment. Spokespeople for the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office and the Ypsilanti Police Department did not respond to requests for comment.
One of the officers who shot at Jenuwine had received the department’s Life Saving Award.
The case has brought renewed scrutiny to the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office, which is currently facing dual lawsuits from whistleblowers who claimed the department hired unqualified officers and fired them in retaliation for reporting it. Both plaintiffs are former office staff who said they were fired after raising concerns that Sheriff Alyshia Dyer and other staff pushed them to hire candidates who had lied about their qualifications and in one case had an “extensive” criminal history. Another sheriff’s deputy resigned in March while under investigation for allegedly having a sexual relationship with a subordinate officer. Dyer herself was also independently investigated last year after a partially burned cannabis cigarette was found in her county-issued vehicle. (She denied it was hers, and an independent report could not determine whether the joint belonged to Dyer.)
“It seems like every day we hear something about the Washtenaw Sheriff’s department,” Kelly Jenuwine told The Intercept. “They are in the news constantly, and it’s not for a good reason.”
Jenuwine’s killing raises a new round of questions about the efficacy of police reform. In 2024, Michigan implemented new statewide guidelines restricting vehicle pursuits to “protect the lives of innocent bystanders.” Following the police killing of George Floyd in 2020, the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s office released a memo outlining how its policies aligned with a series of proposed reforms pushed by activists against police violence that grew out of 2014 protests in Ferguson, Missouri. And the sheriff’s office adopted a new use of force policy in 2022, which classifies intentional vehicle collisions — known as a “PIT” maneuver, a precision immobilization technique — as deadly force.
“That’s something you’re trained not to do,” said Todd Flood, the lead attorney on the Jenuwines’ case.
The new policy also guides officers to “seek voluntary compliance and operate with minimal reliance on the use of force,” using techniques in crisis intervention and “rapport-building communication,” and try to de-escalate, even after using force. It requires a mandatory medical evaluation when deadly force is applied, if an officer observes an injury, or if they believe one has occurred; and it ties the degree of appropriate force to how certain they are that the subject committed a crime. The policy states: “Sheriff’s Office employees shall never employ excessive force.”
Officers did not verbally engage with Jenuwine a single time, Battersby told The Intercept.
“I would have expected them to be calling out over the loudspeaker,” Battersby said. “There were many instances in which they were in close proximity to him, and it doesn’t appear that they did that.”
At a press conference after the shooting, the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office played a dashcam video that showed Jenuwine reversing his van and driving on the wrong side of the road. Before the sheriffs hit Jenuwine’s van in the first PIT maneuver, the dashcam video cuts ahead, with the video timestamp jumping forward 30 seconds.
The Jenuwines said what they describe as John’s “execution” changed the way they look at law enforcement after having considered themselves generally supportive of police. “I want the people that executed my son to never have the opportunity to work in law enforcement again,” said Kelly.
“They ran around with those guns like they were playing video games, guns held sideways,” Larry said, referring to the dashcam footage. “I’m still struggling with this and I anticipate that’s going to be a continuing struggle.”
Despite believing the vast majority of police were “good, honest, hard-working people,” he said, “I don’t believe these guys that were involved in this shooting were. And that’s the kind of people we need to get out of that system.”
“We want to make sure that the people involved in this, in John’s death, are held accountable,” Larry said. “We’re hoping that there will be criminal charges as well, but we can’t count on that.”
Jenuwine liked to spend his time outdoors fishing and hunting with his family, his parents told The Intercept. He was on his high school football team, spent six years in the Navy, and was a member of a Detroit motorcycle club. When he was growing up, he and Larry worked on cars and tractors together.
On what would have been Jenuwine’s 35th birthday last month, his parents said they spent the evening crying over a birthday cake.
“Those officers get to go home to their families every night,” Kelly said. “What Larry and I get, we get a box of ashes and a lock of my son’s hair.”
The post Police Chased the Wrong Man, Then Shot Him and Watched as He Bled Out appeared first on The Intercept.
New capabilities include a next-generation control plane, S3 performance improvements, and native S3 object tagging planned for general availability in H2 2026
PITTSBURGH, June 18, 2026 — VDURA today announced three major advances for ISC High-Performance 2026: a next-generation multi-tenant control plane, significant S3 performance improvements and native S3 object tagging. Together, these capabilities are designed to simplify operations and accelerate data-intensive workloads at scale for AI and HPC organizations worldwide.
Planned for general availability in the second half of 2026, these advances continue VDURA’s mission to deliver the world’s most powerful data infrastructure platform for AI and HPC.
Next-Generation Control Plane: Simplified, Multi-Tenant Management for AI and HPC Environments
VDURA’s next-generation control plane, planned for general availability later this year, is purpose-built for the operational demands of modern AI and HPC environments. It introduces a modern management interface that delivers a streamlined tenant administration model, enabling platform and tenant operators to manage complex multi-tenant storage environments from an intuitive dashboard. Alongside the new UI, a REST API for key platform operations gives operators and integrators a foundation for automation and tooling workflows. Together, they significantly reduce operational overhead while preserving the depth of control that enterprise and research organizations require.
S3 Performance Improvements: Sustained Throughput for Cloud-Native AI Pipelines
VDURA is delivering targeted S3 performance improvements designed to sustain high throughput across cloud-native AI pipelines, including AI model checkpointing, inference serving, and large-scale dataset ingestion. These improvements reduce latency for S3-native operations and increase aggregate throughput for concurrent read and write workloads, ensuring the VDURA Data Platform continues to deliver the performance AI operators demand as workloads scale.
S3 Tags: Metadata-Driven Control Across the Data Lifecycle
Building on enhanced S3 performance, VDURA is also introducing native S3 object tagging support, enabling organizations to attach rich metadata to objects stored on the VDURA platform. S3 Tags unlock policy-based data lifecycle management, automated tiering workflows, and fine-grained access controls across AI training datasets, model artifacts, and scientific data collections. For HPC and AI operators managing petabyte-scale object stores, S3 Tags provide the metadata infrastructure required to enforce governance policies and manage data across its full lifecycle.
“With these new capabilities, we’re focused on making VDURA more powerful and easier to operate at every level of the organization,” said Chris Girard, Vice President of Product Management at VDURA. “The new management interface brings clarity and control to the people running VDURA day-to-day, while our expanded S3 capabilities give data engineers and AI practitioners the tools to build more sophisticated, automated data pipelines. These are the operational and integration capabilities our customers have been asking for.”
Availability
The Next-Generation Control Plane, S3 Performance Improvements, and S3 Tags are planned for general availability in the second half of 2026 for all V5000 class systems. Existing customers can upgrade in place via an online software update. Customers interested in early access are encouraged to visit VDURA at ISC 2026 or contact the VDURA sales team at vdura.com.
VDURA at ISC High Performance 2026
VDURA is exhibiting at ISC High Performance 2026 in Hamburg, Germany. Visit the VDURA booth G21 to experience these new capabilities firsthand and learn more about VDURA’s full portfolio of AI and HPC storage solutions.
About VDURA
VDURA builds the world’s most powerful data platform for AI and high-performance computing, bringing hyperscale-class storage to the rest of the world, powered by HYDRA, the only high-performance distributed architecture purpose-built to unify memory, flash and disk in a single software-defined platform that keeps GPU clusters saturated while delivering hyperscale-class durability and economics. Visit vdura.com for more information.
Source: VDURA
The post VDURA Unveils Next-Gen Control Plane and Advanced S3 Capabilities for AI and HPC at ISC 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 18, 2026 — HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd., through its wholly owned subsidiary BUZZ High Performance Computing Inc. (BUZZ HPC), today announced a landmark sovereign AI infrastructure deal involving Bell Canada and Cohere Inc., marking a significant milestone in Canada’s AI infrastructure ecosystem.
The collaboration brings together Bell AI Fabric’s national data center and connectivity platform, Cohere’s security-first enterprise-grade AI solutions and large language model capabilities, and BUZZ HPC’s NVIDIA-accelerated GPU cloud and AI factory expertise into a single, integrated Canadian AI stack. Together, the companies are delivering full-stack, production-grade sovereign AI infrastructure built in Canada, for Canadian enterprise and government customers.
BUZZ HPC has executed a three-year GPU cloud contract with a total contract value of approximately USD $220 million. Through BUZZ HPC, HIVE has procured NVIDIA AI infrastructure powered by 2,304 NVIDIA Grace Blackwell GPUs as a part of NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 rack-scale systems interconnected with NVIDIA Quantum InfiniBand scale-out networking, built to NVIDIA reference architecture standards and utilizing advanced liquid cooling.
BUZZ HPC will deploy its sovereign AI cloud and GPU cluster infrastructure at Bell’s purpose-built facility in Merritt, British Columbia. The deployment will provide the high-performance compute layer on which Cohere will operate its foundation models and enterprise AI solutions for government and corporate customers across Canada. BUZZ HPC’s AI factories are powered by renewable energy and designed for ultra-low power usage effectiveness (PUE), bringing industrial-scale GPU capacity to one of Canada’s most strategically important AI deployments.
Canada’s federal AI strategy has a clear mandate: invest in Canadian technology sovereignty and keep Canadian data secure under Canadian control. This partnership directly supports that mandate by combining Canadian connectivity, Canadian compute infrastructure, and Canadian AI models into a secure national platform.
HIVE is funding the purchase of the NVIDIA Grace Blackwell rack-scale systems using a portion of the proceeds from its recent USD $115 million convertible note financing completed in April 2026. Hypertec, a Canadian 42-year OEM veteran in high-performance computing is delivering a bespoke GPU server solution, from hardware procurement and system integration through to installation, commissioning, and OEM support.
The partnership further strengthens BUZZ’s position as a leading sovereign AI cloud provider in the Canadian market, alongside Bell AI Fabric’s role as the connective tissue of Canada’s sovereign AI ecosystem. Together, the platform integrates connectivity, data centres, compute, professional services, and cybersecurity into a unified national AI infrastructure platform. For enterprise and government customers, the combined stack provides enhanced control over compute sovereignty, model security, performance, and operational governance. The compute infrastructure will remain entirely within Canadian borders and operate under Canadian standards.
“Canada helped pioneer modern artificial intelligence. What we have lacked is not talent, it is industrial infrastructure to commercialize that talent at scale before others do it for us,” said Frank Holmes, Executive Chairman, HIVE Digital Technologies. “This partnership with Bell and Cohere is a defining moment. BUZZ HPC is the GPU factory layer that transforms Canada’s AI ambitions from political promises into productive national assets. Sophisticated investors understand that the companies building sovereign AI infrastructure today are positioning for a decade of asymmetric returns. HIVE is one of the very few companies in the world operating at the intersection of Tier-I data centers, AI compute, and sovereign infrastructure and this deal validates that thesis at the highest level of Canadian enterprise.”
About HIVE
Founded in 2017, HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd. was among the first publicly listed companies to prioritize mining digital assets powered by green energy. Today, HIVE builds and operates next-generation Tier-I and Tier-III data centers across Canada, Sweden, and Paraguay, serving both Bitcoin and high-performance computing clients. HIVE’s dual engine infrastructure-driven by hashrate services and GPU-accelerated AI computing-delivers scalable, environmentally responsible solutions for the digital economy. For more information, visit hivedigitaltech.com.
Source: HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd
The post BUZZ HPC Announces Sovereign AI Infrastructure Deal with Bell Canada and Cohere appeared first on HPCwire.
Merlin Lu faces felony and misdemeanor charges after police released images of a suspect fleeing the scene
A 21- year old man who admitted to setting fire to a cross in Chicago’s Grant Park last week is now in police custody on hate crime charges, per Chicago police.
Merlin Lu was arrested and charged with four felony and four misdemeanor counts related to the incident on 9 June.
Continue reading...You are the creative orchestrator with the new AI assistants coming to Photoshop, Premiere Pro and Illustrator.
Federal agency to use herbicide to clear lands for replanting after 2021 Caldor fire – but public reaction to plan is fierce
Katherine Levy remembers a childhood deeply rooted in the natural offerings of Lake Tahoe – water-skiing in the summer and working as ski instructor on the surrounding snow-covered mountains during winter months.
She recently moved back to live out her retirement along the lake’s north shore. But she doesn’t like what she has found upon her return: a US government plan to spray multiple types of herbicides, including the cancer-linked glyphosate weed killer – within national forest property that abuts the community’s cherished lake.
Continue reading...Check out some old classics and great new releases on Netflix now.
Arthur, the first named tropical storm of the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, weakened to a post-tropical cyclone after making landfall.
Moderna seeks FDA approval of its new shot, mFlusvia, as option for 50 and older
US health advisers are debating a new kind of flu vaccine on Thursday, the first made with the same mRNA technology that was key to ending the Covid-19 pandemic.
Moderna is seeking Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of its new shot, dubbed mFlusiva, as an option for people 50 and older. The FDA advisory committee meeting is a step toward a final decision ahead of the winter flu season.
Continue reading...Windows users get a true MacBook Pro alternative with HP's top-end consumer laptop.
A proposed $8bn renovation of the hub has critics wondering if it’s another example of the US president bolstering his legacy at taxpayers’ expense
A proposed $8bn renovation of Penn Station in New York City has sparked questions from local leaders who want improvements to the western hemisphere’s busiest transit hub but wonder what it will look like, who will pay for it and what role Donald Trump will play.
The station, which was once considered one of New York City’s most beautiful landmarks, is now seen by many as an ugly infrastructure that is hard to navigate, dark and claustrophobic.
Continue reading...If you're gifting your dad a snazzy new grill this Father's Day, don't forget the meat thermometer, too.
Commentary: My camera roll was filling up with random photos from every time I bumped my camera control button. I hated it until I found this trick.
In US statecraft and warcraft, the president and Pete Hegseth are now saying previously quiet parts out loud
The Department of Defense will soon officially become the Department of War, if Republicans get their way. Key committees in the House and Senate have approved the name change, and Donald Trump is eager to sign it into law. The rebranding is candid and ominous, offering a future of heightened zeal for killing, maiming and destroying.
Christened in 1949, the Department of Defense unified the military branches with the Pentagon as their headquarters. Since then, presidents have routinely promoted each new war as vital for the defense of the United States and its values, a pretense that has pervaded mainstream media and political discourse.
Continue reading...In this week’s newsletter: After Trump’s interventions over Greenland, there are many in Iceland who believe they would be stronger in the EU. But will its recent history of independence win out?
• Don’t get This Is Europe delivered to your inbox? Sign up here
As the UK marks the tenth anniversary of its fateful Brexit referendum next Tuesday, Iceland is fast approaching its moment of truth about the EU – albeit from the opposite direction.
On 29 August, Icelanders will be asked whether or not to they want to come back to the table with Brussels for negotiations about joining the EU. Iceland originally applied in 2009 after the financial crash, but pulled out of talks in 2013 saying it couldn’t go any further without a referendum.
Continue reading...A massive ancient oak tree linked to the legend of Robin Hood may have been loved to death.
New York police department say teenager thrown to the ground when horse bolted away from its driver
A teenager thrown to the ground on Wednesday when a Central Park carriage horse bolted away from its driver has died, according to police.
The 18-year-old was riding in the horse-drawn carriage with three other passengers when the accident happened just before 3pm, according to the New York police department. At least two passengers were sent flying out of the careening cab.
Continue reading...PlayStation 5, Xbox, Nintendo Switch 2, PC; Team Asano/Square Enix
Upbeat, charmingly retro RPG full of treasure-hunting, temple-roaming, monster-slaying and princess-saving is an absolute blast to play
You can’t help but wonder if developer Team Asano is in a private competition with itself to come up with the most ridiculous name for a video game. Following Project Triangle Strategy and Bravely Default: Flying Fairy we have this mouthful: The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales. It’s a playable love letter to the Zelda adventures of yesteryear rendered in the studio’s trademark glorious 2D-HD art style, melding evocative pixel sprites with modern visual effects.
From west Philabieldia, born and raised, our hero is adventurer Elliot. The antagonist making trouble in the neighbourhood is a king’s dastardly aide intent on summoning an ancient evil. The story is pure after-school-TV schlock, fully voice-acted but still unafraid to make you sit through reams and reams of text, and the action comprises treasure-hunting, temple-roaming and dispatching monsters. It’s part Chrono Trigger, part Oracle of Seasons as our almost obnoxiously upbeat hero journeys through the ages in order to solve puzzles, tip his fedora and of course, save a princess.
Continue reading...The Minnesota Lynx point guard’s creativity has made an impact in her first pro season and has fans racing to watch her highlight reels
Sign up to get WNBA 30 in your inbox every Tuesday
For dedicated WNBA fans, every morning begins with the same question: what did Olivia Miles do this time? A no-look pass through three defenders? A crossover that sends another grown woman staggering out of frame? Statue of Liberty layups launched from angles that flout Euclidean geometry? You just never know with this wonder woman. The rush she gives fans makes a double espresso feel like a nightcap.
No player in the WNBA has brought more joy to the season’s opening month than Miles, who has quickly emerged as one of the league’s most compelling talents. Fifteen games into her professional career, the 23-year-old North Jersey native has already established herself as the engine of the Minnesota Lynx offense, pacing the team in average scoring (19.0) and assists (5.7) while sinking more than half her shot attempts. In a 99-83 road win against a short-handed Los Angeles Sparks team on Wednesday night, Miles poured in a season-best 31 points on a blistering 80% percent shooting in just 26 minutes.
Continue reading...While they have a few downsides, if you're a competitive gamer (or hope to be), HE and TMR magnetic switches can make a huge performance difference.
While the stock market booms for the rich, cost of living is soaring for everyone else
Since 2020, the stock market has more than doubled. Americans who own substantial financial assets are reveling in economic success. For everyone else, the economy feels very different. This summer, the average family will spend nearly $800 just to keep their home cool, almost 40% more than in 2020 and up 10.5% since last summer.
Americans now carry more than $1.2tn in credit card debt. Nearly 60% say they are living paycheck to paycheck. One in six households is behind on its utility bills. Every year, utilities disconnect electric service more than 13m times. Nearly 40% of lower-income households struggle to pay their energy bills.
Mark Wolfe is an energy economist and serves as the executive director of the National Energy Assistance Directors Association representing the state directors of the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program and the co-director of the Center on Energy Poverty and Climate. He also serves as an adjunct professor at the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy at George Washington University
Continue reading...Your antivirus software does a lot more than sit in your system tray looking busy.
Bundling may be a money-saver as subscription prices skyrocket. Our expert chimes in on whether they're worth it.
Last year, US adults spent an average of $204 on unused subscriptions. Now, we're wasting even more money.
Special-effects designer Brian Johnson, known for his groundbreaking work on Space: 1999, The Empire Strikes Back, Alien, and Aliens, has died at the age of 86. Johnson began his career creating models and explosions for Gerry and Sylvia Anderson productions, later designed the iconic Eagle Transporter, and became one of science fiction cinema's most influential behind-the-scenes artists. Longtime Slashdot reader sandbagger remembers the SFX legend, writing: "The Space: 1999 Eagle is one of the great space ships of science fiction."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Boseley won for her high-profile, multiplatform political explainer series, Parliamen-Tea: explaining the chaos of Australian politics
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Guardian Australia’s Matilda Boseley’s political explainer series Parliament-Tea was recognised at the 2026 Walkley mid-year media prizes, winning the young journalist award for innovative storytelling.
The high-profile, multiplatform political explainer series, in which Boseley explained machinations in Australian parliament over a cup of tea, engaged a younger generation in national policy debate. The category recognises journalism that breaks standard structural moulds to reach and inform audiences through dynamic digital platforms and creative production formats.
Continue reading...President hails ‘major win’ for US as he attempts to exit war having failed to achieve regime change in Tehran. Plus: an investigation into the murky world of OnlyFans ‘managers’
Good morning.
Donald Trump has signed a 14-point agreement with Iran, claiming it delivered a “major win” for the US – even as it made significant political and financial concessions to Iran to reopen the strait of Hormuz and prevent a “worldwide depression”.
How have US Republicans reacted to the deal? Senator Lindsey Graham, a key Trump ally, appeared to soften his view of the deal after a “very lengthy and productive” conversation with the US special envoy Steve Witkoff. But his fellow senator Ted Cruz, who has backed the war, said: “History teaches that giving billions of dollars to theocratic lunatics who want to murder us is not a good idea. I think the president is receiving some very poor advice on this deal.” And Senator Bill Cassidy declared: “Reagan is rolling over in his grave.”
Why is Ukraine newly concerned about Belarus? Russian spy drones flying into Ukraine from Belarusian airspace have sharply increased since the beginning of the year, leading to Kyiv reinforcing fortifications on its northern border. What concerns Ukrainian and European officials is that Moscow appears to be attempting to integrate Minsk ever more closely into its war efforts, including through joint nuclear exercises earlier this year.
Continue reading...Reform UK leader used private meeting at Bank of England to urge governor to drop plans for state-run cryptocurrency
Nigel Farage has been trying to block a Bank of England cryptocurrency plan that could be costly for the billionaire bankrolling his party.
The Reform UK leader has said Christopher Harborne wants nothing in exchange for the millions he has donated to the party and the undeclared £5m personal gift to Farage that the Guardian revealed in April.
Continue reading...Israel’s government asked Meta to censor social media content about its ongoing war against Iran, according to internal documents viewed by The Intercept.
Company records show that Israel petitioned Meta to take down Facebook and Instagram posts expressing support for Iran, opposition to Israel, and even depictions of Iranian missile impacts.
The government flagged a variety of materials related to the war, including posts mourning the death of Ayatollah Khamenei following his assassination by the U.S. and Israel on the opening day of the conflict, content supportive of Iran’s retaliatory attacks, and Iranian accounts that shared military analysis and propaganda sympathetic to the Iranian regime’s perspective.
“Governments wanting to suppress speech that is critical of their war efforts is as old as time.”
In some cases, Meta complied with the censorship requests, the records show, though it is unclear on what grounds. Meta maintains that it only removes content as required by law or materials that violate its speech policies.
When asked how many Iran-related takedown requests had been granted to date since the war began, the company did not answer. The Israeli Ministry of Justice, which submits takedown requests to social media platforms, did not respond to a request for comment.
Israel’s social media lobbying is not new; for years the nation has leaned on its close relationship with Meta to push for targeted enforcement of the company’s content moderation rulebook.
Israel’s Office of the State Attorney routinely lodges complaints to social media platforms on behalf of state security agencies about content deemed illegal or said to promote “terrorism,” according to its website. In the documents reviewed by The Intercept, the office in some cases made no claim that the social media content violated Israeli law. Instead, the office asked that posts or accounts should be removed because they were in violation of Meta’s content moderation rulebook.
Meta, for instance, designates Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps a “Dangerous Organization,” and prohibits users from engaging in many forms of positive speech about its actions. This means posts supportive of retaliatory missile launches by the IRGC, for instance, could run afoul of the company’s rules. No such prohibition exists for users who post favorably about the U.S. or Israeli militaries.
Meta did not respond to questions about the Iran war requests, but spokesperson Daniel Roberts provided a statement to The Intercept. “Anyone is able to report content they think violates our rules. Regardless of who or how a piece of content is flagged, we assess it based on our policies, which govern what is and isn’t allowed on our platform. It is wrong and irresponsible to imply that these requests are in any way unusual or improper.”
A company headquartered in California can determine what is or is not permissible speech for billions of users across the world, only a fraction of whom are American.
Meta has faced scrutiny, specifically in the Middle East, for removing content that doesn’t violate the company’s rules. A 2022 audit commissioned by the company itself found discrepancies in its content moderation practices between Arabic and Hebrew content. “Arabic content had greater over-enforcement (e.g., erroneously removing Palestinian voice) on a per user basis.” the company found. A 2023 report by the company’s inhouse Oversight Board described the “over-enforcement” of the company’s Dangerous Organizations and Individuals blacklist, disproportionately composed of Muslim and Middle Eastern entities.
Meta has long claimed that as an American company, it is legally required to sometimes remove content pertaining to certain entities sanctioned by the U.S., such as the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. But legal scholars say that has little to no precedent or basis in existing sanctions law, which focus on matters of material support rather than political speech. It’s a policy that has created an immense ideological slant: A company headquartered in California can determine what is or is not permissible speech for billions of users across the world, only a fraction of whom are American.
Further adding to the imbalance when it comes to Middle East crises is the fact that Meta has granted Israel privileged access to its content moderation policy teams. In 2024, The Intercept reported how Meta employee Jordana Cutler, a former aide to Benjamin Netanyahu, served as a dedicated liaison to the Israeli government, advocating for the country’s interests and helping facilitate the removal of unwanted speech. Few other countries in the world have a dedicated representative within Meta — in 2020, a similar policy head for India market resigned after revelations she had lobbied for rule enforcement that favored India’s ruling Hindu nationalist party. Asked if Cutler has had a role in facilitating Israeli takedown requests of content relating to the war, Meta did not respond.
“Meta’s close relationship with the Israeli government for takedown requests has been a long-standing issue,” Evelyn Douek, a Stanford Law School professor and scholar of digital speech policies, told The Intercept. “Meta’s acquiescence in lots of takedown requests has been a long-standing practice.”
These asymmetries of censorship power are particularly sensitive during times of war, said Douek.
“Governments wanting to suppress speech that is critical of their war efforts is as old as time,” she said. “Allowing governments to claim national security reasons to suppress speech willy-nilly would obliterate the value of speech protections.”
According to a source familiar with the matter, Israel lobbied Meta to implement a blanket rule restricting imagery of war damage within its territory, mirroring an Israeli news media censorship policy that bars journalists from documenting weapon impacts without military approval. Meta has so far declined to implement such a policy for its billions of global users, the source said. Meta did not respond to questions about the status of this request.
The U.S. and Iran signed on Friday a ceasefire agreement, though Israel has suggested it would not abide by the terms of a deal. While many of the censorship requests directly addressed the war, others were tangential to the conflict itself. The records show Israel has pushed to remove content expressing outrage over last month’s storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque by far-right government minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. It also sought to stifle posts critical of rhetoric by Israel that linked Israel’s recent closure of Al-Aqsa with the ongoing war.
In general, Meta grants the vast majority of Israeli governmental takedown requests.
In general, Meta grants the vast majority of Israeli governmental takedown requests. The State Attorney’s Office boasted a 92 percent compliance rate in 2023, and a 2025 report by Drop Site News said the overall rate has climbed to 94 percent since the October 7 attack by Hamas.
Records reviewed by The Intercept show Israel asked for Iran war takedowns using the exact same language evoking Hamas’s October 7 attack that it submitted when requesting the censorship of pro-Palestinian and anti-Israeli speech across the globe during Israel’s war on Gaza.
“It suggests that they don’t expect their requests are being reviewed very carefully,” Douek said.
Douek argued that the wartime censorship requests underscore the danger of policing speech entirely out of public view through “opaque processes” like governmental backchannels.
“These companies … have been responsive to their own geopolitical and commercial interests, and have always been more responsive to powerful governments.”
“These platforms have always maintained that they are neutral, or that they are just a platform for people to express their views, but it has long been true that these companies have always presented a particular view of the world and have been responsive to their own geopolitical and commercial interests, and have always been more responsive to powerful governments,” Douek said.
This creates a deeply lopsided dynamic when it comes to the Iran war: The two arguably best-represented governments in the world within Meta — the U.S. and Israel — are allied belligerents in a conflict against a state deeply sanctioned by the company’s speech rules. “You’re going to end up with a skewed debate,” Douek said.
The post Israel Asked Facebook to Censor Iran War Content, Internal Documents Show appeared first on The Intercept.
Did you miss a day in the popular language app? You can restore your 30-day-plus streak, but only for the month of June.
The three-martini lunch allowed us to mix business and pleasure, a phenomenon that is missing during the AI boom
As a 46-year-old executive who now has both people and AI agents reporting to me on the org chart, I think corporate America needs to revive a much-mocked relic of mid-century American business life: the three-martini lunch.
In 1978, Gerald Ford called the ritual “the epitome of American efficiency”, asking: “Where else can you get an earful, a bellyful and a snootful at the same time?” He meant it as a joke, but in 2026, I think it should be our strategic plan.
Continue reading...The unusually large shift comes amid revelations that the president’s ballroom project will rely more on taxpayer money than the administration acknowledged.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Earlier this month, multiple families and educators spoke during a town hall meeting about their concerns with the state of Delaware’s public education for students with disabilities. The meeting showed a clear divide between what parents and school districts view as adequate resources and goals for students with disabilities.
Roughly 50 parents gathered at a Middletown firehouse earlier this month to express their concerns about the goals and resources devoted to their kids’ special education programs within local school districts.
Many of the parents shared a frustration about what they described as a disconnect between their children’s academic progress and the individualized education plans designed to support them. Others raised concerns about access to services and communication with school officials.
The town hall, which drew families from multiple Delaware school districts, was initially prompted by concerns that the Appoquinimink School District would reduce hours for its summer school and extended school year program – both of which help eligible students with disabilities to retain knowledge during the summer break.
The discussion also followed a year of national conversations regarding education access and quality for students with disabilities. Fueling that conversation was a Trump administration decision Tuesday to move federal special education policy away from the U.S. Department of Education and into the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Melissa DeFlaviis’s daughter will be starting the fourth grade at the Red Clay Consolidated School District next school year and has a “working memory issue,” which DeFlaviis says predisposes her to having a learning disability.
While her 9-year-old daughter is in third grade, DeFlaviis said she only reads at a first-grade level. She said her daughter’s individualized education plan (IEP) goal is to be able to write two sentences.

DeFlaviis said she believes the goal is “well below” the standard goal for a third grader.
Red Clay Consolidated School District spokesperson Alva Mobley said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware the district cannot comment on matters involving individual students.
Mobley did note that IEP teams “work collaboratively” with families to develop individualized goals based on each student’s present levels of performance, among other areas.
“Because IEP goals are individualized, there is no single IEP goal that is considered standard for a particular grade level,” Mobley said.
DeFlaviis said she is told her daughter is making adequate progress with her IEP goals. But she disagrees because of her daughter’s report card results, and has hired a tutor to help her daughter improve.
Because of DeFlaviis’s pushback over the district’s goals for her daughter, she said it feels like the “school system has become a game, and I am teaching myself how to play.”
Mobley also said IEP progress reports reflect growth toward individualized goals, while report cards generally reflect performance relating to grade-level standards. Progress in one area may not always directly correspond to changes in the other, she said.
Federal law requires school districts to reimburse families for private services like tutoring from a certified educator when the district cannot provide an appropriate education that aligns with the student’s IEP needs.
Still, some parents of children receiving district-paid services claim there are difficulties ensuring their children are not marked absent for receiving those services.
Joe Ventura, an Appoquinimink School District parent, has two autistic children who were both diagnosed before reaching 3 years old.
Ventura said his son requires private tutoring during school hours, often missing in-school learning as a result, at a location across the street from his school.

Although these services are paid for by the Appoquinimink School District, Ventura said he has had to “fight” with the school’s administration because his son is often marked absent from or late to school.
“They mark him absent or late, because, ‘Oh, it’s not an official document coming from the tutor,’” Ventura said, “But you’re the district paying for the tutor.”
When asked about Ventura’s experience, Appoquinimink Executive Director of Student Services and Special Education Edmond Gurdo said absences such as these are approved and are noted as approved in the student information system.
Families like Ventura’s would need to follow the district’s absence approval process, which includes submitting an absence request form. The school office then has its own process to properly document the submission.
Gurdo noted the process “can take time depending on when documents are submitted and the updates are made within the student information system.”
States must verify that all special educators are fully certified or enrolled in alternative certification programs when they apply for the federal funds that help school districts provide special education, as reported by K-12 Dive.
Delaware also requires specialized certification for teachers who work with a certain percentage of students with autism in the classroom.
These standards have left districts like Appoquinimink “significantly constrained” in their ability to recruit amid the ongoing, nationwide teacher shortage, said Kristi Peters, the Appoquinimink director of special education.
Separate district constraints around transportation and meal service were behind Appoquinimink’s decision to cut back on its summer programs – the change that had initially sparked outrage from parents of students with disabilities – from four to three days per week, Peters said.
Still, she said the program will maintain “students’ access to their specially designed instruction and required services.”
Peters also noted that discussions about those summer changes began during the Appoquinimink Board of Education’s January meeting and continued “through subsequent conversations with stakeholders.”
The feeling of being constrained by state laws and certification requirements was also discussed during the Middletown firehouse meeting by Sharon Livingstone, a paraprofessional in the Appoquinimink district.
Livingstone said there are not enough educators in the state who are certified to work with students with autism, and the district must rely on paraprofessionals or long-term substitute teachers.
Peters told Spotlight Delaware that if vacancies persist, the district uses trained and supervised paraprofessionals to “assist in the delivery of services.” She also said those staff members receive coaching and participate in professional learning through a collaborative model with certified teachers.
The Appoquinimink School District has reported “systemic staffing challenges” to the Delaware Department of Education’s Exceptional Children Resources workgroup, Peters said.
Next school year, the district will start partnering with outside agencies to help teachers earn autism certification and support paraprofessionals currently filling teaching roles, beginning with a small pilot program before expanding.
In the meantime, educators like Livingstone have taken it upon themselves to push for access to more resources at the state level.
Livingstone said the state’s certification is through five classes at Wilmington University, and she has spoken to legislators about the state providing financial assistance to those who want to take the courses.
The post Delaware parents, educators, advocates voice concern about special education appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
They claim to fix fine lines, blemishes and redness – but which stand up to scrutiny? We asked dermatologists and put them to the test to find out
• The best anti-ageing creams, serums and treatments
LED face masks are booming in popularity – despite being one of the most expensive at-home beauty products to hit the market. They claim to either reduce the appearance of fine lines, stop spots or calm redness, with some even combining different types of light to enhance the benefits.
However, it’s wise to be sceptical about new treatments that are costly and non-invasive, and to do your research before you buy. With this in mind, I interviewed doctors and dermatologists to find out whether these light therapy devices work.
Best LED face mask overall:
CurrentBody Series 2
Best budget LED face mask:
Silk’n LED face mask 100
When parents and educators in Greystones, Ireland saw children dealing with increasing anxiety, they acted – and took phones out of the equation.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware has a long history of LGBTQ+ advocacy and community-building, but dedicated physical spaces for queer residents are limited. As concerns grow over policies from the Trump administration and their impact on LGBTQ+ people, a new community space opening in Delaware’s largest city aims to provide a place for connection, support, and belonging.
For years, Delaware’s LGBTQ+ history has lived in fragments, scattered throughout the state.
Stories from the community have been found in shared memories, archives, temporary exhibits, small businesses, annual Pride events and community spaces.
Now, the Delaware Sexuality and Gender Collective is trying to give that history a permanent home in the state’s largest city.
By the end of this year, the organization plans to open The Collective, a 3,200-square-foot facility on Market Street in downtown Wilmington. It would serve as an LGBTQ+ visitor center, museum, co-working space, and community hub.
Organizers say the project would create Delaware’s first queer history museum. It would also create the first brick-and-mortar LGBTQ+ community space in northern Delaware in over 35 years — following the closure of the Griffin Community Center in Wilmington.
Similar centers exist in Sussex County and Philadelphia.

For Noah Duckett, co-founder of the Delaware Sexuality and Gender Collective, the space’s purpose feels vital. He emphasized that while there have been “incredible events” in Wilmington, there is not a single space “to showcase all of that in a permanent way.”
“It felt like now was the most important time to have a space that was created by us, created for us, that is not going to go away,” Duckett said.
Duckett’s plans come after LGBTQ+ rights were thrust into the center of national political debates amid President Donald Trump’s second term.
Since taking office, Trump issued an executive order to recognize two sexes — male and female. His administration also issued a string of directives and orders aiming to alter health care for transgender individuals by pulling federal dollars from hospitals nationally and in Delaware that provide gender-affirming care.
Meanwhile, some states and conservative groups have called for the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn its decade-old ruling, legalizing same-sex marriage.
Duckett said those government actions only increase the need to build a community center.
“We have sponsors that are pulling away, we have hospitals and agencies and government practices that are really just trying to minimize their support as much as possible,” Duckett said.
Duckett and his mother, Julissa Coriano, founded the Delaware Sexuality and Gender Collective in 2018. Both are clinical social workers, sexuality therapists, and advocates in the queer community.
Duckett said their organization began as a provider of family therapy, and clinical education and training, among other things. It then expanded into social programming and direct support services. Those included hosting the Pride Closet clothing drive, and offering recovery support for people healing from gender-affirming surgery.
A brick-and-mortar space had long been part of the conversation, Duckett said.

The Collective is expected to include a visitor center highlighting LGBTQ+ businesses, organizations, and events across Delaware; a gift shop featuring local queer artists and makers; a co-working space with offices and day-pass work areas; and a community room available for meetings, events, and programming.
It will be located on Market Street in Wilmington, but Duckett said the exact address will not be announced until the lease is finalized. It will be near the historical location of Wilmington’s previous LGBTQ+ community center, the Griffin, Duckett said.
Duckett’s organization is raising $500,000 to help cover upfront rent, construction, buildout and long-term sustainability. He said the goal is to make sure the space can last.
“We don’t want to have a really great idea and then it burns out in two years because we run out of funding,” he said.
At the center of the project will be a permanent museum curated by Carolanne Deal, a longtime historian focused on Delaware’s LGBTQ+ history. Deal previously led research for the state’s first digital exhibit on LGBTQ+ history.
Deal noted that queer history is rarely represented in a permanent way in Delaware museums or archives.
“It’s so incredibly important for us to have a permanent space that’s not just a temporary exhibition that comes out once a year for Pride month,” Deal said.
According to officials at the Delaware History Museum, the only active physical exhibit in their space is a certificate for the first gay marriage signed in Delaware.
The LGBTQ+ museum will feature graphics, visuals, text, as well as reproductions of newsletters and panels discussing various historical events, such as the founding of one of the first queer student union groups in the country at the University of Delaware, Deal said.
Deal plans to bring a wide scope of historical events and information about important figureheads in Delaware’s LGBTQ+ community, including Ivo Dominguez Jr. and James Welch, the pioneers who founded “The Griffin,” the state’s first queer community center, in 1986.
During the height of the AIDS epidemic, the Griffin Community Center served as a meeting place for organizations, such as the Gay and Lesbian Alliance of Delaware, or GLAD, and the state’s first HIV/AIDS service agency, now known as AIDS Delaware.

The center also hosted meetings for various other community organizations.
Dominguez and Welch, who are longtime partners, began their activism in the late 1970s, a time when the community’s advocates across the country were gaining visibility, but also facing a conservative backlash.
Over the years, they organized HIV/AIDS education and fundraising events, founded GLAD, Delaware’s first statewide gay rights organization, and opened Hen’s Teeth, the state’s first queer bookstore, in Wilmington.
The Griffin closed just four years after it opened. Dominguez said burnout contributed to its closure.
Today, apartments stand where the small row building once existed. But Dominguez and Welch said the need for a physical gathering space for Delaware’s queer community never disappeared.
Dominguez and Welch have been assisting with the creation of The Collective by attending planning meetings and doing outreach. As activists who have done the work before, Dominguez says his biggest advice to Duckett and Coriano in establishing the space is to “live as if you are free.”
“We have the benefit and the privilege right now of living in a state that is relatively kind and good to our people; we’ve got to keep it that way,” Dominguez said.
The post LGBTQ+ advocates look to open museum, visitor center on Market Street in Wilmington appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
| This is incredibly tempting if these arent difficult to diagnose but I wanted to ask y'all what to ask and look for before jumping into it! [link] [comments] |
The agreement shows the US is in a weaker position than before the war
No one gets a Nobel peace prize for ending a war he started, let alone for a pointless war of aggression that set back the causes that supposedly prompted the conflict. No amount of Donald Trump’s spin can obscure the fact that his newly announced deal with Iran is one big lesson in why this war should never have been launched.
The text of the deal, a 14-point memorandum of understanding, underscores its emptiness. The tyrants of Tehran are undoubtedly celebrating.
Continue reading...
A businessman with ties to Chinese military contractors was among the overseas investors who acquired stakes in SpaceX while it was still a private company. An entity linked to the Qatari royal family also took a stake.
The new details come from a private investor list obtained by ProPublica that sheds light on a particularly delicate issue for Elon Musk’s rocket company: which people in countries like China bought into the company, and how. SpaceX built its business off sensitive U.S. government work like making spy satellites for the Pentagon. While there is no ban on Chinese investment in U.S. military contractors, such investment is heavily regulated.
In a sign of its sensitivity to the concerns, SpaceX barred investors from China and Hong Kong from buying shares in its initial public offering last week due to “regulatory and compliance risks,” Bloomberg reported. The U.S. government alleges that China has a strategy of using investments in sensitive industries for espionage and to get access to cutting-edge technology.
The company’s IPO last week was the largest ever, making Musk the world’s first trillionaire. Musk has extensive business interests in China, where Tesla builds many of its cars.
The new records detail at least a dozen investors with addresses in mainland China, Hong Kong or Russia who acquired stakes in SpaceX years ago through a middleman firm in the U.S. called Tomales Bay Capital. The investments are relatively small, ranging from $800,000 to $40 million, and were made between 2018 and 2021.
We’re still reporting. If you know more about SpaceX, please contact our reporting team.
Justin Elliott
I’m always looking for under-covered stories about business and politics, no matter the specific subject. Contact me with tips, by email or securely on Signal. I take confidentiality seriously.
One investment came from an entity owned by David Su, the co-founder of the prominent Beijing venture capital firm MPCi. The Su entity invested $15 million in a SpaceX fund in 2020, according to the investor list. It was not Su’s only foray into the space industry; his company has been a high-profile backer of some of SpaceX’s Chinese competitors. Two satellite companies that Su’s firm invested in were sanctioned by the U.S. government for allegedly assisting the notorious Russian mercenary organization the Wagner Group. One of the companies was sanctioned again last month for allegedly helping Iran attack U.S. military forces during the war.
MPCi has also worked with Chinese government investment funds. Last year, the website for China’s Ministry of Science and Technology named Su’s firm as a partner in a state-backed effort to develop the country’s aerospace industry.
There is no evidence that Su did anything improper. But the key question from the U.S. government’s perspective would be whether China-based investors got access to nonpublic information about SpaceX’s technology or strategies, said Sarah Bauerle Danzman, an Indiana University professor who has worked for the State Department scrutinizing foreign investments. “If an investor has conflicts of interests with other companies in China — if they could feed that information to competitors — it could be a national security concern,” she said.
In a statement, MPCi said that Su “has not received any nonpublic information of SpaceX.” The statement described Su as “a Singapore citizen who resides in Singapore,” adding: “MPCi is a brand name with different teams and funds. Mr. Su is responsible for the US dollar funds.” According to a 2024 profile of him, Su “spent almost 100 per cent of his time in China over the last 20 years.”
A lawyer for Tomales Bay Capital said in a statement that the firm “has not provided any non-public, sensitive information regarding SpaceX to investors.” He said the investors are passive limited partners: “Aside from fund financials that include quarterly valuations, Tomales Bay’s investors have not received any further information regarding SpaceX.”
“The vast majority, if not all, of the investors included on the unsealed Tomales Bay investor list are not citizens of any foreign adversary, including Russia or China,” said the lawyer, Ryan Stonerock, “and certainly none of them are agents of Russia or China, or any other foreign adversary.” He added that some of the investors “may have mailing addresses listed” in Russia or China but do not actually live there “and are in fact citizens and residents of the United States or other countries that are not foreign adversaries.”
SpaceX did not respond to questions. One of the Chinese space companies sanctioned by the U.S. government, Spacety, previously denied providing support to the Wagner Group.
All the investors located in China or Russia that ProPublica identified appeared to be either wealthy businesspeople or their children.
The new documents come from a corporate dispute in Delaware involving Tomales Bay Capital. The court records were unsealed this month after ProPublica moved to make them public, with the help of attorneys from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the law firm Shaw Keller. Tomales Bay Capital appealed to the Delaware Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of ProPublica.
Tomales Bay Capital is run by an investor named Iqbaljit Kahlon, who has long been close to SpaceX’s leadership and even involved in the company’s operations. SpaceX CFO Bret Johnsen, who’s worked there for 15 years, testified that Kahlon “has been with the company in one form or fashion longer than I have.”
Before SpaceX went public, Kahlon made a fortune by acting as a middleman for investors hoping to add the rocket company to their portfolio. His firm regularly bought SpaceX stock, packaged it into investment funds and then charged fees to investors who bought pieces of those funds.
In a 2021 pitch to one potential investor in China, Kahlon promised special access to SpaceX, including quarterly updates on the company’s business development, “visits to SpaceX, and the opportunities to interview with Space X’s CFO,” according to the meeting minutes, which later appeared in court records.
While ProPublica and other outlets have previously reported on the existence of Chinese investors in SpaceX, the identities of most of the rocket company’s investors have been closely guarded. The Kahlon investor list adds hundreds of names to the public picture of who owns SpaceX. The list details investments in several Tomales Bay Capital funds that have acquired SpaceX stock; it is possible that some of the funds own stakes in other companies too.
Some of the SpaceX investors on Kahlon’s ledger are easy to identify: the Indian politician Abhishek Singhvi; Betsy DeVos, the former U.S. secretary of education; a British Virgin Islands company owned by Indonesian billionaires. But others on the list are shell companies whose ultimate owners remain hidden.
One such company is a Delaware LLC called HAL9001 Partners Fund I, which invested roughly $10 million in a SpaceX fund in 2020. The incorporation documents for HAL9001 were signed by the venture capitalist Roman Sobachevskiy. The Treasury Department recently fined a company that was co-owned by Sobachevskiy hundreds of millions of dollars for managing a different investment on behalf of a sanctioned Russian oligarch. Sobachevskiy has not been personally accused of wrongdoing.
A Tomales Bay Capital spokesperson said that the oligarch “had no involvement with the investment.” Sobachevskiy did not respond to questions, including who put up the money for the SpaceX investment.
The records also shed some light on the connections between SpaceX and Qatar. Funds affiliated with Bracket Capital — an investment firm with offices in Los Angeles, London and Qatar — invested about $48 million through a series of deals from 2017 through 2020, the documents show. Bracket has money from the Qatari royal family, according to an email that Kahlon sent to SpaceX’s CFO. The ledger also lists Doha, Qatar, as the address for a mysterious entity called AM FIG Cayman Limited, which invested around $10 million in 2020.
The documents do not specify whether the Bracket investments were made on behalf of the royal family or some other client. In 2021, as Kahlon was soliciting backers for yet another SpaceX deal, he texted a Bracket employee: “At the end we can just send Yalda to talk to big guy. We need a bail out lol.” (Yalda Aoukar is Bracket’s co-founder. It’s unclear whether the “big guy” refers to a member of the royal family and what Kahlon meant by “a bail out.”)
Bracket did not respond to requests for comment.
The investments covered in the ledger were tiny percentages of SpaceX but would have generated windfalls. The company’s valuation has exploded in recent years, from $33.3 billion in 2019 to $2.7 trillion as of Wednesday morning.
Last year, ProPublica reported on SpaceX’s unusual approach to accepting money from Chinese investors. According to testimony from the Delaware case, the company allowed Chinese investors to buy stakes in SpaceX so long as the money was routed through the Cayman Islands or other offshore secrecy hubs.
The post Before SpaceX IPO, Investors in China Secretly Acquired Stakes appeared first on ProPublica.
An estimated hundreds of thousands of children, many of them U.S. citizens, have been separated from a parent in the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
Most people are still confident they have upward mobility, but fewer than half say everyone in the country can reach their ideal.
Even Hormuz reopening will not resolve Europe’s key energy vulnerability Expert comment thilton.drupal
Europe remains over reliant on insecure and persistently expensive natural gas. It should focus efforts on reducing demand.
European governments, most of which rely on oil and gas imports to fuel their economies, have been nervously watching prices climb and storage levels fall in the weeks since the US-Israeli attack on Iran triggered the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
They could be forgiven for being relieved by this week’s news of a US-Iran framework agreement that promises to enable ships to transit the Strait, through which approximately one-fifth of oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) flowed before the war.
This would be premature, however. Even in the event of a lasting deal, it will take months for shipping flows to fully resume. Logistically, it will take time to reschedule routes efficiently as ships struggle to transit the strait and supply chains are disrupted. Crucially, insurance and shipping firms must be convinced of safe passage in the long term, which remains uncertain.
More importantly, the war has reconfigured the global LNG market, on which Europe increasingly depends, in ways that are unfavourable to its energy security. This reconfiguration will continue to weigh on Europe, irrespective of any deal.
Since the dramatic reduction in pipeline flows to Europe from Russia in 2022 after its invasion of Ukraine, Europe has imported growing quantities of LNG from the US. In 2021, 28 per cent of Europe’s LNG was sourced from the US; by 2025, this had grown to 58 per cent. Data from the first quarter of 2026 indicates it had reached 63 per cent.
Europe was expected to increasingly turn to Qatar as a major provider of its LNG. Before the war, the Gulf nation was aiming to double its LNG export capacity by 2030 (based on its 2025 levels); this would have cemented Qatar as the second largest exporter of LNG globally, behind only the US.
For Europe, this would have provided much-needed diversity of supply in its highly concentrated gas supply mix. But severe damage inflicted by Iranian missiles during the war has taken out roughly a sixth of Qatar’s export capacity.
Although a concrete deal would allow Qatar to restart exports in the coming months, the damaged capacity may take several years to come back online, while export capacity expansion is set to be delayed. Some planned projects may not materialize at all: LNG from the Gulf will henceforth likely carry a geopolitical risk premium that takes into account any potential closures or conflict in the Strait.
Europe’s reliance on US LNG may therefore be expected to increase and extend further into the future, especially considering the decision of the EU27 to ban all Russian gas imports before the end of 2027. Accounting for both pipeline and LNG flows, it is possible that in 2026 the US will overtake Norway to become Europe’s largest overall supplier of gas, just as Russia was before 2022.
This dependency exposes Europe to potential coercion by the US, which has made clear its intention to use energy exports for geopolitical leverage. It also diminishes the continent’s ability to set terms. This can be seen in the anticipated watering down of EU rules, under US pressure, aiming to reduce methane emissions associated with LNG production.
While market optimism around the provisional US-Iran agreement has caused headline oil and gas prices to fall, the European gas price is unlikely to return to pre-war levels, compounding the stubbornly higher prices that have plagued the continent since the 2022 gas crisis linked to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Gas storage across Europe remains low at 45 per cent, compared to a seasonal average of 55 per cent. The need to refill storage before the cold winter months will drive demand up through the summer and autumn.
LNG relies on specialized infrastructure which restricts its supply to a greater extent than with oil. Pre-war, most Qatari LNG went to Asia. With Qatari supply curtailed, Asian and European buyers have been competing more fiercely for the same limited supply, and this bidding war is pushing up prices. Looking ahead, Asian demand is likely to be even higher than usual due to El Niño weather patterns, increasing demand for air-conditioning.
So far, US natural gas prices have remained low as export infrastructure capacity has limited exports, while production has increased as a by-product of increased oil drilling.
But the US plans to boost LNG exports by nearly 30 per cent next year, and more than double them by 2029, with a massive buildout of new LNG export infrastructure. This will likely place upwards pressure on US prices and deepen the link between US prices and higher European and Asian prices.
Oracle is sticking to its promise of more regular Solaris updates with the release of Oracle Solaris 11.4 SRU93. This release, like other SRU releases, is for paying Solaris customers, as the CBE releases for enthusiasts are on a different cadence. With Solaris’ focus being on enterprise server environments, it should come as no surprise that most of the changes and improvements are focused on things like enterprise networking and security, such as changes to how policy settings for the Kernel Crypto Framework (KCF) are stored, moving from using RPC over sockets instead of STREAMS, and more.
Of course, there’s also the long list of updated open source packages.
SRU 93.221.2 updates a broad set of platform, runtime, developer, networking, desktop, and open source components. Notable updates include Apache Tomcat to 9.0.116, bash to 5.3 patch 9, BIND to 9.20.18 and 9.20.21, Django 4.2 to 4.2.30, Django 5.2 to 5.2.13, Firefox to 140.8.0esr, Golang to 1.25.8, Node.js 20 to 20.20.2, Node.js 22 to 22.22.2, Node.js 24 to 24.14.1, NSS to 3.119.1, Perl to 5.42, Python 3.11 to 3.11.15, Python 3.13 to 3.13.12, RabbitMQ to 4.2.4, Thunderbird to 140.8.0esr, vim to 9.2.0340, and zlib to 1.3.2. Additional updates include development tools, Python modules, X11 utilities, printing components, libraries, cryptographic packages, networking tools, and desktop-related packages.
↫ Colin Kavanagh at the Oracle Solaris Blog
Existing Oracle Solaris customers can update to the new release through pkg update.
Who is winning the battle to be top scorer at the World Cup? Live and updated throughout the tournament
All-time World Cup goalscorers
The Golden Boot is awarded to the World Cup’s top goalscorer, with assists used as a tie-breaker if two or more players finish level. The 2026 tournament has three former Golden Boot winners taking part: Kylian Mbappé of France (eight goals in 2022), England’s Harry Kane (six goals in 2018) and James Rodríguez of Colombia (six goals in 2014).
Mbappé and Kane are among the pre-tournament favourites to finish top scorer in North America, alongside Norway’s Erling Haaland – making his World Cup debut – and Argentina’s Lionel Messi.
Continue reading...As companies integrate AI and hire fewer employees, a shift toward a ‘gig economy’ will commence
In 2024, the buy-now-pay-later company Klarna announced that it would cut hundreds of customer service roles and begin using an artificial intelligence chatbot instead. The move was expected to save the company millions. But a year later, after customers complained about the degraded quality of customer service, Klarna began to quietly recruit human customer service agents back.
At first glance, the reversal appeared to be a victory for human workers in the age of AI. The reality was more complex. Instead of bringing on full-time customer service agents, who Klarna contracts through an outside agency, it instead brought on workers in what Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski has described as “an Uber type of set-up”. Now, an AI chatbot continues to handle most of customers’ basic queries, while a growing number of gig workers handle the more advanced ones. “Just like somebody can go and drive an Uber for a while, they can actually jump on and work for Klarna’s customer service,” Siemiatkowski said on a podcast in February.
Continue reading...The outcome of a special election in the small working-class district of Makerfield could upend Labour Party leadership and U.K. politics.
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from Autoblog: For years, the Chinese auto industry has employed a hostile price war to kneecap global competitors. Armed with massive state subsidies, cheap raw materials, and an aggressive "scale-first" business model, Chinese automakers flooded the market with electric vehicles priced so low that legacy manufacturers stood no chance to compete. How did they do it? Simple, they couldn't. They did it anyway. Reports from CarNewsChina show that Chinese automakers have been selling vehicles at a loss until a recent law passed by the Chinese government banned below-cost sales of new vehicles. During the ongoing sales slump in China caused by rolled-back subsidies and direct government intervention banning below-cost sales, the truth behind the rapid expansion of the Chinese auto industry has been exposed. "By the first quarter of 2026, China captured 32 percent of the global auto market, with its New Energy Vehicles (NEVs) controlling an incredible 61 percent of global share," the report notes. Yet that dominance has come at a steep cost: throughout 2025, "the profit margin for China's auto industry plunged to 4.4 percent and dropped further to a historic low of 3.2 percent in early 2026." "Gross profit, not net profit, per vehicle, plummeted to a mere $2,000. We can expect the net figure to be loss-making." Autoblog adds: "Data shows over 70 percent of Chinese car sales were loss-making. This left more than half of the country's auto industry in the red. Great Wall Motor (GWM) even saw net profits drop 17 percent despite steady revenue growth." China's EV price war has now hit a wall. New regulations are discouraging below-cost sales, rising material costs are forcing automakers to cut discounts and raise prices, and reduced tax incentives are weakening domestic demand. To sustain growth, manufacturers are increasingly turning to exports.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Socceroos and United States both made a fast start to their campaign – here is what the Group D rivals must do to maintain momentum in Seattle
Back Nestory Irankunda: the 20-year-old was expected to be an impact player at this World Cup, coming on as a substitute to affect matches against tiring opposition. A player of the match performance when starting against Turkey showed how Irankunda has become one of the Socceroos’ most important players. While still learning his wing-craft, his speed and determination without the ball are vital in a Socceroos outfit seemingly happy to give their opponents’ possession, and his ability to make the most of transition and direct opportunities – as seen for his opening goal against Turkey – can be a superpower.
Continue reading...got my first one wheel ever and have been having an absolute blast. i originally planned to buy the vesc conversion kit deep into my one wheel journey but the constant beeping at 17mph leaves me feeling like someone who got blue balled. want a second opinion because installing the vesc doesn’t look too bad but i don’t want to risk breaking it 🫡
Sellers of luxury villas have wiped tens of millions of pounds off asking prices, with sales down 19% in May from the previous month
Property sales in Dubai have fallen “off a cliff”, a leading market watcher has said, after war in the Middle East forced a dramatic slowdown in one of the world’s most expensive real estate markets.
Sales in the city dropped 19% in May compared with the previous month, accelerating from a 4% drop in April, the researcher ValuStrat found.
Continue reading...Directive aimed at government workers, but reports of wider implementation spark warnings of future Afghanistan-wide prohibition
The Taliban have ordered a sweeping ban on the use of smartphones by government officials – in what some analysts say could foreshadow broader, population-level restrictions.
In a directive issued by the Taliban’s military courts and reviewed by the Guardian, the ban was to take effect this week and prohibits “high rank, low rank, general mujahideen, or service staff” from using mobile phones.
Continue reading...More than six months after federal agents descended on Minnesota, the toll of the immigration crackdown on the Twin Cities continues to mount.
The latest revelations about the far-reaching and deeply felt impacts of the campaign known as Operation Metro Surge come in a Human Rights Watch report published Thursday.
Based on more than 130 interviews, video analysis, and government arrest data, the report documents a dizzying array of abuses over the multi-month siege of Minneapolis and St. Paul — from lethal violence to free speech violations, unlawful detentions, and more.
While many of the abuses are well-known — including the killings of Minnesota residents Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents — others occurred in the shadows of the infamous campaign.
Among the most troubling accounts are those provided by healthcare and mental health professionals.
According to the report, the National Alliance on Mental Illness in Minnesota saw a 120 percent increase in calls and a “significant increase” in the number of people struggling with suicidal thoughts or actions during Metro Surge. One medical provider knew of at least three teenagers who attempted to take their own life after their parents were detained in the crackdown, with one of the adolescents doing so on a “frequent” basis.
“One goal of the report is to bring light back to the full scope of the harm, and not only the harm that we saw in terms of violence in the streets, in terms of abusive detentions,” Reagan Williams, the author of the new report, told The Intercept, “but also the effects that that had for aspects of daily life for everybody here — the impact it had on people’s ability to leave their homes, to go to doctor, to go to school, to go to work.”
Human Rights Watch found the combination of violence and racial profiling that defined the crackdown caused many Minnesotans to forgo medical care.
The day after Good was killed, nearly a third of one healthcare provider’s patients — mostly Somali or Spanish-speaking immigrants — did not show up for pre-scheduled appointments. Another provider said the number of in-person visits at their office dropped by as much as 50 percent.
When Williams arrived in the Twin Cities, her focus was the kind of violent interactions documented in viral videos proliferating from Minnesota. She soon learned those weren’t the only issues community members were desperate to discuss.
“People that we talked with expressed emotions of exhaustion, fear, frustration, immense stress,” she said. “They expressed particular concerns for children, medical providers in particular, the impact of missing school, of knowing violence is happening in their communities — for immigrant children and children of color, the fear of having a parent taken, of themselves being taken.”
“Children are particularly vulnerable to long-term impacts of this kind of acute violence and stress,” Williams added. “Those are impacts that will continue on.”
Described by Trump administration officials as the largest immigration enforcement operation in history, the crackdown in the Twin Cities began in December and stretched into February. Thousands of officials from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the U.S. Border Patrol conducted roving arrest operations throughout the area.
More than 4,000 immigrants were arrested during Metro Surge. At roughly 100 arrests per day, it was the highest per capita arrest rate in the country; 64 percent of immigrants arrested in the campaign had no criminal record.
“In Minnesota, US citizens and immigrants alike were racially profiled in the ordinary course of their day — approached by federal agents while driving, while at work, or while shoveling snow,” the report said. “Minnesota residents of Somali and Latin American descent were notably targeted, despite the fact that the overwhelming majority of these communities are US citizens or have green cards.”
A hotline run by the National Lawyers Guild recorded 524 cases of the U.S. citizens detained during the surge, though the figure is believed to be a significant undercount. A survey by the U.S. Immigration Policy Center at the University of California, San Diego earlier this year found that nearly a third of Minneapolis residents experienced an interaction with federal agents; of those interactions, nearly half occurred “at or near a school, healthcare facility, childcare facility, courthouse, or place of worship.”
The new report follows a fresh tally from Minneapolis officials, announced last week, estimating that Metro Surge cost the city nearly $700 million. A nonprofit serving tenants in Minnesota described the economic fallout as a “crisis,” the Human Rights Watch report said, with an 85 percent increase in people seeking rent payment assistance.
“If I told you every time ICE was near a school, you’d stop reading my messages.”
In one Minnesota school district, attendance dropped by nearly a third during the government operation. At least 14 incidents of immigration enforcement reported at or near campuses, including the arrest of a preschool teacher, a special education staff member, and a parent at a school bus stop.
“If I told you every time ICE was near a school,” the district’s superintendent told Human Rights Watch, “you’d stop reading my messages.”
Considering the sweeping impacts of the crackdown, Human Rights Watch is calling for an overhaul of the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE and Border Patrol; congressional investigations into the actions of officials involved in the operation; legislation to prohibit immigration arrests at sensitive locations such as schools and hospitals; and a host of other reforms.
To date, the report said, “The many abuses committed by federal agencies during Operation Metro Surge have so far been met with near-total impunity.”
The post ICE’s Unseen Toll in Minneapolis: Suicide Helpline Calls More Than Doubled During Surge appeared first on The Intercept.
| 40 miles range 35mph top speed and only $2,600 idk why I didn't join sooner. Also no sales tax since they are based out of the UAE. That was the unexpected cherry on top. Gonna be the longest 40 days of my life. [link] [comments] |
The growing odds and seismic consequences of a Le Pen-Bardella victory.
How Beijing’s export strategy will keep poor countries poor.
Tehran is poised to overplay its hand.
As the pornography platform has exploded in popularity, a side industry has emerged: middlemen who encourage young women into the industry, then take a large cut of their earnings
Markuss Hussle wants his online students to understand one thing: he knows how to make money. There is no subtlety involved. He gives an hour-long presentation in one video, sitting next to his silver Lamborghini. In another, he splices his money-making tips with footage of a ski weekend with his friends in Courchevel, in the French Alps, including shots of private jets, helicopters and a girlfriend in a fur coat. He claims the trip cost $100,000 (£75,000). He shows off his watches and his swimming pool and talks about how his mother worked three jobs as a cleaner until he “retired her” and bought her a home by the sea.
If you were not paying close attention to the spreadsheets and presentations interspersed with the motivational lifestyle content, you might guess he was offering guidance on how to trade shares or invest in cryptocurrency. There are a lot of performance graphs and much discussion of account management, optimisation, scaling, working smart and tripling profits.
Continue reading...This blog is now closed – see our full report on the latest in the Middle East crisis
Trump also addressed media reports of a leaked US-Iran deal (see post at 11:57), denying claims it includes a $300bn reconstruction fund for Tehran.
“We’re not putting up 10 cents,” he said. “We are not investing and we do not have a fund.”
It’s not final. It’s a memorandum of understanding, and if I don’t like it, we’ll go back to shooting at them, dropping bombs on their head.
If I don’t like it, if they don’t behave, we’ll go right back to dropping bombs right smack in the middle of their head, okay, because they’ve misbehaved for 47 years.”
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Tesco, a retail conglomerate headquartered in the United Kingdom, is moving 40,000 server workloads off of VMware amid "abusive conduct" from Broadcom, recent legal filings claim. Tesco filed a lawsuit in the UK's High Court against Broadcom alleging breach of contract last year. According to a September report from The Register, the lawsuit claimed that in January 2021, Tesco bought perpetual licenses for VMware's vSphere Foundation and Cloud Foundation, a subscription to VMware Tanzu, plus support services until 2026, with the option to extend support for four additional years. But when Broadcom took over VMware in November 2023, it would not honor the deal and instead tried to get Tesco to pay "excessive and inflated prices for virtualization software for which Tesco has already paid" and would not allow it to buy support services for its perpetually licensed software without buying "duplicative subscription-based licenses for those same Software products," the initial complaint read, The Register reported at the time. Tesco, which reported 73.7 billion pounds (about $98.7 billion) in revenue in its fiscal year 2026, has since started migrating away from VMware and Broadcom's mainframe products, according to late-May court filings reported on by The Register today. In January, Broadcom stopped supporting Tesco's VMware products, Tesco said, and Tesco has been paying for third-party support since. In its initial filing, Tesco also said that Broadcom refused to upgrade software or provide all security updates to customers without subscriptions. One of Tesco's recent filings, per The Register, reads: "Faced with Broadcom's abusive conduct, and given the criticality of virtualization and mainframe software and services to its business, Tesco has been forced to incur material costs to procure alternative solutions with reduced functionality, and to migrate to that software in a manner, and on a timeframe, that creates very significant risks to its business." If it works "at exceptional pace," Tesco will be completely off VMware by the end of 2027 at the earliest. However, "the timeframe in which that migration must be undertaken has created and continues to create operational and commercial risk, and at material ongoing cost and disruption to the business," Tesco reportedly noted. Tesco is also dealing with migration challenges related to data security because its new, unnamed virtualization software is incompatible with the Veeam and Zerto products it uses. Tesco initially requested at least 100 million pounds (about $133.6 million) in damages each from Broadcom, VMware, and reseller Computacenter, plus interest. In its recent filings, Tesco said it turned down at least four offers from Broadcom to continue using VMware and Broadcom's mainframe tech. [...] The case is expected to go to court between November 1, 2027, and February 25, 2028, The Register reported. Afterward, it could go to trial. Further reading: HPE Tempts VMware Users, Partners With Year of Free Virtualization Software
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 18.
Before President Donald Trump threw his latest hand grenade into congressional negotiations over a key domestic spying law, two factions of Senate Democrats seemed to believe they were on the verge of a breakthrough.
Privacy advocates thought they had their best chance in years of passing reforms, including a warrant requirement for searching American communications collected abroad.
Centrists allied with U.S. intelligence agencies, meanwhile, thought they were close to renewing Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act with only minor tweaks.
Then Trump, who had once already thrown the renewal process into chaos, announced on Wednesday that he wouldn’t sign it unless Congress passed an unrelated voter suppression bill.
Claiming that Democrats were poised to walk away from a spy law compromise, Trump said that “to add a slight bit of intrigue but, for the Good of the Nation, and the People of our Country, I will not approve FISA without THE SAVE AMERICA ACT going along with it.”
Trump’s surprise outburst on Truth Social on Wednesday scrapped the confirmation hearing set later in the day for Jay Clayton, a federal prosecutor in New York, to serve as the permanent director of national intelligence. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., had said that he hoped to quickly confirm Clayton.
Clayton’s impending confirmation had appeared to solve a problem — at least for some Democrats — that Trump created by tapping lapdog housing chief, Bill Pulte, as the Cabinet-level intelligence chief. It might also have opened a route for Congress to renew Section 702, the surveillance law that allows federal agents to conduct “backdoor,” warrantless searches of Americans’ communications collected abroad.
In a joint press conference on Wednesday, top Senate Democrats revealed the cracks in their coalition over next steps on FISA.
A key reformer, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said he still hopes to pursue adding a warrant requirement to Section 702, while a centrist aligned with the intelligence agencies, Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., expressed disappointment that the easiest route to renewal without major changes had been foreclosed.
“We had a path forward, as of yesterday, and today we don’t, and that’s because of this president.”
“This has become a complete debacle, and now it’s up to the White House to figure out a path forward here,” said Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., a member of the intelligence committee. “We had a path forward, as of yesterday, and today we don’t, and that’s because of this president and his advisers.”
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., remained cagey about what version of the law he would like to see ultimately passed. But in comments at the joint press conference, he sought to portray Democrats as the more responsible party when it came to Section 702.
“It’s on our Republican colleagues to work with us to find A) a capable director, not someone who is a menace, and second, then to work with us on renewing FISA. It is up to them,” Schumer said at the press conference. He said he was deeply concerned about Trump’s appointment of Pulte, who appears likely to step into the office on Friday.
Republicans “have got to have the courage to buck the president, who clearly doesn’t want a DNI director and doesn’t want FISA renewed,” Schumer said. “All he wants is Pulte.”
Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, claimed Sunday that Section 702 renewal was on a “glide path” before Pulte’s nomination. He also praised Clayton’s selection, while reserving the right to ask about Clayton’s views on election integrity.
Reformers said Thursday, however, that Section 702’s renewal was never as assured as Warner and Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Tom Cotton, R-Ark., have suggested in public comments.
Majorities of both Republicans and Democrats voted in recent weeks against advancing the law’s renewal in versions of the bill that do not include a warrant requirement.
“They don’t want to have to deal with people who want things like warrants.”
“They want that to be the narrative, because they don’t want to have to deal with people who want things like warrants,” said Kia Hamadanchy, a senior policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union. “At no point have they actually demonstrated that they have a deal that one, has 60 votes in the Senate, and two, has any chance of going anywhere in the House.”
Wyden expressed alarm about Trump’s actions at the joint Senate Democrat press conference. Wyden said that he always wanted to reform the law — not allow it to expire.
“It is now even clearer than before that the only path to 60 votes in the United States Senate on intelligence is real reform, actual black-letter law, that addresses these issues,” Wyden said.
Privacy advocates argue that the way out of the congressional logjam is to allow members of Congress to vote on whether to add a warrant requirement, something that Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson have not been willing to allow so far. Even then, however, Trump could veto whatever version of the law emerges from that process.
The post Senate Democrats Aren’t Happy About Trump’s Spy Law Ultimatum appeared first on The Intercept.
| My friend sold me his Pint X with like 400 miles on it for $400, got new rails and added my own stickers on the fender (there more to come don’t worry) what we thinkin? [link] [comments] |
Ordinary Taiwanese, young and old, are joining courses to learn how to fly drones amid looming China military threat
In a small, crowded room in Taipei, Pan Chien-chin is trying to keep a drone hovering steadily. Imagining himself flying a plane, he gently nudges controller joysticks to guide the insect-like device as it hums through the air.
Cheers break out as Pan, who has never flown a drone before, steers it around a rectangular course marked by traffic cones without crashing. Around him are about two dozen fellow trainees, all signed up for the same course: Taiwan’s first civil defence drone training programme.
Continue reading...The new update lets players decide how much censorship they want, depending on their region.
Details of the 14-point agreement revealed as senior US officials claim ‘major win’ despite significant concessions to Tehran
Reaction: Donald Trump’s Iran deal met with anger, relief and incredulity
Analysis: Trump’s Iran deal is result of unrealistic ambitions for an untenable war
Donald Trump has signed a 14-point agreement with Iran, claiming it delivered a “major win” for the United States – even as it made significant political and financial concessions to Iran to reopen the strait of Hormuz and prevent a “worldwide depression”.
In extraordinary remarks on Wednesday, Donald Trump went from threatening Iran with a new wave of attacks to suggesting the country had basic rights to enrich uranium for civilian use, that he would not pressure Tehran to abandon its ballistic missiles programme and the US was “going to have to give back” billions of dollars in frozen Iranian assets.
Continue reading... | Dope. Love you guys at Float Life. Love the magnet too! [link] [comments] |
Matter 1.6 introduces updates to device setup, smart thermostats, and connected-home technologies. Here's what you need to know.
Jamie McDonald, a partner at the firm Sullivan & Cromwell, is President Trump's choice to helm one of the nation's most prestigious federal prosecutors' offices.
Go behind the scenes with our team as we find and make sense of the numbers.
President Trump warned he could order new strikes if Iran's leaders "don't behave." The U.S. and Iran signed the memo of understanding remotely, a White House official said.
The New York Knicks are planning to visit the White House, owner James Dolan said Wednesday, marking a first for an NBA Finals winner during President Trump's time in office.
Knicks owner Dolan is a longtime ally of US president
No NBA team has visited White House under Trump
New York Knicks owner James Dolan says his team will become the first NBA champions to visit Donald Trump at the White House.
“We just did receive an invitation from the White House, which we accepted,” Dolan said during an appearance on WFAN New York on Wednesday. “We still have to figure out the details … but yes, of course. Look, I invited the president to come down for [last week’s Game 3 of the NBA finals]. He is a friend. I’ve known him for 30 years and I’m very proud to bring the team to the White House.”
Continue reading...Democrat Jamie Raskin seeks ‘comprehensive accounting’ and requests interview with outgoing Bard president
Harvard University and Bard College are facing new questions about the institutions’ relationship with Jeffrey Epstein amid allegations that the convicted child sex trafficker leveraged his ties to the universities and their faculty to traffick women, while also burnishing his reputation to avoid detection.
Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the House judiciary committee, said in a statement that Harvard and Bard had both previously attempted to investigate the role their universities and leadership played in facilitating Epstein’s abuse, but that those attempts either failed or fell short of a full accounting of what occurred.
Continue reading...The US star was on a ‘modified’ training schedule for the third day in a row after coming out at half-time in the opener. Other options must be considered
Mauricio Pochettino now has the privilege of giving the new World Cup format a practical test.
The Argentinian wisely played it safe at half-time of the United States’ 4-1 thrashing of Paraguay, pulling Christian Pulisic before his calf could be kicked any more. The attacking midfielder said after the match that he had taken similar punishment before, and he was optimistic he would be fit for the next match. As of Wednesday, he was still training away from his teammates and wearing a sleeve on his left calf.
Continue reading...Senator Bill Cassidy attacks ‘worst foreign policy blunder in decades’ while others in his party skeptical over peace deal
A handful of Senate Republicans have sharply criticized the agreement Donald Trump reached with Iran, accusing the administration of committing “the worst foreign policy blunder in decades”.
On Wednesday, the Trump administration released the text of an interim deal between Washington and Tehran to end the 110-day conflict, framing it as a “major win” for the US – even as the 14-point accord made significant political and financial concessions to Iran to reopen the strait of Hormuz and prevent a “worldwide depression”.
Continue reading...The US has to approve a renewal of the existing agreement by 1 July, or announce its intention to exit the pact, a process that would take 10 years
Donald Trump also denied (again) that the memorandum of understanding includes a $300bn fund for Iran, and denied that he had asked the Gulf states to commit funding.
“It’s false,” Trump told reporters as he sat alongside Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. “You can invest if you want. What am I going to do, say no one is ever allowed to invest? We’re not investing, we’re not putting up 10 cents and people can decide to do it. That’s up to them.”
In short, what it does is it opens the strait of Hormuz immediately … It also provides a framework whereby if the Iranians give us what we need – on stopping the funding of terrorism, on no longer pursuing a nuclear weapon – then they can get some benefits, be re-invited into the world economy.
Continue reading...Nottinghamshire tree, one of Europe’s oldest and largest, fails to produce leaves after being stressed by series of hot, dry summers
The Major oak, one of Europe’s oldest, largest and most celebrated ancient trees, has died.
The huge tree, which has grown in Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire, England, for at least 1,000 years, failed to produce any leaves this year, after becoming stressed by a series of hot, dry summers.
Continue reading...Wessex Archaeology suspect they have uncovered a prototype for world-famous Stonehenge site in Wiltshire
A 5,000-year-old monument that was aligned with the summer and winter solstices and may have served as a prototype for the later solar alignment at Stonehenge has been discovered close to the famous neolithic site, in what archaeologists have described as a “once in a lifetime” find.
The structure at Bulford, 5km (3 miles) from the world heritage site in Wiltshire, has been carbon dated to around 3000BC, the same time as the earliest phase of construction at Stonehenge and 500 years before its huge trilithon stones were carefully placed to line up with the midsummer and midwinter sun.
Continue reading...wiredmikey shares a report from SecurityWeek: Microsoft on Wednesday published an advisory acknowledging the public disclosure of a vulnerability in Defender that could lead to privilege escalation. The security defect, tracked as CVE-2026-50656 (CVSS score of 7.8), was dropped last week by security researcher Nightmare Eclipse (also known as Chaotic Eclipse). "We are working to provide a high-quality security update that addresses this vulnerability. We will provide information in this CVE when the update is available," Microsoft adds. RoguePlanet, Nightmare Eclipse explained last week, targets a race condition in Microsoft Defender and allows attackers to gain System privileges. The researcher released a proof-of-concept (PoC) exploit that demonstrates local privilege escalation (LPE) on Windows 11 and Windows 10 systems with the June 2026 patches installed. [...] On Wednesday, Nightmare Eclipse pointed out that the PoC works regardless of whether Defender's real-time protection is enabled or disabled. It may even work in passive mode, the researcher said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Frustrated lawmakers are increasing pressure on the defense secretary to get answers they’ve sought for months.
Efforts to stop Central Africa's deadly Ebola outbreak face widespread mistrust and porous borders in a war zone.
The Obama-era Iran deal was packed with technical details and specific requirements limiting, but not shutting down, Iran's nuclear program. President Trump's new agreement is more of a framework, and it's not final yet.
Yesterday, Google released Android 17 to Pixel devices, so late last night I updated my Pixel 10 Pro with the intent to write a news item about the release today. The reality is that that I totally forgot I even upgraded last night, because Android 17 is about the biggest nothingburger I’ve ever seen. Virtually all of the new features listed in the upgrade blurb on my phone were “AI” nonsense I don’t encounter, so over the course of the day, I didn’t really notice anything new about my phone’s operating system.
The only interesting feature that I think will be particularly useful on tablets and perhaps foldable devices is something called “App Bubbles”. Basically, you can turn any application into an overlay that can be minimised into a bubble, which then lives anywhere on your screen. Tap it, and you can maximise the overlay again. This little multitasking bubble can contain multiple applications, effectively making it a dock or taskbar. Neat, but I didn’t see much use for it on my phone.
The remainder of the new non-“AI” features are hard to spot, at best. I guess the ability to turn one half of a foldable display into a gamepad is neat if you can deal with gaming on glass buttons (I cannot), and the changes to location access (you can now grant it for just one time) and contacts access (it’s more fine-grained and temporary now instead of granting access to everything forever) are welcome, but that’s about it for user-facing features.
Under the hood, the one thing that stands out is that Google is enforcing stricter memory limits for applications, based on how much RAM a device has. The idea is that this should prevent memory leaks from getting out of control and leading to crashes, which is nice, especially for devices with less RAM.
Android 17 is available for Pixel devices now, and will probably find its way to non-Pixel devices over the coming months or years. With how little meat there is on Android 17’s bones, this might be the first release where Android’s update woes don’t really matter.
In a sprawling news conference at the G-7 summit in France, the president touted the economic benefits of the ceasefire and threatened force if it fails.
Epstein associate’s lawyer rejected preferential treatment claims in January, saying ‘humane treatment isn’t special’
Staff from the House oversight and judiciary committees visited the Texas prison where Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, is serving her sentence, according to Democratic lawmakers.
In a statement, the Democratic representatives Robert Garcia and Jamie Raskin said staff from the committees traveled to the minimum-security federal prison camp in Bryan, Texas, on Tuesday to seek answers about Maxwell’s transfer there, and about allegations that she has received preferential treatment at the prison camp.
Continue reading...Review reveals rise in users and rates of psychosis in countries where cannabis is sold commercially
Decriminalising the possession of cannabis or strictly regulating access to the drug do not appear to drive up usage, but when the drug is sold commercially the number of users increases and more mental health problems are seen, a review has found.
An international team analysed the dramatic shift in policies on cannabis between 2000 and 2025, including how the numbers of people taking the drug, its potency, and rates of psychosis changed after new rules came in.
Continue reading...White House joined suit to stop city of Evanston, Illinois, from compensating victims of housing discrimination
The Trump administration has joined a lawsuit attempting to stop a first-of-its-kind reparations plan that would compensate Black residents of a Chicago suburb, arguing that its race-based criteria are unconstitutional.
The program, in the Chicago suburb of Evanston, offers Black residents and their descendants up to $25,000 for past raced-based housing discrimination. When the city’s program was approved in 2021, it was hailed as a model for reparations movements across the US.
Continue reading...US entered war with maximalist goals and exits it with pragmatic decision to end conflict despite political cost
As the adage goes: no plan of battle survives first contact with the enemy.
Donald Trump entered the war with Iran with maximalist goals: eliminating the country’s nuclear programme, destroying its ballistic missile programme and ending its support for regional military groups including Hezbollah and Hamas.
Continue reading...The latest Nintendo console benefits from an incredible library of games carried over from the original Switch, but it has fantastic exclusives as well.
CCS Insight expects global smartphone shipments to fall 15% this year as AI-driven demand pushes memory manufacturers toward higher-margin server chips. "[S]ome entry-level devices have already seen their sticker prices go up by more than 50 percent since last year," reports The Register. From the report: The firm found that the primary smartphone market (meaning new devices) contracted 4.4 percent in the first quarter of this year, despite sales channels front-loading (meaning stockpiling) product inventory, as device prices begin to rise sharply. As CCS notes, this casts an ominous shadow on the outlook for the rest of the year, and it seems things have worsened since The Register first started reporting on the smartphone memory woes. Back in January, the forecast was for handset price rises of 6-8 percent, while the most pessimistic outlook was that the global market might contract as much as 5.2 percent. By February, analysts were expecting to see a decline in shipments of around 8 percent across the global market, and for prices to increase by about 14 percent. The root cause of all this is the AI craze, which has seen huge demand for high-performance GPU-filled servers to process it all. Chipmakers have moved to capitalize on this by prioritizing production of high-margin memory components for those servers, rather than making the plain old DRAM and NAND needed for PCs and phones. "The memory chip crisis shows no sign of slowing down in the near future, ramping up the pressure on manufacturers and consumers. Memory components now account for more than 30 percent of a manufacturer's bill of materials in some smartphones." said CCS research analyst Ben Hatton. "The full impact has yet to be felt in many regions, but it's clear that device prices will accelerate over the rest of the year."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Luigi Mangione's lawyers will argue that he was suffering from an extreme emotional disturbance when he allegedly killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Those who held off on upgrading can now get the PS5 and Xbox Series versions at no extra cost.
Any chance this battery is root cause to the error 16 code after working for an unknown amount of time?
I picked up a used XR last year, my first and only board. It has 4206 software and I’ve been happy enough with speed and range. I cut it on for a birthday ride the other day and got the dreaded error 16 code. Boo and happy birthday to me. I fiddled with it, it worked intermittently for a minute, and then nothing.
One thing lead to another, research happened, and now I’m looking at the drop in XRV kit and/or replacing the wiring harness.
Troubleshooting the wiring harness, I tore into the battery box and lo and behold.. this dang thing has a JWXR battery in it. Neat!
Should I stay the course? Pivot?
Nine scientific computing projects have been selected for early access development for the next-gen AI-enhanced Discovery supercomputer
June 17, 2026 — Scientific computing experts at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) have selected the first nine research projects that will run on Discovery, the nation’s next flagship supercomputer, slated for deployment in 2028.

