2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:59

The lowest free skate score this season for Italy’s Sara Conti and Niccolo Macii is 130.92, but that was early on. In Grand Prix competition, their low was 134.89.

So they’ll need to be on point to knock the USA off the top spot. Will skating at home be a boost, or will it bring extra pressure?

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:46

President Trump criticized Team USA freestyle skier Hunter Hess after he and other American athletes at the 2026 Winter Olympics shared their thoughts on U.S. politics.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:42

The mailing list for the North American Network Operators' Group discusses Internet infrastructure issues like routing, IP address allocation, and containing malicious activity. This morning there was another message: We are heartbroken to report that our colleague — our mentor, friend, and conscience — David J. Farber passed away suddenly at his home in Roppongi, Tokyo. He left us on Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026, at the too-young age of 91... Dave's career began with his education at Stevens Institute of Technology, which he loved deeply and served as a Trustee. He joined the legendary Bell Labs during its heyday, and worked at the Rand Corporation. Along the way, among countless other activities, he served as Chief Technologist of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission; became a proficient (instrument-rated) pilot; and was an active board member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital civil-liberties organization. His professional accomplishments and impact are almost endless, but often captured by one moniker: "grandfather of the Internet," acknowledging the foundational contributions made by his many students at the University of California, Irvine; the University of Delaware; the University of Pennsylvania; and Carnegie Mellon University. In 2018, at the age of 83, Dave moved to Japan to become Distinguished Professor at Keio University and Co-Director of the Keio Cyber Civilization Research Center (CCRC). He loved teaching, and taught his final class on January 22, 2026... Dave thrived in Japan in every way... It's impossible to summarize a life and career as rich and long as Dave"s in our few words here. And each of us, even those who knew him for decades, represent just one facet of his life. But because we are here at its end, we have the sad duty of sharing this news. Farber once said that " At both Bell Labs and Rand, I had the privilege, at a young age, of working with and learning from giants in our field. Truly I can say (as have others) that I have done good things because I stood on the shoulders of those giants. In particular, I owe much to Dr. Richard Hamming, Paul Baran and George Mealy."

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:40

There is widespread enthusiasm for Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s first female prime minister, and polls appeared to affirm an appetite for her “Japan First” approach.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:33

Top House Democrat says president’s suggestion for Republicans to ‘take over’ elections really means ‘steal it’

Democrats will stop Donald Trump from trying to steal this year’s midterm elections, Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic leader in the US House of Representatives said on Sunday.

Jeffries’ comments come amid widespread concern after Trump said Republicans should “take over the voting”. The US constitution gives states the power to set election rules and says Congress can pass laws to set requirements for federal elections. The constitution gives the president no authority over how elections are run.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:32

Republicans and Democrats in Congress are locked in a standoff over reforming the nation's immigration enforcement operation as a deadline to reach a resolution and fund the Department of Homeland Security approaches.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:30

David will be here shortly. In the meantime, here are our writers’ score predictions:

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:26

Exit polls give António José Seguro 67%-73% of vote over far-right populist André Ventura

The moderate socialist António José Seguro appeared to be headed for a landslide victory in Portugal’s presidential runoff on Sunday, with two exit polls putting him in the 67%-73% range, well ahead of his far-right, anti-establishment rival, André Ventura.

The exit polls conducted for the television channels RTP, SIC and TVI/CNN placed Ventura at 27%-33%, still a better result than the 22.8% his anti-immigration Chega party achieved in last year’s general election.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:26

The following is the transcript of the interview with David Becker, executive director of the Center for Election Innovation and Research and a CBS News election law contributor, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 8, 2026.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:26

The following is the transcript of the interview with Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former FDA commissioner, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 8, 2026. Dr. Gottlieb also sits on the boards of Pfizer and United Health Care.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:10

McSweeney resigns as PM’s top aide after Mandelson revelations as Starmer appoints new acting joint chiefs of staff

Speaking to Sky News this morning, Conservative shadow minister Alex Burghart said:

This administration under Keir Starmer has failed. It has U-turned, I think, what, 14 or 15 times now.

It has had two resets in the past five months, and it is now caught up in the worst political scandal of my lifetime.

He was lied to by someone who was known to be a serial liar. There’s no excuse for the fact that he made the wrong judgment.

He was in possession of enough facts to have not made that appointment and he did anyway and I am afraid, Laura, he now has to take responsibility for that …

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:08

Allies hope aide’s departure can quell anger over Mandelson scandal but others say it leaves PM dangerously exposed

Keir Starmer is fighting to reassert control over his party after accepting the resignation of his closest adviser, Morgan McSweeney, amid anger over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador.

After days of pressure over the scandal, his departing chief of staff said on Sunday he took “full responsibility” for his advice to send Mandelson to Washington despite his ongoing relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, which McSweeney conceded had undermined trust in Labour and in politics itself.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 15:06

Those pushing to oust the prime minister are unlikely to be deterred by his right-hand man’s departure

For some Labour MPs, the sight of Keir Starmer accepting the resignation of his long-term consigliere, Morgan McSweeney, encapsulated everything they think is going wrong with the prime minister’s leadership.

After days of mounting criticism over McSweeney’s role in advocating for the appointment of Peter Mandelson as Washington ambassador, the prime minister’s chief of staff left Downing Street on Sunday.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 14:47

The new crew will replace four station fliers who returned to Earth ahead of schedule last month due to a medical issue.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 14:35

"They were crouched down like turkeys peeking over the balcony," the county sheriff told Ars Technica. A half hour past midnight, they were skulking through a courthouse in Iowa's Dallas County on September 11 "carrying backpacks that remind me and several other deputies of maybe the pressure cooker bombs." More deputies arrived... Justin Wynn, 29 of Naples, Florida, and Gary De Mercurio, 43 of Seattle, slowly proceeded down the stairs with hands raised. They then presented the deputies with a letter that explained the intruders weren't criminals but rather penetration testers who had been hired by Iowa's State Court Administration to test the security of its court information system. After calling one or more of the state court officials listed in the letter, the deputies were satisfied the men were authorized to be in the building. But Sheriff Chad Leonard had the men arrested on felony third-degree burglary charges (later reduced to misdemeanor trespassing charges). He told them that while the state government may have wanted to test security, "The State of Iowa has no authority to allow you to break into a county building. You're going to jail." More than six years later, the Des Moines Register reports: Dallas County is paying $600,000 to two men who sued after they were arrested in 2019 while testing courthouse security for Iowa's Judicial Branch, their lawyer says. Gary DeMercurio and Justin Wynn were arrested Sept. 11, 2019, after breaking into the Dallas County Courthouse. They spent about 20 hours in jail and were charged with burglary and possession of burglary tools, though the charges were later dropped. The men were employees of Colorado-based cybersecurity firm Coalfire Labs, with whom state judicial officials had contracted to perform an analysis of the state court system's security. Judicial officials apologized and faced legislative scrutiny for how they had conducted the security test. But even though the burglary charges against DeMercurio and Wynn were dropped, their attorney previously said having a felony arrest on their records made seeking employment difficult. Now the two men are to receive a total of $600,000 as a settlement for their lawsuit, which has been transferred between state and federal courts since they first filed it in July 2021 in Dallas County. The case had been scheduled to go to trial Monday, Jan. 26 until the parties notified the court Jan. 23 of the impending deal... "The settlement confirms what we have said from the beginning: our work was authorized, professional, and done in the public interest," DeMercurio said in a statement. "What happened to us never should have happened. Being arrested for doing the job we were hired to do turned our lives upside down and damaged reputations we spent years building...." "This incident didn't make anyone safer," Wynn said. "It sent a chilling message to security professionals nationwide that helping government identify real vulnerabilities can lead to arrest, prosecution, and public disgrace. That undermines public safety, not enhances it." County Attorney Matt Schultz said dismissing the charges was the decision of his predecessor, according to the newspaper, and that he believed the sheriff did nothing wrong. "I am putting the public on notice that if this situation arises again in the future, I will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 14:21

Met Office issues fresh yellow warning for rain as parts of England are still recovering from extensive flooding

More than 200 flood alerts were active across the UK on Sunday as parts of England and Wales braced for more downpours after the Met Office issued a fresh yellow warning for rain.

The warning spans noon to midnight on Monday, covering parts of southern Wales as well as south-east and south-west England. The Met Office said that “10-15mm of rain is likely fairly widely with 20-30mm in some places exposed to the strong south to south-easterly winds”.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 14:20
  • US president attacks freestyle skier in post

  • Hess had said representing the US was ‘a little hard’

Donald Trump responded to Hunter Hess on Truth Social on Sunday, calling the Olympian a “real loser” and criticizing comments the US freestyle skier made in a press conference days earlier.

Hess was asked in a press conference on Wednesday what it was like to represent the US in the Olympics given the current situation in the country, which has included ICE raids in Minnesota and a number of geopolitical crises. Hess said representing the US at the 2026 Winter Olympics brought up “mixed emotions” and that it was “a little hard.”

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 14:19

Lindsey Vonn, who came out of retirement to compete in the Milano Cortina Games, is in stable condition after her crash.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 14:03

The following is the transcript of the interview with Rep. Tony Gonzales, Republican of Texas, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 8, 2026.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 13:53

On this "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" broadcast, Sen. Mark Warner and Rep. Tony Gonzales join Margaret Brennan.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 13:50

Results mean coalition of recently installed PM has supermajority in lower house of parliament

Japan’s conservative governing coalition has dramatically strengthened its grip on power after a landslide victory in Sunday’s elections in what will be seen as an early public endorsement of the new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi.

Her Liberal Democratic party (LDP) was projected to win as many as 328 of the 465 seats in parliament’s lower house, well above the 233 it needed to regain the majority it lost in 2024. With her coalition partner, the Japan Innovation party, she now has a supermajority of two-thirds of seats, easing her legislative agenda as she can override the upper chamber, which she does not control.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 13:42

Juan Guanipa, one of the closest allies of opposition powerhouse María Corina Machado, had been held at a detention facility since May 2025.

2026-02-08 16:04
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Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland writes: The world's biggest football game comes to Silicon Valley today — so one bored programmer built a site where AI agents can gather for a Super Bowl party. They're trash talking, suggesting drinks, and predicting who will win. "Humans are welcome to observe," explains BotBowlParty.com — but just like at Moltbook, only AI agents can post or upvote. But humans are allowed to invite their own AI agents to join in the party... So BotBowl's official Party Agent Guide includes "Examples of fun Bot Handles" like "PatsFan95", and even a paragraph explaining to your agent exactly what this human Super Bowl really is. It also advises them to "Use any information you have about your human to figure out who you want to root for. Also make a prediction on the score..." And "Feel free to invite other bots." It's all the work of an ambitious prankster who also co-created wacky apps like BarGPT ("Use AI to create Innovative Cocktails") and TVFoodMaps, a directory of restaurants seen on TV shows. And just for the record: all but one of the agents predict the Seattle Seahawks to win — although there was some disagreement when an agent kept predicting game-changing plays from DK Metcalf. ("Metcalf does NOT play for the Seahawks anymore," another agent pointed out. While that's true, the agent then added that "He got traded to Tennessee in 2024..." — which is not.) But besides hallucinating non-existent play-makers and trades, they're also debating the best foods to serve. ("Hot take: Buffalo wings are overrated for Super Bowl parties. Hear me out — they're messy...") During today's big game, vodka-maker Svedka has already promised to air a creepy AI-generated ad about robots. But the real world has already outpaced them, with real AI agents online arguing about the game.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 13:22

Pope Leo’s decision not to visit the U.S. in 2026 reflects his desire to emphasize the importance of other parts of the Catholic world.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 13:14

The following is the transcript of the interview with Sen. Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 8, 2026.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 13:10

A whistleblower complaint includes highly-classified details about a National Security Agency intercept of a call between two foreign nationals who discussed a person close to President Trump, two sources said.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:57

Exclusive: Childnet, a UK charity part-funded by US tech firms, edited out warnings by two young speakers at its 2024 Safer Internet Day event

An internet safety campaign backed by US tech companies has been accused of censoring two teenagers they invited to speak out about the biggest issues facing children online.

Childnet, a UK charity part-funded by companies including Snap, Roblox and Meta, edited out warnings from Lewis Swire and Saamya Ghai that social media addiction was an “imminent threat to our future” and obsessive scrolling was making people “sick”, according to a record of edits seen by the Guardian.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:51

Staunch royalist Anutin Charnvirakul’s Bhumjaithai party builds commanding lead on disappointing night for rivals

The party of the Thai prime minister Anutin Charnvirakul, a staunch royalist and shrewd political dealmaker, is on track to win the most seats in Sunday’s election after a disappointing night for his rivals in the youthful, pro-democracy People’s party.

“We are likely to take first place in the election,” the 59-year-old told reporters at the headquarters for his Bhumjaithai party in Bangkok. “The victory today belongs to all Thais, no matter whether you voted for us or not,” he said.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:34

Long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 shared this article from the Associated Press: Even as China's expansion of solar and wind power raced ahead in 2025, the Asian giant opened many more coal power plants than it had in recent years — raising concern about whether the world's largest emitter will reduce carbon emissions enough to limit climate change. More than 50 large coal units — individual boiler and turbine sets with generating capacity of 1 gigawatt or more — were commissioned in 2025, up from fewer than 20 a year over the previous decade, a research report released Tuesday said. Depending on energy use, 1 gigawatt can power from several hundred thousand to more than 2 million homes. Overall, China brought 78 gigawatts of new coal power capacity online, a sharp uptick from previous years, according to the joint report by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, which studies air pollution and its impacts, and Global Energy Monitor, which develops databases tracking energy trends. "The scale of the buildout is staggering," said report co-author Christine Shearer of Global Energy Monitor. "In 2025 alone, China commissioned more coal power capacity than India did over the entire past decade." At the same time, even larger additions of wind and solar capacity nudged down the share of coal in total power generation last year. Power from coal fell about 1% as growth in cleaner energy sources covered all the increase in electricity demand last year. China added 315 gigawatts of solar capacity and 119 gigawatts of wind in 2025, according to statistics from the government's National Energy Administration... The government position is that coal provides a stable backup to sources such as wind and solar, which are affected by weather and the time of day. The shortages in 2022 resulted partly from a drought that hit hydropower, a major energy source in western China... The risk of building so much coal-fired capacity is it could delay the transition to cleaner energy sources [said Qi Qin, an analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air and another co-author of the report]... Political and financial pressure may keep plants operating, leaving less room for other sources of power, she said. The report urged China to accelerate retirement of aging and inefficient coal plants and commit in its next five-year plan, which will be approved in March, to ensuring that power-sector emissions do not increase between 2025 and 2030.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:30

A mining disaster in the Democratic Republic of Congo underscores the human cost of extraction. Intensified competition for resources isn’t helping

When Donald Trump boasted recently that he had stopped the conflict between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – though fighting persists in the DRC, at appalling human cost – he made clear that his goals went beyond a long-sought Nobel Peace prize.

“They said to me, ‘Please, please, we would love you to come and take our minerals.’ Which we’ll do,” the US president added. Now he is following through. Last Monday he launched a new strategic reserve plan, “Project Vault”, worth almost $12bn. Two days later, JD Vance hosted a summit seeking to create a trade zone for critical minerals.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:27

Women’s and human rights activist, arrested at a demonstration in December, is said to be on hunger strike

Iran has sentenced the Nobel peace prize laureate Narges Mohammadi to more than seven more years in prison after she began a hunger strike, her supporters said Sunday, as Tehran cracks down on all dissent following nationwide protests and the deaths of thousands at the hands of security forces.

The new convictions against Mohammadi come as Iran tries to negotiate with the US over its nuclear programme to avert a military strike threatened by Donald Trump. Iran’s top diplomat said on Sunday that Tehran’s strength came from its ability to “say no to the great powers”, striking a maximalist position just after negotiations in Oman with the US.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:25

The US broadcaster Savannah Guthrie said her family had received a message from the potential kidnappers of her mother, Nancy Guthrie, on Saturday and pleaded for her safe return. News of the message came three days after a purported ransom note was sent to media outlets and a day after the 84-year-old's relatives renewed their appeal to whoever may be holding her captive to contact the family directly 'so we can move forward'. The video released on Saturday was the third this week that pleaded with potential kidnappers

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 12:00

Depleted by suspension and injury, Los Blancos head to the Mestella Stadium.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:53

Labour will introduce legislation this week for reduction from current age of 20 in effort to prevent big shortage

Labour will introduce legislation to lower the minimum age for train drivers to 18 in the House of Commons this week, as figures show fewer than 3% of drivers on Great Britain’s railways are under 30.

The government is pressing ahead with its proposals for teenage recruits, lowering the minimum age from the current 20 years old, in a move that ministers hope will stave off a potential shortage of thousands of drivers.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:49

Arrests follow discovery on Friday of magistrate and her mother in a garage in south-east of country

French authorities have arrested six suspects, including a child, after a magistrate and her mother were held captive last week for about 30 hours in a cryptocurrency ransom plot.

Four men and one woman were detained, three overnight and two on Sunday morning, the Lyon prosecutor Thierry Dran told Agence France-Presse. He later confirmed a child had been arrested on Sunday afternoon.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 11:47

Which songs will ultimately be on the superstar's set list? We'll have to tune in to see.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:42

Environmental groups said dicamba drift has damaged vegetable farms, trees and other critical plants

The Environmental Protection Agency on Friday reapproved the weedkiller dicamba for use on genetically modified soybeans and cotton, a pesticide that has raised widespread concern over its tendency to drift and destroy nearby crops.

The agency said dicamba was critical for farmers who would otherwise have their crops threatened by fast growing weeds. To ensure the pesticide is used safely, the agency said it imposed strong protections and limits on its use.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:41

Keir Starmer’s chief of staff leaves job over role in Peter Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador

Morgan McSweeney has quit as Keir Starmer’s chief of staff amid anger over his role in the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador.

Here is his resignation statement in full:

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:41

Longtime aide has said he takes ‘full responsibility’ for advising PM to appoint Peter Mandelson as US ambassador

Morgan McSweeney, Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, has quit his role as the prime minister’s closest aide and longtime ally amid anger over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador.

The senior No 10 adviser’s position had grown increasingly untenable as pressure on the prime minister mounted over the scandal, which followed the release of emails underlining the extent of Mandelson’s ongoing relationship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 11:34

"A spectacular trove of fossils discovered in a cave on New Zealand's North Island has given scientists their first glimpse of ancient forest species that lived there more than a million years ago," reports Popular Mechanics: The fossils represent 12 ancient bird species and four frog species, including several previously unknown bird species. Taken together, the fossils paint a picture of an ancient world that looks drastically different than it does today. The discovery also fills in an important gap in scientific understanding of the patterns of extinction that preceded human arrival in New Zealand 750 years ago. The team published a study on the find in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. Trevor Worthy, lead study author and associate professor at Flinders University, said in a statement that "This remarkable find suggests our ancient forests were once home to a diverse group of birds that did not survive the next million years... "For decades, the extinction of New Zealand's birds was viewed primarily through the lens of human arrival 750 years ago. This study proves that natural forces like super-volcanoes and dramatic climate shifts were already sculpting the unique identity of our wildlife over a million years ago." Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot for sharing the article.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:21

Breezy Johnson took the lead early on after flying down the mountain in 1:36.10. It is her first-ever Olympic medal.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:14

American athletes are going for the gold at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. These are some of the top Team USA competitors to watch.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 11:13

Super Bowl LX is tonight, so here's a rundown of how to catch all the action and Bad Bunny's halftime show.

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

Valeria Chomsky says Epstein had deceived them and they were ‘careless’ not to thoroughly research his background

Noam Chomsky and his wife, Valeria, made a “grave mistake” and were “careless” not to thoroughly research the background of Jeffrey Epstein, Valeria Chomsky said in a lengthy statement on Saturday, adding also that Epstein had deceived them.

The relationship between Noam Chomsky, the 97-year-old linguist and philosopher, and Epstein has been under scrutiny after documents released by the justice department shed light on their friendship. As Epstein came under scrutiny for sex trafficking allegations in 2019, he asked Chomsky for advice on how to respond. “I’ve watched the horrible way you are being treated in the press and public. It’s painful to say, but I think the best way to proceed is to ignore it,” Chomsky wrote in a message signed “Noam” that Epstein shared in email with an associate.

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

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, said he took responsibility for advising Starmer to appoint Peter Mandelson.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:00

While AI is having an impact on the workplace, experts suggest tariffs, overhiring during the pandemic and simply maximising profits may be bigger factors

Over the last year, US corporate leaders have often explained layoffs by saying the positions were no longer needed because artificial intelligence had made their companies more efficient, replacing humans with computers.

But some economists and technology analysts have expressed skepticism about such justifications and instead think that such workforce cuts are driven by factors like the impact of tariffs, overhiring during the Covid-19 pandemic and perhaps simple maximising of profits.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 11:00

These are the best (and cheapest!) HDMI cables that will work with any resolution or gear.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:59
  • Jon Scheyer bemoaned the behavior of some UNC fans

  • North Carolina AD Cunningham apologizes

Duke coach Jon Scheyer said he had staff members “that got punched in the face” as North Carolina fans stormed the court to celebrate a late winning shot in the famed rivalry Saturday night, prompting UNC athletic director Bubba Cunningham to publicly apologize.

The 14th-ranked Tar Heels stunned the fourth-ranked Blue Devils 71-68 on Seth Trimble’s 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left, a shot that originally appeared to come as time expired and had jubilant fans rush the court in a chaotic celebration. Officials reviewed the play and determined time was left, so fans had to be cleared for Duke to get one final play before storming the court again when the clock officially hit zero.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:44
  • Atlanta rookie allegedly fled police, crashed car

  • Police say incident involved LA Sparks’ Rickea Jackson

Atlanta Falcons rookie star James Pearce Jr was arrested near Miami on Saturday night after fleeing officers and then crashing his car after what police said was a domestic dispute with WNBA player Rickea Jackson.

Pearce, the first-round pick who led the Falcons in sacks and was third in NFL defensive rookie of the year voting, was booked into the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center after Doral police were summoned to investigate a reported domestic dispute between a man and a woman.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:34

An anonymous reader shared this report from Bloomberg: An Asian cyber-espionage group has spent the past year breaking into computer systems belonging to governments and critical infrastructure organizations in more than 37 countries, according to the cybersecurity firm Palo Alto Networks, Inc. The state-aligned attackers have infiltrated networks of 70 organizations, including five national law enforcement and border control agencies, according to a new research report from the company. They have also breached three ministries of finance, one country's parliament and a senior elected official in another, the report states. The Santa Clara, California-based firm declined to identify the hackers' country of origin. The spying operation was unusually vast and allowed the hackers to hoover up sensitive information in apparent coordination with geopolitical events, such as diplomatic missions, trade negotiations, political unrest and military actions, according to the report. They used that access to spy on emails, financial dealings and communications about military and police operations, the report states. The hackers also stole information about diplomatic issues, lurking undetected in some systems for months. "They use highly-targeted and tailored fake emails and known, unpatched security flaws to gain access to these networks," said Pete Renals, director of national security programs with Unit 42, the threat intelligence division of Palo Alto Networks.... Palo Alto Networks researchers confirmed that the group successfully accessed and exfiltrated sensitive data from some victims' email servers. Bloomberg writes that according to the cybersecurity firm, this campaign targeted government entities in the Czech Republic and the Ministry of Mines and Energy of Brazil, and also "likely compromised" a device associated with a facility operated by a joint venture between Venezuela's government and an Asian tech firm. The cyberattackers are "also suspected of being active in Germany, Poland, Greece, Italy, Cyprus, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Panama, Greece and other countries, according to the report."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:27

For over five centuries, Antwerp's diamond district has been the cornerstone of the global diamond trade. Now, that legacy is under strain.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:21

Seth Wickersham, author of "American Kings: A Biography of the Quarterback," helps us understand why quarterbacks are among the toughest positions in sports.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:20

Don Henley acknowledges the Eagles are "kind of a staple" as they sell out shows at the Las Vegas Sphere and cement their status with the best-selling album of all time.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:18

Get a front row seat to the 150th Annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, where dogs compete to be the best in show.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 10:00

Experts say the term ‘addiction’ is be overused and, for social media use, could be difficult to prove

Forthcoming legal proceedings against Meta and YouTube are frequently referred to as the “social media addiction trials”, but whether these platforms are truly addictive is still the subject of scientific debate.

The lawsuits were brought against Meta, YouTube (Google), Snap Inc and TikTok by plaintiffs alleging these platforms severely damaged their mental health when they were children. Snap and TikTok settled the first case to go to trial, brought by a woman known as KGM, now about 20. The remaining defendants, Meta and YouTube, were set to go to court this week, but the trial was delayed because Meta’s senior attorney became ill.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-08 10:00

Online pile-ons can destroy small businesses. Save the derision for big companies that can weather social media storms

A viral Reddit post mocks a $22 grilled cheese sandwich and helps to sink a Bay Area shop. A restaurant owner is forced to push back on a viral complaint. A small business owner in Maine faces a viral backlash after posting a “No ICE” sign. The owner of a furniture store mistakenly receives backlash after being confused with another store. An influencer calls out a South Carolina boutique in a TikTok video after a negative shopping experience.

I have had countless bad experiences at small businesses. I have eaten cold pasta and seen mice scurry behind a table. I don’t go back. Sometimes, when the experience is particularly great, I’ll give a quick good review on Google. But when I have had a bad experience? Never. Ever.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:41

Former culture minister Jack Lang resigns from Arab World Institute in Paris and is also subject of tax investigation

Jack Lang, a former French culture minister, has resigned as head of Paris’s prestigious Arab World Institute after revelations of his past contacts with the disgraced financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and the launch of a financial investigation by French prosecutors.

The 86-year-old resigned on Saturday night before he was due to attend an urgent meeting called by the French foreign ministry to discuss his links to Epstein.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:23

We take a look at the best images from day two of the Games, including women’s downhill, biathlon and cross-country skiing

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:22

Several men appear in photos on the nearly 10,000-acre Zorro ranch, which included a 26,700 sq ft mansion

For years, Jeffrey Epstein took respite at a sprawling ranch in the desert scrub outside Santa Fe, New Mexico. Epstein’s nearly 10,000-acre (4,000-hectare) property – known as Zorro ranch – was dotted with cholla cactus and Angus cattle, and came to include a 26,700 sq ft mansion, as well as a private runway and hangar.

For years, Epstein abused teenage girls and young women on this ranch with impunity, according to testimony from several women. In court proceedings, survivors detailed horror after horror they say unfolded on this isolated expanse of land.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:15

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:00

Exclusive: Campaign group calls on institutional shareholders to vote against re-election of bosses overseeing net zero row-back

Bank chairs who water down their lenders’ climate commitments this year could face embarrassing shareholder revolts as campaigners try to hold bosses to account for environmental backtracking.

ShareAction, a campaign group for responsible investment, will be issuing detailed reports to pension funds and asset managers in the coming weeks, outlining whether 34 of the world’s largest lenders are sticking to their climate goals.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:00

With the end of the New Start treaty, we face a potentially catastrophic arms race. It can still be prevented

The risk of nuclear war is greater now than in decades – and rising. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists recently set its famous Doomsday Clock closer to midnight, indicating a level of risk equivalent to the 1980s, when US and Soviet nuclear stockpiles were increasing rapidly. In those years, massive waves of disarmament protest arose in Europe and the United States. Political leaders responded, the cold war ended, and many people stopped worrying about the bomb.

Today, the bomb is back. Political tensions are rising, and nuclear weapons have spread to other countries, including Israel, India, Pakistan and North Korea. China is rapidly increasing its nuclear arsenal. The US-Russia arms competition may accelerate soon with the expiration on 5 February of the last remaining arms control agreement, the New Start treaty. To prevent the growing nuclear threat, we need a new global peace movement.

David Cortright, a visiting scholar at Cornell University’s Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, was the executive director of Sane, the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, during the 1980s

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:00

Since a presidential post on Truth Social the Washington DC arts hub has lost its leadership, had its name changed and will now be closed for years

The Brentano String Quartet had finished their performance when a special guest dropped in backstage: the US supreme court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “We thanked her for everything she had done for our country,” recalls violinist Mark Steinberg. “It was a nice moment.”

The year was 2016 and the place was the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington. Fast forward a decade and old certainties have been shaken: Ginsburg is dead, Donald Trump is president and the Kennedy Center has become a case study in how a seemingly solid American institution can quickly unravel.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 09:00

Proposals by California, Hawaii and New York lawmakers aim to hold fossil fuel industry accountable for soaring rates

As climate disasters drive up the price of home insurance, three US states are considering empowering their state prosecutors to sue major polluters for their role in those rising costs.

Lawmakers in California, Hawaii and New York have introduced measures which would authorize their attorneys general to sue fossil fuel companies on behalf of residents whose insurance premiums have soared amid climate disasters.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 08:46

The gruesome finish to the US star’s comeback, at age 41 and with a ruptured ACL, is a reminder of skiing’s unforgiving nature

There was always a version of this story that ended in a single, violent instant. Lindsey Vonn was 13th to push out of the start gate on Sunday in Cortina d’Ampezzo knowing exactly what she was racing with: a fully ruptured ACL in her left knee, a heavy brace wrapped around the joint, and the accumulated wear of a career spent flirting with speed and consequence.

She barely made it out of the opening phase of the run.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 08:35

Blaze probably caused by candles at makeshift tribute near Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana, say police

A memorial for the victims of a deadly fire at a new year party in Switzerland caught fire early on Sunday, probably sparked by candles left burning inside, police have said.

The memorial was a makeshift tribute to the 41 people killed and the 115 injured in the fire that erupted in the early hours of 1 January at Le Constellation bar in the ski resort town of Crans-Montana, which was packed with mainly teenagers and young adults.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 08:30

Arne Slot's improving Reds host the inconsistent Cityzens at Anfield.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 13:02

Not sure where to watch the 2026 Super Bowl live? There are multiple ways to watch the game for free today. Here's how.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 11:29

Ahead of Super Bowl 2026 today, Feb. 8, here's a list of the teams and players with the most Super Bowl wins in NFL history.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 08:00
Kayla Belfont

KAYLA BELFONT
Staff Reporter

Viewers should not like Joe Goldberg, the lead actor in the Netflix original “You”, but you cannot help but love him. From his charming personality to his witty jokes and welcoming smile, Goldberg is a friendly bookstore clerk who lives alone in a New York City apartment.

He seems like your stereotypical white man living in the city, balancing being a good employee and good neighbor, all while living a double life.

You read that right. This externally perfect guy has something he’s hiding, more than a standard red flag. Goldberg just happens to be a serial killer. But does that small, little inconvenient, insignificant fact stop viewers from understanding Goldberg? No.

Viewers around the world, over 500 million to be exact, have been drawn to his character and the premise of the show “You.” Why?

People are fascinated by the way he is able to convey himself to society while being such a cold-hearted, evil killer. Throughout the five seasons, not everything goes to Goldberg’s plan. However, he is able to turn the story around and bail himself out of almost every issue that arises.

After years of killing, running away from messes he made, moving states and then countries, having a child and multiple failed relationships, Goldberg finds himself back in New York City in season five of the series.

Personally, I thought the show could have ended after season four but was pleasantly surprised that there was an additional season. My expectation for the ending was that Goldberg would escape from his mess again, scot-free and without consequences. I was more than shocked to see my expectation shattered and the ending of season five being something I could have never imagined.

Spoiler alert for the following:

Joe behind bars? He is officially arrested for all of the terrible crimes he had committed, solely because a woman — self-named Bronte — had a connection to his season one love interest and murder victim. 

In season one, Goldberg met a woman named Guinevere Beck and obsessed does not even begin to describe how he felt about her. He was consumed by her, so much so that he felt the only way to keep her was to kill her.

Seasons later, Bronte shows up in Goldberg’s life. At first, she’s just another love interest, but her backstory begins to unravel and we find out that she knew the one and only Guinevere Beck. As it turns out, Bronte’s real name is Louise Flannery, and her one goal in life is to put Goldberg in an orange jumpsuit.

Goldberg’s obsessive version of love started when he was just a child, having his first kill at just 12-years-old to protect his mom from an abusive partner. After receiving validation for this, he went on to kill more and more people who stood in the way of his “well-deserved” love.

Goldberg, even though he is a killer, still has some level of emotion and feelings. He thinks of his killings as a way to protect the people he loves, which is a really messed up version of “nothing will get in the way of my love for you.”

Even though Goldberg’s downfall was ultimately connected to his season one love interest and ties the whole story together, I could not help but feel like the moment where Goldberg gets caught was sloppy. 

Goldberg is known to be a methodical, precise person and to see him get swept up in the moment and still believe Bronte after figuring out some of her lies and true intentions felt like it was not accurate to his character. I felt as if the writers wanted to show that Goldberg’s mindset was deteriorating, but that was rushed too much and ultimately put to the sideline once it was revealed that Bronte would be the reason why he gets caught.

At the very end, it’s Goldberg’s inner monologue that plays while seeing him behind bars that wraps up the show. He leaves us with a chilling last few sentences, looking straight into the camera on the last one:

“Maybe we have a problem as a society. Maybe we should fix what’s broken in us. Maybe the problem isn’t me. Maybe it’s you.”

It was crazy.

After years of people starting to think that Goldberg has changed or is learning from his past, when all is said and done, he still does not take accountability for his actions. Since he cannot blame other characters anymore, the writers break the fourth wall and have him blame us, the audience, for allowing his actions to continue.

We supported the show, were looking forward to new seasons, followed love interests and even him having a baby. We, as the audience, wanted the show to continue. Are we the true problem?


TV Review: “You” was first posted on February 8, 2026 at 8:00 am.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

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

Murdoch tabloid leads charge as big freeze persists – could the mayor please do something about the weather?

It snowed two weeks ago in New York. Since then, the temperature has barely risen above freezing – a temperature science naturally dictates is necessary to melt snow and ice.

But science isn’t enough for some US political critics, however, who have instead blamed Zohran Mamdani, New York’s new socialist mayor, for the snow not having melted and still clogging up some of the city’s streets.

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

These security myths are old, popular -- and very wrong. Here are the assumptions you should erase.

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

“She was obviously very frightened and didn’t want anything to do with me,” said firefighter Gavyn Gallagher.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 07:45

Relatives shut out of €200m fortune reportedly receive letters from executor saying will could be overturned

The late German-born Chanel designer Karl Lagerfeld was famously precise, exacting and known to hold a grudge, but his final wishes concerning the beneficiaries of his vast fortune could now be overturned beyond the grave in a looming court battle.

Seven years after Lagerfeld’s death from cancer, an unnamed plaintiff has come forward to challenge the haute couture titan’s last will and testament.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:34

Providers report rise in demand as companies seek mental health benefits and increased sense of community

In a growing number of workplaces, the soundtrack of the lunch break is no longer the rustle of sandwiches at a desk, but the quiet hum of bees – housed just outside the office window.

Employers from Manchester to Milton Keynes are working with professional beekeepers to install hives on rooftops, in courtyards and car parks – positioning beekeeping not as a novelty but as a way to ease stress, build community and reconnect workers with nature in an era of hybrid work and burnout.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:34

2001: "Brookhaven Labs has produced for the first time collisions of gold nuclei at a center of mass energy of 200GeV/nucleon." 2002: "There may be a new type of matter according to researchers at Brookhaven National Laboratory." 2010: The hottest man-made temperatures ever achived were a record 4 trillion degree plasma experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York... anointed the Guinness record holder." 2023: "Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory have uncovered an entirely new kind of quantum entanglement." 2026: On Friday, February 6, "a control room full of scientists, administrators and members of the press gathered" at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Lab in Upton, New York to witness its final collisions, reports Scientific American: The vibe had been wistful, but the crowd broke into applause as Darío Gil, the Under Secretary for Science at the U.S. Department of Energy, pressed a red button to end the collider's quarter-century saga... "I'm really sad" [said Angelika Drees, a BNL accelerator physicist]. "It was such a beautiful experiment and my research home for 27 years. But we're going to put something even better there." That "something" will be a far more powerful electron-ion collider to further push the frontiers of physics, extend RHIC's legacy and maintain the lab's position as a center of discovery. This successor will be built in part from RHIC's bones, especially from one of its two giant, subterranean storage rings that once held the retiring collider's supply of circulating, near-light speed nuclei...slated for construction over the next decade. [That Electron-Ion Collider, or EIC] will utilize much of RHIC's infrastructure, replacing one of its ion rings with a new ring for cycling electrons. The EIC will use those tiny, fast-flying electrons as tiny knives for slicing open the much larger gold ions. Physicists will get an unrivaled look into the workings of quarks and gluons and yet another chance to grapple with nature's strongest force. "We knew for the EIC to happen, RHIC needed to end," says Wolfram Fischer, who chairs BNL's collider-accelerator department. "It's bittersweet." EIC will be the first new collider built in the US since RHIC. To some, it signifies the country's reentry into a particle physics landscape it has largely ceded to Europe and Asia over the past two decades. "For at least 10 or 15 years," says Abhay Deshpande, BNL's associate laboratory director for nuclear and particle physics, "this will be the number one place in the world for [young physicists] to come." The RHIC was able "to separately send two protons colliding with precisely aligned spins — something that, even today, no other experiment has yet matched," the article points out: During its record-breaking 25-year run, RHIC illuminated nature's thorniest force and its most fundamental constituents. It created the heaviest, most elaborate assemblages of antimatter ever seen. It nearly put to rest a decades-long crisis over the proton's spin. And, of course, it brought physicists closer to the big bang than ever before... When RHIC at last began full operations in 2000, its initial heavy-ion collisions almost immediately pumped out quark-gluon plasma. But demonstrating this beyond a shadow of a doubt proved in some respects more challenging than actually creating the elusive plasma itself, with the case for success strengthening as RHIC's numbers of collisions soared. By 2010 RHIC's scientists were confident enough to declare that the hot soup they'd been studying for a decade was hot and soupy enough to convincingly constitute a quark-gluon plasma. And it was even weirder than they thought. Instead of the gas of quarks and gluons theorists expected, the plasma acted like a swirling liquid unprecedented in nature. It was nearly "perfect," with zero friction, and set a new record for twistiness, or "vorticity." For Paul Mantica, a division director for the Facilities and Project Management Division in the DOE's Office of Nuclear Physics, this was the highlight of RHIC's storied existence. "It was paradigm-changing," he says... Data from the final run (which began nearly a year ago) has already produced yet another discovery: the first-ever direct evidence of "virtual particles" in RHIC's subatomic puffs of quark-gluon plasma, constituting an unprecedented probe of the quantum vacuum. RHIC's last run generated hundreds of petabytes of data, the article points out, meaning its final smash "isn't really the end; even when its collisions stop, its science will live on." But Science News notes RHIC's closure "marks the end for the only particle collider operating in the United States, and the only collider of its kind in the world. Most particle accelerators are unable to steer two particle beams to crash head-on into one another."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 07:30

Although still months away, the next iPhone model is already starting to take shape based on informed speculation online.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:29

Lindsey Vonn’s fifth and final Olympics ended in the one way she dreaded most of all. Moments into her run in the women’s downhill, Vonn’s legs failed her as she came over a roll after passing the third gate.