Nine scientific computing projects have been selected for early access development for the next-gen AI-enhanced Discovery supercomputer
The projects will be developed through the Discovery Center for Accelerated Application Readiness (CAAR) program at ORNL’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF). The program is designed to ensure that leading-edge scientific applications are optimized and ready to deliver results as soon as Discovery becomes operational.
“Our goal is to develop a suite of leadership-class computing applications that are ready to run science campaigns on day one,” said Reuben Budiardja, CAAR programming lead and group leader for ORNL’s Advanced Computing for Nuclear, Particle, and Astrophysics Group. “We want to demonstrate Discovery’s full potential from the very moment it becomes available to users.”
The Discovery supercomputer will be a key contributor to the Genesis Mission — DOE’s ambitious initiative to create the world’s most powerful scientific platform that will accelerate research breakthroughs, enhance national security, and advance energy innovation across the country. As part of the Genesis platform, Discovery’s world-class artificial intelligence and high-performance computing (HPC) capabilities will be connected with emerging quantum computing technologies to help solve some of the world’s hardest problems faster than ever before.
Technical support for CAAR is provided in part by the ORNL HPE/AMD Center of Excellence, a collaborative team of computer scientists, application developers and staff from the OLCF, AMD and HPE, working to optimize the applications to fully leverage Discovery’s advanced architecture.
In addition to preparing applications, the CAAR program will help strengthen key systems such as the user and programming environments, while also developing documentation and training resources for Discovery’s broader user community.
The selection process for the CAAR applications is highly competitive. The projects were evaluated based on their potential for scientific advancements and the ability to solve grand challenge problems designed to push the limits of Discovery’s computational capabilities. A key requirement is that each application demonstrate the potential to run three to five times faster than on Frontier, OLCF’s current exascale supercomputer.
The selected applications span a diverse set of scientific domains, including astrophysics, molecular biology, quantum chemistry and aerospace engineering. Likewise, the teams behind them reflect a broad cross-section of the research community, with participants from industry — such as General Electric — alongside universities, national laboratories and federal agencies including NASA.
“We’re always seeking opportunities to collaborate with industry and agency partners. Organizations like NASA and GE operate at the leading edge of science and technology, driving innovation across critical fields,” said Tom Beck, section head of Science Engagement at ORNL’s National Center for Computational Sciences. “By pairing ORNL’s computing expertise with the cutting-edge research represented by these CAAR teams, we’re creating a powerful combination that will unlock new insights and accelerate the pace of scientific and technological advancement.”
To achieve optimal performance on Discovery, teams will go beyond traditional code optimization. Many projects are expected to incorporate new methodologies, advanced algorithms and novel AI programming techniques. These include the use of surrogate models to accelerate simulations, mixed-precision computing to improve efficiency and emerging approaches such as agentic AI — or autonomous AI — to explore complex parameter spaces.
“This is a really special time for computing. We’re laying the groundwork for the next generation of supercomputers that will feature a convergence of AI, HPC and quantum computing. And, getting to see how all of this comes together when Discovery is deployed and ready to run early science and deliver results is something we’re very excited about,” said Matt Sieger, project director for the Discovery supercomputer. “We’re looking forward to showing the world what Discovery can do.”
Learn more about the selected CAAR applications here.
The OLCF is a DOE Office of Science user facility at ORNL.
UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOE’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://energy.gov/science.
Source: Jeremy Rumsey, ORNL
The post ORNL: Discovery Supercomputer’s 1st Applications Selected for Day-One Science appeared first on HPCwire.
PALO ALTO, Calif., June 17, 2026 — Odyssey, an AI lab pioneering world models founded by self-driving car veterans, today announced a $310 million Series B at a $1.45 billion valuation. Natural Capital led the round, with participation from Amazon, AMD Ventures, GV, EQT, IQT and others. They join existing investors including Jeff Dean, Google’s chief scientist; Elad Gil; Qasar Younis, co-founder and CEO of Applied Intuition; Garry Tan, president and CEO of Y Combinator; Guillermo Rauch, founder and CEO of Vercel; and Kyle Vogt, founder of Cruise.
Odyssey has announced a new deal with Amazon Web Services (AWS), which will become the company’s preferred cloud provider. As a leading world model provider, Odyssey requires compute designed for speed and quality. In addition to other chips, Odyssey will also use AWS Trainium chips, which are purpose-built to deliver these performance advantages. Both Odyssey and AWS share a conviction that Trainium will enable industry-leading price performance, and the companies will collaborate on future research and go-to-market efforts to make these use cases more accessible to customers.
“We believe world models represent a new class of foundation model—AI that can understand and simulate the world itself,” said Oliver Cameron, Co-Founder and CEO of Odyssey. “The last few years have seen major breakthroughs in scaling, interactivity, multimodality, and physics accuracy, and the field is now advancing extremely quickly. This round provides the compute, infrastructure, and partners to push the frontier of general world models, and to achieve a GPT-3 moment for the field.”
“World models represent one of the most demanding workloads in AI—they require massive compute throughput with tight latency constraints,” said Ron Diamant, Vice President and Distinguished Engineer at Amazon. “Odyssey’s team has been pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in this space, and Trainium is purpose-built for exactly this kind of scale. We’re excited to support this next phase of growth with AWS as Odyssey’s preferred cloud provider, collaborate on optimizing their models on our silicon, and work together to help accelerate applications in robotics, gaming, science, and beyond.”
Over the last three years, Odyssey has pushed the limits of research in this nascent, growing area. Odyssey-2 Max materially advanced the state-of-the-art in physics-accuracy for general world simulation. Starchild-1 introduced the first real-time multimodal world model. Agora-1 launched multi-agent interaction within a shared world simulation. With PROWL, Odyssey demonstrated how world models can improve through active exploration. Together, this research represents significant progress toward capable, general world models.
“At Natural Capital, we invest behind ambitious technical teams building what comes next,” said Jay Zaveri, General Partner at Natural Capital. “We developed deep conviction in Odyssey’s research direction, technical leadership, and execution, which made this our largest investment to date. We believe they have the potential to help define AI beyond language models.”
The funding will accelerate Odyssey’s research and broader deployment of its world model technology.
About Odyssey
Odyssey is an AI lab pioneering general world models: causal, multimodal systems that learn to predict and interact with the world over long horizons. This foundational technology promises to revolutionize robotics, science, healthcare, education, gaming, defense, and beyond.
Odyssey’s founders previously pioneered the most complex application of physical AI: self-driving cars. They’ve now brought together a world-class research team from DeepMind, Tesla, Waymo, Meta, Apple, and Wayve, who have made significant contributions to language models (DeepMind Gemini), video models (DeepMind Veo), world models (Wayve GAIA), and autonomous systems (Tesla FSD).
Source: Odyssey
The post Odyssey Raises $310M Series B to Advance AI World Models appeared first on HPCwire.
The exoplanet HD 80606 b has a weird, elliptical orbit that brings it perilously close to its home star, causing massive temperature fluctuations.
Parents of children with autism are turning to a controversial stem cell treatment backed by the US Health Secretary. A growing number of clinics in the US are charging parents tens of thousands of dollars for stem cell therapy, which is being given to children as young as 18 months old. The Guardian’s chief reporter Ed Pilkington tells Kai Wright about his months-long investigation into the providers of these treatments, and their connections to the health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr. He also spoke with figures in the science community who fear the FDA may be loosening its rigorous restrictions on stem cell treatment for autism
Carvana is testing a radically different new-car dealership model in Dallas, turning the location into a test-drive center and themed "playground" while requiring every purchase to be completed through its online platform. "Every single car that we sell, whether it's used or new, is online," said Tom Taira, Carvana president of special projects who's leading the new vehicle operations. "That's a very inherent difference. Even coming into the store, you're buying it online, and that's a big difference in how people think about it." The company hopes its no-haggle pricing, hourly employees, service operations, and national logistics network can reshape franchised auto retail. CNBC reports: Through its used vehicles sales, Carvana has become the most valuable auto retailer in the U.S. with a more than $70 billion market cap. Carvana's target with the new vehicle business is to grow its market share and customer base as well as assist used vehicle sales through trade-ins and other means, according to Taira. If the company is successful, the strategy could cause a ripple effect across the U.S. franchised dealership model, which the National Automobile Dealers Association reports includes 16,990 retailers that topped $1.3 trillion in sales last year. [...] Carvana is using a location in Dallas as a test center for its foray into new vehicle sales. The facility looks like a traditional Stellantis dealership from the outside, but the consumer process for purchasing a vehicle and the responsibilities of its employees are unprecedented. Couches and chairs replace cubicles and sales offices. There are no finance and insurance departments, and instead of an army of commission-based employees, the facility has associates that are paid hourly to assist customers -- if they want the help. The experience is meant to be as self-guided as a customer wants. By scanning QR codes located on 10-foot-by-10-foot screens inside the building or on vehicles and displays outside, shoppers can customize a vehicle, learn about a product's features and conduct test drives before deciding whether to purchase anything. If they do decide to buy something, it's online and not originated from a sales person, the company said. The "playground" has roughly 50 vehicles divided by brand, with each having a theme. Jeep has an off-road display. Dodge has race tracks, including a Carvana-themed Charger pace car and part of a traditional track fence barrier. Chrysler minivans, meanwhile, have a soccer net and Ram's area is truck-centric. Carvana is not committing to expanding the exact experience to its other franchised dealer locations, but Taira told CNBC that the overall process of online sales, vehicle testing and service are expected to be consistent throughout the locations. Further reading:: Online Car Retailer Launching Nation's First Car "Vending Machine
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Spotlight Delaware is pleased to share, in podcast form, all of the panel discussions that took place at its Health Care Summit on University of Delaware’s STAR Campus on April 29, 2026.
ACCESS TO SPECIALTY CARE
With Delaware’s rapidly growing population, there is a rapidly growing demand for specialty medical care. What is the current status for accessing care like OB/GYN, neurology, and pediatrics – and what potential solutions are there to alleviate the shortages?
DOWNSTATE DEMAND
The health care challenges facing the state are multiplied in rural areas, due to geographically remote populations and fewer care facilities. What are providers and advocates doing to navigate the difficulties confronting downstate communities?
UPDATE ON THE OPIOID COMMISSION
In 2025, Delaware’s Prescription Opioid Settlement Distribution Commission revised its funding procedures. Commission Executive Director Brad Owens shares how the changes have impacted current grant applications and how funds have been assisting substance abuse victims.
HOSPITAL LEADERSHIP
C-Suite representatives from Delaware’s three largest health care systems – Bayhealth, Beebe Healthcare and ChristianaCare – discuss how their institutions are working to address the largest health challenges in the state.
DELAWARE’S MEDICAL SCHOOL: THE PATH FORWARD
Delaware’s success obtaining funds from the federal Rural Health Transformation Fund has opened the door to creating the state’s first medical school. How would a medical school improve health care in Delaware, and what are the obstacles to getting a school off the ground?
The post Health Care Summit Podcasts appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Workers with Titan Plumbing in Howell, Michigan, were on an emergency call when they noticed what appeared to be an engagement ring. It turns out that the ring had been lost for more than a decade.
New York judge imposes life without parole after emotional statements at Rex Heuermann’s sentencing
The families of eight women killed by Rex Heuermann spoke at the Gilgo Beach killer’s sentencing in Riverhead, New York, on Wednesday, more than three decades after the 62-year-old Manhattan architect began his killing spree.
Heuermann pleaded guilty to murdering seven women and admitted to the killing of an eighth victim in April. Just before being sentenced to life in prison without parole on Wednesday for his admitted crimes, Heuermann offered a weak, generalized apology for his actions.
Continue reading...Officers responding to call about ‘screaming woman’, who was celebrating Knicks win, shot dog named Jameson
As the Los Angeles police department faces mounting scrutiny after officers shot and killed a two-year-old golden Saint Bernard doodle, the city’s political leaders have backed calls for an investigation into the incident.
On Saturday, LA police officers responded to a radio call about a “screaming woman” in the Canoga Park neighborhood, about 30 miles (48km) from downtown, which turned out to be celebratory noise in reaction to the New York Knicks’s long-awaited championship win.
Continue reading...
Elon Musk became the world’s first trillionaire June 12, his net worth rocketing to $1.2 trillion when his space exploration firm SpaceX became publicly traded, valued at more than $2 trillion.
The historic wealth milestone renewed calls from some politicians to address wealth inequality and raise taxes on the richest Americans. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said Social Security taxes are capped for ultra-high earners like Musk.
"Today, Elon Musk, a trillionaire, pays the same amount into Social Security as someone making $184,500," Sanders said in a June 12 X post, calling the situation absurd and in need of reform.
Sanders’ statement accurately reflects a real feature of Social Security taxes. The federal government stops collecting the tax after a person’s wages reach a certain amount. In 2026, that cap is $184,500.
Musk couldn’t pay more than the maximum, but his income structure is unique and heavily weighted toward stocks. It’s unclear what his liability for Social Security taxes is each year.
For most wage earners, Social Security taxes, along with Medicare taxes, are paid through payroll deductions. Workers and employers each pay 6.2% of the worker’s income into Social Security, up to the cap.
That means the maximum Social Security tax liability in 2026 for someone earning $184,500 or more is $11,439. Self-employed people must pay the full 12.4% rate on their income, so their Social Security taxes would max out at $22,878.
Whether someone earns $200,000 or $2 million, they don’t pay taxes over the income cap. Benefits are also capped, so earnings above the maximum don’t increase a person’s future benefits.
"That maximum is identical for a worker earning $184,500 and for the richest person in the country," said Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist and professor at the New School for Social Research, in an email to PolitiFact.
Medicare taxes, the other portion of payroll taxes, have no income cap. Employees and employers each pay 1.45%, and an additional 0.9% surcharge is imposed on wages over $200,000 a year.
Sanders’ spokesperson Jeremy Slevin said Sanders’ post was promoting the changes proposed in his Social Security Expansion Act. The bill would eliminate the cap on Social Security taxes over $250,000 and apply the full Social Security payroll tax to more forms of income, including capital gains.
Social Security taxes are imposed only on income classified as wages, which is a regular paycheck for most workers. Bonuses and stock-based compensation like stock options or restricted stock units — if classified as wages — are subject to the tax once they’re exercised (bought or sold) or vested.
But the tax doesn’t apply to non wage-related income such as capital gains from investments, said Jessica Riedl, a Brookings Institution budget and tax fellow.
Musk’s wealth is tied up almost entirely in stock in Tesla, his electric car company; and SpaceX, the spaceflight company that also houses satellite telecommunications company Starlink and xAI, the social media and AI company behind X and Grok.
When Musk sells that stock or takes out a loan against it, that’s not counted as wages, so it isn’t subject to payroll tax.
Increases in stock value also don’t trigger Social Security taxes. The recent jump in Musk’s net worth from around $800 billion to over $1 trillion was not because he was paid billions of dollars, but because SpaceX increased in value once it went public.
It’s impossible for us to determine Musk’s total liability for federal payroll taxes, but public disclosures give a window into some of his income.
Musk does not take a salary from Tesla, so he owes no taxes there. A Securities and Exchange Commission filing from SpaceX ahead of its initial public offering shows that he received a salary of $54,080, which was tied to California’s minimum wage for exempt employees. His other companies, The Boring Company and Neuralink, are private, so they do not disclose his compensation.
Musk’s major payroll tax liability in recent years has come from exercising stock options that were paid as compensation. In 2021, he exercised an option to buy Tesla stock at a major discount based on a 2012 compensation package, which resulted in more than $20 billion in taxable income.
Although his income tax bill was likely over $11 billion that year, his Social Security tax burden would have been far less because of the cap. He would have been on the hook for about $8,853, the same as someone who earned that year’s taxable maximum of $142,800.
There’s one caveat to Sanders’ statement: It’s possible that in some years Musk could pay even less than someone earning the maximum, Ghilarducci said.
In years when his stock-based compensation doesn't incur payroll taxes, "his wage income can be near zero," she said. "In such a year he pays less into Social Security than a salaried worker earning $184,500, possibly far less."
Sanders said Musk "pays the same amount into Social Security as someone making $184,500."
Social Security taxes are imposed only on income up to a set maximum, which is $184,500 in 2026, so Sanders is right that any wages over that limit aren’t taxed. But since we can’t know how much wage-based income Musk will receive this year, it’s not clear that he’ll hit that maximum. He could pay even less.
Increases in Musk’s net worth are often caused by increasing stock value, rather than compensation. Such unrealized gains aren’t subject to Social Security taxes.
Sanders’ statement is accurate but could use a little more information. We rate it Mostly True.
June 17, 2026 — Every breakthrough AI model starts the same way: with a training run. The infrastructure running those training jobs shapes everything: how fast teams can iterate, what scale of model they can build and whether those jobs complete reliably.

NVIDIA delivers the performance, scale and reliability that frontier training requires — in benchmarks and beyond. Credit: NVIDIA.
As models grow in size, complexity and intelligence, the demands on training infrastructure are also rising.
In MLPerf Training 6.0 — the latest of a series of rigorous, peer-reviewed industry benchmarks for evaluating AI training performance — the NVIDIA Blackwell platform led across every category, demonstrating:
NVIDIA brings together performance, scale and reliability in a single platform engineered through extreme codesign to enable AI model builders to launch frontier models faster, minimize training costs and start generating revenue early.
Performance: Fastest Time to Train on Every Benchmark
MLPerf Training 6.0 added two new mixture-of-experts (MoE) pretraining workloads to the suite: DeepSeek-V3 671B and GPT-OSS-20B, reflecting the growing centrality of MoE architectures. The NVIDIA platform was the only one to be submitted across every benchmark, and delivered the fastest time to train on all seven.
This round, NVIDIA submitted results on both NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 and GB300 NVL72 rack-scale systems. Within each rack-scale system, fifth-generation NVIDIA NVLink Switches connect all 72 GPUs with high bandwidth, into a unified pool of compute and memory, enabling them to act as one giant GPU.
Large-scale MoE training faces the same all-to-all communication challenge as MoE inference — tokens must be routed across GPUs to reach the right expert subnetwork — and NVLink’s bandwidth advantage is what makes that fast and efficient at scale.
NVIDIA also showcased NVFP4 training methods that increase performance while meeting strict accuracy requirements across large- and small-scale pretraining as well as fine-tuning workloads. NVIDIA continues to push low-precision training innovation across different model architectures, most recently using NVFP4 to pretrain the massive 550-billion-parameter NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Ultra model.
NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 Delivered up to 1.6x Performance Over GB200 NVL72: In this round, GB300 NVL72 delivered up to 1.6x faster training than GB200 NVL72 at the same scale. Key Blackwell Ultra capabilities such as higher compute density with NVFP4, expanded memory capacity and a higher power ceiling that lets the GPU sustain peak performance drive this improvement.
Scale: Largest Blackwell Cluster in MLPerf Training
To support distributed training at scale, NVIDIA offers two complementary scale-out networking platforms — NVIDIA Quantum InfiniBand and NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet — giving data centers the flexibility to build large-scale clusters optimized for their infrastructure.
On DeepSeek-V3 671B, the largest MoE model in the suite, NVIDIA scaled its submission to 8,192 GPUs using GB200 NVL72 systems, the largest-scale Blackwell-based submission in MLPerf Training to date.
NVIDIA also submitted results at 5,120 GPUs with NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 systems on Llama 3.1 405B, one of the largest dense LLMs in the suite.
This round’s results also reflect the deep co-engineering between NVIDIA and its partners on system architecture, networking and software:
At-Scale Reliability: Built for Production
In production training environments, runs can span weeks or months across hundreds of thousands of GPUs. At that scale, effective training throughput depends on both the performance of the system and the resiliency that makes it reproducible over time.
The MLPerf Training v6.0 results above speak to the performance of NVIDIA’s platform. For resiliency, NVIDIA’s platform is engineered across two dimensions:
Frontier AI Built on NVIDIA
NVIDIA ecosystem partners also participated extensively this round, with compelling submissions from 19 organizations, including ASUSTeK, Microsoft Azure, Cisco, CoreWeave, Dell Technologies, Fujitsu, Giga Computing, Google Cloud, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Inventec, Krai, Lambda, Nebius, Netweb Technologies India Ltd., Quanta Cloud Computing (QCT), ScitiX, Supermicro and TTA. Many of these partners are running some of the most demanding AI training workloads on NVIDIA infrastructure.
CoreWeave, which houses its NVIDIA infrastructure within Dell PowerRack systems with Dell PowerEdge servers, is home to several of these workloads. Cohere achieved 3x faster training on GB200 NVL72 for its North agentic AI platform. Midjourney, which trained its v8 image generation model on a Blackwell cluster, is now scaling a large fleet of Blackwell Ultra GPUs on CoreWeave to train upcoming image and video models.
On Google Cloud, Thinking Machines Lab saw 2x faster training and serving speeds on GB300 NVL72 compared with prior-generation GPUs, accelerating frontier model research and reinforcement learning workflows.
Nebius, running NVIDIA Blackwell and Blackwell Ultra infrastructure on its AI cloud, enabled Higgsfield to reduce model training time by 30%, supporting a platform that now serves 22 million users and generates over 6 million pieces of AI content per day.
For a deeper technical look at the MLPerf Training 6.0 results and the optimizations behind them, read this technical blog.
More from HPCwire: MLCommons Releases MLPerf Training v6.0 Results
Source: Shruti Koparkar, NVIDIA
The post NVIDIA Blackwell Delivers Fastest Results Across All MLPerf Training 6.0 Tests appeared first on HPCwire.
SUNNYVALE, Calif., June 17, 2026 — Synopsys, Inc. today announced availability of its first Multiphysics Fusion solutions for customer deployment. As chip complexity increases, physics-related challenges including signal integrity, power integrity, thermal integrity, electromagnetic effects, and co-packaged optics are becoming critical constraints at advanced nodes and in multi-die architectures, requiring a unified EDA and multiphysics approach.
The Multiphysics Fusion portfolio combines Synopsys’ AI-powered EDA solutions with Ansys golden signoff analysis across timing signoff, design closure, multi-die design, and analog workflows. Validated by market leaders, these solutions improve predictability and accelerate convergence for AI and high performance computing systems.
“Multiphysics is fundamentally reshaping how advanced semiconductor designs are engineered, driving a shift from costly overdesign to integrated, system-aware co-design,” said Sanjay Bali, Senior Vice President of EDA Product Management and Strategy at Synopsys. “Our Multiphysics Fusion portfolio unifies Synopsys and Ansys technologies to embed physics directly into digital and analog workflows, enabling engineering teams to design across domains with fewer iterations, improved productivity and more optimized silicon for next-generation systems.”
Enabling Multiphysics‑Aware Co-Design Across the Chip Design Flow
Building on the vision introduced at Synopsys Converge 2026, the first Multiphysics Fusion solutions include targeted GPU-accelerated flows powered by NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries such as cuDSS:
Demonstrating Real-World Impact with Market Leaders
Early engagements with leading semiconductor and systems companies validate the value of Multiphysics Fusion solutions:
“As multi-die integration becomes increasingly important for high performance compute platforms, it’s critical we make the right system-level design decisions early in the development process,” said Harrison Hsieh, vice president at MediaTek. “By unifying multiphysics analysis and timing signoff across digital, analog, photonic and multi-die designs, Synopsys Multiphysics Fusion technology gives us earlier insight into cross-domain interactions across silicon, advanced packaging and optical domains, which makes it possible for us to improve predictability, reduce late-stage rework, and achieve a runtime that’s 10 times faster than before.”
“Advanced AI and high-performance computing platforms are pushing chip design beyond traditional workflows, and to deliver greater performance, efficiency and reliability at scale, multiphysics-aware co-design is essential,” said Tim Costa, vice president and general manager of computational engineering at NVIDIA. “Synopsys is using NVIDIA accelerated computing and CUDA-X libraries, including cuDSS, which delivers up to 13x GPU acceleration, to scale increasingly complex SPICE simulations, electromagnetics, and power-integrity workloads. In addition, Synopsys Multiphysics Fusion solutions enable up to 5x faster design closure and up to 86% IR fix rates in selected pilot designs.”
“Accurate timing signoff at advanced nodes requires a unified approach that accounts for IR drop, thermal, and stress effects directly within timing analysis,” said Hyung-Ock Kim, vice president and head of the Foundry Design Technology Team at Samsung Electronics. “Synopsys’ Multiphysics Fusion technology provides a unified, all‑aware timing signoff platform by integrating PrimeTime with multiphysics insight, delivering SPICE-accurate correlation and enabling margin recovery. This is increasingly important as we pursue higher levels of integration, performance, and reliability across advanced process and multi‑die technologies.”
In addition, the Cisco Silicon One group is leveraging Synopsys Multiphysics Fusion technology to unify IR drop effects within signoff design closure to gain earlier, more accurate visibility into real-world conditions. Combined with signoff-accurate, timing-aware IR fixing, this enables predictive optimization—helping Cisco Silicon One converge on power integrity issues faster, deliver better PPA, and achieve significantly faster runtime.
Availability
Multiphysics Fusion solutions for timing signoff, design closure, multi-die design, and analog and photonic design are available today. For more information, visit, https://www.synopsys.com/solutions/multiphysics-fusion.html.
About Synopsys
Synopsys, Inc. (Nasdaq: SNPS) is the leader in engineering solutions from silicon to systems, enabling customers to rapidly innovate AI-powered products. We deliver industry-leading silicon design, IP, simulation and analysis solutions, and design services. We partner closely with our customers across a wide range of industries to maximize their R&D capability and productivity, powering innovation today that ignites the ingenuity of tomorrow. Learn more at www.synopsys.com.
Source: Synopsys
The post Synopsys Launches Multiphysics Fusion Portfolio for AI and HPC Chip Design appeared first on HPCwire.
If reports online are true, the Chinese tech giant is keeping quiet about an innovation it beat Tesla to create.
The bill passed the Illinois legislature and is awaiting the governor's signature.
Four states file alongside FTC, claiming WPath made deceptive claims about gender-affirming care for minors
The Federal Trade Commission and four states sued the World Professional Association for Transgender Health on Wednesday, in the latest push by Donald Trump’s administration and others to limit gender-affirming care for transgender minors.
The suit alleges the group, known widely as WPath, made deceptive claims about gender-affirming care for minors and that its members profited off the claims. Alaska, Iowa, Nebraska and Texas filed along with the FTC.
Continue reading...Lawmakers cite rushed timeline and public input despite pressure to redraw districts after supreme court opinion
Georgia Republicans declined to redraw the state’s congressional map during a special session, defying calls from Donald Trump for widespread redistricting in the wake of a recent US supreme court decision that effectively gutted a major section of the Voting Rights Act.
“We believe that it’s important to do things the Georgia way, responsibly, transparently, and with ample opportunity for public input,” said Jon Burns, the Georgia house speaker.
Continue reading...Open markets committee says ‘economic activity is expanding at a solid pace’ in first meeting under new chair Kevin Warsh
US stock markets dropped on Wednesday afternoon after the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged and signaled a possible rate hike before the end of the year.
The Fed was widely expected to keep rates at a range of 3.5% to 3.75%, where they have remained since December. The decision was unanimously supported by the Fed’s voting committee.
Continue reading...
A new bombshell has entered the villa: fact-checkers.
On June 16 in Episode 13 of "Love Island USA," Mackenzie "Kenzie" Annis told her then-partner, Caleb McDaniel, that 20/30 vision "means that what (other) people have to be at 20 feet to see, I can see at 30 feet."
Snuggled up in "Soul Ties," a secluded section of the villa where intimate conversations often occur, Caleb shared that he had "fighter pilot vision" because of his 20/13 vision score. With no way to verify the information through external sources, Caleb dropped the topic after Kenzie asserted that a higher second number in a vision score means better vision.
But the rest of us don’t have to take Kenzie at her word.
According to the American Academy of Ophthalmology, 20/20 vision is normal, or what the average person can see on an eye chart from 20 feet away. The first number represents a person’s distance from the chart while reading it, and the second number is the distance someone with average vision would have to stand from the lettering to clearly see the same line.
Kenzie said, "I was in nursing school, bro," to explain why she thinks her 20/30 score is superior, but her score indicates slightly below-average vision. It means she must be 20 feet away to clearly see objects that the average person can see clearly at 30 feet. Caleb’s 20/13 vision is 30% better than the average person. (The average visual acuity for a professional baseball player is also 20/13.)
Kenzie, who is a recent graduate of the Wellstar School of Nursing at Kennesaw State University in Georgia, was unavailable for comment because she remains digitally disconnected as part of the show’s real-time format.
Kenzie said a 20/30 vision score "means that what (other) people have to be at 20 feet to see, I can see at 30 feet."
We don’t want to step on any toes in the villa, but she swapped the meaning of the two numbers in the vision score. Her 20/30 vision means that she must be 20 feet away from an object to clearly see what the average viewer needs 30 feet of distance to see. With that kind of vision, you may miss an islander’s head turning at the new bombshell.
We rate the statement False.
Groups cite detainee maltreatment and degradation of surrounding land as reasons to close facility permanently
An alliance of environmental groups has welcomed reports that detainees have been moved from Florida’s notorious “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration jail, but have promised to press ahead with legal action to ensure its permanent closure and the restoration of the fragile Everglades wetlands where it is located.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a statement late on Tuesday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and authorities in Florida “have moved illegal aliens from the soft sided facility [and] transferred them to other facilities” for their safety, citing this month’s beginning of the Atlantic hurricane season.
Continue reading...Jackson Lahmeyer had been backed by President Trump, although the president dropped his endorsement shortly before Lahmeyer dropped out.
We're looking at the start of a turbulent summer in the US, so stay ahead of the storms with these apps.
Augmented World Expo this week is giving us a fresh look at the state of the art in high-tech eyewear.
U.S. inflation is expected to remain elevated through the end of the year, Fed officials say in their latest forecast.
Rex Heuermann was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the series of murders known as the Gilgo Beach serial killings.
The agreement, as read by senior U.S. officials, allows Iran to immediately begin exporting oil and petroleum products.
BrianFagioli writes: Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, Arm, Mastercard, Siemens, and other companies have joined the newly launched Appia Foundation under the Linux Foundation. The project aims to create common specifications and assessment frameworks that organizations can use to demonstrate AI systems meet emerging safety, trust, and compliance requirements. According to the Linux Foundation, the framework is designed to allow conformity evidence to be reused across the AI supply chain, potentially reducing duplicate assessments and compliance costs. The announcement comes as governments around the world move toward enforcing AI regulations and organizations face increasing pressure to prove AI systems are trustworthy. "As international standards and legal frameworks become more established, global organizations need a consistent, practical way to verify that AI systems conform to new expectations," said Jim Zemlin, CEO of the Linux Foundation. "The Appia Foundation establishes a neutrally governed environment where the entire industry can collaborate on a common assessment framework. By building this infrastructure in the open, we are helping organizations reduce complexity, lower operational costs and build trust." Craig Shank, Executive Director of the Appia Foundation, added: "AI systems now make decisions about people's loans, their children's schools and their jobs. People on the receiving end deserve to know those systems were built and assessed against criteria that hold up to scrutiny. The Appia Foundation was formed to do that work: creating publicly available specifications that organizations across the AI value chain use to demonstrate their systems meet those criteria. By establishing this open framework, we are building the accountability layer required to scale safe and trusted AI across major industries."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Senate canceled Jay Clayton's confirmation hearing on Wednesday after President Trump's move to delay the installation of the new intelligence chief.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 18, No. 837.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 18, No. 1,825.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 18, No. 1,103.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 18, No. 633.
A $35,000 money market account can result in a big return on your money, but it's not the only advantage to know now.
Exclusive: Allies of Labour’s Makerfield candidate concerned rapid collapse of Starmer government would increase instability
Andy Burnham’s campaign has been forced to talk ministers out of resigning as early as this weekend to avoid Keir Starmer’s government descending into chaos amid fallout from the Makerfield byelection, the Guardian can reveal.
As they prepare for a potential change of leader in the event he beats Reform on Thursday, Burnham’s team is increasingly concerned a rapid collapse of Starmer’s administration would mean further instability for the country.
Continue reading...CNET's review of the Trump phone found much the same thing as iFixit: It's likely a reskinned HTC phone from two years ago.
CBS will host a primetime special celebrating America's 250th birthday on Saturday, July 4, with exclusive performances and the largest fireworks show in history.
Don Berthiaume, the Trump nominee for inspector general at the Department of Justice, refused to outright say that the January 6 insurrection was an 'attack'. Berthiaume was testifying before the Senate homeland security and governmental affairs committee on Wednesday as part of his confirmation process
Continue reading...The southern US is seeing intense rain that is expected to cause dangerous flash flooding
The first tropical storm of the Atlantic hurricane season formed on Wednesday near the Gulf coast, bringing intense rain and the threat of dangerous flash floods to states including Texas and Louisiana, meteorologists said.
Tropical Storm Arthur was a disorganized cluster of storms that brought rain for days over parts of eastern Mexico and the Gulf. The National Hurricane Center in Miami said conditions were conducive for a short-lived tropical storm to form.
Continue reading...Jane and Alan Kelvey’s holiday yacht met a warship in the Channel – at a tense time for Anglo-Russian relations
“We actually had right of way,” said Jane Kelvey, a little crossly, though keeping it civil. “But we weren’t going to argue with a warship.”
The dramatic standoff in the Channel on Tuesday morning between Admiral Grigorovich, a 125-metre (409ft) battle-hardened Russian frigate, and Bright Future, a 12-metre (40ft) pleasure yacht owned and helmed by Jane, 69, and her husband, Alan, 71, has rather caught the nation’s imagination.
Continue reading...Don Berthiaume, Trump nominee for inspector general at justice department, pressed by senators amid confirmation
Donald Trump’s nominee to serve as a top independent watchdog at the Department of Justice has refused to call the January 6 insurrection an “attack” during questioning by US senators.
Don Berthiaume, a career justice department employee who has been serving as inspector general at the agency, faced senators as part of his confirmation process to take up the role permanently on Wednesday.
Continue reading... | Howdy, i’ve been trying to find a replacement tire for my Onewheel XR, I wore my last one down to the cords, and it finally popped lol. I’ve realized that it wasn’t quite a straightforward to find tire replacement as I thought it would be. I just found this one in the attached photo, but I’m trying to decide if this is a good replacement, or if there is a better option/more budget friendly. [link] [comments] |
Everpure (formerly Pure Storage) may have changed its name a few months back, but the real change appears to be in the future, as the company embarks upon an aggressive pivot with its business plan. Instead of just building storage arrays (which it will continue to do), the company is moving up the stack and attempting to tackle a much more daunting and challenge problem: Developing a unified platform for centralized management of decentralized data.
Traditionally, applications had primacy over data. ERP systems and other on-prem enterprise apps determined how data was stored, often within a centralized relational database. This straightforward approach worked for many years, but the emergence of SaaS applications running in the cloud, among other changes, has upset the storage apple cart. With a complex mix of decentralized apps, all of which demanded control over storage, customers have suffered.
This application-centric approach causes all sorts of problems. Having multiple copies of data floating around not only drives up storage costs, but leads to inaccurate data and wrong answers, said Everpure CEO and Chairman Charlie Giancarlo.

The current application-centric model has created a data integration mess (Image courtesy Everpure)
“The definition of customer in ERP is different from the definition of customer in your CRM, or in your ServiceNow environment,” Giancarlo said during his keynote address this morning at Accelerate 2026. “So it’s fragmented the data and furthermore, it’s fragmented the context.”
Data analytics teams spend enormous sums of money and time trying to rationalize and normalize their data to make it usable for the business. Centralized data warehouses and data lakes addressed the problem by mandating centralized storage of data, but the approach has only been marginally successful, in part because it still relies on maintaining data pipelines.
This data integration problem has existed for many years, and it’s only gotten worse since the big data boom began 15 years ago. Now, as we enter the AI era, the idea of having AI agents accessing and making decisions based on this mess of data is emerging as a serious problem.
This is essentially what spurred Everpure, the 17-year-old storage array vendor that recorded $3.7 billion in revenues in fiscal 2026, to throw its hat into the ring. The company has correctly identified some of the real pain points of the application-centric approach to data management, and today at Accelerate 2026 in Las Vegas, it began the rollout of its solution to the problem.
Today the company unveiled Everpure Data Intelligence. The offering which is based on data discovery and classification technology it obtained with its 1touch.io acquisition earlier this year, is the key element in Everpure’s ambitious new “data-primacy” architecture. Everpure Data Intelligence is critical to ingesting and rationalizing metadata about user’s data environments. The software creates a semantic knowledge graph of user’s entire data storage map, whether the data physically resides on Everpure arrays, sits in the cloud, or is stored on competitor’s storage systems.

Everpure has postulated a data-primacy model that centralizes metadata and utilizes a semantic knowledge graph to manage access to raw data (Image courtesy Everpure)
“We think that the answer to this is that, instead of the apps themselves connecting to all of your data, we need to construct a context map,” Giancarlo said. “We need to understand the data itself. We need to understand the context of each of the data systems, each of the data environments. And then what we need to do is we need to create shared context of how these different data sets, how they cooperate with one another, what the connections are between the same definitions in the different data sets.”
The company’s goal is to give customers better control over their data, and easier ways to access it, whether it’s from the wide array of users and applications, or whether it’s from AI agents. It’s doing this through centralization of data management via the creation of a metadata-powered semantic layer, not centralization of physical storage of data. This will break the old paradigm of application-centric storage, and give customers control and power over their data.
“The way we’re going now is just not sustainable,” Giancarlo said. “We cannot continue to have continued data fragmentation because data fragmentation confuses AI agents. Instead, what you want is a coherent view, a coherent repository of the sources of truth inside your organization.”
Everpure refers this data-first approach, rather than application-first, as data primacy. The company has been implementing a version of this data primacy vision onto its own operations through a project called Mercury. The company, which has nearly 15,000 customers and revenues approaching $4 billion, relies on 750 different applications, which creates all sorts of challenges even for relatively simple business processes, like generating an invoice. The goal of Everpure Data Intelligence is to bring some simple truths to this chaotic reality.
Everpure also announced an update to its Unified Data Plane. Just as previous tools gave Everpure customers control over individual arrays as well as their entire storage fleet, the Unified Data Plane gives customers the capability to manage and govern their data, no matter where it sits.
The company also announced the availability of Everpure Data Stream. The previously announced product is based on Nvidia’s AI Data Platform, and essentially sits between a customer’s far-flung data repositories and the AI inference system that wants to access that data. Instead of using brille ETL pipelines to pull data into a centralized lake or database, the Data Stream access raw data from its source and uses the power of a GPU and the semantic knowledge of Everpure Data Intelligence systems to expose the information to the AI system.
“The first 10 years of our life, we focus on simplifying your array,” Giancarlo said. “Over the last five years, we brought in Fusion to simplify your fleet overall. Now we unified the management of this environment. And what our next challenge is, I think not just as Everpure but as an industry, is to help you to be able to unlock the power of your data.”
The post Everpure Outlines Ambitious Pivot to Data-Centric Storage at Accelerate 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
President Trump defended the agreement reached by the U.S. and Iran at a press conference to close out the G7 summit in France.
New updates mean you should be able to go back and forth between coding and designing without interruptions.
Anthropic employees say they remain confused and increasingly convinced that the Trump administration is singling out the company after officials gave it less than 90 minutes to disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 over alleged national security concerns. Cybersecurity experts, however, argue that the cited behavior of helping to identify vulnerabilities in software is also available in rival models and is more valuable to defenders than attackers. The New York Times reports: Inside the company, employees' private group chats immediately lit up. Managers were instructed to prepare customers for a potential service disruption to the models, called Fable 5 and Mythos 5. But the messaging kept changing, with workers initially being told that the security problem was the ability of foreign companies to gain access to the systems, and later that a major vulnerability had been discovered in the models. In employee chats, Anthropic engineers asked one another if the company's plan to go public this year would be harmed by the White House directive. Many shared news reports that offered conflicting information about why the White House had ordered Anthropic to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all foreign nationals. "What are you telling your clients?" one employee asked in a chat viewed by The New York Times. Another said, "Does anyone know what to believe?" In another message, a worker said, "I don't understand what the issue is." Six days later, Anthropic's roughly 3,000 employees still have few answers. The San Francisco company is continuing to grapple with internal confusion as Dario Amodei, the chief executive, and some of his lieutenants meet with the Trump administration to try and resolve the situation. But after discussions on Monday and Tuesday, there was no breakthrough over ending the U.S. order to limit access to the company's new A.I. models. In a statement on Monday, Anthropic said it would continue meeting with government officials and pledged its "ongoing commitment to working alongside the administration." The dispute highlights how singular Anthropic has become in Washington. It was the second time in six months that the fast-growing A.I. start-up has become embroiled in a fight with the Trump administration over its powerful technologies, even as other A.I. companies offer similar models that have not received the same attention. And it has left Anthropic's employees in what they described as a holding pattern, with some wondering if they were being picked on by President Trump. "Are we being bullied based on bad vibes?" one employee asked in a chat viewed by The Times. Yesterday, TechCrunch's Zack Whittaker argued that the move sets a troubling precedent: the government can unilaterally disrupt American software products without court approval, potentially undermining trust in U.S. AI providers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
It comes with advanced, wire-free navigation and a promised future AI-powered mapping update.
No formal warning issued to captains or ship owners, but industry body says they are exercising greater vigilance
British officials believe Russia will try to retaliate for the Royal Marines’ seizure of the oil tanker Smyrtos, prompting UK ship owners to exercise greater vigilance until tensions with Moscow ease.
Military sources said the UK had considered possible responses to the seizure of the vessel carrying Russian crude worth $40m (£30m) to India, and anticipate that the Kremlin will want to hit back.
Continue reading...Refugee charity says decision to let riot police use water cannon, which are banned in Great Britain, is ‘sickening’
French riot police deployed in northern France under a £660m deal with the UK are authorised to use water cannon against asylum seekers, the Guardian has been told.
Two specialist policing units, including a 50-officer riot squad, have begun working to prevent asylum seekers and people smugglers from launching small boats under the UK-France deal in time for the summer months.
Continue reading...The benefits of a gold investment this June are multiple. Here's why it's especially worth investing in right now.
Canadian officials find structural defects in material used for hull and say firm failed to fully test ‘novel’ design
Canadian safety officials have issued a damning report on the catastrophic final voyage of the Titan submersible, finding that the US company behind the expedition was overcome by “groupthink” and “confirmation bias” and failed to understand the profound risks confronting their largely untested craft.
The 6.7-metre (22ft) carbon fibre submersible dipped below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean in June 2023 en route to the wreckage of the Titanic ocean liner. But nearly two hours after it departed with five passengers, communications went dark. The disappearance prompted a frantic international search, with Canada and the US marshalling all available resources.
Continue reading...A suspect was taken into custody in Philadelphia in connection with the shooting at Wilmington Hospital that left a 19-year-old dead and another injured.
If Samsung Messages is still your default texting app, you'll need to take action in July.
The Fed held rates steady again on Wednesday. Here's what that continued pause could mean for mortgage borrowers.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Artificial Intelligence will lead to labour shortages, not the replacement of humans, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos predicted in a highly optimistic appearance at the VivaTech technology conference in Paris on Wednesday. Bezos put forward a rosy vision of how technology will help humanity, speaking about projects including his space venture Blue Origin and his new AI startup Prometheus, which is aimed at speeding up physical manufacturing. "I know there's a lot of concern that many people have, including many smart people, that AI is going to make humans redundant and so on," Bezos said. "I totally disagree with this point of view. And I think, in fact, AI is going to create a labor shortage." Half of Americans fear the rise of AI could put them or someone in their household out of work, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found this month. Bezos, the world's fourth-richest person with a net worth around $250 billion, argued that people have "endless" things to do, and are currently limited by barriers that he said AI would lower. One goal of space exploration is to move polluting industries off Earth, said Bezos, whose Blue Origin aims to compete with trillionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX in rockets. "If space travel gets reliable enough and inexpensive enough, and we can get materials from asteroids and near-Earth objects and the moon, then this garden planet can be returned to its pre-Industrial Revolution state," Bezos said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Musician says on Instagram he is ‘doing much better’ and receiving treatment and therapy after 2025 arrest
The musician Lil Nas X posted a moving video update to his Instagram on Wednesday morning. In the nearly three-minute clip, the artist – born Montero Lamar Hill – shared that he “has been in rehab for a few months” and since then, has returned home to Atlanta, where he is from and his family lives, and Los Angeles, where he resides.
The update comes in response to an event last summer in which the musician was charged with attacking Los Angeles police officers.
Continue reading...After more than a decade since it was announced, the Obama Presidential Center and Library officially opens to the public in Chicago's Jackson Park on June 19, 2026.
The US president’s opulent tastes will be well served in a palace that has hosted Putin, King Charles and JFK
For a US president who has likened himself to a king and redecorated the Oval Office with golden paint and gold ornaments, it feels like the perfect dinner venue.
Donald Trump said one of the deciding factors in accepting an invitation to dine with Emmanuel Macron at the spectacular, 2,300-room Palace of Versailles was that it was “not gold leaf” but the “real deal”.
Continue reading...Twenty-nine new Ph.D. students will apply high-performance computing to accelerate discoveries in AI, quantum science and engineering, physics and advanced materials.
June 17, 2026 — Twenty-nine students working toward achieving doctorates in fields that emphasize the use of computing and mathematics have been selected for the Department of Energy Computational Science Graduate Fellowship (DOE CSGF) program.
The 2026-2027 incoming fellows will attend 18 U.S. universities as they learn to apply high-performance computing (HPC) to research in disciplines including applied mathematics, machine learning, computer science, quantum science and engineering, electrical and mechanical engineering, physics, chemistry and materials science.
The program, established in 1991 and funded by the DOE’s Office of Science and the National Nuclear Security Administration, trains top leaders in computational science. As of Sept. 1, the DOE CSGF community will include more than 725 fellows and alumni who have trained at 87 Ph.D. institutions. More than 500 alumni work in fields that enlist HPC to maintain the nation’s advantage in energy science and other urgent scientific and technological challenges.
“Over the last 35 years, the Computational Sciences Graduate Fellowship has played an outsized role in ensuring American leadership in supercomputing and in science more broadly. CSGF alumni contribute to the three fastest scientific supercomputers in the world, all run by the U.S. Department of Energy, and to the science and engineering applications that run on them,” said Hal Finkel, the Associate Director of DOE’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research program. “Alumni also play key roles in the department’s Genesis Mission in artificial intelligence and in research that will lead to a revolution in practical quantum computing. The DOE Office of Science is proud to help support this fantastically successful program.”
“Computational tools and capabilities are critical for our nation, and the Computational Science Graduate Fellowship has a long history of developing leaders in computing for academia, industry, and government,” said Stephen Rinehart, Assistant Deputy Administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration. “Within the NNSA, CSGF alumni play critical roles in developing leading-edge computing and in using supercomputers to help assure the safety and security of America’s nuclear stockpile. NNSA is proud to continue supporting the CSGF program and looks forward to the contributions these students will make in the years and decades to come.”
Most DOE CSGF recipients work in traditional scientific disciplines that rely on HPC to address research problems. A second track supports those studying applied mathematics, statistics, computer science or computer engineering, with research interests that advance HPC’s use in science. This includes students focused on HPC as a broad enabling technology rather than a particular science or engineering application. Regardless of track affiliation, fellows’ research includes elements of artificial intelligence, machine learning and quantum computing, positioning them to contribute to U.S. investments in emerging computing architectures, including the DOE’s Genesis Mission.
Fellows receive support that includes a stipend, tuition and fees, and an annual academic allowance. Renewable for up to four years, the fellowship is guided by a comprehensive program of study that requires focused coursework in science and engineering, computer science, applied mathematics and HPC. It also includes a three-month practicum at one of 22 DOE-approved sites across the country, and an annual meeting where fellows present their research in poster and talk formats.
The DOE CSGF has been managed by the Iowa-based nonprofit Krell Institute since 1997. Details for each incoming fellow will be available in September via the program’s online fellow directory. Meanwhile, please contact the Krell Institute for further information.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy
The post DOE Selects 36th Class of Computational Science Graduate Fellows appeared first on HPCwire.
Public-private partnership leads to benchmark-setting system
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M., June 17, 2026 — A public-private partnership in the Mountain West announced today new results that mark steady progress toward the Department of Energy’s goal of fault-tolerant quantum computing, systems large and reliable enough to solve complex problems.