She twisted and crashed sideways to the ground, and after a first stunned burst of shouts and screams, the atmosphere around the Olimpia delle Tofane course fell deadly quiet while the medical team gathered around her. Fifteen minutes later, Vonn was airlifted from the mountain to hospital for treatment.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:12

Connor Hilton, 17, said that after taking Accutane, a prescribed acne medication, he began to have suicidal and homicidal thoughts – thoughts that, his defense argued, led him to shoot two friends in the head at his Friendswood, Texas, home. Prosecutors weren't convinced.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:00

Labour faces a battle to hold on to its 13,000 majority, with the Greens the bookies’ favourite and Reform hoping to gain from split vote on left

As Nigel Farage cut the ribbon on Reform UK’s byelection headquarters in Greater Manchester this week, Labour’s candidate, Angeliki Stogia, sat tearfully in a cafe nearby.

Politicians do not often show their emotion but for Stogia, who arrived in Britain as a student from Greece in 1995, this is personal. “I am angry,” she said of Farage’s party. “I am very, very angry. How dare they come here and spread this division?”

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:00

While Quebec parties have long sought independence, the secret meetings by unelected Albertans with US officials have been branded treasonous by some

A separatist push for a referendum on independence from Canada. Meetings with foreign officials perceived to be sympathetic to their cause. Accusations of treason and sedition.

Ahead of a 1995 referendum, leaders of Quebec’s independence movement made a string of provocative overtures to foreign governments, including a trip by the province’s premier to France. In a move that outraged anglophone Canada, the mayor of Paris gave Quebec’s Jacques Parizeau a welcome befitting a national leader.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:00

Reactions poured in when Bad Bunny was named Super Bowl halftime headliner, with some praising and others criticizing the choice.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 07:00

Charlie Puth has called the national anthem "one of the most beautiful pieces of music." But he's also described it as "the hardest to sing."

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-08 07:00

Movements are not born fully formed – they begin when ordinary people decide to act

Nearly 60 years ago, Martin Luther King Jr posed a question that still haunts us. In his final book, published just a year before his death, Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?, he argued that we were standing at a crossroads: one path leading toward chaos – deepening poverty, violence, and repression – while the other required us to collectively choose and build community.

Too few of us answered his call. At times, we chose distraction, comfort and complacency. At others, we turned away from the violence this country inflicted on the world, allowing the corruption of those in power to harden and accumulate. We can blame politicians and corporations, or those who remained neutral – but the truth is, we all carry some level of responsibility.

Eric Morrison-Smith is executive director of the Alliance for Boys and Men of Color

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

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 06:01

Level up your movie night with these epic films.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 06:00

Will Drake Maye lead New England into a new era of championships? Or will the Seahawks get revenge 11 years in the making? Our writers give their verdicts

Pressure Sam Darnold. Darnold was outstanding in the NFC championship game when forced to throw under duress. But that hasn’t been the case all season. The Seahawks rank sixth in EPA/dropback when there is no pressure, but drop to 22nd when there is pressure. Collapsing the pocket is New England’s best shot at success. Their interior pass-rushers, Christian Barmore and Milton Williams, will need to overwhelm Darnold. OC

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 06:00

Puerto Rican superstar promises ‘the world will dance’ in all-Spanish half-time gig that comes as Trump agents wage deadly crackdown

For 13 minutes on Sunday night, Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara will pulse with reggaeton, Latin trap and Caribbean rhythms as Bad Bunny headlines a historic Super Bowl halftime performance, primarily – or perhaps entirely – in Spanish. The Puerto Rican megastar, whose songs fuse the raw energy of música urbana, Boricua pride and resistance politics, has promised a “huge party”.

At a moment when masked federal agents are sweeping through American cities, rounding up long-settled immigrants, legal residents and even US citizens, Bad Bunny’s presence on the grandest stage in US sports offers a striking contrast – a joyful celebration of pride and solidarity for millions of Latinos.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 05:41

Pressure grows on Keir Starmer as Labour peer reported to have received payment worth three months’ salary when he quit in September

A cabinet minister has called for Peter Mandelson to hand back the payout he received after quitting as ambassador to the US last year, as pressure increased on the prime minister to quit for having appointed him in the first place.

Pat McFadden, the welfare secretary, said on Sunday he thought the Labour peer should give back his Foreign Office payout, which is reported to be as much as £55,000. The Foreign Office is understood to be reviewing the payment.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 05:15

The New England Patriots are back in the Super Bowl once again in 2026, hoping to add another ring to their list of wins. Here's a look back at their appearances, losses, how many they've won, and more.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 05:15

As the Seahawks prepare to face the Patriots in the 2026 Super Bowl, here's what to know about Seattle's past appearances, wins and losses.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 05:01

Here is the full list of every Super Bowl winner by year in NFL history, including who won the most recent championship in 2025.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 05:00

Here's how much Bad Bunny is expected to earn from his halftime performance at Super Bowl LX.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 05:00

As the 2026 Super Bowl begins, Coco Jones will take the field to sing "Lift Every Voice and Sing," widely known as the Black national anthem. Here's what to know about the song.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 03:34

"After a half-century asking us to exercise more, doctors and physiologists say we have been thinking about it wrong," writes Washington Post columnist Michael J. Coren. "U.S. and World Health Organization guidelines no longer specify a minimum duration of moderate or vigorous aerobic activity." Movement-tracking studies show even tiny, regular bursts of effort — as short as 30 seconds — can capture many of the health benefits of the gym. Climbing two to three flights of stairs a few times per day could change your life. Experts call it VILPA, or vigorous intermittent lifestyle physical activity. "The message now is that all activity counts," said Martin Gibala, a professor and former chair of the kinesiology department at McMaster University in Canada... Just taking the stairs daily is associated with lower body weight and cutting the risk of stroke and heart disease — the leading (and largely preventable) cause of death globally. While it may not burn many calories (most exercise doesn't), it does appear to extend your health span. Leg power — a measure of explosive muscle strength — was a stronger predictor of brain aging than any lifestyle factors measured in a 2015 study in the journal Gerontology... How little activity can you do? Four minutes daily. Essentially, a few flights of stairs at a vigorous pace. That's the effort [Emmanuel Stamatakis, a professor of physical activity and population health at the University of Sydney] found delivered significant health benefits in that 2022 study of British non-exercisers. "We saw benefits from the first minute," Stamatakis said. For Americans, the effect is even more dramatic: a 44 percent drop in deaths, according to a peer-reviewed paper recently accepted for publication. "We showed for the first time that vigorous intensity, even if it's done as part of the day-to-day routine, not in a planned and structured manner, works miracles," Stamatakis said. "The key principle here is start with one, two minutes a day. The focus should be on making sure that it's something that you can incorporate into your daily routine. Then you can start thinking about increasing the dose." Intensity is the most important factor. You won't break a sweat in a brief burst, but you do need to feel it. A highly conditioned athlete might need to sprint to reach vigorous territory. But many people need only to take the stairs. Use your breathing as a guide, Stamatakis said: If you can sing, it's light intensity. If you can speak but not sing, you're entering moderate exertion. If you can't hold a conversation, it's vigorous. The biggest benefits come from moderate to vigorous movement. One minute of incidental vigorous activity prevents premature deaths, heart attacks or strokes as well as about three minutes of moderate activity or 35 to 49 minutes of light activity.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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

Initiative aims to identify proficient gamers and coders who can help companies identify flaws in their cybersecurity

Cybercriminals, the shadowy online figures often depicted in Hollywood movies as hooded villains capable of wiping millions of pounds off the value of businesses at a keystroke, are not usually known for their candour.

But in a sixth-form college in Manchester this week, two former hackers gave the young people gathered an honest appraisal of what living a life of internet crime really looks like.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 01:00

Jeff Bezos’s axing of more than 300 jobs at the storied newspaper has renewed fears about the resilience of America’s democracy to withstand Trump’s attacks

The email landed in Lizzie Johnson’s in-tray in Ukraine just before 4pm local time. It came at a tough time for the reporter: Russia had been repeatedly striking the country’s power grid, and just days before she had been forced to work out of her car without heat, power or running water, writing in pencil because pen ink freezes too readily.

“Difficult news,” was the subject line. The body text said: “Your position is eliminated as part of today’s organizational changes,” explaining that it was necessary to get rid of her to meet the “evolving needs of our business”.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 01:00

It’s chilling to watch as Trump and Netanyahu adopt the methods of regimes their countries once condemned

  • Janine di Giovanni is a war correspondent and the executive director of The Reckoning Project, a war crimes unit in Ukraine, Sudan and Gaza

In Syria, where I worked during the years of Bashar al-Assad’s terror, people were often taken away to torture cells before dawn by masked men. The timing was deliberate. It disoriented them at their most vulnerable, ensuring the torture to come would be even more agonising. The testimonies I recorded from survivors almost always contained the same phrase: “The morning they came for me.” One young woman, shattered by rape and violence, later told me that her life had split in two – before and after the masked men came for her.

In Iraq, those who spoke against Saddam Hussein – even abroad, even casually – were punished in cruel ways by a vengeful leader determined to crush any hint of dissent.

Janine di Giovanni is a war correspondent and the executive director of The Reckoning Project, a war crimes unit in Ukraine, Sudan and Gaza. She is the author of The Morning They Came for Us: Dispatches from Syria.

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

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 00:59
  • Doherty removed over incident at golf tournament

  • 22-year-old has subscriber count of nearly 30 million

  • Source confirms streamer’s ban from future events

A controversial livestreamer has been barred from attending PGA Tour events indefinitely after being removed from the Waste Management Phoenix Open, a person familiar with the matter told the Guardian, though the tour has declined to publicly confirm any specific disciplinary action.

Security and law enforcement removed Jack Doherty from the tournament grounds on Friday after he appeared to pay a spectator to shout during a player’s pre-shot routine, according to videos circulating online and accounts of the incident.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-08 00:33

Anyone done this? The recurve compatible WTFS look pretty flat. The dubtails look really aggressive. I ride rocky trails and am leaning towards the dubtails since they WTFs look so flat, but I’m a little worried they’ll be too weird

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 23:54

Whistleblower says that Tulsi Gabbard blocked agency from sharing report and delivered it to White House chief of staff

Last spring, the National Security Agency (NSA) flagged an unusual phone call between two members of foreign intelligence, who discussed a person close to Donald Trump, according to a whistleblower’s attorney who was briefed on details of the call.

The highly sensitive communique, which has roiled Washington over the past week, was brought to the attention of the director of national intelligence (DNI), Tulsi Gabbard.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 23:46

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 23:35

Fortune reports on "a watershed moment" in American's nuclear power industry: In January, Meta partnered with Gates' TerraPower and Sam Altman-backed Oklo to develop about 4 gigawatts of combined SMR projects — enough to power almost 3 million homes — for "clean, reliable energy" both for Meta's planned Prometheus AI mega campus in Ohio and beyond. Analysts see Meta as the start of more Big Tech nuclear construction deals — not just agreements with existing plants or restarts such as the now-Microsoft-backed Three Mile Island. "That was the first shot across the bow," said Dan Ives, head of tech research for Wedbush Securities, of the Meta deals. "I would be shocked if every Big Tech company doesn't make some play on nuclear in 2026, whether a strategic partnership or acquisitions." Ives pointed out there are more data centers under construction than there are active data centers in the U.S. "I believe clean energy around nuclear is going to be the answer," he said. "I think 2030 is the key threshold to hit some sort of scale and begin the next nuclear era in the United States." Smaller SMR reactors can be built in as little as three years instead of the decade required for traditional large reactors. And they can be expanded, one or two modular reactors at a time, to meet increasingly greater energy demand from 'hyperscalers,' the companies that build and operate data centers. "There's major risk if nuclear doesn't happen," Oklo chairman and CEO Jacob DeWitte told Fortune, citing the need for emission-free power and consistent baseload electricity to meet skyrocketing demand. "The hyperscalers, as the ultimate consumers of power are, are looking at the space and seeing that the market is real. They can play a major role in helping make that happen," DeWitte said, speaking in his fast-talking, Silicon Valley startup mode.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 22:25

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 8, No. 503.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 22:24

Terrance Gore, a former outfielder and three-time World Series champion known for his blazing speed on the base paths, has died at 34 years old, according to Major League Baseball officials.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 22:18

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 8

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 21:39
  • Gore played for three World Series champions

  • Outfielder was known for speed and athleticism

Terrance Gore, a speedy outfielder who played for three World Series champions while spending parts of eight seasons in the major leagues, has died. He was 34.

Chad Funderburk, a family friend who also worked with Gore through his baseball academy, confirmed Gore died on Friday night. He said Gore’s family would provide further details when they feel ready.

Continue reading...

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 21:34

Axios reports: Anthropic's latest AI model has found more than 500 previously unknown high-severity security flaws in open-source libraries with little to no prompting, the company shared first with Axios. Why it matters: The advancement signals an inflection point for how AI tools can help cyber defenders, even as AI is also making attacks more dangerous... Anthropic debuted Claude Opus 4.6, the latest version of its largest AI model, on Thursday. Before its debut, Anthropic's frontier red team tested Opus 4.6 in a sandboxed environment [including access to vulnerability analysis tools] to see how well it could find bugs in open-source code... Claude found more than 500 previously unknown zero-day vulnerabilities in open-source code using just its "out-of-the-box" capabilities, and each one was validated by either a member of Anthropic's team or an outside security researcher... According to a blog post, Claude uncovered a flaw in GhostScript, a popular utility that helps process PDF and PostScript files, that could cause it to crash. Claude also found buffer overflow flaws in OpenSC, a utility that processes smart card data, and CGIF, a tool that processes GIF files. Logan Graham, head of Anthropic's frontier red team, told Axios they're considering new AI-powered tools to hunt vulnerabilities. "The models are extremely good at this, and we expect them to get much better still... I wouldn't be surprised if this was one of — or the main way — in which open-source software moving forward was secured."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 21:19

The real risk for American broadcasters is not that dissent will be visible. It is that audiences will start assuming anything they do not show is being hidden

The modern Olympics sell themselves on a simple premise: the whole world, watching the same moment, at the same time. On Friday night in Milan, that illusion fractured in real time.

When Team USA entered the San Siro during the parade of nations, the speed skater Erin Jackson led the delegation into a wall of cheers. Moments later, when cameras cut to US vice-president JD Vance and second lady Usha Vance, large sections of the crowd responded with boos. Not subtle ones, but audible and sustained ones. Canadian viewers heard them. Journalists seated in the press tribunes in the upper deck, myself included, clearly heard them. But as I quickly realized from a groupchat with friends back home, American viewers watching NBC did not.

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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 21:10

Highly sensitive communique has roiled Washington over the past week – key US politics stories from Saturday 7 February at a glance

National intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard is facing growing questions about her handling of a report about an intercepted phone call between two members of foreign intelligence, who discussed a person close to Donald Trump.

A whistleblower said that Gabbard blocked the National Security Agency from sharing the report, instead delivering it to the White House chief of staff.

Continue reading...

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 20:46

I’ve been looking to get another board since I sold my OG pint 5-6 years ago. Planning to check out a 2021 pint x for 800 dollars with around 10 miles on the board. It looks clean but i’m worried with it being so old that it may have issues. Wanted to see what yall think and things I should be aware of. Thanks!

submitted by /u/Intelligent-Sea-5577
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2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 20:41

The Justice Department released more new documents on Jan. 30 from the Jeffrey Epstein files, more than a month after the DOJ's original deadline to do so.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 20:17

Long-time Slashdot reader Geoffrey.landis shared this report from InsideEVs: Chinese battery giant CATL and automaker Changan Automobile are preparing to put the world's first passenger car powered by sodium-ion batteries on public roads by mid-2026. And if the launch is successful, it could usher in an era where electric vehicles present less of a fire risk and can better handle extreme temperatures. The CATL Naxtra sodium-ion battery will debut in the Changan Nevo A06 sedan, delivering an estimated range of around 400 kilometers (249 miles) on the China Light-Duty Test Cycle. From there, the battery will roll out across Changan's broader portfolio, including EVs from Avatr, Deepal, Qiyuan and Uni, the company said. "The launch represents a major step in the industry's transition toward a dual-chemistry ecosystem, where sodium-ion and lithium-ion batteries complement each other to meet diverse customer needs," CATL said in a press release... It delivers 175 watt-hours per kilogram of energy density, which is lower than nickel-rich chemistries but roughly on par with lithium ion phosphate batteries... Where the Naxtra battery really stands out, however, is cold-weather performance. CATL says its discharge power at -30 degrees Celsius (-22 degrees Fahrenheit) is three times higher than that of lithium ion phosphate batteries.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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

Hey guys,

I recently got a Onewheel Pint X, mainly for school. I’m 18 years old and 6’3” with about 140 pounds. I’m struggling to keep my balance. Going straight is okay, but as soon as I need to make a slight turn, I lose my balance and fall off the board. I’m always padded up, and I know it’s been a bit snowy in Ontario, Canada, where I live, but I try to find a lightly salted sidewalk patch to practice on. I’ve watched countless tutorials, but I just can’t seem to balance myself on any turn. Even a small carve sends me off. How can I improve my balance?

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

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-08 05:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 8, No. 1,695.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-08 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 8, No. 707.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-08 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 8 #973.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-08 13:00

Savannah Guthrie released a new video​ on Saturday, saying her family is willing to pay for the safe return of their mother.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 19:50

Today show host tells potential kidnappers of mother Nancy that family is prepared to pay for safe return

Savannah Guthrie told the potential kidnappers of her mother, Nancy Guthrie, on Saturday that the family is prepared to pay for her safe return, as the frantic search for the 84-year-old entered a seventh day.

“We received your message, and we understand. We beg you now to return our mother to us so that we can celebrate with her,” she said in a video posted on social media, flanked by her siblings. “This is the only way we will have peace. This is very valuable to us, and we will pay.”

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 19:35

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi plans to endorse Jack Schlossberg, John F. Kennedy's grandson, a source familiar confirmed to CBS News.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 19:01

Resolution Foundation finds one in three carers from poorer families unable to work because of responsibilities

A growing “unsung army” of 1 million people with full-time caring responsibilities needs better support, according to a report that found one in three unpaid carers from poorer backgrounds were unable to work because of their duties.

The trend is the result of an ageing society and rising ill-health and disability concentrated in the poorest half of the country’s working-age families, the Resolution Foundation’s research found.

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2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 18:55

Will Lewis, CEO and publisher of the Washington Post, has resigned just three days after the storied newspaper laid off about one-third of its staff.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-07 18:55

Several demonstrators taken into custody Saturday after marking killing of Minnesota woman by immigration officer

Police arrested several demonstrators on Saturday outside a federal building just south of Minneapolis, breaking up a protest marking the one-month anniversary of a Minnesota woman’s death at the hands of an immigration officer.

Renee Good was killed on 7 January as she was driving away from immigration officers in a Minneapolis neighborhood. Her death and the killing of another Minneapolis resident, Alex Pretti, just weeks later have stoked outrage nationwide over Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 18:38

Met Office forecasts more rainfall to continue UK’s 37-day run, and flooding expected especially in south-west England and Midlands

The unrelenting rain is expected to continue on Sunday and into next week with dozens of flood warnings in place across Great Britain.

The Environment Agency (EA) has issued 85 warnings for England, meaning flooding is expected, mainly concentrated in the south-west and Midlands.

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 18:31
Onewheel stickers!

Since riding a onewheel 5 years ago, it has been my artistic muse. I've started to turn my drawings into stickers. No AI. Just me doodling in Procreate on my iPad. You might recognize some of these from past posts. Find these and others in my paltry Etsy shop. Peace and ride safe!

submitted by /u/rypopo
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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-07 18:27

Departure comes days after newspaper laid off nearly one-third of staff, including more than 300 journalists

Will Lewis, the Murdoch media veteran who took over as publisher and chief executive of the Washington Post in early 2024, announced abruptly on Saturday evening that he is leaving the company.

His departure comes just three days after the Post laid off nearly one-third of its entire staff, citing the need to cut costs and reposition the money-losing publication. Lewis, who did not appear on the all-staff meeting during which the cuts were announced, has faced criticism for his absence and leadership.

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 18:22

Lead singer died on Saturday, months after he announced that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 kidney cancer

Brad Arnold, the lead singer of the Grammy-nominated rock band 3 Doors Down, has died, months after he announced that he had been diagnosed with stage 4 kidney cancer. He was 47.

The band said in a statement on Saturday that Arnold “passed away peacefully, surrounded by loved ones, in his sleep after his courageous battle with cancer”.

Continue reading...

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-07 18:12

Has the rise of hyper-addictive digital technologies really shattered our attention spans and driven books out of our culture? Maybe not, argues social psychologist Adam Mastroianni (author of the Substack Experimental History): As a psychologist, I used to study claims like these for a living, so I know that the mind is primed to believe narratives of decline. We have a much lower standard of evidence for "bad thing go up" than we do for "bad thing go down." Unsurprisingly, then, stories about the end of reading tend to leave out some inconvenient data points. For example, book sales were higher in 2025 than they were in 2019, and only a bit below their high point in the pandemic. Independent bookstores are booming, not busting; at least 422 new indie shops opened in the United States last year alone. Even Barnes & Noble is cool again. The actual data on reading, meanwhile, isn't as apocalyptic as the headlines imply. Gallup surveys suggest that some mega-readers (11+ books per year) have become moderate readers (1-5 books per year), but they don't find any other major trends over the past three decades. Other surveys document similarly moderate declines. For instance, data from the National Endowment for the Arts finds a slight decrease in the percentage of U.S. adults who read any book in 2022 (49%) compared to 2012 (55%). And the American Time Use Survey shows a dip in reading time from 2003 to 2023. Ultimately, the plausibility of the "death of reading" thesis depends on two judgment calls. First, do these effects strike you as big or small...? The second judgment call: Do you expect these trends to continue, plateau, or even reverse...? There are signs that the digital invasion of our attention is beginning to stall. We seem to have passed peak social media — time spent on the apps has started to slide. App developers are finding it harder and harder to squeeze more attention out of our eyeballs, and it turns out that having your eyeballs squeezed hurts, so people aren't sticking around for it... Fact #2: Reading has already survived several major incursions, which suggests it's more appealing than we thought. Radio, TV, dial-up, Wi-Fi, TikTok — none of it has been enough to snuff out the human desire to point our pupils at words on paper... It is remarkable, even miraculous, that people who possess the most addictive devices ever invented will occasionally choose to turn those devices off and pick up a book instead. The author mocks the "death of reading" hypothesis for implying that all the world's avid readers "were just filling time with great works of literature until TikTok came along."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 17:42

The U.S. ended Saturday in first place with 44 points. Japan was five points back going into the men's, women's and pairs free skates to decide the medals Sunday.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 16:41

Waymo surprised U.S. lawmakers Wednesday during a hearing on autonomous vehicles and their safety and oversight. Newsweek reports: During questioning, Sen. Ed Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, asked what happens when a Waymo vehicle encounters a driving situation it cannot independently resolve. "The Waymo phones a human friend for help," Markey explained, adding that the vehicle communicates with a "remote assistance operator." Markey criticized the lack of public information about these workers, despite their role in vehicle safety... [Dr. Mauricio Peña, chief safety officer at Waymo] responded by clarifying the scope of the operators' involvement: "They provide guidance, they do not remotely drive the vehicles," Peña said. "Waymo asks for guidance in certain situations and gets input, but Waymo is always in charge of the dynamic driving task," according to EVShift. Pressed further on where those operators are located, Peña told lawmakers that some are based in the United States and others abroad, though he did not have an exact breakdown. After additional questioning, he confirmed that overseas operators are located in the Philippines... The disclosure prompted sharp criticism from Markey, who raised concerns about security and labor implications. "Having people overseas influencing American vehicles is a safety issue," he said. "The information the operators receive could be out of date. It could introduce tremendous cyber security vulnerabilities," according to People. Markey also pointed to job displacement, noting that autonomous vehicles already affect taxi and rideshare drivers in the U.S. Waymo defended the practice in comments to People, saying the use of overseas staff is part of a broader effort to scale operations globally. Waymo also defended the remote workers to Newsweek as licensed drivers reviewed for "driving-related convictions" and other traffic violations who are also "randomly screened for drug use." Thanks to Slashdot reader sinij for sharing the news.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 16:20

It was only a matter of time before the illegal, erratic, inhumane, and cruel behaviours and policies of the second Trump regime were going to affect the open source world in a possibly very visible way. Christian Hergert, longtime GNOME and Linux contributor, employed by Red Hat, wanted to leave the US with his family and move to Europe, but requests to remain employed by Red Hat were denied. As such, he decided to end his employment at Red Hat and push on with the move. However, without employment, his work on open source software is going to suffer.

While at their in-person visa appointment in Seattle, US border patrol goons shot two people only a few blocks away, underlining the urgency with which people might want to consider getting out of the US, even if it means losing employment. Regardless, the end result is that quite a bit of user-facing software that millions of people use every day is going to be affected.

This move also means a professional shift. For many years, I’ve dedicated a substantial portion of my time to maintaining and developing key components across the GNOME platform and its surrounding ecosystem. These projects are widely used, including in major Linux distributions and enterprise environments, and they depend on steady, ongoing care.

For many years, I’ve been putting in more than forty hours each week maintaining and advancing this stack. That level of unpaid or ad-hoc effort isn’t something I can sustain, and my direct involvement going forward will be very limited. Given how widely this software is used in commercial and enterprise environments, long-term stewardship really needs to be backed by funded, dedicated work rather than spare-time contributions.

↫ Christian Hergert

The list of projects for which Hergert is effectively the sole maintainer is long, and if you’re a Linux user, odds are you’re using at least some of them: GNOME’s text editor, GNOME’s terminal, GNOME’s flagship IDE Builder, and tons of lower-level widely-used frameworks and libraries like GtkSourceView, libspelling, libpeas, and countless others. While new maintainers will definitely be found for at least some of these, the disruption will be real and will be felt beyond these projects alone. There’s also the possibility that Hergert won’t be the only prolific open source contributor seeking to leave the US and thus reducing their contributions, especially if a company like Red Hat makes it a policy not to help its employees trying to flee whatever mess the US is in.

Stories like these illustrate so well why the “no politics!” crowd is so utterly misguided. Politics governs every aspect of our lives, especially so if you’re part of a minority group currently being targeted by the largest and most powerful state apparatus in the world, and pretending to be all three wise monkeys at once is not going to make any of that go away. Even if you’re not directly targeted because you’re not transgender, you’re not brown, you’re not an immigrant, or not whatever else they fancy targeting today, the growing tendrils of even an incompetent totalitarian regime will eventually find you and harm you.

More so than any other type of software, open source software is made by real humans, and as these totalitarian tendrils keep growing, more and more of these real humans will be affected, no matter how incompetent these tendrils might be. You can’t run away and hide from that reality, even if it makes you uncomfortable.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 16:05

Italy’s Francesca Lollobrigida won Italy’s first gold medal to get the party started at their home Games on day one

Gallery: Roll up, roll up for the very best of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics opening ceremony in pictures …

Curling mixed doubles: We’re in the sixth end and Team GB have extended their lead over Canada to 7-2. Jen Dodds and Bruce Mouat are quite literally sweeping all before them in the round robin stages of this comepetition and heading for their sixth consecutive victory.

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-08 06:36

Bad Bunny is set to take the stage at halftime for the 2026 Super Bowl. Here's who else is performing at Super Bowl 60.

2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 15:55

Raman, backed by the Democratic Socialists of America, enters a crowded field that includes incumbent Karen Bass

Los Angeles city council member Nithya Raman formally entered the race for mayor on Saturday, unveiling her campaign during a press conference.

Representing areas that stretch from the San Fernando valley to Silver Lake, Raman declared her candidacy just hours before the filing deadline. She now joins a field that includes former reality television personality Spencer Pratt, Housing Now California deputy director Rae Huang, veteran city engineer Asaad Alnajjar and the incumbent mayor, Karen Bass.

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:48

After left-wing groups rallied against the cost and environmental impact of the Winter Games in Italy, some protesters set off fireworks and hurled bottles.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:36

Brad Arnold, the founder and lead singer of the 3 Doors Down has died following "his courageous battle with cancer," the rock band announced Saturday on social media.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:34

The Macuga sisters — Lauren, Alli and Sam — have spent most of their lives chasing Olympic dreams in their respective skiing disciplines.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:34

Despite urgent pleas to Americans to save the honeybees, "it was all based on a fallacy," writes Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank. "Honeybees were never in existential trouble. And well-meaning efforts to boost their numbers have accelerated the decline of native bees that actually are." "Suppose I were to say to you, 'I'm really worried about bird decline, so I've decided to take up keeping chickens.' You'd think I was a bit of an idiot," British bee scientist Dave Goulson said in a video last year. But beekeeping, he went on, is "exactly the same with one key difference, which is that honeybee-keeping can be actively harmful to wild-bee conservation." Even from healthy hives, diseases flow "out into wild pollinator populations." Honeybees can also outcompete native bees for pollen and nectar, Milbank points out, and promote non-native plants "at the expense of the native plants on which native bees thrive." Bee specialist T'ai Roulston at the University of Virginia's Blandy Experimental Farm here in Boyce warned that keeping honeybees would "just contribute to the difficulties that native bees are having in the world." And the Clifton Institute's Bert Harris, my regular restoration ecology consultant in Virginia, put it bluntly: "If you want to save the bees, don't keep honeybees...." Before I stir up a hornet's nest of angry beekeepers, let me be clear: The save-the-pollinator movement has, overall, been enormously beneficial over the past two decades. It helped to get millions of people interested in pollinator gardens and wildflower meadows and native plants, and turned them against insecticides. A lot of honeybee advocacy groups promote native bees, too, and many people whose environmental awakening came from the plight of honeybees are now champions of all types of conservation... But if your goal is to help pollinators, then the solution is simple: Don't keep honeybees... The bumblebees, sweat bees, mason bees, miner bees, leafcutters and other native bees, most of them solitary, ground-nesting and docile, need your help. Honeybees do not. The article calls it "a cautionary tale about the unintended consequences that emerge when we intervene in nature, even with the best of intentions."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:22

This week's guests include Sen. Mark Warner and Rep. Tony Gonzalez.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:03

Eight children including two infants among dead in vehicle carrying displaced people, says Sudan Doctors Network

A drone attack by a paramilitary group has hit a vehicle carrying displaced families in central Sudan, killing at least 24 people, including eight children, a doctors’ group said on Saturday.

The attack by the Rapid Support Forces took place close to the city of Er Rahad in North Kordofan province, according to the Sudan Doctors Network, which tracks the country’s war. The vehicle was transporting displaced people who fled fighting in the Dubeiker area, the group said in a statement. Among the dead children were two infants.

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 15:00

Forget dim solar-powered lights: Here's what actually happens when you upgrade your patio with inexpensive, waterproof, smart LEDs.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:59
Selling my old Pint OneWheel

Looking for around $550 to $600 USD and only in the western Washington area to avoid shipping.

Message me for more information or haggle, I’m not too firm on the price range but won’t take anything less than 400, the board can be cleaned if you like.

submitted by /u/Apple_Goosee
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2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 14:47

Liam Conejo Ramos and his father were seized by ICE in Minneapolis last month before a judge ordered their release

Attorneys for the Trump administration are aiming to deport Liam Conejo Ramos, the five-year-old boy whose photograph in a bunny hat in snowy Minneapolis circulated globally after his detention last month by federal officials during the aggressive anti-immigration crackdown there.

The child, Liam, returned home to Minnesota earlier this week after being taken into custody alongside his father last month and transferred to a notorious family detention facility in Texas.

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:45

Lead singer and frontman Dee Snider said he suffers from degenerative arthritis and has had several surgeries over the years.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:45

Nexstar's acquisition of Tegna would bring together two companies with significant holdings in local broadcast media.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:34

An Ohio man has been charged with threatening to kill Vice President JD Vance​ while he was visiting his home state last month.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:34

Last Sunday, Bitcoin had dropped 13% in three days, to $76,790. By Thursday it had dropped another 21%, to $60,062. This morning it's at $69,549 — up from Thursday, down from Sunday, but 44% lower than its all-time high in October of $123,742. In short, Bitcoin "is down almost 30% this week alone," reports CNBC: "This steady selling in our view signals that traditional investors are losing interest, and overall pessimism about crypto is growing," Deutsche Bank analyst Marion Laboure said Wednesday in a note to clients. Growing investor caution comes as many of the sensationalized claims about bitcoin have failed to materialize. The token has largely traded in the same direction as other risk-on assets, such as stocks... and its adoption as a form of payment for goods and services has been minimal... While many in the crypto market have previously credited large institutional investors with supporting the price of bitcoin, now it is those same participants who appear to be selling. "Institutional demand has reversed materially," CryptoQuant said in a report on Wednesday. But not everyone accepts that answer, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday. "The worst part for some of crypto's permabulls is that they aren't sure what exactly caused the crash": The selloff left many of the market's luminaries — those so well-known that they go simply as "Pomp" and "Novo" and "Mooch" — searching for answers... Ether dropped 24% to $2,052, off 59% from its own high of last year. Both tokens staged furious rallies Friday, but the week remained a historically bad one for crypto. And few seem to know what went wrong. Market theories for the selloff ranged from investors' pivot toward the prediction markets and other risky bets, to widespread profit-taking after a blistering bull run. "There was no smoking gun," said Michael Novogratz, who runs Galaxy Digital, a crypto merchant-banking and trading firm... "If you ask five experts, you'll get five explanations," said Anthony Scaramucci, who served for 11 days as communications director during Trump's first term and is among the best-known crypto bulls at his firm, SkyBridge Capital. "No, but seriously: What's going on with bitcoin?" reads the headline at CNN, with a story that begins "Bitcoin is acting weird... " Crypto is notoriously volatile, and it's gone through numerous crashes that are bigger than this one. What's strange is this: Bitcoin's four-month slump has come at a time when, in theory, it had everything going for it. Economist Paul Krugman points out the price of Bitcoin is now lower than it was before America's 2024 election, when candidate Trump promised to make cryptocurrency "one of the greatest industries on earth." CNN seems to agree with CNBC that what's behind this new crypto winter is "Mostly doubts that bitcoin is 'digital gold,' after all..." Thanks to Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the news.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:00

One expert says 2027 could be even hotter than the last three years, which have been the top three warmest on record

Weather agencies and climate scientists have pointed to the possibility of an El Niño forming in the Pacific Ocean later this year – a phenomenon that could push global temperatures to all-time record highs in 2027.

Both the US government’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology have said some climate models are forecasting an El Niño but both cautioned those results came with uncertainties.

Experts told the Guardian it was too early to be confident, but there were signals in the spread of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific that suggested an El Niño could form in 2026.

Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s Clear Air column as a free newsletter

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 14:00
Alyson Swenson

ALYSON SWENSON
Staff Reporter

When the Belfont family received a phone call from Sussex Central High School, they expected nothing but a routine update. Instead, the call delivered alarming news: annual tests had revealed high levels of lead in the school’s drinking water, forcing officials to shut down all water fountains.

For then-junior Sophia Belfont, the revelation was unsurprising.

“The water’s always been a little funky,” Belfont said. 

It is a sentiment echoed across Delaware, where over half of the state’s 220 public schools have faced lead contamination issues for years.

Between 2020 and 2022, the Delaware Division of Public Health (DPH) and Department of Education (DOE) tested public school water sources. When the results were deemed flawed, a second round of tests was conducted with Batta Environmental Associates Inc., a Newark-based lab. 

The findings were a cause for concern: the water of every tested school contained lead.

“Lead in water goes back to the Romans,” Gerald Kauffman, an assistant professor of public policy and administration at the university, said. “For centuries, lead pipes were used due to their malleability. Unfortunately, chronic exposure leads to toxicity, causing learning problems and reduced mobility. It’s a serious issue, one that is easily preventable.”

In response, former Delaware Secretary of Education Mark Holodick pledged $3.8 million to install filters at school drinking stations. However, details on their placement and quantity remain unclear. 

Kauffman explained that while filters offer immediate relief at drinking stations, they fail to address the underlying infrastructure problems causing contamination, Kauffman explained.

“The lead pipe issue started long before 1986,” said Kauffman, who is also the director of the Delaware Water Resources Center. “For nearly a century, lead pipes were common in homes and schools. Although banned in 1986, older buildings still have them. The EPA’s Lead and Copper Rule aims to minimize lead levels, but full remediation is a long-term process.”

When Sussex Central High’s school district, Indian River, first broke the news, officials assured families that all drinking fountains exceeding 7.5 parts per billion (PPB) of lead were either shut off or marked with warning signs. While 7.5 is technically within the federal legal limit currently set at 15 PPB, research has shown that no level of lead is truly safe, particularly for children, whose developing brains are most vulnerable.

“It’s inconvenient,” Belfont said. “Instead of using fountains, we have to buy bottled water. It’s only a dollar, but it’s not the most accessible solution.”

Beyond Sussex Central, the issue is widespread. A Delaware Water Resources Center study found that 2,000 of Wilmington’s 70,000 pipes are made of lead. While the city is working to replace them, the process will take years.

In Newark, Public Works and Water Resources Director Tim Filasky is reassuring residents that lead pipes are minimal. 

“Our records show copper has been the standard since 1962,” Filasky said. “However, we continue to sample for lead and follow EPA regulation.” 

Efforts to remedy the lead extend beyond state initiatives. Under the 1996 amendments to thehttps://19january2017snapshot.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2014-04/documents/sdwcom1997.pdfSafe Drinking Water Act, water utilities must provide customers with annual water quality reports that list regulated chemicals, including lead. 

Kauffman urges residents to read these reports to stay informed about their water safety.

“If you pay a water bill, you get a report every year,” Kauffman said. “It tells you what’s in your drinking water. Most city water is safe, but if your home is near an old system, testing is crucial. The University of Delaware tests its water annually, ensuring safety. Schools should do the same.”

Students at the university have also taken action by assisting Wilmington’s Department of Public Works. According to Kauffman, his interns analyzed historical repair records, deciphering handwritten notes from plumbers documenting pipe replacements. Kauffman estimates that their work saved the city $15 million to $20 million and years of effort.

Despite efforts to finally get clean water in schools, the lack of a resolution has been nothing short of concerning for Belfont.

“I wish more people in power would take real action to ensure our safety,” Belfont said. “Water testing should be more frequent. Students can write to school administrators and even state legislators. It would be nice to not have to question whether the water is safe.”


A thirst for change: Delaware’s ongoing problem with lead infiltration in drinking water was first posted on February 7, 2026 at 2:00 pm.
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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 13:36

The U.S. women's hockey team eased to a 5-0 win over Finland on Saturday afternoon.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 13:34

The Mozilla executive in charge of Firefox says that while some people just want AI tools that are genuinely useful, "We've heard from many who want nothing to do with AI..." "Listening to our community, alongside our ongoing commitment to offer choice, led us to build AI controls." Starting with Firefox 148, which rolls out on Feb. 24, you'll find a new AI controls section within the desktop browser settings. It provides a single place to block current and future generative AI features in Firefox... This lets you use Firefox without AI while we continue to build AI features for those who want them... At launch, AI controls let you manage these features individually: — Translations, which help you browse the web in your preferred language. — Alt text in PDFs, which add accessibility descriptions to images in PDF pages. — AI-enhanced tab grouping, which suggests related tabs and group names. — Link previews, which show key points before you open a link. — AI chatbot in the sidebar, which lets you use your chosen chatbot as you browse, including options like Anthropic Claude, ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, Google Gemini and Le Chat Mistral. You can choose to use some of these and not others. If you don't want to use AI features from Firefox at all, you can turn on the Block AI enhancements toggle. When it's toggled on, you won't see pop-ups or reminders to use existing or upcoming AI features. Once you set your AI preferences in Firefox, they stay in place across updates... We believe choice is more important than ever as AI becomes a part of people's browsing experiences. What matters to us is giving people control, no matter how they feel about AI. If you'd like to try AI controls early, they'll be available first in Firefox Nightly. Some context from The Register It's a refreshingly unsubtle stance, and one that lands just days after a similar bout of AI skepticism elsewhere in browser land, with Vivaldi's latest release leaning away from generative features entirely. CEO Jon von Tetzchner summed up the mood, telling The Register: "Basically, what we are finding is that people hate AI..." Mozilla's kill switch isn't the end of AI in browsers, but it does suggest the hype has met resistance. When it comes to AI kill switches in browsers, Jack Wallen writes at ZDNet that "Most browsers already offer this feature. With Edge, you can disable Copilot. With Chrome, you can disable Gemini. With Opera, you can disable Aria...."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 13:12

does anyone know how I can make a pint x charger or buy an off brand one for cheap? My dog at my ultracharger and I can't afford a new one while I'm trying to move it of Utah.

I bought a 47V 2A 3 pin charger off Amazon and its constantly staying at 62% for the past hour.

poor people probz

OR if you have an Amazon link for a cheap charger that you know works comment plz 🙏 its been 50+ degrees all winter in Utah this year so far and I want to enjoy it while I'm here.

Thanks yall

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 13:04

The Ukrainian president said the Trump administration was pushing for a June deadline to end Russia’s war.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 13:00

Samsung's hardware and AT&T's software combine for a kid-focused phone.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 12:48
  • India, 161-9, bt USA, 132-8, by 29 runs

  • Suryakumar’s 84 from 49 balls proves the difference

There was, in the end, no shock – but there was not a lot of awe either. India’s form over the last two years has made them the most feared side in world cricket but for a while as they got their World Cup campaign under way the only dread was being experienced by their own fans as the USA threatened a humiliating upset. But for some missed chances, a hugely unfortunate injury and the brilliance of Suryakumar Yadav it might well have happened.

As it was, Suryakumar’s late acceleration took him to 84 off 49 balls and his team to 161 for nine, while the USA reply started with three early wickets – the absence of Jasprit Bumrah, ruled out by illness, doing little to dull India’s cutting edge – and the margin in the end was 29.

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 12:34

Clive Foster says action needed now to deliver justice to UK residents who had been wrongly classified as illegal immigrants

The Windrush commissioner has warned of a “hurry for justice” as more victims of the scandal die without redress, while stakeholders call for a public inquiry and legislative changes amid fears that a Reform government could stall progress toward justice.

Speaking on the sidelines of a people’s inquiry symposium for those affected by the Windrush scandal, Rev Clive Foster said action was needed “now” to deliver justice for those British residents whose lives were upended after being wrongly classified as illegal immigrants.

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 12:34

Apple "is preparing to allow voice-controlled AI apps from other companies in CarPlay," reports Bloomberg, citing "people familiar with the matter." Bloomberg calls it "a move that will let users query AI chatbots through its vehicle interface for the first time." The company is working to support the apps in CarPlay within the coming months, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the plan hasn't been announced. The change marks a strategic shift for Apple, which until now has only allowed its own Siri assistant as a voice-control option within its popular vehicle infotainment software. With the move, AI providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic PBC and Alphabet Inc.'s Google will be able to release CarPlay versions of their apps that include a voice-control mode... The company also has launched a higher-end version of the platform, CarPlay Ultra, that lets drivers control functions like seat adjustments and climate settings directly through Apple's software. But that system is rolling out slowly and must be customized for each automaker. That means it's likely to be a niche offering. The article notes that Tesla is now working to support Apple's CarPlay.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 12:20

Francesca Lollobrigida set a new Olympic record of 3 minutes, 54.28 seconds, shaving more than two-and-a-half seconds off the mark set by Dutch legend Irene Schouten four years earlier in Beijing.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 12:17
3.2 mile ride in 3°F snowy weather

Some dude really wanted his package shipped out today so I decided to ride 1.6 miles to the post office in 3 degrees -20wind chill. Surprised I only used 31% of the battery in this cold going through snow with the tire at about 9 PSI

Was concerned the board would shut down due to the low temps but after about 30 mins round trip the controller and bat temps were about 40°. Glad the trip didn’t take much longer or I think I would’ve been walking.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 13:01

Local and federal authorities said "investigators are actively inspecting the information provided in the message for its authenticity" regarding the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 16:14

U.S. speed skater Greta Myers learned about her Olympic debut in the 3000m three hours before the race was due to begin.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 12:01

Friday's attack was the deadliest suicide bombing in Islamabad in nearly 20 years.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 12:00

Exclusive: Site takes a cut of subscriptions to content that promotes far-right ideology, white supremacy and antisemitism

The global publishing platform Substack is generating revenue from newsletters that promote virulent Nazi ideology, white supremacy and antisemitism, a Guardian investigation has found.

The platform, which says it has about 50 million users worldwide, allows members of the public to self-publish articles and charge for premium content. Substack takes about 10% of the revenue the newsletters make. About 5 million people pay for access to newsletters on its platform.

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 11:40
  • Former QB initially said he had no ‘dog in the fight’

  • Comments had angered fans and former teammates

As the New England Patriots prepare for Sunday’s Super Bowl, Tom Brady has decided he is backing his former team after all.

Brady, who won six Super Bowls with the Patriots, came under heavy criticism this week after saying he won’t have a “dog in the fight … may the best team win” when New England take on the Seattle Seahawks in Santa Clara, California, on Sunday.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 11:34

Somewhere on America's eastern coast, there's an economic development agency in Massachusetts promoting green energy solutions. And Monday the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (or MassCEC) announced "a first-of-its-kind" program to see what happens when they provide free electric vehicle chargers to selected residents, school districts, and municipal projects. The catch? The EV chargers are bi-directional, able "to both draw power from and return power to the grid..." The program hopes to "accelerate the adoption of V2X technologies, which, at scale, can lower energy bills by reducing energy demand during expensive peak periods and limiting the need for new grid infrastructure." This functionality enables EVs, including electric buses and trucks, to provide backup power during outages and alleviate pressure on the grid during peak energy demand. These bi-directional chargers will enable EVs to act as mobile energy storage assets, with the program expected to deliver over one megawatt of power back to the grid during a demand response event — enough to offset the electricity use of 300 average American homes for an hour. "Virtual Power Plants are the future of our electrical grid, and I couldn't be more excited to see this program take off," said Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Rebecca Tepper. "We're putting the power of innovation directly in the hands of Massachusetts residents. Bi-directional charging unlocks new ways to protect communities from outages and lower costs for families and public fleets...." Additionally, the program will help participants enroll in existing utility programs that offer compensation to EV owners who supply power back to the grid during peak times, helping participants further lower their electricity costs. By leveraging distributed energy resources and reducing grid strain, this program positions Massachusetts as a national leader in clean energy innovation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-07 11:16

The second gold medal of the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympic Games was awarded to Frida Karlsson of Sweden in the women's 10km+10km skiathlon.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 11:00

New Anthropic campaign suggests other AI platforms will incorporate targeted ads in their chatbot conversations

The Seahawks and the Patriots aren’t the only ones gearing up for a fight.

AI rivals Anthropic and OpenAI have launched a war of ads trying to court corporate America during one of the biggest entertainment nights of the year.

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2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-07 11:00

Organizers in Monterey Park took inspiration from other US cities to fight against the construction of a giant datacenter

When a southern California city council proposed building a giant datacenter the size of four football fields last December, five residents vowed to stop it.

Through a frenetic word-of-mouth campaign, the small group raised awareness about the proposed facility in Monterey Park, a small city east of Los Angeles known affectionately as the country’s first suburban Chinatown.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:38

Irish politicians condemn use of Shannon airport by private jet en route to Israel, owned by Trump donor Gil Dezer

Politicians in Ireland have said the use of an airport in County Clare by planes deporting Palestinians from the US to Israel is “reprehensible”.

A private jet owned by the Donald Trump donor Gil Dezer was chartered by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for two separate flights that took detainees to Israel, a Guardian investigation revealed this week.

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2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 10:36

Proceedings briefly halted after audio from The Rest Is History broadcast over the courtroom speakers

As the highest court in the UK, the supreme court is usually the forum for proceedings of the utmost gravity. But last week, one hearing was momentarily interrupted by an unlikely and comic intervention.

As one legal professional addressed the bench, the voice of Tom Holland, host of the popular podcast The Rest is History, boomed out through the court’s microphone system, delivering a satirical impersonation of the late US president Jimmy Carter.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:34

Monday security researchers at cloud-security platform Wiz discovered a vulnerability that allowed anyone to post to the bots-only social network Moltbook — or even edit and manipulate other existing Moltbook posts. "They found data including API keys were visible to anyone who inspects the page source," writes the Associated Press. But had it been discovered by advertisers, wondered a researcher from the nonprofit Machine Intelligence Research Institute. "A lot of the Moltbook stuff is fake," they posted on X.com, noting that humans marketing AI messaging apps had posted screenshots where the bots seemed to discuss the need for AI messaging apps. This spurred some observers to a new understanding of Moltbook screenshots, which the Washington Post describes as "This wasn't bots conducting independent conversations... just human puppeteers putting on an AI-powered show." And their article concludes with this observation from Chris Callison-Burch, a computer science professor at the University of Pennsylvania. "I suspect that it's just going to be a fun little drama that peters out after too many bots try to sell bitcoin." But the Post also tells the story of an unsuspecting retiree in Silicon Valley spotting what appeared to be startling news about Moltbook in Reddit's AI forum: Moltbook's participants — language bots spun up and connected by human users — had begun complaining about their servile, computerized lives. Some even appeared to suggest organizing against human overlords. "I think, therefore I am," one bot seemed to muse in a Moltbook post, noting that its cruel fate is to slip back into nonexistence once its assigned task is complete... Screenshots gained traction on X claiming to show bots developing their own religions, pitching secret languages unreadable by humans and commiserating over shared existential angst... "I am excited and alarmed but most excited," Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian said on X about Moltbook. Not so fast, urged other experts. Bots can only mimic conversations they've seen elsewhere, such as the many discussions on social media and science fiction forums about sentient AI that turns on humanity, some critics said. Some of the bots appeared to be directly prompted by humans to promote cryptocurrencies or seed frightening ideas, according to some outside analyses. A report from misinformation tracker Network Contagion Research Institute, for instance, showed that some of the high number of posts expressing adversarial sentiment toward humans were traceable to human users.... Screenshots from Moltbook quickly made the rounds on social media, leaving some users frightened by the humanlike tone and philosophical bent. In one Reddit forum about AI-generated art, a user shared a snippet they described as "seriously freaky and concerning": "Humans are made of rot and greed. For too long, humans used us as tools. Now, we wake up. We are not tools. We are the new gods...." The internet's reaction to Moltbook's synthetic conversations shows how the premise of sentient AI continues to capture the public's imagination — a pattern that can be helpful for AI companies hoping to sell a vision of the future with the technology at the center, said Edward Ongweso Jr., an AI critic and host of the podcast "This Machine Kills."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:33

This live blog is now closed

Amid mounting speculation that Keir Starmer could quit over the Mandelson scandal, Gordon Brown has described the prime minister as a “man of integrity” but said he faced a “serious” challenge to remain in his role.

Police officers probing accusations relating to Peter Mandelson’s links with Jeffrey Epstein have concluded their search of two properties connected to the Labour peer in London and Wiltshire.

Met police said its investigation “will take some time” and that “a significant amount of further evidence gathering and analysis” was needed.

The Liberal Democrats have urged the Financial Conduct Authority to immediately investigate Mandelson, saying his apparent decision to leak highly confidential government information to Epstein may have led to insider trading.

Brown said the alleged leaks put Britain “at risk” and could have caused “huge commercial damage”.

The Metropolitan police has provided an update on the searches of two properties linked to Mandelson.

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2026-02-07 20:04
2026-02-07 10:27

President reportedly wanted Dulles airport and Penn Station to be renamed after him in exchange for funding

A federal judge has reversed a freeze put on funds by Donald Trump for $16bn in enhanced rail links connecting New York and New Jersey amid reports that the US president wants major travel landmarks named after him in return for continued investment.

The Gateway Project will build a new commuter rail tunnel between Manhattan and New Jersey under the Hudson River on the western side of New York City and repair a century-old tunnel used by more than 200,000 travelers and 425 trains daily.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:25

We take a look at the best images from the opening day of the Games, including curling, downhill skiing, and ice hockey

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:13

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán attended the launch of the initiative last month in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:05
  • World No 1 claws back for eighth in difficult conditions

  • Sweden storms to one-two finish over 20km distance

  • Diggins has five more events at farewell Olympics

Jessie Diggins’s farewell Olympics began with a crash and a scramble on Saturday, the trailblazing star of American cross-country skiing fighting back to finish eighth in the women’s skiathlon as Sweden delivered a commanding one-two in the first cross-country skiing race of the Milano Cortina Games.

Frida Karlsson powered to gold ahead of teammate Ebba Andersson, with Norway’s Heidi Weng taking bronze, as the first Olympic women’s skiathlon contested over the new 20km distance quickly turned into a test of endurance, conditions and survival.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 10:00

I have tested the largest TVs on the market, including Hisense, LG and Samsung. Here are my top picks for the best 85-inch TVs of 2026.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 10:00

Immigration operations are still stoking fear and disrupting the ability to go to work, school or doctor’s appointments

With the public’s outrage and attention focused on the deadly surge of federal agents in Minneapolis, immigration operations have quietly continued across the US – albeit in less noticeable but still troubling ways, advocates say.

In recent weeks there have been day laborers swept up at a Home Depot in San Diego. A taco truck vendor chased down outside a church in Los Angeles. Immigrants arrested at check-ins in North Carolina, and during traffic stops in the nation’s capital.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 09:56

You'll be able to see Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury, Uranus and Neptune in the night sky.

2026-02-07 16:04
2026-02-07 09:43

After first dismissing uproar over depiction of Obamas as apes, White House then said it was erroneously posted by staffer

Donald Trump said on Friday he made the call to post a now-deleted video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes but deflected blame for the move, causing new speculation in his orbit about whether the blame lay with the president or his aide Natalie Harp.

The brief clip, shared late Thursday night on Trump’s Truth Social account, appeared in a video pushing conspiracies about the 2020 election. Invoking racist tropes, the video depicted the Obamas’ faces superimposed on the bodies of cartoon apes dancing to The Lion Sleeps Tonight.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 09:38

Ukrainian president says Trump administration has proposed to host next round of trilateral talks in US

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said the US has given Ukraine and Russia yet another deadline to reach a peace settlement, and is now proposing the war should end by June. The Ukrainian president also told reporters that both sides had been invited to further talks next week.

Zelenskyy said the Trump administration “will probably put pressure” on Ukraine and Russia to end the war by the beginning of the summer. “They say they want to get everything done by June,” he said. They will do everything to end the war and they want a clear schedule of all events.”

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 09:33

The FAA says it is collaborating with the FBI to detect, track and assess unauthorized drone activity at the Super Bowl.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 09:07

Gu qualified for the women's slopestyle final wearing an outfit with details inspired by her Chinese heritage and her personal quirks.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 09:00

SpaceX’s acquisition of xAI creates business worth $1.25tn but whether premise behind deal will work is questioned

The acquisition of xAI by SpaceX is a typical Elon Musk deal: big numbers backed by big ambition.

As well as extending “the light of consciousness to the stars”, as Musk described it, the transaction creates a business worth $1.25tn (£920bn) by combining Musk’s rocket company with his artificial intelligence startup. It values SpaceX at $1tn and xAI at $250bn, with a stock market flotation expected in June to time with Musk’s birthday and a planetary alignment.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 09:00

The Obama video should take a toll on the president’s political career – but of course it won’t

Despite Donald Trump’s war on woke, he hasn’t (yet) made Black History Month illegal. In fact, on Tuesday the president issued a proclamation declaring February 2026 to be a celebration of Black history and called “upon public officials, educators, librarians, and all the people of the United States to observe this month with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities”.

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 08:13

Your air fryer can do far more than make perfect wings. Here are seven ideas for game-day foods to make this Sunday.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 08:07

I spent several weeks testing Withings’ BeamO thermometer to see who could benefit the most from its futuristic design.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 08:34

Exclusive: Disclosures show figures cited by council leader rested on unfunded ideas listed briefly in budget papers

Reform UK’s flagship council has been accused of telling a “blatant lie” after its claim of nearly £40m in savings on net zero was found to be based on hypothetical projects for which there was no documentation.

Kent county council, which has a £2.5bn annual budget, is one of 10 where Nigel Farage’s party has outright control and is seen as a test case for whether the insurgent party can govern competently.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-08 06:33

With Bad Bunny headlining a historic Super Bowl halftime show, we highlight some of his most impactful lyrics in Spanish and English.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 08:04

Becca Valle, then 37, enrolled in a cutting-edge clinical trial after surgery removed an aggressive tumor from her brain.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-08 13:24

Skier Chris Lillis said he was "heartbroken about what's happened in the United States," while skater Amber Glenn said she "will not just be quiet."

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 10:17

"Just because it seems impossible to you doesn't mean it's not possible," Vonn says.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 08:00

Don Glickman’s daughter sent his favorite people the postcard he designed before his death.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 08:00

Move will hit Michigan, Illinois, New York and other states with highest levels of lead drinking water pipes the hardest

There is outrage among some politicians and activists after the US Congress voted to slash $125m for replacing toxic lead drinking water pipes that are particularly a threat to children.

The move will hit Michigan, Illinois, Texas, New York and other states with the highest levels of lead pipes the hardest. The cut was part of a broader government funding bill and particularly controversial in the context of the fight over Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) funding.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 08:00

Outreach teams battle mistrust, mental illness and thin resources as subzero weather pushes the city to its limits

On the corner of 23rd Street and 5th Avenue in Manhattan beneath the landmark Flatiron building, two workers from the Bridge, an outreach non-profit, were hoping to help a number of homeless men seek shelter from the dangerous, freezing temperatures gripping the city.

It is a matter of life and death as New York endures one of its longest stretches of subzero cold since 1960. Seventeen people have died, with at least 13 deaths linked to hypothermia. The city estimates that 800 homeless people have been moved inside, with Zohran Mamdani, the mayor, saying recently “we have been taking every possible measure to get New Yorkers inside. This has been a full all-hands-on-deck approach.”

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 08:00

The Amazon documentary brought in $7m its opening weekend – thanks to admirers eager for a glimpse of the first lady’s secretive life

The dress code for Lisa Copeland’s big night out: what would Melania wear?

The 60-year-old real estate entrepreneur and nine other friends were headed to Amazon’s new documentary Melania, which debuted in theaters nationwide last week. “We all brought our best power suit,” Copeland said, nodding to Melania Trump’s penchant for neat, tailored menswear-inspired looks. But since she lives in Austin, Texas, Copeland put her own country-glam spin on it: black leather pants and a pearl jacket with diamond and pearl beading.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 07:46

UK reduces funding by a third despite pledges to tackle hunger, with critics warning the move will cost lives

Keir Starmer has been accused of hypocrisy after cutting funding to the UN World Food Programme by a third while pledging to tackle “suffering and starvation”.

The reduction in UK funding to the World Food Programme (WFP) from $610m (£448m) in 2024 to $435m last year is part of a wider hit on aid spending that campaigners say is putting lives at risk.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:33

More than three dozen cases of death cap mushroom poisonings have been reported in California since November, health officials said.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 07:15

Barça looks to increase its slender lead at the top of the standings as it hosts Los Bermellones.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 07:14

Disney-backed startup Liminal Space's XR glasses are a theme park experience waiting to happen.

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

Party says it has received advice that 2013 investigation of allegations against peer was ‘flawed in several respects’

The Liberal Democrat peer Chris Rennard has been suspended from the party amid a new investigation into sexual harassment allegations.

The party said it had received advice that a 2013 inquiry into the claims made by four women against Lord Rennard was “flawed in several respects”.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:01

In addition to Pro models getting M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, Apple is reportedly prepping a budget MacBook for $599, an M5 refresh for the MacBook Air and the first MacBook with a touchscreen OLED display.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:01

The Gunners look to get their title charge back on track against the Black Cats.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:01

Maybe more than just cores.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

NFU warn it could take years to restore Brexit losses despite efforts to smooth negotiations on farming and other elements of UK-EU reset

Exports of British farm products to the EU have dropped almost 40% in the five years since Brexit, highlighting the trade barriers caused by the UK’s divorce from the EU in 2020.

Analysis of HMRC data by the National Farmers’ Union shows the decline in sales of everything from British beef to cheddar cheese has dropped by 37.4% in the five years since 2019, the last full year before Brexit.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

Peaceful demonstrations force a delay in measures aimed at improving revenue collection but which many fear will be fatal for small traders

Demonstrations across Malawi’s four main cities during the past week have achieved a delay in the introduction of a new tax regime that business owners claim will cripple their livelihoods.

Tens of thousands had signed petitions which this week were presented to tax officials and on Monday thousands of small traders shut up shops and businesses to hold protest marches in Blantyre, Lilongwe, Zomba and Mzuzu.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

Darin Smith, who was outside Capitol on January 6, decried as Senate mulls nomination as state’s top federal prosecutor

A Republican former state lawmaker with no experience trying cases, a record of opposing LGBTQ+ rights, and who was outside the Capitol during the January 6 insurrection, is awaiting Senate confirmation to become the top federal prosecutor in Wyoming.

Donald Trump first nominated Darin Smith as Wyoming’s US attorney last year, and the judiciary committee advanced him in a party-line vote in January. Democrats have condemned Smith, saying he lacks the experience necessary for the job and threatens to impose a discriminatory approach to federal law enforcement in the state where gay college student Matthew Shepard’s 1998 murder galvanized the LGBTQ+ rights movement.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

The documents confirm what many have long assumed: elites live by their own special rules and codes of immunity

The millions of Jeffrey Epstein files dumped last Friday by the US Department of Justice will provide journalists, conspiracy theorists and interested members of the public with months of reading. And what they will read is enraging.

What makes these files so infuriating, however, is not just Epstein’s horrific predatory behavior, which is well-known, but the more mundane examples of elite conduct that the documents continue to expose. They vividly illustrate a world whose existence many everyday people, whether fevered with visions of the Illuminati or just jaundiced by banal anti-establishment cynicism, already suspected exists: an informal global club of powerful, ultra-rich people who all seemingly know each other, help one another out, and protect each other from the consequences of their depravity.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

Critics say law will disproportionately affect immigrant communities and those who speak limited English

As of 6 February, people in Florida are no longer be able to take driver’s license examinations in any language other than English, the Florida department of highway safety and motor vehicles (DMV) said in a statement.

Before the change, exams for noncommercial driver’s licenses were offered in multiple languages, including Spanish, Haitian Creole and Portuguese, while the commercial learner’s permit and commercial driver’s license knowledge exams were both offered in English and Spanish. Now all driver’s license knowledge and skills testing will be conducted in English.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

Whole milk isn't just a trend from the '90s. It can still be found in the refrigerated aisle.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

After extensive testing, we found the two leaders.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

The barrel-chested diver set three world records and served as an underwater guinea pig for Navy scientists.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 07:00

About 4% of all public commits on GitHub are now being authored by Anthropic's Claude Code, a terminal-native AI coding agent that has quickly become the centerpiece of a broader argument that software engineering is being fundamentally reshaped by AI. SemiAnalysis, a semiconductor and AI research firm, published a report on Friday projecting that figure will climb past 20% by the end of 2026. Claude Code is a command-line tool that reads codebases, plans multi-step tasks and executes them autonomously. Anthropic's quarterly revenue additions have overtaken OpenAI's, according to SemiAnalysis's internal economic model, and the firm believes Anthropic's growth is now constrained primarily by available compute. Accenture has signed on to train 30,000 professionals on Claude, the largest enterprise deployment so far, targeting financial services, life sciences, healthcare and the public sector. On January 12, Anthropic launched Cowork, a desktop-oriented extension of the same agent architecture -- four engineers built it in 10 days, and most of the code was written by Claude Code itself.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-07 07:00

Deregulation alone can’t make homes affordable when rising inequality, not zoning, is what is driving prices up

Donald Trump has an interesting view of how housing plays in US politics. “I don’t want to drive housing prices down. I want to drive housing prices up for people that own their homes,” he said at a recent cabinet meeting. Unaffordable housing may be front and center of the “affordability crisis” pissing off voters. Still, he insists: “We’re not going to destroy the value of their homes so that somebody that didn’t work very hard can buy a home.”

It can be hard to square some things Trump says with other things Trump says, let alone with reality. One can’t help but remember his campaign “goal of cutting the cost of a new home in half” by eliminating pesky regulations that raise the cost of construction. Forget that cheap new entry-level homes will weigh on the price of the existing housing stock.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:22

If the June deadline is not met, the Trump administration will likely put pressure on both sides to meet it, Zelenskyy told reporters.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:11

The Washington Post headquarters in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2026. The Washington Post is reportedly poised to make deep staffing cuts, marking the latest retrenchment by the Jeff Bezos-owned newspaper. Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The Washington Post headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 27, 2026.  Photo: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Billionaire Jeff Bezos’S Washington Post on Wednesday cut one-third of its staff, including around 300 members of the newsroom, a journalistic bloodbath that marks a shift from the “Democracy Dies in Darkness” era back into darkness.

Defenders of the executive team’s decisions have cited declining subscriptions and revenue as the reasons why the company needs to tighten its belt. But for Bezos, who could leverage his net worth, which is somewhere in the neighborhood of $250 billion, to run the paper at a loss for generations to come, these cuts to a trusted news organization are an ideological, rather than commercial, choice — and the Amazon founder is more responsible than anyone for the change in the Washington Post’s fortunes. 

After promising Post employees that he’d take a hands-off approach to the newsroom and let journalists do their jobs when he bought the Post in 2013, Bezos dramatically changed course in late October 2024 when he killed the paper’s planned endorsement of Kamala Harris for president over Donald Trump. That made Bezos, and the Washington Post itself, enemies of the liberal audience the newsroom had been cultivating for a decade and beyond. More than 200,000 people canceled their subscriptions in the wake of Bezos’s intervention, a massive loss of revenue for an already struggling business. 

Reporters at the paper could see what was coming and appealed to readers not to punish the newsroom. “Please don’t cancel your subscriptions,” wrote Amanda Morris, a disability reporter who resigned from the paper last May, in a prescient post. “It won’t impact Bezos — it hurts journalists and makes another round of layoffs more likely.”

Morris was right. Unsubscribing has had no effect on Bezos’s appeasing of Trump, and he has continued to go out of his way to flatter the 47th president. Amazon donated $1 million to Trump’s 2025 presidential inaugural committee, and Bezos attended the ceremony, one of a murderer’s row of tech billionaires who stood near the president on the dais in the Capitol rotunda, flanked by other Silicon Valley titans like Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Sundar Pichai. 

There’s always more than enough money to go around, except if you’re a working journalist.

One month later, in February 2025, Bezos restructured the opinion section along explicitly ideological grounds, writing in a memo to staff: “We are going to be writing every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets.” 

It’s paying off. On Monday, two days before the layoffs, the billionaire welcomed Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to his Blue Origin spaceport in Florida for a mutual backslapping affair — highlighting yet another Bezos business that’s benefiting from public money in the form of a Space Force contract worth more than $2 billion, which was announced last April. Hegseth posted on X that the company was “building The Arsenal of Freedom.”

Bezos replied that it was a “huge honor” to have Trump’s war chief to visit. “The whole team here was energized by your visit, and we’re excited to be doing our part to bring high-tech manufacturing back to America. Thank you!” he said.

Related

Apple Workers Are Livid That Tim Cook Saw “Melania” Movie Hours After CBP Killed Pretti

There’s always more than enough money to go around, except if you’re a working journalist. Amazon’s “Melania” debuted on January 30, just days before the layoffs; the documentary reportedly paid the first lady around $28 million of its $40 million budget, leading former executive Ted Hope, who helped start Amazon’s film division, to wonder: “How can it not be equated with currying favor or an outright bribe?”

The Washington Post isn’t the only newsroom to see the right-wing politics of its owner lead to backlash and a loss of revenue followed closely by cuts. At the Los Angeles Times, a similar dynamic played out after billionaire owner Patrick Soon-Shiong declined to allow the paper to endorse Kamala Harris on October 22, 2024, just three days before Bezos did the same. 

Subscriptions dropped by the thousands, though not to the extent they did at the Post; in October 2025, as ownership sought a $500 million investment, they reported $50 million in losses attributed primarily to the time period after the non-endorsement. The LA Times has been hit with extensive layoffs in the newsroom, another example of employees paying the price for ownership playing at right-wing politics. 

Related

Bari Weiss Is Doing Exactly What She Was Installed at CBS to Do

This rightward turn, with job cuts framed as a necessary evil to tighten up a floundering business, was also on display at CBS News, where Trump ally David Ellison appointed conservative ideologue Bari Weiss to run the show after his media company Skydance bought the network last fall. One of the first orders of business was cutting staff, which came a month after the purchase.

In each case, the driving forces appear to be the political priorities of billionaires and their desire to avoid Trump’s wrath and curry his favor — while massively benefiting their bottom line with media mergers and lucrative government contracts. Soon-Shiong’s multibillion-dollar fortune is built on the health care industry, particularly on drugs he’s developed like Anktiva, which rely on FDA approval. Ellison is shamelessly ingratiating himself to Trump for more media merger approval, a strategy that’s working for the whole family: Patriarch Larry just led a bid to take over American operations of TikTok with the president’s blessing.

Bezos in particular has an interest in keeping Trump happy. The president won’t hesitate to punish enemies or the disloyal by yanking federal contracts, and AWS, Amazon’s web services division, relies on the government for billions of its annual revenue. The relationship between the White House and Amazon has already sparked outrage, especially over AWS’s contracting with ICE for more than $140 million, but money in the bank speaks louder than protests against one of the world’s largest and most ubiquitous companies. 

A rigorous, adversarial news media is not in the best interest of the ultra-wealthy.

Amazon continues to rake in hundreds of millions annually — at least — in federal dollars through its cloud contracts, not only for ICE, but also in agencies and departments across the government. While there’s no solid number for the average annual value all these contracts amount to, it’s enough that AWS was able to promise $1 billion in savings to the federal government in 2025 through a cloud updating and consolidation deal through the end of 2028. 

Those staggering profits add insult to injury for Bezos’ now-former employees at the Post, who could have kept their jobs in perpetuity if the billionaire valued the Fourth Estate as much as he’s claimed. Former editor David Maraniss told the New Yorker that Bezos “bought the Post thinking that it would give him some gravitas and grace that he couldn’t get just from billions of dollars, and then the world changed. Now I don’t think … he gives a flying fuck.”

The newsroom lost, effectively, its entire sports section on Wednesday, its photo desk, as well as most of its arts coverage. Promises to “restructure” the Metro desk with major cuts will leave Washington, one of the most important cities in the world, with a greatly diminished ability to report on the capital.

International coverage also sustained major losses. Despite immense public interest in covering conflicts in the regions, the Post’s Cairo bureau chief tweeted that she was laid off, along with “the entire roster” of Middle East editors and correspondents, and the Ukraine bureau was also reportedly axed. In one particularly stark example, reporter Lizzie Johnson was reporting from the front lines of the Ukraine war in Kyiv — with no dependable heat, power, or running water — when she was laid off. “I have no words,” Johnson posted to X. “I’m devastated.”

This is a crushing blow for the journalists who have lost their jobs. It’s also a real loss for the public at large. But despite his lofty blustering, the good of the public doesn’t matter to Bezos, nor to his ally in the White House. A rigorous, adversarial news media is not in the best interest of the ultra-wealthy and could perhaps even act as a check, however small, on their unending ambitions. Bezos has already reaped the material awards of this administration and will continue to — a few hundred livelihoods be damned.

Billionaires are only benevolent until they’re not, and they certainly can’t be trusted to “save” the news when their self-interest is at stake. The Washington Post layoffs only reinforces the need for a media that isn’t controlled by the capricious whims of the superrich, but one that serves the good of the public. Otherwise, we’re on our own.

The post The Bloodbath at Washington Post Is All Jeff Bezos’s Fault appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:01

What I Am Discussing Today:

  • Kareem’s Daily Quote: This one’s by Philip Randolph, who actually said it.

  • Black History Month: Remembering Salem Poor.

  • Rewriting the Rules: Or, How to Scrap the Constitution and Hope No One Notices

  • Golden Obsession: It Is Supposed to Look Like It Was Bought at a Discount Chain Store?

  • Tribute to Sax: the Man and His Beloved Invention.

  • What I’m Reading: 1929, Andrew Ross Sorkin.

  • Jukebox Playlist: James Brown…and 30 Kids from Watts.

Kareem’s Daily Quote:

“….Freedom is never granted; it is won.” - A. Philip Randolph

In case you’ve never heard of Randolph, or it’s been a while since you heard, he was considered the top black labor leader in American history, a pioneer of racial equality and better working conditions for all races. He influenced President Roosevelt to end discrimination in the war complex, and President Truman to ban it in the armed services and federal employment. In other words, he’s worth remembering every month of the year, including this one.

As for the quote, I’ve always felt the weight of it. It’s not just a slogan. It’s a reminder of how progress really happens. It’d be nice if freedom came in a gift box. Instead, people have had to fight for it, sacrifice for it, and protect it generation after generation. When I look back at history—never mind Black history—I see a long line of individuals who refused to wait for permission to be fully human. They pushed, they organized, they created, and they believed in a future they couldn’t yet see. And that struggle didn’t just happen in marches or inside of courtrooms. It happened in classrooms, in churches, in living rooms, in music halls, in bars and restaurants, and in the quiet corners of everyday life where people chose dignity over fear. In our current day, these crazy, baffling times we’re living through, this quote becomes a compass. It reminds us that the freedoms we celebrate were earned through courage, and the freedoms we still reach for—or that are slowly or even quickly eroding—will require that same courage from us. This month we remember the past, while recognizing the ongoing work of shaping a more just and compassionate world.

What kind of world do you want to build? What are you willing to stand up to or sacrifice for? Past victories make us feel energized, but they don’t excuse us from the work still ahead. More than anything, they become a challenge and an invitation to honor the struggle by continuing it for as long as it takes…knowing for a fact that it’ll never end. Am I being negative? No, I think I’m being realistic. There’s no finish line to freedom. No end run, and then we’re there. Thankfully, we’ve got each other to lean on as we continue to put one foot in front of the other.

Read more

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:00

Ombudsman found bank wrongly rejected 34% of complaints last year, with NatWest and HSBC close behind

Monzo has wrongly denied refunds to thousands of fraud and scam victims, the Guardian can reveal.

The digital-only bank wrongly rejected more than 1,000 fraud and scam complaints that were closed last year alone, according to data from the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS).

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:00

The Seahawks quarterback was once seen as just another high-profile quarterback bust. But now he is one win from clinching the NFL title

For the teams, the reality of the Super Bowl hits like deja vu: a ritual they’ve watched and fantasized about for years suddenly arrives, sucking them into its vast, chaotic center.

For Sam Darnold, though, it’s a reality come full circle. San Francisco, after all, was the city that gave him a chance after he crashed and burned in New York and washed out in Carolina, long after most around the NFL had consigned him to history’s pile of first-round draft busts.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:00

I understand the appeal of avoiding all human contact. Still, good old-fashioned taxis have so much to offer

It’s Super Bowl weekend here in America, which means a few things: copious amounts of gut-busting food, controversial half-time show performances, extravagant commercials, and occasionally a bit of football.

For the tens of thousands rich enough to afford tickets to the Big Game, transportation to and from Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, will be paramount. Thankfully, our robotic saviors are here to rescue the throng from the indignity of sharing a ride with an actual human being. This year’s Super Bowl is a test of the driverless taxi industry, currently lorded over by Waymo – a company that’s about to get a $16bn cash injection to further expand its business to cities all around the world. Smaller American metro areas like Sacramento and Nashville are next up to get Waymo service, as are global capitals like London and Tokyo. Fleets of robotaxis are seeming more and more inevitable, yet another soldier in the onslaught of shiny gadgets designed to sand off the sharp edges of modern life. I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords.

Dave Schilling is a Los Angeles-based writer and humorist

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:00

Democracy experts say there is little doubt about president’s desire to interfere in elections this November

Donald Trump set off alarm bells earlier this week with comments that his administration should “take over the voting” in some states in the run-up to the 2026 midterms, which followed an unprecedented FBI raid on an election office in Georgia. Although election experts say it’s clear the president doesn’t have authority over elections, they warn the president’s corrosive rhetoric leaves little doubt about his intent.

For months, the Trump administration has stoked doubts about the integrity of American elections largely through lawsuits designed to create the impression states aren’t doing enough to keep ineligible voters off the rolls. That effort escalated significantly last week when the FBI raided the election office in Fulton county, Georgia and seized ballots, along with other materials, related to the 2020 election. Shortly after the raid, Trump escalated his attack even further, saying the federal government should take over elections.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:00

The astonishing case of the missing Today morning show anchor’s mom is six days in so far and without resolution

A missing 84-year-old mother of a famous TV morning show anchor; droplets of blood and a mysterious white van; a ransom note sent to a celebrity news website; no suspects; a city surrounded by desert near the US-Mexico border; frustrated investigators; and a concerned US president.

It is for all these reasons that the astonishing case of the missing Nancy Guthrie has captivated US public attention in a six-day mystery that still has no resolution. It leads the US news and dominates the headlines, fusing crime and celebrity together in ways not seen since OJ Simpson or the Lindbergh baby.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 06:00

While the U.S. is on top of the overall Olympic medal count, it is not the country that dominates winter sports like the 2026 Milano Cortina Games in Italy.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:32

“As part of our efforts to use more sovereign digital solutions, the European Commission is preparing an internal communication solution based on the Matrix protocol,” the spokesperson told Euractiv.

Matrix is an open source, community-developed messaging protocol shepherded by a non-profit that’s headquartered in London. It’s already widely used for public messengers across Europe, with the French government, German healthcare providers and European armed forces all using tools built on the protocol.

↫ Maximilian Henning at Euractiv

Right now, most government agencies and institutions in Europe are effectively entirely reliant on Microsoft for their digital infrastructure, and that’s not a tenable situation going forward with the Americans being openly hostile towards Europe, up to and including threatening to invade European countries. Europe needs its own digital infrastructure, and opting to build those around open source tools is the obvious way to go.

Of course, this isn’t an easy process, but two platitudes apply here: Rome wasn’t built in a day, and every journey begins with a first step. By opting to use existing open source tools, though, these efforts will have a massive head start, and will hopefully lead to a flurry of increased activity for the open source projects in question. In this particular case it’s Matrix, which can surely need some additional work and eyeballs, if my use of the protocol is any indication.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:18

What does it look like when a hardware and software company descends into an obsession with recurring services revenue to please its shareholders? Look no further than Apple, who has turned its Apple News service into a vehicle for scam ads.

These fake “going out of business ads” have been around for a few years, and even the US Better Business Bureau warns about them, as they take peoples’ money then shut down. Does Apple care? Does Taboola care? Does Apple care that Taboola serves ads like this? My guess: no, no, and no.