Sandia National Laboratories photonics researcher Forrest Hubert aligns an experimental chip with an optical waveguide carrying laser light. Sandia collaborates with quantum computing company Quantinuum to develop and test similar technologies. Photo credit: Craig Fritz.
Sandia National Laboratories, home to the DOE’s longest running quantum computing program, and tech company Quantinuum published a paper today in the scientific journal Nature that reports the performance of the company’s 98-qubit commercial system, Helios, which debuted last year.
In operations that involved only one or two qubits, or quantum bits, the system demonstrated very high fidelity — 99.9975% and 99.921%, respectively. The results establish Helios as the company’s largest and most reliable quantum computer to date.
Sandia senior manager Mike Descour lauded the findings as a success for the laboratory’s collaboration efforts within the quantum computing sector.
“As a national resource, we are committed to accelerating quantum computing technology in support of economic and national security,” he said.
Sandia, the nation’s premier engineering laboratory, assesses emerging opportunities and threats stemming from quantum information science for the U.S. government. These areas include cryptography, pharmaceutical research, energy science, advanced sensing and communications, all of which are key to national security.
The paper was previously posted to the pre-print website arXiv. The new version in Nature has been peer reviewed, meaning the findings now have been scrutinized by third-party experts.
Ongoing Partnership Advancing Scalable Hardware
For more than 20 years, Sandia’s quantum computing research and development program has combined the labs’ engineering forte with expertise in computer modeling and world-class microelectronics and nanotechnology facilities to build, characterize and share working quantum devices on a variety of technology platforms.
Throughout this time, Sandia has grown its portfolio of industry partnerships. The labs and Quantinuum have been working together for four years under a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement, which was renewed in May. Similar agreements are in place with several other quantum computing companies.
“We welcome collaboration with any interested partner including universities, industry and other national laboratories,” said Sandia photonics manager Chris DeRose.
The partnership initially formed a few years after Sandia researchers had started developing foundational technologies in integrated photonics for trapped ion quantum computers, the same style as Helios, at Sandia’s Microsystems Engineering, Science and Applications complex.
Integrated photonics are energy-efficient chips that carry information at the speed of light through microscopic optical channels. They promise to reduce the risks of quantum technology by lowering energy costs and improving scalability, which is key to building large, useful computers.
Now, Sandia helps Quantinuum design and test these kinds of components for possible inclusion in future platforms.
Quantinuum, which has its corporate headquarters located in Colorado, operates a research and development site in New Mexico, close to Sandia’s main campus.
Sandia Conducted Helios Assessment
In the Nature paper, Sandia evaluated and certified the performance of the Helios system.
The national laboratory has pioneered ways to debug quantum computers and used a variety of tests, including some of its own inventions, to assess Helios. Its researchers supplied a new benchmarking methodology to measure the performance of non-destructive readout operations, called mid-circuit measurements, that are essential for correcting quantum computing errors.
“The most important aspect of today’s quantum computers is not speed, but reliability,” said Sandia’s Robin Blume-Kohout, a co-author on the paper. Quantum computers use complex, experimental technologies that can fail in dozens of subtle ways, he explained, from an out-of-tune laser giving bad instructions to a single atom jiggling out of place. These problems degrade fidelity and limit performance.
In the long term, Blume-Kohout said, helping companies solve these issues will help bring about quantum computers that can tackle unsolved scientific problems.
“We evaluate every aspect of quantum computer performance with our commercial partners to accelerate the advent of quantum supercomputing,” he said.
In the near term, the new research results show the nation is reaching significant milestones along that path.
“Helios operates beyond the capabilities of classical simulation alone and established a new benchmark of fidelity and complexity for quantum computers,” said Quantinuum’s Tony Ransford, Helios lead architect.
More from HPCwire: Quantinuum Introduces Helios Quantum System as Roadmap Advances Toward Apollo
About Sandia Labs
Sandia National Laboratories is a multimission laboratory operated by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration. Sandia Labs has major research and development responsibilities in nuclear deterrence, global security, defense, energy technologies and economic competitiveness, with main facilities in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Livermore, California.
Source: Sandia National Laboratories
The post Sandia and Quantinuum Report High-Fidelity Results from 98-Qubit Helios Quantum System appeared first on HPCwire.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche appointed Alessandra Serano to serve as the Justice Department's national coordinator on human trafficking and child exploitation cases.
MORETON BAY, Australia, June 17, 2026 — PsiQuantum today broke ground and started construction on its facility at Moreton Bay Central, where the company will build and deploy the world’s first utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Minister for Industry and Innovation and Minister for Science Senator the Hon Tim Ayres, Queensland Minister for Science and Innovation the Hon Andrew Powell and City of Moreton Bay Mayor Peter Flannery joined PsiQuantum Chief Executive Officer Victor Peng and PsiQuantum Co-Founder and Executive Chair Prof. Jeremy O’Brien to mark the milestone.

At its facility at Moreton Bay Central, PsiQuantum will build and deploy the world’s first utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Credit: PsiQuantum.
Fault-tolerant quantum computers are expected to unlock transformative new capabilities across medicine, materials science, energy, manufacturing, logistics, finance, and agriculture. As demand for advanced computing continues to grow alongside technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing will provide a powerful new way to solve some of the world’s most complex scientific and industrial challenges by generating high-quality data directly from first principles. Together, quantum computing and AI will help form a complete industrial computing stack capable of accelerating discovery and unlocking breakthrough technologies across critical industries.
“Building a quantum computer that solves real world problems is one of the great engineering challenges of our time. For decades, quantum computing has held the promise of transforming what humanity can achieve through computation, and today in Australia we are beginning to turn that promise into reality,” said Victor Peng, Chief Executive Officer of PsiQuantum. “We are grateful for the partnership and support of the Australian Government, the Queensland Government and City of Moreton Bay as we take this step forward.
“Australia has been part of this journey from the very beginning,” said Prof. Jeremy O’Brien, Co-Founder and Executive Chair of PsiQuantum. “Returning to break ground on a utility-scale quantum computer, so close to where much of the foundational work was done, is a powerful reminder of how far the field has come. This facility will be critical infrastructure, strengthening Australia’s sovereign capability while helping build the workforce that will power the next era of computing, and I’m thrilled to see PsiQuantum leading this revolution here in Australia.”
PsiQuantum’s site will be developed in several phases, with the possibility of future expansion. During the initial construction phase, PsiQuantum will prepare for the arrival of a large cryoplant, a critical piece of infrastructure for cooling the quantum computer currently under construction and manufactured by Linde Engineering. Ordered by PsiQuantum in late 2024, the cryoplant will be one of the largest ever built for quantum computing and is set to be delivered in the second half of 2027. PsiQuantum will then proceed with commissioning the cryoplant and site before then beginning to accept cryogenic cabinets, which will be filled with photonic quantum chips and networked together with standard optical fiber.
The company’s operations are expected to create highly skilled jobs across engineering, technical operations, advanced manufacturing, research, and professional services, all supporting economic growth in the City of Moreton Bay and contributing to the continued development of Queensland’s innovation economy.
Located in one of Australia’s fastest growing regions, the site is located within the Moreton Bay Central Innovation Precinct alongside a TAFE Centre of Excellence and the University of Sunshine Coast Moreton Bay campus, which will help create direct pathways for students, apprentices, technicians and engineers into careers in quantum technologies and advanced manufacturing. Moreton Bay’s role as a host city for the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games reflects the scale of growth and investment taking place across the city.
“This is exactly the type of investment we have been working to attract to Moreton Bay,” said City of Moreton Bay Mayor Peter Flannery. “PsiQuantum’s building technology that will have an impact globally, and they’re doing it right here in our city. The economic benefits will be felt for years through new jobs, new skills, and new opportunities for local businesses. Combined with the education and training facilities being developed within the precinct, this project helps create a pathway from classroom to career in one of the world’s most advanced industries.”
“We opened this campus in 2020 in one of Queensland’s fastest-growing areas. We worked with City of Moreton Bay to create a site that would enable businesses to co-locate with industry experts and research facilities, to promote knowledge sharing, opportunities for collaboration and access to skilled local graduates,” said University of the Sunshine Coast Vice-Chancellor and President, Professor Helen Bartlett. “It’s wonderful to see this very purposeful industry ecosystem coming to life in Moreton Bay with PsiQuantum breaking ground today.”
Today’s announcement follows the May 2026 opening of PsiQuantum’s Test and Validation Lab located at Griffith University in Brisbane. The lab includes a high-powered cryogenic system used to test photonic quantum chips and other sub-systems, all components that will be developed and refined in support of building and deploying PsiQuantum’s first utility-scale system at Moreton Bay Central.
More from HPCwire
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 Breaks Ground on Australian Site for Utility-Scale Quantum Computer appeared first on HPCwire.
As standard practice, the military makes public identifications 24 hours after next of kin have been notified.
French president welcomes group’s unity after ‘very deep change’ in Washington’s approach
Emmanuel Macron has said the whole of the G7, including the US, recognises “the territorial integrity of Ukraine” as he hailed a “re-synchronisation” of positions on the issue.
The French president welcomed a “very deep change in the US approach”, saying Donald Trump and all the leaders present at the G7 summit at Évian-les-Bains understood that Vladimir Putin was not interested in peace.
Continue reading...Move will allow Trump’s controversial pick, Bill Pulte, to assume role and remain in place for at least several weeks
Donald Trump abruptly diverted the confirmation process for Jay Clayton as the US’s top intelligence chief early Wednesday, in a move that will allow the US president’s controversial selection for acting director of national security, Bill Pulte, to assume the role and remain in place for at least several weeks until Clayton is confirmed.
Trump pushed the Senate to confirm Clayton after his appointment of Pulte as acting director sparked bipartisan pushback and stalled his administration’s push for renewal of the controversial Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (Fisa).
Continue reading...Give your mind and body a standing break without interrupting your work.
This blog has now closed – see all our coverage of the G7 summit here
Rutte says the adjustment in the US pledge to the Nato Force Model is “not primarily about where forces and assets are currently, but about who would do what if our defence plans were activated.”
He says historically the model was “overly reliant” on the US.
“You will likely have seen news adjusting its contributions to the Nato force model. In some cases, this has been cast as a problem, as the US pulling away from its allies, but that is not the reality. The US has made clear that it is committed to Nato.
That commitment comes with an expectation that allies will more fairly share the responsibility for our security here in Europe.”
Continue reading...US runner reportedly lost pulse in medical incident
Organizer thanks EMS and safety professionals
Simpson won bronze in 1500m at 2016 Olympics
Jenny Simpson, a three-time Olympian and one of the most accomplished American female runners in history, was taken to hospital and is receiving treatment after collapsing at a track event on Tuesday in North Carolina.
The organizer of the event, Sir Walter Running, said there had been a “medical incident” involving Simpson while she paced a mile group at an event in Raleigh. Runner’s World and LetsRun reported that Simpson did not have a pulse for a period of time but said it was restored with CPR and an AED.
Continue reading...Get one of the best desks for your office in 2026 with the help of our CNET experts.
A small plane crashed on a highway and caught fire in Laredo, Texas, on Tuesday night. Police and bystanders frantically tried to smash the cockpit window to free people inside. Police say six people were onboard. Five were injured and one was killed. The plane had left San José del Cabo in Mexico and was bound for Austin, Texas, according to the Federal Aviation Administration
Continue reading...You know Home Chef, HelloFresh and Blue Apron, but the best meal kit service is one you've probably never tried.
This blog has now closed. See all our UK politics coverage here
Andy Burnham may have trouble getting through to Keir Starmer if he tries ringing him after the Makerfield byelection to urge him to set a timetable for his departure. Burnham reportedly wants to call Starmer this weekend. (See 9.47am.) But, in his interview with Sky News, Starmer said: “I’m sure I’ll talk to Andy after the weekend.”
If Starmer declines to take Burnham’s call, he may be following Ed Miliband’s example. In a Times story today, Patrick Maguire and Steven Swinford report:
Sir Keir Starmer’s relationship with Ed Miliband has broken down to such an extent that the energy secretary has been accused of “ghosting” the prime minister in recent weeks.
Senior government sources claimed that Miliband declined to take calls from the prime minister during a tense stand-off over defence spending.
Continue reading...Epic Games has released Lore, an MIT-licensed version control system written in Rust and designed specifically for "games and entertainment purposes with large file sizes," reports Phoronix. From the report: While there is Git LFS for large file storage with Git, Epic Games has crated Lore as a version control system designed entirely around the large file needs of modern game development as well as multimedia/entertainment purposes. Lore is designed to be fast and efficient for large files including binary files, and be easy-to-use including for 3D artists and more. The Lore documentation elaborates more on its differences and motivation for development compared to Git: "No existing system was designed for the combination of constraints that large game and entertainment projects require: arbitrary content types, multi-axis scale, multi-tenant safety, and a fully open specification and license. [...] Lore is designed to combine what works in each (Git's content-addressed revision graph and centralized systems): a centralized server-of-record for durability, access control, and conflict resolution; content-addressed storage with fragment-level deduplication that is as effective on a multi-gigabyte binary as on a kilobyte of text; sparse, lazy working copies that materialize only what you need; free branching; and a fully open, publicly versioned specification and MIT license. Normal editing operations -- staging, committing, branching, diffing -- never require a network round trip." You can learn more at Lore.org. All the code is available on GitHub.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Victims’ families spoke in court as Heuermann was imprisoned for killing spree that spanned decades
Rex Heuermann, the Manhattan architect who methodically planned and carried out the murders of eight women over at least 17 years on Long Island, was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison without parole.
The sentence, the maximum the New York law allows, was handed down by Judge Timothy Mazzei after a morning of grueling victim’s family impact statements on the effect Heuermann’s murder spree had on the children and relatives of his victims.
Continue reading...In an exclusive interview with CBS News, retired Justice Arthur Engoron reflected on the highs and lows of the 2023 Trump civil fraud trial.
You cannot take a rules-based order seriously when only some of the participants are playing by the rules
When 200,000 protesters gathered to meet the G8 summit in Genoa, 25 years ago, their point (our point, in fact; I went on a coach, it took two and a half days) was that eight rich nations shouldn’t dictate the rules to the rest of the world. If you accept that power concedes nothing without a demand, this demand probably sounds a bit broad, boiling down to “abnegate your power”. But it was part of a wider anti-globalisation movement, in which many of the precise mechanisms by which the developed world exploited the developing had been nailed down.
Many of the protest tactics and networks had been honed at the battle for Seattle in 1999, outside the World Trade Organization summit, along with an agenda that was capacious and versatile. Unfortunately, the authorities had also learned a thing or two, and both the elaborate security of the G8’s red zone and the police brutality outside it were met with some astonishment from the world’s (liberal) media, but not from anyone with a memory exceeding two years.
Continue reading...SUNNYVALE, Calif., June 17, 2026 — The worldwide market for accelerated, high‑performance data center infrastructure serving artificial intelligence (AI) workloads grew 60.1 percent year‑over‑year in 2025, reaching more than $300 billion in spending, according to new market data from industry analyst firm Intersect360 Research. The AI market continues to be fueled predominantly by hyperscale companies, with hyperscale AI infrastructure remaining the largest and fastest‑growing segment in absolute dollars. At the same time, the non-hyperscale enterprise AI market, including AI segments for high-performance computing (HPC), reached $71.6 billion in 2025 and is projected to grow to more than $130 billion by 2030.
The new forecast, informed by broad-based Intersect360 Research budget surveys and technology trend reports from the HPC‑AI Leadership Organization (HALO), shows that accelerated infrastructure is steadily taking share from traditional, non‑accelerated data center spending. Over the 2025–2030 period, the combined AI infrastructure market will grow at a double‑digit compound annual rate, with total annual AI infrastructure spending projected to comfortably exceed $500 billion by the end of the decade.
“We’ve seen AI infrastructure take over the data center agenda,” said Intersect360 Research CEO Addison Snell. “Our forecast maps where the money is really going, from hyperscalers and neoclouds to sovereign and enterprise AI.”
The highest growth in the forecast shifts away from hyperscale alone toward newer segments, including AI‑focused cloud providers and national sovereign AI data centers. National sovereign AI data centers begin as a small share of accelerated infrastructure but post the fastest growth rate over the forecast period, as more nations fund dedicated, nationally controlled AI facilities.
“Our surveys and HALO budget mapping show where new money is going: hyperscaler AI infrastructure is growing fastest, while enterprise and sovereign AI become a visible, steadily expanding share of total spend,” said Intersect360 analyst Antonia Maar. “Sovereign AI starts as a small slice of the market, but it grows several‑fold as governments prioritize nationally controlled AI capacity.”
“Accelerated infrastructure is steadily taking share from traditional, non‑accelerated data center spending,” added Intersect360 analyst Kevin Jackson. “Over the forecast period, GPUs, high‑end servers, and AI‑optimized cloud services capture most of the incremental budget growth, while legacy enterprise infrastructure remains flat or declines in real terms.”
The full series of market forecast reports from Intersect360 Research defines four accelerated, high‑performance segments of the worldwide data center infrastructure market: hyperscale AI, AI‑focused clouds (“neoclouds”), national sovereign AI data centers, and enterprise AI (including HPC-AI). Two additional non‑accelerated segments—hyperscale and enterprise—complete the forecast and provide context for the long‑term shift toward accelerated AI infrastructure.
Intersect360 Research will present highlights of the new forecast, along with results from recent HALO surveys, in a free webinar on June 18, 8:00 a.m. PT – 9:30 a.m. PT, including a long‑term outlook for AI, HPC, quantum, hyperscale, and the future of enterprise computing. A 60-minute presentation will be followed by 30-minutes of live Q&A with Intersect360 analysts. All registrants will get access to presentation materials and recordings. For registration information, visit https://www.intersect360.com/webinar-registration.
About Intersect360 Research
Intersect360 Research is a market intelligence, research, and consulting advisory practice focused on high-performance data center trends, including High Performance Computing (HPC), artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning, cloud computing, big data, and hyperscale. Intersect360 Research utilizes both user-based and supplier-based research to form a complete perspective of market dynamics, trends, and usage models, including both technical and business applications. The company’s research agenda and studies are informed by the HPC-AI Leadership Organization (HALO), a global end user group organized by Intersect360 Research to help guide the future of the HPC-AI industry. More information on HALO is available at www.hpcaileadership.org.
In addition to its market advisory subscription services, Intersect360 Research offers customers an array of client-specific services, including custom surveys, white papers and custom analysis. More information about Intersect360 Research as well as the full slate of Intersect360 Research reports available for purchase and download can be found at www.intersect360.com.
Source: Intersect360 Research
The post Intersect360 Research: AI Infrastructure Market Grew 60% in 2025, Forecast to Exceed $520B by 2030 appeared first on HPCwire.
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., June 17, 2026 — On October 1, 2026, EPB Quantum will host the inaugural Quantum in Business (QiB) conference, exclusively in Chattanooga, Tennessee. QiB will highlight how companies can benefit from a projected $2.7 trillion in economic value by utilizing quantum computing in the near-term, especially in financial, healthcare, insurance, chemicals, logistics and automotive industries.
“First movers who understand quantum computing’s business impact will shape tomorrow’s competitive landscape,” said EPB President and CEO-elect Janet Rehberg. “We designed QiB to connect business and technology leaders with next steps to benefit their companies today and lead their industries tomorrow.”
Sessions will focus on how business innovation and technology chiefs can connect with the resources to begin developing quantum solutions that can benefit their companies today:
View the full agenda at quantum.epb.com/qib26/agenda.
The conference will feature information from quantum researchers who are ready to work with business leaders to develop practical applications to benefit their companies in the near term. Attendees will also learn about potential sources of grant funding for companies as well as perspectives from industry, state and federal leaders who are supporting Tennessee’s push to play a leading role in commercializing quantum technology to support job creation in Chattanooga and across the state.
Although still early, quantum computing technology is delivering innovation for practical applications.
EPB Quantum Center is the first U.S. facility to offer both a commercially available quantum computing (opening 2026) and commercially available quantum networking, which has been in operation since 2023. EPB has more than 10 years of quantum technology experience, including a R&D 100 Award with Oak Ridge and Los Alamos National Laboratories for power grid-securing technologies.
Sign up at epbquantum.com/qib to receive updates and speaker announcements.
About EPB
Located in Chattanooga, Tennessee, EPB is a nationally recognized energy and communications provider with a mission to enhance quality of life for the people it serves across its 600-square-mile service area. Starting in 2010, EPB gained notice as a national model for building and utilizing its 100% fiber-to-the-home network to deliver cutting-edge services such as the world’s fastest community-wide internet, now with service up to 25 Gig, and the nation’s most advanced automated electric grid.
As a pioneer in fiber optic innovation, EPB also launched EPB Quantum to provide access to cutting-edge quantum technology platforms and help innovators bring paradigm-shifting solutions into the real world. With the launch of EPB Quantum Network in 2023 and EPB Quantum Computing (coming in 2026), EPB Quantum offers the most comprehensive, commercially available quantum technology platform in the U.S.
Learn more at epb.com and EPBQuantum.com.
Source: EPB Quantum
The post EPB Quantum Debuts Business-Focused Quantum Computing Conference appeared first on HPCwire.
PARIS, June 17, 2026 — As part of their recently unveiled collaboration, Bull, a leader in advanced computing and AI, and Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn) today announced their first strategic milestone with the production in Europe of key components for commercialization under the Bull brand.
This announcement builds directly on the partnership unveiled on June 1, 2026, which combines Bull’s expertise in AI systems design and deployment with Foxconn’s industrial scale and supply chain capabilities, to manufacture AI infrastructure for AI Factories and AI Cloud providers, from Europe.
With the NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 platform, the partnership moves into execution, bringing its industrial ambition to life through the production of advanced AI systems in Europe, and opening the path to supporting a broader set of technology architectures over time.
Systems will be manufactured and initially tested at Foxconn’s facilities in the Czech Republic, before being assembled, integrated and fully validated at Bull’s factory in Angers, France. Designed for the most demanding AI workloads in the age of Agentic AI, these AI servers and data centres will address the needs of neo-cloud providers, cloud service providers and the emerging generation of AI factories across Europe and beyond.
Beyond hardware, the ability to manage and operate AI infrastructure end-to-end is becoming critical. In this context, Bull is providing the AI software layer with embedded AI use cases and data science expertise to give customers greater control over how systems are deployed, secured and optimised – extending the “made in Europe” model from manufacturing to operations.
Together, these developments reinforce the ambition behind the Bull–Foxconn partnership: anchoring a more resilient and efficient AI supply chain in Europe, with a competitive time to market, while enabling the emergence of scalable, high-performance infrastructure for the region’s most demanding AI workloads.
Emmanuel Le Roux, CEO of Bull, said: “The partnership between Bull and Foxconn marked a turning point in the development of European manufacturing capacity for AI infrastructure, bringing together system design, industrialisation and supply chain execution across France and the Czech Republic. Made in Europe to serve Bull’s global AI ambitions, this initiative now takes a further step forward with the introduction of NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72, translating that vision into concrete solutions for the next generation of AI deployments.”
James Wu, Foxconn Vice President, said: “Foxconn is proud to partner with Bull and NVIDIA to help build the foundation for AI factories, sovereign AI and next-generation data center infrastructure in Europe. By combining Bull’s leadership in European supercomputing, NVIDIA’s accelerated computing platform, and Foxconn’s global manufacturing and deployment capabilities, we are creating an ecosystem that can accelerate Europe’s AI ambitions and strengthen its long-term technological competitiveness.”
More from HPCwire: Bull and Foxconn Partner to Scale Europe’s Manufacturing Capabilities for AI Infrastructure
About Bull
Leveraging nearly a century of innovations, Bull is a global leader for High-Performance Computing, Artificial Intelligence and Quantum technologies with c.720m€ in revenue and 3,000 professionals operating in 32 countries. Built on an open, end-to-end and trusted approach, Bull designs, deploys and operates hardware, software and strategic services that unlock enterprise value, accelerate scientific research and advance society. Driven by world-class R&D, backed by 1,600 patents, manufacturing excellence and data sciences expertise, Bull enables nations and industries to fully control their AI and data and to drive progress for the benefit of the planet.
About Foxconn
Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn) (TWSE:2317) is the world’s largest electronics manufacturer and leading technology solutions provider, ranking 28th in Fortune Global 500. In 2025, revenue totalled TWD8.1 trillion (approx. USD260 billion). The Group’s market share in electronics manufacturing services (EMS) exceeds 40% and covers four major product segments: smart consumer electronics; cloud and networking; computing; and components and other. Operating over 240 campuses across 24 countries, Foxconn is one of the world’s largest employers with approx. 900,000 employees during peak manufacturing season. We are committed to sustainability in the manufacturing process and serving as a best-practice model for global enterprises. The Group is guided by its 3+3+3 strategy, actively investing in industries of electric vehicles, digital health, and robotics; in technologies of artificial intelligence, semiconductors and next-generation communications; in intelligent platforms of Smart Manufacturing, Smart EV and Smart City. Foxconn is dedicated to becoming a comprehensive, world-class enterprise, with AI as its core driving force.
Source: Bull
The post Bull and Foxconn Advance European AI Manufacturing with Vera Rubin NVL72 Platform appeared first on HPCwire.
PM says Greater Manchester mayor is ‘huge asset’ who can play big part in Labour government if he wins byelection
Keir Starmer has indicated he would give Andy Burnham a cabinet job, describing him as a “huge asset”, as he attempted to head off a challenge to his leadership that is expected to come after the Makerfield byelection on Thursday.
Allies of Burnham said the Greater Manchester mayor would not be interested in serving under Starmer if he returned to Westminster.
Continue reading...It looks like it'll be a hit for students.
Forever running out of juice? Top up your battery-powered devices with our expert picks, from tiny smartphone chargers to super speedy models
• The best iPhones: which Apple smartphone is right for you
It’s disempowering when your smartphone, laptop or other important gadget runs out of battery. With the flash of a graphic or a plaintive bleep, we lose a way to entertain ourselves, get things done, stay in touch or even get home safely. There’s a time and a place for a digital detox – but what is the time, and where am I?
Carrying a power bank is your ticket out of electronic oblivion. These pocket-sized cuboids plug into compatible devices and charge them, often via assorted connections, including USB-C and USB-A. Most power banks are made for charging smartphones and smaller gadgets, such as fitness trackers and earbuds, but some models can also charge power-hungrier laptops and large portable speakers.
Best power bank overall:
Belkin BoostCharge Pro 3-port 20k
Best budget power bank:
Belkin BoostCharge 10k with integrated cable
World No 1 has chance to join Rory McIlroy in exclusive club – but windswept course requires patience
Shinnecock Hills is a study in restraint and attrition that has spent more than a century bringing the world’s finest golfers to heel. When the US Open returns here for a sixth time on Thursday, the current crop will once again face a rugged coastal masterpiece where calamity lurks around every corner and mistakes are punished with uncommon severity.
The William Flynn-designed layout, one of the United States Golf Association’s five founding clubs, is a 7,440-yard track of rare beauty and menace revered as one of the purest tests in championship golf. Three distinct clusters of holes form a rough triangle across the property, exposing players to shifting winds from different directions throughout the round. With gusts forecast to exceed 40mph at times, even players who know Shinnecock well acknowledge that controlling trajectory and accepting adversity will be every bit as important as making birdies.
Continue reading...Jackery's new ultra-thin FridgeGuard joins a growing market of portable power stations designed to keep your appliances powered. I tried it.
Reuters reports a cyber extortion group has claimed responsibility for breaching Novo Nordisk's network, stealing roughly 1.3 terabytes of data, including source code, drug research, clinical-trial records, employee and physician information, production-system details, and internal AI model data. The group says it's exploring selling parts of the data after unsuccessfully demanding $25 million from the company. From the report: FulcrumSec, a cyber extortion group that emerged in October 2025, said in a long message posted to its website that it spent more than two months in Novo Nordisk's networks stealing data. It said that data included company source code, proprietary information on released and unreleased drugs, trial data, employee, doctor and patient data, information related to company processing facilities and internal AI model information. [...] FulcrumSec told Reuters in an email that Novo Nordisk representatives contacted the group on June 3, roughly 48 hours after the group's initial contact to unnamed company executives. The company used a random Proton Mail email address sent to email addresses that FulcrumSec used in its initial outreach, and confirmed it was the company by requesting specific files for verification only the company would know about. The FulcrumSec representative also said that the group would prefer not to sell data, "as open sourcing it is a more effective deterrent for future companies to avoid paying." [...] FulcrumSec said it would not share some of the data it stole, including information on thousands of company employees and physicians, and roughly 11,500 pseudonymized clinical trial patients. The group said it also would withhold data related to operational technology and software used to interact with sensors and machinery at Novo Nordisk production facilities as part of its "harm-reduction strategy." A Novo Nordisk spokesperson said in an email that the company "is aware of claims that data allegedly copied externally without authorization from our systems has been published online. We take this matter seriously and maintain continued operations of our main platforms. We are in contact with the relevant authorities."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh is stepping in at a critical juncture for the U.S. economy, with inflation at its highest level in more than three years.
Does your TV live up to the marketing hype, or do you have buyer's remorse? Rate your TV in our People's Picks survey.
Hungary’s reset with Ukraine is good news for European deterrence Expert comment jon.wallace
Ending a dispute on minority rights would do more than progress Ukraine’s EU accession talks: it could strengthen the continent’s posture towards Moscow.
Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Hungary has created the most visible fissure in European Union (EU) support for Kyiv. Former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán dissented early on from the European consensus. And he progressively turned this dissent into political leverage. Budapest slowed sanctions on Russia, contested assistance to Ukraine, obstructed parts of Kyiv’s European path and blurred the moral and strategic line between aggressor and victim.
For Moscow, this mattered. Russia did not need Hungary to become an ally in any formal sense. It only needed an EU and NATO member state to make European unity appear conditional, reversible and transactional. Hungary’s role was therefore never only about Hungarian foreign policy. It was about the credibility of Europe’s collective resolve.
That is why Budapest’s emerging reset with Kyiv under newly elected Péter Magyar is important. Hungary and Ukraine have reached an understanding on a festering dispute over the rights of the Hungarian minority in Transcarpathia.
The agreement removes one of the main obstacles to opening EU accession talks with Ukraine – allowing Kyiv to take the first step on a long road to EU membership. Magyar has also signalled his readiness to meet Volodymyr Zelenskyy, presenting the issue as the beginning of a ‘new chapter’. The phrase may sound diplomatic, but the stakes are more strategic than they sound.
For Zelenskyy, the benefits are immediate. Ukraine needs air defences, ammunition, financial support and heightened sanctions pressure on Russia – especially since the US–Israel war with Iran boosted oil prices, and Moscow’s energy revenues.
But Kyiv also needs momentum in Brussels. In Zelenskyy’s view, Russia’s wager is not only that it can outgun Ukraine, but that it can wait out its partners. Every EU delay in accession talks, financial support or sanctions enforcement therefore helps Moscow to turn time into strategic advantage.
For Magyar, the issue is more delicate. His rise has been built on a promise to end the corruption, isolation and ideological theatre of the Orbán era. But he cannot simply reverse Hungarian policy by decree and expect domestic politics to follow. His government will still not send arms or troops to Ukraine.
The ‘reset’ is not a strategic conversion. It is a shift from obstruction to conditional cooperation. That is why the Transcarpathia issue matters: by conditioning support for Ukraine’s European track on Hungarian language, education and cultural rights, Magyar can tell voters that he is defending national interests more effectively than Orbán did.
That distinction is important. A reset with Kyiv will only be politically sustainable if it is framed as a somewhat elaborate form of Hungarian statecraft. It cannot appear to be capitulation to Brussels. Magyar’s task is to agree a settlement and come out as a statesman Europe can trust. That would be a meaningful change: a careful shift from obstruction to negotiation.
Kyiv has an interest in cooperating. Ukraine’s future in the EU will depend on more than its resistance to Russia. It will also need to demonstrate institutional maturity, even under extreme pressure. Restoring trust with Budapest over minority rights will strengthen the argument that Ukraine can manage difficult questions with regard to the law, and with the application of compromise and political discipline.
Yet the larger question is European. Since 2022, Europe’s support for Ukraine has often been impressive in substance but fragile in method.
It has produced sanctions packages, financial facilities, military assistance and enlargement commitments. But too often it has done so through last-minute bargaining, veto threats and leader-level firefighting. Orbán exploited that weakness. He understood that in a Union built around consensus, a single government can turn obstruction into currency and political gains at home.
A Magyar-led reset will not abolish that structural problem. But it could reduce its most corrosive effects. Ukraine’s accession process would still be long, technical and politically demanding. And Magyar has made clear that Hungary does not support a shortcut to membership. But the question would no longer be how far Hungary operates as Russia’s wedge inside Europe. Instead, it will be whether Hungary can be reincorporated into a more coherent European posture towards Moscow.
Russia watches Europe’s internal politics very closely. It knows the best and cheapest way to weaken the continent is to convince Europeans that their unity is too expensive, their publics too divided, their institutions too slow and their commitments too tiring.
The Kremlin welcomes all European division over money, sanctions, EU enlargement or military aid to Ukraine. Each dispute supports the Russian strategy that Europe will tire first, divide and settle for less than Ukraine’s survival requires. In that respect EU resolve is as strategically important as ammunition production or air defence.
The Ukraine–Hungary reset should therefore be understood as part of Europe’s wider deterrence posture. A continent that cannot maintain political cohesion around Ukraine invites Russian escalation.
But a continent that can resolve internal disputes, and still sustain pressure on Moscow is harder to intimidate. The point here is fundamental: Europe does not need unanimity without argument – it needs argument without strategic paralysis.
There are risks, of course. Magyar may yet be tempted to use Ukraine policy as leverage in his own negotiations with Brussels over frozen funds, rule-of-law conditions and Hungary’s wider rehabilitation inside the EU. Kyiv may find that implementation of minority commitments becomes a moving target. And European governments may be too eager to declare the Hungarian problem solved. The danger is that Europe mistakes one diplomatic breakthrough for durable alignment.
But the opportunity is real. A serious reset could give Ukraine a clearer path through the next stages of accession talks. It could reduce Moscow’s room for political manipulation and help restore the credibility of Europe’s enlargement promise. It could also show that the post-Orbán transition, if consolidated, is not only a Hungarian domestic story but a strategic moment for European coherence.
PARIS, June 17, 2026 — Following the announcements made by the President of the French Republic on May 22 at the CEA’s Très Grand Centre de Calcul (TGCC) regarding the second phase of France’s National Quantum Strategy (SNQ), GENCI (Grand Équipement National de Calcul Intensif) and French quantum computing company Alice & Bob signed an agreement at VivaTech on June 17, in the presence of representatives of the French government, for France’s acquisition of an 18-cat-qubit quantum computer.