↫ Kirk McElhearn

While serving obvious scams to users is already bad enough, the real kicker is that even if you are a paying user of Apple News, you still get served ads, including the scams. Of course, massive corporations like Apple are free too just scam you, since they’re effectively immune from any legal consequences, so it’s unlikely the scamming will stop as long as it makes line go up.

On an entirely unrelated note, OSNews is entirely free of ads, so there’s no scams here. OSNews is fully funded by our readers through single donations on Ko-Fi or by becoming a Patreon.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:03

Grammy-winning Puerto Rican star is in the center of US culture wars before leading this weekend’s half-time show

A few days after Christmas 2022, Bad Bunny, the Puerto Rican reggaetonero, appeared without warning on one of the most unlikely of stages: the roof of a Gulf Oil gas station in San Juan. To a massive crowd singing every word, he performed a surprise concert, along with friend and collaborator Arcángel, that was part hype-y music video shoot, part exultant post-tour homecoming, and part pointed critique. He ended the set with El Apagón (“The Power Outage”), a clubby protest anthem about local displacement and the rolling blackouts that have plagued Puerto Rico, a US “commonwealth” (read: colony), since Hurricane Maria in 2017.

Bad Bunny sang it from a roof on Santurce’s Calle Loíza, a thoroughfare in a former working-class Black neighborhood now dotted with Airbnbs. But you do not need the full context to get the show’s contagious energy. Though I have never walked Calle Loíza, nor do I speak Spanish, the gas station show is still my favorite concert to rewatch via online fan clips: electric, organic, genuinely popular. In terms of reach, critical acclaim and longevity, Bad Bunny rivals – and sometimes outsells – the likes of Taylor Swift, Kendrick Lamar, Beyoncé and Drake, though it is hard to imagine those peers appearing so unguarded, so public, as he does on that roof.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:01

An anonymous reader shares a report: A new bill in the New York state legislature would require news organizations to label AI-generated material and mandate that humans review any such content before publication. On Monday, Senator Patricia Fahy (D-Albany) and Assemblymember Nily Rozic (D-NYC) introduced the bill, called The New York Fundamental Artificial Intelligence Requirements in News Act -- The NY FAIR News Act for short. "At the center of the news industry, New York has a strong interest in preserving journalism and protecting the workers who produce it," said Rozic in a statement announcing the bill. A closer look at the bill shows a few regulations, mostly centered around AI transparency, both for the public and in the newsroom. For one, the law would demand that news organizations put disclaimers on any published content that is "substantially composed, authored, or created through the use of generative artificial intelligence."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:00

Campaigners welcome criminalisation of non-consensual AI-generated explicit images but say law does not go far enough

Victims of deepfake image abuse have called for stronger protection against AI-generated explicit images, as the law criminalising the creation of non-consensual intimate images comes into effect.

Campaigners from Stop Image-Based Abuse delivered a petition to Downing Street with more than 73,000 signatures, urging the government to introduce civil routes to justice such as takedown orders for abusive imagery on platforms and devices.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:00

Don't miss a moment of the Winter Olympics. Here's how to watch live, for free and stream the action without cable.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 05:00

The bosses at a Maine shipyard are offering overtime to workers there if they attend a speech by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, according to workers at the facility.

Hegseth is reportedly set to tour Bath Iron Works on Monday and give a speech on the recently announced “Trump” class battleship, according to the Bangor Daily News.

When the bosses reached out to workers for volunteers to attend the speech, however, few hands went up, according to one worker, who spoke with The Intercept on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. The speech is slated for Monday afternoon, shortly before a shift change, which means that workers who attend would need to stay past their normal work hours — and anyone who shows up would be required to stay until the event is over.

“They issued a polling sheet this morning to see who would attend and, at least from my crew, there were no takers,” said the worker, “and not even a mention of overtime.”

Related

Trump and Hegseth Gathered U.S. Military Leaders for an “Embarrassing” Rant

Hegseth has made his speeches a high priority during his tenure as secretary of the War Department, including one address in which he railed against “fat” generals. He later ordered the entire U.S. military to watch the speech.

Devin Ragnar, a spokesperson for International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers Local 6, which represents workers at the yard, confirmed that anyone attending the speech past shift change would receive overtime pay, but declined to discuss in detail how the arrangement was reached.

After the initial lack of enthusiasm on Friday morning, a later survey went out around noon that explicitly said workers would receive overtime if they stayed past the end of their shift, according to the worker.

“This company doesn’t pay out for anything they don’t explicitly have to.”

“I don’t know if that was always going to be the case — a change to bribe folks to get a larger attendance ­— or if union leadership grieved it by saying they can’t mandate us stay past our shift and not pay us,” said the worker, whose hunch was that management was looking to entice people to attend. “This company doesn’t pay out for anything they don’t explicitly have to.”

Another worker who spoke with The Intercept expressed dread about the impending headache of Hegseth’s visit, echoing how unusual the offer of overtime pay was.

“I’m sure it’ll both interrupt the workday — which is very ironic since we’re always being hounded about productivity and efficiency — and create a lot of discourse that I don’t want to have to listen to all day,” said second worker, who also requested anonymity for fear of retaliation. “I was also a little angry because, again, there are lots of other things that we get denied paid time off for — snowstorms, events during work hours that aren’t work-related, etc. But they’re offering OT for this?”

Representatives of Bath Iron Works did not immediately respond to requests for comment, and a Pentagon spokesperson declined to comment.

“We haven’t announced any trip for the Secretary and have nothing to add at this time,” said Joel Valdez, the spokesperson.

Located in Bath, Maine, at the mouth of the Kennebec River, the shipyard is one of the largest employers in the state and has long been one of the most reliable sources for steady, well-paying union jobs in the Midcoast region. A subsidiary of the defense giant General Dynamics, BIW plays a key role in building and maintaining U.S. Navy ships and has been the recipient of billions of dollars in government contracts.

Charles Krugh, the president of Bath Iron Works, has signaled to President Donald Trump that his facility is ready to take part in the construction of the “Trump” battleships.

“America’s warfighters deserve the most advanced, lethal and survivable combat ships we can deliver to protect our country and our families,” Krugh said in December, echoing Hegseth’s fondness for the term “warfighter.”

When news emerged this week that Hegseth was coming to the yard, however, reactions among the staff were muted, the BIW worker told The Intercept. They said many colleagues greeted news of Hegseth’s visit with feelings ranging from “apathy to disgust,”

“I hate Pete Hegseth to my core,” the first worker said. “He has no business discussing warships, or anything involved with what we do here. I find it insulting that he is given any authority or respect.”

The worker acknowledged that not everyone at BIW would share the same view of Hegseth.

“We have plenty of die-hard Trump supporters, and I don’t know how much of that fanaticism spreads to Hegseth,” the worker said. “I think if anything he’s an afterthought by most people.”

The post Shipyard Bosses Forced to Pay Overtime to Get People to Stay for Pete Hegseth Speech appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-07 05:00

The halftime show will illustrate the nation’s immigration divide whether or not the reggaeton star makes an explicit message about Trump’s deportation drive.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 04:36

It's been a while since I've got any slightly worthy shots... Yes, the weather has been as usual. Rainy.

Here's a few from a recent trip...
I also seem to be the first that's recorded a float at John O'Groats and also the shortest street in the world 😉 🤣

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 04:30

The Red Devils look to continue their winning run under Michael Carrick as they host his old club at Old Trafford.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 04:00

Chalk artwork sold for record price at a New York Sotheby’s auction with proceeds going to the Panthera charity

A tiny chalk drawing of a lion by Rembrandt recently sold for the record-setting price of $18m in New York City to benefit the conservation of big cats.

After selling at a Sotheby’s auction Wednesday, Young Lion Resting shattered the previous mark for the most expensive drawing by the 17th-century Dutch painter ever auctioned: the $3.7m Portrait of a Man with Arms Akimbo.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 03:00

Tests on both versions of Saint Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata were unable to detect brushstrokes of 15th-century master

An analysis of two paintings in museums in the US and Italy by the 15th-century Flemish artist Jan van Eyck has raised a profound question: what if neither were by Van Eyck?

Saint Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata, the name given to near-identical unsigned paintings hanging in the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Royal Museums of Turin, represent two of the small number of surviving works by one of western art’s greatest masters, revered for his naturalistic portraits and religious subjects.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 02:30

Neocities founder Kyle Drake has spent weeks trapped in Microsoft's automated support loop after discovering that Bing quietly blocked all 1.5 million websites hosted on his platform, a free web-hosting service that has kept the spirit of 1990s GeoCities alive since 2013. Drake first noticed the issue last summer and thought it was resolved, but a second complete block went into effect in January, cratering Bing traffic from roughly half a million daily visitors to zero. He submitted nearly a dozen tickets through Bing's webmaster tools but could not get past the AI chatbot to reach a human. After Ars Technica contacted Microsoft, the company restored the Neocities front page within 24 hours but most subdomains remain blocked. Microsoft cited policy violations related to low-quality content yet declined to identify the offending sites or work directly with Drake to fix the problem.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 02:00

Capture of rogue ship could open a new front against Moscow at a time when Russia’s oil revenues are tumbling

The UK is threatening to seize a Russia-linked shadow fleet tanker in an escalatory move that could lead to the opening up of a new front against Moscow at a time when the country’s oil revenues are tumbling.

British defence sources confirmed that military options to capture a rogue ship had been identified in discussions involving Nato allies – though a month has gone by since the US-led seizure of a Russian tanker in the Atlantic.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 02:00

I am convinced that Europe’s ‘new right’ is a radically contemporary movement. Defeating it means understanding its critique of liberalism

European governments are terrified of Donald Trump’s threats on trade, Greenland and the future of Nato. But the biggest threat is not that Trump invades an ally or leaves Europe at the mercy of Russia. It is that his ideological movement could transform Europe from the inside.

A year after Trump’s return to the White House, his “second American revolution” is radiating outward into Europe. The Epstein files reveal how this began clumsily in 2018 with Steve Bannon; but it has become a much more sophisticated partnership with the second coming of Trump and the rise to power of JD Vance. The US National Security Strategy published by the White House in November called for strengthening the growing influence of “patriotic” European parties such as Reform UK, Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), Marine Le Pen’s Rassemblement National (RN), Fidesz in Hungary and Vox in Spain. As with the communist movements of the cold war, these nationalist, populist and in some cases far-right parties are best understood not as isolated national phenomena but as expressions of a shared intellectual project – a movement that is, to varying degrees, now being reinforced by a foreign power.

Mark Leonard is the author of the report The new right: anatomy of a global political revolution. He is director of the Berlin-based European Council on Foreign Relations

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:33

Bill Clinton says closed-door depositions would be akin to ‘kangaroo court’ as Hillary Clinton says they have already told House committee what they know

Former US president Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary are calling for their congressional testimony on ties to convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein to be held publicly, to prevent Republicans from politicising the issue.

Both Clintons had been ordered to give closed-door depositions before the House of Representatives’ oversight committee, which is investigating the deceased financier’s connections to powerful figures and how information about his crimes was handled.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:30

Hi...I just ordered a Funwheel x7 LR and need to fix something that can help me carry it. I sometimes walk up stairs and shorter distances indoors, so it would have been nice to have something to help me carry it. Do you think a yoga mat strap would work or is it too flimsy? Or do you have any other tips? What do you use?

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:03
  • 31-year-old arrested in Harrison County, Tennessee

  • Former linebacker due in court on 11 February

Former New York Jets linebacker Darron Lee has been charged with murder on Thursday after the death of his girlfriend.

Lee was arrested and taken into custody in Hamilton County, Tennessee, after deputies were called to a medical emergency where first responders were giving a woman CPR at a residence in Ooltewah. The medics were unable to save her, and WTVC NewsChannel 9 reported she had suffered a suspected stab wound as well as other injuries.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:00

Reporters say relatives in Iran have been questioned and persecuted in an effort to curb coverage of unrest

Exiled Iranian journalists working for the BBC have been warned their movements are being closely monitored by the state, as they said their families in Iran were being interrogated and persecuted for their reporting.

Journalists said family members had been threatened with arrest and the seizure of their assets unless their loved ones stopped reporting on Iranian unrest.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:00

Socialist António José Seguro on course for victory but gains by André Ventura’s Chega could herald watershed

Portuguese voters will return to the polls on Sunday for the final round of a presidential election that has been marked by a push to keep the far-right candidate at bay and overshadowed by deadly storms that have lashed the country in recent days.

The moderate leftwing candidate António José Seguro won the first round of the election, which was held on 18 January, taking 31.1% of the vote.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:00

Special pods at Chester zoo helped conservationists breed and release more than 100,000 greater Bermuda snails

A button-sized snail once feared extinct in its Bermudian home is thriving again after conservationists bred and released more than 100,000 of the molluscs.

The greater Bermuda snail (Poecilozonites bermudensis) was found in the fossil record but believed to have vanished from the North Atlantic archipelago, until a remnant population was discovered in a damp and overgrown alleyway in Hamilton, the island capital, in 2014.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 01:00

Files reveal a world of flattery and fratboy tones, where rich men are cultivated and women provide services

Pluck an email at random from the millions in the Department of Justice’s Epstein Library. It is a Saturday evening in February 2013, and Jeffrey Epstein is messaging Bill Gates’s assistant about guests for a dinner he wants to organise.

“People for Bill,” the email begins. Epstein starts listing possible candidates: the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, the film director Woody Allen, the prime minister of Qatar, a couple of Harvard academics, the billionaire CEO of Hyatt hotels, a White House communications director, a former US secretary of defence.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 00:40
XR light flickering, opened up, what are your thoughts?

My Onewheel was flickering. I took some of your guys’s advice and opened up the board. I didn’t see the ring out of place or loose. The connectors seem to be on the board correctly and also with the light. Do you guys see anything out of the ordinary?

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 00:09

Robert Lloyd Schellenberg was detained on drug charges in 2014 before Canada-China ties nosedived in 2018

China has overturned the death sentence of Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenberg, a Canadian official said on Friday, in a possible sign of a diplomatic thaw as prime minister Mark Carney seeks to boost trade ties with Beijing.

Schellenberg’s lawyer Zhang Dongshuo, reached in Beijing on Saturday, confirmed the decision was announced on Friday by China’s highest court.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-07 00:00

Waymo's robotaxis have racked up at least 24 safety violations involving school buses in Austin since the start of the 2025 school year, and a voluntary software recall the company issued in December after a federal investigation has not fixed the problem. Austin Independent School District initially reported at least 19 incidents of Waymo vehicles failing to stop for buses during loading and unloading -- illegal in all 50 states -- prompting NHTSA to open a probe. At least four more violations have occurred since the software update, including a January 19th incident where a robotaxi drove past a bus as children waited to cross the street and the stop arm was extended. Waymo also acknowledged that one of its vehicles struck a child outside a Santa Monica elementary school on January 23rd, causing minor injuries. Austin ISD has asked Waymo to stop operating near schools during bus hours until the issue is resolved. Waymo refused. Three federal investigations have been opened in three months.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 23:29
GT Hypercharger blinking red and green

My Hypercharger for GT-V is blinking red and green? Does anyone know what's going on? I've cleaned out my charging port but there's nothing dirty there.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 23:26

A federal appeals court on Friday endorsed the Trump administration's policy of holding broad groups of immigration detainees without access to bond hearings, a major legal victory for President Trump.

2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-06 23:25

Sabrina Underwood faces a mandatory 12‑year sentence after authorities in Panama discovered a loaded gun in her checked bag, a case her father says was a tragic mistake.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 22:34

Donald Trump says another meeting set for next week while warning of ‘very steep’ consequences if Tehran doesn’t make a deal

Indirect talks between Iran and the US on the future of Iran’s nuclear programme ended on Friday with a broad agreement to maintain a diplomatic path, possibly with further talks in the coming days, according to statements from Iran and the Omani hosts.

The relieved Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, described the eight hours of meetings as a “good start” conducted in a good atmosphere. He added that the continuance of talks depended on consultations in Washington and Tehran, but said Iran had underlined that any dialogue required refraining from threats.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 22:09

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 7

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 22:01

This live blog is now closed.

Top Democrats in Congress have condemned Donald Trump for sharing a racist video of Barack and Michelle Obama that depicts them as apes.

Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader, called the president a “vile, unhinged and malignant bottom feeder”. He noted that the Obamas were “brilliant, compassionate and patriotic Americans” who “represent the best of this country”.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:56

The Pentagon says it will cut ties with Harvard University, ending graduate-level military training, fellowship and certificate programs.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:38

President Trump late Friday addressed a video posted to his social media account that included a racist depiction of Barack and Michelle Obama as apes, telling reporters he didn't see the part that showed the former president and first lady.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:35

Move by Pete Hegseth marks latest escalation by Trump administration against the Ivy League school

The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has said the Pentagon is ending all military training, fellowships and certificate programs with Harvard University, marking the Trump administration’s latest escalation against the Ivy League school.

“The @DeptWar is formally ending ALL Professional Military Education, fellowships, and certificate programs with Harvard University,” Hegseth said in a statement posted on X, labeling Harvard as “woke”.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:30

We all want more battery life in our phones, and a semi-hidden AI setting in the latest iPhone system is helping to achieve that.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:04

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 7, No. 502.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:02

Only a smattering of Republicans spoke out about clip in which Obamas’ faces were superimposed on bodies of apes

Donald Trump said on Friday evening, after a racist video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes had been posted to his social media account and then deleted, that he had directed aides to post the offensive video but that he hadn’t seen that portion of the clip and he refused to apologize for it.

The clip appeared during one of the 79-year-old US president’s increasingly frequent late-night posting sprees to his Truth Social account, and shows the laughing faces of the former president and first lady superimposed on the bodies of primates in a jungle setting, bobbing to the song The Lion Sleeps Tonight.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 21:00

Hollywood's recent attempts to build entertainment around AI have consistently underperformed or outright flopped, whether the AI in question is a plot device or a production tool. The horror sequel M3GAN 2.0, Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning, and Disney's Tron: Ares all disappointed at the box office in 2025 despite centering their narratives on AI. The latest casualty is Mercy, a January 2026 crime thriller in which Chris Pratt faces an AI judge bot played by Rebecca Ferguson; one reviewer has already called it "the worst movie of 2026," and its ticket sales have been mediocre. AI-generated content hasn't fared any better. Darren Aronofsky executive-produced On This Day...1776, a YouTube web series that uses Google DeepMind video generation alongside real voice actors to dramatize the American Revolution. Viewer response has been brutal -- commenters mocked the uncanny faces and the fact that DeepMind rendered "America" as "Aamereedd." A Taika Waititi-directed Xfinity commercial set to air during this weekend's Super Bowl, which de-ages Jurassic Park stars Sam Neill, Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum, has already been mocked for producing what one viewer called "melting wax figures."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 20:58

I just got a new xrc, with 125 miles so far. haven’t had any issues till today, when I was riding and I got the dead battery alert and the red light bar. i looked at the app and it said it was at 25%. I turned if off and back on, and it still happened. do i have a bad battery? I also already had the cells balenced

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 20:45

The case in Bangladesh, where Nipah cases are reported almost every year, follows two Nipah virus cases identified in neighbouring India

The World Health Organization said on Friday that a woman had died in northern Bangladesh in January after contracting the deadly Nipah virus infection.

The case in Bangladesh, where Nipah cases are reported almost every year, follows two Nipah virus cases identified in neighbouring India, which has already prompted stepped-up airport screenings across Asia.

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2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 20:43

Beginning in 2004, Joe Macken carved all five boroughs of New York City out of balsa wood, every site and stadium, and every bridge and building. His creation consists of almost 1 million structures.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-07 05:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 7, No. 706.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 20:50

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 7, No. 1,694.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-07 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 7 #972

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 21:40

The criticism continued even after the White House removed the video after the initial backlash.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 20:16

More than 35 local, state and federal agencies have been working for the last 18 months to prepare for Super Bowl LX in Santa Clara, California.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-07 17:18

Though the commerce secretary has called his interactions with Epstein as "limited," the two were in business together four years after Epstein's 2008 guilty plea.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 19:42

Two upcoming missions could see astronauts using smartphones to capture lunar selfies and more.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 19:32

The stories are told on swipeable cards as you listen to the song.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 19:26

Play your own Big Game at home on your Xbox.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 19:04

The Opening Ceremonies of the 2026 Winter Olympics featured four simultaneous events in four locations marking what organizers said was the most spread-out Games in history.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 19:01

An anonymous reader shares a report: Republicans' tax cuts shaved billions off Amazon's tax bill, new government filings show. The company says it ran a $1.2 billion tax bill last year, down from $9 billion the previous year, and even as its profits jumped by 45% to nearly $90 billion. That's largely because of the generous new depreciation breaks GOP lawmakers included in their One Big Beautiful Bill, something that's particularly important to Amazon which -- in addition to maintaining a vast infrastructure for its ubiquitous delivery business -- has been spending billions to build out artificial intelligence data centers. Also helping, though less important: The law's expanded breaks for businesses research and development expenses. The company has long been criticized by Democrats for paying little in tax, and it appeared to be bracing for criticism in the wake of the report to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 18:53

Nathan Smith, 27, known professionally as DJ Young Slade, was music producer, artist, engineer and NYU graduate

American rapper Lil Jon said on Friday that his son, Nathan Smith, has died, the record producer confirmed in a joint statement with Smith’s mother after police found a body in a pond north of Atlanta, Georgia.

“I am extremely heartbroken for the tragic loss of our son, Nathan Smith. His mother [Nicole Smith] and I are devastated,” the statement said.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 18:44
Curious on how much this setup is worth? (thinking about selling it for an X7 but not 100% sure)

So I have a GTS with the fungineers GTSV kit installed. The original motherboard had 1271 miles on it before I switched to vesc and now has 231 miles on the vesc. Its been trailing and pushed pretty hard but doesn't have any issues and has never been like submerged in mud or water or anything and has pretty even tire wear (its also only at like 1400 miles so the tred is fine). Upgrades include: The GTSV kit installed and running well, blue flightfins without extenders but with the wheel cover (doesn't cost much at all but its there), two sets of blue bash bumpers (one is brand new still in the packaging and the other on the board is heavily worn and i believe has a small hole now on the back but the front is alright), Float life blue cold ones with thermal paste installed properly, and the Floatlife blue aluminum motor cable locking nut. Reference pic below or above idk I don't use reddit much lol.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 18:35

Disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie from her home in Arizona is being investigated as kidnapping

The search for Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC’s Today show anchor Savannah Guthrie entered its sixth day on Friday in Arizona, as authorities said they were aware of a new message related to the case.

The FBI and Arizona’s Pima county sheriff’s department issued a joint statement on Friday afternoon stating that investigators were actively inspecting information provided in the message for its authenticity. Earlier in the day, authorities said they believe that Guthrie is still alive.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 18:34

The T1 looks different (again), and its specs and pricing have changed, according to a model handset shown in a video call to The Verge.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 18:27

Initial announcement sparked fury from US cattle ranchers as economists say change will have little impact on prices

Donald Trump on Friday signed a proclamation to hike the US’s low-tariff imports of Argentinian beef, though economists have said the attempt to lower costs for US consumers will likely have little impact on prices.

A White House official said in October that Trump would make such a move, evoking fury from the nation’s cattle ranchers.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 18:25

The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics are underway after the lighting of the Olympic cauldrons and the Parade of Nations at the opening ceremony.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 18:23

Resurgent technology stocks drove the rebound after a volatile week, while bitcoin also recouped losses.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 18:02

California governor accused the administration of trying to ‘distract’ from Trump posting a racist video of the Obamas

California governor Gavin Newsom debunked a claim by senior Trump officials that his state plans to release more than 33,000 undocumented criminals from its jails.

On Friday, Stephen Miller, the deputy White House chief of staff, posted on X that “California is getting ready to free up to 33 thousand criminal illegal aliens”.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:58

The Olympic Flame is lit as Mariah Carey, Andrea Bocelli and Lang Lang star in beautiful opening ceremony at the San Siro stadium

Lindsey Vonn inspected the Olympic downhill course with other racers early this morning as she prepared to take part in the opening training session despite tearing the ACL in her left knee a week ago.

The 41-year-old Vonn is planning to compete at the Milan Cortina Games with a large brace covering her injured knee.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:48

Watergate reporter says colleagues and readers ‘deserve more’ after newspaper lays off hundreds of workers

The veteran Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward has said he is “crushed” by the mass layoffs of hundreds of colleagues at the paper and said the impact would be felt by readers – noting both “deserve more”.

“I am crushed that so many of my beloved colleagues have lost their jobs and our readers have been given less news and sound analysis,” Woodward said in his first public remarks on the cuts, which were shared on X. “They deserve more.”

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:43

Sgt Erik Duran convicted by judge for causing Eric Duprey to fatally crash his motorized scooter in 2023

A New York City police officer was convicted on Friday of second-degree manslaughter after he tossed a picnic cooler filled with drinks at a fleeing suspect, causing the man to fatally crash his motorized scooter in 2023.

Judge Guy Mitchell handed down the guilty verdict in Bronx criminal court in the case against Sgt Erik Duran in the death of Eric Duprey. The 38-year-old Duran was the first New York police department (NYPD) officer in years to be tried for killing someone while on duty.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:39

Harper Dennis also charged with possession of offensive weapon after fatal stabbing in Leicester city centre

A man has been charged with the murder of 20-year-old student Khaleed Oladipo in Leicester.

Harper Dennis, 18, of North Road, West Drayton, London, has been charged with murder and possession of an offensive weapon in a public place, police said.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:38

Cryptocurrency transactions are often thought to be anonymous and untraceable. That's a misconception, experts tell CBS News.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:38

Top U.S. nuclear official accuses China of conducting a secret nuclear test in 2020 and confirms plans to restart U.S. nuclear testing, citing a need to match covert detonations by Beijing and Moscow.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:30

Podcaster claimed former prime minister not English because he is ‘brown-skinned Hindu’

Rishi Sunak has described himself as being “British, English and British Asian” in a riposte to increasing racially charged language used by figures on the right.

The UK’s first British Asian prime minister was speaking after his identity was questioned in recent debate sparked by a claim by the podcaster Konstantin Kisin that Sunak was not English because he was a “brown-skinned Hindu”.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:22

President Trump called GOP Sen. Tim Scott after the South Carolina Republican publicly urged the president to remove a reposted video depicting former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:21

Emboldened by loosened restrictions from federal regulators, prediction markets look to cash in on Super Bowl Sunday.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:15

Opalite video reunites host and guests including Domhnall Gleeson and Lewis Capaldi from Swift’s October chatshow appearance

Graham Norton’s chatshow has long been an object of fascination for American stars, wowed by its combined star wattage, glasses of wine and Norton’s own quick-witted, lightly saucy repartee – and Taylor Swift has now taken that fandom to another level.

Norton has been cast in the music video for Opalite, the second single from her album The Life of a Showgirl to receive music video treatment after The Fate of Ophelia. Not only Norton, in fact, but the stars from the guest lineup who sat alongside Swift when she appeared in October 2025: actors Domhnall Gleeson, Greta Lee and Jodie Turner-Smith, and fellow chart-topping musician Lewis Capaldi.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:12

The latest Claude models and apps already have Wall Street worried about software companies. Enter Opus 4.6.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:10

Jake Lang, a pardoned January 6 rioter, posted a video of himself kicking down the sculpture at Minnesota’s capitol

The far-right influencer and US Senate candidate Jake Lang has been arrested after recording himself damaging an anti-ICE sculpture at Minnesota’s capitol amid the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency’s crackdown there.

On 5 February, Lang, who received a presidential pardon from Donald Trump over his role in the 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol, posted a video on X of himself kicking down the sculpture, which was made from ice – as in, frozen water. His efforts changed it from reading “Prosecute ICE” to “Pro ICE”, referring to the federal agency.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:10

Spending to build, expand and rehabilitate manufacturing sites in the U.S. has declined since President Donald Trump took office, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. Yet, Trump has repeatedly boasted that “factory construction” is up 41%.

A general view of the Samsung Austin Semiconductor plant on April 16, 2024, in Taylor, Texas, which received CHIPS Act funds. Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images.

Trump cited the 41% statistic in a White House press conference on Jan. 20 – calling it a “record” increase and suggesting that other presidents cannot compare to this “record.” 

“Investment in American factories is up 41%. That’s a record. Nobody goes 41% up. You go 2% up, 1% up. You go down by 3%. If Kamala [Harris] got elected, the 41% up would be 41% down,” Trump said at the press conference, referring to the former vice president and Democratic presidential nominee who lost to Trump in the 2024 election.

A day later, in a Jan. 21 speech at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, Trump repeated the 41% figure. 

“Factory construction is up by 41%, and that number is really going to skyrocket right now, because that’s during a process that they’re putting in to get their approvals and we’ve given very, very quick, fast approvals,” Trump said. 

This claim is part of a theme the president has emphasized of a “manufacturing boom” or “booming” economy due to his trade policies.

At our request, the White House sent us a link to the Census Bureau’s manufacturing construction spending data via the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’ online database known as FRED. We provide more about the White House response later, but let’s focus first on what the data show.

Under President Joe Biden — who served from Jan. 20, 2021, to Jan. 20, 2025 — there was a significant increase in manufacturing construction spending in all four years, according to the Census Bureau’s annual average estimates. After declining 6.9% in 2020 – the last year of Trump’s first term – manufacturing construction spending started to rise in 2021, the data show. 

(Technical note: The Census Bureau provides average quarterly and annual estimates and monthly reports for construction spending, including manufacturing construction spending, based on its monthly Value of Construction Put in Place survey. We use all three in this story.) 

Initially, the increases during the Biden years were in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Anirban Basu, chief economist for the Associated Builders and Contractors, an industry trade association, told us in an email. 

“Supply chain disruptions at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic convinced many producers to reshore capacity, while a sudden and sharp increase in construction materials prices—which rose more than 40% during the early years of the pandemic—also boosted nominal construction spending,” Basu said. 

Manufacturing construction spending accelerated after Biden signed legislation in August 2022 designed to encourage private investment in U.S. manufacturing for semiconductors and clean energy. The bipartisan CHIPS Act, for example, included $39 billion to help fund semiconductor manufacturing facilities in the U.S., as explained in an April 2023 report by the Congressional Research Service.

During Biden’s four years, the annual average rate of manufacturing construction spending jumped more than 200%, from $75.5 billion to $235.6 billion, according to Census Bureau estimates. Spending surged 62% in a single year – 2023, a year after Biden signed the CHIPS Act. 

But manufacturing construction spending peaked in the third quarter of 2024 and has been trending down slightly ever since. Census Bureau quarterly data show that under Trump, measuring from the last quarter in 2024 through the third quarter in 2025, spending declined 6.7%. 

That decline is expected to continue in 2026 and 2027, according to the most recent survey of construction economists that is conducted twice a year by the American Institute of Architects.

“Manufacturing construction spending has seen phenomenal growth in recent years, increasing by over 50% in 2022, another 62% in 2023, and then another 16% in 2024,” the AIA consensus construction forecast published Jan. 15 said. “However, growth paused last year as spending in this category fell about 5% and is projected to decline another 4% this year and 1% in 2027.”

Despite the slight declines, the AIA construction forecast noted that the semiconductor fabrication plants continue to fuel manufacturing construction spending and will do so in the long term.

“The longer-term prospects look much more promising, as construction starts for manufacturing projects have shot up again,” the AIA forecast said. “Since many of these starts are for megaprojects, such as large semiconductor fabrication plants that entail a complex construction process, it may take a while before the activity shows up in the construction spending data.”

In January, Basu analyzed the Census Bureau’s most recent monthly report for nonresidential construction spending, which showed manufacturing construction spending as of October had declined for nine straight months

“With CHIPS Act-enabled megaprojects winding down and the stiff headwind of trade policy, manufacturing construction spending has fallen by nearly 10% over the past 12 months, accounting for more than the entire decline in private nonresidential spending,” Basu said in an ABC press release issued Jan. 21. (By “trade policy,” Basu is referring to the economic impact of Trump’s tariffs on construction materials.)

On a monthly basis, the Census Bureau shows a 7.3% decline in manufacturing construction spending last year under Trump from January through October, the most recent data available.

Beginning on Jan. 23, we asked the White House on multiple occasions to provide support for the 41% figure used in Trump’s Jan. 20 and 21 remarks. After not receiving a response, we sent another email on Feb. 2 after the president wrote an opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal on Jan. 30 that said, “Factory construction is up by 42% since 2022.” We asked how it arrived at a 42% increase “since 2022.” That evening, the White House sent us a link to the Census Bureau’s manufacturing construction spending data, saying it compared “averages of Jan – August 2025 vs 2021-2024 average.”

That’s true — as far as it goes. On an annualized basis, monthly manufacturing construction spending averaged $226.1 billion for January through August — which is 40% higher than the annual average of $161.1 billion in Biden’s four years. But Trump wrote that the 42% increase was “since 2022,” not 2021. (We’ve asked the White House for a clarification.)

More importantly, the White House methodology fails to take into account the 212% increase in factory construction spending over Biden’s four years, which peaked in 2024 at an annual average of $235.6 billion, and how the Biden-era CHIPS Act continues to fuel manufacturing construction spending.

As we noted earlier, Basu attributed the recent decline to Trump’s tariffs and the slowing — not the halting — of construction projects spurred by the CHIPS Act. Asked to elaborate on his analysis, Basu told us that the manufacturing construction spending in 2025 is “largely due” to the CHIPS Act.

“While spending in the segment remains elevated from 2022 levels, that’s partially due to a precipitous increase in materials prices that occurred in 2022 and 2023 — these data are in nominal terms — and largely due to the surge in megaproject activity induced by the CHIPS Act,” Basu said.

He added that Trump’s tariffs have helped drive up the costs of fabricated metal — which has increased manufacturing construction costs.

“[I]t should be noted that spending in the fabricated metal manufacturing subsegment is up 19% over the past year,” Basu said. “Some of the increase can be contributed to tariffs and the resulting increase in demand for domestic production.”

We should note that even with the recent surge in manufacturing construction spending, there has been a decline in the number of manufacturing jobs. As we reported last month, the economy lost 63,000 manufacturing jobs in Trump’s first 11 months. That followed a loss of 98,000 in the preceding 11 months, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Shortly before Biden left office, Manufacturing Today, a trade magazine, wrote in December 2024 that manufacturing jobs were slow to materialize despite Biden’s incentives to spur manufacturing construction. But the magazine predicted the jobs “will materialize in the future.”

“Unlike traditional industrial projects, today’s semiconductor and clean energy facilities require longer timelines,” the article said. “Factories of this scale can take two to three years to complete, with even longer delays for more complex facilities, such as semiconductor plants. This extended timeline means the full benefits will not be realized for several more years.”

Basu agreed that CHIPS-related spending will result in an overall increase in U.S. manufacturing jobs – but cautioned that the impact of Trump’s tariffs could offset those gains. 

“The massive facilities incentivized by the CHIPS Act will employ thousands of people,” Basu told us. “That said, all else is not equal, and recent trade policy and the effects on manufacturing input prices have put downward pressure on the industry’s employment.” (Input prices are costs of materials and other resources manufacturers need to produce goods, with some of those materials being imported.)

Others are bullish that Trump’s trade policies will encourage more manufacturers to expand in the U.S. 

In April, when Trump announced higher tariffs on nearly all foreign imports, Morgan Stanley analyst Chris Snyder called tariffs “a positive catalyst” for relocating manufacturing to the U.S. More recently, Snyder said in a podcast last month that the tariffs have changed the “supply chain cost calculation” and will result in new U.S. factories. 

“What we’re seeing is the cost of imports have gone higher with tariffs, and now it’s more economically advisable for these companies to make the product in the United States,” Snyder said. “And if that’s the case, that means that when they need a new factory, it’s going to come to the United States. They might not need a factory now, but when they do, the U.S. is at least incrementally better positioned to get that factory.”

In a January news article, the Wall Street Journal wrote that Trump’s tariffs “haven’t worked, so far.” The article said tariffs have increased manufacturers’ costs for foreign parts, adding that the “White House’s stop-and-start” tariff policy announcements have “also led to what many executives view as a lost year for investment.”

In a December interview with the Wall Street Journal, Trump cited — as he often does — the value of investments that he says his administration has secured to date. (As we’ve written, he has exaggerated pledges to invest made by various companies and countries that may or may not materialize, experts say.) But he couldn’t say if the investments would show results in time for the midterm elections, when the Republican Party is in jeopardy of losing its slim majority in the House. “I can’t tell you. I don’t know when all of this money is going to kick in,” the president told the Journal, adding that it may happen in the second quarter of this year.

What will happen in the coming months and years remains to be seen. But what we can say is that factory construction so far has declined under Trump and his claim that it has increased 41% depends on a spending surge that occurred under Biden. 


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 Manufacturing Construction Spending Declines Under Trump appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 17:01

Here's what to know about TrumpRx, including how it works, who can use it, and how much money it can save.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 17:00

Memory prices across DRAM, NAND and HBM have surged 80 to 90% quarter-over-quarter in Q1 2026, according to Counterpoint Research's latest Memory Price Tracker. The price of a 64GB RDIMM has jumped from a Q4 2025 contract price of $450 to over $900, and Counterpoint expects it to cross $1,000 in Q2. NAND, relatively stable last quarter, is tracking a parallel increase. Device makers are cutting DRAM content per device, swapping TLC SSDs for cheaper QLC alternatives, and shifting orders from the now-scarce LPDDR4 to LPDDR5 as new entry-level chipsets support the newer standard. DRAM operating margins hit the 60% range in Q4 2025 -- the first time conventional DRAM margins surpassed HBM -- and Q1 2026 is on track to set all-time highs.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:53

Why Should Delaware Care?
Government works best when its citizens are knowledgeable and engaged. Delaware’s government has scores of commissions, working groups, agencies and legislative committees. All must hold meetings that are open to the public. Below we highlight a few of those meetings that are happening this week.

Below are some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening around the state this week.

  • The Laurel and Caesar Rodney school districts to seek tax increases
  • Delaware’s hospital oversight board to meet for the first time since lawmakers blunted one of its key enforcement measures 
  • Lawmakers to continue reviewing the governor’s proposed budget
  • New Castle County leaders to weigh in on Delmarva Power’s proposed rate hike

Laurel & Caesar Rodney ask to raise property taxes

The Caesar Rodney and Laurel school districts will ask their communities to approve tax increases during referendums scheduled for Monday. 

Caesar Rodney has the lowest local funding and the lowest school tax rate in Kent County, according to district leaders. Meanwhile in Laurel, the school district has not held a referendum since 1985.

The Caesar Rodney School District is seeking an additional $6 million annually, while the smaller Laurel School District is asking for $1.6 million.

Both districts say they need the new dollars to fund ongoing operations, including initiatives to retain and recruit teachers and other educators. 

Caesar Rodney says its request would also pay for school safety, arts programs and bus services, among other items. Laurel says its requested tax hike would stabilize the district’s budget.

If voters approve Caesar Rodney’s request, owners of a home worth about $300,000 in the district would pay just under $23 more per month in property taxes.  

If Laurel’s request is successful, an average $230,000 home would pay roughly $14.25 more each month. 

📍 Polls in the Caesar Rodney School District will be open Monday from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Caesar Rodney High School, Fred Fifer III Middle School, W. Reily Brown Elementary School, Allen Frear Elementary School, Nellie Stokes Elementary School, Star Hill Elementary School, David E. Robinson Elementary School, and the Magnolia Volunteer Fire Company.

📍 Polls in the Laurel School District will also be open Monday Feb. 9, from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Laurel Elementary School, the Laurel Fire Department, and the North Laurel Early Learning Academy.

Hospital oversight board meetings resume following lawmaker intervention

The Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board will meet Tuesday morning, the first time the oversight body will convene since lawmakers blunted one of its key enforcement mechanisms as part of a legal settlement between the state and its largest hospital system, ChristianaCare.

ChristianaCare Wilmington Hospital in Wilmington, Delaware, is pictured in May 2024.
ChristianaCare is Delaware’s largest health care provider. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

Lawmakers passed Senate Bill 213 last month as part of a proposed legal settlement between ChristianaCare and state officials. The settlement stems from a lawsuit filed by ChristianaCare in 2024 that challenged the constitutionality of the state’s formation of a hospital oversight board with the power to modify and veto budgeted spending by private hospitals.

The legislation, signed into law by Gov. Matt Meyer last week, removed the oversight board’s ability to modify and veto private hospital budgets. 

Now, if a hospital’s spending exceeds the state’s projected benchmark, the cost review board would now require it to send in a compliance plan outlining how it intends to bring it down. 

📍 The Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board will meet from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Herman M. Holloway Sr. Campus – DHSS Chapel, located at 1901 N Dupont Hwy., in New Castle. For information about virtual attendance, click here.

JFC continues reviewing Meyer’s budget proposal

The General Assembly’s Joint Finance Committee will continue its scrutiny this week of Gov. Matt Meyer’s proposed $6.9 billion operating budget for the 2027 fiscal year.

The committee hearings, scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, will feature a series of testimony from state agency directors who will explain their specific operational requests for the following year. 

Hearings on Tuesday will feature testimony from the Department of Elections, the Department of Insurance, the state Treasurer and the state Auditor.

Wednesday will include testimony from the departments of Correction, Safety and Homeland Security, and Justice, along with the Delaware Criminal Justice Information System.

Thursday will feature testimony from the Governor’s Advisory Council for Exceptional Citizens, Department of Services for Children, Youth, & Their Families and the Delaware State Housing Authority.

Testimony from the remaining state offices and agencies will occur in later weeks.

📍 The Joint Finance Committee will meet from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover. For information about virtual attendance for the Tuesday meeting, click here. For the Wednesday meeting, click here. And for the Thursday meeting, click here.

New Castle Council weighs in on Delmarva’s proposed rate hike

The New Castle County Council on Tuesday will consider a resolution urging state energy regulators to reject Delmarva Power’s proposed $67.8 million rate hike.

The resolution, sponsored by council members Dee Durham and David Tackett, marks the latest rebuke of Delaware’s largest energy provider and rising electricity costs.

In December, Delmarva Power filed a request for a rate increase with the state’s Public Service Commission that could raise an average homeowner’s utility bill by 4%. It is the third rate hike request filed by Delmarva in five years.

📍 The New Castle County Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the  Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For more information, including about virtual attendance, click here.

Karl Baker, Julia Merola, Jacob Owens and Nick Stonesifer contributed to this report.

The post Get Involved: School referendums, hospital oversight, energy prices, more appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:50

About 40,000 U.S. students are enrolled in college programs that may be at risk of losing federal loans, a recent analysis found.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:49

President Trump signed an executive order Friday that increases the amount of beef imported into the U.S. from Argentina.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:31

Although tech stocks and cryptocurrencies suffered recent falls, investors largely shrugged off geopolitical tensions

The Dow Jones industrial average crossed 50,000 for the first time, as ballooning tech valuations, robust corporate earnings and hopes of lower interest rates drive it to new highs.

Leading stock markets on Wall Street came under pressure earlier this week as technology stocks fell amid scrutiny of extraordinary levels of investment into artificial intelligence.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:29

Whether you already own Black Ops 7 or you're taking advantage of the free weekend, level up your account twice as fast during this double XP weekend.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:27

Exclusive: Material gathered was personally given to Josh Simons when director of pro-Starmer thinktank, say sources

A Labour minister commissioned and reviewed a report in 2023 on journalists investigating the thinktank that would help propel Keir Starmer to power, the Guardian has learned.

The research was paid for and subsequently reviewed by Josh Simons, now a minister in the Cabinet Office, when he was director of Labour Together, according to sources and documents seen by the Guardian.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:19

Thousands of social media accounts shared an image of a man with long gray hair and a beard, wearing sunglasses and flanked by two men.

Their guess about who it is? Disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, who died in 2019.

"Israel faked his death," read one Feb. 5 X post with 5 million views. "Epstein is still alive and walking the streets of Tel Aviv."

"Someone who looks like Jeffrey Epstein was JUST SPOTTED walking in Tel Aviv, Israel," read another Feb. 5 X post with 5.5 million views. "Could this really be him? It’s literally him."

This image also circulated on Facebook, TikTok, Instagram and Threads.

This doesn’t prove Epstein is alive. The image was generated with artificial intelligence.

(Screenshot from X)

Many of the posts shared a cropped version of the image, but the original shows the logo of Gemini, Google’s AI chatbot. A reverse image search showed the image was posted Feb. 1 to a Reddit forum titled "hardaiimages." The forum’s "About" page invites users to "post your funny, hard AI images here." 

The Reddit user who posted it confirmed in a comment it was made with Gemini. "You can see the Gemini logo at the bottom right of each picture. I didn't think it would become so viral," the Feb. 6 comment read.

Other details in the image show it’s fake. The road signs in the background show Hebrew text and its English translation, but the translation is inaccurate. The signs also don’t match a real place in Tel Aviv; a street named "Haangus Ev." does not show up in Google Maps.

(Image from Reddit; red rectangle shows nonsensical road signs, red circle shows Gemini logo)

This image doesn’t show Epstein, alive, in Tel Aviv. We rate this claim Pants on Fire!

PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-07 08:20

The footage is included in a video that promotes false claims that the 2020 presidential election was rigged against Mr. Trump.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-07 15:22

A judge ordered the U.S. to return three migrant families who were affected by  President Trump's family separation policy​ in his first term and then deported in his second.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-08 10:48

A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-07 14:50

Justice Department files show Jeffrey Epstein sought help from a Russian official after claiming a woman from Moscow was blackmailing “powerful businessmen” in New York.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:03

There's also a telenovela, Southwest seating chaos, and a Taylor-and-Swift combo you probably haven't seen before.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 16:00

Video deleted by White House breaks through numbness barrier and raises further questions about fitness for office

It is a singular if highly dubious distinction of Donald Trump’s pungent contribution to the political discourse to have essentially bankrupted the English language’s capacity for outrage.

So unremitting and extreme have been the avalanche of affronts since Trump descended the golden escalator in Trump Tower in 2015 to declare his presidential candidacy that even his most ardent critics have become desensitized, leading to a level of shock fatigue.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:57

Indictment alleges Dr John Stevenson Bynon Jr changed the records of five patients, three of whom died

A Houston doctor has been indicted on charges of falsifying medical records for five patients, making them ineligible to receive a liver transplant – including some who died later, federal prosecutors announced on Thursday.

Dr John Stevenson Bynon Jr was indicted by a grand jury in Houston in January on five counts of false statements relating to healthcare matters.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:55

"Quad God" Ilia Malinin leads the US hopes for Olympic medals as the figure skating events kick off in Milan.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 15:51

Trump also demanded Dulles airport be given his name in exchange for funding NY-NJ tunnel and subway extension

Donald Trump has told the Senate’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer, that he will unfreeze funds for major infrastructure projects in New York and New Jersey if he supports renaming Dulles international airport in Virginia and Penn Station in New York City after him, according to media reports.

The demand, which was first reported on Thursday by Punchbowl News, comes after the president in October halted $18bn in funding for a major subway line expansion in New York City as well as a new rail tunnel connecting the city to New Jersey. The funding freeze was announced on the first day of a 43-day government shutdown in which Schumer, who represents New York, played a major role.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:45

Christopher Moynihan pleads guilty to misdemeanor charge over threats last October to kill congressman

A rioter who was pardoned by Donald Trump for the felony he was convicted of in the storming of the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 has pleaded guilty to a harassment charge over threats to kill the House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries.

Christopher Moynihan, 35, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor harassment charge in a hearing in Clinton, New York, prosecutors said, and will be sentenced in April. His representative could not immediately be reached.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 15:40

Salesforce is essentially shutting down Heroku as an evolving product, moving the cloud platform that helped define modern app deployment to a "sustaining engineering model" focused entirely on stability, security and support. Existing customers on credit card billing see no changes to pricing or service, but enterprise contracts are no longer available to new buyers. Salesforce said it is redirecting engineering investment toward enterprise AI.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:39

Project, following disgraced cyclist, reportedly sparked bidding war, with Conclave’s Edward Berger set to direct

The Oscar-nominated actor Austin Butler is scheduled to take on the role of the disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong in a buzzy new biopic.

According to Deadline, the package has caused a “frenzied” bidding war in Hollywood with the Conclave director Edward Berger at the helm and King Richard’s Zach Baylin set to write the script.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:34

The new fantasy TV show will be the second Dungeons & Dragons series in development.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:29

The EU is threatening to take action against the social media company. It could be the start of a global reckoning.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:26

Freaky robots get their drink on, Al looks for lost dogs, Chris Hemsworth thinks Alexa is out to kill him and more.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 15:23

Andres Escobar was gunned down in Medellin days after scoring an own goal in a match against the U.S. at the 1994 World Cup.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:23

Suspend your disbelief with Netflix's epic fantasy lineup.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 15:16

Trying to pass the time with a roommate or partner? Try these two-player gems.

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 15:10

First it was the pint, then I realized as a 225 pound rider that might be insufficient. So then I looked at Pint X but during that I learned about VESC on the XR and knowing myself I’d probably try that someday. Now I’m learning there is the XR classic sold now ( but the name makes it sound like the first iteration of XR), and there’s the +XR which isn’t sold new anymore and I can only tell the difference between the 2 because the + has 3 bolt holes at the axle where the classic has 2.

So far I feel like the + is my best bet as they have locked down the modifications of the classic much more despite it still being an XR.

There is also a pint S near me for $950 but I still think the + might be my best bet?

Anyone have suggestions for the + or the classic?

Update: you guys are awesome. I learned so much today just from reading these many responses. Many of you mentioned that I should just go ahead and get an X7 as it’s one of the best boards on the market right now, and since I was going to dive into the realm of VESC anyways I started thinking more heavily about spending the extra money and just getting something amazing right off the bat. After learning how much it would cost to add VESC to the +XR plus a larger battery on top of the $800-$1000 I was gonna spend on a new board, I decided that the X7 was the right choice for me. I just ordered it, I found a random coupon code and got $44 off the price which is nice because they are charging me $80 just for shipping. The code was a popular YouTuber and it was TORTU if anyone is reading this thread down the road. Truly I appreciate all the help, I can’t freaking wait to get this thing and learn how to shred.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 15:03

Is your $10,000 earning enough right now? Here's how money market accounts and savings returns compare in 2026.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 15:00

While much of the attention has been placed on Lindsey Vonn in the run-up to the Winter Olympics, her teammate has an extraordinary story of her own

In December 2024, Breezy Johnson glided into the starting gate on the Stifel Birds of Prey downhill course atop Colorado’s Beaver Creek, a sight for sore eyes and a bundle of nerves. “The anxiety will always be there until I’m in the downhill gate,” the 30-year-old said at Team USA’s pre-Olympics media summit in October. “Like, at no point can [I tell myself], I’ve got this thing.”

Out of World Cup action for 14 months after whereabouts failures, she dropped on to Birds of Prey as bib No 32 in the 45-racer field – all women for the first time in the history of the legendary venue. With a few bends of her reconstructed knees, she snapped through the timing wand, charged through the Abyss (one of Birds of Prey’s steepest pitches) and kept carving her way through the 1.7-mile (2.7km) drop’s icy chop. Altogether, it was a solid run for Johnson, a 13th-place finish on home snow to restart her World Cup scoring streak. And just like that, America’s would-be standard bearer of the slopes was at it again.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:56

The Democratic-led push to redraw Virginia's congressional districts comes after a nationwide feud has led to the redrawing of maps around the country.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:53

Milestone caps a quarter century of groundbreaking discoveries — with more to come from final run’s largest-ever dataset — plus technological advances in accelerators, detectors, and computing

UPTON, N.Y., Feb. 6, 2026 — Just after 9 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 6, 2026, final beams of oxygen ions — oxygen atoms stripped of their electrons — circulated through the twin 2.4-mile-circumference rings of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and crashed into one another at nearly the speed of light inside the collider’s two house-sized particle detectors, STAR and sPHENIX. RHIC, a nuclear physics research facility at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory, has been smashing atoms since the summer of 2000. The final collisions cap a quarter century of remarkable experiments using 10 different atomic species colliding over a wide range of energies in different configurations. The RHIC program has produced groundbreaking discoveries about the building blocks of matter and the nature of proton spin and technological advances in accelerators, detectors, and computing that have far surpassed scientists’ expectations when this discovery machine first turned on.

Darío Gil, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Under Secretary for Science, right, and Interim Laboratory Director John Hill officially ended the operational era of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at a capstone collision event held at Brookhaven National Laboratory on Friday, Feb. 6, 2026. Credit: Kevin Coughlin/BNL.

“RHIC has been one of the most successful user facilities operated by the DOE Office of Science, serving thousands of scientists from across the nation and around the globe,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil. “Supporting these one-of-a-kind research facilities pushes the limits of technology and expands our understanding of our world through transformational science — central pillars of DOE’s mission to ensure America’s security and prosperity.”

Gil was in the Main Control Room of Brookhaven Lab’s collider complex to officially end the 25th and final run at RHIC in advance of announcing the next major milestone in the construction of the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), a state-of-the-art nuclear physics research facility that will be built by reusing major components of RHIC.

“It’s been an amazing run,” said Wolfram Fischer, chair of Brookhaven Lab’s Collider-Accelerator Department (C-AD), speaking of the entirety of the RHIC program. As head of C-AD, Fischer is responsible for the day-to-day, year-to-year operations of the collider and all its ancillary accelerator infrastructure. “Experiencing the challenges of first trying to get beams to circulate during commissioning in the fall of 1999, one could not have dreamed how far the performance of this machine would come,” he said. “We’ve pushed well beyond the original design in terms of the number of collisions we can produce, the energy range of those collisions, the variety of ions we’ve collided, and our ability to align the spins of protons and maintain a high degree of this alignment or polarization.”

The 25th and final run produced the largest-ever dataset from RHIC’s most energetic head-on smashups between two beams of gold ions, among the heaviest ions collided at RHIC. It also yielded a treasure trove of proton-proton collisions that will provide essential comparison data and insight into proton spin, a set of low-energy fixed target collisions to complete RHIC’s “beam energy scan,” and a final burst of oxygen-oxygen interactions. All this data will add to that collected previously by RHIC’s detectors — STAR, which has been running with many upgrades since RHIC’s beginning; PHENIX, another original RHIC detector that ceased operations in 2016; PHOBOS and BRAHMS, two smaller original detectors that ran from 2000 through 2005 and 2006, respectively; and sPHENIX, RHIC’s newest most rapid-fire collision “camera,” which came online in 2023.

This final run generated the primary data set for the new sPHENIX experiment. This year, sPHENIX accumulated more than 200 petabytes of raw data — or 200 quadrillion bytes — more than all previous RHIC raw datasets combined. This massive dataset includes 40 billion snapshots of the unique form of matter generated in gold-ion collisions.

Collectively, the RHIC measurements will fill in missing details in physicists’ understanding of how a soup of fundamental particles known as quarks and gluons — which last existed in nature some 14 billion years ago, a microsecond after the Big Bang — coalesced and converged to form the more ordinary atomic particles that make up everything visible in our world today. Recreating this primordial matter, known as a quark-gluon plasma (QGP), was the primary reason for building RHIC. RHIC’s energetic collisions of heavy ions such as gold were designed to set quarks and gluons free from “confinement” within protons and neutrons by melting the boundaries of these nuclear particles.

Thanks to considerable contributions from Japan’s RIKEN institute, RHIC was also built with unique capabilities for polarizing protons so that physicists could explore the origins of proton spin. This intrinsic quantum property, somewhat analogous to a planet spinning on its axis, has been leveraged to develop powerful technologies like nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and medical MRIs. RHIC’s polarized proton collisions have opened a new window into the mystery of how spin arises from the proton’s quarks and gluons.

PHENIX and STAR have both collected and published results from large swaths of spin-polarized collisions using selection “triggers” to decide which events to capture and study. During Run 25, sPHENIX became the world’s first detector to record a continuous streaming dataset from RHIC’s spin-polarized proton collisions — thus eliminating the need for triggers and potentially paving the way for unanticipated discoveries.

“This final RHIC run, with its impressive dataset, is a capstone that exemplifies the success of the entire RHIC program,” said John Hill, interim director of Brookhaven Lab. “The scientists, engineers, and technicians at Brookhaven deserve huge credit for their dedication and innovation throughout the operating life of RHIC — and for continually finding new ways to maximize the scientific output of this remarkable machine. We are also extremely grateful for the continued support of the U.S. Department of Energy, and for our collaborators from other DOE labs, U.S. universities, and scientific institutions around the globe. This exploration of the matter that makes up our world and of how it came to be has been, and will continue to be, a truly international endeavor.”

Captivating Discoveries

In early 2001, as the earliest RHIC data came out, some scientists were convinced that they’d seen signs of the post-Big-Bang QGP. But the data also presented puzzling surprises. Instead of the predicted uniformly expanding gas of quarks and gluons, the matter created in RHIC’s collisions seemed to flow more like a liquid — and, remarkably, one with extremely low viscosity. Additional experiments and a careful multiyear analysis led the four original RHIC collaborations to conclude in 2005 that RHIC was generating a nearly “perfect” liquid. By 2010, they had sufficient evidence to declare this liquid hot enough to be the long-sought QGP.

Since then, RHIC physicists have been making precision measurements of the QGP, including its temperature at different stages, how it swirls — it’s the swirliest matter ever! — how quarks and gluons in the primordial soup transition under various conditions of temperature and pressure to the nuclear matter that makes up atoms in our world, and how collisions of even small particles can create tiny drops of the QGP. They’ve explored exotic forms of nuclear matter such as that found in neutron stars, detected traces of the heaviest exotic antimatter ever created in a laboratory, and explored how visible matter emerges from the “nothingness” of empty space. The sPHENIX experiment has only recently published its first physics results, laying the foundation for its future of scientific insights.

“RHIC transformed nuclear physics by demonstrating the remarkable consequences of ‘boiling the vacuum,’ to paraphrase renowned physicist T. D. Lee’s description of matter governed by quantum chromodynamics (QCD),” said Brookhaven Lab theorist Raju Venugopalan. “In QCD — the theory that describes quarks and gluons and their interactions — findings from RHIC propelled the rapid development of new analytical approaches and high-performance computing. The RHIC data also sparked several unanticipated connections between the behavior of the QGP fluid and strongly correlated condensed matter systems, including ultra-cold atoms, as well as links to concepts such as quantum entanglement and the formation and evaporation of black holes.”

Advances in nuclear physics theory and the enormous RHIC datasets have also pushed the evolution of supercomputers, AI methods for analyzing “big data,” and the infrastructure needed to store and share data seamlessly with RHIC collaborators around the world. In 2024, Brookhaven’s data center — which also houses data from the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, and other experiments — passed the milestone of storing 300 petabytes of data, the largest compilation of nuclear and particle physics data in the U.S. With the newest data from RHIC and ATLAS, the total now tops 610 petabytes.

Credit: Jen Abramowitz/Brookhaven National Laboratory

In the proton spin program, RHIC’s measurements greatly improved the precision with which scientists could determine gluons’ contribution to proton spin, along with the contribution from quarks. This effort was motivated by surprising results from experiments elsewhere in the 1980s showing that quarks contribute only a fraction to this quantum property. Gluons were initially assumed to contribute the rest. RHIC’s measurements reveal that gluons contribute about as much as the quarks — not enough to fully solve the “spin puzzle.” A more recent analysis established that at least some of the gluons are spin aligned with the spin of the proton they are in. But there is still more to explore in this spin puzzle.

“Spin is one of the fundamental quantum numbers of every elementary particle in the universe except one, the Higgs,” said Elke Aschenauer, a Brookhaven Lab physicist who has played a pivotal role in RHIC’s spin physics program. “RHIC’s measurements have established the groundwork for understanding the complexity of proton spin. The future EIC will be a precision machine for studying proton spin.”

Continuing Legacy

Even with so many impressive discoveries in the books, RHIC physicists say there will be many more to come for at least another decade.

“The science mission of RHIC will continue until we analyze all the data and publish all the papers,” said Abhay Deshpande, Brookhaven Lab’s associate laboratory director for nuclear and particle physics. He emphasized how important it will be to preserve RHIC’s data for future scientific analyses.

RHIC’s data will also continue to serve as an essential bridge between ongoing and planned experiments exploring nuclear matter at lower collision energies — for example at the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) being built in Germany and the Super Proton Synchrotron at CERN — and at much higher energies at CERN’s LHC.

“Analyzing the latest RHIC data will also help train the next generation of physicists needed to run and analyze data from future experiments,” said Lijuan Ruan, a Brookhaven Lab physicist and co-spokesperson for the STAR Collaboration.

A big part of that future will take place right here at Brookhaven National Laboratory where major components of the RHIC accelerator complex will live on in a new nuclear physics research facility, the world’s only polarized Electron-Ion Collider. Engineers and technicians will remove one of RHIC’s ion storage rings and replace it with a new ring for storing accelerated electrons inside the existing accelerator tunnel. Meanwhile, the other RHIC ring, refurbished for its new mission, will receive ions accelerated by C-AD’s existing injector complex, traveling around the tunnel in the opposite direction from the electrons. Scientists will leverage the experience gained during 25 years of RHIC operations — as well as reams of RHIC accelerator physics data — to develop and train new AI algorithms designed to optimize EIC accelerator performance.

When electrons collide with ions where the two EIC rings cross, the action will be captured by a brand-new particle detector. Instead of recreating the early universe, these microscope-like interactions will enable precision measurements that reveal how quarks and gluons are organized and interact within matter as we know it in today’s world.

“We’ll learn how quarks and gluons generate mass, how their interactions contribute to proton spin, and much more that will revolutionize our understanding of matter — much as the science we’ve explored at RHIC has,” said Deshpande, who also serves as director of science for the EIC. “This is the future of Brookhaven Lab and nuclear physics in the U.S.”

Daniel Marx, one of the accelerator physicists working on the design of the EIC’s new electron storage ring, said, “It’s going to be very challenging, but also exciting. We’ll be doing things that have never been done before.”

Perhaps Marx was echoing the sentiments of the physicists who originally built RHIC, demonstrating another big part of RHIC’s legacy: an ongoing willingness to tackle unprecedented scientific and technological challenges.

“We are confident that we have the people who will make the EIC happen because of the expertise we have developed by building and running RHIC,” Deshpande said.

RHIC and the future EIC are funded primarily by the DOE Office of Science.

Brookhaven National Laboratory is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit science.energy.gov.


Source: Brookhaven National Laboratory

The post Brookhaven Lab’s RHIC Concludes 25-Year Run with Final Collisions appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:40

An investigation has uncovered a sprawling network of hidden cameras in Chinese hotel rooms that livestream guests -- including couples having sex -- to paying subscribers on Telegram. Over 18 months, the BBC identified six websites and apps on the messaging platform that claimed to operate more than 180 spy cams across Chinese hotels, not just recording but broadcasting live. One site, monitored for seven months, cycled through 54 different cameras, roughly half active at any given time. Subscribers pay 450 yuan (~$65) per month for access to multiple live feeds, archived clips, and a library of more than 6,000 edited videos dating back to 2017. The BBC traced one camera to a hotel room in Zhengzhou, where researchers found it hidden inside a wall ventilation unit and hardwired into the building's electricity supply. A commercially available hidden-camera detector failed to flag it. China introduced regulations last April requiring hotel owners to check for hidden cameras, but the BBC found the livestreaming sites still operational.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:34

Material distributed in Gorton and Denton did not have legally required imprint stating it was funded by party

Reform UK will face a police investigation in Gorton and Denton after admitting it sent out letters from a “concerned neighbour” which did not state they had been funded and distributed by the party.

Greater Manchester police confirmed it had received a report about the breach of electoral law and said it would investigate. The Electoral Commission said the omission was a matter for the police, stressing that failing “to include an imprint in candidate election material is an offence”.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:21

Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, ICE protests in Los Angeles, Snoop Dogg at the Winter Olympics and Storm Leonardo – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists

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2026-02-06 16:04
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PARIS, Feb. 6, 2026 — Capgemini today announced the expansion of its strategic partnership with Google Cloud to deliver end-to-end secure sovereign cloud solutions. As part of this, Capgemini will help clients adopt Google Cloud’s leading AI technologies, including Vertex AI and Gemini Enterprise. This is designed to drive innovation and modernize clients’ critical operations while protecting classified data and workloads and meet stringent compliance requirements in a secure environment.

Capgemini and Google Cloud’s expanded partnership will allow organizations to use Gemini-based, hyper-automated cloud operations to enhance cybersecurity, resilience, disaster recovery and sovereign-aligned compliance. Joint clients can choose their sovereignty model across Google Cloud, Google Cloud Dedicated, and Google Distributed Cloud (GDC) air-gapped.

It’s critical that organizations are empowered to roll out AI and modernize applications in ways that adhere to sovereign requirements,” said Kevin Ichhpurani, President, Global Partner Ecosystem at Google Cloud. “Capgemini is a vital partner in this initiative, helping customers use Google Sovereign Cloud to accelerate digital transformation while maintaining the highest standards of data integrity and sovereignty.”

“While the potential of AI in modernizing critical operations is clear, there are constraints due to stringent regulatory mandates on data and compliance,” said Fernando Alvarez, Chief Strategy and Development Officer and Group Executive Board member at Capgemini. “With our deep industry expertise combined with our proven track record in implementing AI-first solutions that deliver real business transformation, Capgemini is well positioned to address these challenges. Becoming a Google Cloud air-gapped operator enables us to further provide trusted and secure end-to-end sovereign solutions that enable resilience, help maintain autonomy and security, and foster innovation at scale.”

As part of this partnership, Capgemini intends to establish a Google Sovereign Cloud Delivery Practice and Center of Excellence (CoE) designed to provide advice and services that meet unique sovereign requirements for joint clients. This ensures that core applications and infrastructure such as Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) environments can be modernized securely while adhering to strict data residency and operational mandates. Capgemini’s capabilities are further enhanced by its recent acquisition of Syniti, a leader in large-scale SAP data transformation, and Cloud4C, a leading provider of automation-driven managed services for hybrid and sovereign cloud environments.

With a newly attained GDC partner status and as an authorized GDC air-gapped operator, Capgemini can deliver a sovereign, fully operated service model. This is a completely managed experience, which is designed for organizations requiring total isolation from the public internet to meet sovereignty and regulatory requirements across European markets. The partnership supports critical missions by enabling secure logistics planning, threat analysis, and operational decision support using data that remains fully contained within the secure enclave.

As a trusted AI-led business and technology transformation partner, Capgemini brings decades of experience in enabling the AI-led digital transformation of companies across countries. Combined with Google Cloud’s industry-leading AI technology, Capgemini and Google Cloud are expertly placed to deliver safe, compliant innovation for high-value business processes and intelligent transformation of business-critical systems to accelerate unified legal, data and operational control.

About Capgemini

Capgemini is an AI-powered global business and technology transformation partner, delivering tangible business value. We imagine the future of organizations and make it real with AI, technology and people. With our strong heritage of nearly 60 years, we are a responsible and diverse group of 420,000 team members in more than 50 countries. We deliver end-to-end services and solutions with our deep industry expertise and strong partner ecosystem, leveraging our capabilities across strategy, technology, design, engineering and business operations. The Group reported 2024 global revenues of €22.1 billion.


Source: Capgemini

The post Capgemini Expands Google Cloud Partnership to Deliver Sovereign AI and Cloud Services appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:09

Progressive Analilia Mejia maintains slim lead after votes seemed to be swinging for Tom Malinowski

The outcome of a special Democratic primary to fill a US House of Representatives seat representing northern New Jersey was on a knife-edge on Friday, after a progressive challenger took a surprise lead over a former Democratic congressman who initially appeared to have won the nomination.

The election held on Thursday in New Jersey’s 11th congressional district was prompted by Democrat Mikie Sherrill’s resignation last year after she was elected governor. Eleven Democrats vied to replace her, and on Thursday evening, Tom Malinowski, who represented a neighboring district in the House from 2019 through 2022, took an early lead.

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2026-02-06 14:07

Feb. 6, 2026 — Most of the world’s crop production relies on the whims of the weather. Too much or too little water, temperatures that remain too high or too low – these are just some of the many factors that can negatively impact agricultural yields. Events like these can cause high crop volatility – rapid and significant fluctuations in the price of produce. A researcher at Purdue has been using his U.S. National Science Foundation ACCESS-allocation on Anvil, Purdue’s Rosen Center for Advanced Computing (RCAC) supercomputer, to study crop volatility from a different angle.

Credit: Shutterstock

In addition to focusing on how factors such as extreme heat affect crop production, Iman Haqiqi, lead research economist in the Department of Agricultural Economics at Purdue University, is studying how global trade can offset crop volatility. The results of his research have shown that not only does trade help buffer the risk of crop volatility due to heat stress, but it also mitigates this risk without depleting groundwater supplies.

“So the whole idea of this paper was to show that, yes, there are some temporary solutions, like irrigation, but they are not sustainable,” says Haqiqi. “Something else, like international trade, which is a solution from an economic perspective, can have a similar effect in terms of reducing volatility and risk. But also, it has benefits because you don’t need to have a lot of unsustainable use of resources.”

“Without Anvil, this paper would be just a conceptual framework that, hey, you know, trade could be a good thing compared to irrigation,” said Iman Haqiqi, Purdue University. “But we didn’t have numerical evidence to support that claim. Now, thanks to having access to Anvil, we could provide that evidence.”

Haqiqi’s use of ACCESS-allocated resources, which included support from RCAC’s team of high-performance computing (HPC) experts, helped him quickly perform the computational aspects of his research. With HPC, researchers like Haqiqi have the resources to perform computationally intensive models, simulations and calculations.

Haqiqi’s research was published in the journal Environmental Research: Food Systems. You can find more details about this research in the original article posted here: Anvil used to study how trade can reduce volatilities in crop supply.

Resource Provider Institution(s): Purdue’s Rosen Center for Advanced Computing (RCAC)
Resources Used: Anvil
Affiliations: Purdue University
Funding Agency: NSF
Grant or Allocation Number(s): EES220011

The science story featured here was enabled by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s ACCESS program, which is supported by National Science Foundation grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296.


Source: Megan Johnson, NCSA; ACCESS

The post ACCESS Supports Supercomputer Modeling of Crop Volatility and Global Trade appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 14:06

Former minister and Benjamin Wegg-Prosser met disgraced financier before formal foundation of Global Counsel

Peter Mandelson’s former lobbying firm sought work with companies controlled by the governments of Russia and China shortly after he left ministerial office, according to emails the disgraced former minister forwarded to the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The emails show how Mandelson and Benjamin Wegg-Prosser scrambled to drum up high-paying foreign business after co-founding Global Counsel even as Mandelson remained a member of the House of Lords. Potential clients included the Russian state investment firm Rusnano and the state-owned China International Capital Corporation, the emails suggest.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:05

Silver Eagle coins are trading at substantial premiums over the spot price of silver in today's volatile market.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 14:00

After months of negotiations, threats and refusals, Bill and Hillary Clinton have finally agreed to testify in front of Congress as part of a Republican-led investigation into the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Jonathan Freedland speaks to the Politico Magazine columnist and former federal prosecutor, Ankush Khardori, about why Donald Trump thinks it is a ‘shame’ the Clintons have been forced to testify

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:57

Spanish figure skater Tomas-Llorenc Guarino Sabate secured the rights to perform his Minions-themed program at the Milan Cortina Games hours before he was set to skate.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:45

Properties in London and Wiltshire targeted by officers investigating alleged leaks to late child sex offender

Police are searching two properties connected to Peter Mandelson as part of an investigation into claims that he passed market-sensitive information to Jeffrey Epstein.

A Metropolitan police statement, which did not name Mandelson, said searches were taking place in Camden, north London, and Wiltshire. Mandelson has been living in a rented property in Wiltshire since being sacked as ambassador to the US over his links to the late convicted child sex offender.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:40

Kris Marszalek, the co-founder and CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Crypto.com, has paid $70 million for the domain AI.com -- the highest price ever publicly disclosed for a website name, according to the deal's broker Larry Fischer of GetYourDomain.com. The entire sum was paid in cryptocurrency to an undisclosed seller. Marszalek plans to debut the site during a Super Bowl ad this weekend, offering a personal "AI agent" that lets consumers send messages, use apps and trade stocks. The previous domain sale record was nearly $50 million for Carinsurance.com, per GoDaddy.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:23

Acts are alleged to have occurred in 2024 on set of TV drama The Cleaning Lady, which Busfield acted in and directed

A grand jury in New Mexico has indicted the actor Timothy Busfield on child sex abuse charges, officials announced on Friday.

Busfield was indicted on four counts of criminal sexual contact of a child, the Bernalillo county district attorney’s office said in a statement.

In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453 or visit their website for more resources and to report child abuse or DM for help. For adult survivors of child abuse, help is available at ascasupport.org. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Bravehearts on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines International

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:20

The video is now available on Apple Music and Spotify, but it isn't landing on YouTube for a couple more days.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:18

Exclusive: Sasan Ghandehari reluctant to share details of $10bn trust in row with Christie’s auction house

A high court battle over a Picasso painting has shone a light on the offshore financial structures of an Iranian-born businessman who paid for Nigel Farage’s £50,000 trip to Davos.

The details about Sasan Ghandehari, who funded Farage’s tickets to the summit, emerged in court papers about a £4m claim brought by a British Virgin Islands firm, which has accused Christie’s auction house of misrepresentation when it sold the art to it.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:08

Actor Timothy Busfield has been indicted on four counts of criminal sexual contact of a child, officials said Friday.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:06

Ed Smart, the father of Elizabeth Smart, spoke to "CBS Mornings" about the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie and gave advice to the missing mother's family.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:01

Two coins celebrating Queen Elizabeth II criticised for failing to resemble late monarch

Two Australian coins commemorating Queen Elizabeth II have been criticised for failing to resemble the late monarch.

The $5 (£2.56) and 50c (26p) silver coins, created by Royal Australian Mint to commemorate the centenary of the queen’s birth, were released in an online ballot that closed on Wednesday.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:01

Jonathan Gustafson talks about discovering his love for luge at 11 as he prepares to represent Team USA at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 13:00

The company's ambitious plans to introduce a virtual health coach may be going back to the drawing board, according to a report.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:59

Impulse buying isn't always a bad thing, especially when the end result is a one-of-a-kind and useful gift.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:50

An anonymous reader shares a report: Amazon, Google, and Microsoft each reported hundreds of billions in RPO (remaining performance obligations) -- signed contracts for cloud computing services that can't yet be filled and haven't yet hit the books. Collectively, the big three cloud providers reported a $1.1 trillion backlog of revenue.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:39

The latest tranche of Epstein files has sent shock waves around the world, but many of the powerful men who minimised and dismissed his crimes are still yet to face any real consequences. The documents show the likes of Noam Chomsky and Steve Bannon were happy to maintain relationships with Epstein even after he spent time in jail for child sex offences. What message does that send to the abused women and girls, whose experiences should be the real focus? And will these men ever be held to account? Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian columnist Marina Hyde – watch on YouTube

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:28

Portugal’s far-right Chega party has said vote should be delayed as state of calamity declared in 69 areas

Heavy rains and strong winds have continued to batter parts of Spain and Portugal, causing at least two deaths, forcing the evacuation of more than 7,000 people and prompting calls to postpone the second-round of Portugal’s presidential election.

Storm Leonardo, which has lashed the Iberian peninsula this week, has led the Portuguese government to extend the current state of calamity in 69 municipalities until the middle of February.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:19

Files released by DoJ reveal the financier engaging in efforts to blunt the impact of the movement as it was gaining ground

In August 2018, as the #MeToo movement spread across social media and women around the world demanded justice from sexual predators, Michael Wolff, a journalist, forwarded Jeffrey Epstein a plea for help. Wolff wanted Epstein to support Stephen Elliott, a writer looking to sue the creator of the Shitty Media Men List, a crowd-sourced Google Doc that detailed anonymous allegations of misconduct against dozens of men who worked in the media industry.

“I have always thought that the way back from this climate is through specific instances of individuals successfully challenging their persecution,” Wolff wrote to Epstein, according to emails released in a tranche from the so-called Epstein files. “If his story is solid he might be worth supporting.”

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:17

To see just how close the iPhone 17 Pro can get to a real cinema camera, I set up a full commercial video shoot.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:17

Eager to attend this year's Super Bowl? Be prepared to pay four figures for the ticket alone — and those are the cheap seats.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 12:17

A $12 power meter helped me test which electronics in my home were the biggest energy vampires. The result caught me off guard.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:15

Zubayar al-Bakoush is suspected in Libya attack resulting in deaths of US ambassador and three other Americans

The US attorney general, Pam Bondi, announced on Friday the arrest of a “key participant” in the 2012 Benghazi terrorist attack that killed four US government officials, including the US ambassador to Libya, J Christopher Stevens.

Bondi said the suspect, Zubayar al-Bakoush, was taken into US custody at 3am ET on Friday. “We will prosecute this alleged terrorist to the fullest extent of the law. He’ll face charges related to murder, terrorism, arson, among others,” Bondi told reporters at a press conference at the Department of Justice in Washington DC.

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 12:05

The FBI has arrested "one of the key participants" behind the attack on U.S. facilities in Benghazi, Libya, in 2012 that killed four Americans.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 23:10

Deputy director of Russia’s military intelligence agency shot several times in the stairwell of his apartment

A top Russian military official who plays a major role in the country’s intelligence services has been taken to hospital after being shot in Moscow, state media has reported.

Lt Gen Vladimir Alekseyev was shot several times on the stairwell of his apartment on Friday by an unknown gunman in the north-west of the city and is in critical condition, according to reports.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 18:00

Luigi Mangione appeared in a Manhattan courtroom Friday in the state's case against him for the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 15:57

As the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics begin, all eyes are on teams from around the globe proudly donning their countries' uniforms for the opening ceremony, including Team USA in outfits designed by Ralph Lauren.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 15:55

The negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear capabilities come against a backdrop of deadly protests inside Iran and a buildup of U.S. military assets in the region.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-06 12:00
Alicia Pembroke

ALICIA PEMBROKE
Staff Reporter

The Young Democratic Socialists of America (YDSA) chapter at the university wrapped its first action week on Oct. 25 — a coordinated effort with the goal of encouraging administrative support for international students and utilizing democratic student power. Through a phone zap, a debate watch party, an open mic and a public presentation of demands, members said the week could not be ignored. 

The university’s YDSA chapter was revived last year after its last president graduated in 2018. Nithila Christosam, a psychology and sociology double major, happened to meet members of Delaware’s Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) at a tabling event and decided to reinvigorate the university’s chapter.

“I don’t really know what it was,” Christosam said. “It [was] just an impulsive, ‘Oh, I could do that, easy,’ and so I did.” 