VivaTech Signing event with Michaël Krajecki, CEO of GENCI, Chloé Poisbeau, COO of Alice & Bob, and Anne Le Hénanff, Minister of AI and Digital. Photo credit: Antoine Guilloteau.
This marks the world’s first acquisition of a quantum computer based on cat-qubit technology. The system is part of the National Quantum Strategy under the France 2030 investment plan. The quantum computer will be hosted at the TGCC and integrated with GENCI’s Joliot-Curie supercomputer. Expected to be accessible to users in 2027, the system will strengthen the strategic autonomy of France and Europe while enhancing their scientific and technological competitiveness.
This quantum computer is the first so-called “early Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computer” (eFTQC) to be installed in a European computing center. Developed by Alice & Bob, the technology offers a major advantage: it natively corrects one of the two primary sources of quantum noise, known as bit-flip errors. This technological feature dramatically reduces, compared with other architectures, the number of physical qubits required to build high-performance logical qubits. As a result, it provides a natural bridge to next-generation fault-tolerant quantum computers.
From 2027, the system will join the Ruby and Lucy quantum computers already installed at the CEA’s TGCC facility in Bruyères-le-Châtel, where it will also be hybridized with GENCI’s Joliot-Curie supercomputer. At a later stage, it will be integrated with the European exascale supercomputer Alice Recoque, acquired by EuroHPC JU, creating a hybrid platform delivering state-of-the-art computing services across high-performance computing (HPC), artificial intelligence, and quantum computing.
As France prepares to access two 1,024-qubit universal quantum computing prototypes by 2032 through the PROQCIMA program of the National Quantum Strategy, led by the French Ministry of the Armed Forces, this first eFTQC system will enable users to familiarize themselves with quantum error correction and anticipate its impact on quantum computing workflows, while identifying potential applications for the technology.
Like all GENCI-operated systems—including HPC, AI and quantum computing infrastructure hosted and operated within France’s national computing centers—access to this eFTQC system will be provided free of charge to academic and industrial researchers conducting open research. Allocation requests will be managed through the EDARI platform.
The technology was acquired through a negotiated public procurement process and is funded entirely by the HQI – France Hybrid HPC Quantum Initiative program, part of the National Quantum Strategy under France 2030.
The signing ceremony took place at VivaTech on the National Quantum Strategy stand. This year marks the fourth edition of the Quantum Zone, the largest space dedicated to quantum technologies at VivaTech. As VivaTech celebrates its 10th anniversary as one of Europe’s and the world’s leading technology events, the National Quantum Strategy also marks its fifth anniversary. The Quantum Zone brings together the major public and private stakeholders and programs contributing to the success of France’s national quantum initiative.
Michaël Krajecki, CEO of GENCI, said: “The deployment in Europe of this first fault-tolerant quantum system represents a major milestone for French and European research. Starting next year, this pioneering technology, designed by Alice & Bob, will provide our researchers and industrial partners with a revolutionary tool to push the boundaries of hybrid computing, combining HPC and quantum technologies. Supported by the HQI program, this investment strengthens both our strategic autonomy and scientific excellence. It is more than just a machine: it is a promise for European innovation, open from 2027 to all those who wish to help build the future. Above all, it will offer our users the opportunity to tackle the challenges of quantum error correction, a critical step towards tangible industrial applications.”
Anne-Isabelle Étienvre, General Administrator of the CEA, said: “We are delighted to welcome this Alice & Bob machine to our facilities after several years of collaboration. The installation of this third HQI program machine at the TGCC demonstrates our teams’ ability to host and operate some of the world’s most innovative computing systems. Bringing this quantum computer into operation will provide French and European research communities with cutting-edge technology on the path towards fault-tolerant quantum computing.”
Dr. Théau Peronnin, Co-founder and CEO of Alice & Bob, said: “Scientific breakthroughs realise their full value when they can be deployed in real-world environments. The partnership signed today with GENCI will help bring together a community of academic and industrial researchers working to develop the technology stack required for fault-tolerant quantum computing, while broadening access to next-generation quantum technologies.”
About GENCI
Founded by the French government in 2007, GENCI (Grand Équipement National de Calcul Intensif) is France’s national high-performance computing agency and a major research infrastructure dedicated to democratising access to numerical simulation through high-performance computing, artificial intelligence and quantum computing in support of French scientific and industrial competitiveness. GENCI is a civil company owned by the French State (49%), represented by the Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Space; the CEA (20%); the CNRS (20%); France Universités (10%); and Inria (1%).
About Alice & Bob
Alice & Bob is a quantum computing company headquartered in Paris and Boston with the mission of building the world’s first fault-tolerant universal quantum computer. Advised by Nobel Prize-winning scientists, Alice & Bob specialises in cat qubits, a technology developed by the company’s founders that significantly reduces the hardware requirements needed to build a useful large-scale quantum computer.
About HQI
HQI (France Hybrid HPC Quantum Initiative) is a national initiative designed to combine a hybrid computing platform, academic and industrial research programmes, and the dissemination of quantum computing applications. Launched by the General Secretariat for Investment (SGPI) as part of France 2030, HQI is supported on behalf of the French State by the National Research Agency (ANR) and benefits from a total France 2030 budget of €72.3 million.
About the CEA
The CEA is a French public research organisation whose mission is to strengthen the scientific, technological and industrial sovereignty of France and Europe across four strategic areas: low-carbon energy, digital technologies, future healthcare, and defence and security, underpinned by world-class fundamental research.
Source: Alice & Bob
The post France Selects Alice & Bob Cat-Qubit Quantum Computer for GENCI Supercomputing Center appeared first on HPCwire.
The interest earned from a $50,000 deposit in each account type will be similar but not identical. Here's what to know.
Social Security checks could see a 22% cut in 2032 unless Congress takes steps to shore up the program. Here are 5 ideas for fixing it.
Congressman Jamie Raskin alleges FBI director authorized substantial recurring payments to agents in his inner circle
Kash Patel, the FBI director, has been accused of directing more than $1m in taxpayer-funded bonus payments to a small circle of loyalist agents as part of a “personal slush fund” that may have violated federal law.
Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the ranking member of the House of Representatives judiciary committee, alleged Patel had authorized substantial recurring payments to agents in his inner circle and security detail.
Continue reading...
Donald Trump’s Department of Justice unsealed a federal indictment on Tuesday announcing hefty charges against 15 antifascist protesters for alleged actions taken in response to the brutal U.S. Immigration Customs and Enforcement surge in Minneapolis earlier this year.
The federal prosecutor in the case, Minnesota U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen, warned that more arrests and charges could follow.
Once again, prosecutors are throwing extreme and overreaching charges at activists in a scrambling effort to criminalize organized, collective opposition to Trump’s most violent policies.
The Minneapolis indictment exemplifies the Trump regime’s escalating strategy: Criminalize whole political movements with claims of collective liability and “conspiracy,” and treat typical acts of protest, constitutionally protected speech, association, and political identification as criminal acts.
Call it the spaghetti-against-the-wall approach.
The indictment, Rosen said, is a part of Trump’s National Security Presidential Memorandum-7, or NSPM-7, initiative to target and prosecute leftists and antifascists as terrorists.
Minneapolis is not an incidental target for Trump’s Department of Justice. The city unleashed an oftentimes-inspiring response to the ICE crackdown: mutual aid organizing, confrontational protest, blockades, and strikes in response to brutality set a national example for how to fight back when federal agents descend on a city to kidnap our immigrant neighbors.
The “conspiracy” in Minneapolis according to the government, involves purported antifa activists acting with the aim of impeding ICE operations and injuring officers. The indictment names no federal officer injuries, and only minor incidents of property damage — like a protester leaving a dent in an ICE vehicle from kicking it.
Among other pieces of evidence cited for the alleged criminal conspiracy are the most basic protest strategies, including self defense, nonviolent tactics, and First Amendment-protected activity.
The use of encrypted Signal chats to communicate protest plans is cited again and again in the indictment.
The government points out that organizers employed phrases like “become ungovernable” — a liberatory slogan so common it has spread to cute animal memes.
Demonstrators are accused of building and advocating for the use of shields at protests outside an ICE detention facility — the sort of protests in which, in Minneapolis and nationwide, federal agents have beaten people and fired rubber bullets and tear-gas canisters directly at heads and bodies.
The indictment even claims that people tracking ICE vehicles and alerting others to their presence, as agents prowled neighborhoods looking for immigrants to kidnap, is evidence of criminal conspiracy.
That certain protest activities may have indeed impeded ICE in its efforts to ruin lives and whiten the country do not make those activities illegal. Minor violations and property damage may involve unlawful acts, but do not constitute a mass criminal conspiracy.
Certainly, none of it calls for unleashing the vast resources of the federal government against protesters. The Trump administration, however, has made its own strategy clear: Make the stakes of association with political movements dangerously high.
And if the cases fall apart? Well then, movements have still been disrupted by lengthy, frightening, and expensive legal processes; antifascist political activity is chilled nonetheless.
The Minneapolis charges do not stand alone. Recent weeks have seen an array of federal arrests, prosecutions and raids aimed at Trump’s favored targets: antifascists, Palestine solidarity activists, and voting rights advocates.
Protesters who participated in the Atlanta-based Stop Cop City movement were hit last week with new federal charges under the NSPM-7 initiative — despite the fact that state cases against the movement for the very same incidents have consistently collapsed.
This month, the FBI also raided the homes of numerous Palestine-solidarity activists connected to the University of Michigan, with eight activists indicted on federal charges for allegedly aiming to “intimidate” university officials in protests aimed at ending the school’s investment in Israel’s genocide. FBI agents also raided the offices of an Ohio voter-registration organization, seizing employees’ phones and computers.
These are unabashed authoritarian tactics to chill whole swathes of political activity, the likes of which have a long history in this country, from multiple Red Scares and the deadly COINTELPRO effort last century against Black-liberation struggle, to the mass repression in response to Black Lives Matter uprisings in the last decade.
Such repression is not the sole preserve of Trump’s regime or Republican administrations, but we are witnessing an escalation in authoritarian efforts to criminalize political resistance.
The assault on the left has been, perversely, carried out in tandem with brazen attempts to lavish Trump’s violent far-right supporters with impunity, government jobs, and even financial rewards.
Sometimes the spaghetti does stick. In March, a Texas jury found eight defendants guilty of terrorism charges for simply being present and wearing black at a protest in which a shooting took place outside ICE’s Prairieland Detention Facility in Northern Texas.
The ruling was a major victory for the Justice Department — a case in a Trump-friendly jurisdiction, presided over by a Trump-appointee judge, the government’s flimsy effort won through.
In Spokane, Washington, three anti-ICE demonstrators were convicted in May on conspiracy charges for impeding federal officers in a case with similarities to the Minneapolis indictment. The original federal prosecutor in the Spokane case resigned instead of signing indictments against protesters; he did not believe they were warranted, he said. As is a pattern with Trump’s Department of Justice, however, the prosecutor’s successor moved forward with charges. Six people took plea deals, but three refused, wanting to defend their First Amendment rights in court. For typical protest activity, they were convicted of federal conspiracy charges. They face up to six years in prison.
Trump’s lawyers are not famed as skilled practitioners, but they know how to navigate an unjust system with brute force, willing to pour unending resources into crushing ideological enemies and symbols of resistance.
Trump has ample reason to relentlessly push politically motivated cases, even those thrown out in lower courts.
Just consider the extraordinary, ongoing efforts to deport Palestinian activists like Mohsen Madawi and Mahmoud Khalil, or a Salvadorian immigrant with legal status, Kilmar Abrego Garcia.
With an ideologically aligned far-right Supreme Court, Trump has ample reason to relentlessly push politically motivated cases, even those thrown out in lower courts.
Cases like Prairieland threaten to set frightening precedents, but the lesson they offer is not that federal prosecutors have somehow now cracked the mass-prosecution code after other collective liability efforts had failed. Rather, the lesson is an older one, about solidarity.
Prosecutors in the Prairieland case relied heavily on the testimony of cooperating defendants, who testified against co-defendants as a part of plea deals. Without that testimony, the case would likely not have played out the same way.
“If people hadn’t cooperated in Prairieland, the case would’ve been extraordinarily different,” said Xavier T. de Janon, an attorney with the People’s Law Collective, which is representing Stop Cop City protesters in state-level cases. “Their entire prosecution was made possible by cooperators, and their investigation was successful because people cooperated very quickly.”
De Janon nonetheless stressed that, while the federal government was successful in the Prairieland trial, the Justice Department has accrued “hundreds of failures.”
“If people hadn’t cooperated in Prairieland, the case would’ve been extraordinarily different.”
In Stop Cop City cases so far, as was the case in the mass federal prosecution against the so-called J20 protesters at Trump’s first inauguration, no defendants aided prosecutors as cooperating witnesses. Efforts to isolate and criminalize “bad protesters” failed, and collective prosecutions, based on the flimsiest of claims, collapsed.
The response to ICE in Minneapolis and St. Paul was powerful precisely because residents blended tactics of mutual aid, community support, mass mobilization, and militancy. The worst possible response to the Justice Department’s sweeping indictment would be for certain elements of the movement to follow the government’s lead and demonize antifa associations and confrontational protest.
The government is escalating a well-worn strategy to disarticulate and defang movements.
“This is a fascist society, not just the government, but the fabric of society,” said de Janon. “People thinking, ‘If I go to a rally, I might be charged with a federal felony and spend 25 years in prison’ — it is outrageous.”
There is no denying that the Department of Justice is attempting to make the stakes devastatingly high for even minimal association with today’s liberatory movements, from antifascist immigrant defense to Palestine solidarity.
The price for failing to stand together against this fascist overreach is, however, far higher still.
The post Trump’s Spaghetti-Against-the-Wall Indictment Against ICE Protesters — and How to Fight It appeared first on The Intercept.
A new law in New York makes it the eighth state to provide a path for coerced debt relief for survivors of domestic violence.
After a year of intense political pressure, higher education heads are speaking openly about rising concerns.
The next Strait of Hormuz crisis could be even worse Expert comment thilton.drupal
Even if Trump’s deal holds, Iran retains the ability to close Hormuz again. If the Houthis were to simultaneously disrupt shipping in the Bab al-Mandab Strait, the consequences would be disastrous.
Earlier this week, the US and Iran signed an interim peace deal that includes plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. While the deal promises a removal of the US blockade within 30 days and a restoration of pre-war shipping traffic, the future of the Strait remains uncertain.
The memorandum of understanding states that ‘the traffic of commercial vessels will immediately start.’ But it also acknowledges the need for Iran to remove mines and obstacles in the Strait, which it says it will begin within 30 days of the agreement.
This demining process will be slow and costly. It may also require external confirmation and support. And mine clearing will have to be paired with the removal of undetonated ordnance that fell into the sea during the war.
Even then, without an internationally recognized traffic separation scheme or other security measures, ships will face navigational risks that undermine their abilities to transit.
There is also uncertainty over the future administration of the Strait. Although President Trump has said passage through the Strait will be ‘permanently toll-free’, the deal allows Iran to work with Oman in conversation with other littoral states to ‘define the future administration and maritime services’ in the Strait. Iranian officials had previously said ‘fees will be charged’ for unspecified ‘services’ going forward.
So far, insurance companies have not significantly reduced maritime insurance premiums, which will be necessary for shipping to flow again. Insurance and shipping companies will likely require more evidence of commitment from both the US and Iran.
The Strait of Hormuz is therefore not open, nor is it close to opening. The process will take time, confidence-building and numerous security assurances. Yet in the meantime, the risk of an even worse chokepoint crisis remains.
Even if the Strait of Hormuz is reopened, Iran will still retain the ability to close it again. The threat of closure alone may be enough to deter shipping and create significant disruption without significant cost to Tehran.
In a future conflict, the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen may also seek to close the Bab al-Mandab Strait, another major maritime chokepoint that connects the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden.
Signs of this potential strategy were already emerging before the ceasefire deal. On 8 June, the Houthis threatened to block Israeli and Israeli-linked ships sailing through the Red Sea. On 10 June, a small vessel operating off Yemen’s coast reportedly harassed a commercial ship close to Bab al-Mandab.
Shipping in the Red Sea has faced disruption before. Between 2024 and 2025, the Houthis attacked over 190 commercial ships in the Red Sea, causing major disruption to global trade. Despite the attacks ending with a May 2025 US-Houthi ceasefire, the Houthis have retained the ability to threaten maritime traffic at any time.
Today, with Hormuz effectively closed, ships have been forced to seek alternative routes. Some of the remaining workarounds depend on access to the Red Sea, including transporting oil by land to Saudi Arabia’s Yanbu port on the Red Sea coast. Renewed insecurity in Bab al-Mandab therefore threatens some of the existing alternatives to Hormuz.
This also has a knock-on effect on another chokepoint: the Suez Canal. The Bab al-Mandab Strait serves as the southern gateway to the Suez Canal. Amid Houthi attacks, vessel traffic through the Suez Canal dropped by 90 per cent in 2024. Even the threat of attacks alone is enough to disrupt shipping due to elevated insurance premiums and crew safety concerns.
Disruption in one or more maritime chokepoints frequently generates ripple effects across the wider global shipping network. In this case, the immediate impact would be felt through rising transportation costs. Insurance premiums would rise as ships enter higher-risk operating environments. Longer voyages around the Cape of Good Hope would increase fuel consumption and vessel operating expenses. Congestion at alternative ports and transit routes creates additional delays.
Disruption to the Bab al-Mandab Strait would also put additional pressure on energy markets. Reduced access to Gulf exports and longer shipping routes would likely increase oil and gas prices, generating inflationary effects across a wide range of industries. For import-dependent economies, especially those already facing fiscal stress, higher transportation and commodity costs could reduce access to food, fuel and essential goods.
The consequences would not be distributed evenly. Smaller economies and vulnerable importers would bear disproportionate costs, exacerbating existing humanitarian crises. Economic and humanitarian pressure would potentially push countries to negotiate transit rights with Iran and the Houthis.
During the war, countries like India, Pakistan, and Malaysia sought to negotiate passage through the Strait of Hormuz with Tehran on an ad hoc basis. Private companies have also pursued individual deals for safe transit with Tehran. Over time, countries facing severe economic disruption may conclude that bilateral transit agreements are preferable to absorbing the costs of prolonged supply-chain disruption.
A range of international initiatives aimed at protecting shipping already operate in the Red Sea area. These include European naval missions, the International Maritime Organization’s Maritime Security Transit Corridor, and regional frameworks such as the Djibouti Code of Conduct. Several countries maintain a naval presence in the region and periodically provide escorts and convoy protection for commercial shipping.
Sir Keir Starmer offered his best wishes to the England team before their entry into the tournament
It is Wednesday, so you can feast upon your weekly dose of The Knowledge.
Socceroos forward Awer Mabil on that viral video.
The reason why it went viral is because it was raw. It was not edited. It was just purely what the players wanted to say and all put together. It had an effect because individually Australians can feel and relate with it.”
Continue reading...Fathers particularly affected, with almost 15% reporting suicidal plans after relationship breakdowns, according to survey of 20,000 men
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Men who have recently gone through a breakup are seven times more likely to report a suicide attempt than those who have not, a new study shows.
The Ten to Men project has followed more than 20,000 Australian men and identified the mental health risks in relationship breakdowns, which can include changes in their contact with their children, in their finances and in their support network.
Continue reading...Australia lean into their underdog status while fans and media build hype around highly anticipated Group D match
The poisoned words have added sizzle to the Socceroos’ clash against the USA, and underlined the Australians’ belief in their status as underdogs. Commentators have described the Socceroos as a “lay up” for the Americans. That they don’t have any good players. That they are nothing but an average team with a “smug” coach.
USA midfielder Sebastian Berhalter – even as some teammates took a more conciliatory tone on Wednesday – chose to continue the war of words: “I think one [of this team’s core beliefs] is that we’re American. We don’t take shit.”
Continue reading...Commentary: The Scottish fans bring bagpipes and party vibes to the Boston area for the World Cup, and it's all very welcome.
Last week, the Supreme Court declined to reconsider parts of its landmark Tinker decision about free speech rights for public school students. And Monday, it took similar action in a dispute about student clubs posting political message flyers in public schools.
On June 8, 2026, the justices denied a petition for review in C. S. v. Craig McCrumb, a case that asked the justices to rule on what counted as an appropriate clothing choice for a Michigan elementary school student inside of the classroom.
One week later, in E.D. v. Noblesville School District, the Court denied a request from a student who wanted to post flyers for her school club, Noblesville Students for Life. The flyers included photos that showed students objecting to Planned Parenthood. The school prohibited the signs on the grounds that they violated its neutral-content policy and presented a political message that could be confused with the school’s own speech.
A district court agreed with the Noblesville School District that the Supreme Court’s precedent in Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier (1988) applied and that the walls within the school were limited public forums that could be regulated by educators. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld the lower court decision and said the Hazelwood precedent gave schools “a broad pedagogical duty to create a stable, neutral educational environment.”
In their petition for a writ of certiorari, the student’s lawyers told the Court that three different federal circuits had been split on the issues presented in the case, and that E.D.’s free speech rights were restricted. The Court declined to hear the case, but Justice Samuel Alito, with his dissent from denial of certiorari, asked the Supreme Court to reconsider Hazelwood in the context of government speech issues.
The First Amendment precedents in question
In 1988, the Supreme Court in Hazelwood defined the authority of educators over school-sponsored publications that students, parents, and members of the public “might reasonably perceive to bear the imprimatur of the school.” In comparison, another well-known free speech precedent, Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969), defined the powers of such educators to silence a student’s personal expression occurring within the school’s premises.
In his majority opinion for a 7-2 Court in Tinker, Justice Abe Fortas held that silent protests—such as wearing armbands—were constitutionally permitted. “It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.” However, Fortas noted that students’ free speech rights didn’t extend to conduct that “materially disrupts classwork or involves substantial disorder or invasion of the rights of others.”
The Court faced a different question in Hazelwood. In 1983, a school principal banned articles from a student newspaper discussing divorce and teenage pregnancy. The editors of the school newspaper brought a First Amendment challenge to the principal’s actions.
Writing for the majority in Hazelwood, Justice Byron White distinguished Tinker from his decision. “The question whether the First Amendment requires a school to tolerate particular student speech—the question that we addressed in Tinker—is different from the question whether the First Amendment requires a school affirmatively to promote particular student speech.”
White said that “a school need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with its basic educational mission, even though the government could not censor similar speech outside the school.” He added that the school could censor the student newspaper as long as the decision was “reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns.”
The Tinker and Hazelwood precedents are often considered by courts along with a third precedent, Bethel School District v. Fraser (1986). In Bethel, the Supreme Court determined that public school students cannot claim First Amendment protection for using vulgar language on school grounds. “Under the First Amendment, the use of an offensive form of expression may not be prohibited to adults making what the speaker considers a political point, but it does not follow that the same latitude must be permitted to children in a public school,” said Chief Justice Warren Burger in the majority decision.
The controversy at Noblesville
In their petition to the Court, the attorneys for E.D. were not questioning the Hazelwood precedent, but they challenged how the Seventh Circuit applied the test, arguing that the Seventh’s Circuit’s approach was in conflict with the approach of other circuit courts.
The attorneys noted that the Noblesville Students for Life club was one of many student-led noncurricular clubs approved by the school and that a written policy did not exist regulating the content of flyers posted by these clubs in common areas.
The attorneys believed that the Hazelwood precedent only applied to school-sponsored curricular speech. Using a narrow understanding of Hazelwood, two other federal circuits would have permitted the flyers, while three other circuits (including the Seventh) would have regulated student speech outside the school curriculum, they noted.
“Public-school students in the Fifth, Seventh, and Tenth Circuits have vanishingly small speech rights because any speech that a school allows can be cast as speech that appears school sanctioned. Under that test, even Tinker itself would come out differently,” they concluded.
The Seventh Circuit took a different view. “The record shows that school officials approved E.D.’s club, reasonably accommodated her speech, and suspended the club only for neutral, conduct-related reasons,” it held. One primary consideration was the Hazelwood forum test.
“Because of where and how E.D. sought to display her flyers, they could reasonably be perceived as bearing the school’s imprimatur. If posted, the flyers would have appeared on school walls alongside announcements for school-sponsored events and remained in common areas for days,” the judges reasoned. The Seventh Circuit also said that “the district’s restriction on political content in student flyers is reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns.”
Justice Alito’s dissent from denial
The Supreme Court considered E.D.’s petition nine times in private conference until it denied the petition for a writ of certiorari on June 15, 2026.
In a dissent from denial of certiorari, Justice Alito argued that the Supreme Court needed to define applications of the Hazelwood precedent in the decades following its original decision. “Since Hazelwood was decided, lower courts have struggled to ascertain its precise limits, and in my view, clarification by this Court is in order.”
Alito was specifically worried about how the lower courts defined government speech. “The distinction between private speech and government speech is critical because the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment constrains censorship of the first category only.”
He also quoted his own majority opinion in Pleasant Grove City v. Summum (2009), where Alito voiced concerns that “the government speech doctrine not be used as a subterfuge for favoring certain private speakers over others based on viewpoint.”
“When Hazelwood was decided, this Court’s decisions had never even mentioned the term ‘government speech,’” he noted.
For now, the denials for certiorari leave the Tinker and Hazelwood precedents and their recent interpretations intact.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from independent journalist Ed Zitron: Today, I can exclusively report, based on audited financial documents viewed by this publication that have been independently verified by the Financial Times, that OpenAI lost around $38.5 billion in 2025, as well as other crucial details about the financial condition of the company. [...] At the end of the year, OpenAI had just over $50 billion in assets, with almost half of that in cash. [...] The financial condition of OpenAI is deeply concerning. $38.53 billion in losses are astronomical, and far higher than most believed it would be. Losses also appear to be mounting year-over-year at a dramatic rate, and I'm not sure how this company finds a way toward any kind of sustainability or profitability. As discussed, I have not editorialized much today. I believe the best thing I can do for the general public is to deliver this news as plainly as possible. Ars Technica's Kyle Orland offers a more editorial take, writing: All told, OpenAI's day-to-day "loss from operations" increased from $8.78 billion in 2024 to $20.92 billion in 2025, a concerning direction for a company that is telling investors it hopes to be profitable by 2030. But measured as a percentage of revenues, the company's operating losses slightly improved year to year, from 237 percent in 2024 to 160 percent in 2025. Operating numbers aside, OpenAI's headline "net loss" number of just over $5 billion in 2024 ballooned to nearly $39 billion in 2025. But the 2025 number includes a significant accounting charge related to investor valuations that shifted amid the company's 2025 conversion to a for-profit structure. The Financial Times cites "a person familiar with the matter" in reporting that this non-recurring charge was approximately $30 billion and that OpenAI's 2025 net loss amounted to a more reasonable-looking $8 billion without it.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Head of National Cyber Security Centre says UK in ‘ongoing contest with capable adversaries’ and AI could add to threat
The UK’s critical national infrastructure has been hit by more than 200 cyber incidents over the past year and state-linked assailants were behind three-quarters of the attacks, according to the state cybersecurity body.
Richard Horne, the chief executive of the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), said hostile states such as Russia, China and Iran were increasingly targeting systems behind the UK’s key services.
Continue reading...HAMBURG, Germany, June 17, 2026 — With just five days remaining until ISC 2026 opens its doors to the international supercomputing community, excitement is building in Hamburg! As of 4 pm CET, 3,474 attendees have registered for the event.
Germany currently accounts for slightly over 27 percent of registered attendees, followed by the U.S. at 13 percent and the U.K. at 12 percent, with additional representation from across Europe, Asia, and other regions. This mix reinforces ISC’s role as a key global supercomputing event, bringing together international scientists, engineers, technologists, infrastructure specialists, decision-makers, and policymakers to address shared challenges and opportunities across HPC, AI, and quantum computing.
Under the theme “Connecting the Dots,” ISC 2026 will focus on the systems, methods, and collaborations that shape supercomputing. The technical program will explore the evolving role of HPC in scientific discovery, AI factories, digital twins, quantum computing, energy efficiency, sustainability, and the infrastructure needed to support increasingly complex workloads.
The keynote program reflects this breadth, addressing some of the central transitions in HPC today — from heterogeneous system design and vascular digital twins to AI, cloud computing, energy considerations, and new computing models.
The ISC 2026 exhibition will bring together 188 exhibitors from 26 countries, including 44 organizations exhibiting at ISC for the first time. With 152 booths across the exhibition hall and foyer areas, attendees can explore technologies, products, services, and research spanning HPC, AI, quantum computing, data infrastructure, cooling, and sustainability.
The event is sponsored by Platinum Sponsors Bull, HPE, Lenovo, NVIDIA, Quantinuum, and Sugon, alongside a broad exhibitor community of established technology providers, research organizations, and first-time exhibitors.
New Formats
The 2026 exhibition will also offer expanded opportunities for interaction and community engagement. New and expanded formats, including the Community Stage, exhibitor pitches, vendor sessions, and themed Walking Talks, will give attendees more ways to engage directly with exhibitors, speakers, and peers.
With strong international participation, a broad technical program, and an exhibition that brings together established technology providers, research organizations, emerging companies, and first-time exhibitors, ISC 2026 is set to provide an important meeting point for the global HPC community.
Join ISC High Performance 2026 in #ConnectingTheDots
ISC 2026 returns to the Congress Center Hamburg from June 22 to June 26 for its 41st edition. Since its inception in 1986, it has been recognized as the world’s oldest and Europe’s most attended event for HPC, AI, and quantum professionals and organizations interested in performance, energy efficiency, and cost-effectiveness.
More from HPCwire
About ISC High Performance
ISC High Performance is the leading global event for high performance computing, artificial intelligence, data analytics, and quantum computing. It brings together researchers, technology providers, and industry leaders to explore the latest advancements and practical applications shaping the future of computing.
Source: ISC
The post ISC 2026 Set to Welcome Global HPC Community with 188 Exhibitors appeared first on HPCwire.
When anti-ICE activists rallied against the Trump administration’s deportation campaign in Minneapolis, many relied on the encrypted messaging app Signal for secure communications. In activist chats and quickly established ICE-tracking groups, locals used Signal to keep tabs on federal agents patrolling their communities.
When the Department of Homeland Security announced this week the arrest of 15 alleged “anti-ICE rioters” in Minnesota, it pointed directly at their Signal chats.
The indictment is in large part built upon on conversations from more than a dozen Signal groups, citing more than 100 specific messages. The case is a stark reminder that using an encrypted messaging platform like Signal is not in and of itself a magic bullet to safeguard communications. It also raises the question: How did Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations unit gain access to all of these communications in the first place?
The indictment doesn’t provide a clear answer. But sprinkled throughout the document are clues that suggest that law enforcement may have gained access to the physical devices of some of those indicted.
The indictment singles out its targets for their alleged participation in local ICE rapid response networks, where volunteers monitor and report the presence of federal agents in their communities by flagging details such as the license plate numbers of vehicles used by immigration authorities. ICE watchers in Minnesota have been met with intimidation from immigration authorities amid the national outcry following the killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good as they observed the actions of immigration authorities.
The 15 people named in the latest indictment are all charged with “conspiracy to impede or injure an officer,” with some facing additional charges like “solicitation to commit a crime of violence” and “destruction of government property.” Though some of the accused had court appearances on Tuesday, their defense attorneys have not as of yet been named.
The indictment comes months after FBI Director Kash Patel said in a podcast interview that federal law enforcement had started an investigation into Minnesota ICE watchers using Signal groups to share information about immigration agents.
The bulk of the indictment consists of transcripts of group messages; at various points it also makes mention of voicemails, text messages, Signal direct messages, and Signal calls. For instance, the indictment in one spot mentions that two of the indictees “exchanged approximately 20 connected Signal calls.” This hints that authorities were able to access not just group chat messages, but likely had wholesale access to the devices of at least some of those indicted.
The Signal app provides end-to-end encryption, protecting communications in transit, so that anyone monitoring your internet or cellular data connection cannot see the contents of your messages. Signal also minimizes the amount of metadata collected, so if the organization behind the app, the Signal Foundation, was served with a compulsory legal process to reveal user information, it wouldn’t even know with whom you spoke or chatted.
But all that falls apart if your device gets into the wrong hands. In order to safeguard your Signal data from someone who obtains access to your device, it’s necessary to manually harden Signal by modifying some of its default settings.
Perhaps Signal’s most well-touted security and privacy feature is its ability to set disappearing messages. Messages can be set to expire in periods ranging from seconds to weeks. A default expiration time for all messages can be selected, and specific groups and conversations can be set to custom retention times. To minimize risk, set retention times to the shortest amount feasible — minutes or hours, instead of days or weeks.
Signal’s disappearing messages don’t remove evidence that communications between parties occurred in the first place.
Keep in mind that Signal’s disappearing messages delete the contents of a message, but they don’t remove evidence that communications between parties occurred in the first place. This means that even if a group has enabled disappearing messages, someone who gains access to a member’s device could later determine with whom they were chatting. Therefore it’s safest to regularly delete entire groups and chats, not just the messages themselves.
Just like its chat function, Signal also keeps similar records of voice and video calls. It’s as important to delete records of the calls as it is to delete records of text messages, both within the Signal app and in your phone’s standard call history.
On iPhones, Signal can integrate its call history into the iPhone’s regular call history. This privacy-eroding feature can be disabled on Signal on iOS by tapping your profile circle on the top-left corner of the app, clicking on Settings, then Privacy, then disabling “Show Calls in Recents.”
Additionally for Signal on iPhones, you’ll also likely want to disable settings like “Share Contacts with iOS” and “Use Phone Contact Photos” (for Android users, the equivalent is “Use address book photos”), which can be found under Settings, then Chats.
Such precautions may sound extreme, but in a recent case, authorities were able to recover deleted incoming Signal messages based on old push notifications that were archived on iPhones (the latest iPhone update fixes this issue, highlighting the importance of keeping your devices up to date). On that note, remember to either turn off Signal notifications entirely or have them display only the names of people sending messages — which should be pseudonyms, not real names.
The post How Did the Feds Get Into Anti-ICE Activists’ Signal Messages? appeared first on The Intercept.
WASHINGTON, June 17, 2026 — The Department of Commerce’s CHIPS Research & Development Office today announced the signing of a definitive agreement with SandboxAQ for a $500 million award under the CHIPS and Science Act.
The award will accelerate the development and deployment of SandboxAQ’s Al-driven materials discovery platform to address critical semiconductor materials bottlenecks and supply chain risks, including developing new molecules and chemistries for alternatives to PFAS “forever chemicals,” advanced catalysts, rare earth-free magnets, and novel battery chemistries for semiconductor facility backup power systems.
SandboxAQ’s platform is designed to compress traditional materials development timelines by combining first-principles physics and chemistry simulation, Al-driven optimization, high-throughput screening of millions of candidates, and targeted experimental validation. SandboxAQ will also partner with high-performing American manufacturing partners to advance the strongest breakthrough results into full-scale domestic manufacturing and commercialization.
“President Trump is committed to strengthening America’s semiconductor supply chain and ensuring national security,” said Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick. “This award will accelerate the discovery and innovation of critical materials and reduce our reliance on foreign-controlled materials.”
The Department’s award will advance U.S. economic and national security by accelerating development across four priority programmatic areas that are critical to continued innovation in next-generation semiconductor manufacturing, advanced computing, Al infrastructure, secure communications, and defense systems:
“The CHIPS Research and Development Office is taking a targeted approach to strengthen the domestic semiconductor industry by supporting the development of new materials solutions to critical input constraints,” said Bill Fraunhofer, Executive Director of Semiconductor Investment and Innovation. “By investing in Al-enabled materials discovery, we are advancing a capability that can identify novel chemistries and molecules for the semiconductor ecosystem, accelerate development timelines, and improve U.S. supply chain resilience.”
In connection with the award, the Department will receive a minority, non-controlling equity stake in SandboxAQ, which enhances the benefit to the U.S. taxpayer.
The CHIPS Research and Development Office continues to solicit proposals from eligible applicants for research, prototyping and commercial solutions that advance microelectronics technology in the U.S. Eligible applicants should apply under announcement 2025-NIST-CHIPS-CRDO-01 at www.grants.gov.
Source: NIST
The post SandboxAQ Wins $500M CHIPS Award, Grants US Government Equity Stake appeared first on HPCwire.
Here are some highly rated series to check out, plus a look at what's new in June.
That lack of faith matters as AI becomes increasingly inescapable.
After the billion-dollar company’s leaders sent staff a memo saying the brand had ‘over-extended’, game studios may be in the firing line
In March 2000, Bill Gates stood onstage at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco and, to a packed crowd, officially announced the company’s long-anticipated video game console. “We want Xbox to be the platform of choice for the best and most creative game developers in the world,” he told attenders – and that was indeed the intention of the small, dedicated team who put together the blueprints of that first machine.
The Xbox landscape seems very different 25 years later. Last week, mere days after a bullish summer showcase full of Gears of War revivals and promises of a renewed focus on Xbox’s gaming strengths, new CEO, Asha Sharma, and chief content officer, Matt Booty, wrote a memo to Xbox staff inviting them to brace for “hard truths”. “Excluding Activision Blizzard King, over the past five years, we have spent over $20bn on ongoing investments in our content, platform and hardware subsidy, but our annual revenue has declined nearly half a billion during that time. Going forward, this cannot continue,” it read.
Continue reading...I finally decided to make my wallet a little angry and get a onewheel. Finally got a pint S, got it about 4 days ago, and does not charge whatsoever with the pint ultra charger and regular charger. stays green when plugged in, and no indication on the board/ app that it’s charging. Is there a simple solution? Or take the L with this one and send it back.
Vice President JD Vance said on "CBS Monrings" that the Trump administration wants "to tell the American people what's in this deal."
Commentary: Half phone, half gimbal camera. Count me in.
Acting secretary Keith Sonderling threatens to withhold administrative funds from states for first time in history
Keith Sonderling sent letters to 53 states and US territories demanding action to “combat waste, fraud, and abuse” within the unemployment insurance program, threatening to withhold administrative funds from states for the first time in history.
“We are officially putting governors on notice,” said the acting US secretary of labor. “The American people will no longer tolerate the blatant waste, fraud, and abuse of their hard-earned tax dollars – no state should allow it either. If states allow it, they will suffer the consequences. This department is no longer afraid to use every lever available to ensure taxpayer money is protected.”
Continue reading...Focus on business dealings with mining company
Guadalajara rally to highlight fate of ‘disappeared’
Hyundai will be targeted by protesters at a rally before the Group A game between Mexico and South Korea in Guadalajara on Thursday, due to the World Cup sponsor’s business dealings with the South American mining company Ternium.
A 2025 report from the environmental group Mighty Earth criticised Hyundai’s involvement in what they described as a “dirty steel supply chain”, as the South Korean motor company is a major buyer of iron ore from Ternium for use in steel production. Ternium has faced repeated criticisms for its destructive environmental impact and corporate governance policies from campaign groups, as well as its alleged links to the disappearance of two Mexican activists.
Continue reading...Yes, you should absolutely marathon them.
Exclusive: Images show Israeli military using six companies’ bulldozers and excavators to demolish south Lebanon villages
Human rights experts have alleged that six multinational construction equipment conglomerates may be aiding and abetting war crimes by supplying excavators and bulldozers to Israel, after photos and videos showed the Israeli military using their equipment to demolish villages in south Lebanon.
The Guardian geolocated and verified images showing the Israeli military using excavators made by six companies – Caterpillar, Volvo, Hyundai, Doosan, Hitachi and Komatsu – to destroy homes, public utilities, shops and other structures across southern Lebanon.
Israel has levelled entire villages inside the “yellow line”, a 608 sq km area occupied by Israel along the Lebanese-Israeli border. At least 46 villages in south Lebanon have suffered heavy damage, most of it caused by demolitions carried out after the 17 April Lebanon-Israel ceasefire, according to a satellite analysis by Bellingcat.
Continue reading...An AI tool is no replacement for a doctor, and regulation is essential. But together, physicians and AI could prove beneficial
A calf cramp should not be a brush with death. Mine almost was.
For five days, I had what felt like a stubborn muscle spasm in my left calf. It was tender, swollen and getting worse. I assumed it was a muscle problem and went to my chiropractor, who treated it as a muscle issue.
Gleb Tsipursky, PhD, serves as the CEO of the future-of-work work consultancy Disaster Avoidance Experts and wrote The Psychology of Generative AI Adoption at Work (Georgetown University Press, 2026)
Continue reading...For over-the-counter use, Solius Pro aims to deliver the natural health benefits of the sun without causing skin damage.
Google's first new smart speaker in years puts a big focus on Gemini for Home, but will that be enough to help it compete with HomePods and Amazon Echo speakers?
Will Colombia elect a far-right president? Expert comment LToremark
Iván Cepeda and Abelardo de la Espriella represent opposite ends of the political spectrum. But neither appear to have the solutions to Colombia’s problems.
The second round of Colombia’s presidential election will be held on 21 June, revealing a country deeply divided between two candidates with entirely different political visions.
Iván Cepeda, leader of the left-wing coalition Pacto Histórico, is the government-backed candidate endorsed by current president Gustavo Petro. He aims to combat the economic elites and political forces that have dominated Colombia for over a century. To do so, he wants to reform the state and the tax system, reduce inequality through social agreements and increased access to new technologies, protect nature, and strengthen peace and multilateralism.
His opponent, Abelardo de la Espriella, is a businessman and lawyer with no political experience who is endorsed by US President Donald Trump – and currently leading the polls. Nicknamed ‘El Tigre’ (The Tiger) for his aggressive approach, he blends the characteristics of Donald Trump, Argentina’s Javier Milei and El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele. De la Espriella presents himself as a staunch opponent of communism and advocates a tough stance against the authoritarianism of the left, organized crime, corruption, drug trafficking and illicit economies.
The differences between the two candidates and their visions for Colombia could not be greater.
Cepeda is a senator who has spent his entire adult life fighting against the state’s collusion with the far-right paramilitary groups that murdered his father, senator and lawyer Manuel Cepeda Vargas, in 1994. He wants to tackle three key problems in Colombia: inequality, violence and the lack of state control of 40 per cent of the national territory – which creates the perfect environment for armed groups to operate freely.
In Gustavo Petro’s current government, Cepeda led the Paz Total (Total Peace) initiative to reach agreements with non-state political and criminal armed groups. The aim was to get them to lay down their arms and cease their illicit activities by offering reduced sentences and the retention of part of their wealth. He also attempted to reach a peace agreement with the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrilla group. Both projects failed, and he is accused of indirectly having helped the armed groups gain ground.
De la Espriella, meanwhile, became famous as a lawyer for defending individuals linked to organized crime and paramilitarism. His clients include Alex Saab, an alleged organized crime operator who was a key ally of former Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro’s government as well as an alleged collaborator of the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).
As a politician, he now takes a very hardline approach to organized crime and drugs. If elected, he would use massive force against armed criminal or political groups and strengthen security by building maximum-security prisons. He would also seek to dismantle the 2016 Peace Agreement between the Juan Manuel Santos government and FARC Marxist guerrilla, particularly the Special Jurisdiction for Peace (JEP) established by the agreement to implement transitional justice.
De la Espriella wants to reduce the size of the state, eliminate regulations, promote mining and energy exploitation, cut taxes on businesses and large fortunes, and force banks to provide cheap loans for home purchases. He also wants to withdraw Colombia from the United Nations and the Organization of American States.
The Colombian business community, most of the media, the international financial sector, and part of the armed forces officers would support a potential De la Espriella victory. In diplomatic circles, however, some feel it would be a lack of prestige for Colombia to have a president linked to organized crime and the paramilitaries.
But it is a price they might consider worth paying to be on good terms with the US, which has always been their political and economic benchmark. And currently occupying the White House is a president for whom the lines between personal and political interests are blurred.
De la Espriella’s approach fits in with Trump’s national security strategy, which seeks to have like-minded governments in the region that cooperate in the war on crime and grant him access to their mineral and energy resources. By contrast, if Cepeda wins, the Trump administration may try to exert direct and indirect pressure through their regional allies to limit his reforms, particularly tax reforms and attempts to impose regulations on US mining and oil companies operating in Colombia.
This election is part of the wider trend towards the far right across Latin America. In elections across the region, traditional right-wing parties – as well as those on the left and in the centre – have been taken by surprise by populist, non-political outsiders who have won over a large proportion of their voters by focusing on issues such as crime and nationalism versus multilateralism.
Although Cepeda has focused his campaign on denouncing De la Espriella for his links to the paramilitaries, he has misunderstood the new right which his opponent represents. De la Espriella has presented himself as a representative of a new, pragmatic right, which is devoid of values and instead focused on seeing immediate results. As Hernando Gómez Buendía, director of Razón Pública, points out: ’The right-wing did not disappear. It changed hands’.
This election highlights the link between the erosion of democracy and the consequent rise of the far right in Latin America on the one hand, and Trump’s hemispheric policy of supporting allied governments in the region on the other. This support is either direct or channelled through local allies, as seen in Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa’s explicit backing of De la Espriella, which led to accusations of ‘deliberate interference’ in the election.
Campaigners welcome announcement cutting levies on menstrual health items, but say their work to end period poverty is ‘far from over’
Pakistan plans to abolish “period tax”, in a victory for young campaigners who had taken the government to court over the charges.
Finance minister Muhammad Aurangzeb announced that sanitary towels and related items were “daily necessities that are indispensable for women’s health, dignity and full participation in social activities”, and said he intended to remove the sales tax.
Continue reading...LTX is introducing new tools for creators to experiment with custom AI models.
Retired staff sergeant Wilmer Trujillo, who served roughly 20 years in the U.S. Army and the Texas National Guard, is asking ICE to release his wife of six years.
The Austin-bound plane was carrying six people when it crashed on a highway near Laredo, Texas. Videos show it striking a lamppost and a car, and snapping in half.
The president met with Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky at the G-7 summit but told reporters the conflict “has no impact on us … we’re thousands of miles away.”
Education secretary describes historical practice in England as a ‘shameful period’ in country’s history
Downing Street is to make a full apology on behalf of the state to those affected by historical forced adoption in England, the education secretary has confirmed.
Bridget Phillipson, giving evidence to MPs on the education select committee on Wednesday, described it as a “shameful period” in UK history.
Continue reading...Apple TV's horror comedy upped the stakes with its season finale, delivering a big, emotional twist and teasing even more of the island's disturbing lore.
Wins for the right-to-repair movement mean you can fix your tech, not toss it. But some products are more accessible than others.
People understand gender differently, and I was taught to respect all ideas. But the vitriol I recently experienced was not a healthy debate
For as long as I can remember, I have known I am a girl. That certainty is as instinctive as knowing I am right-handed. It is difficult to explain to someone who has never been transgender or loved someone who is, but I have never lived this way to gain an advantage or take something from someone else. I live this way to honor what I know is true.
I transitioned at four years old. By sixth grade, my identity was public. I grew used to the double takes, the questions, the quiet skepticism. Most of it did not bother me. Curiosity, even when clumsy, is human. People understand gender differently, and I was taught to respect all ideas, just as I hope others respect mine.
Lina Haaga is a transgender student athlete
Continue reading...Proposed rules would require every mobile customer to provide a government ID. Experts warn the move could effectively end anonymous phone service in the US.
Trump’s most consequential foreign policy mistake.
A business jet with six on board crashed on a Laredo, Texas, highway and caught fire, killing one person and causing chaos as passersby frantically tried to save those inside.
Robert White's win in the heavily Democratic city sets him up to take the top spot in November's general elections, when he could replace 18-term delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton.
Forecasters say the potential first tropical cyclone of the 2026 Atlantic hurricane season could develop into a fully formed storm on Wednesday and bring life-threatening flash flooding.
David Pearce was convicted of first-degree murder for the deaths of Christy Giles and Hilda Marcela Cabrales after a night of partying in Los Angeles. He was also found guilty of raping seven other women who came forward to testify at his trial.
The mother of murdered model Christy Giles pleads for others to share their locations. She says the technology helped police catch David Pearce, who murdered Giles and her friend, architect Hilda Marcela Cabrales.
Republicans question details of deal set to be signed later in the week as European leaders seek to join talks. Plus: can we refreeze the Arctic?
Good morning.
Donald Trump, facing severe criticism from some domestic supporters for conducting a war against Iran that has met hardly any of its original objectives, has backed a joint G7 leaders’ statement that welcomes his proposed peace deal.
What is the domestic criticism of the deal? Many Senate Republicans said there were still unanswered questions and they needed thorough briefings before it was finalized. Senator Lindsey Graham, a close ally of Trump and a longtime hawk on Iran, said: “The way Iran describes it, it’s awful. The way we describe it, it makes sense to me. Let’s look at it and see what it actually is.”
How do people in Iran feel about the deal? The Guardian’s Deepa Parent found a shared sense of exhaustion, and anger that nothing has really changed.
What does the deal mean for US-Israeli relations? The strategic interests of the US and Israel appear to be diverging and Benjamin Netanyahu has been left in a political bind, facing an election having led Israel in three wars – in Gaza, Lebanon and Iran – without a clear victory in any of them.
How are authorities cracking down on protests against ICE? Fifteen people in Minnesota have been charged with conspiracy to impede or injure federal officers over their response to a deadly immigration enforcement crackdown in the state earlier this year. The prosecutors allege the defendants were part of two Minneapolis-based “antifa” groups that “violently oppose immigration law enforcement”.
Continue reading...Trump asked questions of Iran when he did not know the answers. Now he must pay the price Expert comment jon.wallace
The president started a war in the Middle East without considering foreseeable risks. The US memorandum of understanding with Iran leaves many of the repercussions of that miscalculation unaddressed.
There is a maxim every trial lawyer learns early in their career: ‘Never ask a question you don’t already know the answer to’. In Operation Epic Fury, US President Donald Trump violated this fundamental principle.
Trump is not the first US president to misjudge an endeavour in the Middle East. From George H. W. Bush to George W. Bush, to the Biden era view that the ‘region is quieter today than it has been in two decades’, successive US administrations have all searched for peace in the Middle East through war, sanctions and economic leverage and diplomacy – and all failed to secure a lasting, favourable outcome.
On 28 February 2026, Trump thought the main question was: ‘Will the Iranian regime be compelled into compliance with US demands through the use of overwhelming military force?’ He hoped – but did not know – that the answer was ‘yes’: that the US and Israel could wage a quick military operation lasting four to six weeks, grounded in a set of objectives that included destroying Iran’s missile industry and navy, neutralizing Iran’s regional proxy network, and ensuring Iran could not obtain a nuclear weapon.
Also at the heart of Trump’s ambition was an ideological attachment to seeing regime change in Iran. The president believed the operation would put in motion the first domino in a chain that would lead to the collapse of Iran’s Islamic Republic.
Launching the war, he asked an explicit question of Iran’s citizens – another which he did not know the answer to. Were they capable of seizing the opportunity the US was providing and overthrowing the Iranian regime? ‘So let’s see how you respond,’ he said.
But the conflict and its outcome were never for Iranian civilians to decide. As Iran’s leadership structure faced early decapitation and personnel losses, it reconstituted itself and adopted a ‘nothing to lose’ approach.
Iran exported the conflict across the region using ballistic missiles and drones and disrupted global markets through a de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz. This strategy of horizontal escalation re-established leverage for Iran. For Trump it meant digesting tactical success but strategic failure.
Now the US and Iran have agreed to a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to extend the April ceasefire 60 days and ‘reopen’ the Strait of Hormuz, while providing a framework for additional negotiations between the parties.
Negotiations over the last year have made clear that the US and Iran are rarely on the same page or even reading from the same book. Yet Americans, regional players and the market are meant to believe that after successive failures and false starts, negotiations have turned the corner.
The MoU rests on very little common understanding and is already raising skepticism, among the US intelligence community and in Israel. What comes next will be more telling than what has already been achieved.
Re-establishing timely, safe and open passage through the Strait of Hormuz represents the most pressing test. But the US and Iran have a host of open items to address in coming months – including all the questions left unanswered by the war: What is to be done with Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium (the ‘nuclear dust’)? What is the future of Iran’s nuclear programme, sanctions relief and frozen assets? Will Iran be persuaded to halt its support for its regional proxies? And what are the prospects for genuine peace in the Israel–Hezbollah theatre?
With trust between the conflicting parties so weak, the door remains open to a range of scenarios. Negotiations may fall apart during the 60-day ceasefire extension – perhaps over fighting in Lebanon. The ceasefire may be extended again to allow for more meaningful progress on negotiations. Or a peace deal may be reached with deeply compromised terms that fail to resolve the outstanding issues.
For Trump, the MoU announcement comes as a relief. It has been clear for weeks that the conflict in Iran has been testing the president’s patience, as he seeks to focus on other items on his agenda.
Atop the list is America’s 250th birthday in just a few weeks, and November’s US mid-term elections. American support for Operation Epic Fury peaked at around 40 per cent and has been waning over the last month.
Polling indicates that voters have consistently been more concerned with the state of the US economy than the state of the Middle East. Any easing the MoU brings to prices at the gas pump and on inflation will play favourably at home. On the international stage, Greenland remains of interest to Trump, as does Cuba.
In the coming weeks, analysts will draw comparisons between the MoU (and any follow-on negotiations) and the Obama-era Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
Trump has repeatedly referred to the JCPOA as ‘the worst and most one-sided transaction the United States has ever entered into’. The truth of how any new arrangements stack up to the JCPOA will be complex and complicated, but for now remains unmeasurable.
The US president drew laughs from his fellow G7 leaders for his quip as he walked into a meeting on the last day of the their summit
Continue reading...Broadcast channels under review and 10% of senior leaders to go as part of drive to cut £500m in costs
Entire BBC programmes will be scrapped and compulsory redundancies will be necessary as part of sweeping cuts at the corporation, the new director general, Matt Brittin, has told staff.
The former Google executive also announced he was reviewing the BBC’s broadcast TV channels and radio network, as audiences continue to switch to online content.
Continue reading...Apple is partnering with brands like Eve, Aqara and others to bring Apple Home support to security cameras. Here are my favorites.
These can be used at any time with or without equipment.
The European Commission has declined (PDF) to propose a law requiring publishers to keep discontinued video games playable, despite the Stop Killing Games initiative collecting nearly 1.3 million verified signatures. Instead, it plans to develop a voluntary industry code covering end-of-life transparency and preservation. Dextero reports: The Commission's full communication said a legal obligation to keep games playable, as requested by the initiative, "would not be proportionate." It cited concerns about intellectual property rights, confidential business information, publisher costs, and potential cybersecurity or safety risks once games are no longer supported. The code of conduct could include more transparent storefront labeling about possible game discontinuation, along with more partnerships between publishers and cultural heritage institutions to preserve games. However, it would not legally require publishers to provide offline patches, private server tools, or other methods for players to continue accessing games after official support ends. The Commission also argued that existing EU consumer law already provides some safeguards, including requirements around transparency, contract duration, termination conditions, and possible refunds if a shutdown conflicts with the agreement or a consumer's reasonable expectations. [...] Despite the setback, Stop Killing Games has said it is not ending its push for legislation. In a response posted after the Commission's decision, the official Stop Killing Games account said the outcome was "not unexpected" and claimed the campaign had already prepared for the result. The group said it is now pushing for members of the European Parliament to amend Stop Killing Games into the Digital Fairness Act instead. "We can move on without the Commission and their non-decision," the group said, referencing earlier comments from Accursed Farms creator Ross Scott.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Following the supreme court’s gutting of the voting rights act, the president’s recent claims of fraud are cause for serious concern
The first case I argued in the supreme court was in 1982. I represented African American voters from Burke county, Georgia, where no Black person had ever been elected to office even though 40% of the voters were Black. The reason was simple. All candidates were elected at large by the voters of the entire county, and the white majority could outvote Black voters every time.
Federal law banned many older methods of southern discrimination–the bogus literacy tests, “understanding” tests, and poll taxes, for example – but structural barriers like the one in Burke county were pervasive, and they suppressed Black politics across the south. In Georgia, fewer than 1% of the elected officials in the state were African Americans while more than a quarter of the state’s registered voters were Black.
Continue reading...Ten years ago, after complaining that traffic was ‘driving him nuts’, Musk’s Boring Company began building underground tunnels to ease congestion on the roads. Did he overpromise and underdeliver?
It’s another blindingly bright day in Las Vegas but I’m 30ft underground and strapped in for a rocket ride to the future. Actually, it’s a Tesla ride to the future, and not a self-driving one. And it’s pretty slow – my driver tells me the speed limit down here is 30mph. It’s also pretty short: the journey is over in a matter of minutes. In fact, the Vegas Loop is a pretty underwhelming experience: a brief trundle down a white-walled tunnel only slightly larger than the vehicle itself, lined by strips of LEDs that change colour every few seconds, in an attempt to inject some Vegas glitz. I’d been hoping to ask other Loop-riders what they made of the experience, but … there aren’t any. I’m the only person here.
This is not the futuristic transport solution Elon Musk originally promised. When he first announced this innovative technology in 2017, it was accompanied by sci-fi visuals showing a car pulling over from the street traffic on to an elevator platform, which then descended into a network of tunnels and whizzed along on an “electric skate” at 200km/h (124mph). “There’s no real limit to how many levels of tunnel you can have … so you can alleviate any arbitrary level of urban congestion,” Musk said. A few months earlier, with characteristic edgelordly nonchalance, Musk had announced on Twitter: “Traffic is driving me nuts. Am going to build a tunnel boring machine and just start digging …” Followed shortly after by: “I am actually going to do this.” He did, and he named it the Boring Company.
Continue reading...About 150 jobs have already been lost in Bolton as company reports 145% rise in profits and hands £20m to shareholders
The online electrical goods seller AO World has revealed it is outsourcing up to 200 UK call centre roles to South Africa blaming rising labour costs, as it handed £20m to shareholders.
As the retailer reported a jump in profits, it said it was shifting the majority of call centre jobs overseas “in response to ongoing inflationary cost pressures, and particularly rising employment costs”. It expects to save about £4m a year as a result of the change.
Continue reading...Lionel Messi tied the Men's World Cup goals record with his first World Cup hat trick as Argentina topped Algeria.
Pamphlets from event featured projects in West Bank and East Jerusalem despite previous denials by organisers
An Israeli real estate event in north London appears to have advertised the sale of land in Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank, despite previous denials that illegal settlement properties would be marketed at the event.
Pamphlets shared with the Guardian from the event on Sunday showed real estate projects in Ma’ale Adumim, Givat Ze’ev, Kfar Eldad and Teneh Omarim in the occupied West Bank, as well as Ramat Eshkol and Givat Hamatos in East Jerusalem.
Continue reading...Voters in the San Francisco Bay Area are deciding who will fill the remainder of former Rep. Eric Swalwell's congressional seat in a special primary election on Tuesday.
When Congressional Democrats rallied against President Donald Trump’s appointment of Bill Pulte to serve as temporary director of national intelligence last week, they said he was an unqualified pick who would be too eager to use the job to undermine elections.
Now some high-ranking Democrats are lining up to support another permanent appointee with a dubious claim to the legal job requirements — Jay Clayton — who has also openly questioned the integrity of U.S. elections.
Some to Democrats are lining up to support Jay Clayton, who has questioned the integrity of elections.
Clayton’s nomination will be heard by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on Wednesday. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., hopes to have him confirmed as soon as Thursday — a lightning-fast process for a top intelligence post.
What’s at stake, however, isn’t just the outcome of Clayton’s nomination process. Trump’s pick is intertwined with the fate of a key domestic surveillance law, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, that expired Friday.
Privacy advocates are worried that Clayton’s nomination will give some Democrats the excuse they have been looking for to vote for renewing Section 702. The advocates are raising concerns about Clayton and calling on Congress to add a warrant requirement to the surveillance law, no matter who ultimately takes over as intel chief.
The top Democrats on the House and Senate intelligence committees, Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut and Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, who have both supported renewing Section 702 without major changes, have issued positive statements about Clayton’s nomination.
Neither House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., nor Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has tipped their hand as to whether Clayton’s nomination will lead them to support a so-called “clean” renewal of Section 702.
Jeffries said last week that he supports making significant reforms to the law, although he did not specifically commit to a warrant requirement.
Sean Vitka, executive director of the left-leaning advocacy group Demand Progress, urged Democratic leaders to stand firm on reform.
“There is no universe where the momentary person who happens to satisfy Himes and Warner’s vibe check,” Vitka said, “should mitigate everybody’s concerns that are decades old with warrantless surveillance.”
The reauthorization of Section 702 once appeared to be on a “glide path,” according to Warner. The law sets the parameters for when intelligence agencies can warrantlessly search American communications collected abroad.
Congress was within days of passing a new version of the law with minor tweaks when Trump nominated Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency and chair of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to serve as temporary director of national intelligence.
When he tapped Pulte, Trump said he wanted to him to use the post to investigate “rigged” elections. That alarmed Democrats who noted that Pulte is already accused of misusing sensitive mortgage databases to help launch investigations against Trump’s political enemies.
The intelligence chief post has no formal role in election administration, but that did not stop outgoing Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard from appearing at an FBI raid of a Fulton County, Georgia, ballot warehouse.
Pulte’s lapdog reputation was not the only thing that worried Democrats. They also noted that he did not meet the job requirement for the intelligence chief post in statute, which states that the nominee “shall have extensive national security expertise.”
Centrist Democrats who were willing to renew Section 702 despite Gabbard’s overt politicization of the intelligence chief job finally had enough when it came to Pulte’s nomination. Even Warner and Himes voted against the law’s reauthorization.
Trump’s nomination of Clayton was an attempt to undo the backlash. Clayton currently serves as the federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York and was previously the Securities and Exchange Commission chair — the kind of resume that reassures Washington insiders.
“I’ve known and respected Jay Clayton for decades,” Himes said on X. “His intelligence, temperament and deep commitment to public service will make him a terrific DNI. Had this nomination been made a week ago, lots of pain might have been avoided.”
Advocates were more dubious. They noted that only days before his selection, Clayton had been asked on CNBC about the delays in returning California’s election results that had fueled right-wing conspiracy theories.
“On the integrity side, we’re doing an absolutely terrible job,” Clayton said, without offering evidence. “And the American people are right to question it.”
Clayton’s willingness to engage with one of Trump’s favorite tropes alarmed advocates, who say that Gabbard’s role in the Georgia warehouse raid shows how the intelligence chief post could be misused to sow election doubt.
Clayton’s willingness to engage with one of Trump’s favorite tropes alarmed advocates.
Even centrist Democrats concede that, like Pulte, Clayton doesn’t have “extensive” national security experience. In his defense, supporters point to the role of federal prosecutors in launching national security cases.
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., the ranking member of the armed services committee, sounded a note of skepticism on “Fox News Sunday.”
“We have to look very clearly at Jay Clayton,” Reed said. “He is a very accomplished lawyer, but the statute requires someone taking this job to have significant national security experience, and that has to be measured. I don’t think he does.”
Senators of both parties will have an opportunity to probe Clayton’s qualifications at Wednesday’s confirmation hearing. Warner has said that Clayton will have to answer questions about his views on elections.
Whatever happens with his nomination, privacy advocates say the entire saga of replacing Gabbard further proves the need for major reforms to Section 702.
“It doesn’t matter who’s in charge,” longtime privacy booster Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said on June 11. “FISA 702 can’t be renewed without real reforms.”
“Case in point: Trump’s latest nominee for director of national intelligence was peddling election conspiracies just a few days ago.”
The post Are Jeffries and Schumer Getting Ready to Greenlight Domestic Spy Power for Trump? appeared first on The Intercept.
Online uproar follows Canadian brand’s use of taiko drum at sponsored festival held to celebrate Chinese culture
The activewear brand Lululemon has apologised after a promotional event held on the Great Wall of China appeared to mistakenly feature a Japanese drum, prompting an uproar.
The Canadian-headquartered company, known for its upmarket leggings, has been growing rapidly in China and arranged for a yoga festival to take place in late May on a section of the wall near Beijing.
Continue reading...Nearly every indicator of climate change is flashing red. But we still hold the tools available to bring the planet back into balance
The ocean is running a fever. In 2025, the number of days of marine heatwaves – prolonged spells when the sea turns abnormally, dangerously warm – was more than triple what it was in the early 1990s.
These are not abstract statistics. A severe and persistent marine heatwave bleaches coral reefs, strips away the kelp forests that shelter young fish, empties fishing grounds and – if occurring frequently – can tip whole ecosystems past the point of recovery.
Karina Von Schuckmann is an IGCC author and senior adviser of Mercator Ocean International
Continue reading...Federal Tort Claims Act, over which DoJ has total discretion, provides workaround to Trump’s $1.8bn slush fund
January 6 defendants who assaulted police officers are pursuing legal claims for millions in compensation from the Trump administration using an obscure federal process with minimal oversight, but which offers the Trump administration a way to compensate those responsible for violence even after scrapping its “anti-weaponization fund”.
The defendants are pursuing their claims using the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which allows individuals wronged by the government to file claims for monetary damages. The justice department has complete and unchecked discretion over whether to settle the claims, giving the Trump administration a powerful vehicle to reward those responsible for violence on January 6. The claims would be paid out from the judgment fund, a perpetual appropriation allowed for by Congress and the same pot of money Trump’s $1.8bn slush fund was going to draw from. All of the defendants seeking compensation received a pardon from Trump.
Continue reading...Steven Mills and Tiffany Score reached an agreement with the biological parents of their child after fertility clinic’s mix-up
A Florida couple who learned they had been given the wrong embryo after their newborn, Shea, appeared to be of a different race, will retain permanent custody of the child.
Steven Mills and Tiffany Score reached a custody agreement with Shea’s biological parents – identified anonymously as Patient 004 – in a court filing last week from their lawsuit against the Florida clinic allegedly responsible for the embryo snafu.
Continue reading...Unsafe AI systems are leading to cyber weapons of mass destruction
Stuart Russell is a computer scientist known for his contributions to AI and a new Guardian US columnist
The AI company Anthropic has been making major headlines recently. Its trillion-dollar IPO plan and its blood feud with secretary of defense Pete Hegseth have attracted much attention, but two other events may be even more consequential.
In early June, the company posted an article describing early signs of recursive self-improvement (RSI), a process in which an AI system devises ways to increase its own intelligence, leading to a greater ability to improve itself, and so on.
Stuart Russell is a distinguished professor of computer science at University of California, Berkeley, the president of the International Association for Safe and Ethical Artificial Intelligence and a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...
As a House committee debated President Donald Trump’s signature domestic policy bill last year, Republican backers repeatedly emphasized that its changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps, wouldn’t affect vulnerable people.
SNAP reforms would “restore integrity” to the program and ensure it works for the “most vulnerable among us, including children,” said Rep. Glenn “GT” Thompson, a Pennsylvania Republican and chair of the House Agriculture Committee.
Passing the bill would be a “historic accomplishment” that will ensure “those in need can continue to receive the assistance they need,” said Rep. John Rose, a Republican from Tennessee.
And Rep. Dusty Johnson, a South Dakota Republican, said the bill would focus resources on the “neediest” Americans. “If you are a pregnant woman, your benefits are unaffected. If you have young children at home, your benefits are unaffected by this bill. If you are disabled, your benefits are unaffected by this bill.”
But nearly a year after the measure was signed into law, the number of children receiving food assistance has plummeted by at least 776,000, according to a ProPublica analysis. At least 12 states break down program participation by age, and of the 1,670,011 people who are no longer receiving benefits in those states, 776,134, or 46%, were children.
Another analysis reached the same conclusion: Just last month, the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities found there were 700,000 fewer children receiving food assistance.
Arizona has seen the nation’s largest percentage decline in SNAP participants; 205,223 children are no longer receiving the benefit since July 2025, a 55% drop. Louisiana had the second largest percent decline among children, 22%.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees SNAP, hasn’t detailed the impact on children aided by the program, but initial figures show that compared to February 2025, 4.3 million fewer people received SNAP nationwide in February 2026, leaving 37.8 million participants.
Although children weren’t the intended targets of the legislation’s changes, they’re increasingly “collateral damage,” said Katie Bergh, a senior policy analyst at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
If states are trying to comply with the law’s changes to SNAP, they’re likely not focusing on making the program accessible, Bergh said. Other experts said that people may be pushed off the program because of increased paperwork requirements to remain eligible.
States are required to impose work requirements for most adult recipients, while preparing for two major cost shifts. In October, states will begin covering 75% of the program’s administrative costs. States have been paying 50% of those costs.
In addition, states will have to pay a larger share of SNAP benefits starting in October 2027, based on their error rate. Error rates reflect overpayments or underpayments of SNAP benefits. While sometimes characterized as fraud, such errors are usually the fault of the state agency or the SNAP recipient, according to USDA, which describes them as “largely unintentional.”
If a state agency is facing staffing shortages and struggling to comply with new regulations, it will be harder for low-income families to access the benefits, Bergh said. “Families are falling through the cracks.”
In Massachusetts, for example, the share of SNAP applicants who called an assistance line and couldn’t reach a worker rose from 61% in November to nearly 81% in March, according to the Department of Transitional Assistance, which administers SNAP in the state. The state agency did not respond to a request for comment.
A USDA spokesperson did not address ProPublica’s questions about the number of children who have lost access to SNAP. “There is no shortage of resources for the most vulnerable among us, including children,” the spokesperson said.
The three members of the House Agriculture Committee who defended last year’s bill before its passage — Rose, Thompson and Johnson — did not respond to ProPublica’s questions about their statements now that many children no longer receive SNAP benefits.
Rep. Jim McGovern, a Massachusetts Democrat, asked Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins about her recent comments that it was “good news” that millions of people no longer receive SNAP. If more than 700,000 children have been dropped in the 12 states that report those figures, “that number’s going to be into the millions” when other states are included, he said.
Rollins responded, “The 700,000 number of children is not correct,” contending that most people who were kicked off SNAP were “fraudulent.”
“That is not a nonpartisan group that gave you that number,” she said. (ProPublica independently verified the figures reported by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.)
McGovern said he has talked to people who have lost food assistance. “These are people who actually need and rely on this food assistance to provide basic nutrition for their families,” he said.
Pressure to lower error rates “creates a temptation for the states to bump off working families,” said Parke Wilde, a food economist at Tufts University. Working families may have more volatile incomes, making it harder for state agencies to assess benefits accurately.
“When they say we want to preserve SNAP for those with the greatest need, they’re sort of acknowledging that they want the scale of the SNAP program to be smaller,” he said.
Mariana Chilton, an expert in child hunger at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, said a smaller program won’t save money in the long run. Research shows that children who receive SNAP benefits are healthier, have better academic outcomes, use hospitals less often and have better mental health as teenagers.
She called the situation a “public health crisis” in the making. “When children are not healthy, this affects children today and it affects them throughout their lifetimes,” she said, likening hunger during early childhood to a brain injury.
As Arizona’s SNAP participation drops, nonprofits are feeling the effects. St. Mary’s Food Bank, the largest in the state, has seen a 15% increase in need this year, which translates into 300,000 more visits from people in search of food, said Milt Liu, the chief executive officer.
“It’s important for everyone to realize that policies have implications for people on the edge, and we’re seeing that in our line every day,” he said.
On a recent morning, Ana Alvarez waited in a line of vehicles at a St. Mary’s food bank in Phoenix. Alvarez, a single mother of five who works at a restaurant, started coming to St. Mary’s after she lost her SNAP benefits in September.
She reapplied for SNAP with the Arizona Department of Economic Security in December, but the application is still pending. The department did not respond to questions about its backlog.
She clips coupons and has cut out trips to the zoo and restaurants with her children. The slow season at the restaurant where she works is about to hit. And as summer temperatures rise, Alvarez wonders how she will afford her electric bill, her rent and her car payment.
At least once a week she contacts the agency about her application. The last time she called, a worker told her what others have in the past: She will have to keep waiting.
The post More Than 770,000 Children Are No Longer Receiving SNAP Benefits After Trump Changes Federal Food Program appeared first on ProPublica.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware lawmakers introduced legislation last week to create the state’s first ever Commission on Indigenous Affairs. The commission would give Indigenous Delawareans a means of communication between the state government leaders and sovereign nations, advising policymakers on decisions that could impact their community.
Delaware lawmakers advanced a bill last week aimed at strengthening ties between the state and its Indigenous population.
The House of Representatives unanimously passed House Bill 365, which would stand up the state’s first-ever Commission on Indigenous Affairs. If established, the commission would advise lawmakers and Gov. Matt Meyer on issues affecting Delaware’s Native American communities.
According to the bill, some of those issues could include healthcare, social services, housing, employment, and education needs.
Representatives from both the Nanticoke Indian Tribe and the Lenape Tribe of Delaware – two of Delaware’s largest – were inside the House Chamber for the June 9 vote.
House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover), who sponsored the legislation, addressed the commission’s potential impact on Delaware’s Indigenous communities after lawmakers voted to advance the bill.
“This is a momentous day for them,” Harris said. “Finally they will have their voice in our government in a way that is solid.”
House Bill 365 now awaits consideration in the Senate.
The state’s Commission on Indigenous Affairs could create programs and events that raise awareness of Lenape, Nanticoke and other Indigenous people of Delaware, according to HB 365.
The commission would be made up of nine members operating under three-year terms. That membership would consist of at least two members from the Lenape tribe, at least two members from the Nanticoke tribe and five members who are Indigenous residents of Delaware from any tribe or nation.
Members would be appointed by Gov. Matt Meyer from a panel of candidates recommended by the Lenape and Nanticoke tribes.
The commission would be tasked with providing state policymakers with Indigenous perspectives and advising them about how policies, laws and administrative rules would impact Delaware’s Indigenous communities.
It remains unclear what specific policy recommendations the commission would put forth for lawmakers to consider. The bill’s language, however, mentions land acknowledgment, clean water initiatives, protection of native plant species and wetlands and protection of historic Indigenous burial sites and artifacts.
House Bill 365 would allocate $20,000 a year for the next three fiscal years toward the commission. According to the bill’s fiscal note, that money could go toward startup and other programming costs.
Before the House vote, Rep. Harris hosted a peace walk with representatives from Delaware’s Indigenous communities who came to Legislative Hall in support of the proposed commission.
Indigenous and non-Indigenous people alike were invited to participate in the demonstration of solidarity and support for HB 365.
During the demonstration, participants walked in a circle while different speakers took turns coming to the center to recite prayers.

“Wanishi,” meaning “thank you” in certain dialects spoken by Delaware’s Indigenous communities, was a common call and response phrase echoed throughout the walk.
Attendees also acknowledged that the commission would have important work ahead of it, should it be enacted by the General Assembly.
“Healing cannot begin until truth is acknowledged,” said Raggatha Rain Calentine of the Indian Mission United Methodist Church during a moment of prayer. “Justice cannot grow where truth is denied.”
The Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Tribal Nation, which is made up of both Nanticoke and Lenape tribe members, has historically lived throughout New Jersey, Delaware, southern New York, and eastern Pennsylvania. The Lenape and the Nanticoke are the largest Indigenous populations in Delaware, but they do not currently have a formal commission to advise policymakers within the state government.
“The common sense would just make sense if we were at the table, helping guide, as we always have,” said Denise Bright Dove Ashton-Dunkley, tribal councilwoman and educator of the Nanticoke Lenni-Lenape Tribal Nation in New Jersey.
After passing unanimously in the House, HB 365 will be considered by the Senate Elections and Government Affairs Committee this Thursday, June 18.
Get Involved
The Senate Elections and Government Affairs Committee will discuss HB 365 at 11:30 a.m. on Thursday, June 18, inside Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover. For more information about that meeting, including how to attend virtually, click here.
The post Lawmakers work to stand up Delaware’s first Commission on Indigenous Affairs appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Major operation launched after spate of pet thefts in Ho Chi Minh City, according to local media
Police in Vietnam have rescued more than 400 cats in a bust of a cat meat crime ring in Ho Chi Minh City, according to animal welfare groups and local media reports.
More than 40 cats were reunited with their owners after the multiday operation last week, but several dozen of those rescued have died due to the harsh conditions in which they were found, the groups said.
Continue reading...President Trump delayed Jay Clayton's nomination to lead the U.S. intelligence community, saying he's trying to force Congress to pass a voter ID bill that currently lacks enough support to be approved.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 17, No. 836.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 17 No. 1,102.
Abdiqadir Salah was pierced by shrapnel in a bombing that killed 12 in Somalia. But as the US denies civilians were hurt they face no hope of compensation
Read more: Killed walking home from school: why did Somali children become targets of US drone strikes?
A seven-year-old boy who was riddled with shrapnel during a deadly US airstrike in Somalia faces losing his ability to walk unless he has a £750 emergency operation.
But Abdiqadir Salah’s family cannot afford the surgery and the US – which refuses to admit that any civilians were killed or injured during its attack six months ago – appears unwilling to pay compensation to those affected by airstrikes in Somalia.
Continue reading...PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S; EA Vancouver/Electronic Arts
Micromanaging your fighter is a little tedious, but the action is thrilling in this authentically detailed sporting simulation
Becoming a professional fighter takes years of repetition, drilling techniques and training footwork until everything is instinctual. Your body needs an automatic answer for every limb, from every angle. In MMA, which encompasses every martial art, it’s even harder.
EA Sports’ UFC 6 realistically captures the grind of this brutal discipline. Throw on Career Mode and you spend most of your time working on combos and techniques. It’s all about making the complex controls feel second nature, increasing the effectiveness of every strike thrown by your fighter. With simulated six-week-long training camps between bouts, you can sometimes spar 12 times before a fight that could be over in a matter of seconds.
Continue reading...The Americans have the advantages on paper, but the Socceroos’ strengths are in their defensive organization and the power of the unknown
It is the showdown to determine the world’s best “soccer”-playing nation: the much-anticipated Group D clash between two countries in which football has more than one meaning.
Neither will be distracted by nomenclature, however, when the United States run out against Australia in Seattle on Friday in a contest set to captivate both sides of the Pacific.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 17, No. 1,824.
AI is slashing the cost of starting and running a business. "Everything has decreased in cost and increased in speed," one entrepreneur said.
“She went from barely surviving to truly thriving,” a rescuer said of her Havanese, who won the top prize.