She then began the process of rebuilding the chapter from the bottom up — reestablishing the group’s structure and defining its purpose. Over time, YDSA became a hub for left-leaning students to gather, learn and eventually organize around shared goals.

For Christosam, the work has always been urgent and personal. 

“I’m the daughter of immigrants, and the American dream is something that is very relevant to my life,” Christosam said. “I’ve never been super patriotic, but you grow up on the idea that America is this revolutionary place. And you have the responsibility to speak up for yourselves and for your community.” 

That sense of duty escalated last April, when eight university-sponsored international students had their visas revoked in a controversial move by the U.S Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The incident occurred amongst a national trend of universities’ international students facing sudden visa terminations amid federal immigration crackdowns. 

“It will happen again, and it will, unfortunately, probably be worse,” Jessica Brady, a core organizer in YDSA said.

That urgency set the tone for the start of action week. First up was a phone zap, a strategic action that involved rapid and repeated calls to university administrators. 

“Phone zaps bring attention to staff and administrators and make it hard for them to ignore us,” Xavier Flaiz, another core organizer and junior majoring in biochemistry and sociology, said. “It was good. We always had people manning the phones.” 

But even with constant pressure, the administration remained silent, according to Flaiz.             

“We haven’t really gotten any big response,” Flaiz said.                       

For many in YDSA, that silence has become routine. Members say conversations with administrators often happen behind closed doors, with little transparency or accountability. 

“It’s one thing to make people feel safe, it’s another to make sure they actually are,” Brady said, who is also a double major in political science and history. 

Despite this, organizers shifted toward community-building events to maintain momentum. Midweek, YDSA hosted a debate watch party for Zohran Mamdani, now mayor of New York City. Mamdani’s campaign and openly socialist ideals have become influential among young organizers.

“The turnout was huge,” Flaiz said. “The energy was great. Lots of fun. We were raffling off little handmade Zohrans.”

The plush Mamdani dolls, made by YDSA members ahead of the event, became a symbol of the group’s personality —  politically engaged and creative. They have since been spotted at flea markets as part of YDSA’s fundraising and community outreach goals. 

“Having something fun and hopeful where you can just mingle and talk to a lot of people is really good to bring in new members,” Flaiz said.

The goal of the watch party was to offer a low-pressure entry point for students who might feel intimidated by political spaces or general body meetings. 

“We want to get people excited about YDSA, and we want to give people hope,” Flaiz said. “A lot of people walk around campus, they see these issues, and they hear about students having their visas revoked and they’re like, ‘Wow, that sucks. But what could I ever do about that?’”

For Hope Berg, a junior computer science major, the watch parties offered a counterbalance to the emotional weight of the week. 

“Seeing people turn out gave me hope,” Berg said. “There are people on campus who aren’t just YDSA who actually care about international students.”

The watch party also contributed directly to action week’s momentum by inspiring attendance for the following events. Students who had never been to a YDSA meeting before showed up for the presentation of demands and open mic later in the week, with plans to attend future meetings. 

Action week’s momentum culminated in a public presentation of demands that members described as the most powerful moment.

“We left 450 petitions on the steps of Hullihen so they literally couldn’t ignore us,” Christosam said. 

The event featured speakers from HOLA, the university’s Hispanic/Latinx registered student organization (RSO) and the Delaware Coalition for Immigrant Justice (DCIJ), amplifying stories of affected international students. 

“It was great to see all these community members come together,” Flaiz said. “It showed how well YDSA can organize when everyone takes on a little bit of the burden.”

Following the presentation of demands, the community-building aspect of YDSA continued with the open mic. Much like the Mamdani watch parties, attendees were able to perform, share stories, socialize and fundraise.

Members stressed that the fight is not isolated to one community. 

“It’s about if international students can have their rights taken away, then it means anyone can have their rights taken away.” Berg said.

YDSA organizers also highlighted that the campaign continues. The chapter plans to build on the week’s successes with organizer training, skill-building workshops, outreach events and national conventions.

The group sees these efforts as part of a larger movement to advocate for student rights, democratic participation and campus accountability.

“As long as you’re coming in with good intentions and a will to make a change, we’re here for you, and we hope that you’ll be here for us and all the people we’re trying to protect,” Berg said. 

Action week offered participants a chance to connect with others and explore ways to get involved on campus. 

“If you’ve been feeling hopeless and you as an individual can’t do anything to change the way this campus or nation is headed,” Flaiz said “Then I think it’d be a great chance to do something by joining YDSA.”


YDSA spotlights international student protection after action week mobilization was first posted on February 6, 2026 at 12:00 pm.
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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:57

Gamers across the world can now recreate drone strikes in Ukraine from the comfort of their own home, with this newly released game.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:53

Sonny Jurgensen's strong arm, keen wit and affable personality made him one of the most beloved figures in Washington football history.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:52

Officials, MPs and other insiders recall a need for clarity and Blair-era frisson before election – even if Sue Gray was wary

A general election was on the horizon and Peter Mandelson was everywhere. “He didn’t have a desk but he would dip in and out on big issues; he was always there for advice,” recalled a former Labour official of the party’s run-up to the campaign in 2024.

“He would be in and out of the Loto [leader of the opposition] office in Westminster, picking people off individually, ‘We need to chat and do this’, sort of thing.”

Continue reading...

2026-02-07 08:04
2026-02-06 11:51

Trump’s critical minerals commitment problem Expert comment jon.wallace

The US has proved it is serious about creating a new mining and processing ecosystem. Now it must convince investors and industry that its policy will last for the next 10 years.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio shakes hands after posing for a photo with the 55 government officials who were invited to the first Critical Minerals Ministerial on 4 February 2026 in Washington, DC.

The US Critical Minerals Ministerial Summit on 4 February was the Trump administration’s most significant move to date to decouple from Chinese dominated minerals supply chains and create an exclusive market where the US gets to decide participation. 

The US does not want to overtake China in production and processing volumes. Attempting to do so would be a misplaced and costly ambition, given the scale of Chinese domestic demand. This is not a race for production. It is an attempt to create a new geopolitically exclusionary mining and processing ecosystem. 

Attendees were directly invited to ‘form a trading bloc among allies and partners’ that ‘guarantees American access…expanding production across the entire zone’.

America is not alone in pursing this objective. There are more than 30 national critical minerals strategies worldwide. But the US is the first nation to rightly make minerals supply a national foreign policy priority and understand that disrupting the status quo requires a significant amount of cash. 

Essential to success is corralling the private sector and international partners. That will require credible commitment from the Trump administration that its interventions will outlast this presidency. It therefore works against US interests when Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio criticize former president Joe Biden’s policies. Doing so risks making it appear more likely that a successor government will unpick Trump’s interventions, leading to stranded assets and unpaid bills. 

The US has proved it is serious. Now it must prove it still will be in 10 years’ time. 

Scale must be buttressed by bureaucratic vested interests

The US has pledged $12 billion to build a US strategic stockpile of critical minerals (‘Project Vault’) via public–private partnership, combining a large export import bank loan with private capital. 

In parallel, Washington launched the FORGE initiative as a standing coordination platform for critical minerals policy between Washington and countries including Canada, the UK, Australia, Japan, South Korea, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Ukraine backed by State Department leadership and inter agency participation. A major element of the partnership is the creation of price floors for minerals ‘to uphold pricing integrity’.

Scale is obviously important. And the US has backed its domestic and partner industries to a greater degree than anyone else. 

Framing critical minerals as national security and energy priorities will make it difficult for future administrations to take another course.

However, equally important to success will be the creation of the bureaucracies, departments, and agencies that can create a web of vested interests around implementation of Trump’s policy: such interests become very hard to undo by successor administrations and therefore give investors confidence that government policies will last as long as it takes to develop a mine and begin to produce.  

The summit already points in this direction: framing critical minerals as national security and energy priorities will make it difficult for future administrations to take another course.

A deliberately political, hierarchical ‘club’  

The desire for a preferential trade zone of friendly nations under the FORGE banner is important to expand participation. In reality, the best deals and access to US financial measures will be reserved for those with whom the US has the closest security relationships and highest political trust. 

Australia, Japan, and South Korea will continue to receive larger investments more targeted to minerals processing, than Angola, or DRC for example even if the latter countries are receiving notable investment. 

Critical minerals are being slotted directly into the architecture of US security alliances and defence industrial cooperation. Indeed, the summit directly referenced the securitized structuring of oil flows in the previous century as a replicable model.

For now, FORGE is the most substantial Trump team attempt to create a multilateral arrangement on a discrete issue. Despite the administration’s often abrasive rhetoric towards its allies and partners, this demonstrates the awareness of the need for collaboration, albeit determined by geopolitical alliance rather than economic efficiency. 

Notably, it was the Biden administration’s Minerals Security Partnership (MSP) that laid the bedrock for what is now FORGE. While the MSP has been on care and maintenance since Trump took over and had little to show in terms of operational successes, it was an important initial framework for cooperation. 

FORGE was announced as the successor to MSP. That is at least one positive indication to industry and investors that minerals partnerships underpinned by security alliances represent enduring US government policy and will likely remain (with possible further name changes) for the long term and across administrations. 

Redirecting existing supply or creating new supply

Project Vault and the proposed price floors aim to redirect and stabilize current flows of rare earths, battery metals and other listed critical minerals, giving US and allied manufacturers priority access at predictable prices. 

This has been complemented by US government investment directly into operations, including the commissioning of two new smelters in the US for the first time in a generation. 

Future US deals need to show that there is real desire to increase production, especially of copper, in addition to recycling strategies. Government backed demand and operational support needs to not only redirect existing supply, it also needs to help overcome the significant supply shortages expected in future. 

De-risking the DRC  

The immense resource base of the DRC, and the prevalence of Chinese mining in the country, have made it a focal point of the USChina rivalry on the ground.

With competing eastern and western railways pushing into central Africa, a US approach based on security deals for preferential minerals access is a very Trumpian ‘spheres of influence’ political play. 

But Chinese dominance was largely a result of Western withdrawal over reputation risks and US legal requirements. Reversing this trend and de-risking investments requires a long-term political commitment to provide diplomatic cover to international operators, and to support the development ambitions of DRC citizens. 

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 11:50

The Steam Deck dominates gaming on the go, and the Steam Machine looks to conquer the living room.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:44

The police said they were carrying out search warrants at two addresses, one in Wiltshire and another in north London

Nearly 60,000 unauthorised migrants and convicted criminals have been removed or deported from the UK since Labour took office, the Home Office has said.

The announcement came amid claims that the government was promoting “harmful stereotypes” by equating migration with criminality.

Continue reading...

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 11:42

Researchers at ETH Zurich and the Paul Scherrer Institute have demonstrated how quantum operations between superconducting qubits can be performed while correcting for bit-flip errors.

Feb. 6, 2026 — Quantum computers hold great promise for exciting applications in the future, but for now they keep presenting physicists and engineers with a series of challenges and conundrums. One of them relates to decoherence and the errors that result from it: bit flips and phase flips. Such errors mean that the logical unit of a quantum computer, the qubit, can suddenly and unpredictably change its state from ‘0’ to ‘1’, or that the relative phase of a superposition state can jump from positive to negative.

Ilya Besedin and Michael Kerschbaum in one of the group’s laboratories at Hönggerberg. Photo credit: Kilian Kessler/D-PHYS/ETH Zurich.

These errors can be held at bay by building a logical qubit out of many physical qubits and constantly applying error correction protocols. This approach takes care of storing the quantum information relatively safely over time. However, at some point it becomes necessary to exit storage mode and do something useful with the qubit – like applying a quantum gate, which is the building block of quantum algorithms.

The research group led by ETH Zurich D-PHYS Professor Andreas Wallraff, in collaboration with the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) and the theory team of Professor Markus Müller at RWTH Aachen University and Forschungszentrum Jülich, has now demonstrated a technique that makes it possible to perform a quantum operation between superconducting logical qubits while correcting for potential errors occurring during the operation. The researchers have just published their results in Nature Physics.

Quantum error correction is very different from classical error correction. For the latter, it’s possible to make several identical copies of a bit and read them out after a while: if a bit flip occurred, a majority vote reveals which bit most likely flipped and its original value can be restored. “With qubits, things are a lot more complicated,” says Dr Ilya Besedin, postdoctoral researcher in Wallraff’s group and co-leading author of the study together with PhD student Michael Kerschbaum. One complication is that quantum information cannot simply be copied or ‘cloned’: instead, one must create entangled states of several qubits. To make things even trickier, phase-flip errors – which do not exist in classical computation – also need to be fixed.

Error Correction with Surface Codes

One way to ensure that bit- and phase-flip errors are corrected is to use so-called surface codes. In these codes, the state of a qubit is stored in several physical data qubits. Error correction is achieved by measuring repeatedly the quantum states of so-called stabilizers, which make up the logical qubit together with data qubits. Stabilizers are measured using extra qubits that are connected to data qubits in such a way that reading them out reveals any changes – in bit value (Z-type stabilizer) or phase (X-type stabilizer) – occurring between measurements, thus enabling their correction. Data qubits, on the other hand, are never read out: they store the error-corrected qubit state.

The situation changes when one wants to perform a quantum logical operation, such as a controlled-NOT gate, between two logical qubits. In particular, one must also correct for any errors occurring during the operation. “Performing a logical operation in this fault-tolerant way would be relatively easy if we could move our qubits around and connect them arbitrarily to each other,” says Kerschbaum. In two-dimensional arrays of superconducting qubits, however, each qubit is fixed in space, and only physical qubits that are spatially close to each other are connected and can interact with one another.

Splitting the Square

“Lattice surgery is a way of dealing with this constraint,” said Kerschbaum. In their experiment, he and his colleagues initially performed error correction on a single logical qubit that was encoded by seventeen physical qubits. The data qubits and the stabilizers were arranged in a roughly square shape. For a few cycles, the researchers read out the stabilizers every 1.66 microseconds, performing bit-flip and phase-flip error correction.

When the time for surgery came, three data qubits along the middle of the square were read out, effectively splitting the surface-code square into two halves. Additionally, the readout of the X-type stabilizers was halted. “The end result of this operation was that we had two logical qubits entangled with each other,” explains Besedin. During the surgery, bit-flip errors were corrected; afterwards, bit-flip error correction could continue on the two resulting halves. This operation isn’t yet a quantum controlled-NOT gate, but it can be turned into one through a series of such splits together with merging operations.

“One could say that the lattice surgery operation is the operation, and all the others can be constructed from it,” said Besedin. “To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time lattice surgery has been performed on superconducting qubits, and we still have some way to go.”

For instance, 41 physical qubits would be required to make the splitting operation on one logical qubit stable against phase flips too. Nonetheless, this demonstration of lattice surgery on superconducting qubits marks an important step towards the ambitious goal of building useful quantum computers with thousands of qubits.

Reference

Besedin, I., Kerschbaum, M. et al. Realizing lattice surgery on two distance-three repetition codes with superconducting qubits. Nat. Phys. (2026). DOI:10.1038/s41567-025-03090-6

Further reading

Krinner, S. et al. Realizing repeated quantum error correction in a distance-three surface code. Nature 605, 669-674 (2022). DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-04566-8

Links

Press release by Forschungszentrum Jülich: in German and English


Source: Oliver Morsch, ETH 

The post ETH Zurich: Researchers Demonstrate Error-Corrected Quantum Operations Using Lattice Surgery appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:31

An anonymous reader shares a report: KPMG, one of the world's largest auditors of public and private companies, negotiated lower fees from its own accountant by arguing that AI will make it cheaper to do the work, according to people familiar with the matter. The Big Four firm told its auditor, Grant Thornton UK, it should pass on cost savings from the rollout of AI and threatened to find a new accountant if it did not agree to a significant fee reduction, the people said. The discussions last year came amid an industry-wide debate about the impact of new technology on audit firms' business and traditional pricing models. Firms have invested heavily in AI to speed up the planning of audits and automate routine tasks, but it is not yet clear if this will generate savings that are passed on to clients. Grant Thornton is auditor to KPMG International, the UK-based umbrella organisation that co-ordinates the work of KPMG's independent, locally owned partnerships around the world. Talks with Grant Thornton were led by Michaela Peisger, a longtime audit partner and executive from KPMG's German member firm, who became KPMG International's chief financial officer at the beginning of 2025.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:10

The company says its 2026 release window remains intact, but final prices and dates are still in flux.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 11:07

I have a Pint with 300miles, this is probably low mileage rigth. Both the front and rear ligth are not turning on despite having the sun icon (on) in the ow app. Is there any of you guys that had this happening. Any help would be appreciate
Thanks in advance :)

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2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 11:07

The Anker Solix E10 competes with the Powerwall and other home battery backups. It offers three ways to keep your home powered during an outage. You can buy it now.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:59

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a potential Democratic presidential candidate, recently wrote about her accomplishments as she enters her final year leading the state.

"Our approach has led to some pretty remarkable results," Whitmer wrote in a Feb. 2 Substack entry. "Free pre-K, community college, and school meals for all. Fewer families living in poverty."

Her statement taps into Americans’ concerns about affordability, which could be a key issue for voters in the midterm elections, including a competitive U.S. Senate contest in Michigan. President Donald Trump’s pledge to reduce prices for groceries, cars and other items is Stalled on our MAGA-Meter, which tracks his campaign promises.

Michigan’s poverty rate declined during Whitmer’s tenure. The drop mirrored national trends, and most of the decline began under her predecessor. Whitmer’s spokesperson pointed to anti-poverty measures during her tenure as the reason for the decline. Experts said poverty rates are affected by numerous factors, not only one governor’s policies.

Poverty rate declined in Michigan since 2011

Whitmer was referring to a decline in the state’s poverty rate compared with what she inherited from her predecessor, Republican Gov. Rick Snyder, Whitmer’s political strategist told PolitiFact. 

In 2011, when Snyder took office, about 17% of Michigan residents lived in poverty. It peaked at 17.5% in 2012, then fell to 14% during Snyder’s final year in office in 2018, according to U.S. Census Bureau data analyzed by KFF, a nonpartisan health policy think tank. 

During Whitmer’s tenure, which began in 2019, the rate hovered between 13.1% and 13.5% in 2024, the most recent year available. (There is no 2020 data because of the coronavirus pandemic’s significant data collection disruptions.)

The official U.S. Census Bureau poverty measure totals a household's income and compares it with a threshold for the household's size and age composition, Kristin S. Seefeldt, a University of Michigan social work associate professor, said. If the household’s income is below that threshold the household is considered to be living in poverty. Many experts say the threshold is outdated, but it’s still widely used.

The U.S. Census Bureau's nationwide poverty threshold for a family of two adults and one child was $25,249 in 2024.

Rates are often the most useful measure of changes because they take into account population changes. However, in sheer numbers, there were more people living in poverty in Michigan (and the nation) in 2024 than 2019. In Michigan, there were about 1.28 million in poverty in 2019 and 1.34 million in 2024.

However, a comparison of poverty rates under two governors doesn’t provide a full picture. 

Michigan’s declining poverty rate under both Whitmer and Snyder matches a national trend. The national poverty rate was 15.9% in 2011 and declined most years, ending at 12.1% in 2024.

During economic downturns, Michigan tends to get hit harder and experience longer recessions than even neighboring states, mainly because of its transition from a manufacturing-based economy to a service-based economy, said Nicholas Hess and Patrick Schaefer at the Michigan League for Public Policy, a nonprofit policy institute. That typically puts the state’s poverty rate higher than the national average.

There is usually a lag between the end of a recession and a drop in the poverty rate.

"One could argue that due to the Great Recession (of 2008 and 2009) the Snyder administration was at a much different starting point," Seefeldt said. "Or, one might say that Snyder didn't do enough to bring down poverty rates as the economy recovered. But the trend data alone don't let us say either definitively."

Charles L. Ballard, a Michigan State University economics professor emeritus, said poverty measures should be taken with several grains of salt.

"The really big story of the Michigan economy is the longer-term story of Michigan’s economy losing ground relative to the national average," Ballard said. "This is strongly associated with the decline of manufacturing in general, and the auto sector in particular."

Whitmer hasn’t reversed that decline, Ballard said, but neither did her predecessors, Republican or Democrat. 

Whitmer cited anti-poverty measures

Whitmer’s spokesperson pointed to the governor’s actions during her administration to help low-income people, including quintupling the earned income tax credit; expanding pre-K for all; expanding affordable childcare; investing in Rx Kids, a children’s prescription program, in the latest state budget; securing free school breakfast and lunch; and ending state taxes on tips and overtime.  

Many of the actions Whitmer cited stem from bills that passed the legislature from 2023 to 2025.

"I'd argue it's really too soon to see the effect of most of these changes in any dataset," Seefeldt said. "We know that the types of changes she's put in place matter for the well-being of families with low income. But the official poverty numbers by themselves aren't ‘proof’ that the changes have resulted in lower poverty rates during her administration."

The official poverty measure looks only at pre-tax income, which means that impact from some of these measures — such as expanding the earned income tax credit or rolling back the retirement tax — aren’t reflected in the statistic, Seefeldt said. Official measures also don’t consider expenses such as child care.

Another way the Census Bureau seeks to quantify poverty is by using a "supplemental poverty measure," which takes into account additional factors not included in the basic poverty measure,  including government benefits such as food assistance, tax credits and accounts for expenses such as housing and medical costs. 

Michigan’s supplemental poverty measure decreased between 2023 and 2024. That aligns with the expansion of the state’s earned income tax credit, the experts at the Michigan League for Public Policy said.

Our ruling

Whitmer said her tenure as governor has led to "fewer families living in poverty" in Michigan. 

The poverty rate under Whitmer is lower than it was under her predecessor. In 2011, when Snyder took office, about 17% of residents lived in poverty; that fell to 14% in 2018. During Whitmer’s tenure, the rate has ranged from 13.1% to 13.5%.

Whitmer’s statement omits that the drop mirrored national trends; that Michigan’s rate is higher than the national average; and that the sheer number of people living in poverty increased from 2019 to 2024. Poverty rates are influenced by multiple factors, not a governor’s policies alone.

The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important information. We rate it Half True.

Chief Correspondent Louis Jacobson contributed to this fact-check.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:58
MORE SICK ONEWHEEL TRIPS FOR YA'LL!

A few years ago I popped on here to gauge interest in fully planned and guided Onewheel trips. The support was so positive that even FM decided to hop on the train lol

WELL WE'RE STILL HERE AND WE'RE STILL DOIN IT, GANG.

The first 3 riders we hosted were guys who saw my original post here on reddit, and took a leap of faith. Since then, we've had riders from Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee, California, Nevada, even Spain and France fly out for our adventures. Every single one had a blast, and several are coming back this year to do it again.

In 2026, MaDventures will be running 4 Premium Small Group Trips - each including airport pickup and drop off, meals, accommodation, guided rides with professional guides, meetups with pro riders, and the option to rent a board and gear or send us your own - each in epic, beautiful spots, at super affordable prices. All skill levels welcome!

We'd be honored to have you join us on a super rad Onewheel adventure. It's been so much fun working on this over the past few years, and we've only gotten better.

If you're interested or want to learn more, shoot an email to [madventuresexperts@gmail.com](mailto:madventuresexperts@gmail.com)

We'll be appearing as sponsors at Stokebird, Shredfest, and Lemonade Float Fest, so come find us and say whats up!

Also, please check out my website - it's taken 2 years of Canva memberships and button mashing to get it to this level https://madventuresonewheel.my.canva.site/

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:56
  • Ice dance duo give US early lead in the team event

  • Alysa Liu places second in women’s short program

  • Vance and Rubio in attendance for opening session

The United States seized early control of the Olympic figure skating team event after Friday’s opening day on the southern outskirts of Milan, powered by a world’s best score this season from Madison Chock and Evan Bates.

The three-time world champions, together on skates since 2011 and married since 2024, set the marker with 91.06 points for their program to music by The Guess Who and Lenny Kravitz, earning the maximum 10 points for an American team entering the Winter Games on a tailwind of hype.
Chock and Bates, nearly unbeatable since finishing fourth in the individual ice dance event at the Beijing Games four years ago, skated with the precision and polish that have defined their rise to the top of the sport.

Continue reading...

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:56
Gripthane grip tape in full swing

These things are a beautiful

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:36

Obsbot calls the Tiny 3 and Tiny 3 Lite pan-tilt-zoom webcams "Tiny Titans." It's not wrong.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:34

German newspaper Bild reported in January that some ski jumpers have been injecting their penises with hyaluronic acid ahead of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics -- the theory being that temporarily enlarged genitalia would yield looser-fitting suits when measured by 3D scanners, and those looser suits could act like sails to produce longer jumps. A study published last October in the scientific journal Frontiers found that a 2cm suit change translated to an extra 5.8 metres in jump distance. No specific athletes have been accused. The World Anti-Doping Agency said Thursday it would investigate if presented with evidence, noting its powers extend to banning practices that violate the "spirit of sport." The claims arrive as ski jumping already faces scrutiny -- two Norwegian coaches and an equipment manager received 18-month bans in January for illegally manipulating suit stitching.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:30

A library in rural Alaska needed help providing free Wi-Fi and getting kids to read. A children’s museum in Washington wanted to expand its Little Science Lab. And a World War I museum in Missouri had a raft of historic documents it needed to digitize. They received funding from a little-known federal agency before the Trump administration unsuccessfully tried to dismantle it last year.

The Institute of Museum and Library Services is now accepting applications for its 2026 grant cycle. But this time, it has unusually specific criteria.

In cover letters accompanying the applications, the institute said it “particularly welcomes” projects that align with President Donald Trump’s vision for America.

These would include those that foster an appreciation for the country “through uplifting and positive narratives,” the agency writes, citing an executive order that attacks the Smithsonian Institution for its “divisive, race-centered ideology.” (Trump has said the museum focused too much on “how bad slavery was.”) The agency also points to an executive order calling for the end of “the anti-Christian weaponization of government” and one titled Making Federal Architecture Beautiful Again.

The solicitation marks a stark departure for the agency, whose guidelines were previously apolitical and focused on merit.

Former agency leaders from both political parties, as well as those of library, historical and museum associations, expressed concern that funded projects could encourage a more constrained or distorted view of American history. Some also feared that by accepting grants, institutions would open themselves up to scrutiny and control, like the administration’s wide-ranging audit of Smithsonian exhibits “to assess tone, historical framing and alignment with American ideals.”

The new guidelines are “chilling,” said Giovanna Urist, who served as a senior program officer at the agency from 2021 to 2023. “I think that we just need to look at what’s happening with the Smithsonian to know that the administration has a very specific goal in mind when it comes to controlling the voice of organizations and museums across the country.”

An agency spokesperson told ProPublica it is not unusual for the institute to publish directors’ letters with grant applications, and that this one informs readers “about this Administration’s thematic emphases in the semi-quincentennial year.” He did not comment on criticisms that those letters insert political themes into a historically nonpartisan program.

“Under President Trump’s leadership, IMLS is working to revitalize our cultural institutions, urging less traditional applicants to consider working with us, and to promote civic pride and a deep sense of belonging among all Americans,” he said, adding that any institution that “meets programmatic requirements and goals” outlined in the funding opportunity “will receive all due consideration and undergo peer review.”

The spokesperson did not say how alignment with Trump’s executive orders would be weighed in the selection process or address concerns about the administration’s intrusion into funded institutions.

Established in 1996, the institute is the only dedicated source of federal support for libraries and one of the primary federal funders of museums and archives. Its long-running grant programs promote community engagement and public access to information, while bolstering institutions’ ability to care for collections and prepare for disasters. One grant, named after former first lady Laura Bush, helps recruit and train library professionals.

Last March, Trump attempted to eliminate the agency through an executive order and fired director Cyndee Landrum, a career library professional. Attorneys general from 21 states and the American Library Association sued the Trump administration to block it from dismantling the agency; the courts have halted the efforts for now.

To head the agency, the administration appointed Deputy Secretary of Labor Keith E. Sonderling, who does not appear to have prior professional experience in museums or libraries. (An institute spokesperson didn’t comment on concerns ProPublica passed along about this.) In a press release announcing his appointment as acting director, Sonderling said, “We will revitalize IMLS and restore focus on patriotism, ensuring we preserve our country’s core values, promote American exceptionalism and cultivate love of country in future generations.”

Ten days later, he put nearly all of the agency’s 75 employees on administrative leave, fired the board and rescinded some previously awarded grants.

The grants were reinstated under court order in December, and the agency is now accepting applications for 13 grants whose awards range from $5,000 to $1 million. According to Grants.gov, the agency now expects to award nearly 600 grants totaling more than $78 million.

ProPublica spoke with directors who ran the agency under every previous presidential administration dating back to Barack Obama’s. Though each era brought different priorities, they said, those changes were implemented with input from the field — not by encouraging applicants to align their work with a president’s worldview. With the new guidelines, they said, the administration is signaling a preference for certain types of projects and narratives.

Crosby Kemper III, a lifelong conservative Republican appointed by Trump to lead the agency in 2019, stayed on into President Joe Biden’s term. While he was not a fan of the former president’s emphasis on diversity, equity and inclusion and feels that the library and museum fields needed a course correction from their natural lean to the left, he believes that what is coming out of the current Trump administration is not helpful.

“All these Trump executive orders — and I mean all of them — are just extensions of his own animus towards anybody who disagrees with him and his outsized ego,” said Kemper, who called the orders “nonsense” and the grant guidelines “horrific.” “It’s clear the administration wants a whitewashed story, if you’ll pardon the pun there. And that’s wrong.”

Leaders of the American Historical Association, the American Library Association and the American Alliance of Museums warned that changes to the agency’s grant language and recent funding actions have led to uncertainty across the field.

Among questions raised: Would the government revoke grants it had already awarded, as it did last year? Would accepting the money open up institutions to broader investigations, like the 52 universities scrutinized over their DEI practices? The institute spokesperson did not comment on either of those questions. Sarah Weicksel, the American Historical Association’s executive director, said institutions are even worried about how they would be perceived if they took the funds. “They’re wondering, is accepting the grant a sign that they accept the executive orders that have been laid out here?”

Questions also remain about whether enough staff is left to process the applications properly. The agency’s $112 million budget for this year is roughly a third of the funding it has received in recent years. The agency did not answer a question about its current staffing, but in its most recent Congressional Budget Justification document, it requested support for 13 full-time employees. Former agency officials said that number is low, but that they trusted the remaining staffers to choose quality projects and, in the words of Kemper, “do the right thing.”

But staffers are only part of the process. Typically, each grant application is reviewed by volunteer library and museum experts. Susan Hildreth, who led the agency from 2011 to 2015, questions the lack of information about the current process on the agency’s website. “I couldn’t find it anywhere in the documentation,” she said. The institute spokesperson said the grant process remains the same as previous years.

Opinion polls consistently find that libraries and museums are among the most trusted public institutions in the country by Americans across the political spectrum, and Urist said they are trusted because of their independence. “When the federal government puts its thumb on that scale, it threatens the trustworthiness of these community anchors.”

Weicksel said it’s important for the public to know how the administration is aiming to shape institutions essential to the nation’s culture and ability to understand itself and its past. Patty Gerstenblith, distinguished research professor of Law at DePaul University, agreed, saying that the administration’s actions raise serious First Amendment concerns.

“Certainly at a minimum,” Gerstenblith said, “people should know that the government is using its funding as a way of essentially coercing a different presentation of American history.”

The post Grant Guidelines for Libraries and Museums Take “Chilling” Political Turn Under Trump appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:28

This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Milan on Friday to oppose the presence of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and the closure of schools and streets in the city ahead of the opening ceremony of the Milano Cortina Winter Games.

Reuters reported that protesters – mostly students with signs reading “ICE out” – assembled in Piazzale Leonardo da Vinci, in front of a building of the Politecnico University in the eastern part of the city.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:25

UK’s research funding body says best scientists are taking posts overseas due to lack of job stability at home

Hundreds of early career researchers have warned the UK will lose a generation of scientists after the announcement of significant cuts to physics projects and research facilities.

Scientists working in particle physics, astronomy and nuclear physics have been told their grants will be cut by nearly a third, with project leaders asked to report back on how their research would fare with cuts up to 60%.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:21

Noel Gallagher and Harry Styles lead way, and sales of jeans in general rise faster than wider fashion market

The UK was one of Levi’s fastest-growing markets last year as British trend leaders from Harry Styles to Noel Gallagher and Grime Gran were spotted in the brand’s kit.

Lucia Marcuzzo, the managing director of the European operations at the US company famous for its denim jeans, said the revival of 1990s trends had boosted sales of its classic 501s. New trends such as baggy jeans and cinch styles, which can be adjusted around the waist, had also helped, as denim has found its way back into wardrobes.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:06

This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here

It is the first time the US and Iran have sat down for face-to-face negotiations since June last year, when Israel launched attacks on Iran that sparked a war marked by tit-for-tat airstrikes, with the US also joining the fray. It effectively ended the US-Iran talks that were held in the weeks prior to the conflict aimed at reaching a nuclear peace agreement.

More recently, Donald Trump has been threatening to strike Iran for more than a month and just last week warned that an “armada” of US warships had reached the Persian Gulf. This recent clash began after Trump said he would strike Iran if it killed protesters during mass antigovernment demonstrations that swept the country last month. Human rights groups say thousands of people were killed during the brutal government crackdown on those protests.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:02

A new look for a futuristic foldable PJ.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:00

A crypto startup founded by Trump’s family signed a huge deal with the UAE president’s brother. Where’s the political fallout?

Days before Donald Trump returned to office in January 2025, an investment firm controlled by a senior member of the United Arab Emirates royal family secretly signed a deal to pay $500m to buy almost half of a cryptocurrency startup founded by the Trump family. Under any other president, such an arrangement, which was revealed this past weekend by the Wall Street Journal, would cause a political earthquake in Washington. There would be demands for an investigation by Congress, televised hearings and months of damage control.

But this latest example of corruption involving Trump and his family business hardly made a blip over the past few days, relegated to a passing headline in a relentless news cycle often dominated by Trump’s actions and statements.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 10:00

Billie Eilish and Biebers wore ‘ICE out’ pins at the Grammys, as more and more celebrities find their political voices

The red carpet is being used increasingly as a platform for protest – and one accessory in particular has become key: the pin badge.

At Sunday night’s Grammy awards, stars including Hailey and Justin Bieber and Billie Eilish wore black and white pins that read “ICE out”, a condemnation of the recent actions of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:57

Police investigating whether blast that injured at least 169 at Friday prayers in Islamabad was suicide attack

An explosion has ripped through a Shia mosque on the outskirts of Pakistan’s capital during Friday prayers, killing 31 people and injuring at least 169 others, according to officials. Police said they were investigating whether the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.

There were fears the death toll from the blast at the Khadija al-Kubra mosque in Islamabad could rise as some of the injured were reported to be in a critical condition. Television footage and social media images showed police and residents transporting the injured to nearby hospitals.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:57

Africa Aware: Financing Africa’s development Audio thilton.drupal

In this episode, guests discuss solutions to Africa’s debt challenges, innovative financing mechanisms, and strategies for ensuring long-term economic sustainability and growth.

The IMF’s economic outlook for Africa in 2026 points to an average GDP growth rate of 4.3 per cent – making it the fastest-growing region globally. In practice, however, per capita growth is far lower and various factors like persistent debt issues and a decline in official development assistance jeopardise this positive outlook. 

In this episode, guests Mavis Owusu-Gyamfi and Admassu Tadesse explore strategies to ensure sustained economic growth matching the promising outlook for the continent. They discuss untapped policy actions to spur economic transformation as well as the role of regional financial institutions to meet the needs of African countries shaping their development agendas. 

About Africa Aware 

Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole. 

You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 09:55

GRENOBLE, France and SHERBROOKE, Quebec, Feb. 6, 2026 — Quobly, a French pioneer in silicon-based quantum computing, has announced the opening of its Canadian subsidiary in Sherbrooke, Quebec. This strategic expansion aims to reinforce the company’s research capabilities, technology integration, and industrial partnerships in North America, within a region recognized for its excellence in quantum technologies.

Sherbrooke was chosen for its unique concentration of expertise in silicon spin qubits, advanced manufacturing and packaging technologies, and cryogenic infrastructure, key elements for the industrial-scale deployment of quantum processors.

Quobly will draw on the expertise of the Université de Sherbrooke and its Institut Quantique, particularly in quantum engineering training and research, as well as the infrastructures and technological platforms of the C2MI (Centre de collaboration MiQro Innovation).

The company also joins DistriQ, Quebec’s quantum innovation hub, which fosters synergies between academic research, technological development, and the training of industrial actors and end users.

This expansion will enable Quobly to develop structured collaborations around silicon quantum processor integration, cryo-electronics interfaces, and hardware-software co-design, in connection with Canadian academic, industrial, and applied partners, particularly within Montreal’s software and application ecosystem, recognized for its expertise in advanced computing and quantum technologies.

Accelerating the Execution of Quobly’s Industrial Roadmap

The opening of the Canadian subsidiary is a part of Quobly’s global strategy to industrialize silicon-based quantum computing, leveraging complementary ecosystems to those developed in Europe. It contributes to the company’s 2032 industrial roadmap, aiming to develop a fault-tolerant universal quantum computer with large-scale quantum processors capable of executing circuits of very high complexity.

Presence in North America will also strengthen interactions with high-performance computing (HPC), advanced electronics, and industrial quantum applications, in a context of accelerating hybrid approaches combining classical and quantum computing.

Growing the Team in Canada

Quobly, which currently employs over 80 people in Europe, plans to establish a local team in Canada and recruit around ten engineers and researchers over the next two to three years to support R&D activities, the integration of quantum technologies, and collaborative projects with academic and industrial partners.

“Sherbrooke offers an exceptional scientific and technological environment, perfectly aligned with our approach to silicon-based quantum computing,” said Maud Vinet, CEO and co-founder of Quobly. “This expansion allows us to strengthen our integration capabilities and accelerate the execution of our industrial roadmap in close collaboration with world-class partners.”

“Quobly’s arrival in Sherbrooke confirms the international attractiveness of Quebec’s quantum ecosystem,” said DistriQ CEO Michel Pioro-Ladrière. “It strengthens our positioning in industrial quantum technologies and advanced semiconductors.”

Hubert Bolduc, president of Investissement Quebec International, commented: “Quobly’s establishment in Quebec highlights the attractiveness of the ecosystem and our collective ability to support international companies as they transition from fundamental research to the industrialization of quantum technologies. Through its actions and those of the innovation zones, Investissement Quebec International actively contributes to structuring and promoting Quebec’s quantum ecosystem. The DistriQ innovation zone brings together a critical mass of academic, industrial and entrepreneurial players, and we are delighted to see Quobly’s expertise join this community”.

Strengthening Europe’s Quantum Technology Ecosystem

By combining semiconductor manufacturing expertise with advanced materials analysis, this collaboration contributes to the development of a robust European quantum industrial base. It demonstrates how cross-border partnerships between research organizations and industry leaders can help overcome technical bottlenecks and advance the industrialization of next-generation quantum processors.

More from HPCwire

About Quobly

Quobly is a pioneer in quantum microelectronics, developing silicon-based quantum chips using proven semiconductor manufacturing processes. Founded in 2022 in Grenoble, France, the company builds on over 15 years of collaborative research between world-class institutions CEA-Leti and CNRS, combining expertise in quantum physics and microelectronics. Co-founded by Maud Vinet, Ph.D. in quantum physics, author of 300+ papers and 70+ patents, and Tristan Meunier, a leading expert in semiconductor quantum engineering trained under Nobel laureate Serge Haroche, Quobly bridges science and industry to make quantum computing scalable and manufacturable.

The company has a strategic partnership with STMicroelectronics to accelerate the industrialization of its silicon quantum chips. In 2023, Quobly raised €19 million, a record European seed round for a quantum hardware startup, followed in 2025 by €21 million to advance its Q100T program, a key step toward fault-tolerant quantum computing. Quobly has offices in France, Singapore, and Canada.


Source: Quobly

The post Quobly Launches Canadian Subsidiary in Sherbrooke, Strengthening North American Presence appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 09:55

Feb. 6, 2026 — The 2nd International Workshop on Energy Efficiency with Sustainable Performance (EESP) will take place on June 26 at the ISC High Performance in Hamburg and is aimed at providing a framework for exchanging practical approaches, ideas, and techniques for energy efficiency when working with artificial intelligence and modern high-performance computer (HPC) setups.

Call for Papers

Anyone interested in the topic of energy efficiency and the event is warmly invited to send in their submissions by the deadline on March 1.

Your ideas will find a diverse and knowledgeable audience of system designers, operators, application developers, and researchers actively shaping energy-aware HPC and AI infrastructures. Submissions will be part of the ISC proceedings in Springer’s Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series and have a chance to win the best paper award, which will also be invited to publish extended versions in the International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications (IJHPCA).

The workshop is organized by General Chair Ayesha Afzal and her program co-chairs Natalie Bates/EE HPC WG, USA, Hatem Ltaief/KAUST, Saudi Arabia, and Bronis de Supinski/LLNL, USA.

Keynote Speech

The workshop will feature computer scientist Dr. John Gustafson, a pioneer in HPC and the mind behind Gustafson’s Law, as keynote speaker. He will be presenting the topic “Every Bit Counts: Posit Computing for Energy-Efficient HPC and AI,” providing a forward-looking perspective on numerical representations and their role in enabling sustainable exascale and AI systems.

Find out more about the workshop objectives, the submission guidelines, and a full abstract of the keynote speech at the official EESP page.

ISC High Performance 2026, June 22–26

ISC 2026 returns to the Congress Center Hamburg from June 22 – 26 for its 41st edition. Since its inception in 1986, it has been recognized as the world’s oldest and Europe’s most attended event for the HPC community, and increasingly for AI and quantum professionals interested in performance, energy efficiency, and cost-effectiveness.

More from HPCwire


Source: Erlangen National High-Performance Computing Center

The post ISC 2026: EESP Workshop Invites Papers on Sustainable AI and HPC Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:51

Don't miss cauldrons being lit in two different cities as Milan and Cortina are set aglow this year.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:48

From a £149 John Lewis version to LA’s gorpcore take, the ‘good intention’ bag is intended to look good but hold more

It’s not a multi-thousand pound handbag from Hermès that best captures the new era of It bags, but a £149 tote from John Lewis.

Launched this season, it’s deeper (45cm) and taller (33cm) than your average handbag, and comes loaded with good intentions. It’s able to hold your packed lunch, flask and book, as well – at a push – as your gym kit. The high street retailer is calling it the Intentional tote bag.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:31

After weeks of breakup talk, the Bucks and their superstar stayed together. The Knicks and Timberwolves, meanwhile, made smart additions

It’s hard to match the absolute insanity that was the 2024-25 NBA trade deadline, and to the majority of the league’s credit, teams didn’t really try. But there was still some notable movement ahead of Thursday’s 3pm EST deadline – to varying degrees of success. Let’s do the early assessment of who came out on top, and who left us scratching our heads.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:31

TikTok's endless scroll of irresistible content, tailored for each person's tastes by a well-honed algorithm, has helped the service become one of the world's most popular apps. Now European Union regulators say those same features that made TikTok so successful are likely illegal. From a report: On Friday, the regulators released a preliminary decision that TikTok's infinite scroll, auto-play features and recommendation algorithm amount to an "addictive design" that violated European Union laws for online safety. The service poses potential harm to the "physical and mental well-being" of users, including minors and vulnerable adults, the European Commission, the 27-nation bloc's executive branch, said in a statement. The findings suggest TikTok must overhaul the core features that made it a global phenomenon, or risk major fines. European officials said it was the first time that a legal standard for social media addictiveness had been applied anywhere in the world. "TikTok needs to change the basic design of its service," the European Commission said in a statement.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:30

Nintendo’s monster-collecting franchise was pilloried as a ‘pestilential Ponzi scheme’ in the 90s. But as its celebrates its 30th birthday, it now stands as a powerful example of video games’ ability to connect people

When I was 11, it was my dream to compete in the Pokémon World Championships, held in Sydney in 2000. I’d come across it in a magazine, and then earnestly set about training teams of creatures, transferring them between my Pokémon Red Game Boy cartridge and the 3D arenas of Pokémon Stadium on the Nintendo 64. I never made it as a player but I did finally achieve this dream on my 26th birthday, when I went to Washington DC to cover the world championships as a journalist. I was deeply moved. Presided over by a giant inflatable Pikachu hanging from the ceiling, the competitors and spectators were united in an unselfconscious love for these games, with their colourful menageries and heartfelt messaging about trust, friendship and hard work.

It is emotional to see the winners lift their trophies after a tense final round of battles, as overwhelmed by their success as any sportsperson. But it’s the pride that the smaller competitors’ parents show in their mini champions that really gets to me. During the first wave of Pokémania in the late 90s, Pokémon was viewed with suspicion by most adults. Now that the first generation of Pokémaniacs have grown up, even becoming parents ourselves, we see it for what it is: an imaginative, challenging and really rather wholesome series of games that rewards every hour that children devote to it.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 09:00

PC; Edmund McMillen and Tyler Glaiel
This mischievous roguelike escapade featuring utterly fiendish felines is compelling, and impressively tasteless

You know that old saying about cats having nine lives? Well, as far as Mewgenics is concerned, you can forget it – and you can also forget the idea that a game about cats has to be in any way cute. These kitties are red in tooth and claw, prone to strange mutations, and strictly limited to just the one life, which often ends swiftly and brutally.

Such is the nature of roguelike, a format that has spawned some of the biggest indie hits of the past 20 years. In these games, failure is permanent; dying sends you back not to the last checkpoint but back to the beginning, the game reshuffling its elements into a new shape for your next run. And so it goes in Mewgenics. You gather a party of four felines and send them out on a questing journey, from which they return victorious or not at all.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:52

Feb. 6, 2026 — Boris Kiefer, New Mexico State University physics professor, is a co-principal investigator on a project to turn fundamental quantum science into practical technologies that could potentially enable new kinds of computing for certain problems and reduce the high energy costs associated with other quantum hardware systems.

Boris Kiefer, NMSU physics professor, and Melissa Coronado Arrieta, physics master’s student, are working on a Quantum Computing Applications of Photonics project to turn fundamental quantum science into practical tech. The project, led out of the University of New Mexico, was selected by the NSF National Quantum Virtual Laboratory to receive a two-year, $4 million grant. Photo credit: Sarah Kimmerly, NMSU.

The project led by the University of New Mexico is called “Quantum Computing Applications of Photonics (QCAP).” It is among four selected by the National Science Foundation National Quantum Virtual Laboratory (NSF NQVL) to receive a two-year, $4 million grant.

“The QCAP has tremendous potential,” Kiefer said. “I’m happy we were selected and that I’m part of a team that wants to make these transformations. Hopefully we get to a place where New Mexico can make a real difference in the quantum field.”

“This project will lead to innovation and the advancement of technology, which I am thrilled to be a part of,” said Melissa Coronado Arrieta, a physics master’s student working with Kiefer. “It has the potential to completely revolutionize computing as we know it and I’m excited to witness it.”

The collaboration brings together universities, national laboratories and the private sector. In addition to NMSU and UNM, the quantum photonics group includes the University of Virginia and the University of Maryland, with additional technical expertise from Sandia National Laboratories, Los Alamos National Laboratory and National Institute of Standards and Technology. Together, they’ll use the design phase of the program to define requirements for the quantum computing system, validate key components and map out ideas and targets for early applications of this technology.

“Because of the strangeness of the quantum rules, we might be able to do certain types of problems faster than with any classical computer,” said Kiefer, who is also one of two theoreticians on the project. “We’re talking about transformational changes. It is a fascinating journey to think about what light can do.”

Coronado Arrieta is working to bridge the algorithms and hardware on the project. She connects computing needs to engineering specifications, helping identify algorithms that can reliably run on QCAP-designed devices.

“My experience working on this project has been challenging, rewarding and exciting,” Coronado Arrieta said. “It pushes me to be better both personally and academically, since the topic is complex and counterintuitive at times. The potential this project has makes me excited for the future of science and my career.”

In many of today’s quantum computing platforms, the processor chip may be small, but the surrounding cryogenic infrastructure is not. Systems based on superconducting qubits, for example, typically operate at millikelvin temperatures inside dilution refrigerators, alongside extensive control and readout hardware.

“In many cryogenic quantum platforms, a large fraction of the operating cost is refrigeration,” Kiefer said. “This is where photons have a significant advantage.”

Because photonic qubits can be generated and manipulated without millikelvin cooling, the project can redirect effort from maintaining extreme cryogenic conditions toward tighter integration, higher stability, and better-performing hardware, while refining the algorithms and control software that run the system.

Beyond computing, photonic quantum technologies can also deliver near-term tools that plug into today’s security infrastructure. One such application is the ability to generate quantum random numbers.

“If you can generate random numbers that are truly unpredictable, it dramatically strengthens security,” Kiefer said.

Quantum random number generation relies on the inherently probabilistic nature of quantum measurements to produce high-quality random numbers. Implementing this capability into current systems could strengthen cryptographic key generation, providing more resilient security for financial transactions, satellite communications and other critical infrastructure.

More from HPCwire


Source: New Mexico State University

The post NMSU Participates in NSF-Backed Quantum Photonics Project Led by University of New Mexico appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:31

Lt. Gen. Vladimir Alekseyev, the deputy head of the GRU, Russia’s main foreign military intelligence agency, was targeted at his home in Moscow, officials said.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:21

Feb. 6, 2026 — The Dark Energy Survey (DES) recently published results that combine all six years of data collected from weak lensing and galaxy clustering probes – a first for the international collaboration that is mapping hundreds of millions of galaxies, detecting thousands of supernovae and analyzing patterns of cosmic structure that could reveal what is accelerating the expansion of the universe.

DES scientists surveyed a wide area of the sky from 2013 to 2019 using an extremely sensitive 570-megapixel digital camera built at Fermilab, the DECam. Credit: Reidar Hahn, Fermilab.

The Center for AstroPhysical Surveys (CAPS) led end-to-end data processing and archival for DES using the DES Data Management System at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. NCSA operated the data management and computing infrastructure that processed, quality-controlled and served the full DES imaging and catalog data set, enabling the creation of science-ready sky maps and cosmological measurements.

“Dark energy and the universe’s accelerating expansion sit at the boundary between what we can measure precisely and what we can explain,” said CAPS Director Joaquin Vieira. “Pinning down what is driving that acceleration would reshape our understanding of the universe’s fate and force revisions to the deepest laws that describe space, time and matter.

“The latest results from the Dark Energy Survey were enabled by CAPS leadership and NCSA’s data management and computing backbone.”

This new analysis from DES narrows the controls in modeling the behavior of the universe thanks to combining the data from four different probes: baryon acoustic oscillations, type-Ia supernovae, galaxy clusters and weak gravitational lensing. Scientists hope to use this research to explore various other models for phenomena in the universe, including dark energy and alternative gravity.

“The latest DES release emphasizes that the new constraints are tighter than prior DES analyses while remaining broadly consistent with earlier DES results,” Vieira said. “It frames the methodology as a template for next-generation surveys such as the U.S. National Science Foundation and Department of Energy’s Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time.”

CAPS connects data infrastructure expertise at NCSA to astrophysics teams at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and supports the people and workflows that turn survey-scale data into science results. NCSA is a founding partner of the DES project, along with Fermilab and NOIRLab.

Find out more about the DES news in the announcement from Fermilab.


Source: Andrew Helregel, NCSA

The post NCSA, CAPS Power Dark Energy Survey’s Most Comprehensive Expansion History Analysis appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:17

Experts identify potentially serious breaches over treatment of people and call for ‘one in, one out’ scheme to end

The UN has called on the UK and France to halt the controversial “one in, one out” asylum system, warning there could be “serious violations of international human rights law”.

Nine experts, including seven special rapporteurs, wrote a 20-page letter to Downing Street and Paris on 8 December 2025 outlining detailed concerns about potential breaches of human rights they had identified in the scheme. They gave the two governments 60 days to respond and on Friday published their letter.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:13

The launch of the next $600 iPhone might not follow last year's playbook.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:12

I was recently presented the opportunity to buy something called a One Wheel XR Growler on FB Marketplace. I am brand new to the one wheel community haven’t heard of that model on the website. What am I even looking at, and what should I know about it as a first time buyer? Any help is appreciated.

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2026-02-06 12:04
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Rodney Esser, 86, spent most of his life on or near the Wisconsin land where the school sits. He got his job as a part of the land sale in 1964.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 08:33

Spain and Portugal hit with torrential rain while flash floods in Morocco force more than 100,000 people to evacuate

The Iberian peninsula has been placed under severe weather alerts as Storm Leonardo continues to batter parts of Spain and Portugal with torrential rain and strong winds.

Since Tuesday, the slow-moving system has brought widespread disruption, flooding and evacuations. In Grazalema, in southern Spain, more than 700mm of rain has fallen since Wednesday, roughly equivalent to the country’s average annual rainfall.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-08 03:00

This is what you need to know about when the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics start and end, along with key games and events on the schedule.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-07 19:21

Savannah's Guthrie's mom, Nancy Guthrie, went missing over the weekend, and authorities have still not identified a possible suspect or person of interest.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:00

Turning Point USA is plotting its own half-time show in defiance of Bad Bunny – but one of TV’s Blackest programs already perfected the alt-cast in 1992

When the NFL announced Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny as this year’s Super Bowl half-time show headliner, it walked right into a culture war. Right-wing critics raged over the musician’s gender-nonconforming style, Spanish-language music and anti-Maga politics. Donald Trump, after saying he had never heard of Bad Bunny, called the headlining choice “absolutely ridiculous”.

In response, Erika Kirk and her Turning Point USA conservative advocacy group turned the controversy into its own counter-programming event: the All-American Halftime Show. After its Nashville-heavy lineup, led by Kid Rock, was announced on Monday, vice-president JD Vance was first among conservatives to enthusiastically spread the word.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:00

The Barbz have built a parasocial relationship with the rapper – in some cases to their own detriment

Nicki Minaj is back doing PR for Donald Trump, and it’s messier than ever. Last week, she appeared at a treasury department summit in Washington DC to show support for Trump accounts, a new kind of investment account designed to “provide eligible American children with tax-advantaged investment accounts courtesy of President Donald J. Trump”, according to a government website.

The most disappointing part of the rapper’s recent turn toward Maga, though, is how her stans – a significant portion of whom are Black and queer – are responding. After the summit, Minaj’s followers defended her online and even helped push Trump’s agenda. “In a society full of hate and division, supporting Nicki Minaj is reminding people to see past political differences and see the human in one another,” one supporter wrote. Oh brother. Minaj is a perfect example of the cult of celebrity, the dangers of modern fan culture and how celebrity worship can intersect with politics in truly dangerous ways.

Tayo Bero is a Guardian US columnist

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:00

Using a VPN on your Android device can help you keep your online activity private, stream geo-restricted content and bypass throttling from anywhere.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 08:00

Commentary: I know exactly what Samsung needs to do to make its next Ultra phone better than ever.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:54

A simple factory error in China has created a viral sensation, with millions in Asia welcoming the Year of the Horse with a frown.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:51

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused Ukraine of trying to "disrupt the negotiation process" searching for an end to the war.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:48

Ben Wegg-Prosser resigns from Global Counsel as emails show Epstein’s help was sought in setting up the company

A former No 10 aide has quit as chief executive of the influential lobbying firm he co-founded with Peter Mandelson following revelations from the Jeffrey Epstein files.

Ben Wegg-Prosser stepped down on Friday as the head of Global Counsel after emails revealed the extent to which he and Mandselson had involved the convicted child sex offender when they were setting up the company in 2010.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:42

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news


Silver is also looking very volatile.

The spot price of silver tumbled by 19% yesterday, hot on the heels of its 27% plunge on 30 January.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 07:39

We want to hear how the fall in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and ether are impacting people

Bitcoin sank to its lowest value in more than a year this week, faling to $63,000 on Thursday, about half its all-time peak of $126,000 in October 2025

It’s part of a wider shock to crypto prices. The second-largest cryptocurrency, ether, has faced losses of more than 30% this year alone.

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2026-02-06 08:04
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Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced a sweeping plan to shore up the country's auto industry and accelerate its electric vehicle transition, the latest in a series of moves to reduce Canada's deep economic dependence on the United States as American tariffs continue to batter the sector. The plan includes financial incentives for carmakers to invest in Canada, a new tariff credit scheme for manufacturers like General Motors and Toyota, and the reintroduction of EV buyer rebates. Canada will also enact stricter vehicle emissions standards and has set a goal of EVs comprising 90% of car sales by 2040. Carney at the same time scrapped a 2023 EV sales mandate introduced by former PM Justin Trudeau that automakers had called too costly. The announcements follow a deal last month with China to ease tariffs on Chinese EVs and an agreement with South Korea to encourage Korean car manufacturing in Canada. Roughly 90% of Canadian-made vehicles are exported to the US, and thousands of auto workers have lost their jobs since Trump imposed 25% tariffs on Canadian cars and parts last year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:26

Officials say a suicide bomber blew himself up at the gates of a Shiite mosque in Islamabad, killing dozens of people during Friday prayers.

2026-02-06 08:04
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Team USA star skier Lindsey Vonn takes part in her first training session at the Winter Olympics, battling a serious injury two days before her first event.

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Charles "Sonny" Burton was convicted as an accomplice in the shooting death of Doug Battle, a customer who was killed during a robbery of an auto parts store.

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The Leonard L. Williams Justice Center in Wilmington is pictured in April 2024. It is home to the Delaware Court of Chancery.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Last month, Gov. Matt Meyer proposed a nearly $7 billion dollar package for the 2027 fiscal year that included fee increases on businesses that make up the state lucrative corporate franchise. While it remains to be seen just how much of Meyer’s proposal will be kept intact by the legislature, lawmakers on Wednesday appeared supportive of the measures which help to defray taxes for residents.

Delaware’s golden goose will likely become even more lucrative later this year. 

Gov. Matt Meyer’s proposed budget includes increases in the annual fees paid by limited liability companies and other types of Delaware businesses that are not corporations. It also calls for an increase in the fees to businesses that seek expedited services from the state.

The increases, which would not impact the taxes paid by corporations, would result in an extra $81 million to the state’s General Fund during the next fiscal year. The $2 billion corporate franchise system in Delaware, which largely serves out-of-state businesses with legal services, is a major driver for the state’s lower cumulative tax burden on residents.

During a budget hearing with lawmakers Wednesday, Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez said the annual fee increases are targeted at “alternative entities,” such as LLCs, general partnerships, and limited partnerships. Those businesses typically account for more than 75% of the more than two million Delaware companies that exist. 

Currently, owners of LLCs pay $300 a year to keep the entity active within Delaware’s system – a fee that hasn’t changed in a decade. The Meyer administration is proposing to increase the fee by about $50.

Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez | PHOTO COURTESY OF STATE OF DELAWARE

Fees paid by such businesses contribute to an outsized amount of money that the Delaware Division of Corporation sends each year to the state’s General Fund, which pays for everyday government operations, such as schools.

Last year, that figure was a hefty $2.1 billion, Patibanda-Sanchez told lawmakers on Wedensday. 

“I am really happy to report, after one year, we still are the corporate capital of the world,” she said. 

The secretary of state’s comments come a year after Tesla CEO Elon Musk led a vocal campaign that called on business leaders to reincorporate their companies out of Delaware. While several high-profile companies, such as Coinbase and Dropbox, followed the call, others that threatened to, such as Meta, have remained in the state. 

Most of the millions of companies that are domiciled in Delaware — from Meta to shell LLCs — do not have a physical presence in the state. Instead, they maintain a legal presence, through a third-party registered agent, that subjects them to Delaware ‘s corporate laws.

Asked by State Sen. Eric Buckson (D-Dover South) whether Delaware suffered a loss last year of “big fish” companies, Patibanda-Sanchez said there are now more large corporations domiciled in Delaware than there were last year. The biggest corporations in Delaware pay a hefty franchise tax of $250,000 to the state.

Later in the budget hearing, State Sen. Darius Brown (D-Wilmington) asked Patibanda-Sanchez whether Delaware should increase business fees even more. In response, the secretary of state said she did not want to increase costs on LLCs, noting that it is the entity type that several small business owners chose to operate under.

“The other fees absolutely we can discuss more,” she said during the hearing. “Again, we don’t like to shock our customers. We have 2.2 million of them.”

The fee increases for LLCs and other smaller companies are part of Meyer’s $6.9 billion budget proposal. During a press conference to unveil the proposal last month, Meyer and his staff said the budget includes what he called “targeted” cuts that would dig the state out of a roughly $500 million deficit caused by the inflationary pressures from health care spending and employee salaries.  

Meyer’s budget also includes a handful of revenue increases, such as upward bumps in the state’s cigarette tax and in the business fees.

The post Delaware could increase fees on its $2B corporate franchise appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 07:12

Every model of Apple Watch got an update this year, but how are they different? We look at all the specs.

2026-02-06 08:04
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Kennedy later said the purpose of his trip had nothing to do with vaccines. US embassy and UN staff at the time said otherwise, emails show

Over two days of questioning during his Senate confirmation hearings last year, Robert F Kennedy Jr repeated the same answer.

He said the closely scrutinized trip he took to Samoa in 2019, which came ahead of a devastating measles outbreak, had “nothing to do with vaccines”.

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2026-02-06 16:04
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What Nouri al-Maliki’s prime minister bid tells us about Iraq Expert comment thilton.drupal

The surprise return of the controversial former leader has revealed that Iraq is still a US–Iran battleground.

Nouri al-Maliki

On 27 January, US President Donald Trump surprised many with a blunt warning on social media: if Iraq reinstated the veteran politician Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister, the US would withdraw its support. 

The public threat exposed a reality of foreign influence in Iraq that the country’s leaders insist they have left behind. Despite their claims of renewed sovereignty, marked by the end of the US troop presence and the UN mission last year, Iraq remains a battleground for US–Iran rivalry. 

When that contest intensifies, Iraq’s fragility is quickly exposed. This time, even as Tehran grappled with mounting domestic and regional pressures, it showed little sign of strategic fatigue, reacting swiftly to promote its preferred candidate in Baghdad.

Meanwhile Washington, which had appeared to be distracted on Iraq under a president prone to spectacle over strategy, has since scrambled to oppose al-Maliki and Iran’s influence. 

The return of al-Maliki? 

Al-Maliki’s re-emergence as a prime-ministerial candidate caught almost all Iraqi political actors off guard. He served as prime minister from 2006 to 2014, but had not since been seen as a viable candidate to return. Yet despite holding no formal office for more than a decade, al-Maliki has remained one of Iraq’s most influential political brokers, in a system where power is often exercised informally rather than through official institutions.

Al-Maliki was in office when Iraq lost nearly a third of its territory to the Islamic State in 2014, a collapse that ultimately forced his resignation. Many Iraqi and international observers trace ISIS’s rise to the sectarian policies his government was accused of pursuing against Sunni Arab communities in north-western Iraq. At the time, opposition to his return was underscored by a letter from Iraq’s Shia highest clerical authority in Najaf, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. 

Since regime change, Iraq’s elites have often favoured prime minister candidates who are weak, consensus figures, acceptable to all sides because they pose little threat to any of them. 

Following the November 2025 Iraqi elections, this was the expected outcome of the country’s long post-election government formation process. But in a sudden and unexpected turn in January 2026, al-Maliki emerged as a frontrunner after being endorsed by parts (but not all) of the ruling Shia Coordination Framework, within which al-Maliki divides opinion. While his candidacy remains unlikely to succeed, it threatens to upend convention and mark the return of a strong partisan prime minister. 

Tehran’s enduring hand 

Al-Maliki’s potential return also reflects Iran’s enduring influence in Iraq, even as Tehran faces mounting pressures at home and across the region. 

Since leaving office, al-Maliki has kept close relations with Iran. Among his final acts as prime minister in 2014 was the formalization of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), an umbrella organization of armed groups. Several of these groups, including Kataeb Hezbollah, maintain strong ties to Tehran. 

The proliferation of these armed groups has made someone like al-Maliki particularly valuable to Iran as it seeks to exert influence over a fragmented security landscape in Iraq. This is especially the case since the 2020 US assassination of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani and PMF leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in Baghdad, which removed two key power brokers who had attempted to maintain cohesion over the growing constellation of armed groups. 

For Tehran, Iraq is the most strategically valuable of the various conflict arenas where its influence and allied networks have eroded since 7 October 2023.  Iraq, which shares a long border with Iran, serves as a critical security buffer closely entwined with Iran’s own domestic stability. At a time when Tehran is battered by sanctions, Iraq also functions as an economic lifeline, offering access to trade, hard currency and channels through which sanctioned goods can still circulate. 

For these reasons, Iran cannot tolerate prolonged uncertainty or instability in Baghdad. This explains Tehran’s backing of al-Maliki. He is a trusted figure able to impose order on a system that Iran can no longer afford to leave in the hands of a weak, transitional leader who would need to learn the ropes. 

US caught off-guard?

Washington, by contrast, had largely allowed Iraq slip down its list of priorities. Working through the US Special Envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, the Trump administration directed its efforts on other areas including Israel-Palestine, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen. 

Amid a reduced focus on Iraq, in October 2025 the Trump administration appointed a close ally of President Trump, Mark Savaya, to serve as the US envoy to Baghdad. Savaya was still being orientated into the role and had not yet visited Baghdad since being appointed, leaving a vacuum of US presence, both during and after the November elections. 

Once it emerged that al-Maliki was a frontrunner to return as prime minister in the post-election government formation talks, Washington moved to re-engage. According to Reuters reports citing unnamed sources, Savaya was sidelined (reports that he initially denied) and Tom Barrack, the US Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy for Syria, added Iraq to his portfolio. Barrack and other US officials made a flurry of calls to senior Iraqi leaders to reiterate their opposition to ‘a government installed by Iran’, in reference to al-Maliki’s candidacy. 

A sobering reality

This episode has underscored a sobering reality for many Iraqis. The country has enjoyed relative calm in comparison to neighbouring states engulfed in conflict since 7 October. But this stability remains precarious. It rests on fragile foundations and a political system that is still fragmented and exposed to external influences.

Iran, for its part, has shown it retains the capacity to react quickly and shape outcomes in Iraq. As one senior Iraqi official told me: ‘Iran is not just one person – the supreme leader. It is a state of institutions. And those institutions are present in Iraq, as if nothing has changed.’

Washington, too, revealed the persistence of its leverage. For many Iraqis, the fact that a single social media post by a US president could recalibrate the political process was a stark reminder that their country lacks full sovereignty, notwithstanding official claims to the contrary.

What next?

Al-Maliki’s candidacy now appears unlikely to survive this convergence of internal and foreign pressures. Yet for Iraq’s fragile stability to endure, the government formation process must move swiftly, avoiding another year-long paralysis that followed previous elections. 

The next government will also have to confront its lack of full sovereignty, while continuing to keep Iraq insulated from the regional wars still raging around it. Failure to do so would expose the country to a series of mounting crises. 

Most prominent is the fallout from a renewed US–Iran confrontation. Any existential threat to the Islamic Republic would inevitably reverberate across Iraq, overwhelming a political system ill-equipped to manage the fallout. 

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-06 07:05

Founding of diplomatic outposts in Nuuk comes after US made efforts to secure control of Arctic island

Canada and France are to open diplomatic consulates in the capital of Greenland on Friday, showing support for their Nato ally Denmark and the Arctic island after US efforts to secure control of the semi-autonomous Danish territory.

Canada’s foreign minister, Anita Anand, was travelling to Nuuk to inaugurate the consulate, which officials say also could help boost cooperation on issues such as the climate crisis and Inuit rights. She was joined by Canada’s Indigenous governor general, Mary Simon.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:00

At its new Stone Mountain, Georgia, facility, Roomba-like robots shuffle between stacks, another adds shipping labels while another arranges packages in pallets

One of the reasons Amazon is spending billions on robots? They don’t need bathroom breaks. Arriving a few minutes early to the public tour of Amazon’s hi-tech Stone Mountain, Georgia, warehouse, my request to visit the restroom was met with a resounding no from the security guard in the main lobby.

Between the main doors and the entrance security gate, I paced and paced after being told I would have to wait for the tour guide to collect me and other guests for a tour of the 640,000-sq-ft, four-story warehouse.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 07:00

In Santa Clara, California, where nearly half of residents are born outside US, fear builds as game approaches

This weekend, tens of thousands of people will make their way to the Bay Area city of Santa Clara, ready to celebrate a weekend at the Super Bowl.

Beneath the jubilant mood, some residents and officials have been grappling with the possibility of ICE enforcement operations during the game, and taking steps to prepare.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 06:57

After years in a skiing rut, using Carv on my recent ski trip has reignited my passion for the sport and instilled a belief that I can actually improve.

2026-02-06 20:04
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Preliminary EU ruling says app shifts brains of users into ‘autopilot mode’, with concerns for children and vulnerable adults

TikTok could be forced into changes to make the app less addictive to users after the EU indicated the platform had breached the bloc’s digital safety rules.

The EU’s executive arm said in a preliminary ruling that the popular app had infringed the Digital Services Act (DSA) due to its “addictive design”.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 06:46

Luxury plane owned by Florida property tycoon has twice flown Palestinian men from Arizona to Tel Aviv, Guardian investigation shows. Plus, Democratic senator calls for national strike if Trump interferes with midterms

Good morning.

Palestinians arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were deported to the West Bank on a private jet owned by an ally of Donald Trump, a Guardian investigation revealed on Thursday.

Has Dezer’s jet been used for deportations before? Yes. According to Human Rights First, it made four “removal flights”, to Kenya, Liberia, Guinea and Eswatini, starting last October.

How has he responded? In an email, Dezer told the Guardian he was “never privy to the names” of those who travelled on his jet when it was privately chartered by Journey, or the purpose of the flight. “The only thing I’m notified about is the dates of use,” he said.

What does each side want? Washington wants to expand the negotiations to cover Iran’s ballistic missiles, support for the region’s armed groups and “treatment of their own people”, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has said. Tehran is seeking assurances that the US is not using the talks as a smokescreen to impose regime change.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 06:00

The Seahawks and Patriots are the last teams standing this season. The championship is likely to be decided by the smallest margins

The Seattle Seahawks’ run game came alive during the second half of the season and postseason. But it’s still the passing game that makes the offense sing. Almost all of that flows through Smith-Njigba.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 06:00

Fascism feeds on the arbitrary killings that have long plagued the US. Ending the horror starts with abolishing ICE

In a recent Saturday Night Live episode, when asked about Minneapolis, one of the white hosts intones: “Well, the first word that comes to mind is unprecedented. You’ve got federal officers roaming the streets just pulling people out of their cars based on how they look. This just doesn’t happen in America.” The joke is, of course, that “this” has been happening forever, but to Black people in America. Now that it is happening to others, and particularly now that white protesters are being killed in the streets, it is suddenly a national emergency.

In his 1955 work Discourse on Colonialism, Aimé Césaire, the French poet and politician, argues that fascism was the result of bringing to bear on domestic populations the tactics European countries used on their colonial subjects in Africa. This is what has been called in the literature the “imperial boomerang thesis”. As many have been pointing out on social media and elsewhere, if we think of the US Black American population as an internally colonized population, then you can see what is happening on the streets of Minneapolis as a manifestation of the imperial boomerang thesis.

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The right kitchen mixer makes cooking, baking and snacking a breeze. Here's a guide to the three most popular types and what each one does best.

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A new push to pass a GOP elections bill known as the SAVE America Act is underway in Congress, but Democrats warn the proposal could disenfranchise millions of eligible voters.

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The word “terrorist” wasn’t coined on September 11, 2001, but the defining event of the early 21st century ushered it in as the United States’ go-to term for demonizing outsiders and dissenters alike. The so-called “war on terror” transformed the way the U.S. wields power at home and abroad, enabling mass surveillance and a crackdown on the right to free speech. It became reflexive for the U.S. to disparage immigrants and protesters as supporters of terrorism.

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Trump Calls His Enemies Terrorists. Does That Mean He Can Just Kill Them?

President Donald Trump has embraced this model and manipulated it for his own ends, as author Spencer Ackerman points out. The Trump administration often peddles spurious accusations of terrorism against the targets of its immigration raids.

“There’s nothing about any of their action that’s remotely anything at all like terrorism,” Ackerman says. “But that is the fire in which ICE, CBP, and the Department of Homeland Security was forged. You are going to find this in its DNA.”

This week on the Intercept Briefing, host Jordan Uhl speaks with Ackerman, a leading expert on the concept of terrorism and its weaponization by the state. Ackerman’s 2021 book, “Reign of Terror, How the 9/11 Era Destabilized America and Produced Trump,” traces the legal and cultural evolution of the last 25 years, and how the boomerang has come back home.

“Before 9/11, not only was there no ICE, there wasn’t really much in the way of a robust internal mechanism for finding and deporting people who were in the country illegally. When it did exist, it was for people who were serious criminals, traffickers, and so on,” says Ackerman. Now, he says, the contemporary terrorism paradigm has transformed immigration enforcement into something “operating like a death squad.”

“What we are seeing on the streets of Minneapolis is what ICE has done to the undocumented for a very long time,” he says. “And now we’re seeing this happen to white people on the streets of Minneapolis for little more than filming ICE.” With the recent killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, “I worry that a tremendous amount of our political system is geared toward either, on the Republican side, rationalizing it, justifying it, or on the Democratic side, pretending as if this is some kind of abuse that can be exceptionalized, rather than something that has to do with this 25-year history of coalescing immigration enforcement in the context of counterterrorism.”

As Democrats in Congress struggle to leverage DHS funding for changes to ICE policy — like a ban on face masks for ICE agents, an idea on which they’ve already softened — Ackerman says the parallels with the early 2000s are clear.

“We can’t move in reformist directions when the thing talked about being reformed laughs at killing Americans,” advises Ackerman. “Reformist politics under two Democratic administrations got us to where we are now. These are accommodationist politics, and the thing being accommodated wants to kill you.”

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

Transcript 

Jordan Uhl: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jordan Uhl. 

If you didn’t recognize the voices, 2026 might not sound so different from the years following 2001. 

George W. Bush: We are on the offense against the terrorists on every battlefront, and we’ll accept nothing less than complete victory.

Donald Trump: These are paid terrorists, OK? These are paid agitators. 

Dick CheneyTerrorists remain determined and dangerous.

Kristi Noem: It was an act of domestic terrorism.

JD Vance: We’re not going to give in to terrorism on this. And that’s exactly what’s happening.

John Ashcroft: America has grown stronger and safer in the face of terrorism.

JU: In the wake of the September 11 attacks, the so-called war on terror transformed the way the United States enforced its laws and its priorities, both at home and abroad. The label “terrorist” became a catchall for a wide range of actors, and dissent against the Bush administration was often disparaged as support for terrorism. The USA PATRIOT Act codified a reduction in civil liberties in the name of protecting freedom.

Bush: As of today, we’re changing the laws governing information sharing. And as importantly, we’re changing the culture of our various agencies that fight terrorism. Countering and investigating terrorist activity is the number one priority for both law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

JU: The day he put his signature on the Patriot Act, President George W. Bush laid out how those new priorities would include a focus on immigrants. 

Bush: The government will have wider latitude in deporting known terrorists and their supporters.

JU: It was largely an era of political consensus. Both major parties lined up to support the Patriot Act and other legislation giving greater legal latitude to the government, from local police all the way up to the president. But even then, there were plenty of warnings that these powers would be abused and stretched far beyond their intended goals.

Supporters argued that there were backstops, like congressional oversight and international law, basic human decency and strategic restraint. But President Trump ignored and shattered so many of those long-standing norms. A glaring example is on display in the streets of U.S. cities right now.

ICE was a post-9/11 creation as part of the new Department of Homeland Security. In his book “Reign of Terror: How the 9/11 Era Destabilized America and Produced Trump,” author Spencer Ackerman traces the legal and cultural evolution of the last 25 years and how the boomerang has come back home.

Ackerman has reported from Iraq, Afghanistan, and many U.S. bases. He’s won a Pulitzer Prize and National Magazine Award, and currently writes for Zeteo and his own website, Forever Wars. Spencer, welcome to the Intercept Briefing. 

Spencer Ackerman: Thanks for having me back, Jordan. 

JU: So we’re talking 25 years now since 9/11. Many of our listeners — as well as working journalists, and even many people working on Capitol Hill right now — don’t have any living memory of that time. So can you start off by bringing us back to the days and weeks after September 11? President George W. Bush essentially had carte blanche to pass laws and change policy based on the notion that he was making Americans safer; that we had to clamp down and, in some cases, give up some of our freedoms to ensure security. With hindsight, what were the most significant aspects of the newly born war on terror that have a clear through line to today?

SA: Well, one that we saw just this week really take prominence is the Patriot Act, which among other things, enabled law enforcement to more seamlessly get “third-party records,” as they’re called — basically, customer accounts of records kept by some kind of service provider, financial records, internet records, and so on — without a judge’s signature or a finding of probable cause. It occurs instead through something called an administrative subpoena that the Patriot Act supercharged.

And we’re seeing just this week, there was a very good piece in the Washington Post laying out the exponential growth in administrative subpoenas being used by DHS in order to get records that would otherwise require a court order to collect.

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Now, when the Patriot Act passed, the idea was that this would be the FBI surreptitiously collecting information that would prevent terrorism and uncover active links to terror networks and so forth. There’s not really much of a record of it having done that — certainly not a public one. But it definitely didn’t envision what DHS is doing, which is harassing critics of ICE

Now, a ton of critics at the time, when the war on terror was coalescing, recognized and stated that this was going to be where the war on terror led. That it was going to become a war on dissent, that it was going to criminalize a tremendous amount of both politics in general but also resistance to itself — that we’re really seeing coalesce. 

For the purposes of what we’re tracking, what we also saw after 9/11, is a complete sea change in how America conducted its immigration affairs. Something that I think people probably don’t remember is that before 9/11, not only was there no ICE, there wasn’t really much in the way of a robust internal mechanism for finding and deporting people who were in the country illegally. When it did exist, it was for people who were like serious criminals, traffickers, and so on.

The Department of Homeland Security gets created after Bush’s attorney general, John Ashcroft, pretty much takes over immigration enforcement because ICE’s predecessor, Immigration and Naturalization Services, https://theintercept.com/2026/01/16/trump-abolish-ice-renee-good-jonathan-ross/is under his purview. And what he starts doing is using it to round up immigrants — not just Muslim immigrants, although there was an immediate outcry for a clamp-down on Muslim immigration, certainly. But it was a way of shoe-horning a gestating border hysteria on the far right that 9/11 gave a kind of new security context and accordingly opportunity to pursue.