Frank Ssekamwa says the United States presented his country with an impossible choice. If it accepted the terms of a new health agreement, Uganda would have to give the U.S. access to the data of millions of his fellow citizens — a decision he worries would make their personal information more vulnerable to breaches and possible exploitation.
But if it refused, the East African nation would likely lose out on more than a billion dollars to address HIV, malaria, tuberculosis and other illnesses, even as its people face ongoing threats from Ebola and other deadly infectious diseases.
So, on Dec. 10, it agreed.
“If you take the deal, you’re going to be exploited. If you don’t take it, you’re going to die,” said Ssekamwa, an attorney and digital rights expert in Uganda. “It’s the essence of digital colonialism.”
Across Africa, countries have faced similar dilemmas as the U.S. has held a series of closed-door negotiations in which lifesaving aid has been conditioned on access to citizens’ health data. The negotiations come in the wake of the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development, which — in contrast with the new contracts — provided billions of dollars in aid with few strings attached. Officials in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Ghana have been so outraged by the demands that they rejected the initial deals.
The demand to access health data is central to the Trump administration’s new America First Global Health Strategy, an openly transactional approach that seeks to leverage the desperate need for medical treatments abroad. Aid will now be given “in a way that directly benefits the American people and directly promotes our national interest,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated in September.
The State Department declined to publicly release global aid and data-sharing agreements it has signed with more than 30 countries as part of its new approach. But a ProPublica analysis of nine of the deals offers a window into the extensive U.S. demands for access to data — and the potential risks and vulnerabilities for the citizens of countries that have signed them. ProPublica also reviewed a data-sharing agreement struck with Uganda, which has not previously been reported; a data agreement with Kenya; six agreements over the sharing of pathogens that can cause pandemics that were made public by the State Department this week; generic templates of deals for sharing both data and pathogens that can cause pandemics; and an analysis of the documents the advocacy group Public Citizen shared exclusively with ProPublica.
ProPublica also consulted more than a dozen experts in data privacy and global health, including several with direct knowledge of U.S. policy who said that the insistent demands for data access and other resources as a condition of aid are unprecedented. Without seeing the full suite of agreements, they could not identify all vulnerabilities. But they spotted some red flags: The terms of the deals are vague and lack language standard in most data-sharing agreements that adequately limits what data is collected and how it can be used. That increases the risk that individuals’ personal data could be exposed, misused or commercialized without their consent.
In the Ugandan data deal, the U.S. will get direct, real-time access to nine of the nation’s health data systems for seven years, including the central repository that stores all of its health information, lab data, data collected by community health workers and, critically, its system for managing individuals’ electronic medical records. The agreement calls for the sharing of aggregated data with all personally identifiable information removed. It also says the data should be used for delivering and auditing healthcare services.
But lawyers and digital privacy experts argue that the deal raises questions about who will have access to the massive cache of health data and whether it could be inappropriately accessed and exploited.
Some expressed concern that, because it is possible to reverse-engineer data that has been anonymized, people with HIV, tuberculosis and other diseases could have their records exposed.
Stephanie Psaki, who served as the U.S. coordinator for global health security under President Joe Biden, described the Trump administration’s approach as a “blunt instrument of ‘just give me the login to your data systems.’”
“The U.S. would never agree to that,” she said, if the deal were offered in reverse.
In Uganda, the U.S. will provide up to $1.7 billion over five years for global health security and the treatment and prevention of deadly conditions such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV and polio. In the past, the U.S. gave this aid without asking for direct benefits in return, saving an estimated 170,000 Ugandan lives per year.
While a significant investment, it is less than the U.S. previously spent in Uganda and will decrease every year of the agreement. By 2030, the African nation will receive 45% less global health funding than when Trump retook office, according to an analysis by Vincent Lin of Partners in Health, which provides healthcare in poor countries.
Several experts said there is broad support for some of the goals of the new plan for aid, including reducing African countries’ dependence on the U.S. for healthcare needs. But they worry the transactional nature of the approach could backfire by undermining trust or, in some cases, driving nations to reject deals altogether.
After withdrawing from the World Health Organization and losing access to its global network that tracks and combats disease outbreaks, the U.S. is attempting to obtain the information necessary to address potential pandemics through a patchwork of deals with individual countries. Each of the agreements ProPublica reviewed includes a section on responding to outbreaks. And some countries have signed separate pathogen-sharing agreements, which state that countries must “initiate sharing specimen(s) and related data” within five days of a U.S. request. The Trump administration is also planning unprecedented involvement of private companies to manage and process data.
The State Department told ProPublica that it needs access to the data to improve health outcomes in recipient countries and keep Americans safe. The new approach also requires countries to invest more in their own health systems in exchange for the aid, a promise many countries will likely struggle to fulfill. And, in some cases, including the deal with Uganda, it aims to boost local manufacturing through partnerships with American companies.
The State Department said it took multiple factors into account to ensure the required investments from other countries were “realistic and achievable.”
“The United States is investing billions of dollars in other countries’ health systems to fight infectious disease. In return, we expect governments to increase their own spending on health, so programs are sustainable and under genuine national ownership, not permanently financed by U.S. taxpayers. For the first time, both sides are putting skin in the game to ensure lasting impact,” a State Department spokesperson said in response to questions about the agreements.
In response to follow-up questions from ProPublica, spokesperson Tommy Pigott said the agreements “share only the same kinds of aggregated, de-identified data that has been shared and used for years in the fight against HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and other diseases. All data sharing is consistent with each country’s laws and approvals. No personally identifiable information is being received or shared by the United States government.”
Uganda’s Ministry of Health, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Personal Data Protection Office and embassy in Washington, D.C., did not respond to questions for this article.
In the age of artificial intelligence, large health data sets have become so valuable they’ve been referred to as the new gold. The precise value of the health data of an entire nation is unclear, but it could be extremely valuable to AI-driven companies for training models. The industry of buying and selling such information troves is worth billions. And countries around the world have come to regard their citizens’ health records as national assets that deserve special protections and can confer economic and strategic advantages.
Yet the agreements, which are part of a strategy the State Department openly states is intended to make America “more prosperous” and “promote American health innovations,” provide no guarantee that Africans subject to them will have a say in what happens with their data or receive a fair share of its benefits. “Once companies get this data, the value is being accrued. But there’s no way for the [African] population to know how companies will use it,” said Jane Munga of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who has argued that the agreements may violate African privacy laws.
We’re still reporting. If you know more about the Trump administration’s plans for foreign aid and the U.S. companies that are involved, please contact our reporting team.
Sharon Lerner
I write about health, science, environmental regulation, government oversight and corruption. I’d like to speak with workers in inspector general offices or in science- and health-related agencies. I take confidentiality seriously.
Africans have also expressed concern that they will not be able to access and benefit from medicines and vaccines developed from pathogen samples shared with the U.S. Five of the six specimen-sharing agreements reviewed by ProPublica state that, in the event that a medical product is developed primarily from a specimen from the country, the U.S. government “shall prioritize” a request from that government behind the needs of the U.S. Only one of the agreements, with Nigeria, commits the U.S. to facilitating “priority access” to — and the donation of — any medical products developed using the specimens.
The phenomenon of extracting information and samples from less-resourced populations and failing to credit and compensate them for their contributions to medical developments is well known enough to have several names, including “parachute science.” Just a few years ago, countries, including some in Africa, hosted COVID-19 vaccine trials, only to later struggle to access the shots they helped to develop.
Each agreement includes “benefit-sharing provisions,” the State Department said in response to questions.
After the Trump administration dismantled USAID, the world’s largest provider of humanitarian assistance, it also drastically reduced funding for international health work done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and severely scaled back the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, which combats HIV globally. In addition to withdrawing from the WHO, the U.S. removed itself from international negotiations over a pandemic agreement intended to affirm countries’ sovereign rights to their biological resources and ensure equitable access to medical interventions.
Brad Smith, an entrepreneur who served in the first Trump administration, is now in charge of creating the system that would rise from the ashes. Before joining this administration, Smith founded three companies with business models that rest in part on using data to reduce healthcare costs, including CareBridge, a home care provider that sold for a reported $2.7 billion in 2024. During the presidential transition that year, Smith led the government efficiency panel that would become Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. After Trump took office, he presided over some $67 billion in sweeping cuts to the Department of Health and Human Services before being brought on as an adviser to the State Department.
Although the humanitarian aid system had been largely dismantled, Congress required the executive branch to continue providing aid. So Smith and his team had to find new ways to get the funding to countries, ensure that it was being spent wisely and address potential pandemics — all without most of the international partners and staff the government had previously relied on to carry out this complex work.
A Rhodes scholar known for his intense work ethic, Smith threw himself into the effort. State Department staff fielded calls from him at all hours of the night to explain budget items on spreadsheets. Through his personal lawyer, Smith referred questions to the State Department.
One of the greatest challenges lay in the handling of health data. In the past, PEPFAR, the HIV program, built its own systems to handle anonymized data, separate from government health records — a setup that Trump administration officials and others have criticized as inefficient.
The America First plan proposed standardizing data collection and processing within countries. The Ugandan data agreement requires the country to provide the U.S. — and its contractors — with logins “or other secure access mechanisms” to directly enter the country’s data systems. The new approach, U.S. officials say, will enable the U.S. to continue auditing programs and track outbreaks.
The agreements ProPublica reviewed include statements about the U.S. government’s intent to ensure data security and say that the data is being accessed for the purposes of addressing diseases and auditing that work, but they leave open the possibility that sensitive information could be revealed, according to the data privacy experts ProPublica consulted.
At particular risk are countries that don’t have national data privacy laws, such as Liberia, whose memorandum of understanding requires “interlinked and interoperable” data systems for “surveillance, laboratory, response, health, environment, agriculture.” That country’s main health agreement doesn’t require the U.S. to limit the amount of data it takes to the least needed, a standard clause in U.S. contracts, according to Abdoul Jalil Djiberou Mahamadou, a recent postdoctoral fellow focusing on bioethics at Stanford University. (Neither Liberia nor the State Department has released the supplemental data-sharing agreement.) “Once data is breached, it’s nearly impossible to get it back,” Mahamadou added.
The Liberian government did not respond to a request for comment.
The Ugandan data-sharing agreement says it will comply with the laws of both nations and permits the sharing of “sensitive personal data” if the consent of individuals whose data is shared is obtained, there is a compelling public health emergency of international concern and it is the only way information can be provided in a “timely and accurate format.”
Ssekamwa, the digital rights expert who also founded and runs the African Centre for Digital Justice, said there are important questions that haven’t been answered by the Ugandan government.
“Does the U.S. have appropriate data protections? Can the systems provide anonymized data? Are they really up to that standard?” said Ssekamwa. “If I’m someone who has had health issues, can you deny me a visa because of the health issues I’m having?”
Psaki, the former global health security coordinator, worried about the haste with which the changes to data access are happening. “Even in the best of circumstances, you can’t go from having parallel data systems that were established over 20-plus years to finding some way to integrate those data systems in six months.”
Speed has been a hallmark of the America First global health effort. In September, just a month after Smith joined the State Department, it launched the strategy at an event co-sponsored by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and five large pharmaceutical companies. By November, Smith was crisscrossing the African continent with a small team of negotiators, trying to persuade dignitaries to agree to deals.
The State Department said the deals were “negotiated in a thoughtful and strategic way over many months.”
On Dec. 4, Kenya became the first country to sign, during a triumphant celebration with Rubio and President William Ruto in Washington. Outcry over the agreement had already begun two days earlier, when a Kenyan activist named Nelson Amenya announced on the social platform X that he had seen a sample of the specimen-sharing agreement as well as a legal analysis that showed it would violate Kenyan law.
As a condition for receiving $1.6 billion in aid, the Kenyan government agreed to provide access to seven years’ worth of health records — two years longer than the U.S. would provide financial support.
Although the Kenyan data-sharing agreement states that the U.S. will take “all reasonable measures to protect the confidentiality of information” and abide by American and Kenyan laws, Amenya worried that wouldn’t be enough. “Every HIV test, TB diagnosis, malaria case – accessible to US officials,” he wrote in the post, which now has one million views. “Your medical records, your children’s health data – all exposed.”
A few days later, a Kenyan senator named Okiya Omtatah sued members of the Kenyan government over the agreement, arguing that it poses a threat to citizens’ constitutional right to privacy by “allowing broad foreign access to sensitive data.” A Kenyan nonprofit also sued, and more than 50 groups weighed in on their side, describing the document as giving the U.S. “excessive access” to African data and raising the possibility of serious human rights violations.
In court filings, the Kenyan government argued that it is obligated to achieve the “highest attainable standard of health” and that it is unable to do that on its own. After blocking the deal for months, in May, the Kenyan court temporarily allowed implementation of the agreement to proceed while it considers the case.
Since outrage bubbled up in Kenya, some other countries have negotiated shorter terms for sharing data and pandemic specimens, and have inserted additional protections, according to the Public Citizen analysis.
Still, groups across Africa have sounded alarms about dangers inherent in these provisions, including data breaches. Examples of such unauthorized access to personal data abound, including a recent case where the healthcare data of some 500,000 participants in the UK Biobank wound up listed for sale on the Chinese website Alibaba.
Revealing whether someone has had an abortion, mental health condition, substance use treatment or sexually transmitted disease can be devastating anywhere. In Africa, research has shown it can lead to discrimination and violence. And even when personal information has been removed, individuals in “anonymized” data can be reidentified using AI and other tools.
The Ugandan data-sharing agreement calls for the U.S. government to “promptly notify the Government of Uganda of any unauthorized access” in such cases and requires the parties to conduct a joint breach assessment and remediation plan afterward. But by that point, it may be too late, Ssekamwa fears. “Once the data gets out of Uganda, we are skeptical that the government of Uganda will actually have any power to control it,” he said.
The secrecy around both the negotiations and the agreements has raised further suspicions. The State Department has declined to share the agreements, telling ProPublica the agency will release them when negotiations with all partner governments are complete and describing its actions as “protecting sensitive negotiations—not ‘secrecy.’” In response to a public records request filed by ProPublica, the State Department said it planned to provide the documents in September 2027. The advocacy group Public Citizen recently filed suit against the federal government in an effort to obtain the documents.
“Why are they hiding the agreement if they think the terms are OK?” asked Bernard Okpi, a Nigerian lawyer who sued his government in March, alleging that the deal violates the country’s constitutional right to privacy and promotes religious discrimination by prioritizing funding for Christian faith-based health facilities. That suit is pending, and the Nigerian government did not respond to questions from ProPublica.
The State Department said that the agreement with Nigeria “was negotiated in connection with reforms the Nigerian government has made to prioritize protecting Christian populations from violence.”
The Trump administration says that its new global health strategy is designed to save lives and keep the U.S. — and the world — safe from disease outbreaks. But ultimately its hard-driving and secretive negotiations may work against those goals.
While the administration aspired to strike agreements with 50 nations, including the three countries that walked away from negotiations in part over concerns about data sharing, it has fallen far short of that number. (In Zambia, officials also balked at U.S. demands for critical minerals.) The loss of aid in those countries is already proving to be devastating.
Despite the Trump administration’s stated goal of putting “America first,” the U.S. may feel the consequences of those failed negotiations, too, as mistrust compounds the loss of long-standing systems that provided care and responded to disease outbreaks.
“It’s in everyone’s interest to have a comprehensive approach to respond to an outbreak early,” said Psaki, who pointed to the quickly escalating number of Ebola cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo as evidence. While that country struck a healthcare deal with the U.S., five of the nine countries bordering it have not. “We need to get data and samples from all nine countries to collaborate effectively on that outbreak, and now we don’t have that.”
The State Department said the U.S. has responded swiftly to the outbreak and has provided over $270 million to the global fight against Ebola.
In Uganda, where people have also fallen sick and died from Ebola, Ssekamwa said that his country needs all the help that the healthcare deal can bring, including improved protection from outbreaks, but there needs to be more robust protection of people’s personal data.
“We are happy to benefit from the technological advancement and the fruits of big data,” he said. Instead, he said, “the U.S. has left so many gaps within the agreement, which can be exploited in their favor.”
The post “Digital Colonialism”: U.S. Demands to Access Africans’ Data Raise Privacy, Sovereignty Concerns appeared first on ProPublica.
After a resounding primary victory and ahead of a potential presidential run in 2028, progressive California lawmaker Ro Khanna has received the endorsement of the influential advocacy and watchdog group TrackAIPAC, known for posting red cards of lawmakers and candidates who receive money from the pro-Israel lobby.
Khanna, a Democrat representing parts of San Francisco’s Bay Area, is the first member of Congress to go from a target of TrackAIPAC’s online fury to the winner of its endorsement. Though Khanna never took money from the pro-Israel lobby giant, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, he received a red anti-endorsement card from TrackAIPAC in 2024 largely due to his legislative record. Khanna has taken money from the liberal Zionist group, J Street, which opposed Gaza ceasefire attempts in 2023 but has since pushed for conditions on military aid to Israel.
“Rejecting AIPAC money isn’t enough — every member of Congress must be clear on these issues.”
Khanna’s TrackAIPAC endorsement, first reported by The Intercept, came after the lawmaker on June 10 became the initial signatory of a new pledge from TrackAIPAC called PEACE to enforce American law, counter foreign influence, and end war crimes. Among other commitments, candidates who sign the pledge swear off money from AIPAC and aligned groups, acknowledge Israel’s genocide in Gaza, oppose military aid to any country that commits human rights violations, and agree to stand against efforts in Congress to enmesh the U.S. and Israeli militaries.
“I’m proud to be the first member of Congress to sign the PEACE Pledge to reject campaign contributions and political support from AIPAC, DMFI, and other groups that promote unconditional support for Israel,” Khanna told The Intercept in a statement. “The pledge also affirms my opposition to the genocide in Gaza and my commitment to voting against future military assistance to any country whose security forces are committing human rights violations. Rejecting AIPAC money isn’t enough — every member of Congress must be clear on these issues.”
With the endorsement and the new pledge, TrackAIPAC is flexing its growing influence on the Capitol. Its viral social media posts have played a large role in making AIPAC into a politically toxic entity, helping drive underground much of its campaign giving in the midterms. Those posts have also compelled lawmakers, including Khanna, to seek meetings with the group in hopes of removing their red cards. With its political arm, Citizens Against AIPAC Corruption, TrackAIPAC has also been endorsing and funding candidates.
TrackAIPAC’s founders said they want to offer a good-faith offramp for members of Congress looking to evolve on Israel and Palestine. Beyond tracking the pro-Israel lobby’s political spending, the group also serves as an advocacy organization pushing for Palestinian rights in the Capitol. It has claimed major midterm primary victories in races it has endorsed a candidate, such as in New Jersey with the victory Adam Hamawy, a former Army surgeon who volunteered in Gaza during the war; Chris Rabb in Pennsylvania; and Mai Vang in California.
“We’ve been really effective at building a megaphone and bringing accountability to folks who are on the wrong side,” TrackAIPAC co-founder Casey Kennedy, told The Intercept. “But with that success we’ve had, now we have a responsibility to offer a bridge to folks to chart a new path forward.”
The group has attracted controversy over its methodology, which examines campaign financing as well as lawmakers’ legislative record on policies relating to Israel and Palestine. TrackAIPAC has at times assigned its red card to lawmakers and congressional candidates who do not take AIPAC money, which critics have called unnecessarily confusing or misleading.
Last June, Khanna became the first lawmaker to meet with TrackAIPAC, according to the group, and asked why TrackAIPAC had initially assigned him a red card. By the time they met, the group had removed the red card but did not grant him its green seal of approval. Instead, it appended a label that remains on his page today, stating: “We encourage this representative to continue improving their legislative record on Israel-Palestine issues.”
In contrast, Squad member Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., has a green card and a positive label stating: “This candidate rejects Israel lobby contributions. This representative has a strong legislative record on Israel-Palestine issues.”
Khanna had previously appealed to TrackAIPAC on social media, doubling down on his rejection of AIPAC support. The posts drew the ire of AIPAC, which relentlessly attacked him on social media, at times using TrackAIPAC’s own red card graphic.
Khanna’s stances on Israel and Palestine have shifted in recent years. In the immediate weeks after October 7, 2023, Khanna voted in favor of a string of pro-Israel House resolutions, including reaffirming Israel’s “right to self-defense” on October 25. A week later, he signed a resolution that condemned antisemitism and “the support of Hamas, Hezbollah, and other terrorist organizations” in colleges and universities. Khanna was also notably absent on early resolutions calling for a ceasefire.
Khanna has since become a loud critic of Israel and has voted against a bill that sought to codify the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism, which has been used to silence criticism of Israel. In the summer of 2025, he co-sponsored the Block the Bombs bill and signed on to a pair of resolutions by Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., acknowledging Israel’s offensive in Gaza as a genocide and recognizing the Nakba. Earlier this month, Khanna attempted to strike a portion of the National Defense Authorization Act that would codify Israel’s joint development of weapons with the U.S.
It was also this month when Khanna’s office reached out again to TrackAIPAC to revisit the possibility of gaining the group’s endorsement, the group said. His office had been receiving inquiries about his “continue improving” label on TrackAIPAC’s presidential candidate list. At the time, TrackAIPAC had already been developing its pledge and offered it to Khanna’s office.
“Groups like AIPAC are pouring money into our elections and are influencing policies that undermine human rights,” Khanna told The Intercept in a statement. “When Track AIPAC offered, I was proud to sign the pledge.”
While Khanna has not formally announced a run for president, he is positioning himself to the left of the Democratic establishment on Israel. In April, he announced he supports the halt of both offensive and so-called defensive weapons to the country due to its human rights abuses.
Adam Carlson, a political consultant and pollster behind Zenith Research, who has been critical of TrackAIPAC’s methodology in the past, has said he expects other congressional and presidential candidates courting the left to sign on to the new TrackAIPAC pledge. But he doesn’t expect a shift from the kinds of establishment Democrats often in the crosshairs of TrackAIPAC over their support for Israel.
“It’s a flex — the more people they get to sign this pledge, the stronger they are,” Carlson said of TrackAIPAC. “But it won’t change the dynamic broadly.”
He cautioned of potential pitfalls, such as how the group will hold legislators who sign the pledge accountable and warned of the risk of purity tests on the left that could hurt certain candidates’ election chances in swing districts.
TrackAIPAC said anyone who abandons the pledge would again receive a red graphic and be targeted in the group’s intense social media campaigns. Cory Archibald, a TrackAIPAC co-founder, also resisted the premise of a purity test. “If you’re gonna have a litmus test,” Archibald said, “I think genocide is certainly a good one.”
The post Once a Target of TrackAIPAC, Ro Khanna Gains Its Endorsement appeared first on The Intercept.
Joint statement welcomes Trump’s deal with Iran to end war and calls for further talks involving European leaders
Donald Trump has backed a joint G7 leaders’ statement that welcomes the deal he has struck with Iran but says a follow-on agreement is necessary to rein in Iran’s ballistic missile programme, an issue not directly addressed in the memorandum of understanding that is due to be signed on Friday by Iran and the US.
The statement says future negotiations with Iran would benefit from the involvement of a wider group of regional and international actors including the UN nuclear weapons agency, the IAEA.
Continue reading...Skip the fine print and inflated prices. We'll send you the best Prime Day deals that are worth it.
Satoshi Matsuoka’s new paper, “FP8 is All You Need (Part 1): Debunking Hardware FP64 as the HPC Holy Grail,” raised some eyebrows during the TPC26 event in Baltimore two weeks ago. When the RIKEN CSS director mentioned his new paper on the Ozaki scheme during his TPC plenary, it spurred numerous conversations among the TPC26 attendees. One of those was Joseph George, AMD’s director of AI and supercomputing.
George shared his thoughts on Matsuoka’s paper, which posits that FP8 hardware combined with Ozaki II emulation is a suitable replacement for the FP64 hardware that has been the HPC community’s gold standard when it comes to modeling and simulation workloads. You can read HPCwire contributor Doug Eadline’s article on Matsuoka’s paper here.
During TPC26, HPCwire sat down with George to discuss Matsuoka’s assertion that FP64 is no longer a requirement and that, thanks to Ozaki emulation, FP8 is all you need. George left no doubt that AMD has no plans to discard FP64 in favor of FP8 anytime soon.
“Precision matters in a very, very, very big way,” George said. “You can approximate in other places in AI. When it comes to science and all the industries that we care about, precision is critically important.”

Satoshi Matsuoka, the head of RIKEN, discussed his new paper, “FP8 is All You Need (Part 1): Debunking Hardware FP64 as the HPC Holy Grail,” at TPC26
AMD supports Ozaki with its line of Instinct GPUs. It is just software, after all. It is giving its customers the option to use Ozaki if they want. But according to George, AMD customers in the private and public sectors are not asking the chip company to remove the FP64 cores from the GPUs and focus instead on ramping up the lower precision cores.
“Our position is this: We want to make sure that the scientists that you and I have been interacting with all day [at TPC26] have as much flexibility as possible,” George said during a break at the Trillion Parameter Consortium‘s recent all-hands meeting. “So if you want to run FP4, FP6, FP8 on some parts of your workload, feel free to do that. If you want to run Ozaki and emulate your FP64, you can do that. If you want to run hardware native FP64, we want you to do that. The only thing we come back to is focus on the science. Focus on getting the answers as close to right as possible. That’s really what we want to do.”
AMD has concerns about the accuracy of results using lower precision computing cores, INT8 with Ozaki I and FP8 with Ozaki II. George said he has not seen definitive evidence that Ozaki emulation can deliver results that match up to the results that HPC customers have traditionally gotten with FP64.
“In science, where we start with is truth. We want to get to facts and truth,” George said. “If you get to wrong answers really fast, that’s not helping anybody. We want to get to right answers fast.”
George encourages AMD customers to do their homework and see whether their HPC workloads could be migrated to lower precision hardware running under Ozaki. It could be that some codes may be more amenable than others to being converted to the type of matrix math that FP8 excels at.

Traditional supercomputers have featured a good helping of FP64 to run modeling and simulation workloads
“If it’s matrix, I could see Ozaki working really well for something like that,” George said. “But if it’s anything else, there’s now a question of, is the validity there. And that’s the one thing that we require…It’s got to be right. That’s the thing we need to be focused on. So is it possible? Sure. Anything’s possible. It’s just going to take a lot of time, I think, to get there.”
AMD has plans to ramp up the amount of FP64 in its forthcoming MI430X GPU, which the DOE will be using in Discovery, the new leadership class supercomputer announced in October that will be the successor to Frontier at Oak Ridge National Laborator. If the company maintains the same ratio between computing power and memory bandwidth, as AMD Fellow Nick Malaya said is the plan when he spoke with HPCwire in March, then the MI430X would have somewhere in the neighborhood of 192 teraflops and 204 teraflops of FP64 capacity. These numbers, which AMD did not confirm, would represent a sizable increase from the MI355, which has 77 teraflops of FP64 capacity.
George said he isn’t hearing clamoring from AMD clients to abandon FP64 compute. What he’s hearing from scientists and engineers is that they need the tools to get the correct answers. That means FP64 for the near-term and the mid-term, he said.
“There’s too much that’s been invested by the scientific community on all these applications,” George said. “Now, are they going to relook at the science? Are they going to relook at the applications? Are they going to relook at all these things? Maybe, and probably, yes. But in the meantime, you and I still need to make sure that the weather’s right. We still need to make sure the nuclear codes work. We got to make sure that we’re governing health in all our nations. We’ve got to make sure all those things stay intact and working for you and I, who are not scientists.”
During a recent energy and gas conference in Texas, the message George received was clear as day: Do not abandon FP64. “We absolutely cannot get away from FP64 for things like seismic analysis,” George said. “We just can’t do it.”

Is the HPC community ready to get by with lower-precision hardware made popular by AI?
While George doesn’t see FP64 being abandoned in favor of lower precision hardware anytime soon, he says it’s likely we’ll see a larger mix of different precisions in the medium and long term.
“Most likely what’s going to happen is a mixed precision environment where some places you can leverage what’s coming on AI. In some places, the science demands and the accuracy demands might be FP64,” he said. “It’s going to be workload-specific. There are going to be some workloads that absolutely require a level of precision that FP64 provides, and some that are going maybe tolerate some mixed precision. It’s a wait and see. We have to see what the science comes back and says.”
Listening to your customers is always a good approach. In the case of Ozaki and the abundance of lower-precision hardware in the market as a result of the AI boom, there is definitely the option to pursue emulation. While Nvidia has said that it’s not abandoning FP64, is leaning on Ozaki emulation with its latest Rubin GPU, which has 33 teraflops of native FP64, about as the same as the H100 GPU but less than the B200 GPU.
AMD is open to Ozaki, if it works. It’s not shutting the door to Ozaki. But it’s not shutting the door to FP64, either. “You’re not hearing AMD say ‘We’re not in anything that’s not FP64.’ That’s not what we’re saying,” George said. “It’s not ‘FP64 or nothing.’ It is what the science requires.”
The post FP8 or FP64? AMD Says It Will Give Scientists What They Need appeared first on HPCwire.
UC Davis researchers say an implanted brain-computer interface has allowed Casey Harrell, an ALS patient who cannot speak, to synthesize sentences from brain activity with 99% accuracy in controlled tests and about 92% accuracy in everyday use. The Register reports that the system has remained usable at home since 2023, helping Harrell communicate naturally, control a computer, and return to full-time work without researchers needing to supervise each session. The Register reports: A team of scientists from the University of California, Davis, published a paper Monday detailing a years-long study of a brain computer interface (BCI) system implanted in a patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease), which destroys motor neurons and causes loss of motor control and eventual paralysis. According to the team, their patient, Casey Harrell, has been living with BCI implants since 2023 that are still working today, giving him the ability not only to control a computer cursor with his thoughts, but also to speak. [...] Davis neurosurgeon David Brandman, co-principal investigator and co-senior author of the paper published Monday, as well as the surgeon who placed Harrell's implant, described the results his team published as the crossing of a threshold in BCI technology: Not only has Harrell's implant been working well with daily use since 2023, but it's also incredibly accurate. In controlled tests, the system managed to synthesize sentences from Harrell's brain activity with 99 percent accuracy; outside of the lab in daily use, Harrell still assessed it as being accurate 92 percent of the time. "The key thing to me is that it's enabling everyday communication for a guy who wants to talk but can't," Brandman told The Register in an interview. "Despite being paralyzed [Harrell] has gone back to work full time and has meaningful conversations with his daughter who's never heard the sound of his voice." Prior work in the BCI space, Brandman told us, has either required researchers to be in a patient's home whenever they're using the tech, or for the patient to come to the researchers. That's not the case here, with the system allowing Harrell's home care team to hook him up to the system themselves, enabling him to use the device for more than 3,800 hours in the past few years. Based on the time the study was filed (It published Monday but went into peer review in July 2025) that would mean Harrell was using the device for more than five hours a day, on average. "It is a life that is more full of dynamic action and with friends and family, with colleagues, and it is something that allows me to communicate more in my natural way of communicating than any other technology that I have experienced," Harrell told UC Davis via his BCI system.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
As the AI focus shifts from training models to running them, CPUs with large addressable memories have become the hot commodity. To that end, HPE today announced from its annual Discover conference that it’s adding its Nvidia Vera CPU-based its ProLiant Compute DL394 server to its Private Cloud AI offering. The company made a slew of other announcements around its data lake, networking, and other products at the show.
HPE introduced Private Cloud AI two years as vehicle for delivering enterprise AI capabilities to customers as a unified solution stack consisting of HPE servers, storage, networking, and software. The offering is based on Nvidia’s reference architecture for its GPU, Ethernet platform, data processing units (DPUs), and network interface cards.
According Fidelma Russo, HPE’s executive vice president and its CTO, HPE has increased the scale of Private Cloud AI inference clusters up to 256 Blackwell-class GPUs. To that end, it is also adding support for Vera, Nvidia’s new Arm-based CPU that it formally launched at the GTC conference in March 2026.

HPE DL394
HPE is supporting Vera in Private Cloud via the DL394 Gen12 server, which it announced earlier this month at the Computex conference in Taiwan. Built around Nvidia’s Vera CPU, which sports 88 “Olympus” Arm cores and 176 threads, the DL394 supports up to 3 TB of LPDDR5X memory, offering up to 1.2 TB per second of memory bandwidth to the CPUs, all contained in a 2U air-cooled chassis.
In addition to the DL394 servers for AI inference workloads, HPE’s Private Cloud AI offering will gain several other new capabilities, including HPE Zerto security software, which provides protection against rogue agent, as well as continuous data protection and data rewind functions. HPE Private Cloud AI users will also benefit from the capability to restrict local agents.
HPE also announced that it’s bolstering two other related offerings, which it calls HPE AI Factory at Scale and HPE Sovereign AI Factory. HPE says that these offerings are getting support for Nvidia Confidential Computing, which protects models and private data during execution for on-premises or sovereign deployments. The solution accomplishes this by implementing a “chain of trust through cryptographic attestation and encryption,” as well as the use of BlueField and DOCA, or what it terms “CUDA for networking.”

HPE also announced that Private Cloud AI is getting an upgrade at the data fabric level. Private Cloud AI already supported the HPE Data Fabric Software. But now the offering’s data fabric is getting an update that will extend Model Context Protocol (MCP) support to Apache Airflow, the open source data flow software. HPE says this will “enrich distributed data with metadata.”
An option to deploy the HPE Data Fabric on a dedicated ProLiant server will simplify deployments, Russo said. “We are also recognizing that sometimes it is very difficult for customers to deploy software around data fabric,” she said. “And so for certain use cases, we have a pre-integrated appliance to allow faster operations, faster deployment.”
HPE also already offered its Alletra Storage MP X10000 storage within the Private Cloud AI. When connected to DL380a Gen12 server using eight Nvidia H200 GPUs, HPE says customers will see their token response time decline by up to 20x.
The Alletra Storage MP X10000 was the first storage array certified by Nvidia for object based workloads earlier this spring, Russo said. “And we’ve now added file,” she said.
“Our architecture is different than other architectures,” Russo continued. “There is no tradeoff between performance, between object and file. They work in parallel with each other, and this makes it a unique architecture for AI analytics and mixed workloads. It’s built-in services around metadata management, about round acceleration, about metadata enrichment, and some KV cache acceleration we have within it now gives us better performance at the private cloud AI level than we had before.”
The post HPE Adds Nvidia Vera CPUs to Private Cloud AI Offering appeared first on HPCwire.
Marko Arnautovic sealed Austria’s victory over debutants Jordan with a goal from the penalty spot as his side returned to the World Cup in style
Supporters on both sides have descended on San Francisco with Jordan making their World Cup debut and Austria returning to the stage for the first time in 28 years.
It’s a comfortable 15C in San Francisco which should suit Austria more than Jordan ahead of a 9pm kick-off. The players have finished warming up and should be out with their game faces on shortly.
Continue reading...Iran's foreign minister says Israeli troops can't remain in Lebanon under the pending deal with the U.S.
| So first photo it was flaking apart secounds I took bumper carefully off but seems like it's got a pre folded line wich causes it to fall apart on its own seems like it was purposely bought for this reason so they don't hold up and they could deny a claim i documented all mine just incase lol [link] [comments] |
Exclusive: Ed Davey to make call ahead of 10th anniversary of Brexit vote, in strengthening of party’s position on EU
The Lib Dems will urge Andy Burnham to end Labour’s “torpor and timidity” towards the EU as they call for the UK to rejoin the single market, in a notable strengthening of their own position.
Ahead of the 10th anniversary of the Brexit vote next week, Ed Davey will challenge Burnham to scrap Labour’s red lines on the customs union and single market if he becomes prime minister and immediately begin talks on a more ambitious deal with the EU.
Continue reading...Exclusive: health professionals, survivors and politicians voice concerns in open letter over comments by Fatima Maada Bio, who denies supporting the practice
The first lady of Sierra Leone has denied that she supports female genital mutilation amid rising anger around her perceived approval of the practice.
But in an exclusive response to the Guardian, Fatima Maada Bio, the wife of President Julius Maada Bio, also said she would not openly condemn FGM until she saw “reliable data” that the practice was harmful.
Continue reading...Heads of state and participants from more than 80 countries at three-day event in Accra to pursue actionable commitments to reconciliation and restitution
Ghana is hosting a conference to advance the continent’s push for reparatory justice after the adoption of the landmark United Nations (UN) resolution declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans as the gravest crime against humanity.
Heads of state and government, ministers, civil society representatives, historians, researchers and legal experts representing more than 80 countries are converging in the capital, Accra, for the three-day event, billed Next Steps, which starts on Wednesday. It is the first major gathering on the issue since the resolution was adopted.
Continue reading...Arnault’s addition of leading weekly to stable of publications raises concerns about media ownership in France
He is known as the “wolf in cashmere” – the owner of the world’s biggest luxury group whose brands including Louis Vuitton, Dior and Tiffany have made him one of the world’s richest people.
But Bernard Arnault, a close friend of Donald Trump, is under fire from journalists’ unions in France for buying up almost all the country’s business and economic press.
Continue reading...From Christian Pulisic and Antonee Robinson to Sergiño Dest and Folarin Balogun, the Socceroos will have their hands full in the Group D clash
In a highly anticipated Group D clash against the USA, the Socceroos face a range of threats on Friday (Saturday AEST): physical, technical and tactical. A draw will almost certainly secure a place in the round of 32 for the Socceroos and, after their heroics against Turkey, Australia can rightfully feel this is a game they can win. To do so, they will need to neutralise the most dangerous components of the USA menace.
Continue reading...A headteacher, a motorcycle taxi driver and a travel agent are among those who are counting the human and economic cost of the virus
Justin Keno watches more than 400 pupils stream through the Nelson Mandela school’s gate each morning, and wonders which of them might be carrying Ebola.
The institution’s principal has done everything he can to prevent the spread of the virus: installing hand-washing basins at the entrance, providing alcohol-based hand rub for parents, making pupils bring packed lunches instead of eating in the canteen, and banning food sellers from outside the gates.
Continue reading...China and Russia are harvesting encrypted secrets—and getting closer to cracking them.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Hewlett Packard Enterprise's (HPE) new virtualization software promotion will likely pique the interest of end users and resellers who are unhappy with Broadcom's pricing of VMware. During its HPE Discover event in Las Vegas this week, HPE announced that customers could use its "HPE Morpheus Software -- VM Essentials" offering for free for "up to one year," per a press release. HPE's website describes its virtualization platform as a "VMware alternative." It includes a hardware virtual machine (HVM) hypervisor and unified management and lets users "manage VMware ESXi and HVM clusters from one console and migrate when you're ready," HPE's website says. "New VM Essentials customers can receive up to one free year of licenses for VM Essentials, a year of HPE Zerto for $1 to support non-disruptive migration to HPE virtual machines, and 0 percent interest on software through HPE Financial Services," HPE's announcement reads, referring to HPE's group for helping IT teams manage funding. Free for a year is cheaper than what Broadcom has charged for VMware vSphere since taking over. VMware prices have skyrocketed due to VMware's parent company eliminating perpetual licenses and bundling products into expensive packages. Notably, per its website, HPE recommends charging $600 per CPU socket per year for VM Essentials; Broadcom has controversially shifted vSphere licensing pricing to a per-core basis. "Customers are feeling quite a bit of pain in the change that some of the virtualization companies have put there, specifically Broadcom," Jeremiah Jenson, VP of HPE's North American channel and partner ecosystem, told CRN. The executive claimed that VM Essentials could bring up to 90 percent cost savings compared to VMware while also helping to "eliminate vendor lock-in and simplify hybrid IT." From March 1 to June 30, HPE has also been offering a free year of VM Essentials via rebate to customers who buy an AMD server and a one-year VM Essentials license. VM Essentials is only available through channel partners, a stark contrast from Broadcom's VMware approach, where the chip giant has drastically reduced the number of resellers that can sell VMware products. HPE's new promotion aims to entice customers to more deeply consider migrating off VMware. [...] HPE also announced that it would give 600 reseller partners who earn the HPE partner program's Private Cloud with Virtualization competency by the end of the year free VM Essentials software licenses for three years. Partners still have to pay support costs, though. The benefit is "a step in the correct direction," said Dean Colpitts, CTO of Canadian managed services provider (MSP) Members IT Group (MITG), which VMware cut from its reseller program after 19 years of partnership a year ago. However, limiting the promotion to 600 partners is "very shortsighted." He believes that HPE should give all of its partners VM Essentials "to facilitate getting [VM Essentials] into customer sites and displacing the competitors." "They need to fling [VM Essentials] as far and as fast as they possibly [can] to immediately gain traction and draw ISVs to them, which will increase adoption even more," he said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
ICE has moved detainees out of a controversial soft-sided detention center in the Florida Everglades known as "Alligator Alcatraz," a spokesperson said, citing safety concerns around hurricane season.
Voters are casting ballots in four states and the District of Columbia on Tuesday, including the runoff race in Georgia to take on Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff.
Rep. Barry Moore won the Republican Senate runoff in Alabama on Tuesday night, CBS News projects, defeating political newcomer and U.S. Navy Seal Jared Hudson.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 17, No. 632.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 17.
President comments that Moscow ‘should make a deal’; Trump-aligned Ossoff wins Senate primary in Georgia – key US politics stories from Tuesday 16 June at a glance
At the G7 summit, Donald Trump repeated familiar language about the Ukraine war – lamenting “the great antipathy” between the Ukrainian and Russian leaders that made it difficult to reach a settlement. He vowed to do what he could, saying Moscow “should make a deal”, noting that it had “lost a great many people, just like Ukraine”.
Trump spoke to Ukraine’s Volodymr Zelenskyy and Russia’s Vladimir Putin on Sunday before travelling to the G7 and claimed both men were open to a meeting. He described the death toll in the war as “ridiculous”. The US president some time ago lost patience with his inability to force home a deal in which Ukraine gave up territory it had not lost on the battlefield.
Continue reading...Rep. Mike Collins will face off against Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff in November as Republicans look to Georgia to deliver a key GOP victory that could determine control of the Senate.
Critics have questioned the overall legality of the boat strikes as well as their effectiveness since the U.S. military began them in September 2025.
This live blog is now closed.
With 55% of the vote counted in Georgia, NBC News projects Mike Collins will defeat former football coach Derek Dooley to win the Republican primary for the US Senate. Collins currently leads by 10 points, 55% to 45%.
The Associated Press has not yet made a call, but NBC’s analysis is based on the fact that Collins is doing better than Dooley in the votes cast on election day, which tend to favor candidates, like Collins, endorsed by Donald Trump, who hates mail-in ballots almost as much as he hates windmills.
Continue reading...Representative Mike Collins defeats former college football coach Derek Dooley, while Rick Jackson selected as governor pick
Georgia’s Republican primary runoff voters chose US representative Mike Collins over former college football coach Derek Dooley to lead the party’s bid to challenge US senator and rising Democratic star Jon Ossoff in November’s midterm elections.
They also selected billionaire healthcare executive Rick Jackson over Trump-backed lieutenant governor Burt Jones to face Democratic gubernatorial candidate Keisha Lance Bottoms in November, after a bruising election campaign that led to libel litigation and federal challenges to Georgia election law.
Continue reading...Rick Jackson, the billionaire healthcare executive who grew up in poverty and spent time in Atlanta's public housing projects, has won the Republican runoff for Georgia governor, CBS News projects.
Voter turnout in the last two midterm elections has been higher compared to midterms in the past four decades.
Eighteen million registered voters didn't cast a ballot in 2024. What was their reason?
The casino said some 350 horses are usually housed in the area, but the fire was contained before it could spread and only affected the one barn.
The company's next major product wave could include AI-focused AirPods, smart glasses, a 20th-anniversary iPhone and a new foldable.
| I was riding a backwoods trail as the sun was setting, and nearly had a heart attack as I watched a copperhead strike at me while zooming past, had to stop and take a photo ofc. [link] [comments] |
Federal prosecutors alleged that the 15 people were “conspiring to impede or injure federal officers” during the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement operation in Minneapolis earlier this year.
| First this is an EXTREMELY hard challenge and you will have to be physically active and strong to be able to do it. As a teenager, I did not have much problem except barely being able to walk afterwards. Alert: You will be busy all day if you want to do this. APP SETTINGS Auto Recording ON (Top left corner, Settings, Ride Recording.) Riding mode: SEQUOIA That's it for app settings... The day BEFORE Charge to 100%... Set an alarm for 10 in the morning. Sleep at least 10 hours. Find at least a 1-mile-long road with no elevation change. The one in my photo is PERFECT. THE DAY Wake up, eat something not too filling, drink water, coffee, or whatever helps you wake up. 10:45 THE BEGINNING Ride in SEQUOIA at 9 mph (constant speed). If you have to brake, accelerate SLOWLY afterwards and try to maintain the same speed. If the sun is strong, and you have like 30 percent battery left, go fast so it will deplete faster and you still get distance done while getting more wind (to stay cool) and being able to go home faster to rest. Feeling tired? Sit down, rest 15 min. 12:30 - 13:15 Go home, rest, drink, charge, stop ride. 15:30 Fresh Start Again, same speed, same deal, same tactic. 18:00 - 18:30 Go home, rest, drink, charge, stop ride. 21:30 Last Push! If you have done this right, you will have no more than 18 miles left! Same tactic and you will finish!!!!! If less than 10 miles remain and still at least 60%: Ride fast! (but safe) If you did everything right, you will have the achievement by 23:00. Always ride safe and with a helmet. [link] [comments] |
Commodore has unveiled the Callback 8020, a $499 Sailfish OS flip phone that runs most Android apps but deliberately blocks social media, browsers, email, and workplace apps to discourage doomscrolling. The "not dumb dumbphone" still supports messaging, music, maps, ridesharing, hotspots, a removable battery, and plenty of Commodore nostalgia. "The phone uses T9-style texting with predictive input, includes Commodore SID ringtones, ships with a selection of Commodore and Sailfish games, and even includes Snake," reports TechSpot. From the report: Commodore says it has developed patent-pending technology that prevents browsers and social media apps from being sideloaded, while DNS-level blocking should stop them from working even if someone finds a way to install them. Users can still sideload nearly anything else if it's not available on the Commostore, but apps designed for doomscrolling remain off limits. That means useful services such as WhatsApp, SMS, Signal, Telegram, WeChat, Spotify, Uber, Lyft, maps, podcasts, QR scanning, voice notes, and hotspot support work, but the likes of Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, Gmail, and browsers do not. The Callback 8020 has a 3.25-inch 480 x 640 internal display, a MediaTek Helio G81 chip, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, a 48MP Sony rear camera, an autofocus front camera, dual SIM support, USB-C, a headphone jack, FM radio, and something many of us miss from flagships: a removable battery. There's no 5G as Commodore argues that 4G VoLTE and Wi-Fi better fit a device meant to discourage constant streaming and scrolling. [...] The main screen is touch-capable but disabled by default, while the outer display keeps things deliberately sparse, showing basics such as time, battery, signal, and notifications via dome LEDs. The 8020 name is a nod to Commodore's 8010 modem from 1980. The phone comes in ProtoPET White, SX Silver, BASIC Beige, a translucent Starlight Edition, and a gold Founders Edition with a 24-karat gold-plated Commodore button. Standard models start at $499, the Starlight version is $549.99, and the Founders Edition costs $640. Preorders open June 30, with shipping targeted for winter. You can watch the launch ad on YouTube.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bomber that crashed during test flight at Edwards air force base in California killed all eight crew members
The investigation into a US air force bomber’s deadly crash during a test flight at a California base on Monday could take up to six months to complete, officials said.
The Boeing B-52 Stratofortress, carrying eight people, crashed in a fiery explosion that sent up thick plumes of smoke at the Edwards air force base in the Mojave desert, about 100 miles (161km) north-east of Los Angeles.
Continue reading...June 16, 2026 — The HANAMI project continues its mission to strengthen Europe–Japan collaboration in high-performance computing (HPC) through joint research activities carried out on Fugaku, one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers.
HANAMI researchers from Materials Science (Work Package 6) have been advancing scientific applications, optimizing software for next-generation HPC architectures, and supporting research across multiple scientific domains, including materials science, quantum simulations and numerical libraries.
One of the initiatives focused on optimizing the Yambo code for Fugaku’s massively parallel ARM-based architecture. Researchers improved OpenMP parallelization and restructured key computational kernels to reduce time-to-solution while maintaining strong scalability. These developments are now integrated into the Yambo 5.4 beta release and also support ongoing work on reduced-precision benchmarks in collaboration with RIKEN.
The Fugaku allocation also supported research into next-generation photovoltaic materials. Using advanced simulations, the team studied the structural, electronic and optical properties of a newly synthesized lead-free perovskite with promising potential for solar cell applications. The work contributes to the development of more sustainable alternatives to conventional lead-based materials.
In another research line, HANAMI researchers carried out large-scale diffusion Monte Carlo calculations on LaH10, a hydrogen-rich superhydride known for its high-temperature superconductivity under pressure. The simulations generated highly accurate datasets that will support the development of machine-learning interatomic potentials, helping improve the predictive accuracy of molecular dynamics simulations for superconducting materials.
The project also advanced the validation of a new pseudo-Hermitian eigensolver developed as an extension of the ChASE library. Large-scale numerical experiments on Fugaku demonstrated efficient performance on both distributed GPU systems and CPU-only architectures, significantly broadening the library’s applicability to future HPC infrastructures.
Lastly, HANAMI’s work package 6 team also used Fugaku to optimize the SIESTA code for Fujitsu’s A64FX architecture and on the study of water-in-salt electrolytes (WISE) for zinc-based energy storage devices. These simulations provided important insights into electrolyte behavior, supporting research into more stable and durable battery technologies.
Together, these studies demonstrate how HANAMI is combining advanced scientific applications with software optimization to maximize the potential of large-scale HPC infrastructures such as Fugaku. The project continues to reinforce Europe–Japan collaboration while supporting the development of more efficient, scalable and reliable scientific computing environments.
For a complete presentation of the activities carried out on Fugaku, read this blog post.
Source: HANAMI Project
The post HANAMI Project Expands Europe-Japan HPC Research Through Fugaku Studies appeared first on HPCwire.
Company Contributes to 300mm Wafer-Scale Superconducting Qubit Manufacturing and Workforce Development
ELMSFORD, N.Y., June 16, 2026 — SEEQC, Inc., a developer and manufacturer of scalable, energy efficient digital chips for quantum computing systems, today announced its participation in a four-year Microelectronics Commons Northeast Regional Defense Technology Hub (NORDTECH) program. As one of eight U.S. Microelectronics Commons hubs, NORDTECH collaborates with regional partners across New York State and the United States to enable innovative R&D projects and advance critical lab-to-fab innovations in direct support of Department of War objectives, while also supporting workforce development goals.
The NORDTECH project is aimed at advancing scalable fabrication of superconducting qubits using next-generation materials on 300mm industrial-grade silicon wafers. SEEQC is a subcontractor to NY CREATES (Albany, NY) and collaborates with academic, industry, and government partners including Cornell University, NYU, Princeton University, Syracuse University, Quantum Circuits / D-Wave, and the Air Force Research Laboratory.
The program focuses on improving materials such as tantalum (Ta) and tantalum nitride (TaN) for high-coherence qubit fabrication and establishing scalable manufacturing processes within a U.S.-based 300mm wafer fabrication environment.
SEEQC’s role includes:
Scaled, standardized quantum chip processing is expected to accelerate research, improve fabrication repeatability, and strengthen domestic manufacturing capabilities.
“Industrial-scale quantum fabrication requires both materials innovation and reliable evaluation infrastructure,” said Dr. Oleg Mukhanov, Chief Scientific Officer of SEEQC. “Our work supports the transition from laboratory-scale experimentation to repeatable, scalable quantum chip production.”
“The U.S. Microelectronics Commons hubs, like NORDTECH, are foundational to building resilient U.S. semiconductor and quantum supply chains,” said John Levy, CEO of SEEQC. “SEEQC is proud to contribute our expertise in digital superconducting technology to a national effort aimed at accelerating quantum innovation.”
The program also includes workforce development initiatives, including educational content and experiential internship opportunities across participating institutions.
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 Selected for CHIPS Act–Backed NORDTECH Quantum R&D Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.
President Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to address constraints in the production of munitions, according to a presidential memo released Tuesday.

Why Should Delaware Care?
One person has died and another has been injured during a shooting at one of Delaware’s largest hospitals — a public crime that left the state’s largest city shaken.
A man opened fire at ChristianaCare’s Wilmington Hospital around 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, killing one person and injuring another — a brazenly public slaying in a crowded workplace that shocked Delaware’s largest city.
Hours later on Tuesday night, law enforcement reported that they had arrested the suspect, John Wallace-Bey, 23, in Philadelphia, after he had fled the scene of the shooting.
In a Wednesday hearing, Wallace-Bey was denied bail by the Municipal Court of Philadelphia County, pending that extradition to face charges in Delaware.
The investigation is ongoing, but the Wilmington Police Department determined the shooting was a “targeted, isolated incident,” and not an aimless act of violence, officials said.
The victims were both 19 years old, and they along with Wallace-Bey were employees of ChristianaCare at the time of the shooting, hospital officials confirmed Wednesday.
Neither victim has yet to be identified by authorities. The injured victim is in critical but stable condition, according to Wilmington Police Department.
Once he is returned to Delaware, prosecutors plan to charge Wallace-Bey with first-degree murder, first-degree attempted murder, carrying a concealed deadly weapon, and two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.
During a Tuesday evening press conference, a visibly shaken Wilmington Mayor John Carney condemned the bloodshed.
“Any violence or loss of life in our city is unacceptable,” he said. “It’s particularly distressing when an incident like this occurs at a hospital whose fundamental purpose is to treat injuries and save lives. If ever there’s a place that should be a sanctuary from such violence, that is the place.”
ChristianaCare’s Wilmington Hospital, the second largest hospital in Delaware that sits alongside the city’s Washington Street Bridge in a sprawling tower campus, was put on lockdown after the shooting. That precaution has since been lifted.
“It’s truly extraordinary to see those caregivers showing up for work, and that’s what they do every day,” said Jenn Schwartz, the incoming president and CEO of ChristianaCare. “They care for people, they care for the community, and they’re showing up tonight to take that shift, even with what’s transpired today.”
According to Wallace-Bey’s GitHub profile, he was an intern at ChristianaCare’s information technology department working on “coding side-projects gone haywire.”

He is a reportedly a graduate of Code Differently, a Delaware-based code training program.
In his LinkedIn profile, Wallace-Bey wrote, “I love a lot of things that have to do with technology, current events, and animals. It’s a bit of a weird combination, but I’m a bit of a weird person.
“I enjoy watching all of the current happenings in the world so much that I also look to alternative news sources just for a more nuanced view. I like to watch people train their dogs, and also animals fighting.”
According to Pennsylvania court records, Wallace-Bey petitioned to change his name from John Lawrence Wallace Jr. in 2020.
With the location of the shooter unknown throughout the lockdown, dozens of officers from a variety of police departments responded to the scene. SWAT teams were also deployed to sweep the building.
Also arriving on the scene were federal agents from the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
A little after 5 p.m., people began walking out of the hospital’s southwest entrance, many with their hands in the air. They then congregated within the facility’s parking garage.
Shortly thereafter, paramedics carted one patient to an awaiting ambulance. It is not immediately clear if the person was an admitted patient or a victim.

As the situation unfolded, several hospital employees and members of the public congregated around the perimeter of the hospital.
Among them were three hospital staffers who said they were taking a class to learn about active shooters when they were told to leave the building. While noting the inconceivability of the situation, they said they were directed out of the hospital through a side door exit.
Also outside the hospital was a man speaking with his wife, a ChristianaCare employee, who was still inside the main hospital building.
In an interview, the man said his wife told him the remaining employees had been shuttled into a single area, as officers went floor by floor through the building.
Wilmington Police Chief Wilfredo Campos confirmed that police had swept every room in the hospital and parking garages, giving him confidence the shooter had left the scene. He added that officers were reviewing surveillance camera footage to determine how the shooter may have left the building.
The post Suspect identified in ChristianaCare Wilmington shooting that left 1 dead, 1 injured appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
KYOTO, Japan, June 16, 2026 — Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. has announced a new collaboration with Synopsys, Inc., enabling users of Synopsys’ simulation tools to navigate directly to Murata’s website to access and download the latest high-performance simulation models from Murata. The collaboration covers Synopsys’ 3D electromagnetic field analysis tool Ansys HFSS and thermal analysis tool Ansys Icepak, and marks a significant step toward streamlining the simulation workflow for electronic circuit designers. Murata is also the first company to offer passive component simulation models via Ansys Icepak.
As demand for high-speed, high-capacity communications continues to grow, electronic circuit design has become increasingly complex. Engineers must now account for a range of physical phenomena, from electromagnetic interference (EMI) to component heat generation, within a single design. Addressing these challenges early in the design process is critical; overlooking them can trigger costly redesigns, extend development timelines, and drive up prototyping expenses. This has placed greater pressure on electronic component suppliers to provide ready-to-use, high-quality simulation models that are compatible with the tools engineers already rely on.
Developing accurate models for electromagnetic and thermal analysis is inherently challenging, as both electromagnetic behavior and temperature distribution shift considerably depending on design conditions. Murata’s vertically integrated approach, spanning raw material development and manufacturing through to final product processing, enables the company to draw on an extensive proprietary dataset, resulting in simulation models that closely reflect real-world component performance.
The models are compatible with Ansys 2026 R1. Ansys HFSS supports electromagnetic field analysis and covers Murata’s RF inductors and multilayer ceramic capacitors (MLCCs), while Ansys Icepak supports thermal analysis and covers Murata’s power inductors.
Looking ahead, Murata will continue to deepen its collaboration with Synopsys, expanding its model lineup to support more advanced and efficient electronic design.
The following data is available for download from Murata’s website:
About Synopsys
Synopsys, Inc. (Nasdaq: SNPS) is the leader in engineering solutions from silicon to systems, enabling customers to rapidly innovate AI-powered products. We deliver industry-leading silicon design, IP, simulation and analysis solutions, and design services. We partner closely with our customers across a wide range of industries to maximize their R&D capability and productivity, powering innovation today that ignites the ingenuity of tomorrow. Learn more at www.synopsys.com.
About Murata
Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. is a worldwide leader in the design, manufacture and sale of ceramic-based passive electronic components & solutions, communication modules and power supply modules. Murata is committed to the development of advanced electronic materials and leading edge, multi-functional, high-density modules. The company has employees and manufacturing facilities throughout the world.
Source: Murata
The post Murata and Synopsys Simplify Access to Component Simulation Models for Ansys Users appeared first on HPCwire.
Binance is expected to lose permission to serve EU customers in July after Greek regulators reportedly decided to reject its MiCA license application. Reuters reports: Under new EU rules, called MiCA, crypto firms have until the end of June to obtain a licence to allow them to keep servicing clients across the bloc. Binance's application, made to Greece's market regulator, is set to be turned down, the people said. European regulators have been attempting to rein in crypto exchanges, which allow people to trade cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin around the globe. Under MiCA, crypto companies have to apply for licenses from regulators in individual EU countries, which they can use as a "passport" to operate throughout the 27-nation bloc. At stake is oversight of the multi-trillion-dollar crypto industry, which regulators have long warned could destabilize markets and harm investors if not properly supervised. The Greek rejection would mean Binance will not be given the green light to operate in the EU, leaving the fate of Binance's customers based in the bloc uncertain. Binance posted on X after the Reuters report was published that it intends to "support an orderly process and minimise disruption to our users", without giving further details. A spokesperson for Binance, which has 300 million customers worldwide, earlier said it has been pursuing a MiCA licenze and had worked with regulators for 18 months. Binance believes it has met the requirements to be MiCA authorized, the spokesperson said. It understood that Greece's Hellenic Capital Market Commission had completed its review of the application and it was considered compliant. "HCMC has given no formal indication of the contrary," the spokesperson told Reuters.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Prosecutors claim defendants were part of Minneapolis-based ‘antifa’ groups that ‘violently oppose’ law enforcement
Fifteen people in Minnesota were charged with conspiracy to impede or injure federal officers over their response to a controversial and deadly immigration enforcement crackdown in the state earlier this year.
The US attorney for Minnesota, Daniel Rosen, and the special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations for Minnesota, Michael McCarthy, announced the charges at a press conference in Minneapolis on Tuesday.
Continue reading...The retro phone has a physical T9 texting button layout, the ability to run most Android-based apps and a social media blacklist.
Brazil supreme court finds that Eduardo Bolsonaro – who resides in the US - tried to get sanctions put on judges trying ex-president over coup plot
Brazil’s supreme court has sentenced Eduardo Bolsonaro to four years and two months in prison after finding him guilty of courting US interference in his father’s coup plot trial last year.
The office of Brazil’s prosecutor general had charged Eduardo Bolsonaro – who lives in the US - courting interference from the Trump administration to help Jair Bolsonaro’s case, by imposing sanctions on the court’s justices and tariffs on Brazilian goods.
Continue reading...SANTA CLARA, Calif. and SAN ANTONIO, June 16, 2026 — AMD and Rackspace Technology today announced the signing of a definitive agreement for the phased deployment of an initial 30 MW footprint dedicated to AMD-based compute deployments across Rackspace’s global data centers beginning in late 2026 through 2028. The agreement operationalizes the Memorandum of Understanding announced May 7, 2026, and establishes AMD as a strategic technology partner at the silicon layer of Rackspace’s governed AI stack.
At full deployment, 30 MW of dedicated AMD compute across Rackspace’s footprint will represent meaningful capacity to serve regulated enterprise workloads, including healthcare providers who have expressed early interest in accelerated compute for clinical AI and inference at scale. This collaboration incorporates both AMD Instinct GPUs (including MI355X, MI350P, and future successor solutions) and AMD EPYC CPUs inside an integrated Enterprise AI Cloud architecture, enabling Rackspace to route each workload to the right compute with full accountability for performance and outcomes end to end.
“Enterprises in regulated industries need AI infrastructure that is governed from the ground up, with one operator accountable for business outcomes, not a collection of vendors each owning a piece,” said Gajen Kandiah, CEO, Rackspace Technology. “This collaboration combines the right compute with the right operating model and delivers something the market hasn’t offered before: a governed AI stack with one accountable partner from silicon to outcomes.”
“As enterprise AI evolves, customers need infrastructure that can deliver the right mix of accelerated and general-purpose compute for each workload,” said Dan McNamara, senior vice president and general manager, Compute and Enterprise AI, AMD. “By bringing together leadership AMD AI compute solutions and Rackspace’s governed cloud operating model, we are helping regulated enterprises deploy high-performance AI infrastructure with the openness, scalability and accountability needed to run AI at enterprise scale.”
Both companies expect to dedicate sales and marketing resources to identify and engage enterprise customers for AMD compute-powered infrastructure, with each company committing personnel to jointly develop and pursue customer opportunities across regulated industries.
This agreement will accelerate delivery of the four integrated capabilities announced with the MOU: Enterprise AI Cloud, Enterprise Inference Engine, Inference as a Service, and Bare Metal AMD Instinct, offering a complete, governed stack from bare metal compute through fully operated inference. Together, the companies aim to establish a new category of managed enterprise AI infrastructure that offers enterprises an alternative to the bare metal model. The shift from AI experiments to agentic workflows running inside core enterprise systems is accelerating demand for exactly the kind of governed, accountable infrastructure this collaboration is built to deliver.
About Rackspace Technology
Rackspace Technology (NASDAQ: RXT) is the operator of the full enterprise AI stack from governed private cloud to AI inference and agents in production. With an Outcomes-as-a-Service model built on secure infrastructure, data foundations, and forward-deployed engineering, Rackspace delivers business results for regulated and mission-critical industries where governance, sovereignty, and uptime are non-negotiable. Learn more at www.rackspace.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 http://www.amd.com.
Source: AMD
The post AMD and Rackspace Sign Deal to Deploy 30 MW of AI Infrastructure Across Global Data Centers appeared first on HPCwire.
Meta's smart glasses are raising surveillance concerns again.
Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania’s governor, squares off with state lawmakers over the facilities powering an AI boom
A controversial haunted house near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, taps into its dark history every fall to scare tens of thousands of visitors. In 1968, a local news station documented appalling conditions for disabled people in the red-brick buildings on the banks of Schuylkill River. Residents were found naked and emaciated at what was then known as the Pennhurst state school and hospital. The institution shut its doors permanently in 1987 after a lawsuit over inhumane conditions.
By 2010, a Halloween attraction stood in its place, and Pennhurst asylum’s previous owner suggested during its early years that he wanted to spook guests by repurposing the hospital’s surgical lights and medical cabinets to use as props.
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed.
You can follow all the latest developments from the G7 summit in our Europe live blog:
We will be including any Iran-related news from the summit in our Middle East crisis live blog.
Continue reading... | been loving my XL, I’ve already put 256 miles on it, the only downside is the battery…gonna build a board in the future that has more range and power like the X7 [link] [comments] |
Starting in 2027, France's cybersecurity agency ANSSI will stop certifying security products that lack quantum-resistant encryption, effectively forcing government agencies and critical infrastructure operators to phase out older cryptographic systems. Reuters reports: Samih Souissi, ANSSI's chief of staff, said at the France Quantum conference that the agency would halt such certifications from 2027, and that businesses should be buying only quantum-safe products by 2030. ANSSI approval is required for use in French government agencies and critical infrastructure, making the policy a de facto phase-out of older encryption. "It's not only a technical issue," Souissi said. "It's a matter of governance, industrial planning, regulation, and sovereignty." The move reflects concern that attackers may store encrypted data now and unlock it later when quantum computers become strong enough to crack today's protections, a risk known as "harvest now, decrypt later."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The AI tool will be trained on proprietary Disney assets, helping Imagineers rapidly produce 3D models of characters and rides.
A pair of MacBooks top the list, including Apple’s new Neo, but I have plenty of picks for Windows users, including budget models and high-powered rigs for gamers and creators and everything in between.
Former secretary of state says the winner of a genuine Democratic primary ‘would have beaten Donald Trump’
Joe Biden’s decision to seek a second term was “a terrible mistake” that cost Democrats the presidency and may have permanently damaged his legacy, Hillary Clinton has declared.
Speaking at the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan on Monday, the former US secretary of state and 2016 Democratic nominee said Biden had reneged on a prior commitment to step aside – and that the betrayal of that promise proved catastrophic. “He made a terrible mistake for himself, his legacy, and for the country,” she said.
Continue reading...Hi friends, is anyone successfully using VESC 7.00 FW with XRV kit and Refloat package 1.2 or 1.2.2? Any bugs so far? Thanks!
The KDE team released KDE Plasma 6.7 today, and with it comes a long list of improvements, new features, bug fixes, new old themes, and so much more. A new feature that is sure to please those among us who use virtual desktops: you can now have different virtual desktop setups per display. It’s been a long-requested feature, so it’s great to see it makes its way to the KDE users. I despise virtual desktops, but I’m happy to see something that I assumed was already part of KDE to finally actually become available.
Another major feature in KDE Plasma 6.7 is something we’ve already talked about: the return of the classic Oxygen and Air themes from the KDE 4.x days. These themes have seen extensive work over the past year or so to make them usable on the latest KDE release, which includes tons of bug fixes, visual nips and tucks, and countless additions to the collection of assets required to make a modern KDE theme look complete. This includes a ton of new icons in the old styles, light and dark modes, accent colour support, and much more. There’s still work left here, including adding support for QtQuick/Kirigami applications – which brings us to the next major new addition to KDE 6.7
This is also something we’ve already talked about: Union. I won’t repeat what I already explained last time Union came up, but suffice it to say that Union effectively unifies the various different ways KDE applications are themed, allowing theme designers to use relatively standard CSS to create themes that cover every aspect of the KDE user experience. Before Union, theme designers had to create individual, unique themes for a variety of parts of KDE – the Plasma desktop, QtWidgets using QStyle, QtQuick/Kirigami – which was a ton of work, and in the case of QtQuick/Kirigami, wasn’t really possible at all. As such, without Union, KDE’s theming is essentially broken, and Union fixes that. For now, Union is not enabled by default, and must be installed and enabled separately for testing.
Of course, there’s a ton of other smaller new features, changes, and bug fixes as well. KDE Plasma 6.7 will find its way to your distribution soon enough.

The head of a Maine conservative news outlet said Graham Platner, the Democrat running to represent the state in the Senate, is lying about his blue-collar oyster farming job.
In a June 5 Fox News appearance, Maine Wire Editor-in-Chief Steven Robinson told Laura Ingraham that Platner’s business is "a campaign prop."
"The oyster business, totally fake," said Robinson, whose outlet was founded in 2011 by the conservative think tank Maine Policy Institute. "There’s no oystermen in Maine … And if you look at the date [when] his fake oyster business was created, it was created after ‘Graham for Maine,’ his Senate website."
Platner’s Hancock County-based oyster farm, Waukeag Neck Oyster Co., is a key part of the 41-year-old candidate’s biography. A Marine Corps veteran and Maine native, Platner is seeking to unseat Republican Sen. Susan Collins, who has held the seat for three decades.
On June 10, Senate Republicans released an ad that also sought to undermine Platner's image. The same day, President Donald Trump disparaged Platner.
"He's not a businessman at all. His parents supported him. He's a loser," Trump said of Platner during a June 10 bill signing for immigration enforcement funding.
Neither Platner’s campaign nor Robinson responded to PolitiFact’s requests for comment. On X, Platner’s campaign shared a Republican National Committee post with Robinson’s comments, calling them "defamatory."
Maine Wire published a Facebook post June 8 that said, in part: "The oyster ‘business’ site should be an FEC-reportable expenditure because it’s just a prop for his campaign, part of the fake working-man routine he’s running."
Waukeag Neck’s parent company, Frenchman Bay Oyster Co., registered with the state as a business in December 2018, according to the Maine Secretary of State’s Office website. Records show the business is currently in "good standing" and has filed its required annual report every year since forming.
Since 2021, Frenchman Bay Oyster Co. has appeared on the Food and Drug Administration’s monthly list of companies federally allowed to sell shellfish across state lines.
Platner was operating his business years before he started his campaign. And records show he launched his business website months before he announced his campaign Aug. 19, 2025.
The oyster farm’s website says Platner joined the business in 2018 and took over operations in 2019, "slowly but sustainably making it a commercially successful small scale aquaculture operation."
Platner began working with Maine Small Business Development Centers, which provides counseling to small-business owners, in 2021 and was awarded a $20,000 grant to buy new cages and equipment for the business, according to the organization’s 2021 year-end review.
Waukeag Neck Oyster Co. as of June 8 had 47 Google reviews; several reviews from before he announced his candidacy mention Platner by name. One February 2024 review includes a picture that appears to show Platner shucking an oyster. The reviewer wrote, in part: "Graham does an amazing job harvesting and serving these delicacies."
Free Beacon, a conservative news website, reported in May that the oyster farm’s website says it is "not currently taking tour reservations" and social media accounts for the farm have shifted from posts about harvesting oysters to criticizing Trump since Platner announced his candidacy. The piece also noted a March 2026 letter sent to Platner by the Maine Department of Marine Resources telling Platner didn’t have the boundaries of his property properly marked in 2024 and 2025 on his oyster farm as required by law.
In August 2021, the state approved Platner’s company for a 20-year aquaculture lease of 5.8 acres south and west of Ingalls Island in Sullivan Harbor, located in Hancock County.
As part of that approval process, Platner spoke Aug. 9, 2021, during a public hearing. He said he needed the approval to expand "existing aquaculture operations," according to state records. The application said Platner had two existing aquaculture leases. (The minutes of a July 28, 2021, special called meeting of the Town of Bar Harbor identified Platner and one of his co-owners as having had multiple oyster harvesting applications "for many years.")
Platner rebuffed the idea that he is not an oysterman in a May story from The New York Times.
"I work with my hands on the ocean and I don’t make much money," Platner told The Times. "I’m not really sure what else the definition is than working, making money from working, not being rich.
Robinson said Platner’s campaign website was registered before the oyster farm website.
Platner registered the campaign website domain in April 2023 and the oyster farm’s domain in January 2024. But — according to archived versions of the websites — the Waukeag Neck Oyster Co. website went live in January 2025, which is months before Platner's campaign website went live and he announced his campaign.
Platner’s income from the oyster business is unclear. Under the "compensation" section of his personal financial disclosure, the one entry listed as providing him more than $5,000 annually is from his mother’s business, Ironbound Restaurant and Inn. The description is simply "oyster purveyor to restaurant."
At midnight on Primary Day, the National Republican Senatorial Committee released an ad aimed at Platner: "Graham Platner runs a hobby oyster farm, whose only customer is his mother’s restaurant."
Robinson said the oyster business was "totally fake."
Public records show that Waukeag Neck Oyster Co. has been registered with the state since 2018. Platner received a grant in 2021 to buy business equipment.
The business applied for and in 2021 obtained approval from the state to farm oysters. Waukeag Neck also has a social media presence that predates Platner running for office.
We rate this statement False.
| Stripped this screw on my pint how cooked am I [link] [comments] |
The Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool in Washington DC has turned green with algae shortly after it had undergone a renovation. The no-bid contract to waterproof and repaint the site was awarded to Atlantic Industrial Coatings, a Virginia-based company that had previously carried out work on a swimming pool at one of Donald Trump’s golf clubs.
Algae thwart Trump’s $14.2m attempt to turn reflecting pool ‘American flag blue’
Before-and-after photos: Trump’s $14.2m makeover delivers … a blue pool
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The driving technology company Mobileye plans to launch a robotaxi service in an as-yet-unnamed US city in 2027, it said earlier today. The service will be vertically integrated, using Mobileye's Moovit mobility platform to interact with customers booking rides, coordinate drivers, and so on. The Israeli company, which was bought by Intel in 2017 before going public again in 2022, says it will start with around 100 robotaxis early next year. The company first rose to prominence in the mid-2010s, when Tesla began using Mobileye's advanced driving assistance systems (ADAS) as part of Autopilot. That relationship lasted until 2016, when Mobileye dropped Tesla as a customer after being alarmed that a driver assistance system was being sold to end users as driverless technology. Since then, Mobileye has continued to work with other partners on ADAS and autonomous vehicles. It has developed a new "SuperVision" ADAS that combines cameras and radar sensors, used by Porsche and Polestar, among others. On the robotaxi front, it has partnered with Volkswagen Group's MOIA to develop a commercially available robotaxi based on the VW ID. Buzz minivan, and last year, Mobileye revealed plans to work with Lyft to deploy robotaxis in Dallas, "as soon as" this year. [...] If Mobileye's experience with the initial 100 robotaxis goes well, it says it will scale up to around 17,000 robotaxis within the following five years. "The robotaxi revolution has only just begun, and its potential for transforming how we travel around the world continues to increase," Shashua said. "This initiative is not a replacement for our existing partnerships; it is an extension of them," said Amnon Shashua, founder and CEO of Mobileye. "We remain deeply committed to enabling automakers and mobility providers with Mobileye Drive. At the same time, operating our own service allows us to accelerate adoption, gain direct operational experience, and showcase the full potential of autonomous mobility."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Apple's MacBook lineup includes three tiers: Neo, Air and Pro. See our favorites and find the best MacBook for your laptop budget and needs.
This is what spending money on a more advanced AI model will get you.
Anthropic's Claude AI service appeared to stop working on Tuesday. Here's what we know so far.
Snap is launching its first consumer augmented-reality glasses this fall for $2,195. "You can preorder a pair of Specs now at specs.com with a $200 refundable deposit, and Snap says they're expected to ship 'this fall' in the US, UK, and France," reports The Verge. From the report: This is a big moment for Snap: The company made a big entry into smart glasses with its original Spectacles in 2016, and the company has been toiling away on nonpublic AR versions of Spectacles over the past few years. CEO Evan Spiegel promised the company would launch consumer AR glasses in 2026 and even turned its smart glasses team into a separate business. The company says that Specs are "fully standalone, with no puck and no tether." (Which is perhaps a jab at Apple's Vision Pro, which is tethered to a separate battery pack.) They'll be offered in two sizes, a 47mm model weighing 132g and a 52mm model weighing 136g, and will have removable inserts that Snap says will support "a wide range of prescriptions." You probably won't mistake Specs, with their wide, bold frames, for any of Meta's smart glasses -- Snap clearly picked a design that it wants to stand out. (They're not my style -- I don't think I can pull off the "snow goggles, but fashionable" look -- though maybe Jony Ive might like them.) They have visible light and infrared cameras, and while the Specs are recording, a little LED bar will glow in the middle of the glasses. Both of the lenses will be able to show you content, and Snap says that its display system is powered by a "proprietary liquid crystal on silicon technology" that offers a 51-degree field of view and can show 16 million colors. The lenses can also go from clear to tinted in 10 seconds, Snap says. The Specs have two Snapdragon processors onboard, and while Snap isn't specifying exactly which ones they are, the company says that one is focused on "computer vision" while the other is focused on running AR Lenses. "Together, they enable fast hand tracking, low latency, and responsive interactions that help digital content feel anchored in the real world," Snap says. You can also expect up to four hours of battery life on a charge, which Snap says accounts for things like "audio and video playback, AI assistance, Bluetooth notifications, and more." The Specs come with a charging case that Snap says will offer four more charges for a total of 20 hours of battery.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New benchmarks and increased diversity of submissions reflect important changes in AI ecosystem
SAN FRANCISCO, June 16, 2026 — Today, MLCommons announced new results for the MLPerf Training v6.0 benchmark suite. The two new benchmarks added in this round, and the submissions received, highlight rapid and significant changes in the AI ecosystem.
“It’s an exciting moment for the community,” said Shriya Rishab, MLPerf Training Working Group co-chair. “We’re seeing strong convergence on a set of best practices for training AI models, but at the same time there is increasing technical diversity in the underlying frameworks and systems that are being used to host and run them.”
MLPerf Training v6.0 Adds Two New Benchmarks, Emphasizing Sparse Computation
The MLPerf Training benchmark suite comprises full system tests that stress models, software, and hardware for a range of machine learning (ML) applications. The open-source and peer-reviewed benchmark suite provides a level playing field for competition, driving innovation, performance, and energy efficiency across the industry. The suite’s benchmark collection is curated by a panel of experts from the AI community.
Version 6.0 adds two new benchmarks: DeepSeek V3 and GPT-OSS 20B, both highlighting the industry-wide shift to sparse computation as exemplified by a Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) architecture. Mixture-of-Experts is a model architecture that uses a smart “router” to send different tokens to specialized sub-networks (“experts”). This enables using a high-parameter-count model that is very efficient because training and inference only activate a fraction of the experts for any given token, reducing the computational cost.
DeepSeek V3 is a large-scale pretraining model, utilizing an MoE architecture. It uses 671 billion total parameters, of which 37 billion are activated per token. It provides a standardized platform for evaluating the training efficiency of a leading open-weights MoE model at production scale.
GPT-OSS 20B, also an MoE model, uses a much smaller footprint: 21 billion total parameters, of which 3.6 billion are activated per token. This allows organizations to evaluate the complex routing logic and sparse computation patterns common to MoE architecture on hardware configurations as small as a single 8-GPU node.
“Sparse computation is a dominant trend in AI right now,” said Rishab. “Over the past two years, all of the major new generative AI models have utilized a sparse computation architecture, frequently MoE. We have introduced our new DeepSeek V3 benchmark to test large-scale sparse computation training systems, and in fact it is now the largest benchmark in our suite with 671 billion parameters. It also exercises the performance of critical innovations that are now standard in the industry, including Multi-head Latent Attention (MLA) and auxiliary-loss-free load balancing.
“On the opposite end of the spectrum, we’ve introduced the GPT-OSS 20B benchmark as an entry point for organizations that may not have the resources to train the largest-scale models, but want to build advanced capabilities. We’ve carefully designed the benchmark for this scenario, including training from randomized weights to avoid the overhead of multi-gigabyte checkpoint downloads; using the same dataset as existing benchmarks in the suite such as Llama 3.1 8B; and choosing a representative sliver of end-to-end training to reduce the cost of generating benchmark results without compromising on the quality of the benchmark.
“Both of these new benchmarks saw quick uptake, drawing many results. Stakeholders clearly see the importance of performance benchmarking for MoE architectures.”
Increasing Diversity of Submissions Highlights New Paths to AI Training
Version 6.0 set new records for diversity of the systems submitted. Participants in this round of the benchmark submitted 95 unique systems, utilizing thirteen different hardware accelerators, 19 different host processors and a couple of different software frameworks. 60% of the systems were multi-node.
Notably, there are more than double the number of cloud systems submitted compared to the version 5.1 results six months ago, reflecting the emerging market for hosting AI training in the cloud.
“There are more ways of getting your AI training than ever before,” said Pavan Yalamanchili, MLPerf Working Group co-chair. “Several companies now offer training systems in the cloud, complementing the on-premises systems that continue to be built out at a furious pace. And we are excited to see so many competitive submissions from a variety of on-premises and cloud providers.”
At the same time, the submissions illustrate growing technical diversity, reflecting a robust, rapidly advancing ecosystem. For example, submitters used multiple different FP4-precision recipes, reflecting the current diversity and exploration across the industry.
“The diversity of FP4 implementations we see in the submissions is not surprising,” said Yalamanchili. “Some implementations are more flexible than others, which allow them to be used in unique training scenarios. But here is where MLPerf’s benchmarking delivers critical insight and value: it allows stakeholders to understand which implementations deliver the best performance for their specific needs. In particular, because MLPerf benchmarks require submissions to meet an accuracy threshold, we shine a spotlight on the differences in performance that these kinds of hardware and implementation design choices can lead to.”
Record Industry Participation Points to Broad Ecosystem, Driven by Generative AI
The MLPerf Training v6.0 round includes performance results from 24 submitting organizations: AMD, ASUSTeK, Azure, Cisco, CoreWeave, Dell, Fujitsu, GigaComputing, Google, HPE, Inventec, Krai, Lambda, MITAC, Neblus, Netweb Technologies India LTD, NVIDIA, Oracle, Quanta Cloud Technologies, SCITIX, Sigmicro, tinycorp, TTA and Vultr. “We would especially like to welcome first-time MLPerf Training submitters,” said David Kanter, Head of MLPerf at MLCommons.
Robust participation by a broad set of industry stakeholders strengthens the AI ecosystem as a whole and helps to ensure that the benchmark is serving the community’s needs. We invite submitters and other stakeholders to join the MLPerf Training working group and help us continue to evolve the benchmark.
View the Results
Please visit the Training benchmark page to view the full results for MLPerf Training v6.0 and find additional information about the benchmarks. To learn about each submitters results, read the supplemental.
About MLCommons
MLCommons is the world’s leader in AI benchmarking. An open engineering consortium supported by over 125 members and affiliates, MLCommons has a proven record of bringing together academia, industry, and civil society to measure and improve AI. The foundation for MLCommons began with the MLPerf benchmarks in 2018, which rapidly scaled as a set of industry metrics to measure machine learning performance and promote transparency of machine learning techniques. Since then, MLCommons has continued using collective engineering to build the benchmarks and metrics required for better AI – ultimately helping to evaluate and improve AI technologies’ accuracy, safety, speed, and efficiency.
For additional information on MLCommons and details on becoming a member, please visit MLCommons.org or email participation@mlcommons.org.
Source: MLCommons
The post MLCommons Releases MLPerf Training v6.0 Results appeared first on HPCwire.
BOSTON, June 16, 2026 — Classiq and Rolls-Royce today published a new technical blog describing work that examines how quantum computing methods could support computational fluid dynamics (CFD), one of the most demanding areas of engineering simulation.
CFD is used across industries such as aerospace, energy, automotive and advanced manufacturing to simulate the movement of air, fluids and gases. These simulations are central to the design of aircraft, jet engines, turbines and other complex systems, but they can require significant high-performance computing resources.
The Classiq blog, “Quantum Linear Solvers for CFD: From Algorithmic Promise to Practical Performance,” looks at a practical question for future quantum computing: can a quantum linear solver be placed inside an existing CFD workflow, and can that workflow still produce useful results when the quantum component is approximate rather than perfect?
Classiq and Rolls-Royce studied a hybrid classical-quantum workflow using a CFD application made publicly available by Rolls-Royce. The application simulates steady flow through a one-dimensional nozzle, including transonic flow with shocks. In the workflow, the classical CFD process continues to manage the overall simulation, while a quantum linear solver is tested as part of an inner step that helps update the simulation.
The work found that the CFD workflow could still converge when using an approximate quantum solver. In one test, an approximate Chebyshev linear combination of unitaries, or Cheb-LCU, approach reduced quantum resource requirements by more than an order of magnitude compared with a Quantum Singular Value Transformation-based solver, while preserving convergence in the full CFD process.
The study was conducted on a smaller-scale test case, and future work will examine scaling to larger more demanding CFD problems. The findings demonstrate why testing quantum algorithms inside real application workflows is important: the practical performance of a quantum method can depend on how it behaves in the larger engineering process, not only on how it performs in isolation.
“Quantum computing matters to enterprises if it can fit into the workflows that engineers and researchers already use,” said Nir Minerbi, co-founder and CEO of Classiq. “This work is an important step in that direction. It shows how teams can move beyond evaluating algorithms on their own and begin studying how quantum methods behave inside real scientific and engineering applications.”
The blog also highlights a broader lesson for enterprise quantum teams. Future quantum applications may not require perfect quantum subroutines at every step. In some cases, useful workflows may be able to tolerate approximation if it reduces resource requirements and keeps the overall process on track.
Classiq’s role included developing and implementing the quantum portion of the hybrid CFD workflow using its high-level quantum software platform. The quantum linear solver implementation is available in Classiq’s open library, supporting repeatability and further research.
For industries that rely on simulation, this type of work can help teams prepare for future fault-tolerant quantum computers while staying grounded in real engineering needs. It also provides a practical framework for evaluating quantum methods as part of end-to-end applications rather than as standalone algorithms.
The full blog is available here.
About Classiq
Classiq is the leading quantum computing software company, providing the technology that makes it practical for enterprises and researchers to access and harness the power of quantum computing. Classiq’s quantum software engineering platform enables an enterprise-grade agentic workflow and advanced compilation to transform high-level functional models into portable hardware-optimized quantum circuits. This enables teams to develop algorithms faster, optimize them for cost and performance, and make quantum applications usable sooner on any quantum computer.
Source: Classiq
The post Classiq and Rolls-Royce Evaluate Quantum Computing’s Role in Future CFD Applications appeared first on HPCwire.
A week or so ago, Apple announced a bunch of features for the App Store on iOS, including personalised recommendations based on your activity and usage of iOS. It turns out this includes a keylogger (taplogger?) in the App Store, which records every single tap you make, every single letter you enter, and a lot of other information. All of this information is unencrypted and sent to Apple.
Now Apple is putting the extensive identifiable analytics they collect in the App Store in action. They record every tap and there’s no way to turn it off.
They can even calculate your typing speed.
↫ Michael Tsai, quoting Mysk
The provided screenshots of the data collected are terrifying, especially because the data is unencrypted, sent to Apple, and fully tied to your user account. Apple clearly wants a slice of that big, juicy advertising pie, and they, too, are discovering that the easiest and best way to serve targeted ads is to collect as much data as they can about you. Of course, this is something the entire internet (but not OSNews!) and several megacorporations are built on by now, but Apple has been incredibly sanctimonious about how it supposedly actually cares about user privacy, making this keylogger yet another case of Apple’s hypocrisy on full display.
Of course, if you care about privacy, you’re entirely free to download your iOS applications from somewhere other than the App Store and install them yours…
Oh, wait.
Elon Musk’s firm briefly reached $2.97tn valuation days after its IPO following purchase of AI coding startup Cursor
SpaceX has overtaken Amazon to become the world’s fifth most valuable company days after its stock market debut.
The milestone came as Elon Musk’s company agreed to buy the startup behind the AI-powered coding app Cursor for $60bn (£44bn), in an attempt to capitalise on the technology’s success as a coding tool.
Continue reading...The update brings a welcome battery bump and points to a future where both act as gateways into Google's broader AI ecosystem.
The latest from Android is upon us. Here's what to expect and a glimpse of what's down the road.
App timers, screen time limits and new restrictions on the Google Play Store are the company's solution to concerns about child safety online.
SpaceX has agreed to acquire Cursor for $60 billion in stock, adding the popular AI coding assistant to Elon Musk's newly public aerospace-and-AI conglomerate. CNBC reports: Cursor built a popular AI coding tool that helps software developers generate, edit and review code, and the company has experienced explosive growth since its founding in 2022. In November, Cursor said it crossed $1 billion in annualized revenue, according to a release at the time. Cursor was also ranked at No. 37 on the annual CNBC Disruptor 50 list in 2026. [...] Musk merged SpaceX with his AI startup, xAI, earlier this year, and the Cursor deal looks set to help revitalize the company's efforts to compete with rivals like Anthropic and OpenAI, which also offer popular coding tools. SpaceX expects the merger to close during the third quarter of this year, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The transaction is subject to "requisite regulatory approvals," the filing said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The recent abandonment of plans for a Franco-German fighter jet sent a disastrous signal. Strategic autonomy will be jointly achieved or not at all
It has become a truism to assert that Europe needs to fast-track its own strategic independence in a volatile world. A recent paper from the European Council on Foreign Relations describes the continent’s leaders as grappling with “a ‘Schrödinger’s NATO’ moment, in which America remains formally inside the alliance while behaving as though it were not, just as the Russian threat looms larger”. Donald Trump’s United States has become at best an unreliable and at times reluctant ally, as Vladimir Putin’s revanchist ambitions have exposed the need to strengthen Europe’s defences.
But if the goal of greater autonomy is to be achieved, far better coordination of resources and cooperation between national defence industries will be required. Neither has been much in evidence this month, with France and Germany abandoning a joint £100bn project to build a new fighter jet as part of an updated Future Combat Air System. Originally launched by Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel in 2017, plans for the jet were pulled as a result of irresolvable disagreements between Dassault, the French aviation company involved, and Airbus, the European aerospace company whose defence unit is based in Germany.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Young adults and teens are being recruited through apps like Telegram and paid to carry out attacks, officials say
Police investigators in Toronto have said that dozens of shootings – including one at the US consulate in March – are linked to a “multilayered” gun-for-hire network that is also responsible for attacks on synagogues around Canada’s largest city.
Toronto’s police chief, Myron Demkiw, told reporters on Tuesday that young adults and teenagers are being recruited through encrypted messaging apps such as Signal, Telegram and WhatsApp by “bad actors” and paid by the networks to carry out the attacks. Shooters are required to film their attacks in order to get paid.
Continue reading...British prime minister was left making small talk unsure if a meeting with Trump and Zelenskyy was going ahead
The wait for Keir Starmer’s first session of the G7 gathering in Évian-les-Bains was undoubtedly awkward. A meeting about the future of Ukraine had been due to start at 9am but more than half an hour later, Donald Trump, Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Emmanuel Macron were nowhere to be seen.
On a live Reuters feed, Starmer could be seen standing next to the leaders of Canada and Japan as they milled about making small talk. “Are they, are they having a meeting?” the British prime minister could be heard asking. If he was referring to the missing attenders, and they were indeed having a meeting, it was clear he hadn’t been invited.
Continue reading...Quandela’s spin-photon quantum computing architecture advances into DARPA program evaluating utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum systems
WASHINGTON, June 16, 2026 — Quandela today announced it has been selected by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to participate in Stage A of the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (QBI), a multi-stage program designed to assess whether any quantum computing architecture can achieve utility-scale operation by 2033.
Under Stage A, Quandela will present a detailed concept for a utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer, along with technical evidence supporting its near-term feasibility. Within DARPA’s framework, utility-scale refers to systems whose computational value exceeds their cost. The QBI program is intended to rigorously evaluate approaches to practical quantum computing and provide the government with a clearer basis for assessing which technologies can realistically scale.
“Selection for Stage A of the QBI program reflects the progress and maturity of our approach,” said Yoni Elmalem, General Manager of Quandela Federal. “It highlights the growing relevance of photonic and spin-photon hybrid architectures in addressing the requirements for scalable, fault-tolerant quantum systems. Our focus is on translating validated scientific principles into engineering pathways that can support practical deployment.”
Quandela is developing a spin-photon quantum computing architecture that combines the natural connectivity and modularity advantages of photons with the high-speed logic operations and resource efficiency of semiconductor spin-based technologies. The company believes this approach can enable modular, high-performance quantum systems designed for scalability.
“QBI establishes a structured framework for evaluating quantum computing approaches against clear performance and scalability criteria,” said Niccolo Somaschi, CEO of Quandela. “This aligns closely with our engineering methodology, which emphasizes measurable progress, architectural clarity and system-level scalability from the outset.”
Companies that successfully complete Stage A may advance to subsequent QBI phases focused on research and development planning, risk reduction, and independent validation of system performance.
About Quandela
Quandela is a global quantum computing company that designs, builds and delivers quantum solutions for research and industry. Its offerings include energy-efficient quantum computers for data centers, full-stack quantum computing solutions accessible through the cloud, and quantum algorithm services for academic and industrial customers. Quandela’s mission is to make quantum computing accessible in order to address complex industrial and societal challenges.
Source: Quandela
The post DARPA Selects Quandela for Stage A of the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.
We would like to hear from small business owners in the US about how they’re adapting to challenges such as inflation
An index of US small business optimism reportedly fell in May to the lowest level since October 2024, which Bloomberg says has erased “almost all of the gains seen since President Donald Trump was elected for a second term”.
The National Federation of Independent Business optimism index fell 0.6 points to 95.3, according to data put out last week. The measure had previously hit a six-year high in December 2024 following Trump’s re-election.
Continue reading...Fashion house pays tribute to Chinese style with its 75th anniversary catwalk show in Shanghai
“New York may be the city that never sleeps, but Shanghai doesn’t even sit down.” For the British designer Ian Griffiths, who encountered this line in the New Yorker, it summed up why China’s biggest city was the right place to celebrate Max Mara’s 75th anniversary.
“Max Mara is a product for metropolitan women, and it would be patronising to assume that a metropolitan wardrobe should be western-centric,” Griffiths said.
Continue reading...The FDA sent a warning letter to Happiest Baby Inc., alleging the company sold some unauthorized products and cited unsanitary conditions.
Move to ChapsVision is to avoid ‘strategic dependencies’, says PM amid concern about reliance on US-controlled tools
France’s domestic intelligence service is to ditch AI data tools from the US tech company Palantir in favour of a domestic provider in an effort to avoid “strategic dependency”, the prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, has said.
“We must use our own AI models; we cannot accept new strategic dependencies in the digital sphere,” Lecornu posted on social media. “We cannot rely on tools developed by foreign powers. France must have its own tools.”
Continue reading...Qualcomm's new Snapdragon Reality Elite could show up in a lot more future headsets, but it's appearing in Google and Xreal's upcoming Android XR glasses first. It's promising significant boosts for graphics, battery and AI.
TechCrunch's Zack Whittaker argues that the U.S. government's abrupt export-control order forcing Anthropic to pull its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models offline was "never about an AI jailbreak" threat. Instead, it was driven more by "personality differences" between the AI company and Trump administration. Security experts say the reported guardrail bypass did not justify the order and warn that the move sets a troubling precedent: the government can unilaterally disrupt American software products without court approval, potentially undermining trust in U.S. AI providers. From the report: Katie Moussouris, a cybersecurity veteran and researcher who founded Luta Security, said in a blog post that Anthropic recently shared with her a private copy of a paper written by security researchers describing an alleged guardrail bypass in Fable 5. (The Wall Street Journal reports that the paper's authors are security researchers at Amazon.) Moussouris said that Anthropic reached out to ask for her take on the paper. Moussouris' blog post described how the researchers triggered the guardrail bypass, but said that the bypass itself "should never have triggered an export control." The difference is largely between asking an AI model to "review code for security issues" versus asking it to "fix this code." The end result is largely the same, even if the questions are posed slightly differently. "The behavior described in the paper cannot meaningfully be fixed, and any attempt would only weaken the model for defense," said Moussouris, who criticized the export control directive as hasty, heavy-handed, and misguided. Moussouris and dozens of other top security researchers and experts have since called on the Trump administration to revoke the export control order, calling the move to pull advanced cybersecurity capabilities from network defenders in the U.S. as "dangerous." Past administrations have made sweeping decisions on knowledge gaps. For instance, language used by the U.S. government during the 2010s to fix export law covering cybersecurity tools that could also be used for cyberattacks was so broad that inadvertently, it nearly outlawed legitimate security and vulnerability research. However, the Trump administration's directive appears retaliatory. Justin Hendrix, the editor of Tech Policy Press, said the Trump administration's move is "likely to raise alarms in foreign capitals about the reliability of American AI for critical applications." The message is that AI companies in the United States can't be trusted to operate without interference from the U.S. government. The Trump administration hasn't confirmed why it invoked its export control directive. Did the officials misread the report and freak out? Did Amazon CEO Andy Jassy say something to senior government officials that prompted the reaction, out of caution or spite? Was something lost in translation, or was this a way to pressure Anthropic, with whom the administration already has a fractious relationship? It's possible that the White House was unaware of the far-reaching consequences of the letter's demand and officials are scrambling to undo the damage of their own making. To quote Hendrix, "the climate is one of a cloud of suspicion that senior officials are picking favorites based on personal and political factors." The aftermath is that the government has set a dangerous precedent about how much control it intends to wield over the release of American-made software. This time the government took issue with Anthropic; tomorrow it could be with anyone else.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
America’s Iran War casualties crept higher even as the U.S. was in the final stages of declaring a second ceasefire with Iran this weekend.
The U.S. and Iran have agreed to a second ceasefire and the eventual reopening the Strait of Hormuz under a preliminary deal scheduled to take effect on Friday. “Iran has taken a major step toward final victory,” Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iranian Parliament, said on Monday, one of several Iranian leaders taking a victory lap after outlasting the Trump administration.
Trump’s war has already killed thousands of Iranian civilians — including more than 150, most of them children – in a strike on an elementary school. The official number of dead and wounded U.S. personnel stands at 426, an almost 11 percent increase since the first ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran was struck on April 8. This tally, however, is missing hundreds of casualties, including two soldiers wounded in action earlier this month.
For months, The Intercept has reported that the Pentagon’s official tally of dead and wounded military personnel from the Iran War is a gross undercount, stemming from what another U.S. government official called a “casualty cover-up.” The Defense Casualty Analysis System, or DCAS, which tracks “deceased, wounded, ill or injured” service members for Congress and the president, is missing hundreds of known casualties. The true number exceeds 625.
When the first ceasefire was struck between the Trump administration and Iran, the tally of U.S. casualties was 385. Despite a pause in hostilities, the number slowly rose to 428, according to Pentagon statistics.
On April 21, however, the number of wounded-in-action troops declined by 15 without public comment from the War Department, dropping the casualty total to 413. Despite repeated questions over almost two months, the Pentagon has not explained the disparity in its casualty count. A defense official told The Intercept that it was impossible to tell whether Pentagon casualty analysts were “grossly incompetent” or had been ordered to manipulate the figures.
Since the 15 wounded vanished in April, the DCAS casualty count has steadily crept upward to top out at 413, where it stood on Tuesday morning. This includes one sailor wounded in action this month. Central Command did not reply to a request for further information about the injury.
The official figures appear to be missing two soldiers who were recently wounded in action. CENTCOM spokesperson Capt. Tim Hawkins told NBC News last week that two crew members from a U.S. Army AH-64 Apache helicopter downed by an Iranian drone on June 8 were receiving medical care. And a CENTCOM social media post said they were in “stable condition.” But DCAS lists no Army personnel wounded in action this month.
The official tally of war dead also appears to be an undercount. For weeks, DCAS listed 13 hostile and non-hostile U.S. deaths during the war. DCAS briefly raised the total to 14 last month before dropping it back to 13, without any explanation on the fluctuation.
The Pentagon list of the names of the dead is still missing Maj. Sorffly Davius, a signals and communication officer with the New York Army National Guard who was assigned to the headquarters of the 42nd Infantry Division and reportedly died of sudden illness while on duty in Camp Buehring, Kuwait, on March 6. Davius’s death was widely acknowledged even as it was excluded from the official count: Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., spoke about him during a memorial service that month, and Gen. Dan Caine, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recognized Davius while “honoring our fallen.”
While DCAS provides a running tally of “non-hostile” deaths — meaning those who died from accidents or by illness — it doesn’t include “non-hostile” injuries. The DCAS figures show that 65 Navy personnel have been wounded in action. Missing, however, are the more than 200 sailors treated for smoke inhalation or lacerations due to a March 12 fire that raged aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford. The aircraft carrier had been conducting round-the-clock flight operations to, in Caine’s words, “project combat power” in the Middle East. The ship returned to its home port in Norfolk, Virginia, last month after 326 days at sea, the longest deployment of any U.S. aircraft carrier since the Vietnam War.
The casualty numbers also don’t include a sailor who suffered a non-combat-related injury aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln as it was involved in “strike missions in support of Operation Epic Fury” on March 25.
On April 21, two Pentagon spokespersons said they were unable to field questions about why more than a dozen casualties had been disappeared by the War Department, claiming only the “duty officer” could answer the question but that person was not at their desk. “As soon as the duty officer comes back to their desk, I can get this to them,” said one of them. After almost two months, The Intercept has yet to receive a response from the duty officer.
The Pentagon did not reply to a request for clarification on Monday about whether the duty officer ever returned to their desk.
The post U.S. Casualties in Iran Are Still Rising appeared first on The Intercept.
They're fully standalone augmented reality and far more expensive than other smart glasses (but cheaper than Apple Vision Pro). I haven't tried them out yet, but did talk to Snap CEO Evan Spiegel.
JD Vance says specifics to be worked out as Senate Republicans say there are many unanswered questions
Republicans have expressed tentative skepticism of the agreement Donald Trump has reached with Iran, and urged the White House to release more information.
The memorandum of understanding (MOU) announced on Sunday to end the war in Iran, set for a ceremonial signing on Friday in Geneva, is centered around reopening the strait of Hormuz and lifting the US naval blockade in the region, along with financial incentives for Iran if it meets certain benchmarks. Both Trump and JD Vance, the US vice-president, have digitally signed the document, along with Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf on Tehran’s behalf, a senior US official confirmed.
Continue reading...WAYNE, Pa., June 16, 2026 — Cornelis, a provider of high-performance networking solutions, today announced the successful deployment of the “Lynx” supercomputing cluster at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL).
The 952-node Lynx cluster, featuring Dell PowerEdge servers, Intel Xeon processors, and the Cornelis CN5000 Omni-Path fabric, is part of the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) Commodity Technology Systems (CTS-2) program. It will provide additional production capability for NNSA’s Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) program and NNSA’s broader national security missions.
“We are excited to see the Cornelis CN5000 400G network come to life at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,” said Matt Leininger, Senior Principal HPC Strategist at LLNL. “The collaboration between NNSA’s ASC program and Cornelis has been rooted in a shared commitment to advancing high-performance computing. Lynx reflects the results of that public-private R&D investment and will support the modeling, simulation and analysis capabilities that underpin the modern NNSA complex.”
Lynx is a key computing infrastructure investment for NNSA and is being integrated into LLNL’s high-performance computing environment, where it will support production modeling, simulation, and analysis for national security.
“Lynx represents an important milestone in NNSA’s work to evaluate and deploy next-generation high-performance computing technologies for mission use,” said Stephen Rinehart, Assistant Deputy Administrator for the NNSA’s Office of Advanced Simulation and Computing. “The system builds on NNSA’s Next-Generation High Performance Computing Network effort and strengthens the computing ecosystem supporting future ASC workloads.”
The Cornelis CN5000 fabric at the heart of Lynx utilizes the Omni-Path architecture, providing low-latency, lossless and congestion-free communication to maximize compute performance and efficiency for today’s HPC and AI workloads.
“The successful deployment of Lynx at LLNL marks an important milestone for CN5000 as a production-ready network for the most demanding and mission-critical computing environments,” said Brad Haczynski, Chief Commercial Officer of Cornelis. “With Lynx now in production in one of the world’s most advanced computing facilities, we have demonstrated that our CN5000 400Gbps solution is ready for broad commercial, academic, and government adoption. We look forward to CN5000 delivering the performance and price-performance organizations need to accelerate their HPC and AI initiatives.”
About Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory provides solutions to our nation’s most important national security challenges through innovative science, engineering and technology. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration.
About the National Nuclear Security Administration
Established by Congress in 2000, NNSA is a semi-autonomous agency within the U.S. Department of Energy that protects our nation by designing and delivering a safe, secure, reliable, and effective U.S. nuclear stockpile; forging solutions that enable global security and stability through nonproliferation, counterproliferation, and emergency response; providing nuclear propulsion to power a global U.S. Navy; and leveraging transformative technologies to address emerging challenges.
About Cornelis
Cornelis delivers high-performance, scale-out and scale-up networking solutions that accelerate AI and HPC workloads. Cornelis technology enables lossless, congestion-free networking that reduces training time, improves inference, and maximizes compute utilization. From foundation model training to complex climate modeling and real-time analytics, Cornelis solutions power the most demanding workloads across commercial, academic, government, and cloud environments. With a focus on performance, scalability, and efficiency, Cornelis helps organizations achieve faster insights and greater return on infrastructure investments. Visit us at International Supercomputing (ISC’26) Booth E02 in Hamburg, Germany June 22-26, or learn more at www.cornelis.com.
Source: Cornelis
The post Cornelis CN5000 Network Powers New Lynx Supercomputer at LLNL appeared first on HPCwire.
The chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal agency created by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to protect American workers from discrimination, moved to delete the agency’s affirmative action rule that was implemented almost 50 years ago.
Chair Andrea Lucas, who was appointed by President Donald Trump, proposed to rescind the “Affirmative Action Appropriate Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964” rule on May 27. The rule has proved a barrier to her efforts to bring lawsuits on behalf of white men who say they were discriminated against at work — a barrier the rescission would get rid of.
The move, which was previously unreported, comes amid Lucas’s quest to characterize all employer efforts at diversity, equity, and inclusion as illegal race discrimination. The agency has filed lawsuits under her watch on behalf of white men at the New York Times and Coca-Cola, as well as investigations into Nike and Northwestern Mutual.
“This proposed rescission is part of this administration’s continued assault on equality for people of color and for women,” said former EEOC commissioner Jocelyn Samuels, who added that the change reflects Trump’s “solicitude for the fortunes of white men.”
The EEOC did not respond to a request for comment.
The rule Lucas wants to do away with was crafted shortly after the EEOC was granted litigation authority in 1972.
Racial discrimination had been rampant throughout American workplaces, and some employers wanted to act to correct those long-standing discriminatory practices and racial disparities in an affirmative way.
Responding to the call, the EEOC crafted the rule to allow for very narrow circumstances in which it would be permissible for employers to take race into account in such efforts.
To take advantage of the rule, employers have to do an analysis showing they had shut out women or people of color for a long time — in other words, that there were “prior discriminatory practices.” Only then can a hiring process favor, say, Black candidates for a job position.
The rule also gives employers some cover. Under the Civil Rights Act, employers can’t be held liable for taking action done in good faith to follow an EEOC regulation that was voted on by the commissioners, such as the affirmative action rule.
At least one large employer in the Trump EEOC’s sights has cited the rule. In its motion to dismiss the EEOC’s lawsuit, Coca-Cola referred to the agency’s affirmative action rule as proof that the agency has encouraged the very behavior it is now penalizing.
Samuels, the former EEOC commissioner, said Lucas’s move to get rid of the rule “could be part of an effort to remove a potential defense.”
The Supreme Court has found narrow approaches to affirmative action to be constitutional.
In the 1987 case Johnson v. Transportation Agency and the 1979 case United Steelworkers of America v. Weber, the court allowed employers, in the case of what it called a “manifest imbalance,” to temporarily take sex and race into account as part of plans to increase representation in particular jobs until women or people of color are commensurate with their share of the population.
Those decisions still stand.
“The law is set by the statute and the Supreme Court’s interpretation,” said Charlotte Burrows, a senior affiliated research scholar at New York University’s School of Law and a former EEOC chair. “The EEOC can’t change that.”
That’s true despite the Supreme Court’s decision in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College that struck down affirmative action in college admissions; that decision doesn’t apply to Title VII, which governs employment discrimination.
“The law is set by the statute and the Supreme Court’s interpretation. The EEOC can’t change that.”
That doesn’t mean the administration isn’t trying to change the law.
After Lucas asked the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice to weigh in, the department released an opinion that says, among other things, that the agency’s affirmative action guidelines “run further into unconstitutional territory.”
Lucas may be trying to blur the lines between affirmative action and DEI policies, but “they are two very distinct things,” Burrows said.
Employers can engage in a variety of perfectly legal approaches to diversity, such as having DEI programs that don’t give women or people of color more advantages but simply open the doors to more people.
“It is a messaging exercise that is part of this administration’s campaign to brand any form of proactive conduct on the part of employers to anticipate, preempt, and address barriers to equal employment opportunity as unlawful, race-based decision-making that disadvantages white men,” Samuels said. “This administration’s pronouncements have had really damaging effects on proactive programs that were designed to identify and address potential barriers before they ripened into discrimination.”
Lucas recently scrapped the EEOC’s previous Strategic Enforcement Plan that included as a priority that the agency “support employer efforts to implement lawful and appropriate diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) practices.” It was crafted through a lengthy public process and was slated to remain in place through 2028.
Instead, Lucas replaced the plan with a National Enforcement Plan that prioritizes going after DEI policies.
That move came after she had already directed agency officials to compile a list of cases in line with her own personal priorities, including “rooting out unlawful DEI-motivated race and sex discrimination,” and recorded a direct-to-camera video soliciting complaints from white men who feel they’ve been discriminated against at work.
Such cases have been accelerated through the agency’s processes, according to the New York Times, although staff have struggled to find complaints with merit.
The post Trump Admin Wants to Make It Easier for White Men to Sue for Discrimination appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Elected officials hold a position of public trust as they represent the interests of their constituents. As a result, arrests can impact their ability to serve the office. Accusations of assault against a Wilmington lawmaker have resulted in the launch of a legislative ethics investigation.
The Delaware State Police is investigating a Wilmington lawmaker on claims he punched a woman in the face.
A police report dated May 21 states that Rep. Josue Ortega (D-Wilmington) was sitting in the passenger seat of a vehicle with the woman in the driver’s seat when he punched her “in the left side of her face.”
The report also includes responses to a victim questionnaire, in which the woman claims Ortega had previously “threatened to kill” her or her children.
Delaware State Police spokesman Tyler Wright said in an email that “this is an active and ongoing investigation, and there are currently no warrants for Rep. Ortega.”
He said Ortega has not yet been charged with a crime, and was not arrested following the incident. He did not state why there was no arrest.
Ortega did not respond to requests for comment, but issued a statement Tuesday afternoon in which he unequivocally denied the accusations.
“Any suggestion that I have ever engaged in any act of domestic violence is patently untrue,” he said. “A thoughtful and deliberate review of this record will reveal that I was the one who sought, and was awarded relief, by the Courts regarding the abuse I have suffered from my accuser.”
The case seemingly came to the fore after a Facebook user, who appears to be the alleged victim, publicly posted that Ortega had punched her and that it had occurred in front of her 3-year-old child. She added photos to the post that raised concerns.
In a statement published Tuesday, leadership in the Delaware House of Representatives called the assault allegations “deeply troubling and disturbing.” They said the House Ethics Committee will begin a confidential review of the incident.
“We have also sent a formal letter to Rep. Ortega informing him of our intentions to investigate the matter further and requesting his full cooperation,” House leaders said in the statement.
It is not immediately clear when lawmakers first learned about the May incident.
House Speaker Melissa Minor Brown (D-New Castle) did not respond to a request for comment, but in a Facebook post said, “I want to make it very clear to all Delawareans that violence of any kind is not something that will be supported, condoned, or excused in the House of Representatives.”

Ortega was first elected to the Delaware House of Representatives in 2024 to represent District 3, an area of west Wilmington that includes the communities of Hilltop, Little Italy and Hedgeville.
He candidacy was boosted at the time after his a primary opponent, Brandon Fletcher-Dominguez, withdrew from the race just days before the primary election. At the time, state investigators had said Fletcher-Dominguez didn’t have a permanent residence within the district.
Ortega is the son of a former Wilmington city councilman, Demetrio “Junior” Ortega. The senior Ortega is seen as a hero by many within the city’s Puerto Rican community. He had served as executive director of the Latin American Community Center and organized the city’s first Hispanic week celebration in 1977.
Before being elected in 2024, Josue Ortega worked in constituent services for the city of Wilmington and New Castle County.
Ortega has not yet filed for reelection in the fall 2026 election, nor has any other candidate. He currently serves on six House committees, including the Education and Transportation committees, among others.
The lawmaker scored perhaps his most noticeable legislative victory in recent days, when Gov. Matt Meyer signed House Bill 290, which recognized Puerto Rico Day as a ceremonial holiday for the state.
This is a developing story that will be updated.
The post Wilmington Rep. Ortega investigated for domestic violence appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Review: The sequel tackles the reality of our screen-obsessed world with emotional depth and humor.
The Arch Linux User Repository "AUR" is facing another issue just days after more than 1,500 packages were found carrying malware. According to Phoronix, over 70 AUR packages have reportedly been modified to insert Russian spam and profane messages into users' shell configuration files. From the report: Nicolas Boichat with his AI/LLM detection bot detected some questionable messages appearing in AUR content. Russian messages were being added post-install to the bashrc / zshrc / Fish configuration, etc containing offensive messaging. Those commits happened on the 14th, after the recent malware fiasco. And then over the past day reporting on dozens of AUR packages having similar Russian messages containing offensive language. The latest update on that thread indicates more than 70 AUR packages having this Russian spam / offensive messaging. Among those various Python packages, Ruby packages, Llama.cpp, and others. At least the AI/LLM bots are proving helpful here in proactively picking up on some of the AUR abuses until the fundamental situation can be better handled.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A sinister new tablet threatens the honest-to-goodness toys’ existence, but Buzz, Woody and Jessie’s big tech moral battle feels compromised
The fifth episode of the Toy Story franchise is as slick and smooth as you like, as glitchless as Toy Story 6 or Toy Story 7 might be … or will be. As a piece of family-entertainment content it has the unblemished sheen of a brand new smartphone. But at heart, it has gone dead. For all the intensive, high-energy creative work that has clearly gone into this film’s every frame, the jeopardy, the novelty, the ideas and the passion are lacking; the crucial Toy Story theme of mortality feels underpowered, and the film even calamitously loses its nerve with its own big idea – those squeamish about spoilers had better look away now – the sinister way addictive tech devices are undermining the imaginative play that kids once had with honest-to-goodness toys.
Here a creepy tablet device called Lilypad (voiced by Greta Lee) enters the children’s world, but ultimately proves to be capable of sentimental self-sacrificial heroism when it comes to their mental health. Really? At least Lots-o’-Huggin’ Bear, the villain from TS3, had the courage of his evil convictions.
Continue reading...Has anyone ridden a One Wheel along the Joseph M. McDade Recreational trail along the border of PA and New Jersey? Are there any charge points along the trail? I saw something saying no motorized vehicles and speed limit 15mph (which I can stay at, really, promise). Just curious. Taking a family vacation in that area in a couple weeks, and saw the trail listed. Thanks!
Security footage shows Daphy Michel, a 31-year-old asylum seeker from Haiti, sitting on a bus stop bench for days in cold temperatures.
LONDON and AUSTIN, Texas, June 16, 2026 — ORCA Computing a leading quantum computing company, today announced the successful deployment of its PT Series photonic quantum computer to a major enterprise customer in Japan, supported by strategic partner Toyota Tsusho Corporation.
Deployed in less than one week within a live enterprise environment, the system will advance hybrid quantum–AI applications across advanced science and engineering, logistics, manufacturing, optimization and generative AI workloads in the manufacturing sectors. This marks a major milestone in the ORCA and Toyota Tsusho partnership and the first installation and operation of an ORCA photonic quantum system within a private-sector enterprise.
The quantum computing capabilities of the ORCA PT-2 system will be integrated into the cloud services which support global operations. By integrating directly into its production infrastructure, the enterprise customer is bringing photonic quantum computing into the enterprise IT stack, enabling hybrid quantum–AI workflows alongside existing high-performance computing (HPC) applications. Later this year, the system will be upgraded to ORCA’s next-generation PT-3 platform, delivering increased processing capability and deeper integration with classical compute environments.
“Toyota Tsusho is proud to support the introduction of this quantum computing capability into the Japanese enterprise market,” said Mr. Norihito Ohigashi, the manager of Digital Infrastructure Department at Toyota Tsusho. “This collaboration reflects our commitment to enabling advanced technologies that will help shape the future of manufacturing, and intelligent infrastructure.”
“This endeavor demonstrates how quickly quantum computing can move from concept to real-world operation,” said Richard Murray, PhD, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of ORCA Computing. “Installing ORCA’s PT-2 quantum system within an enterprise environment in under one week highlights the maturity of ORCA’s photonic quantum technology. Together with Toyota Tsusho, we are laying the foundation for commercial quantum advantage in industrial AI applications.”
This announcement builds on ORCA Computing’s progress in delivering data-center-ready quantum systems and advancing hybrid quantum–classical integration across generative AI and enterprise environments.
More from HPCwire: IQM Quantum Computers Delivers 20-Qubit System to TOYO in 1st Enterprise Deployment in Japan
About ORCA Computing
ORCA Computing, headquartered in London, UK, with offices in the United States, is a leading developer and provider of full-stack photonic quantum computing systems. The company delivers an innovative approach to quantum computing, providing robust, high-performance, and data center-standard systems for machine learning, generative AI and optimization workloads. ORCA Computing has successfully delivered eleven on-premises quantum computers to leading global customers, including the UK National Quantum Computing Centre, Montana State University, and the Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center.
Source: ORCA Computing
The post ORCA Computing and Toyota Tsusho Deploy Quantum System to Enterprise Customer in Japan appeared first on HPCwire.
Expands Hybrid Multi-cloud HPC Access to Thousands of Defense Users
CHICAGO, June 16, 2026 — Parallel Works, a provider of the ACTIVATE control plane for hybrid multi-cloud computing, today announced that the Department of Defense (DOD) High Performance Computing Modernization Program (HPCMP) has awarded the company a contract to provide DoD scientists, engineers, and acquisition engineering professionals with a single, unified interface for accessing on-premises and cloud computational resources to address complex technical challenges.
The Parallel Works ACTIVATE High Security Platform (HSP) will serve as the control plane for connecting Defense Supercomputing Resource Centers (DSRCs) with a secure commercial cloud infrastructure, enabling defense researchers and engineers to deploy mission-critical workloads across environments through a single interface. Users will be able to test and deploy workloads on next-generation cloud infrastructure before those capabilities are integrated into the DSRC.
“AI-driven warfare and the ramp to digital modernization are demanding far more model-sharing options than legacy infrastructure can provide,” said Keith Obenschain, Chief Technology Officer at HPCMP. “There is an urgent need for controlled unclassified information (CUI) and ITAR-capable cloud workflows. ACTIVATE HSP provides users with flexible access to powerful computing resources, while meeting the security requirements for sensitive defense workloads. These capabilities are critical for accelerating mission outcomes with the speed, scale and complexity of today’s operational challenges.”
Thousands of users across the Department of Defense and research institutions will have immediate access to DSRCs through Parallel Works’ HSP. The unified, hybrid multi-cloud offering has been approved for the highest non-classified DOD security level, Impact Level 5 (IL5). It is one of only three SaaS / PaaS software programs approved to handle export-controlled workload environments, including International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) and Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI).
By connecting secure cloud infrastructure, the platform creates a computing fabric capable of running large, distributed workloads across on-premises systems and multiple cloud providers through:
As the first major implementation under the HPCMP contract, the Naval Research Laboratory implemented Parallel Works HSP to advance the speed and reliability of its forecasting model workloads. By automating complex weather prediction workflows and securely orchestrating hybrid defense computing environments, the solution enables faster, more strategic decision-making in the mission-critical DoD operation. The improvements go beyond efficiency and ensure operational continuity and the proactive redistribution of workloads.
“The HPCMP contract allows our platform to support a broad range of mission-critical HPC and AI workloads across the DOD teams,” said Matthew Shaxted, CEO of Parallel Works. “It gives teams a secure sandbox to test, deploy AI and code-assist tools for model development, and run workloads on next-generation cloud architectures before DSRC integration, all connected across hybrid and multi-cloud environments, including AWS, Azure, Google and Oracle.”
About Parallel Works
Parallel Works ACTIVATE is a leading hybrid multi-cloud computing control plane, empowering teams with seamless provisioning, management and sharing of compute resources at scale across on-premises and cloud environments with advanced cost control and budgeting features. ACTIVATE facilitates collaborative research and enhances productivity through intuitive interfaces and API-driven processes, enabling the operating system for complex enterprise computing environments. For more information, visit Parallel Works at parallelworks.com.
Source: Parallel Works
The post Parallel Works to Provide Unified HPC and Cloud Control Plane for Defense Researchers appeared first on HPCwire.
Ex-defence secretary John Healey and ex-defence minister Al Carns have given resignation statements to MPs
Speaking to reporters at the G7, Keir Starmer also defended the defence investment plan (DIP) draft that led to John Healey’s resignation as defence secretary last week. Starmer confirmed that Dan Jarvis, the new defence secretary, is getting some input before the publication of the DIP in its final version.
Starmer said:
The position on investment in defence is firstly that we increased last year defence spending from 2.3% to 2.6%, that’s the biggest increase since the 1980s, and that means £270bn will be spent this parliament on defence.
On top of that [the] defence investment plan which obviously gives us capability for the future. We will put even more money in relation to that. I’ve been really clear that’s required difficult decisions, I have taken the decision to reallocate money from other departments.
Continue reading...Oklahoma primary set to test Donald Trump’s iron grip on the Republican party, while closely watched runoff underway in Georgia
Speaking to NBC News earlier, JD Vance claimed that nuclear inspectors will “absolutely” be allowed back into Iran as part of the deal with the US.
“Yes, absolutely,” Vance said. “In fact, one of the core parts of the agreement is that the [International Atomic Energy Agency] and the United States are going to help Iran destroy the highly enriched stockpile, and that’s something that’s spelled out very clearly” in the memorandum of understanding, he added.
Continue reading...Interest earnings on a CD account of this size will be substantial. Here's what savers can expect to earn right now.
Ministry of Defence investigates after shots apparently fired within 500 metres of vessel near Isle of Wight
The Ministry of Defence is investigating reports that a Russian frigate, the Admiral Grigorovich, fired warning shots within 500 metres of a British yacht sailing a little over 20 miles south of the Isle of Wight.
No injuries or damage have been reported by the yacht, which is continuing its journey. A boat from HMS Tyne has visited the yacht to gather details and check the crew are safe.
Continue reading...This week's Fed meeting could have major implications for credit card borrowers. Here's what to know beforehand.
The FBI said it disrupted an attempt to attack Sunday's UFC America 250 event at the White House, with court records detailing an alleged plot to use small drones carrying explosives.
General secretary of TUC calls Reform proposal ‘a smokescreen for slashing women’s rights’
A law proposed by Nigel Farage to “strengthen women’s rights” could cost female workers money by removing equal pay for work of equal value, unions have said.
A proposal, made by Reform UK days before the Makerfield byelection, to introduce a Women and Motherhood Protection Act that it says will restore equality before the law has been described as “shameless and deceptive”.
Continue reading...Hundreds of anti-regime protesters gathered outsideLos Angeles Stadium before Iran's match against New Zealand. The team's participation in the World Cup has been politically divisive, but alongside the large number of demonstrators, many fans expressed their support for Iranian players. Donald Trump said this week that a peace deal between Washington and Tehran was 'all signed' and that the strait of Hormuz would be 'completely open' from Friday
Continue reading...The sale will split ownership of the pizza chain between a U.S.-based private equity firm and a Chinese restaurant company.
Ukrainian president praises successful talks after Trump’s comments that ‘Russia should make a deal’ after G7 meeting
… and given the delay this morning, the meeting may or may not have happened already – guess we will find out at some point during the day.
in Évian-les-Bains
Continue reading...Ahead of ‘same job, same pay’ hearings, former call centre worker Nathan Brunne says pay gap is structural and widens at senior levels
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
Workers at the Australian Taxation Office’s outsource call centres are paid up to 40% less than their public service counterparts on the same phone lines, according to submissions lodged ahead of landmark “same job, same pay” hearings.
The pay gap, detailed by Nathan Brunne, a former worker on the ATO phone lines employed by the private equity-backed Probe Operations, widens at more senior call centre roles, with team leaders at outsource operators paid about $31 an hour compared with more than $52 at the tax office.
Continue reading...Governor Michele Bullock delivers a strong message after the Reserve Bank holds the cash rate at 4.35%, ending a run of three rises
RBA interest rates: Reserve Bank holds official cash rate at 4.35%
Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast
It will take more than a ceasefire in the Middle East to prevent the Reserve Bank from hiking interest rates again.
That was the strong message from the RBA governor, Michele Bullock, after the central bank held its cash rate at 4.35%, putting an end to a run of three increases.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Linuxiac: Mozilla has released Firefox 152, the latest update to its popular open-source web browser, with updated settings, improved media controls, experimental JPEG XL support, and various platform-specific fixes for desktop and Android. A key update is the redesigned Firefox Settings page, which now features clearer groupings, improved navigation, and a more streamlined structure for easier customization. The release also expands built-in spellchecker support, adding dictionaries for Croatian, English (UK), Georgian, Persian, Slovenian, Tajik, Tamil, Tibetan, Turkish, Welsh, and Xhosa. [...] Importantly, Firefox now offers experimental support for JPEG XL, an image format with improved compression over WebP, JPEG, PNG, and GIF. Users can enable JPEG XL in the Firefox Labs panel within Settings.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Child was fatally shot and his mother’s friend is wounded after Senatobia police responded to shoplifting call
A one-year-old boy is dead and another person wounded after a northern Mississippi police officer shot at a vehicle while responding to a shoplifting call, according to authorities and the child’s grandfather.
Kohen Wiley, the slain child, was in the car at the center of the shooting on Sunday alongside his mother and her friend, said Marquell Bridges, a local community advocate who is helping the family find legal representation.
Continue reading...The deal comes just days after SpaceX went public in the largest IPO in history, raising $75 billion to help fund its expansion.
A Consumer Reports study published Tuesday claimed that Uber and Lyft sell nearly identical rides for a wide range of rates.
Activists say blanket ban could prevent teenagers from finding peers and role models with similar conditions
Disability activists have said banning under-16s from social media risks cutting off a “lifeline for friendship” for disabled children and could push them into social isolation by preventing them from making connections online.
Charities and high-profile figures in disability advocacy said they were concerned that a blanket ban on social media would disproportionately affect teenagers who may not be able to meet people easily in real life or find peers with similar conditions.
Continue reading...Lisa Murkowski, a Republican senator, joins Democrats in bid to stop dismantling of Ocean Observatories Initiative
A group of Democratic senators and one Republican, as well as two Democratic House committees, sent letters on Monday to the National Science Foundation asking it to reverse course on its plan to dismantle a sprawling ocean monitoring network, with House lawmakers going further and accusing the agency of acting illegally.
The Ocean Observatories Initiative is a network of more than 900 ocean sensors built at a cost of $386m. Over the last decade it has tracked ocean circulation, marine ecosystems, climate change and extreme weather, producing data freely available to the public and informing more than 500 scientific publications. The project was slated to run another 15 to 20 years.
Continue reading...Litter-picking creatures emerge from underground for global franchise targeting nostalgic adults and gen Alpha
Move over Paddington Bear. After almost 30 years off screen, the Wombles – the furry, litter-picking creatures who live beneath Wimbledon Common – are set for a comeback.
The characters, whose motto is “Make Good Use of Bad Rubbish”, are being revived after the consolidation of the brand’s intellectual property rights under The Blair Partnership, which will oversee its global development.
Continue reading...Sunday's plane crash ripped a hole in the close-knit community of skydivers in the Midwest: adventure seekers who bonded over the adrenaline they get with every jump.
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Over at the G7 summit in Évian-les-Bains, European allies don’t appear to share Donald Trump’s optimism that the strait of Hormuz will reopen by Friday.
One G7 official has told Bloomberg there are serious difficulties in finding a common position among the group about how to deal with the situation in Iran.
One senior US official said traffic in the waterway would ramp up over time, and it could take as many as two weeks for shipping to significantly increase — and even longer for it to return to the levels seen before the US and Israel attacked Iran in February.
There are mines in the strait that still need to be cleared and shippers have different risk tolerances about navigating Hormuz, the official said.
Bosses of the world’s biggest shipping companies want to see more than just an agreement in place, mines need to be swept, and all hostilities must end, before tankers with hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of cargo will be able to traverse the Strait without fear of a flare up in tensions that could close the Strait mid-voyage.
Thus, even if a deal is signed to end the US/Iran war, the situation is not without its challenges. Brent crude remains above $80 per barrel, and it is unlikely to fall below this level until we start to see cargo ships successfully get through the Strait.
Continue reading...Oprah Winfrey chose "Little Wonder" by Sophie Chen Keller as her latest book club pick. Read a free excerpt here.
Samsung lets you be the "guy in the chair" with an interactive fan site tied to the upcoming Spider-Man: Brand New Day flick.
Any sense of relief is offset by doubts over durability of agreement and feelings of betrayal by Trump administration
In the rural town of Sirik, in southern Iran, temperatures over the past week have climbed to 45C (113F), and residents were still queueing to fill buckets of water days after US strikes reportedly damaged two drinking water facilities serving nearby villages.
Amid the water shortages and the looming fear of war came news of a possible deal between Washington and Tehran. But for those struggling to pick up the pieces in the aftermath, the announcement brought little relief.
Continue reading...Another story from the good old days from Raymond Chen.
During an exchange of war stories, a colleague of mine told one from back in the days when Windows included a processor emulator for x86-32 on systems that natively ran some other processor. (This has happened many times. And no, I don’t know which processor this particular story applied to.)
↫ Raymond Chen at The Old New Thing
So the core of the story comes down to this:
All in all, it took this program 256 kilobytes of code to initialize 64 kilobytes of data.
↫ Raymond Chen at The Old New Thing
The people working on Windows were so offended by this, they added code to the processor emulator just to fix this program.
Speaking of FreeBSD, the project released version 15.1 of their operating system today. As it’s a point release, it’s not full of massive changes, but it still brings the LinuxKPI-based wireless drivers up to Linux 7.0, support for the C23 version of the C has progressed considerably, Unicode has bene updated to version 17.0.0 and CLDR 48, and more.
Oscar-winning actor to write and direct fact-based movie that will follow a police officer mixed up in 2021 Capitol riot
Sean Penn will direct a new film about the January 6 riot set to star Bradley Cooper.
According to Deadline, the star, who recently won his third Oscar, will bring what’s been described as a “passion project” to the screen and act as both writer and director.
This article was amended on 16 June 2026. An earlier version stated that Sean Penn had won two Oscars, not three.
Continue reading...Yum! Brands, parent company of KFC and Taco Bell, to sell Pizza Hut as it faces dated stores and growing competition
The struggling Pizza Hut restaurant chain will be sold for $2.7bn by parent company Yum! Brands.
Yum! Brands said in February that it was considering selling Pizza Hut and the chain looked to close 250 US restaurants. The pizza chain has struggled with outdated stores and growing competition.
Continue reading...BOULDER, Colo., June 16, 2026 — Atom Computing today announced it has raised a total funding of more than $300 million to accelerate the development and deployment of commercial-scale fault-tolerant quantum computers. The total includes a $100 million Series C investment round and a signed Letter of Intent with the U.S. Department of Commerce for $100 million. The Series C round was led by Third Point Ventures, with participation from DCVC, Cisco Investments, and others.
Atom Computing has emerged as a leader in the race to build practical quantum computers using neutral atoms. The company recently announced a full demonstration of quantum error correction on its quantum computers, making it only one of two companies in the quantum industry to have done so, and the first company to do this demonstration using neutral-atom technology.
The company continues to build momentum using its neutral-atom technology. In 2023, Atom became the first quantum company to surpass the 1,000-qubit threshold for a universal gate-based system. The company is currently performing in Stage B of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (QBI) to explore paths to utility-scale quantum systems while also installing the world’s first commercial quantum computer with logical qubits in partnership with Microsoft. Atom Computing, named to Fast Company’s list of the World’s Most Innovative Companies, is also engaged in strategic collaborations with Cisco and NVIDIA.
“Quantum computing is entering a new phase where technical breakthroughs are translating into real-world systems and global adoption, fueled by our neutral-atom technology,” said Dr. Ben Bloom, CEO and Founder of Atom Computing. “We have strong momentum, and we are accelerating the development of utility-scale quantum computers and expanding access to our technology for customers solving some of the world’s most complex computational challenges.”
“Third Point Ventures has backed Atom Computing since their Series B, and leading this Series C reflects our deepening conviction in both the team and the technology,” said Curtis McKee, Partner at Third Point Ventures. “Neutral-atom quantum computing is one of the most credible paths to fault-tolerant systems at scale, and we believe commercial breakthroughs — in cybersecurity, defense, drug discovery, and financial modeling — are closer than the market appreciates. Atom Computing will be at the center of that moment.”
Atom Computing is using its recent funding for:
“Atom Computing’s roadmap and execution towards a neutral atom fault tolerant quantum computing is truly impressive. DCVC has been with the Atom team from the start, and we are delighted to double down!” said Dr. Prineha Narang, a DCVC Operating Partner.
“Quantum computing is rapidly evolving from a research pursuit into a technology platform with real-world enterprise implications. As it matures, the industry will require scalable infrastructure, secure networking, and strong ecosystem collaboration to support real-world deployment,” added Aleem Rizvon, Vice President, Cisco Investment. “We are excited to invest in Atom Computing as it establishes itself as a leader in neutral-atom quantum computing.”
As industries increasingly explore quantum computing for applications in materials science, pharmaceuticals, energy, and logistics, demand is growing for systems capable of unlocking commercially relevant quantum applications. Atom Computing’s unique approach to quantum computing, utilizing arrays of optically-trapped neutral atoms, is widely recognized as one of the most viable paths to reaching commercial utility and positions the company to play a leading role in enabling practical quantum applications in the years ahead.
More from HPCwire
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 1,200 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. In 2025 Atom Computing sold its first commercial on-premises quantum computer to QuNorth, a Nordic quantum initiative funded by EIFO and Novo Nordisk Foundation. Learn more at atom-computing.com.
Source: Atom Computing
The post Atom Computing Raises $100M Series C to Accelerate Deployment of Fault-Tolerant, Neutral-Atom Quantum Computers appeared first on HPCwire.
Expect to see more and more articles like this one, as more and more people discover that FreeBSD’s desktop/laptop support keeps improving rapidly.
FreeBSD 15 really feels like a breakthrough release.
It’s always been my favorite operating system for servers, but with the arrival of pkgbase, massive improvements to the LinuxKPI drivers, and the launch of the Laptop Support and Usability Project, it’s become my primary desktop, too.
↫ Cullum Smith
Since Smith tried FreeBSD 14.0, there’s now KDE Plasma 6.x, you can leave legacy X11 behind and use Wayland on FreeBSD now, and support for Intel Wi-Fi chips has greatly expanded. Apparently, battery life has improved as well, which is one of the hardest problems to solve for an operating system, especially with the wide variety of hardware combinations in the x86 world.
The rest of Smith’s article is a guide to setting up FreeBSD 15 with KDE and Wayland. It’s quite detailed with a ton of low-level tuning and fiddling, accompanied by clear and concise explanation of what the changes do, which I really like. Definitely a bookmark for anyone who wants to try out FreeBSD with KDE.
Luke Skywalker's lightsaber from the "Star Wars" sequel "The Empire Strikes Back" is expected to sell for at least $1 million at an upcoming auction.
Japanese technology company at centre of Post Office IT scandal is negotiating settlement with UK government over faulty software
The chair of Fujitsu, the Japanese technology firm at the centre of the Post Office IT scandal, has resigned after its board became aware of his “woman-related inappropriate conduct”.
The company said on Tuesday that Hidenori Furuta had stepped down after two years in the role.
Continue reading...A WHO official tells CBS News Ebola is still spreading in Congo after a month, as experts race to contain the outbreak in Central Africa.
Andy Lewis, also known for slacklining and tricklining, and Danny Joe Kregle of Arizona were killed in accident in Utah canyon
A weekend Base jumping accident in a Utah canyon killed two people, one of them a daredevil athlete best known for performing on stage with Madonna at the 2012 Super Bowl, authorities said.
The sheriff’s office in Grand county, Utah, confirmed one of the dead was Andy Lewis, an extreme athlete known for feats in Base jumping, a dangerous sport that involves parachuting to the ground after jumping from a tall fixed object such as a building, a bridge or a desert cliff overlooking a deep canyon.
Continue reading...At least eight states have banned the plant-derived product as more people use it and some claim it’s addictive
In 2024, Maizie Hepner, 24, started visiting a bar in Dubuque, Iowa that did not serve alcohol and instead offered beverages containing kava and kratom, psychoactive substances derived from plants.
The drinks were marketed as “herbal tea mocktails”. Hepner, who works as a server and bartender, said. “I asked the guy who owns” Kava Kava “if it was addictive, and he said, ‘Absolutely not’”.
Continue reading...Rejected citing ‘conflict of interest’, the ad took aim at Trump allies David Ellison, Paramount Skydance chief, and his billionaire father, Larry Ellison
Paramount Skydance refused to air an ad submitted by a press freedom group that heavily criticized the network’s leadership and merger with Warner Bros Discovery, with an advertising associate deeming it a “conflict of interest”.
The Freedom of the Press Foundation had hoped to air the 30-second ad during Sunday’s Ultimate Fighting Championship broadcast at the White House, which aired on the streaming service Paramount+ – though a client partner for Paramount told the organization’s ad-buyer that such placement was not guaranteed.
Continue reading...IPO mints Musk as world’s first trillionaire – now SpaceX is public, it will be harder than ever not to have a stake in its future
Hi and welcome to TechScape. Nick Robins-Early here, US tech and power reporter at the Guardian. I’m filling in for your usual host Blake Montgomery, who is out this week on vacation.
Today, we’ll be talking about the historic SpaceX IPO and the US government’s surprise order to limit the use of Anthropic’s most advanced AI model over cybersecurity concerns. I’ll also share a dispatch from Web Summit Rio, South America’s largest tech event.
SpaceX makes largest ever stock market debut, minting Musk as a trillionaire
After SpaceX’s huge IPO, Americans’ financial future will be bound to AI
How much money did Elon Musk make in SpaceX’s stock market debut?
Continue reading...Players deny their decision comes from place of hate
MLB says writing on caps is a violation of league rules
Major League Baseball has issued a statement critical of players who wrote Bible verses on their Pride Night hats after an incident at a San Francisco Giants game last week.
MLB celebrates Pride month during June and most teams choose a home game to acknowledge the LGBTQ community and its baseball fans. The Giants, who are based in a city with a large LGBTQ population, often make an extra effort.
Continue reading...Details of potential threat were not immediately disclosed, after event was held on Donald Trump’s 80th birthday
Law enforcement officials disrupted “planned attacks” meant to target the UFC cage fighting show staged at the White House this past weekend, and multiple people were in custody, said Kash Patel, the FBI director.
The nature of the potential threat was not immediately disclosed, with additional details expected to be released once charges are unsealed later Tuesday.
Continue reading...Administration had claimed algae at Lincoln Memorial pool would be cleared after the renovation, but it has proliferated amid warm weather
Donald Trump’s $14.2m bid to turn the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool from what the US president described as a “filthy” and “dirty” site into a “beautiful” monument has encountered a hitch.
The water is green again.
Continue reading...Judge decides Timothy Hudson should face trial as an adult, though he will be held in an approved juvenile facility
A teenager charged with sexually assaulting and killing his 18-year-old stepsister on a Carnival Cruise ship turned himself over to the custody of federal authorities on Monday after a judge reversed his decision on pre-trial release now that the teen is charged as an adult.
The US attorney’s office in Miami confirmed that Timothy Hudson was in custody. US magistrate Judge Edwin Torres filed the order to revoke Timothy’s pre-trial release last Wednesday, but the order was sealed until Monday afternoon. The order stated that Hudson should surrender to US marshals at the federal courthouse in Tampa on Monday morning.
Continue reading...Just bought my first one wheel (XR Classic) and was super stoked to install my shiny blue fender.
Only to find out, that I can’t install my fender, because I didn’t purchase…. A fender delete kit?
I DONT WANNA DELETE THE FENDER I WANT TO INSTALL THE FENDER.
Idk if I’m missing something here, but why are the parts that you need to install a fender, sold in a kit called fender delete kit???
In the same line, I hate that FM called this board the XR classic because it’s damn near impossible to google anything related to this board, since everything that comes up is related to the OG XR 🙄
The iconic phone grip has been redesigned and goes on sale today at Apple Stores.
We have opened the AI Pandora’s box. Now we have to make the best of it
On 9 June, Anthropic released its Fable generative AI model. Three days later, the US government classified it as a dangerous munition, and used its export-control authority to prohibit any foreign nationals from accessing it. Unable to differentiate between Americans and foreigners, the company shut off access for everyone.
The government’s actions won’t help. The problem isn’t any one particular model; it’s the general trend of increasing AI capabilities. And any real solution requires the sort of collective action that just isn’t possible right now.
Bruce Schneier is a security technologist who teaches at the Harvard Kennedy School at Harvard University
Continue reading...Kimba is an AI-powered sleep technology system that releases personalized scents to help you sleep better. Here’s how it works.
President Trump, who is in France for the G7 summit, said he didn't like that Israel attacked Lebanon two hours before the U.S. signed an agreement with Iran.
A wildfire burning through Riverside county, east of Los Angeles, has grown to about 3 sq miles (8 sq km), Californian authorities report.
Evacuation orders were issued in parts of the county and shelters have been set up for displaced residents. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said more than 250 personnel and more than 40 fire engines had been deployed to tackle the blaze
Continue reading...Two Belarusians detained over attack on Robert Kuzovkov, who is also known as Semyon Skrepetsky
A Russian artist critical of Vladimir Putin and the Chechen leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, has been shot and killed in the eastern Polish town of Biała Podlaska, a prosecutor has said.
Five shots were fired at the victim, including one to the head, in the attack on Monday, said Marcin Kozak, a spokesperson for the district prosecutor in Lublin. Two Belarusians have been detained but not charged in connection with the case, he added.
Continue reading...Serena and Venus Williams are getting back together as a doubles team, at Wimbledon. The last time the sisters were a doubles duo was at the 2022 U.S. Open, where they lost their opening match.
Verizon's plans offer the highest data speeds and options to upgrade phones every year.
With election denialists installed in key positions, officials using series of measures to change voting rules
The Trump administration is waging war on voting rights using justice department lawsuits, FBI investigations, and an executive order to limit voting by mail, moves mirroring the US president’s false claims he lost the 2020 election due to voting fraud, say election experts and ex-officials.
Since Donald Trump began his second term, numerous 2020 election denialists have been installed in key agencies such as the DoJ, the FBI and elsewhere to pursue widely discredited claims of fraud, which can intimidate election workers and voters in swing states that Trump lost to Joe Biden in 2020.
Continue reading...Verizon is working to keep customers with weekly perks and some big giveaways.
Borrowers face stricter payment timelines after Biden-era Save repayment plan was ended by Donald Trump
The American student loan repayment system is set to undergo a significant overhaul next month, changing the way millions of borrowers pay off their debt.
The series of changes, which take effect on 1 July, are a result of the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act that was signed last summer and a recent court ruling that ordered the end of the Biden-era Save repayment plan. Borrowers will be facing stricter payment timelines and less forgiveness, what will be the latest in a series of big changes to the student loan system in just a few years.
Continue reading...New simulations suggest Venus' extremely slow backward rotation may have been triggered by a high-angle collision with a fast-moving object roughly one-tenth its mass. The impact could have dramatically altered Venus' spin and melted nearly its entire mantle. Universe Today reports: Venus' bizarre and extraordinarily slow retrograde rotation on its axis has long puzzled planetary scientists. But in a new paper presented at the recent European Geosciences Union General Assembly in Vienna, the authors argue that their models indicate that a high angle moon-sized, high-velocity impactor likely triggered Venus's strange 248-day rotation. And it probably happened within the first 50 million years of Venus' formation. [...] The team found that an impactor that is about a tenth of Venus' mass hitting the planet at a high angle could drastically slow the early young planet's rotation. Depending on the actual impact parameters, we can slow down a rapidly rotating early Venus to rotation rates that are that are compatible with long-term evolution towards a slow rotating planet, says [Cedric Gillmann, the paper's lead author and a planetary scientist at ETH Zurich]. Or even in some cases with large energetic impact that happen with a tangential impact that would even put planets early on in already a retrograde but faster rotation, he says. In the simulations, giant impacts expectedly produce surface magma oceans, the paper's authors note. Their relative depths vary depending on impact properties: from a shallow melt layer in the order of 100km thick to a fully molten mantle, they note. If the surface can radiate heat to space efficiently, the magma ocean cools down quickly, they write. If Gillmann and colleagues are correct, Venus' likely impactor also melted some 99 percent of Venus' mantle. That is, the interior structure that extends between its core and crust. You will get rid of that impact heat pretty efficiently, and after a few hundred million years, you end up seeing an evolution that is very difficult to distinguish from a case where you don't have an impact, says Gillmann. What role the impact may have played in Venus' lack of plate tectonics, however, remains open for debate. But it's known that Venus' lack of a large-scale carbon recycling mechanism likely led to its current runaway greenhouse.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Iran's World Cup team coach says it was ordered to leave the U.S. and return to its training base in Mexico only a few hours after opening its politically charged tournament with a draw.
Country acts amid Iran war inflation pressures, but US Fed and Bank of England expected to hold rates
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) has raised interest rates to a 31-year high as it tries to dampen inflationary pressures created by the Iran war.
Policymakers in Tokyo raised the BoJ’s short-term policy rate by a quarter of one percentage point, to 1% from 0.75%, and warned that companies were passing on rising oil costs to each other at a “relatively fast pace”.
Continue reading...Hania Ahmed, 9, was killed in a police shooting in Pakistan after robbers confronted her family as they visited a relative’s home
Williams sisters have won six doubles titles at SW19
French Open finalist Chwalinksa awarded wildcard
Serena and Venus Williams will rekindle their doubles partnership at Wimbledon this month after receiving a wildcard into the women’s doubles draw. The All England Club announced the recipients on Tuesday morning in one of the most highly anticipated wildcard announcements in recent memory considering Serena’s return this month after four years of retirement.
Serena, a seven-times singles champion, did not request a singles wildcard and the 44-year-old has remained coy about whether she plans to return for singles. Venus, a five-time singles champion, has also not received a singles wildcard. Venus has competed on the tour since her debut in 1994, only stopping due to health-related issues. She turns 46 on Wednesday.
Continue reading...What I’m Discussing Today:
The Beautiful Game, the Knicks’ Glory, and Human Cockfighting on the White House Lawn: From Team USA to the Knicks to Trump’s UFC lawn party, last weekend showed us the best and worst of the wide world of sports.
Kareem’s Daily Quote: How should we calculate the value of the human soul?
SpaceX makes Elon Musk the first trillionaire: A trillion dollars makes for a flashy headline, but is it something worth celebrating?
Inside the White House Freakout Over the Epstein Files: What happens when you’re more interested in protecting the boss’s image than pursuing justice for Jeffrey Epstein’s victims.
What I’m Watching: The richest man in the world builds a fantastic flying machine…and it’s not Elon Musk.
Jukebox Playlist: Jon Batiste’s “Big Money” asks the right questions for this moment.

Last weekend was a helluva weekend to be a sports fan. It started with Team USA’s inspiring 4-1 victory over Paraguay at Friday night’s World Cup match in front of 70,000-plus cheering fans (including yours truly) at L.A.’s Sofi Stadium. As someone old enough to remember when soccer was an afterthought in the United States, it was truly impressive to see so many people turn out to watch what has long been known, in the rest of the world, as “the beautiful game.” In the U.S., it still has some growing to do: the average player’s salary in Major League Soccer is about $632,000, compared to $5.34 million in Major League Baseball and around $11 million in the NBA. Until soccer can match America’s major sports in salary, it won’t be able to compete with European programs in player development because the best athletes, given the chance to earn 10-20 times as much money playing baseball or basketball, will always gravitate towards the more lucrative sports. But soccer has come a long way since Pelé brought the sport’s unique excitement to America just over 50 years ago.
Still, if you ask me what’s the most beautiful game, I’m going to say basketball ten times out of ten. And it doesn’t get any more beautiful than last week’s NBA finals series between the Knicks and the Spurs, which culminated Saturday night in San Antonio with the Knicks’ first NBA Championship since 1973. That’s not a season I like to think about too much: my Milwaukee Bucks lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Golden State Warriors and their defensive center Nate “The Great” Thurmond, who held me to 22.8 points per game after I’d averaged more than 30 in the regular season. But enough about me and ’73. This year’s Knicks squad were 2-1 underdogs against the Spurs and their exciting young center Victor Wembanyama, and even though I grew up in Harlem I found myself rooting for Wemby, who reminds me a little of myself at that age.
Then again, maybe I’ve held a bit of a grudge against the Knicks ever since my rookie year, when they eliminated my Bucks in the Eastern Conference finals. Whatever, I’m over it now, after their breathtaking post-season run, led by the undersized but enormous-hearted point guard Jalen Brunson, who scored a team playoff record 45 points in the deciding game, sinking distant threes and amazing high arcs over the longest arms in the league. It came as a surprise to exactly no one when he was named finals MVP. I was also greatly impressed by OG Anunoby, who averaged 21 points per game in the finals, and saved game four at the Garden with his already legendary tip in. And I have to give a shout-out to center Karl-Anthony Towns, who won the league’s Social Justice Champion Award named in my honor in 2024 for his work expanding voter rights in Minnesota, where he was playing for the Timberwolves. I don’t have the time or space to talk about every player on the team, but they all shared in the glory Saturday night, and special praise has to go out to coach Mike Brown, who helped the underdogs overachieve when it mattered most.
From San Antonio, we go to that hockey Mecca Las Vegas, where the Golden Knights lost the Stanley Cup finals to the Carolina Hurricanes on Sunday, failing to recapture the NHL title they won in 2023. But the most talked about sporting event Sunday night was the UFC card held on the White House lawn, allegedly to celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary, but conveniently taking place on President Trump’s 80th birthday. I don’t have a lot to say about that, except that it seemed entirely appropriate to celebrate Trump’s birthday with a sport that a much better man, the late Senator John McCain, famously dubbed “human cockfighting.” That this event was taking place in the backyard of what has long been known as the People’s House—while being shown on pay TV that fewer than 20 percent of the American people subscribe to—is entirely on-brand. So is the fact that Trump invested in the UFC just before announcing the event, once again exploiting the office of the presidency for personal profit. On a weekend in which the best aspects of sports competition were just about everywhere you looked, the repulsive view of a Death Star-style Octagon at our nation’s capital is the one we may be doomed to remember the longest.
“For what doth it profit a man, to gain the whole world and lose his own soul?” Mark 8:36
In the Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln praised the Union soldiers who had given their lives so that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” That egalitarian ideal has always been something of a myth, never more so than today, when our government looks a whole lot like one “of the billionaires, by the billionaires, and for the billionaires.” Or should I say trillionaires?
Which brings me back to those words above, spoken by the leading character of what Donald Trump claims is his favorite book (just ahead of The Art of the Deal). The word “profit” implies both a ledger and a contract, stapled together with 2000 years of moral authority. I think that framing is entirely intentional. We run our lives like balance sheets: what we’re worth, what we’ve been paid, what the whole project cost us. Fine, Jesus says: Let’s run the numbers. What have you actually gained, and what did the purchase cost?
The math is ugly.
The soul, in daily practical terms rather than theological ones, is the operating system underneath our individual actions. It’s the constellation of values and commitments that makes a person recognizable as a human being rather than a computer or a robot. Each time we compromise our ideals, we make a small withdrawal from our account, and by the time our accounts are empty, we’ve forgotten what our ideals were to begin with.
We have built a culture that celebrates the world-gainers with very little curiosity about what they traded to get there. Net worth has become our proxy for wisdom, which is how we end up inviting the wealthiest person in the room to lecture us on education, public health, and democratic values—subjects where accumulated fortune confers exactly zero wisdom or expertise. How did we arrive at a place where the size of a man’s balance sheet determines how seriously we take his opinions about the rest of our lives? Jay Gould, the Gilded Age railroad magnate, built his empire through documented fraud and market manipulation, and he died widely described as the most hated man in America. Check his ledger and he had gained the whole world; but the ledger couldn’t capture the loss of reputation and esteem.
I find Orson Welles’ treatment of this transaction in Citizen Kane as profound as anything written on the subject in the last century. The movie opens with a deathbed revelation: a man who gained everything the world could offer dies speaking a word that means nothing to anyone who knows him: “Rosebud.” If you haven’t seen it, stop here and go watch it—not only is it one of the best movies ever made, it’s also one of the most enjoyable.
Alright, if you’re still with me, you know that Rosebud was the name of Charles Foster Kane’s childhood sled, which symbolizes everything he gave up in exchange for all that money and power he acquired. The transaction never announced itself. Kane didn’t know, in any given moment, how much of his soul he was trading to get what he thought he wanted. But none of those things were what he wanted as he breathed his final breath.
I wonder what Donald Trump’s or Elon Musk’s “Rosebud” will be. A giant octagon on the White House lawn or a trillion dollars they wouldn’t be able to spend in a thousand lifetimes? I doubt it, but I don’t know anything about their inner lives. I’m not sure they do, either.
A Liverpool fan and an influencer explain what it’s like to be hired for a Truman Show-style experiment
When Kevin Kotoko heard that he had been selected as one of Fox’s chief World Cup watchers he had no hesitation in accepting. What self-respecting football fan could turn down the opportunity to be paid $50,000 (£37,000) to take in all 104 games at this World Cup, after all?
The only issues were that he would have to watch every match in a custom-built viewing cube in the heart of Times Square and let his employers know that he wouldn’t be coming in for work the next day. “I quit my job,” admits Kotoko, a Liverpool fan who is from Florida and was working as a waiter in a restaurant. “I found out on Thursday that I had won the competition and so I told them on Friday that would be my last day!”
Continue reading...There is a fundamental tension between extreme wealth and the very possibility of democracy. That’s because extreme wealth is always an extreme power
The stock market listing of SpaceX has led to an outpouring of celebration, from Wall Street to Silicon Valley. Yet those who rejoice in Elon Musk’s fortune surpassing the $1tn mark need to be reminded of a simple and vital truth: the mere existence of trillionaires is a major political and economic problem, probably the defining issue of our time.
Simply put, there is a fundamental tension between extreme wealth and the very possibility of democracy. Extreme wealth is always an extreme power. It’s the power to stifle competition, the power to shape public discourse, the power to influence policymaking, the power to buy elections, the power to stall social progress.
Gabriel Zucman is a professor of economics at the Paris School of Economics, a summer research professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and founding director of the International Tax Observatory. He is the author of We Need to Tax Billionaires.
Continue reading...Janeese Lewis George’s ‘people-first platform’ appears to have given her an edge as how the next mayor will handle Trump is key question on residents’ minds
There’s a transplant from Mar-a-Lago at the center of DC’s mayoral primary race on Tuesday, but his name is nowhere on the ballot.
For the first time in more than a decade, Washington DC will have a new mayor this year as the city faces concerns about how to address public safety, housing affordability, and increased federal immigration enforcement in the district. How the next mayor handles Donald Trump is also key question on residents’ minds, with many closely watching to see if any of the president’s supporters are pouring money into the race, as well as the primaries for the city’s congressional delegate.
Continue reading...Josh Hokit’s comment, made after the match at the White House, was condemned widely, but not by the president
Donald Trump is facing growing pressure to condemn an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) competitor who used a White House appearance to push a sexist, racist and transphobic conspiracy theory about former first lady Michelle Obama.
At a UFC event on the south lawn on Sunday, the US president’s 80th birthday, Josh Hokit, a fighter, shouted into the microphone in front of Trump: “Michelle Obama is a man. Am I right, America?”
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Speed cameras have been proliferating in Delaware after the state legislature passed a bill allowing for their introduction statewide in 2023. Speed cameras recently installed in New Castle County have caught thousands of drivers.
During a two-month period this spring, traffic cameras deployed on two roads near Marshallton recorded more than 20,000 speeding cars.
New Castle County Police Sgt. Gregg Bruno reported the data during a meeting of the County Council last week. He said the county had mailed more than 14,000 written warnings to drivers during a grace period from April 15 to May 16 — the first month the cameras were deployed.
Since then, county officials have sent out more than 3,000 citations, and are processing another 3,515, Bruno said. Fines for the tickets start at $20, he said.
The new data appears to support past complaints from Marshallton residents who have said their roads had been besieged by speeders. But left unclear is whether the larger community would push back against the increasing existence of government-deployed cameras in public places.
Asked if the county might expand its speed camera program to new locations, New Castle County spokeswoman Natalie Criscenzo said officials are “focused on the existing locations and continuing to evaluate program performance and safety impacts before considering any potential expansion.”
The county’s current two speed cameras are located near Marshallton, along Milltown Road and along McKennans Church Road. They automatically issue citations or warnings to the owners of cars traveling 6 mph or more above the speed limit.
Last year, the New Castle County Council passed an ordinance approving the installation of ticket-issuing cameras on county roads. Weeks later, Delaware lawmakers gave their authorization for the cameras when passing the state’s capital budget. They also allocated $60,000 to the county for the Milltown Road project.
At the time, the state also authorized a speed camera program for Newark’s busy Main Street.
Unlike speed cameras in construction zones, these cameras are permanently fixed, making their impact long-lasting.
The approvals followed outcry from Marshallton residents. After a County Council meeting last year, resident Jill Orensky recounted to Spotlight Delaware how in early 2024 she watched a Subaru veer off of Milltown Road and crash into her home, destroying its gas meter.
“We need streets for people instead of roads for commuters,” Orensky said then.

During the county grace period this spring, the speed camera on 30-mph McKennans Church Road recorded a driver going 57 mph, Bruno said.
For Milltown Road, which has a speed limit of 35 mph, the highest speed was 66 mph.
“The average (speed) really has consistently stayed within 10 mph over the posted limit,” Bruno said in his testimony to the County Council.
A total of 345 drivers had received repeat citations, “which is a lot,” Bruno said.
Asked about county revenues from the citations, Bruno said he did not yet know the exact amount of money generated.
“We are not making millions of dollars,” he said.
The Delaware legislature first passed a bill to allow for speed cameras across the state in 2023.
A speed camera installed along Route 1 near Lewes this November issued nearly 25,000 tickets within a month, according to a report from the Cape Gazette.
The post New traffic cameras in New Castle County capture thousands of speeders appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
In Delaware, county governments are the source of development decisions, paramedic services and sewer system management, among other functions. The Kent and Sussex county budgets for the 2027 fiscal year have entered the final stages with balanced expenses and revenues, unlike the major deficit faced by New Castle County. Still, leaders in both counties say keeping up with balanced county finances as demand for services increases could become a challenge in future years.
With the start of the 2027 fiscal year rapidly approaching on July 1, Delaware’s central and southern counties are slated to pass annual budgets without property tax rate increases or departmental cuts.
This stands in stark contrast to New Castle County, which approved a 17% property tax hike last month to close a $42 million budget deficit.
Kent and Sussex county officials said they have been able to work through this budget season without any major hiccups – unlike other jurisdictions in the state – thanks to a longstanding culture of lean spending combined with a growing tax base from residents moving to the area.
“It’s definitely tough to keep up with your revenues when inflation just continues to increase, but we’re very conservative,” Sussex County Finance Director Gina Jennings told Spotlight Delaware. “We always look at ways to cut.”
Kent and Sussex counties also do not have a county-run police department, which is a major expense for their northernmost counterpart. Spending on public safety, though, such as the counties’ emergency medical services and new ambulances, was still one of their largest expenses, respectively.
Sussex County also does not have a Parks & Recreation department – a service that cost Kent County $5.2 million last year.
The Kent County Levy Court passed its $46 million operating budget on June 9. The budget for Delaware’s smallest county by population includes a property tax rate of 5.72 cents per $100 of assessed value, which is consistent with the previous two years.
But the Levy Court also approved a 11% sewer user rate increase, which will raise residents’ sewer bills by about $50 per year, County Finance Director Susan Durham said.
The Sussex County Council will soon vote on its $107 million operating budget, which includes a property tax rate of 2.14 cents per $100 of assessed value – unchanged in more than three decades. The county’s proposed budget also includes a sewer usage rate increase of $36 per household and a $90 water service charge increase.
The Sussex County Council will hold a public hearing and final vote on its proposed FY 2027 budget beginning at 10:15 a.m. Tuesday, June 16. The meeting will take place inside Sussex County Council Chambers, located at 2 The Circle Georgetown.
Despite the relatively smoother budget processes compared to New Castle County this fiscal year, Kent and Sussex leaders said they are concerned about long-term financial sustainability. As expenses and residents’ expectations of what services a county government should provide both rise, population growth – and therefore tax base – has the potential to plateau.
Durham, the Kent County finance director, said she anticipates more difficult choices between continuing to increase funding for public safety and moving ahead with capital projects in future years.
Kent County’s $46 million operating budget, which grew by 6% from the past fiscal year, includes relatively standard increases to both revenue generated by taxes and departmental budgets.
County officials seemed to be in agreement about the county’s budget, except for the question of the sewer usage rate increase, which became a point of contention during the final budget discussions.
The Kent County Levy Court ultimately passed its budget unanimously.
The county will spend $19 million, or 41% of its total general fund expenditures, on public safety. That figure is up $2 million from last year, County Administrator Kevin Sipple said. The county is also allocating $1.5 million to its volunteer fire companies.
Because the county does not have its own police force, its public safety dollars are directed to a combination of the county Emergency Medical Services (EMS), 911 communications and the emergency management department, which deals with disasters. The county is also funding the renovation of an EMS station, Sipple said.
Kent County’s general fund revenues, which match projected expenditures at $46 million, will primarily come from a combination of county property taxes; its realty transfer tax – which is imposed at the same rate on property purchases across the three counties; and grants from the federal and state governments.

The property tax rate will remain stagnant this fiscal year, but Durham said property tax revenue is projected to increase from $14.6 million to $15 million because of new home construction. She described the county as having been in “a period of growth for over three years,” but not one that they can count on to help balance the budget in future years.
Kent County completed its property tax reassessment in 2023, a year before New Castle and Sussex, so re-assessed home values did not factor into the increased tax revenue this year.
Kent County also has library tax districts, which are generally consistent with school district boundaries within the county, to fund its five public libraries. Those tax rates all remained the same in this year’s budget.
While Levy Court Commissioners unanimously approved the FY27 budget, tensions arose over the county’s sewer usage rate. Some commissioners said the rate already has seen a number of large increases in recent years.
County staff recommended a 3% to 6% user rate increase this year, but elected officials pushed instead for an 11% increase – or $50 per year more on most residents’ bills.
They described the jump as an effort to get ahead of the curve on debt service payments and funding future sewer improvement projects.
The 11% increase ultimately was included in the approved budget, but Levy Court commissioners Terry Pepper and Jody Sweeney disputed the rate hike, saying it was an unnecessary burden on residents in already tight economic times.
Sweeney said he took issue with the argument made by another Levy Court commissioner that the higher sewer rate would only amount to one fast food dinner for a family.
“This is what politicians say to justify increases, but to the family of four working 2-3 jobs to make ends meet, that McDonald’s meal may have been all they had,” Sweeney said at the June 9 meeting,
The 11% user rate increase will generate about $460,000 more in revenue for the county’s sewer fund this year, Durham said.
The Sussex County budget includes new initiatives this year, such as a building permit surcharge to help fund public schools and additional programs directed toward public safety. Still, county officials said the government’s longtime ethos of low taxes and limited government largely remains intact.
The county’s $107 million general fund budget increased by 3.6% this year, which Jennings, the county finance director, attributed to standard inflation increases.
Despite Sussex County’s position among some of the fastest growing in the country, the revenue generated by property taxes is only projected to increase by $130,000 from last year to about $17.9 million.
This, Jennings told Spotlight Delaware, is because last June’s property tax reassessment substantially shifted the value away from growing parts of the county – like the Millsboro area – toward eastern beach communities, where less development is taking place.
In previous years, population growth had created around a $600,000 increase in property tax revenue annually.
As a result of reassessment, the county will need to rely on other funding sources, like the realty transfer tax – which provides money to both the county and the state when someone purchases a property – and other building permit fees to balance the budget and retain the county’s tradition of keeping property taxes “so low,” she said.

A major new revenue source this year is a proposed building permit fee for schools, which will charge a fee of $5 per $1,000 of construction value for a building permit for all new residential and commercial development.
The fee is projected to generate between $5 million and $7 million in revenue per year, to be given to public schools in the county for capital improvement projects like expanding classroom capacity, Jennings said. As the county’s population has expanded in recent years, a number of schools have struggled with overcrowding and a lack of funding for building expansion projects.
Get Involved
The Sussex County Council will hold a public hearing and final vote on its proposed FY27 budget beginning at 10:15 a.m. on Tuesday, June 16. The meeting will take place inside Sussex County Council Chambers, located at 2 The Circle Georgetown.
On the spending side, the county plans to direct $48.3 million, or 45% of its operating budget, to public safety.
County Council members and Jennings both described public safety, and in particular EMS services, as a focus of the FY27 budget.
“We are really ramping it up this year,” Jennings said.
This push includes purchasing a new ambulance for each of the county’s 21 EMS companies over the next seven years and a new billing service for all the companies. Together, these initiatives will cost the county about $2 million per year, Jennings said.
In recent years, independent libraries in Sussex County have struggled for funding while increasing the services they provide to meet community needs. This spring, the libraries undertook a campaign lobbying the county council to increase its library tax rate, which is their largest funding source.
The county’s FY27 budget does not include an increase in the library tax rate. However, Jennings said the shifting in property values from reassessment amounted to a 10% increase in county funding for libraries, compared to the typical 3% to 4% increase to match inflation.
The county is also directing $2.4 million from its operating budget to open space and farmland preservation programs.
It remains to be seen whether the county council will pass the budget in its current form, or make changes to county staff’s proposed budget.
However, elected officials and county staff alike said more people moving to Sussex County has brought a greater demand for services and expectation of their government, which will soon have to be reconciled with the county’s historical commitment to lean government spending.
“We have typically been a county of low taxes, low services,” County Councilman Steve McCarron told Spotlight Delaware. “Every ask comes with a price tag.”
Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.
The post Kent, Sussex budgets include no tax increase, public safety focus appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
In recent years, the homeless community in Wilmington has grown in size. How to best serve that population while trying to connect them to services to improve their situations has proved to be a contentious debate in the city. A plan to sanction an encampment to coalesce the population was abandoned in just a few weeks.
As the sun set Monday, a tent encampment in Christina Park sat mostly empty, marking the end of a controversial chapter in Wilmington’s response to homelessness.
Government-issued tents lay collapsed on the ground, while a handful of private tents remained standing. Newly installed fencing circled the encampment, and a gaggle of police stood just inside its gates.
Throughout the day, the officers had allowed people who had called the park home for the past several months to leave the enclosure while carting away their meager possessions. For some it was another moment of turbulence in their difficult lives.
For Ron “Philly” Simmons, a park resident who had acted as a de-facto leader of the encampment, the city “should’ve left us alone.”

Most had another place to sleep that night after city officials and nonprofits had lined up immediate housing. But the question on the minds of many was what would happen after their housing benefits expired in the coming weeks or months. Wilmington officials had repeatedly emphasized that tent camping in public spaces in the city is illegal.
Mayor John Carney said last week that the city’s experiment in sanctioning the encampment had accomplished its goals of directing unhoused people to a designated area where various organizations could provide coordinated services.
But several homeless advocates have argued the closure shouldn’t have happened — or should have been delayed until permanent housing options became clearer.
Earlier this month, the Wilmington City Council even passed a resolution urging Carney to “immediately halt any forced removal plans at Christina Park.”
Still others expressed heartache with how the city ultimately carried out the evictions of the park’s residents.
While standing inside the park enclosure on Monday, City Council President Ernest “Trippi” Congo acknowledged that the optics of chain link fencing and police surrounding the encampment “doesn’t look good at all.”
Early Monday morning, work crews installed the fencing around the perimeter of the encampment.
Afterward, only city officials and certain service providers were allowed to enter and assist park residents moving out of their tents. Congo said he believed the Carney administration installed the fences to prevent demonstrators from physically blocking the closure of the encampment.
“At several [past] council meetings, there were a lot of advocates who came and said directly to the administration, you will not force anyone to move,” he said.

Throughout the day, city and state officials floated in and out of the park, including Daniel Walker, Carney’s deputy chief of staff, who had become the mayor’s chief spokesperson on the issue in recent weeks.
Also visiting the park were several politicians. In addition to Congo, there were city council members Coby Owens and Michelle Harlee, former-City Councilman Kevin Kelley, State Rep. Madinah Wilson-Anton (D-Bear), and Curtis Linton, a union leader who is running a campaign for the New Castle County Council.
Officials from the Delaware Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health were also present.
Outside the gates of the enclosure, advocates from organizations that had opposed the closure gathered with food and snacks for residents.
In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, housing advocate Jacqueline Bryk said she and others were concerned that some residents could ultimately end up back on the streets — or even in jail — after their temporary housing terms ended. She then turned her concern to a critique of the Carney administration.
“At this point, I think the mayor is so convinced that there is a small group of people against him, and not that these citizens of Wilmington don’t want this,” she said.
Rachel Stucker, executive director of the Housing Alliance of Delaware, asserted that city officials, when running the encampment, had not done enough to plan for where residents would go once the encampment closed.
“I think there wasn’t enough of the ‘where are people going?’ How are we getting them there?’” she said.
During a press conference last week, Carney acknowledged a concern that some people may move to sleep in other public places in the city after Christina Park is closed. He noted then that the city may need assistance from state prosecutors.
“We do need support from the (Delaware) Attorney General in terms of if there’s a need for a prosecution. I don’t intend or want to have to prosecute folks for this, but if they’re violating the law, if they’re camping in a park after dark,” Carney said.

In an apparent response Monday, Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings said in a press release that her office would not assist the city in prosecuting people for simply sleeping in Christina Park. Instead, her team would only prosecute acts of violence, and trespassing or destruction of private property, she said.
“The City did not consult us in advance. After we learned about the evictions, we were clear with the Mayor’s office that, while our Community Engagement team would be available to assist with service referrals, we would not prosecute people for their nonviolent presence in a park,” the letter stated, saying such prosecutions would be a “moral failure.”
In an interview, Mat Marshall, spokesman for the Attorney General’s office, said prosecutions related to sleeping in other parks would be handled on a “case-by-case basis.”
While many present at the park’s closure on Monday were critical of Carney, a handful from outside his administration offered varying levels of support.
Kelley said the challenges of homelessness should be addressed by state officials, because “they’re the ones who have the resources.”
One Eastside neighbor who visited Christina Park Monday said he was happy about the closure. The resident, Edward Williams, called the encampment an “eyesore,” even while stating that it isn’t right for people to have to live outside in a park.
In contrast, Wilson-Anton, the Bear lawmaker, called Carney’s decision to close the encampment callous, saying she saw no reason for the city to evict people from Christina park.
“I’m just appalled,” she said.

For the park residents who were moving out of their tents, some noted they had been offered stays up to six months at the New Castle County Hope Center. Others, like Simmons, said they were only given two-week hotel stays.
Daniel Walker, Carney’s spokesman, said encampment residents had been offered an application to secure 90-day stays in temporary housing at locations, such as the YMCA and Sojourners’ Place.
Some refused initially, but as the encampment’s closure date approached, some began to reconsider, he said.
Walker said the city most recently offered two-week hotel stays as a temporary step before transitioning people into 90-day housing placements.
Still, two park residents told Spotlight Delaware on Monday evening that the city had not provided them with temporary housing following their departure from the park.
One was John “Jay” Simmons, a Wilmington resident, who said he had been staying at the encampment for two months. Simmons said he returned to the encampment on Monday afternoon after looking for work that day. He then asked city officials about being placed into a hotel.
Officials told him they would check whether his name was on a list, he said. But they left the park before giving him an answer, he said.
By Monday evening, as the city’s sanctioned encampment entered its final hours, Simmons said he still did not know where he would sleep that night.
“I don’t know,” Simmons said. “I’ll probably set up my tent somewhere else.”
The post Wilmington closes Christina Park homeless camp as questions linger about future appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Running next generation AI workloads requires robust infrastructure capabilities. Organizations need extreme compute performance and flexibility to accommodate trillion-parameter AI models. These capabilities delivered in an open-standards architecture can boost cost-efficiency, enable seamless IT integration, and support vendor flexibility.
Today, a growing number of AI users are leveraging rack-scale performance to advance their AI initiatives. This powerful approach unites silicon innovation with a practical, open design that is optimized for diverse requirements and ongoing maintenance.
Efficient, rack-level solutions deliver:
Rack-scale is engineered to simplify and accelerate AI in production. Within a rack, rapid GPU-to-GPU communication enables reliable in-rack communication as operations scale up. Across racks and clusters, high-bandwidth, low-latency connectivity drives higher utilization and faster AI execution as operations scale out. Flexible utilization enables smarter GPU partitioning for multi-tenant use, leading to better business outcomes.
The bottom line: Rack-scale can help organizations achieve higher output density per rack, predictable scaling, and lower cost at hyperscale—critical components of an effective AI strategy.
AI rack-scale systems from HPE are optimized for large AI environments, AI factories, and converged HPC/AI workloads. HPE’s purpose-built portfolio of rack-scale solutions offers integrated hardware, software, and support services that are designed to streamline deployment and help users realize more value quickly. HPE offers a winning formula to help organizations succeed:
HPE is one of the first companies to offer a single turnkey rack capable of large-scale AI. The AMD Helios AI Rack design is a turnkey, open-standards platform for next-level training and inference performance. Featuring 72 AMD Instinct
MI455X GPUs, the AMD Helios rackscale design enables high-capacity, high-speed data movement for demanding mixed workloads.
AMD Helios rackscale design represents a massive leap in AI capabilities, delivering 10x greater performance than the previous generation.[i] The latest AMD accelerator provides:
A new HPE Juniper Networking switch designed specifically for the AMD Helios architecture is the first Ethernet-based scale-up networking solution in the industry. The switch uses AI-native automation by HPE to simplify deployment and reduce costs. Advanced direct liquid cooling maximizes energy efficiency for increased cost savings and stability.
Backed by HPE Services, organizations also benefit from expert deployment, facility planning, and ongoing support to help them mitigate risks and create a strategic roadmap for large-scale AI.
HPE invites you to explore the future of supercomputing solutions at ISC High Performance 2026. Join us in Hamburg, Germany from June 22nd–26th to experience the latest innovations.
Visit HPE at booth C10 and AMD at booth X03 to find out more about the AMD Helios AI Rack. Talk with our experts and experience demos to learn how this solution can empower service providers and neoclouds to achieve breakthrough AI performance, flexibility, and integration.
Let HPE and AMD help you drive AI innovation forward.
[i] MI350-047B: Based on engineering projections by AMD Performance Labs in September 2025, to estimate the peak theoretical precision performance of seventy-two (72) AMD InstinctMI455X GPUs “Helios” AI Rack using MXFP4 dense Matrix datatype vs. an 8xGPU AMD Instinct MI355X platform using the MXFP4 dense Matrix datatype. Results subject to change when products are released in market.
The post Unleash Rack-Scale Performance for Large-Scale AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Down from $149 to $73, this is the kind of deal your ears will appreciate.
An outspoken progressive running for Congress in the Tennessee district at the center of Republicans’ efforts to sabotage voting rights and maintain control of the House earned the endorsement of Sen. Bernie Sanders on Tuesday.
Tennessee state Rep. Justin J. Pearson found himself the unexpected front-runner in the Democratic primary when two-decade incumbent Rep. Steve Cohen dropped out last month, after new gerrymandered maps throttled his chances of winning reelection. The redrawn 9th Congressional District and sudden shakeup mean that rather than running against the last Democrat representing Tennessee in the House, Pearson is facing a Republican machine bent on delivering an all-GOP delegation for President Donald Trump.
The new map hurts the chances for Pearson — or any Democrat — to win in November, but the candidate said he’s running on a platform focused on wealth, income inequality, and corporate overreach that aims to appeal across party lines. “You’ve got a number of disaffected Republican voters, you’ve got a number of distraught MAGA voters, and you’ve got fired-up Democrats, which is a perfect recipe for success for us,” Pearson told The Intercept. “Because our tent is big enough for everybody who is feeling that this status quo was rigged and broken against working-class folk, and want to see a future that is more just.”
It’s a message similar to the one that buoyed Sanders’s 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns.
“As billionaires and Big Tech take more and more control over our lives and our government, we need leaders like Justin J. Pearson who have the experience and track record of standing up to the rich and power-hungry elites,” Sanders said in a statement.
Tennessee is one of several Republican-led states where officials rushed to protect Trump and the GOP’s chances of keeping power in what is expected to be a particularly difficult midterm cycle for Republicans mired in an unpopular war on Iran and an ever-increasing cost of living. After the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in April to gut a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, Trump said he spoke with Tennessee Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who called the next day for a special session to redraw the maps.
Using a practice known as “cracking,” the new map breaks the majority-Black district concentrated in and around Memphis across three red districts, diluting the power of Black voters in the area. Pearson said he believed the antidemocratic move, while detrimental to his chances, was unpopular with voters.
“A lot of people were really upset about the gerrymandered maps,” Pearson said. “I had about half a dozen Republicans who said they’re going to be voting in our campaign and I’d be the first Democrat they’d be voting for in their lifetimes.”
Pearson, who launched his campaign against Cohen in October with the backing of the progressive outfit Justice Democrats, received Sanders’s endorsement the day after getting one from the Working Families Party, and four days after he returned from a listening tour in rural and Republican counties in the newly drawn district. His campaign said more than 750 people attended the gatherings.
Attendees expressed frustration with being unable to afford housing, healthcare, and the things they need to live their daily lives, Pearson said. He said voters couldn’t afford “more of the same” when running against Cohen, and has now directed that message at his likely Republican opponent, state Sen. Brent Taylor.
“Both of them were millionaires, both of them benefited from a status quo that’s broken,” Pearson told The Intercept. “Both of them don’t like me.”
Also running in the August 6 Democratic primary are state Sen. London Lamar, who launched her campaign with Cohen’s endorsement after he dropped out, and Jim Torino, a former executive at a healthcare company focusing on people with disabilities and founder of a social welfare nonprofit. Perennial candidate M. LaTroy Alexandria-Williams filed to run but has not filed any reports with the Federal Election Commission.
Pearson is the top fundraiser in the Democratic primary race so far, with just under $2 million, according to the campaign. Most of that has come from contributions under $200, according to the FEC data; the campaign said its average donation is $31. Torino has raised $117,000, and Lamar has not yet had to file any reports with the FEC.
In addition to Sanders, Justice Democrats, and the Working Families Party, Pearson has backing from groups including MoveOn; Sunrise Movement; Indivisible; IMEU Policy Project and its Peace, Accountability, and Leadership PAC; as well as Reps. Summer Lee, D-Pa.; Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass.; Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich.; Delia Ramirez, D-Ill.; and Ro Khanna, D-Calif.
Pearson said he believes federal legislation is needed to force states to support working people and improve public safety.
“We need to put this ban on AI data centers, we need to increase the minimum wage nationally, because the states won’t do it,” Pearson said. “I’m in a state House, they refuse to do it. We need to have national gun safety laws passed, because states refuse to do it.”
In May, Pearson drew the ire of his Republican colleagues when he marched with protesters before the special session to redraw the state’s maps. Three years earlier, Republicans voted to expel him and another Black Democratic lawmaker after they and one other Democratic colleague led a protest against the legislature’s inaction on gun control after a deadly elementary school shooting in Nashville. Local officials reappointed Pearson and his colleague, state Rep. Justin Johnson, to the state House shortly after the vote.
Pearson, Cohen, two other Democratic congressional candidates, four registered voters, and the Tennessee Democratic Party filed a federal lawsuit challenging Tennessee’s maps last month, but they dropped it last week, citing a political environment hostile to their cause. Pearson said other cases before the federal courts had “a higher probability of success,” pointing to voting rights suits from the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Still, he expressed hope for his long-shot campaign in Tennessee. He pointed to a stop on his listening tour in the city where the Ku Klux Klan was founded in 1865, and where Pearson, who is Black, welcomed 150 people at a rally — his largest crowd throughout the tour.
There is a “renewed vigor and enthusiasm because of what the Republicans have done — to show up in spite of them, in spite of what they’ve tried to do,” Pearson said. “I think that’s not something they probably calculated for when they did this racist redistricting.”
The post Bernie Sanders Backs Justin J. Pearson, House Candidate at the Heart of Tennessee Voting Rights Fight appeared first on The Intercept.
The first big Prime Day deal is live a week early, unlocking early savings on the Ring Battery Doorbell before the rush starts.
Making the case for COP in a fractured geopolitical environment 22 June 2026 — 17:00 TO 18:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Leaders of the world’s foremost climate conference - COP - set out how environmental diplomacy can still deliver.
Leaders of the world’s foremost climate conference - COP - set out how environmental diplomacy can still deliver.The COP global climate talks have anchored international action for three decades, but geopolitical tensions are testing their effectiveness. These pressures raise questions about what COP can still deliver. This event looks at climate leadership, and the role of diplomacy in sustaining progress.
Key questions:
A BASE jumping accident in a Utah canyon killed two people including a daredevil athlete best known for performing onstage with Madonna at the 2012 Super Bowl, authorities said.
Across the US, thousands of people are injecting themselves with unregulated peptides in pursuit of weight loss, muscle growth and younger-looking skin. Despite being labelled 'not for human consumption', the substances are readily available online and have surged in popularity among people disillusioned by traditional healthcare. To find out why so many Americans are willing to risk unknown side-effects for the promise of a quick fix, Adam Gabbatt meets the users and influencers driving the peptide boom, and investigates what's really inside some of these so-called 'miracle' drugs
Continue reading...The NBA postseason remains a psychodrama of moments, memes and memories unlike anything in sport. We look back at the biggest takeaways
Sometimes it’s just your year. When infectiously optimistic young mayor Zohran Mamdani was elected this past fall, there was a palpable vibe shift in the city. That’s not to say that there’s a direct correlation between the New York Knicks being NBA champions and the era of buoyant positivity permeating the city, but it’s also not to say there’s not one. Other American cities will, inevitably, have their moment in the sun again soon. But 2026 is the year of New York (someone get that memo to the Mets).
Continue reading...The much-hyped deal, which is set to be formally signed on Friday in Geneva, doesn’t end the war. It’s essentially a 60-day extension of a ceasefire
When Donald Trump launched his war against Iran in late February, he had ambitious goals: to topple Iran’s theocratic regime, destroy its military capabilities and nuclear program, and instigate a popular uprising by Iranians. A week into the war, Trump said he would only accept Iran’s “unconditional surrender”. On Sunday, Trump settled for a deal that reopens the strait of Hormuz.
The US president celebrated having solved a problem he had created: reopening a vital waterway through which more than a fifth of the world’s oil supply passed each day – before Iran effectively closed it at the start of the war, increasing energy prices and disrupting the global economy. “Ships of the World, start your engines,” Trump wrote on social media in announcing the latest deal. “Let the oil flow!”
Mohamad Bazzi is a Guardian US columnist. He is also director of the Center for Near Eastern Studies, and a journalism professor, at New York University
Continue reading...The desecration of a ruler’s symbols is among the oldest forms of political revolt
There’s a reason the first two of the Ten Commandments prohibit worshiping false gods and making false idols. And a reason iconoclasm – the desecration of the monuments of a hated ruler or regime – is one of the oldest and most powerful symbolic forms of political revolt.
The revolutionary power of iconoclasm is also why Donald Trump – who understands the manipulation of imagery as well as anyone on earth – has had a huge blue and white tarp draped across the facade of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts while the letters of his name are pried off under court order.
Judith Levine is a Brooklyn-based journalist and frequent contributor to the Guardian. Her Substack is Today in Fascism
Continue reading...
It was before dawn on a Friday in January when a Gulfstream G600 with the burnt-orange Texas Longhorns logo on its tail landed at Dulles airport outside Washington, D.C. Its owner, a little-known oil billionaire named Jeffery Hildebrand, had been summoned to the White House.
By mid-afternoon he was in the East Room, just three seats from President Donald Trump, who had recently ordered the military raid that captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. Now Trump wanted Hildebrand and two dozen other energy executives to commit to investing $100 billion in Venezuela’s decrepit oil industry.
Many couched their enthusiasm with caveats. ExxonMobil’s CEO called Venezuela “uninvestable” without changes to its legal system. The head of ConocoPhillips wanted U.S. government financing.
But Hildebrand, a major Trump donor whose wife had been named ambassador to Costa Rica, had already seen how loyalty could be rewarded. Even though he had no notable operations outside the U.S., he hunched toward a microphone and said in a halting voice, “Hilcorp is fully committed and ready to go to rebuilding the infrastructure in Venezuela.”
“That’s good,” Trump said. “You’ll be very happy.”
As the founder and owner of Hilcorp, a privately held company known for buying up old, low-producing “stripper wells,” Hildebrand needs Trump’s favor. Long one of the oil industry’s top polluters, Hilcorp releases unusually large quantities of methane, a greenhouse gas that can trap 80 times more heat than carbon dioxide.
Hildebrand had never been a leading political contributor. But in 2024, the Biden administration issued aggressive restrictions on methane pollution — rules that would impose steep costs on Hilcorp — and the once-obscure tycoon became one of Trump’s biggest oil industry supporters, giving millions to his campaign.

Trump has since named a former Hilcorp lobbyist to a top post at the Environmental Protection Agency, putting him in charge of an effort to unravel the methane rules with help from trade groups backed by Hildebrand, a ProPublica investigation has found. That will bring a sweeping reprieve for the nation’s 700,000 stripper wells, boosting Hildebrand’s profits while saddling society as a whole with the climate fallout.
We’re still reporting. If you know more about the Trump administration’s climate policies, please contact our reporting team.
Alex Cuadros
I welcome tips or documents about Trump administration climate policy or actions by private companies or institutions that may impact the climate.
Stripper wells collectively contribute just 6% of the nation’s oil and natural gas. But in recent studies, scientists have identified them as the source of roughly half the sector’s methane emissions — in part because they tend to be thinly monitored, run-down and thus prone to leaking. As a result, these barely productive wells play an outsize role in climate change, disproportionately amplifying heat waves, droughts and wildfires.
In a world where global warming fixes can seem impossibly daunting, stripper wells are the rare low-hanging fruit, said Andrew Logan of Ceres, a climate advocacy group.
“If you could lose 6% of production and cut emissions in half, who wouldn’t make that trade?” Logan said. “It’s a question of who benefits and who doesn’t, and who has the power.”
Kendra Pinto and Josh Eisenfeld drove a rented Dodge Ram to the site of a Hilcorp well in San Juan County, New Mexico, last August. As infrared camera operators with the nonprofit Earthworks, they were used to roaming through remote areas to investigate leaks at oil and gas wells. But the San Juan is especially lonely terrain, with bumpy dirt roads snaking between scattered scrub and rusting pump jacks, the nodding apparatuses that lift oil and gas from thousands of feet underground.
A sign marked the site as Hilcorp’s Huerfano Unit 119 well, one of the company’s 11,000 in the region. It was little more than a patch of gravel hosting two unmarked storage tanks and what oil workers call a Christmas tree: the cluster of valves that caps the well itself. Drilled in 1969, the well now produces a small but steady trickle of natural gas, enough to generate around $50 of revenue per day.
On paper, it runs remarkably cleanly. According to New Mexico’s oil regulator, Hilcorp has not reported any “venting” — releasing gas — from the well since May 2024. At the site itself, however, a wire fence surrounded some of the equipment, bearing a yellow caution sign that read, “Well vents randomly.”

Methane is invisible to the human eye. But on June 29 last year, a satellite detected a massive methane plume erupting from this very location. According to the nonprofit Carbon Mapper, a NASA partner that one oil executive defined as a “platform to disseminate the sins of our industry,” the methane was being discharged at a rate of 199 kilograms an hour. That’s equivalent to about 12 times the volume of natural gas the well typically produces over that time. The cause was unknown, but according to scientists who have studied the issue, such “super-emitter” events typically stem from some kind of neglect or malfunction — if not from an intentional release. Most last a couple of hours, but some can go on for weeks. Super-emitter plumes have also been identified at other Hilcorp wells.
Pinto and Eisenfeld observed smaller, more persistent leaks as well. When they trained their infrared camera on one of the storage tanks, wispy clouds of pollution could be seen streaming from a pressure-release valve.
“That shouldn’t just be constantly …” Eisenfeld said, trailing off. The finding was far from abnormal, though. Of the eight Hilcorp wells he and Pinto visited that day, seven were seen to be leaking.
In response to a detailed list of questions from ProPublica, Hilcorp spokesperson Nick Piatek said in an email that the Huerfano Unit 119 well “is fully compliant with state and federal regulations” and that the company inspects the site monthly. He also suggested that the company’s approach caused less environmental harm than drilling new wells: “By extending and optimizing the life of existing assets with pre-built infrastructure, our model limits the need for new development elsewhere.” The company is “proud,” he added, of recent efforts to reduce its emissions.
Hilcorp is hardly an outlier in its approach to methane releases. America’s oil and gas system is vast, aging, and in many places largely left to police itself. Of the country’s roughly 1 million active wells, more than two-thirds are stripper wells, each producing the equivalent of up to 15 barrels a day. Many produce less than a single barrel a day. (Newer wells, by contrast, can pump 1,000 a day or more.) Each well site, in turn, is equipped with numerous valves, flanges and other fittings that can leak unless inspected regularly. Some components were explicitly designed to vent small amounts of gas — a legacy of an era when methane’s role in global warming wasn’t widely understood.

Methane, the main component of natural gas, turns into carbon dioxide when burned to heat a home or generate electricity. But when the gas enters the atmosphere directly, it becomes a much more powerful climate pollutant — one that is responsible for one-third of the rise in global temperatures since the Industrial Revolution.
Methane exists underground alongside other fossil fuels and is brought to the surface whether oil or natural gas is being pumped. While it’s a valuable product in itself, capturing it is not always cost-effective. So companies often burn it off, or just vent it, sending it straight into the atmosphere. Apart from the climate impact, this is all sheer waste, as none of the methane’s energy is being harnessed for a human need. Yet with few exceptions, federal rules have allowed these practices at wells drilled before 2012 — which include the overwhelming majority of stripper wells.
Methane leakage is such a routine part of oil and gas production that the EPA often assumes it is happening when asking the industry to calculate its emissions. Even so, those numbers drastically understate the actual emissions observed by plane and satellite. A study led by Evan Sherwin of Stanford, published in the journal Nature in 2024, took close to a million measurements to find that the true figures were, on average, nearly three times higher. Partly that is because companies have never had to report super-emitter events to the EPA. In one region, nearly 10% of all the natural gas produced was being lost to the atmosphere, the study found.
But limiting methane pollution presents a rare opportunity. While carbon dioxide can persist in the atmosphere for centuries, methane breaks down relatively fast, in about a dozen years. Halting these releases, then, would bring a swift payoff.
“Methane is the best lever we have to slow the march of climate change in our lifetime,” said Stanford researcher Rob Jackson. That is especially important, he added, as the planet approaches tipping points — temperature thresholds beyond which forests, coral reefs and ice sheets start to collapse irreversibly.
Unlike with other major methane sources, such as belching cattle or melting permafrost, the technology to curb emissions from oil and gas operations is already viable, and fairly cheap. In the fight against global warming, Jackson said, “It’s the best bang for our buck.”
To build a fortune on the discarded scraps of the oil and gas industry takes a rare instinct for hidden value, an appetite for risk and an obsession with keeping costs down.
Among the nation’s stripper well owners, Hildebrand has done it best, amassing a fortune estimated by Bloomberg at $15 billion. Yet at a time when many billionaires are embracing celebrity, he has maintained an unusually low profile. At 67, he’s almost completely avoided speaking to reporters, and he didn’t respond to multiple interview requests from ProPublica. Even Trump, despite having invited him to the White House, seemed hazy on Hildebrand’s role in the oil industry. “I hear he does a good job,” the president said when reached by ProPublica on his cellphone.
While he avoids the public eye, Hildebrand circulates openly in the overlapping worlds of wealthy businesspeople, private clubs and Republican power brokers. He has been known to hold exclusive parties at his 1,200-acre ranch in Aspen, Colorado — which used to belong, in part, to the musician (and environmentalist) John Denver. He also owns a polo team called Tonkawa, a fixture of the winter season in the sport’s unofficial capital of Wellington, Florida, a short drive from Mar-a-Lago. A video of a 2021 match shows him in a white helmet and forest-green jersey, riding a bay pony as he swings his mallet, trying and failing to keep the ball from the opposing side’s patron, a Russian banker named Andrey Borodin.
There’s a striking tension between Hildebrand’s status as one of the country’s most prolific polluters and his otherwise conventional life as a God-fearing, upstanding Texas businessman. He is less a rogue actor than the product of a deeply American system that rewards production at all costs.
A devout Catholic and philanthropist, he is especially passionate about wildlife conservation, according to Stuart Stedman and Karen Starr Hunke, fellow board members at Texas A&M’s Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute. Yet they and others who know him through the institute said they’d never once heard him mention climate change — an omission that points to a far narrower view of environmental stewardship.
The closest Hildebrand has come to addressing the issue publicly is in a rare speech he gave in 2022, accepting an award as a distinguished alumnus at UT Austin. A husky, square-jawed man, he wore a burnt-orange suit jacket and a burnt-orange tie. He cited an old quote he interpreted as a celebration of the oil industry: “Smite the rocks with the rod of knowledge, and fountains of unstinted wealth will gush forth.” Then he quipped that “in this Green New Deal era we live in” — a reference to the Democrats’ climate agenda — such sentiments might no longer be welcome.

Born in 1959 in Houston, America’s energy capital, Hildebrand graduated from high school at a time when oil prices were soaring. Determined to start his own oil business, he studied geology and petroleum engineering at UT Austin, where he was in the Kappa Alpha fraternity. He worked briefly for Exxon and a few other companies, including that of a prominent Houston investor named Jack Trotter, before starting Hilcorp in ’89 with Trotter’s backing.
The oil business is filled with stories of crazy risks, near-bankruptcies and improbable rebounds. Hildebrand likes to recount that he used his wife’s car as collateral for a loan to drill some early wells. In a speech for his induction into the Texas Business Hall of Fame, he said they turned out to be “dry holes” — failures — but the return on Melinda’s investment would prove “infinite” (only a slight exaggeration).
He started buying stripper wells from larger companies, a niche that is relatively cheap to break into. As a well ages and the underlying reservoir is depleted, pressure in the well drops, and production along with it. The price for a package of these wells tends to be low — one friend recalled “when a big deal for Jeff was $5 million” — but to turn a profit, the new owners have to cut costs. Typically they do this by playing fast and loose with environmental rules, according to Clark Williams-Derry of the nonprofit Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, who calls this the “dung beetle model.”
As Hildebrand expanded into other states, loading up on debt to make ever larger acquisitions, there’s evidence he followed this model. According to records obtained by ProPublica from state and federal environmental regulators, his company has racked up dozens of violations over the past decade. To cite one notable example, after a Hilcorp natural gas pipeline ruptured in Alaska’s Cook Inlet in December 2016, it spewed methane for nearly four months until it was finally repaired. Activists across the country call the company “Spillcorp.”
The penalties, though, have largely amounted to a slap on the wrist, rarely exceeding $500,000 — and often coming in far lower. “I would frankly put that in the category of just operating costs,” said Matt Bernstein, an analyst at the research firm Rystad Energy.
What set Hildebrand apart from other “dung beetles” was that he also found ways to squeeze out more oil and gas from aging wells, not only cutting costs but increasing revenue. His secret was what he has called a “pretty simple” formula: attract top geologists and engineers by offering Wall Street-style incentives, allowing them to effectively take partnership stakes in projects. According to a person involved in an early deal, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, Hildebrand would offer 1.1 times what Hilcorp’s own analysis said an acquisition was worth, betting on the “magic” of his team.
The 2010s saw the landmark Paris Agreement on global warming, the rise of teen activist Greta Thunberg and the first pledge by a major oil company to effectively zero its emissions. None of that dissuaded Hildebrand from doubling down on aging wells. In 2017, he spent $3 billion to mount his largest acquisition yet: ConocoPhillips’ operation in the San Juan Basin, where Pinto and Eisenfeld would later identify so many leaks. Once among the country’s top sources of natural gas, the region had since fallen into decline — and it was already notorious for its methane pollution.
Soon after, according to a Clean Air Task Force analysis of data companies report to the EPA, Hilcorp became the No. 1 emitter of methane in the entire U.S. oil and gas industry.
President Joe Biden presented the first serious threat to Hildebrand’s business. As part of his ambitious climate agenda, the EPA issued rules aimed at cutting methane pollution from oil and gas operations by a whopping 80% — and they took direct aim at stripper wells.
For the first time, outside a patchwork of state rules, older wells would face requirements for regular leak inspections and limits on venting and flaring. Companies would be forced to respond to satellite reports of super-emitters, making repairs if necessary. A fee would also be imposed on excess methane emissions, costing the oil and gas industry an estimated $500 million a year.
Even the Department of Justice got involved, filing suits to crack down on improper methane releases. One found that Hilcorp had failed to capture the emissions when it redrilled 145 wells in the San Juan — discharges large enough that Don Schreiber, a rancher who documented some of the events, described hearing a “jet engine” sound as the gas rushed into the air. This time, the penalties were more than a slap on the wrist; although Hilcorp did not admit to wrongdoing, it settled the allegations for $9.4 million.
With the new rules gradually being phased in, Hildebrand effectively made parallel bets. Getting a jump on compliance, Hilcorp started upgrading much of its aging equipment — and its methane numbers declined.
“That’s a win,” said Lesley Feldman of the Clean Air Task Force, a nonprofit that advocates for cutting emissions. “That means the policy is working. And we’ve seen evidence of other companies doing this too.”
Yet while Feldman celebrated the reductions, she did question their magnitude. Hilcorp spokesperson Piatek said the company’s methane numbers had fallen by “nearly 80% in recent years.” But, Feldman said after examining Hilcorp’s most recent data, that decline is artificially inflated by recent changes to the reporting rules, which make comparisons to previous years misleading. The data itself may be suspect, she added, because the EPA has yet to publicly verify it — and Hilcorp has previously made huge upward revisions to its reported emissions. (Piatek didn’t respond when ProPublica pointed out the artificially inflated reduction.)
Even taking the numbers at face value, Hilcorp remains one of the oil industry’s top methane emitters, according to a ProPublica analysis of EPA data.
Since he was still looking at substantial compliance costs, Hildebrand’s other bet was to step up his political contributions. Since 2020, he and his wife have given more than $15 million to Trump and other Republicans in federal races, placing them among the top donors in an industry that overwhelmingly supports the president and his party. (That compares to just over $3 million in the entire two decades prior.) The recipients have included Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. August Pfluger, both of Texas — two of the most vocal opponents to the methane fee, which they call the “natural gas tax.”
During the 2024 campaign, Hildebrand also co-hosted at least three high-dollar fundraisers for Trump, who promised to “unleash American energy” by dismantling climate regulations. One was a lavish dinner held a short drive from Hildebrand’s Aspen ranch, at a home sprinkled with art by Andy Warhol (a tiny self-portrait), Damien Hirst (a mirrored pill cabinet) and Jack Pierson (mismatched lettering that spelled out the word “badass”). The home belonged to another donor later graced with an appointment: the investor John Phelan, who would briefly serve as Trump’s Navy secretary.
Hildebrand co-hosted two of the fundraisers in Houston. One was reportedly scheduled to take place at his own home, but, due to security concerns, it was moved to a hotel owned by the sports and entertainment magnate Tilman Fertitta, who would be named ambassador to Italy. The other was followed by a private roundtable where, according to Teofilo Lingi, an investor who was present, oil executives discussed the methane rules with Trump himself.
At a previous event with Trump, Hildebrand said, “I’m really here today to represent the independent energy companies, the family-owned businesses that are in this industry.”
This mom-and-pop image clashes with the reality that the independents, as they are known, are highly organized into an alphabet soup of newly influential lobbying groups — with Hildebrand a member of several. Hilcorp CEO Greg Lalicker sits on the board of the American Exploration and Production Council (AXPC), which also represents Diversified, the country’s single largest owner of stripper wells. At least until recently, another Hilcorp executive was a director at the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA), which represents smaller producers, including many stripper well owners.
In an industry long hostile to regulation, the independents have often displayed a more open contempt toward climate policy than the global oil giants. And they have historically had little say in emissions rules. “They didn’t want to be regulated, but they kind of knew that was a losing argument,” said Joseph Goffman, who held top EPA roles under both President Barack Obama and Biden.
Hildebrand received an early sign that was going to change when, less than three weeks after the 2025 inauguration, Trump tapped his wife to be ambassador to Costa Rica — even though she was primarily known for charity work and for opening a doughnut shop in their wealthy Houston neighborhood of River Oaks. Melinda Hildebrand didn’t respond to requests for comment, but when ProPublica asked Trump why he appointed her, he said, “I don’t know, because you know, I get recommendations. … I see the list of people, but we only name good people, and I’m sure she’s very good.”
Later that month, the Republican-controlled Congress effectively killed the methane fee, and Trump nominated a former Hilcorp lobbyist named Aaron Szabo to oversee the EPA’s climate regulations.
Szabo, an otherwise inconspicuous former bureaucrat, helped to unite two distinct networks with overlapping ambitions. As a lobbyist for Hilcorp and other oil and gas companies, he had already helped to draft a letter from the AXPC opposing the new methane rules. He then became a fellow at the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute and gave advice on climate regulations for the EPA chapter of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025, the deregulatory blueprint for the second Trump administration. The chapter specifically recommended dismantling the program to address super-emitters.
Now tasked with rewriting the methane rules, Szabo has been seeking input from oil industry groups including the AXPC, the IPAA and the National Stripper Well Association (NSWA), according to interviews with industry representatives and current and former EPA officials, records of closed-door conversations, and agency emails and calendar entries obtained through public records requests by the watchdog group Fieldnotes and shared with ProPublica.
“It’s the first time in 20 years of my business that they’ll even answer the phone,” NSWA Chair Patrick Montalban told ProPublica, referring to top regulators. He described an informal atmosphere where independent oil executives called on old personal connections to open the doors. He himself had met not just with Szabo but with EPA chief Lee Zeldin, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Energy Secretary Chris Wright. He and Wright, he noted, have both served on the board of yet another oil industry group. (Press offices for the departments of Interior and Energy didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.)
The IPAA’s Lee Fuller, on a private conference call with industry representatives, also spoke glowingly about a meeting with Szabo’s office last year. Previously, he said, the EPA had never even considered the group’s requests to create separate methane rules for stripper wells. This time, though, agency staff brought it up unprompted — which suggests that it was already on Szabo’s agenda. Presented with this opening, the IPAA later asked for stripper wells to be exempted from the methane rules entirely.
Hilcorp spokesperson Piatek declined to answer questions from ProPublica about the influence campaign. The IPAA also declined to comment but sent an email linking to a recent statement of support for deregulating stripper wells that nonetheless nodded toward “our shared environmental goals.”
The heart of the stripper-well owners’ argument is that they simply cannot afford to be regulated. “Venting and flaring are essential for the survivability of low production wells,” an IPAA lawyer named James D. Elliott wrote in an email to EPA officials last year. He cited estimates that the methane rules would force 300,000 of the lowest-producing wells to shut down. Framing this as a blow to small-business owners, he didn’t acknowledge that it would have almost no impact on the U.S. energy supply.
The AXPC declined to answer ProPublica’s questions about the group’s interactions with Szabo’s staff but sent a statement from CEO Anne Bradbury saying its members were “committed to building on a legacy of world-leading methane emission reductions.” In a “policy roadmap” published on its website in March, however, it asked the EPA to “incorporate greater flexibility for low-producing and mature assets.”
Some members of the coalition have argued, inaccurately, that stripper wells are not significant sources of methane pollution. In a Zoom interview with ProPublica, NSWA board member Sam Bradley played a slideshow that he said he’d shared with Szabo’s staff. One slide purported to show the emissions from various sources. Stripper wells ranked lower than both the collective exhalations of the U.S. populace and what Bradley called “smoke and brisket” — barbecues. (In reality, these are negligible sources of emissions.)
Hildebrand and his fellow stripper-well owners appear likely to win exemptions. Speaking with industry representatives last month, the AXPC’s Wendy Kirchoff shared early details of Szabo’s plan to weaken the methane rules, confirming it will cover stripper wells, according to a recording reviewed by ProPublica.
Szabo himself didn’t respond to questions sent by ProPublica, and the EPA’s press office declined to comment on the details. But the agency confirmed it is working on a proposal to “provide relief” to the oil industry, saying in a statement, “We heard consistently from American oil and natural gas producers (shocker that we meet with stakeholders) that the Biden-Harris Administration’s oil and gas methane regulations were unworkable and unnecessarily restricted American energy dominance.”
To protect carve-outs from rollback by a future Democratic administration, Pfluger, the representative from Texas, and Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., have proposed a bill to simply exempt stripper wells from EPA emissions rules — allowing them to pollute the atmosphere at will, with scant economic benefit. The NSWA and the IPAA both helped to craft the legislation, according to an internal newsletter from a state trade group that represents many stripper-well owners.
In effect, the Trump administration and its allies in Congress are weighing whether to preserve the business model that made Hildebrand rich, no matter the cost to the global climate. As energy assets, his wells may be marginal. But as political currency, they have become more valuable than ever before.
The post Trump Plans to Protect Methane-Leaking Stripper Wells. This Billionaire Donor Will Benefit. appeared first on ProPublica.
The world’s most successful gamer content creators, many of whom have spent their entire adult life on the platform, have met up at TwitchCon in Rotterdam
Aimee Davies, better known as Aimsey to their fans, is 24 but looks much younger. Sitting in a bland meeting room above the annual TwitchCon event in Rotterdam, they’re a barely contained whirl of energy in a beanie hat and T-shirt, all smiles and lightning-fast chatter. Aimsey (who uses they/them pronouns) is also a Twitch veteran, having started streaming eight years ago at the tender age of 16. A million subscribers tune in every week to see them chaotically play Minecraft and share snippets of their life. They have grown up, from teen to young adult, carrying a vast audience with them into maturity. What is it like to experience that?
“When you’re 16 you want to tell everyone everything about you,” they say as music blares from the event below. “When I came out as a lesbian, I told the world. Every part of my identity, my mental health struggles … I thought if I could help one person feel like they weren’t alone, I wanted to do that.”
Continue reading...No 10 is worried about retaliation from White House over restrictions on under-16s’ internet use
Ministers have embarked on a concerted lobbying operation to prevent a backlash from the Trump administration to the under-16s social media ban announced by Keir Starmer.
Officials said they had spent weeks trying to reassure senior Trump officials and the US president himself that the restrictions were not specifically aimed at US technology companies.
Continue reading...Few analysts believe final settlement can be reached in 60 days – and even if it is, war and instability could soon return
In much of the Middle East, news that the US and Iran had come to a fragile agreement was greeted with relief tempered with doubt that any deal would resolve the turbulent region’s deep problems or even prevent a future return to war.
In Kuwait, a frequent target of Iranian drone strikes during the 15-week conflict, Iyad Joumma, a 37-year-old Jordanian engineer, spoke for many.
Continue reading...If you open up your battery box you’ll see the BMS has 4 different cables going into it. The smallest one that sticks out perpendicular to the PCB is what lets your BMS tell your ESC that your board is charging. If you unplug it, it has no way of knowing so you can charge your board as you ride if you get a backpack setup
This might break FM firmware as well, I can’t be completely sure.
Personally, I recommend the PintV Kit. That opens your door far beyond FM support and restriction, so the skies (or rather your wallet) the limit for battery possibility. Easy as to install
If you’ve got more dough to throw around just buy an atom. Its the combine price of a stock Pint and the PintV kit, and that really opens your door to far better Hill Climb Performance, NOOB VESC and more range.
Either way when it comes to VESC, your range is quite dependent on your Motor and Battery Current Limit, which is an inverse relation to Torque (hill climb performance).
Its possible that you would get marginally better range from a Pint S-Series motor (straight from FM) but no guarentees.
Thinktank says decoupling electricity from gas prices has also helped shield Spain from hikes caused by Iran war
Spanish households save €10 a month on electricity bills because of wind turbines and solar panels installed in the last five years, a report has found.
Typical energy bills would be 19% more expensive if electricity costs were still as tightly coupled to gas prices as in 2021, according to Ember, a climate thinktank. It found Spain’s “strategic” expansion of renewables since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 has shielded Spanish households from the latest rises in fossil fuel prices caused by the Iran war.
Continue reading...A Chinese Zhuque-2E rocket's upper stage broke apart shortly after last week's June 9 launch, likely creating 100 to 150 pieces of debris in a busy region of low-Earth orbit crossed by the ISS and lower-altitude Starlink satellites. Most fragments should reenter within months because of atmospheric drag, but experts say the incident adds to a worsening trend as China leaves more large rocket bodies in orbit while expanding its launch rate. Ars Technica reports: The US Space Force confirmed the breakup event in a post on space-track.org, a website used by the military to distribute orbit data to the public. "The tracked pieces are being incorporated into routine conjunction assessment to support spaceflight safety," the Space Force wrote in an advisory. "There are currently no threats to human spaceflight. Analysis is ongoing." So far, the Space Force has not added any of the debris fragments to the official catalog of human-made space objects. [...] The bad news is that the Zhuque-2E's breakup is the latest chapter in China's growing contribution to the space junk problem. After decades of leaving spent rocket bodies in orbit, launch operators in most countries now reserve enough fuel to steer their upper stages back to Earth for controlled reentries. Rocket bodies attributed to Russia and the former Soviet Union account for the bulk of the launch-related debris in long-lived orbits, followed by China and the United States. But the Russian and American numbers are declining or holding steady, while the mass of Chinese rocket bodies in these long-lived orbits has grown by more than 150 percent in the past five years, according to a new analysis by Space Domain Awareness expert Jim Shell. The increase comes as China ramps up launches of its own megaconstellations designed to compete with SpaceX's Starlink. Rocket bodies are the most concerning sources of space debris because they are typically fairly large in size and mass, often with residual propellant and high-pressure gases that can trigger an explosion. There is no way to maneuver or dispose of them if left abandoned in orbit after releasing their payloads. McKnight characterized the recent breakup of the Zhuque-2E rocket as a "slight space safety issue," but the trend is not good. China's Long March 6A rocket has an especially bad track record, including two explosions that littered a higher-altitude low-Earth orbit with more than 1,000 debris fragments, where they will remain for decades or centuries. "Three of the top four breakup events in LEO are of Chinese origin, with two of these events being from Chinese (rocket body) explosions in the last four years," McKnight said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Tech is helping to identify and save new specimens and could open ‘genomic goldmine’ of fungi data
The rise of AI and digitisation could be a turning point in the “race against extinction” faced by botanists trying to identify and save vital plants before they vanish, according to a major report from Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
New technology is enabling scientists to track how flowering times have shifted by weeks around the world, rapidly identify new specimens and even get crucial genetic data from 180-year-old fungus specimens, potentially opening a “genomic goldmine”. Digitisation and online access to millions of specimens that were until now only accessible in archives is also producing new insights, especially in the global south.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 16.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 16, No. 631.
Almost every child, including those from high-income countries, is now exposed to at least one hazard
Half of the world’s children are exposed to at least three overlapping climate hazards threatening their health, education and survival, according to a Unicef report.
Globally, children face increasing threats from heatwaves, storms, floods and droughts as the climate crisis worsens, with more than one billion facing at least three of these at once.
Continue reading...Brian Gu says he sees Chinese car firms competing on quality rather than launching price war as at home
Motorists in the UK and EU should not expect a sharp drop in the cost of electric vehicles despite increased competition among Chinese manufacturers, one of the country’s biggest electric carmakers has said.
Brian Gu, the vice-chair of the manufacturer Xpeng, said that Chinese carmakers could compete on quality to win customers in the EU and UK, rather than unleashing a brutal price war as they have in China.
Continue reading...So-called ‘good behaviour’ legislation fiercely criticised by opposition politicians and rights groups
Sweden’s parliament has voted to escalate the country’s crackdown on immigrant rights, backing laws that allow authorities to revoke residency permits based on a vague criteria of bad behaviour and obliging most public sector workers to report anyone suspected of being undocumented.
The new legislation comes ahead of parliamentary elections in September, pitting the centre-right government, which currently depends on the support of the far-right Sweden Democrats to govern, against a far right that has said its intent is to create one of Europe’s most hostile environments for non-Europeans.
Continue reading...The alliance has survived 80 years of disagreement—and it will survive again.
How the Iran war will transform America’s military role.
This blog is now closed – see our full report on the US-Iran agreement and an analysis of what it means
The agreement between the United States and Iran should allow for the “immediate reopening” of the Strait of Hormuz, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Monday.
“The priority now is its swift and full implementation by all parties,” von der Leyen said about the announced deal.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: A group made up of dozens of cybersecurity experts, including several well-known veterans of the industry, published an open letter to the U.S. government asking it to lift the export control order on Anthropic's Fable and Mythos models. According to the open letter, "this action has taken the best models away from [cybersecurity] defenders" who now can't use the models to find vulnerabilities and make their software and products more secure. "To pull the best capabilities away from defenders without a good reason when our adversaries are rapidly advancing is dangerous," read the letter. On Friday, the U.S. government ordered Anthropic to limit the export of Fable and Mythos, citing national security concerns, without explaining the specific reasons behind the order, according to Anthropic. In response, the company suspended access to the models to all users worldwide. As of this writing, the letter is signed by 76 cybersecurity experts, including Alex Stamos, former Facebook chief of security; Casey Ellis, the founder bug bounty platform Bugcrowd; Jon Callas, famed cryptographer and former Apple security design and architecture manager; Paul Vixie, computer scientist ; Dino Dai Zovi, the former head of applied security engineering at Block; Katie Moussouris, the founder of Luta Security; and Rachel Tobac, the CEO of the security awareness training firm SocialProof Security. [...] Anthropic said that the White House export control order may have been based on a report that there was a method to bypass -- or jailbreak -- Fable to unlock its powerful Mythos-level capabilities. According to Katie Moussouris, one of the signatories of the open letter, the method was demonstrated by Amazon researchers in a paper that is not public but that she has reviewed. But Moussouris said in a blog post that the paper did not actually demonstrate a real jailbreak. Instead, she wrote, the researchers simply asked Fable to fix open source code with public and known vulnerabilities along with "deliberately planted vulnerabilities," after the model initially refused to "review the code for security issues." "The behavior described in the paper cannot meaningfully be fixed, and any attempt would only weaken the model for defense," Moussouris wrote. "Defenders need to be able to ask AI to fix the bugs in a file, explain why the fix matters, and write tests that confirm the patch works. That is not a guardrail bypass. It is the most valuable thing an AI model can do for defensive security: executing the find, fix, and test loop defenders run every day." Moussouris' critique was echoed in the open letter, which also said that the group of experts believe the model capabilities in the Amazon paper "can be replicated" on OpenAI's GPT-5.5, on Anthropic's own publicly available Claude Opus 4.8 and Sonnet, "and even Chinese models like Kimi 2.7." Moussouris told TechCrunch that "the bugs used to demonstrate the techniques in the paper can be found using the other models. The method in the paper is a guardrail bypass technique. Other models that lack the Fable guardrails often won't refuse the straightforward request to look for security bugs, so they don't need a bypass." The letter also asked for transparently and fairly enforced regulations created by "a democratic rule-making process" that are based on scientific research done by industry and academic experts, and "used only to the minimal extent necessary to ensure the safety of the American public."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| House battery gives almost exactly 5 miles. Extendo gives an extra 10+ [link] [comments] |
The closures, so employees can watch a recorded lecture, will cost the company an estimated 2.1bn won ($1.4m) in sales
Starbucks Korea will simultaneously close all its stores for a mandatory history lesson, after a disastrous promotion that evoked memories of a pro-democracy massacre sparked public and political backlash.
More than 2,000 stores will temporarily close at 3pm on 22 June, the company said, so staff can watch recorded lectures on modern Korean history and engage in “social sensitivity” training. The half-day closures will cost Starbucks an estimated 2.1bn won ($1.4m) in lost sales, according to data firm IGAWorks.
Continue reading...Bluetti's new FridgePower helps protect refrigerated food and perishables when your home loses power.
Dr. Peter Stafford, his wife, Rebekah Stafford, and their four children all arrived safely on Monday, according to Serge, a Pennsylvania-based Christian missions organization.
Experts say criminal networks favour Sri Lanka due to ease of getting tourist visas and limited regulation on sim cards and internet connections
Experts have warned that Sri Lanka is emerging as a hub for transnational cybercrime, after a crackdown in south-east Asia pushed Chinese-run criminal networks to relocate their vast scam operations.
Sri Lankan police spokesperson Fredrick Wootler said the country was witnessing an “alarming increase of cybercrimes” perpetrated by people entering the country as tourists, and then illegally setting up scam operations targeting people across the world.
Continue reading...The teen was initially released pending trial after being charged as a juvenile, but after he was charged as an adult, a judge ruled he was no longer subject to rules regarding juvenile detention.
I have a wooden dowel and a mallet. But every video I see has a 3 ton press. I’ve heard of people doing it but there are no videos I’ve found of people doing it without a press?
Any recommendations?
The all-out splurge, the killer deal, or the Goldilocks middle ground. We've tested every Apple Watch to help you land you perfect match.
The Federal Aviation Administration said British Airways Flight 271 landed safely at Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas after the crew reported a cellphone fire on board.
35% of American households are using AI to find information. 14% of people trust that information.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that his administration has “cut” by 97% “the flow” of illegal drugs entering the U.S. “by water, by ocean and sea.” But available federal data do not support that claim.
There is no comprehensive data on the total amount of drugs trafficked to the U.S., including how much authorities don’t capture. Without that information, drug policy experts have told us that it’s not possible to know if the president’s claim is accurate.
“[W]e do not know the true amount of drugs coming into the country because we don’t know the amount that comes in undetected (the known unknown),” Katharine Harris, a fellow in drug policy at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, told us in an email.
She said the amount of drugs “seized” — which is what the federal government reports — is not equivalent to total drug “flow.”
However, Trump, based only on cherry-picked seizure data, continues to claim that his administration has almost completely stopped drugs from being brought into the U.S. by way of water.
“We cut the flow of fentanyl across our border by 59%, which is unheard of,” Trump said in May 22 remarks in New York. “And we cut the flow of fentanyl and drugs into our country by the ocean and the sea, in other words, coming in by water, by ocean and sea by 97%.”

Then, on May 28, in an interview with his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, on Fox News, he said, “We have drugs down 97%. Fentanyl and various drugs down 97% on drugs coming in by water.”
The president has made the 97% reduction claim more than a dozen times since late December.
We already addressed in February Trump’s unsupported claim that fentanyl coming across U.S. borders is down by more than half.
The amount of fentanyl seized by Customs and Border Protection decreased by about 50% in the first full 15 months of Trump’s second term, going from 26,398 pounds seized in President Joe Biden’s last full 15 months in office to 13,216 pounds seized in Trump’s first full 15 months, according to the most recent CBP data. Also, based on provisional data, the National Center for Health Statistics estimates about a 22% decline in overdose deaths from synthetic opioids, or fentanyl, between 2024 and 2025 — from 48,913 to 38,084.
The seizure data is often used as a proxy for how much enters the country undetected. To some, fewer pounds seized indicates that fewer drugs are being smuggled in — not more.
The fact that the seized amount has declined could mean that less of the drug is being trafficked into the U.S., but it could also mean that authorities are catching less of it. In October 2024, we wrote about then-Vice President Kamala Harris’ claim that the Biden administration had cut the flow of illegal fentanyl “by half” because the amount seized by border officials had increased in Biden’s first two years as president.
But experts said there was also insufficient data to support her statement.
“If you don’t know the denominator” – meaning the figure for the total flow of a drug to the U.S. – “you can’t have an answer,” David Luckey, director of the RAND Rural America Partnership Initiative and professor of policy analysis at the RAND School of Public Policy, told us for that 2024 story.
Trump’s claim about drugs coming by water is flawed for similar reasons.
When we asked for the source of his claim, a senior administration official sent only a hyperlink to the webpage with statistics on drugs seized by CBP’s Air and Marine Operations, which does aviation and maritime law enforcement.
Sometimes — such as in June 10 remarks in the Oval Office — Trump sounds as though he’s claiming that there has been a 97% cut in fentanyl coming by water. But that’s not really what he means.
Administration officials have told other fact-checkers that the president’s claim is based on the decrease in the amount of all drugs seized in July 2025 compared with November 2025.
There were 4,476 combined pounds of cocaine, fentanyl, marijuana, heroin and methamphetamine interdicted by CBP’s Air and Marine Operations last November, about a 98% drop from the 224,805 pounds seized four months earlier in July. But that particular comparison was cherry-picked.
That July, there was a huge one-month spike in the amount of drugs seized – mostly marijuana. The total weight seized had increased 1,140% from 18,132 pounds in June. Using July as a starting point made the change in drug seizures under Trump look like a much larger decline.
“Picking a different month” to start “would have shown a smaller decline,” Harris, of the Baker Institute, said of the White House’s calculation. She added, “Generally it’s more informative to look at these trends over at least a 12-month period, especially when the data are available, in order to account for things like seasonal variation and outlier events.”
In fact, as of April, the most recent data available, there had been 547,603 pounds seized by CBP’s Air and Marine Operations in Trump’s first full 15 months back in office. That was an increase of about 81% from the 302,548 pounds seized in the last full 15 months under Biden.
Even if the unusually large amount of drugs seized in July 2025 is excluded from that 15-month tally, the amount seized under Trump was still almost 7% higher than under Biden.
If an increase in seizures indicates more drugs getting into the country undetected – as some Republicans have said – that’s the opposite of what Trump has claimed is happening.
In addition, the U.S. Coast Guard says it — not CBP — is “the lead federal maritime law enforcement agency” responsible for water-based interdiction of illegal drugs.
In fiscal year 2025, which included about eight months under Trump, the Coast Guard said it seized a record of almost 510,000 pounds of cocaine in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean – more than three times its annual average of 167,000 pounds.
In September, the last month of that fiscal year, the U.S. military began striking boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean that it claimed were bringing drugs to the U.S.
But the New York Times, citing epidemiologists, addiction scientists and public health experts, reported in May that cocaine is still widely available in the U.S., as drug smugglers have seemingly adjusted to the boat strikes by transporting their product in large shipping containers or using land routes through Central America.
Harris, the drug policy fellow, said the amount of drugs seized “can be paired with other data points, like the purity, price, and availability trends for a particular substance, to infer whether there has been a reduction in supply.” If drugs are more scarce, less potent and prices are higher, she said that could indicate a supply interruption.
“But the seizure data alone cannot substantiate claims about the true drug flow,” she said.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post Trump Makes Unsupported Claims About Drug Flows appeared first on FactCheck.org.
State’s attorney general alleges TikTok exposed children to harmful sexual content and addictive features
Florida became the latest state to sue TikTok on Monday after the attorney general accused the company of violating a state law that limits social media access for teenagers.
In a press conference, Republican James Uthmeier said TikTok exposed children to harmful sexual content and addictive features, such as unlimited scrolling and push notifications. “It’s designed to keep kids stuck on those screens for hours,” Uthmeier said at a press conference. “Our evidence suggests that so many kids are on TikTok for upwards of six, seven, eight or more hours a day. We are going to get our kids their lives back.”
Continue reading...Donald Trump posts ‘Let the oil flow’ as US-Iran peace deal sparks immediate drop for Brent crude
Global oil prices have tumbled to a three-month low and stock markets closed at a record high amid fresh hopes that a US-Iran peace deal could end the greatest energy supply crisis in the history of the market.
The price of Brent crude dropped about 4% to about $83 (£62) on Monday amid optimism that the strait of Hormuz could reopen shortly and bring a return of Gulf oil exports to the market. Wholesale gas prices fell 6% in Europe.
Continue reading...Israeli officials disparaged the peace deal and said Israel’s fight against Hezbollah in Lebanon would go on.
Research relationships with Intel, IQM, Qblox, Quantinuum, QuEra Computing, Quantum Machines, Rigetti, and Riverlane to accelerate hybrid classical-quantum computing
LAS VEGAS, June 15, 2026 – HPE today announced it has expanded relationships with eight companies to integrate high performance computing (HPC) and quantum computing systems to pave the way for practical and scalable hybrid classical-quantum applications in the future.
As a global leader in HPC with the HPE Cray supercomputing platform, HPE is in a unique position to advance quantum computing and provide the critical HPC and networking infrastructure necessary to enable hybrid application workflows and integrate emerging quantum technologies into existing supercomputing environments. By partnering with quantum processing unit, quantum error correction, and quantum control leaders, HPE is pioneering a hybrid approach that combines classical supercomputing with quantum computing, enabling faster, more efficient solutions to apply to some of the world’s most complex scientific and industrial challenges.
“By bringing supercomputing and quantum technologies together in a hybrid platform, we will accelerate the transition from research to real-world application,” said Trish Damkroger, senior vice president and general manager, HPC & AI Infrastructure Solutions at HPE. “Our new strategic collaborations will extend world-class HPC infrastructure to make quantum accessible, scalable and operational.”
Advancing Full-Stack Hybrid Quantum Supercomputing Across Multiple Modalities
HPE is collaborating with leading companies – Intel, IQM, Qblox, Quantinuum, QuEra Computing, Quantum Machines, Rigetti, and Riverlane – across a diverse set of architectural approaches with the goal of building out a full-stack hybrid quantum supercomputing platform. These collaborations will support the development of integrated testbeds for hybrid algorithm co-design, software interoperability, and system-level performance benchmarking across HPC and AI environments.
HPE is bringing together multiple quantum modalities – including neutral atom, ion trap, superconducting, and silicon spin quantum bits (qubits) – along with quantum error correction and quantum control systems. Through these efforts, HPE is enabling exploration of architectural trade-offs, validation of hybrid workflows, as well as development and benchmarking of quantum application workloads and workflows running on HPC systems and AI factories.
HPE continues to extend the capabilities of classical HPC while building a shared community committed to practical innovation in quantum computing. By enabling the seamless integration of quantum and classical HPC and AI, HPE is shaping the future of hybrid architectures, driving progress in scientific discovery, national security, and industrial innovation.
Explore hybrid classical-quantum computing at HPE Discover demo #629 or attend a quantum computing session at the show:
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 Advances Quantum Computing at Scale with Expanded Industry Collaborations appeared first on HPCwire.
Third annual Cleveland Discovery and Innovation Forum convenes global leaders to examine the future of advanced computing in biomedical research
June 15, 2026 — The third annual Cleveland Discovery and Innovation Forum, hosted by Cleveland Clinic and IBM, highlighted progress in applying quantum computing and AI to healthcare and life sciences research. The forum brought together global leaders in healthcare, science and technology to share insights into how advanced computing is accelerating discovery and shaping the future of patient care.

“AI-Powered prevention: Aligning visions, strategies and policies for impact.” Panelists (l to r): Alex Shalek, Ph.D., MIT; Stacey Adam, Ph.D., Foundation for the National Institutes of Health; Aled Edwards, Ph.D., Structural Genomics Consortium; James Kozloski, Ph.D., IBM; Steve Nissen, M.D., Cleveland Clinic. Courtesy of Cleveland Clinic
The one-day event, held today on Cleveland Clinic’s Main Campus, featured more than 30 speakers from academia, industry, foundations, venture capital and government. Discussions focused on the growing impact of AI and quantum computing in tackling some of the most complex challenges in healthcare and life sciences research.
“The Cleveland Discovery and Innovation Forum highlighted how AI and quantum computing are advancing research across every stage of disease – from prevention and early detection to treatment,” said Lara Jehi, M.D., Cleveland Clinic’s Chief Research Information Officer. “Cleveland Clinic is at the forefront of applying quantum computing to life sciences research. Through this forum and our broader research efforts, we are helping define how advanced computing can unlock new scientific insights and ultimately improve care for patients around the world.”
The forum also highlighted five years of progress by Cleveland Clinic’s and IBM’s Discovery Accelerator, a partnership focused on advancing the pace of biomedical research through high-performance computing, AI and quantum computing. Since its launch, the Discovery Accelerator has supported more than 50 projects, contributed to multiple peer-reviewed publications and developed an innovative education curriculum aimed at building the skilled workforce needed for the future.
“As we mark five years of our collaboration with Cleveland Clinic, we are seeing how quantum and AI can work together to transform biomedical research — modeling molecular interactions, refining machine learning for personalized care, and pushing the boundaries of what’s achievable across healthcare and life sciences,” said Alessandro Curioni, Ph.D., IBM Fellow and Vice President, Algorithms and Applications, IBM Research.
The agenda included keynote presentations, panel discussions and fireside chats led by Cleveland Clinic and IBM executives alongside international leaders. Featured speakers included Eric Isaacs, Ph.D., of Research Corporation for Science Advancement; Curtis Priem, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and co-founder of NVIDIA; Alex Shalek, Ph.D., MIT; Sergii Strelchuk, University of Oxford; Serpil Erzurum, M.D., Cleveland Clinic; Alessandro Curioni, Ph.D., IBM; and Percy Carter, Pfizer.
Sessions included panels on applied quantum computing and its role in building a world-class research and healthcare ecosystem, and how AI and quantum computing can realize the potential of personalized therapy as well as a fireside chat on visionary leadership and advanced computational methods in healthcare.
The forum also featured a project showcase from Cleveland Clinic and IBM researchers, including recent work modeling a protein of more than 12,000 atoms, the largest protein structure known to be simulated on a quantum computer. The findings underscore the growing potential of quantum computers as scientific tools for solving fundamental problems in biology, chemistry and life sciences.
Several research announcements and updates were shared during the event and highlighted Cleveland Clinic’s steadfast progress in shaping quantum computing applications in medicine, and building the Ohio Discovery Corridor through its Cleveland Innovation District. These included:
About Cleveland Clinic
Cleveland Clinic is a nonprofit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. Founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation, Cleveland Clinic has pioneered many medical breakthroughs, including coronary artery bypass surgery and the first face transplant in the United States. Cleveland Clinic is consistently recognized in the U.S. and throughout the world for its expertise and care. Among Cleveland Clinic’s 83,000 employees worldwide are more than 6,600 salaried physicians and researchers, and 21,900 registered nurses and advanced practice providers, representing 140 medical specialties and subspecialties. Cleveland Clinic is a 6,725-bed health system that includes a 173-acre main campus near downtown Cleveland, 23 hospitals, 300 outpatient facilities, including locations in northeast Ohio; Florida; Las Vegas, Nevada; Toronto, Canada; Abu Dhabi, UAE; and London, England. In 2025, there were 15.9 million outpatient encounters, 343,000 hospital admissions and observations, and 336,000 surgeries and procedures throughout Cleveland Clinic’s health system.
Source: Cleveland Clinic
The post Cleveland Clinic and IBM Forum Highlights Advancements in AI and Quantum Computing for Healthcare Research appeared first on HPCwire.
COLUMBIA, Md., June 15, 2026 — EigenQ, Inc. today announced a collaboration with TD SYNNEX intended to help public-sector, defense, critical infrastructure and enterprise customers assess and prepare AMD EPYC processor-based server environments for the post-quantum security transition.
As organizations plan for the migration from classical public-key cryptography to quantum-resistant approaches, many must protect data with long confidentiality lifetimes while continuing to operate large installed bases of production systems. The collaboration is expected to support practical modernization paths that help customers evaluate post-quantum readiness, identify deployment models and add quantum-safe security capabilities to new and, where technically appropriate, already-deployed AMD EPYC processor-based infrastructure.
EigenQ’s platform combines post-quantum cryptographic software, cryptographic-agility tooling, quantum entropy hardware and integration capabilities for high-assurance computing environments. When aligned with AMD EPYC CPU-based server platforms and ecosystem deployment models, the EigenQ approach is intended to support use cases including encrypted communications, secure workload protection, identity and access systems, key generation and lifecycle management, attestation, cryptographic agility and phased infrastructure modernization.
“Modern enterprises need infrastructure that delivers performance, efficiency and security while giving them the flexibility to prepare for what comes next,” said Derek Dicker, Corporate Vice President, Enterprise Business Group, AMD. “Our collaboration with EigenQ and TD SYNNEX aims to help organizations evaluate practical, ecosystem-ready approaches for preparing AMD EPYC CPU-based environments for the post-quantum security transition.”
“EigenQ is honored to work with AMD and TD SYNNEX to help bring practical post-quantum security capabilities to AMD EPYC processor-based server environments,” said Dr. José R. Rosas-Bustos, Chief Executive Officer, EigenQ. “Customers are asking for solutions that can strengthen resilience, support migration planning and protect existing infrastructure without disrupting mission operations. By aligning technology integration with scalable channel pathways, we believe this collaboration can help organizations prepare for the next major transition in cybersecurity.”
TD SYNNEX is expected to support EigenQ’s ecosystem motion by helping align partner enablement, distribution readiness and public-sector channel pathways for customers seeking to evaluate post-quantum security solutions for AMD server environments, subject to applicable approvals, program requirements and customer requirements.
“As customers prepare for the post-quantum transition, they need practical solutions that can be evaluated, procured and deployed through trusted technology ecosystems,” said Dennis Levenson, Vice President, Vendor Management, TD SYNNEX. “TD SYNNEX is committed to helping partners and customers assess emerging security technologies and bring scalable, operationally practical solutions to market. We look forward to working with EigenQ as it advances post-quantum security readiness for enterprise and public-sector environments.”
The collaboration is expected to be particularly relevant for organizations operating long-lived infrastructure in regulated, mission-critical or high-availability environments. These organizations often need a phased migration path that supports post-quantum readiness while preserving operational continuity, procurement flexibility and the economic value of existing systems.
“Post-quantum migration is no longer only a future compliance exercise; it is becoming an infrastructure planning issue for organizations that must protect sensitive data over long time horizons,” said said EigenQ Chairman Dr. Jesse Van Griensven Thé. “The market needs deployment models that meet customers where they are – across current systems, mixed environments and real-world mission constraints. This collaboration is designed to help address that need through technology readiness, platform alignment and practical ecosystem execution.”
Together, the companies intend to help customers bridge the gap between post-quantum standards development and deployable security implementation. By focusing on platform-level integration, rollout flexibility, ecosystem enablement and operational continuity, the collaboration is designed to support practical migration planning for organizations preparing AMD compute-based server environments for CNSA 2.0 alignment and future quantum-era cybersecurity requirements.
About EigenQ
EigenQ develops quantum-security and post-quantum cybersecurity technologies, including quantum entropy hardware, cryptographic-agility software and integration platforms designed to help organizations prepare for the quantum era. EigenQ focuses on practical deployment models for enterprise, public-sector, defense, critical infrastructure and high-assurance computing environments. For more information, visit www.eigenq.com.
About TD SYNNEX
TD SYNNEX (NYSE: SNX) is a leading global distributor, solutions aggregator, and original design and contract manufacturer that plays a central role in connecting the technology ecosystem. We support more than 150,000 customers across over 100 countries with a comprehensive edge-to-cloud portfolio spanning cybersecurity, analytics, artificial intelligence, mobility, and Everything-as-a-Service. We are a Fortune 100 company that helps partners maximize the value of technology investments and achieve measurable business outcomes through our global reach, expertise and enablement capabilities. Headquartered in Clearwater, Florida, and Fremont, California, the Company’s distribution business brings together a broad portfolio of IT hardware, software and systems, providing access to products across the global IT ecosystem. The Company’s Hyve Solutions business partners with technology companies to design, manufacture, and deliver traditional and accelerated compute, cloud, and connected infrastructure.
Source: EigenQ
The post EigenQ and TD SYNNEX Target Post-Quantum Migration for AMD EPYC Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.
Mark Carney says Canadian Ombudsperson for Responsible Enterprise office hasn’t been ‘effective’ since its 2019 setup
Canada is eliminating a watchdog that investigates alleged human rights violations committed by Canadian companies operating abroad, after Mark Carney said the office hadn’t been “effective” since it was set up in 2019.
The move comes as Canada faces criticism from Donald Trump’s administration over its “unacceptable” efforts to combat forced labour.
Continue reading... | (Fixed, see comments)I'm attempting to change my tire after running the old one completely to the ground. However watching the TFL video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-3TixixB7I) I didn't get far because these two connectors which the guy simply removes with his fingers are completely stuck, and the area is too tight to bring any sort of tools into to remove. Are there anyone who has had the same issue, or now of a smarter way to remove them? I understand they're a little fragile so I'd like to not use a lot of pressure. Thanks in advance [link] [comments] |
America's Block Party will celebrate the nation's 250th birthday this Fourth of July with a benefit concert in Los Angeles and events in local communities around the country.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Spotlight Delaware’s Breaking Bread Tour, launched this year, gives residents a chance to speak directly about issues affecting their communities. By bringing neighbors together around the same table, the discussion is meant to allow residents to highlight concerns that might not always appear in local government meetings or policy debates.
Nearly two dozen residents gathered in a Dover community center last Tuesday, dining on pasta and garlic knots while discussing what they felt were the city’s most pressing issues.
Their conversations spanned a variety of both local and national issues, such as homelessness, gentrification, and the criminal justice system. Some also spoke about the importance of individuals connecting with their community.
The event, hosted by Spotlight Delaware as the final session of its “Breaking Bread” tour, took place at the Inner City Cultural League in Dover, less than a mile away from Legislative Hall.
Homelessness has become a controversial topic across the state in recent months. In Dover, city leaders have attempted to push forward proposals meant to ban panhandling within the city. They also have targeted the People’s Church Community Center, a homeless shelter that had requested $47,000 in city funds to be spent on workforce development programs at the shelter.
During last week’s dinner, some residents questioned how the city is actually helping its homeless population. One resident described her concerns that wages remain at the same rate despite the rising cost of rent, electricity, and other utilities.
Another said they do not believe other Delawareans are “making the connection” between homelessness and an inability to afford rent prices.
One table attempted to focus on solutions, speaking about ways to improve Dover without displacing people. They spoke about initiatives like empowering people by providing jobs and new youth initiatives for those experiencing homelessness.

Another table spoke about wanting to feel more connected as a community. Despite living in Delaware’s capital, some said most connections and events are held in Wilmington – the state’s largest city.
In response to those concerns, one resident said those living in Dover must find events like Breaking Bread and stay in touch afterward to build their own community.
Separately, another table spoke about criminal justice issues in the state. A few individuals spoke about charge stacking, which occurs when law enforcement agencies file multiple charges against a person stemming from a single incident.
Participants ultimately tied charge stacking back to homelessness, stating that the practice can prevent individuals from obtaining a job with their criminal record, thus preventing them from supporting their families.
One resident called the connection between charge stacking and homelessness a “never-ending cycle.”

The post Dover residents talk homelessness, creating community at Spotlight Delaware event appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Europe after Nord Stream: The limits of energy security 23 June 2026 — 12:00 TO 13:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
As the debate continues in Brussels over how to defend infrastructure and strengthen energy independence, hear from experts on how Europe is facing up to this ongoing risk.
As the debate continues in Brussels over how to defend infrastructure and strengthen energy independence, hear from experts on how Europe is facing up to this ongoing risk.
The sabotage of the Nord Stream natural gas pipeline in 2022 exposed vulnerabilities in Europe’s energy system and wider infrastructure. It also highlighted risks linked to Russia’s grey-zone warfare and the vulnerability of undersea networks. It has driven efforts to strengthen resilience and raised urgent questions about Europe’s readiness to deter and respond to future threats.
This session discusses:
Relations at lowest ebb in years after Washington refuses to apologise for deaths in strait of Hormuz
Fury has continued to mount in India over the US’s refusal to apologise for the deaths of Indian sailors killed in strikes in the strait of Hormuz, further straining relations between the two countries as their leaders meet at the G7 summit in France this week.
Last week, three Indian seafarers, who were working on board commercial oil tankers, were killed when the US launched missile strikes on the vessel as it sailed through the strait of Hormuz.
Continue reading...Skip the token tie and get him a gift he’ll still be telling people about years from now
The very best Father’s Day deals and gifts for dads, grandfathers, and dads to be
Sign up for the Filter US newsletter, your weekly guide to buying fewer, better things
Socks, underwear, ties, another personalized mug. Dads and grandpas of all ages know the drill when it comes to Father’s Day. They have perfected the smile and gracious “thank you” while reminding themselves that it’s the thought that counts.
Don’t make him fake the enthusiasm this year. The right gadget can get a genuine “wow” by making his life a little easier, more comfortable or more fun, and he doesn’t even need to be a “tech guy.” I spoke to more than a dozen dads, from new dads to grandpas, geeky dads to sporty dads, and they all shared stories of gadgets they’ve received as gifts in the past and adore. Here are some of their all-time favorites, and your dad’s future favorites.
Shokz OpenMove headphones
ANMONE Long Stylus Pen
Continue reading...Can Argentina’s Javier Milei evolve from disruptor to political leader? Expert comment LToremark
Two and a half years after Milei came to power and shook up Argentina’s political system, the novelty might be wearing off.
Since becoming Argentina’s president in December 2023, Javier Milei has defied political gravity. A self-described anarcho-capitalist with no prior executive experience, he came to power promising to upend decades of interventionist policies and slash public spending with his famous chainsaw. In doing so, he defeated the Peronist movement, long synonymous with Argentina’s political system but weakened by economic crisis and political dysfunction during Alberto Fernández’s presidency.
The surprises did not stop there. Milei enacted one of the most ambitious fiscal adjustments in modern history, eliminating the fiscal deficit and restoring a budget surplus. He passed significant reforms and brought down triple-digit inflation despite controlling only a small minority in Congress. His success in the 2025 midterm elections strengthened his legislative position and paved the way for further reforms, including a major overhaul of labour regulations. In the process, he became an international celebrity and a reference point for the global libertarian right.
Yet 2026 has served as a reminder that this is still Argentina – where there are no blank cheques. Milei’s approval ratings are down and signs of political fatigue are beginning to emerge, as many Argentinians continue to struggle despite improving macroeconomic indicators. Meanwhile, increasingly public disputes within the government are raising questions about Milei’s ability to manage his coalition and fuelling speculation about alternative candidates on the right.
And Peronism may not be over either. Former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, whose political career appeared to be over after being convicted on corruption charges and placed under house arrest, is once again polling competitively – although she is unable to run for office. Despite Milei’s novelty, neither Peronism nor Argentina’s talent for political surprises have disappeared.
It would be hard even for Milei’s critics to deny his economic achievements. Inflation has come down from 211 per cent when he took office in December 2023 to just over 30 per cent last month. Although still among the highest rates in the world, it no longer dominates political debate in a society accustomed to much higher levels of inflation. The economy is expected to grow by 3.5 per cent this year, boosted by exports of shale oil and gas from the Vaca Muerta reserves, mining and agriculture. Argentina’s central bank has successfully defended the value of the peso, which remains broadly stable, and has begun to rebuild foreign currency reserves, one of the country’s most persistent economic vulnerabilities. Finally, despite his close political affinity with US President Donald Trump, Milei has moved to liberalize foreign trade, slashing export taxes and supporting the Mercosur-European Union free trade agreement.
But in September 2025, following his party’s defeat in the Buenos Aires provincial elections, market turbulence raised serious doubts about the sustainability of Milei’s programme prompting a direct intervention from the US Treasury to restore confidence. This served as a reminder that Argentina remains highly exposed to shifts in investor confidence and external financing conditions. While those fears have subsided somewhat, the country is still struggling to lower its sovereign risk premium and re-enter international debt markets, one of the government’s most important medium-term objectives.
But stabilization and prosperity are not the same thing. Rightly or wrongly, many Argentinians feel they are not seeing the benefits of the economic turnaround. Real wages remain low, consumption has recovered unevenly and much of the recent growth has been concentrated in a handful of highly competitive export sectors like agriculture, mining, and oil and gas. Less competitive parts of the economy, including manufacturing, are struggling, while much of the new employment being created is either informal or concentrated in low-paying activities such as delivery services. The government is betting that lower inflation, deregulation and fiscal discipline will eventually unlock a broader wave of investment. Whether Argentinians are willing to wait for those promises to materialize is another matter.
The end of his honeymoon period has also exposed Milei’s limitations as a political leader. While highly effective at setting direction, he has shown less interest in the day-to-day management of government outside the economy. Milei is fiercely loyal to his small circle of trusted advisors but seems unable to resolve the widening dispute between his sister and closest confidant Karina and his chief political strategist Santiago Caputo, fuelling perceptions of government infighting. He has also stood by his chief of staff, Manuel Adorni, despite a steady stream of corruption allegations that have dented Milei’s claim to have uprooted the political caste. Adorni’s recent admission that he underreported his taxes has only increased pressure on the president from opposition and government allies alike.
Meanwhile, Peronism is once again viewed by many as a viable alternative, despite remaining divided and burdened by memories of its disastrous final years in office. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner’s influence over the movement remains considerable. The leading contender to inherit her mantle is Buenos Aires governor Axel Kicillof although their relationship is strained. Kicillof is closely associated with the interventionist economic model that Milei was elected to dismantle and would be a formidable candidate if Argentinians decide that Milei’s experiment needs to be reversed. Less so if voters conclude that the model broadly works but requires moderation.
Why has Albania’s Kushner controversy attracted such international attention? Expert comment jon.wallace
Protests about plans for a luxury resort expose issues confronting all developing countries - over natural resources and sovereignty in an age of a triple planetary crisis.
Last week, the streets of Tirana were filled with protesters brandishing inflatable flamingos. They had gathered in opposition to plans by President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to develop a luxury resort on Albania’s largely unspoiled Sazan Island and the Zvërnec coastline near Vlora. The area is home to flamingos, more than 200 migratory bird species, Mediterranean monk seals and nesting sea turtles. The demonstrations lasted several days and spread internationally, with rallies reported in London and other European capitals.
It may seem unusual that plans for a resort in a relatively remote part of Albania generated such protest and international attention. To some extent, the involvement of Kushner is to blame – as Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama claimed when defending the project.
But the protests, held under the slogan ‘Albania is not for sale’, speak to a broader question: how much of a country’s environment and natural heritage should be sacrificed in the name of economic growth?
This question acquires new urgency in an era defined by the accelerating triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution. Decisions about coastlines, forests and freshwater systems are no longer merely matters of domestic planning. They are increasingly tests of how governments reconcile development imperatives with ecological limits that are becoming harder to ignore.
Thus, what might once have been treated as a routine foreign investment project has become a flashpoint for debates about sovereignty, environmental protection and geopolitical alignment.
For Rama’s government, the attraction of such a project, which is also backed by Qatari as well as local investors, is evident. Albania has spent decades attempting to attract the kind of foreign direct investment that wealthier European states often take for granted.
Controversial amendments to Albania’s law on protected areas in 2024 opened the door to tourism development, enabling further expansion of a sector that has already more than tripled in size over the past decade. Large-scale tourism developments promise employment, infrastructure upgrades, fiscal revenue and international visibility. In a competitive global environment, they also signal that a country is ‘open for business’.
In this sense, the proposed development represents precisely the kind of transformative investment that many governments in the Global South and parts of Europe’s periphery compete to secure.
Similar projects include large-scale coastal tourism projects in Egypt’s Red Sea region and major resort and infrastructure developments along Montenegro’s Adriatic coast. Both have been promoted as bringing jobs, foreign exchange and regional growth. In the case of Montenegro, EU accession is also a key aim.
Yet the very characteristics that make Albania attractive to investors are the same ones that underpin domestic and international opposition.
The country’s relatively undeveloped coastline, rich biodiversity and ecological heterogeneity are not simply aesthetic assets. They are functional ecosystems that support fisheries, protect against coastal erosion, store carbon, and underpin climate resilience in a region already experiencing rising temperatures, water stress and extreme weather events.
In other words, what is at stake is not simply land use, but the integrity of critical ecological systems.
Across the Mediterranean and beyond, ecosystems are under mounting pressure from habitat fragmentation, marine degradation, pollution and climate-induced stress. Rising sea temperatures are altering marine biodiversity. Coastal erosion is accelerating due to both natural and human pressures. At the same time, demand for land, water and infrastructure continues to grow, driven by tourism, urbanization and global capital flows.
The underlying question is no longer whether nature has economic value, but whether it can be converted into short-term financial gain without undermining the long-term ecological foundations on which that value depends.
Yet Albania’s dilemma cannot be understood through economics or environmental policy alone.
The country occupies a strategically complex position. As a NATO member and a candidate for EU accession, it is embedded in Western security structures but outside the EU’s economic and regulatory framework. It is seeking deeper integration with Europe, while trying to maintain strong ties with the United States.
This dual orientation embeds environmental governance within geopolitical dynamics, as access to investment, trade relationships and international credibility is increasingly shaped by how states manage – or not – climate risks, protect biodiversity and regulate the use of natural resources.
At the same time, it complicates domestic debates about environmental governance and sovereignty over natural assets. The ‘flamingo revolution’ is a clear illustration; protesters have questioned the environmental implications of the development. But they are also unhappy about the transparency of the decision-making process, and the extent to which foreign investors influence Albania’s natural heritage.
The dispute over a stretch of Albania’s coastline is therefore ultimately not about a single development project. It is about the evolution of the country’s development model under conditions of ecological constraint and geopolitical competition. It is also about who gets to decide how strategic natural assets are used, and in whose interest development is pursued.
Economic growth, environmental protection and strategic alignment are all legitimate national objectives. The difficulty arises when pursuing one appears to undermine the others. This is the governing dilemma of the triple planetary crisis: environmental degradation is not a side effect of development, but a constraint on its long-term viability.
The protesters are asking whether some places should remain beyond the reach of developers. The government is asking how a country can prosper if it turns away potentially transformative investment. Neither question is unreasonable.
The challenge for Albania – and for many countries in similar positions – is that the answers now lie at the intersection of economics, ecology and geopolitics, where trade-offs are unavoidable and increasingly irreversible.

Cengiz Yar/ProPublica. Source images: Wikimedia Commons, Getty Images, documents obtained by ProPublica.
For more than a decade, Dr. Joseph Mercola cautioned parents against a potentially lifesaving shot of vitamin K for their newborn babies: “Vitamin K shots are completely unnecessary for your newborn.”
But now, in a break from his past warnings, Mercola is saying he no longer believes that.
ProPublica contacted Mercola recently as it was preparing an article about babies who died as a result of their parents turning down the vitamin K shot. Mercola’s new point of view is just as unequivocal as his old one: “The data is clear: vitamin K saves lives,” he wrote in an April article on his website two days after ProPublica contacted him. He added: “Based on the totality of the published evidence, I support vitamin K prophylaxis for all newborns.”
He also directed parents to speak to their children’s pediatricians.
“Vitamin K deficiency bleeding is rare, but when it occurs, the consequences can be devastating and irreversible,” Mercola wrote. “A single injection at birth can prevent it. Please talk to your doctor.”
Mercola is a leading vaccine skeptic and an ardent supporter of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. He is a popular figure online, with a Facebook page that has some 1.7 million followers. He sends out a daily newsletter and sells alternative treatments for a variety of ailments.
His reversal comes at a critical moment. Hospitals and research studies have documented an alarming jump in babies not receiving the vitamin K shot, which has been recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics since 1961 to help newborns’ blood to clot. Without it, research shows, babies are 81 times more at risk for late vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which can be fatal.
Just as has happened with measles and other vaccines, vitamin K shots have become the target of a deluge of false information online. That has caused some parents to view it as an unnecessary pharmaceutical intervention amid a lingering mistrust of the medical system following the COVID-19 pandemic.
Some point to a 2010 post from Mercola, entitled “The Dark Side of the Routine Newborn Vitamin K Shot.” A doctor in Tennessee recalled reluctant families citing the article, as did doctors in Oregon.
In the years that followed, Mercola stood by his opposition. He reiterated his position in 2014, after four babies in Nashville, Tennessee, suffered vitamin K deficiency bleeding. And he did so again in 2019, after hospital staff contacted child protective services in Illinois and took temporary custody of a newborn whose parents refused the shot for their baby.
In place of the shot, Mercola had recommended vitamin K drops, which are taken orally and have been touted online as a popular alternative. The drops, however, are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration and research shows they are not as effective as the shot, though they are used in some European countries.
In his April article, he addressed the rampant false information online regarding the vitamin K shot and acknowledged the role his writing may have played in spreading it. “The internet contains a significant amount of misinformation about vitamin K,” Mercola wrote. “Some of it may reference my own 2010 article. That article reflected the state of a scientific debate that has since been resolved. The science moved forward, and so have I.”

In fact, the science around the vitamin K shot has been settled for decades. The discovery of vitamin K and its role in clotting blood won the Nobel Prize in 1943. Newer studies have confirmed and furthered many of the findings that were available in 2010, but they do not represent a scientific shift from previous research. Some recent studies that Mercola cited in the April article document the rise in babies not receiving the shot and the catastrophic bleeding in the brain that can follow, but again both reinforce the same science that has encouraged giving the shot for more than 60 years.
In Mercola’s earlier posts, he wrote about what he deemed to be risks from the shot, beginning with “inappropriate” and “unnecessary” pain to the baby. He incorrectly claimed that the amount of vitamin K injected into newborns was far more than the needed dose. In addition, he wrote that the shot may contain preservatives that can be “toxic” to a baby’s immune system.
Benzyl alcohol is often used as a preservative in vitamin K shots, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other organizations have stressed that it’s safe. In the 1980s, doctors realized that some extremely premature babies suffered benzyl alcohol toxicity, but, according to the CDC, that was because they were on so many medications containing it. In addition, many hospitals now offer preservative-free options.
Some families have also expressed fear about a “black box warning,” which appears on a drug’s label to alert providers of serious risks. The shot does contain a boxed warning, as do more than 400 other medications, but that is primarily related to adults and vitamin K that is given through an IV, not as a shot in the thigh muscle, which is how doctors typically administer vitamin K to babies. None of the dozens of doctors interviewed by ProPublica said they have ever seen an adverse reaction in an infant who received a vitamin K shot.
But even back in 2010, Mercola dispelled one popular misconception that vitamin K injections increased the risk of cancer. That belief stemmed from a pair of older refuted studies. In 2010, he wrote, “that conclusion was in error.” In April, he reinforced that message.
Alternative treatments promoted by Mercola have attracted federal scrutiny. He and his companies have had to pay millions of dollars to settle allegations that he had made false claims about the safety of products.
During the pandemic, for instance, the FDA sent Mercola a warning letter after he offered unapproved and misbranded products, including vitamin C, on his website as ways to prevent or treat COVID-19.
In 2017, the Federal Trade Commission announced it was mailing $2.59 million to people who bought Mercola indoor tanning systems. The agency charged that Mercola and his companies claimed the tanning systems were safe and that research showed that indoor tanning doesn’t raise the risk of melanoma, a type of skin cancer.
Mercola did not admit wrongdoing. His online posts include a disclaimer that they are intended as a way of sharing knowledge and information, not medical advice. He also has said his 2010 vitamin K article was based on an interview with a Dutch researcher who studied vitamin K.
Mercola, a doctor of osteopathic medicine, declined to be interviewed for this story but said his current stance is accurately reflected in the April article. “While I do not agree with all of the characterizations and conclusions in your summary,” he wrote in response to questions from ProPublica, “I have nothing further to add at this time.”
Even though Mercola has now reversed his position on vitamin K, many on social media still cling to debunked and distorted claims. On Facebook, TikTok and Instagram, unsubstantiated claims often go unchecked.
One theme that has emerged on social media is the notion that God created babies perfectly, and there must be a reason they are born without sufficient vitamin K. In one video on TikTok, a woman who identifies herself as a nurse asked, “Did God really get it wrong?”
Responding to another, someone wrote, “Just know our creator didn’t make a mistake. Every baby is born like this for a reason.”
Others lump the vitamin K shot, which is not a vaccine, in with vaccines. A comment on a video about the vitamin K shot declared, “My baby isn’t getting any vaccines.” It received more than 600 likes.
Mercola also is not the only doctor being cited by vitamin K shot opponents. Commenters on Instagram, TikTok and Reddit have directed people to Dr. Suzanne Humphries, who has spoken out about vaccines and the vitamin K shot for many years.
“My opinion is that the more I read about vitamin K,” she said in a video posted in 2014, “the more I can’t believe that it’s injected into newborn infants.”
Last month, she appeared in a lengthy interview on the website of Children’s Health Defense, the anti-vaccine nonprofit founded by Kennedy. She cited the pair of studies from more than 30 years ago that found an association between the shot and cancer, though they were both called into question shortly after they were published. As even Mercola noted in 2010, several additional studies found no increased risk of cancer following the shot.
“Those of us that believe in a divine creator,” she said, “believe that maybe it is by design, or that actually it is by design, and that there’s a reason for it.”
Humphries did not respond to requests for comment.
During Kennedy’s time at Children’s Health Defense, the group published a post in 2020 that claimed aluminum adjuvants — added components that boost the body’s immune response — in vaccines are “significant sources of early exposure” to aluminum. Some vitamin K shots contain a small amount of aluminum, but studies have not found any evidence of serious or long-lasting harm. Adjuvants, according to the CDC, have been used “safely in vaccines for decades.”
Brian Hooker, chief scientific officer at Children’s Health Defense, said the aluminum concern remains, as does the cancer fear, despite multiple studies that found no basis for them. He said he would like to see more research on the vitamin K shot, as well as other newborn interventions like the hepatitis B vaccine.
“I do want to look at the individual components of these shots in conjunction with everything else that the infant is getting,” he said, “and to me that body of literature is really incomplete.”
Hooker said he worked with Kennedy for many years and, while they are no longer in direct contact, he has full confidence in the country’s leading federal health official. But Kennedy’s silence has served to deepen skepticism among experts.
“Now we’re starting to see something that I never saw, which was brain bleeds and gut bleeds in infants,” said Rep. Kim Schrier, a Washington Democrat who worked as a pediatrician for more than 15 years before running for Congress. “And that’s so scary and heartbreaking.”
At an April House subcommittee hearing, Schrier confronted Kennedy about vitamin K, saying that he made parents distrust doctors and shots, and as a result some parents are refusing the vitamin K shot and other standard care.
“Right now, Secretary Kennedy, given what I just told you about vitamin K, will you just tell pregnant women out there for the record, ‘Yes, you should get your babies the vitamin K shot’?” Schrier asked Kennedy.
Kennedy did not oblige her. He said he has never said anything about the vitamin K shot.
An HHS spokesperson did not answer ProPublica’s questions but said the CDC recommends that parents give newborns the vitamin K shot within 6 hours of their birth to prevent vitamin K deficiency bleeding. She acknowledged that uptake of the shot has declined during recent years “as public trust in health care institutions has fallen, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic amid heavy-handed mandates and inconsistent messaging during the Biden administration.”
“Rebuilding that trust,” the spokesperson wrote in an email, “requires honesty, informed consent, and respect for individual choice.”
Schrier said she empathizes with parents who are inundated with so many conflicting messages. She said she recently stepped out of the Capitol building and overheard a woman say — inaccurately — that every childhood vaccine contains glyphosate, which was an ingredient in some forms of the weed killer Roundup.
“I can just see how this is going to spiral right now. It gets out there, then it’s on social media,” Schrier said. “Every parent just doesn’t want to do the wrong thing.”
I want to understand more about why families decline a vitamin K shot. I know how difficult it is to talk about losing a child and how hard it can be to process this kind of grief. Words can’t express how sorry I am for your loss. ProPublica’s goal is to give the public the best, most trustworthy information. If you have a story to share, I hope you will reach out to me when you’re ready.
Duaa Eldeib
Send me your tips, stories and documents. Reach me by email or securely on Signal at 312-730-4797. I take the protection of my sources extremely seriously.
The post A Popular Doctor Had Long Warned That Vitamin K Shots Are Risky for Newborns. Now He’s Changed His Tune. appeared first on ProPublica.
John Healey’s resignation highlights profound strategic failure in the UK government’s approach to defence Expert comment jon.wallace
General Sir Richard Barrons – a co-author of the 2025 Strategic Defence Review – says a lack of government competence is making the UK less safe and undermining its reputation with allies.
UK Defence Secretary John Healey resigned on 11 June. In his resignation letter, addressing Prime Minister Keir Starmer, he said: ‘you have been unable, and the Treasury has been unwilling, to commit the resources that the nation needs to defend the country at this time of rising threats’, stating that the forthcoming Defence Investment Plan ‘falls well short of what is required for defence and the country at this dangerous time’. These events highlight two clear failures in UK defence.
The first is a failure of competent government.
The Strategic Defence Review (SDR), published in June last year, set out three essential conclusions. First, that the UK now lives in a much more dangerous world. Second, that both the Armed Forces and wider civil society are in poor shape to deal with that reality. Third, that urgent action is therefore imperative.
The SDR was clear that preparing for war in the 21st century is not simply about filling long-standing gaps in equipment, personnel or capability. It is about transformation: changing the way the UK thinks about, funds, organizes and delivers defence.
Yet, a year after the SDR was agreed, the government has decided not to fully fund its own review. In doing so, it is not merely failing to move forward; it is actively going backwards.
The second failure is that this decision makes the country less safe.
It diminishes the UK’s standing within NATO, weakens our credibility with allies, and increases our vulnerability to the realities of 21st-century conflict. Allies and adversaries alike will be paying attention.
The government has, in effect, decided not to fund the defence review it commissioned and endorsed, because it prefers to spend money elsewhere. That is a political choice.
The SDR charted a ten-year programme to put the UK in a stronger position. But the reality is that the country needs to be in a much better place within the next three to five years. The level of funding currently being put on the table means UK defence will not be fixed. In fact, it will continue to deteriorate. The transformation that the SDR says is imperative will simply not be affordable.
This is not ultimately a question of affordability. It is a question of choice. The government is choosing not to spend the money on defence that is necessary.
No one wants to spend more on defence for its own sake. But we are living in the world as it is, not the world as we would like it to be. We do not get to choose whether war matters. War can choose us, whether we prefer to ignore it or not.
That is the experience of Ukraine. It is also reflected in the turmoil across the Middle East. The UK must play its part alongside its allies, and that requires spending more money on defence sooner. If we choose not to do that, we will have to live with the consequences. Those consequences could be catastrophic.
At a time of political turmoil, the Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is the vehicle intended to deliver the Strategic Defence Review. Since the SDR was only agreed a year ago, it must be possible for government to think again, and to think more imaginatively.
The UK public sector spends around £1.3 trillion a year. Finding additional funding for defence is therefore a matter of priority, not impossibility. If government struggles to move money quickly within the public sector, it should also look beyond traditional funding routes.
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. http://fetchrss.com/rss/5db5cd8d8a93f8b2578b456760afa5a971d78900a21503d2.xml → https://fetchrss.com/feed/1iOlvZGYs4cZ1lmGXR97g0Fm.rss |
| 200:The data retrieved from this URL could not be understood as a feed. http://feeds.feedburner.com/tomdispatch/esUU?format=xml |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. http://fetchrss.com/rss/5db5cd8d8a93f8b2578b456760afa911c42db1423f562092.xml → https://fetchrss.com/feed/1iOlvZGYs4cZ1lmGlVBnu2AU.rss |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. http://fetchrss.com/rss/5db5cd8d8a93f8b2578b456760afa623aac03f44cf424b22.xml → https://fetchrss.com/feed/1iOlvZGYs4cZ1lmGZP4DE50E.rss |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot → https://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. http://udreview.com/feed/ → https://udreview.com/feed/ |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. http://fetchrss.com/rss/5db5cd8d8a93f8b2578b45675db5cd528a93f8ec568b4567.xml → https://fetchrss.com/feed/1iOlvZGYs4cZ1iOlucGZo4cZ.rss |
| 403:The feed has gone. https://www.mlb.com/mets/feeds/news/rss.xml |
| 429:The feed returned an error. https://www.reddit.com/r/onewheel.rss |
| 200:The feed has moved permanently to a new URL. https://newsfactsnetwork.com/feed/ → https://newsfactsnetwork.com |
| The data retrieved from this URL could not be understood as a feed. |
| Feed | RSS | Last fetched | Next fetched after |
|---|---|---|---|
| 302 Onewheel on Facebook | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 20:04 |
| @econliberties on Twitter | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 20:04 |
| @rideonewheel on Twitter | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 20:04 |
| Arch Linux: Recent news updates | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Articles | smithsonianmag.com | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| Business | The Guardian | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Chatham House: What's New | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| CNET | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Constitution Daily | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Custom RSS Feed for The Latest | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| FA RSS | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| FactCheck.org | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Home - CBSNews.com | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| HPCwire | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| https://www.mlb.com/mets/feeds/news/rss.xml | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Kareem Takes on the News | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Lima Charlie World | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-21 08:04 |
| Linux.com | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| National | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| News Facts Network | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Onewheel -●- The Self-Balancing Electric Skateboard | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Onewheel Instagram | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 20:04 |
| OSnews | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| pev.dev - Latest posts | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| PolitiFact - Rulings | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| ProPublica | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| RAND: News Releases for 2023 | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| Recently Active Topics | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Slashdot | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Smart News | smithsonianmag.com | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| Spotlight Delaware | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| surfdado | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| Technology - CBSNews.com | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Technology | The Guardian | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| The Bridge | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| The Intercept | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| The RAND Blog | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| The Review | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| The Sideways Movement | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| TomDispatch - Blog | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Truth or Fiction? | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Udaily Newsletter Feed | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| Us - CBSNews.com | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| US news | The Guardian | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| USAFacts | Nonpartisan Government Data | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| VESCmann | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| wheel -●- Self-Balancing Electric Skateboards | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| World | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| World news | The Guardian | XML | 2026-06-19 08:04 | 2026-06-19 10:04 |
| www.newarkpostonline.com - RSS Results in news,news/* | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| www.newarkpostonline.com - RSS Results in regional,regional/* | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |
| www.newarkpostonline.com - RSS Results in sports/college,sports/college/* | XML | 2026-06-18 12:04 | 2026-06-19 12:04 |