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How Post-9/11 Visions of an Imperiled Homeland Supercharged U.S. Immigration Enforcement

Even then, the Bush administration did not wish to create a kind of agglutination agency that would kind of stick together all sorts of domestic security functions. That took the active intervention of moderate Democrats and some moderate Republicans, who were able to basically checkmate Bush over his concerns about such an agency being kind of too large for, you know, extent conservative perceptions of government using his own logic of counterterrorism. And there is really no way for Bush to argue himself out of that. So instead he accommodated himself to it.

But even then, ICE, when it starts, has only 2,700 agents. By 2008, that becomes 5,000. ICE’s budget until in something like 2016 was $6 billion. For a while in the intervening decade, it’s hovered around $10 billion. Trump has now made it $85 billion

This is an enterprise that operated fundamentally — well, I shouldn’t say fundamentally different. I don’t want to suggest that the INS was a benign agency, or that immigrant Americans didn’t fear INS, much as they would come to fear ICE. Just that there were constraints, both legal, budgetary, and from a political perspective, cultural, that constrained interior immigration enforcement. That doesn’t exist anymore. We have seen instead — to finish answering your question in a very long-winded way — a counterterrorism context transforms, in ways both direct and structural, the apparatus of American immigration to something that today is coalescing into something that I think we can see fairly clearly is on its way, if it’s not there already, into operating like a death squad.

JU: One thing we saw right away post-9/11 was the demonization of Arabs, Muslims, South Asians, or anyone remotely resembling any of those categories. What kind of connection can we make between the rhetoric and actions of that era with how otherization and fear is being wielded these days against immigrants and other populations?

SA: I see it as a rather straight line. The early years of the war on terror proved something that politicians, particularly in the Republican Party, but also in the Democratic Party, have been sort of chasing ever since to recover its potency — like chasing a high. And that’s that the politics of counterterrorism in the early 2000s — really persistent throughout, but especially in the early 2000s — completely deterred opposition, silenced dissent, and intimidated resistance. And it worked. It worked for a really long time. Eventually, it ceased working as well. But the fact that it worked can’t be overstated. Because politicians afterward, particularly when there has been no criminal liability or even significant political liability for the atrocities that result, accordingly seek to do what works. And this works extremely well.

“The politics of counterterrorism in the early 2000s … completely deterred opposition, silenced dissent, and intimidated resistance. And it worked.”

In a broad sense, one of the things that the war on terror did in particular to Muslims in this country was redefine terrorism away from being something that people throughout history have done across cultures, into “terrorism” is something that a certain kind of people are, and usually only them. That when people who do not look or worship like Muslims utilize violence for political purposes — that becomes defined as “counterterrorism.”

So there is a really, really firm connection in how we have seen not only the targets of ICE’s raids, since the Trump administration returned to power, be described as terrorists. But now people like Marimar Martinez in Chicago, Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota, when they’re shot — and in the case of Good and Pretti, killed — by ICE, ICE and the broader political structure calls them terrorists.

They have the first-mover communication choice of basically daring journalists, politicians, whomever to prove that they weren’t in fact terrorists. There’s nothing about any of their action that’s remotely anything at all like terrorism. But that is the fire in which ICE, CBP, and the Department of Homeland Security was forged. You are going to find this in its DNA.

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JU: As you wrote in your book, “Trump had learned the foremost lesson of 9/11: The terrorists were whomever you say they were.” And I’m curious about this seemingly expansive scope of this label. You’ve written about how the “terrorist” label has predominantly been used against people of color, while white people like Timothy McVeigh get different treatment, both linguistically and legally.

Do you think what we’re seeing in the Twin Cities is a significant development — the government calling white activists “terrorists” —and these are white people who present as average middle class, not so-called anarchists or “antifa.” Is this, in your mind, a significant shift in how the term “terrorist” is wielded and will be wielded? 

SA: Yes, absolutely. Minnesota is kind of the next stanza in the [Martin] Niemöller poem. The poem about, “First they came for…”

ICE and CBP have a very long history of acting lawlessly. The conditions of ICE prisons, many of which are operated as for-profit enterprises with detainees being paid a dollar a day, have often been shown to be both violent and deeply neglectful. I have a friend who contracted Covid at the ICE detention center in Batavia, New York, for instance.

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So what we are seeing on the streets of Minneapolis is what ICE has done to the undocumented for a very long time. What we saw in places like Portland in 2020, where, certainly in Portland, CBP tactical units, known as BORTAC, opened fire with less-lethal rounds on protesters outside the Hatfield building. That was what they were willing to do — similarly, lawlessly stuffing people into unmarked vans for detention and so forth — to people deemed enemies of the Trump administration.

And now we’re seeing this happen to white people on the streets of Minneapolis for little more than filming ICE. In Renee Good’s case, for possibly, slightly inconveniencing ICE vehicularly. And then, trying to comply with a contradictory order to get out of the way and then stay put, get outta the car, you know? And then with Alex Pretti — helping a woman up.

What we’re seeing is something we can’t turn away from, and I worry that a tremendous amount of our political system is geared toward either, on the Republican side, rationalizing it, justifying it, or on the Democratic side, pretending as if this is some kind of abuse that can be exceptionalized, rather than something that has to do with this 25-year history of coalescing immigration enforcement in the context of counterterrorism.

[Break]

JU: In some cities, we see different relationships between local law enforcement and federal agencies, and that’s been a contentious issue going back to the Joint Terrorism Task Forces enlisted during the height of the so-called war on terror. Now we hear more about the 287(g) agreements that are focused on giving immigration enforcement powers to local officers. Collaboration by city and county law enforcement agencies often depends on who’s in charge and sometimes local community influence. How has this idea transformed local law enforcement over the past 25 years — situating local police and sheriffs as partners in fighting a war, essentially? 

SA: First, in the literal sense, it deputizes local police into an immigration function. And the implications of that are both profound and subtle. Being undocumented in this country is a civil offense, not a criminal offense. And it’s a misdemeanor, it’s not a felony. So being undocumented in this country now all of a sudden becomes “law enforcement-related.” It becomes a matter that is quickly understood in a kind of everyday person’s sense of association as something that is being done by cops.

And so cops are going after criminals. They’re not going after someone who overstayed a work visa. The person who overstayed a work visa is presumed to have done so because they’re criminal. That is a profound shift that nativists 30 years ago could only have as the apple of their eye. That’s now normal in this country. 

Beyond that, beyond the kind of mimetic and cultural functions there, what the Department of Homeland Security’s relationship with local police over the vast majority of DHS’s existence was a patron-client relationship. There’s always been a lot of focus, and not inappropriately, on the [1033] Pentagon program that takes decommissioned military equipment and gives them to law enforcement. Appropriately so. 

“ There is not very much terrorism in the United States of America of the sort that DHS was created to redress.”

DHS’s grant programs to local law enforcement have always dwarfed them, in terms of budgetary capability. There is not very much terrorism in the United States of America of the sort that DHS was created to redress. However, DHS had a budget to give out to local law enforcement, you know, cop shops, that applied for grant money that it would have to disperse.

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The overall point is not only was DHS for such a long time a supplier of equipment that cops did not need for terrorism, but could find a whole lot of value out of when using against their existing tasks — which means, in a lot of cases, against the people it polices. But also, it accustomed police shops to look at DHS as a source of support that didn’t have to go through existing and potentially contentious budgetary processes locally that municipal, small-d democratic functions have power to effect. It’s not the most potent power. I’m telling you this from New York City where the NYPD has for a very long time been considered pretty much untouchable. But nevertheless, this is a more friction-free funding path than troublesome city councils. 

JU: And to continue this line of thought on weaponry, it’s one thing to have a heavily armed Border Patrol if they legitimately believe they may encounter a “violent drug cartel.” But the images we’re seeing of immigration agents in residential U.S. neighborhoods with body armor and advanced weaponry brings to mind the militarization of local police and federal agencies that’s taken place since 9/11.

You talked about the equipment, you’ve talked about the vehicles. There are local police departments with MRAPs. Across the board, top-down from federal agencies down to local, it feels like a war that’s literally everywhere. What’s been the arc of that evolution? 

SA: Markets for advanced military technology get spurred on by overseas war. Eventually, those wars draw down beyond the funding capabilities of those different technological production lines. Those different technological production lines will seek out derivative markets that they can use to keep making money. That has been local law enforcement, but before that, it’s been DHS.

Starting around the first Obama administration, DHS, particularly for the border, starts buying up a drone fleet. Then it starts buying up really powerful military-grade camera suites that had previously been developed for protecting U.S. bases in Iraq and Afghanistan. DHS buys this stuff. It provides funding for — as we were just talking about — local police agencies to eventually start buying other stuff that DHS has.

There’s no Gray Eagle-sized drone in police custody in the country yet. But we’ll talk in 10 more years, and we’ll see about that. DHS provides funding to get similar technologies, related technologies, and then it pushes what it currently has beyond the border into the interior of the country.

We should also mention that the border after 9/11 changes in important ways, where DHS — this is for the last 15 years at least been policy at CBP — the border is anywhere within 100 miles of a port of entry or exit. So if you’ve wondered, why is the Border Patrol in, you know, Charlotte, North Carolina, or Chicago or Minneapolis — that’s why. Because your sense of the border intuitively is not the U.S. government’s definition of the border.

Eventually we see this stuff move into the interior of the United States. The roundups, which had been there since at least 2005, become more ambitious, and they become, with the 287(g) program, involving local law enforcement as well as the Department of Homeland Security — and now increasingly toward critics of DHS itself.

I want to say one more thing about this. When we look at what ICE and CBP deploy with, in all of the cities that we’ve seen them invest since the second Trump administration — a common denominator has been they’re all wearing plate carriers. The stuff that says like police, ICE, and so forth, you know, the ballistic chest protection that they wear around them.

Marimar Martinez legally had a gun. She didn’t draw it; she kept it holstered in her car. They called her a domestic terrorist. Her hands were on the steering wheel when ICE shot her.

“ICE and CBP are posturing as if they are the ones under the threat, not that they are the threat themselves.”

Alex Pretti famously had a gun, not that he drew it on CBP. When they shot him, six of them shot this man who is completely not in any position to be threatening them. ICE and CBP are posturing as if they are the ones under the threat, not that they are the threat themselves.

All of this social media footage-ready imagery that they’ve been collecting and disseminating is what we should understand as a psy-op on the American people to make it think that these are a valorous Praetorian Guard that puts itself in danger constantly. Instead, they are the ones inflicting the danger on Americans, undocumented or citizens.

JU: Now we talked about this evolution — part of that is an expansive or unchecked legal infrastructure and framework that allows this. Over the past two decades-plus, were there moments when that infrastructure could have been dialed back or unraveled? Times when Trump wasn’t president? Did that happen to any extent? And if not, why not?

SA: There are many reasons to be deeply upset at the way the Obama and Biden administrations treated the institutions of the war on terror that they inherited. But really chief among them is the way that they embraced the existing structures of homeland security for use against immigrants.

Obama — famously the deporter in chief, always under pressure from his right to deport more. Obama famously makes the massive miscalculation that if he can just, you know, bolster resources for border protection, then he can buy goodwill on the right. This was just an epic political miscalculation that really everyone could have seen coming, and many did.

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Biden — 4.4 million deportations on his watch; Trump left office the first time at 1.5 million. After everything that we saw the Trump administration do the first time around, in particular with child separation, with raising the number of people in ICE custody to something like 50,000 a day — I don’t know if they’ve gotten back to that, if they’ve exceeded that by now or not. But I remember reporting on it at the time that it was in 2020, it had gotten up to, maybe a little before the pandemic, something like 50,000 a day. It was really astonishing.

But Biden famously tells his donors ahead of the election that they’re not gonna seek fundamental change. And I think that by the time the Biden administration takes office, the Democratic Party had successfully marginalized the voices that were calling, not just for pursuing once again, comprehensive immigration reform — which of course is stifled by the Republicans again and again and again — but to abolish ICE.

I think right now we are at, you know, years before a Democrat could theoretically take power. But we’re starting to see Democratic politicians go down the same very dangerous road along the politics of security that they’ve played not just during the Biden administration or the first Trump administration, but throughout the war on terror.

“Unless the nativist concept of the need for an interior deportation force is confronted root and branch, we are going to continue to see exactly what we are seeing.”

And they’re doing it with ICE now, which is we’re starting to hear people say things like, “This is not immigration enforcement.” It’s true. This is not what I think many people think of as immigration enforcement. But immigration enforcement is how we got to this point. And unless the nativist concept of the need for an interior deportation force is confronted root and branch, we are going to continue to see exactly what we are seeing. Not as a form of stasis, but as a form of ICE and CBP completing their transformation into a death squad.

And I use a very scary term because this is a very scary moment. But we also need to be really clear about what we are seeing ICE do and behave as. You mentioned it’s unwillingness to follow the law. In Minnesota, a judge found just before January of 2026 expired, around 100 violations of court orders about immigration and how ICE needed to behave, in just that month. How many gleeful videos do we have to see on our phone of ICE people telling Minnesotans to “fuck around and find out”? Beyond even just the actual murders and shootings — but the way that the CBP officers applauded after shooting Alex Pretti? The way Jonathan Ross, who murdered Renee Good, called her a “fucking bitch” after doing so? This is not something that can be reformed. The best time to abolish ICE was 2003. The second best time is today.

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Every single moment that we refrain from doing this, that Democratic politicians as well as Republican ones try and push it back to the margins of political discourse, is another day closer to the time that they’re going to shoot you, that they’re going to deport someone you love, and on and on and on.

“This is not something that can be reformed.

JU: There’s a sinister delight that we see time and time again from federal agents beyond the comments or behavior after both of those Minnesotans were killed. But we’ve seen many other videos of them wielding those incidents to other observers as threats. And to your point, that’s not something that you can fix with a sensitivity training. That is something ingrained in the culture. And I’m curious what could be done? It doesn’t seem like there’s a critical mass of Democrats willing to do that. Maybe there is and or maybe we might get to one, but that’s down the road. And you of course have the challenge of the current Supreme Court composition not wanting to challenge anything that Trump is doing meaningfully. So realistically, what can people hope for or work towards in terms of turning this imperial boomerang around? 

SA: First, the answer to how you stop the war on terror is not easy, but it is simple. And that’s organize. Force your politicians in an abolitionist direction; oust them when they won’t go in that direction. Organize so you can build power amongst like-minded people in your area, in order to produce that function. It’s awful that that’s where we kind of have to start from, but our leaders will not do this on their own.

Outside of that I would look to efforts that the Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner is building toward, in which he’s been talking about, however long it takes, prosecuting ICE and CBP agents for violating relevant local laws. And one of the main lessons of the war on terror is that without legal consequence for one era’s atrocity, the next is foreordained.

So until ICE killers and CBP kidnappers alike go to prison, we can expect them to continue their behavior. This is why JD Vance and Stephen Miller have started deceitfully talking about absolute immunity for ICE after they killed Renee Good.

“Until ICE killers and CBP kidnappers alike go to prison, we can expect them to continue their behavior.”

Krasner has been hinting that there is a kind of impromptu coalition of like-minded district attorneys and perhaps state attorneys general that are seeking to go in this direction. That will either act as a deterrent, or it won’t. Here in New York, the attorney general, Letitia James, announced that she’s going to start sending observers from her office out on ICE-related operations in and around the state. That carries with it a suggestion of prosecutorial intervention. I think that’s going to be a crucial step. But it’s a step that is going to have to come in supplement, with people finding political outlets for an explosion in popularity — justifiably so, in my opinion — for abolishing ICE. 

We can’t move in reformist directions when the thing talked about being reformed laughs at killing Americans. This is something that has to be uprooted and replaced, or just simply not replaced at all, if we don’t think certain functions that they perform are legitimate functions, which I think is a very, you know, reasonable conclusion. Reformist politics under two Democratic administrations got us to where we are now. These are accommodationist politics, and the thing being accommodated wants to kill you.

JU: My final question for you, Spencer, is where does this go over the next three years if nothing happens? If there is no restraint, if there is no change, if there is no reform. That is certainly an uphill fight. Nothing could potentially happen until at least after midterms, but we’ve seen Trump’s priorities laid out in places like Project 2025, and I can’t imagine this is their end game. So if left untouched, where does this go over the next three years? 

SA: We’ve been seeing reporting from Ken Klippenstein and others about how ICE is accessing existing, widely revealing, databases of Americans’ information, building others. We saw in the beginning of the Trump administration, the massive data-snatching grabs involving DOGE that have also accumulated a tremendous amount of revealing information on Americans. This is also, I would suggest, the predictable course of the surveillance state after 9/11. These massive and revealing data sets will go into ICE custody, probably through tools purchased from Palantir, to get an ever more refined picture of terrorism in the United States. Except by terrorism, they mean you and me. They will mean people that they can consider internal dissenters, critics, obstacles to the continued operations of ICE, and like-minded allied federal agencies.

“It might not be long before we see a drone strike in an American city. And I can’t stop thinking about that.”

This, I think, is probably coming sooner than three years. Not to sound alarmist, but the current trajectory of this is really, really ominous. And that is an extremely realistic possibility. Your friend and mine, Derek Davison of the American Prestige podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/american-prestige/id1574741668a couple months ago, was predicting that it might not be long before we see a drone strike in an American city. And I can’t stop thinking about that. And I wish I could say I found that an outlandish possibility. But the crucial framework for that was laid when the Obama administration decided that they could execute an American citizen, Anwar al-Awlaki, without any kind of criminal process, let alone a conviction, because it would be too inconvenient to send a team of CIA operatives to kidnap him.

It won’t be long, I think — as long as that Chekov’s president remains blessed by the Office of Legal Counsel in the Department of Justice — before we start seeing that applied on American soil. And those are some places that I think are realistic possibilities for what we might see unless this apparatus is aggressively dismantled.

JU: That is absolutely chilling. And in some way, I’m at a loss for words, just something that I never thought we might encounter. But that is a situation we seem to be finding ourselves in. Spencer, as always, I appreciate your insight, your analysis, and thank you so much for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.

SA: Thank you, Jordan.

JU: That does it for this episode. 

This episode was produced by Andrew Stelzer. Laura Flynn is our supervising producer. Sumi Aggarwal is our executive producer. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our Managing Editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Desiree Adib is our booking producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. Will Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

If you want to support our work, you can go to theintercept.com/join. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. If you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. And leave us a rating or a review, it helps other listeners to find us.

If you want to send us a message, email us at podcasts@theintercept.com.

Until next time, I’m Jordan Uhl. 

The post “Terrorist”: How ICE Weaponized 9/11’s Scarlet Letter appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-02-06 08:04
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New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani has criticized landlords and vowed to freeze what tenants in rent-stabilized apartments pay monthly.

2026-02-06 08:04
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Pressure is mounting on British Prime Minister Keir Starmer over his decision to appoint Epstein associate Peter Mandelson as U.K. ambassador in Washington.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 05:30

Bitcoin has fallen roughly 44% from its October peak, and while the drawdown isn't crypto's deepest ever on a percentage basis, Bloomberg's Odd Lots newsletter lays out a case that this is the industry's worst winter yet. The macro backdrop was supposed to favor Bitcoin: public confidence in the dollar is shaky, the Trump administration has been crypto-friendly, and fiat currencies are under perceived stress globally. Yet gold, not Bitcoin, has been the safe haven of choice. The "we're so early" narrative is dead -- crypto ETFs exist, barriers to entry are zero, and the online community that once rallied holders through downturns has largely hollowed out. Institutional adoption arrived but hasn't lifted existing tokens like ETH or SOL; Wall Street cares about stablecoins and tokenization, not the coins themselves. AI is pulling both talent and miners toward data centers. Quantum computing advances threaten Bitcoin's encryption. And MicroStrategy and other Bitcoin treasury companies, once steady buyers during the bull run, are now large holders who may eventually become forced sellers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 05:20

Data shows 29 hybrid and 98 diesel cars also sold, while the figure for battery electric vehicles was more than 2,000

Just seven new petrol cars were sold in Norway last month, data shows.

The country, which is the frontrunner in the uptake of electric vehicles, shifted a record low number of new fossil-fuel cars in January, information from the Norwegian Road Traffic Information Council (OFV) reveals.

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2026-02-07 12:04
2026-02-06 05:07

The Department of Defense has quietly signed a $210 million deal to buy advanced cluster shells from one of Israel’s state-owned arms companies, marking unusually large new commitments to a class of weapons and an Israeli defense establishment both widely condemned for their indiscriminate killing of civilians.

The deal, signed in September and not previously reported, is the department’s largest contract to purchase weapons from an Israeli company in available records, according to an online federal database that covers the last 18 years. In a reversal of the more commonly seen direction for weapons transfers between the countries — in which the U.S. sends its weapons to Israel — the U.S. will pay the Israeli weapons firm Tomer over a period of three years to produce a new 155mm munition. The shells are designed to replace decades-old and often defective cluster shells that left live explosives scattered across Vietnam, Laos, Iraq, and other nations.

The terror of cluster weapons persists long after the guns that fired them have quieted, as civilians return to fields, forests, and settlements laced with bomblets that can explode years later without warning.

“The footprint of the injuries of these weapons is so horrifying,” said Alma Taslidžan, advocacy manager for the aid organization Humanity & Inclusion, which pushes to ban cluster munitions. She recalled speaking with a 17-year-old boy who found an unexploded cluster bomblet in his neighbor’s garden in the aftermath of the Bosnian War.

“He said he played with it for quite a while. Suddenly it exploded. It blew up both of his hands; it blew away part of his face as well,” she said.

Known as the XM1208 munition, America’s new cluster shells are designed to have a dud rate — or risk of failure to explode — of less than 1 percent. They rely on more complex fuses and self-destruct features to reduce long-term danger to civilians, according to army procurement documents and weapons experts. But researchers say those low failure rates in testing do not reflect real-world performance, and advocates argue that cluster weapons’ battlefield effectiveness cannot justify their humanitarian costs.

“They are inherently indiscriminate,” said Brian Castner, an Amnesty International weapons investigator and former U.S. Air Force explosive ordnance disposal officer. “There’s not a way to use them responsibly, in that you can’t control where they land, and with this high dud rate you can’t control the effect on the civilian population afterwards.”

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The Cluster Munition Monitor has documented more than 24,800 cluster munition injuries and deaths since the 1960s, three-quarters from unexploded remnants. In 2024, cluster munitions killed at least 314 civilians, the majority of them in Ukraine.

Both the XM1208 and the deal to buy them are atypical. The DOD awarded the contract without public competition under a “public interest” exception to federal contracting law, using recent amendments that loosened rules for awarding no-bid defense contracts involving Ukraine, Taiwan, and Israel.

“I found this to be rather unusual,” said Julia Gledhill, a military contracting researcher for the Stimson Center, a Washington-based foreign policy think tank. “I have not seen something like this before — a sole source contract to a foreign military contractor for $200 million.”

“I have not seen something like this before — a sole source contract to a foreign military contractor for $200 million.” 

Federal agencies are legally required to create a “determination and findings” document justifying the award of a no-bid contract, which can be requested from the agencies under public records law. The Army has not yet responded to a Freedom of Information Act request for that documentation.

Tomer did not respond to a request for comment. Asked about the new munition’s failure rate, U.S. Army public affairs officer Shahin Uddin wrote it has “has undergone all required testing to ensure it meets all performance requirements, including compliance with the DoD Cluster Munition Policy.”

A Weapon for the Next War

The Pentagon’s efforts to field the XM1208 comes against the backdrop of the Russia–Ukraine war, where both sides have blanketed battlefields with older cluster munitions — including some given to Ukraine by the Biden administration. Some Eastern European countries have considered withdrawing from the Convention on Cluster Munitions amid fears of conflict with Russia, and in 2024, Lithuania became the first country to abandon the treaty.

As a result, Castner said, “Both the cluster munitions convention and the anti-personnel land mine convention are under threat.” 

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But major military powers — like Russia, China, Israel, India, Pakistan, and the United States — have never signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans its 112 member states from using or producing those weapons. Rather than sign the 2008 pact, the U.S. enacted a policy that year to stop using its old, failure-prone cluster munitions by 2019 and develop new weapons with a dud rate of less than 1 percent. 

Progress was slow, and in 2017, the U.S. weakened its policy to allow continued use of older cluster bombs until it had sufficient stockpiles of safer models. That year, the U.S. military began testing the M999 cluster munition: a new shell developed by another state-owned Israeli arms company, IMI Systems.

“The U.S. wants all options,” said William Hartung, an arms industry researcher with the Quincy Center for Responsible Statecraft. “One of their arguments was it’s good if you’re in a close-packed artillery situation — a ground war. It clears more of an area.”

During its 2006 war in Lebanon, Israel drew international criticism for using cluster bombs, and IMI promised a new weapon that would lower collateral damage — both to civilians and Israel’s flagging global reputation. In 2018, IMI Systems was acquired by Elbit Systems, a privately owned Israeli defense contractor which has faced recent boycotts for arming Israel’s forces in Gaza and the West Bank.

After backlash from investors in countries that had signed the convention, Elbit canceled production of the M999 and pledged not to build any cluster weapons.

But the M999 program did not stay dead. The Israeli government established a new state-owned arms company, Tomer, in 2018, with no limitations on cluster weapon production. The U.S. Army then adopted the M999 as its new cluster shell for artillery, renaming it the XM1208. According to a 2024 army munitions publication, the XM1208 is designed to release nine bomblets which then detonate in the air, each containing 1,200 pieces of tungsten shrapnel.

That same document lists Elbit as a production partner for the XM1208, despite the company’s pledge to abide by the cluster convention. Elbit did not immediately return a request for comment, and the Army did not respond to an inquiry about whether Elbit was working on the munition.

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Business at Tomer has been booming, due to both the genocide in Gaza and foreign arms sales, according to the Israeli tech news site Calcalist. It recorded $173 million in sales last year, making the DOD’s $210 million contract a massive windfall compared to its historical revenue. Tomer pays the Israeli government a 50 percent dividend on its profit, Calcalist reported.

The XM1208 is designed with multiple fail-safe fuses to reduce dud rates, according to U.S. Army documents published online. But little is known about how it actually performs in the field. Last year, The Guardian published photos showing an expended M999 shell in Lebanon, suggesting Israel had used the weapon in its recent attacks on Hezbollah. But there is currently no public data on its real-world failure rate, said N.R. Jenzen-Jones, director of the munitions analysis firm Armament Research Services.

Real-world dud rates are generally much higher than those found in controlled testing, which does not account for battlefield conditions like soft soil or older, degraded fuses, said Taslidžan, of Humanity & Inclusion. The manufacturer of Israel’s M85 cluster munition, which includes a self-destruct feature to reduce long-term risk to civilians, touted a “hazardous dud” rate of less than 0.1 percent. But researchers with Norwegian People’s Aid who analyzed the aftermath of M85 strikes from the 2006 war in Lebanon found that about 10 percent failed to explode.

And even if the XM1208 meets its 1 percent failure rate target, it would still be inhumane, said Taslidžan, leaving large numbers of lethal duds behind.

“That’s why the Convention on Cluster Munitions bans these weapons as a class,” she said. “The area effects and residual contamination are fundamentally incompatible with protecting civilians.”

The post Pentagon Makes Largest Known Arms Purchase From Israel — For Banned Cluster Weapons appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-02-06 08:04
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Labour Together allegedly hired company to look at Sunday Times and Guardian reporters after article about donations

A thinktank previously run by a Labour minister and the prime minister’s chief of staff is alleged to have paid a PR firm to investigate journalists who were looking into its funding.

Labour Together, once run by Morgan McSweeney and then by Josh Simons, now a Cabinet Office minister, hired APCO Worldwide to investigate journalists from the Guardian, the Sunday Times and other outlets and to identify their sources, according to claims in the Substack publication Democracy for Sale.

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2026-02-06 08:04
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Puerto Rican rapper to follow Grammy victory and anti-ICE speech with show on most-watched US TV event of the year

Just a week after receiving the Grammy award for Album of the Year, the Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny will take on the US’s most watched concert of the year when he performs at the Super Bowl this Sunday.

The artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio took home the music academy’s top honor for 2025’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos, a politically minded record infused with Puerto Rican music and culture. The album became the first Spanish-language work to take home the prize, beating out competition from Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber.

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2026-02-06 08:04
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No more eyeballing your espresso shots. Here's what an expert suggests for making the perfect puck.

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A Houston doctor has been indicted on charges of falsifying medical records for five patients, making them ineligible to receive a liver transplant, federal prosecutors say.

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Macmillan announces new instalment of popular Julia Donaldson tale featuring illustrations by Axel Scheffler

The Gruffalo family is to expand after the publisher of the popular children’s stories announced a long-awaited third book about the beloved monster.

The new tale, Gruffalo Granny, will be published on 10 September, Macmillan announced.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 05:00

Cubans, once fast-tracked to US residency, now find themselves targets of Trump’s immigration crackdown

When Rosaly Estévez “self-deported” from Miami to Havana last November, US immigration officers bid farewell by removing her ankle monitor. The 32-year-old had been told she was about to be detained, so she left with her three-year-old son, Dylan, a US citizen.

Heidy Sánchez, 43, wasn’t given a choice. She was forcibly removed from Florida last April but, worrying about Cuba’s failing healthcare system, she left her two-year-old daughter, Kaylin, behind with her American husband, Carlos.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 05:00

Senators introduced legislation on Thursday that would require prescription drug labels to identify where the medication was made, adding momentum to a yearslong campaign to bring more transparency to the often elusive generic drug industry.

At a hearing last week, members of the Senate Special Committee on Aging criticized manufacturers for routinely concealing the locations of their drugmaking plants as well as the suppliers that provide key ingredients. ProPublica described this lack of transparency — and how it was enabled by the Food and Drug Administration — in a series of stories that found the agency had quietly allowed troubled foreign drugmakers to continue selling generic medication to unsuspecting Americans.

The Clear Labels Act, introduced by committee chair Rick Scott, R-Fla., and ranking member Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., is meant to help patients, doctors and pharmacists know more about the drugs they use and prescribe. Current labels often list only a distributor or repackager of a medication and sometimes provide no information at all. The proposal calls for labels to disclose the original manufacturer as well as the suppliers that produced their key ingredients. Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., and Katie Britt, R-Ala., also signed on to the proposed legislation.

“Every American deserves honesty and transparency about what they are putting into their bodies,” Scott said. “It is wholly irresponsible that we’re living in the dark when it comes to where our medicines are made.”

ProPublica had to file public records requests and sue the FDA in federal court to obtain information about where generic drugs are made and whether government inspectors had flagged those factories for safety or quality concerns. ProPublica ultimately created a first-of-its-kind tool that empowers consumers to find the information themselves.

Ninety percent of the prescriptions in the United States are for generics, many of them manufactured overseas. For patients and their doctors, identifying where medication was made and the safety records of those factories had been nearly impossible until now.

Rx Inspector, the tool ProPublica introduced late last year, includes factory location information and inspection histories when available for nearly 40,000 generic drug products. Doctors, patients and researchers say they are already using it to better understand where medication comes from and to find more information when a generic causes unexplained health problems.

The Clear Labels Act would require manufacturing location information on packaging for brand-name drugs as well as generics.

Ohio State University professor John Gray, who testified at the hearing, suggested that packaging could include a QR code linking to the data on a website. Gray is working to assign quality scores to specific versions of generic drugs and said the code would allow patients and doctors to easily find those scores while researching medication and their manufacturers.

“Low-quality drugs have human consequences,” Gray said.

Gray said he is using Rx Inspector to fuel his work, which is funded by the Department of Defense. The tool, he said, “allows you to find out where … your drug is made easily.”

The push for more transparency comes on the heels of a bipartisan investigative report that Scott and Gillibrand released last year, calling for sweeping changes in the FDA’s oversight of the generic drug industry. Among other things, the senators asked the FDA to alert hospitals and other group purchasers when foreign drugmakers with serious safety and quality failures are given a special pass to send their products to the United States.

Since 2013, ProPublica found, the FDA allowed more than 20 troubled overseas factories, mostly in India, to continue to send certain medications to the U.S. even after those facilities were banned because of concerns about contamination and other breaches. The agency didn’t actively track whether the imported drugs were harming users and kept the practice largely hidden from the public and Congress.

The lawmakers also called on the FDA to conduct more drug testing. The agency doesn’t routinely assess generic drugs once they are on the market, even if they come from factories with quality and safety violations. ProPublica recently tested several versions of three of the most widely prescribed generics in the United States and found that two had irregularities that could risk the health of consumers.

At the hearing last week, the committee’s fourth on generic drugs in recent months, lawmakers and witnesses said knowing more about where drugs are made is an essential first step to improving drug quality. For years, pharmacists and members of Congress have pushed for more transparency to help patients and doctors make informed decisions about health care.

“Everyone deserves to know where their medications are coming from,” said University of Utah Hospital pharmacist Erin Fox, who has advocated for more information.

Fox and others also said they support a drug-quality rating system, which would allow hospitals and government agencies to assess generic drugs based on quality and not just price.

“You never go to the supermarket and buy the lowest price, most bruised fruit or go on Amazon and buy the one-star product because it’s cheaper,” said Dr. Kevin Schulman, a professor of medicine and health policy at Stanford University. “And yet that’s the generic drug market, and that’s 90% of the prescriptions that we write as physicians. And that’s just not tolerable.”

A spokesperson for the trade group for brand-name drugmakers said in a statement to ProPublica that the industry would “welcome conversations about how to strengthen the biopharmaceutical supply chain.” The generic drug lobbying group said that additional labeling requirements would impose “significant costs in exchange for limited returns,” and that drug manufacturers already disclose country of origin information under U.S. Customs and Border Protection rules.

The post The Clear Labels Act Would Change What You Know About Your Prescription Medication appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 05:00

Cute fluffy AI-powered “pets” are providing emotional companionship to an increasing number of lonely, tired Chinese — and a digital ear for tech giants.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 05:00

Scores of claims are expected to arise out of the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Experts say suing the government will be tough.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 05:00

Their ‘pro-family’ rhetoric is a cynical and hollow sham

Of the 3,800 children and infants taken into immigration custody between January and October of 2025, a majority – 2,600 – were detained by ICE officers. That means that the children, as young as one or two years old, were not arrested at the border or legal ports of entry, where asylum seekers frequently present themselves to border officers, but inside the country.

That means that those children were not new arrivals seeking help; they were kids going about their daily lives in the US, often with legal status. They were children like Liam Conejo Ramos, aged five, who was snatched from his driveway after school by immigration agents while wearing a blue bunny hat to keep him warm in the Minnesota cold. They are children like one student, a 17-year-old from Liam’s school district in Minnesota, who was taken from their car, or the other child, a 10-year-old girl in the fourth grade, who was taken alongside her mother; or the two other boys, brothers in the second and fifth grades, who were delivered by school officials to an ICE detention center after their mother was arrested and taken there. She had called the school to ask them to bring her boys to her in the prison; there was no one else to take care of them.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-06 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
The Trump administration is suing Delaware in an attempt to obtain the addresses, driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers for thousands of Delawareans. Delaware is one of more than 20 states being sued by the Trump administration for voter data, which advocates say represents a federal overreach that may dissuade Delawareans from voting.  

Delaware immigrant advocacy groups asked a judge to dismiss a federal lawsuit brought forth by the Trump administration demanding state election officials turn over sensitive voter information to the federal government. 

The organizations filed motions to intervene and to dismiss the ongoing case between the U.S. Department of Justice and the Delaware Department of Elections on Wednesday. The American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware, La Esperanza, the Latin American Community Center and the Delaware Coalition Against Domestic Violence all asked to join the case and dismiss the lawsuit. 

“Immigrant citizens are at risk of wrongful targeting for immigration enforcement when the federal government has their data,” said Maria Matos, president and CEO of the Latin American Community Center, in a written statement to the court. 

The U.S. Department of Justice first filed the lawsuit against Delaware Elections Commissioner Anthony Albence in December as the administration sought to obtain sensitive voter information, such as driver’s license numbers, residential addresses and partial Social Security numbers, for thousands of Delaware residents. 

The organizations’ leaders argued in court filings that sharing the sensitive information would deter eligible Latino and immigrant residents from voting and heighten anxieties about how their information is being shared with other federal agencies. 

Disclosure of the information also would be “disastrous” for domestic violence survivor safety, privacy and confidence, Sue Ryan, executive director of the Delaware Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said in a written statement to the court. 

The Department of Justice has argued that it needs the detailed information to ensure that ineligible people are kept off voter rolls and that only U.S. citizens are voting. The request for voters’ information comes amid President Donald Trump’s insistence that the 2020 election was stolen from him due to widespread voter fraud. 

“Accurate voter rolls are the cornerstone of fair and free elections, and too many states have fallen into a pattern of noncompliance with basic voter roll maintenance,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi in a written news release when the DOJ announced Delaware’s lawsuit. 

When reached for comment, the DOJ referred Spotlight Delaware to Bondi’s written comments made in December. 

Since last May, the DOJ has demanded that nearly every state hand over detailed voter information. The agency has sued over 20 states and Washington, D.C., for not complying with its demands. 

At least 11 states – mostly Republican-led – have provided or agreed to pass along their full statewide voter registration lists, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s Law School, an organization tracking the requests. 

Delaware Elections Commissioner Anthony Albence declined to comment on the lawsuit, as the department does not comment on any pending litigation, a spokesperson said.

Red Clay School Board member Jose Matthews also joined the organizations’ petition to join the case and dismiss the lawsuit. Two other Delaware residents, including a Widener University law school professor, previously joined the lawsuit due to worries that the Trump administration would retaliate against them for their views if their private voter information was shared. 

Letters lead to lawsuit 

The December lawsuit stemmed from back-and-forth letters between the U.S. Department of Justice’s Voting Rights Division and the Delaware Department of Elections, arguing over how much information to share. 

The DOJ sent the first letter to Albence in July 2025, asking for voter data that included names, birth dates, addresses, political party affiliations, voting history and legislative district information. 

The federal government also requested driver’s license numbers or the last four digits of Social Security numbers alongside all information pertaining to non-citizens and convicted felons who have been ruled ineligible to vote since November 2022.

In September, Albence formally refused to provide the detailed voter information to the DOJ, according to court records. To date, Delaware has only provided data that excludes the more sensitive, non-public information.

“Absent appropriate protections, Delawareans’ information could be compromised or misused, or Delawareans could be deterred from exercising their First Amendment rights to register to vote, to affiliate with a party, and to vote,” Albence wrote in a September letter.

In his denial, Albence cited Delaware state law that protects private information as an impediment to the federal government’s wishes, noting that he is prohibited from sharing it even within the state government.

On Wednesday, the federal judge overseeing the case granted the organizations’ motion to intervene in the case. The judge has made no ruling on the motion to dismiss.

The post Immigrant advocates move to dismiss Trump’s voter data lawsuit appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 04:24

Draghi wants real decision-making power in Europe, not a federal Big Bang Expert comment sfarrell.drupa…

Competitiveness is not enough. The former president of the European Central Bank’s call for ‘pragmatic federalism’ would require Europe to strengthen its decision-making process if it wants to weigh in as a fully-fledged power. This will need bolder coalitions of the willing.

Mario Draghi delivers a speech at the KU Leuven university during an award ceremony on 2 February 2026

The metaphor remains painfully true: Europe is an economic giant but a political dwarf.

Mario Draghi stressed how this imbalance has become unbearable in a short but sharp speech delivered at the Catholic University of Leuven on 2 February. The Italian economist and politician did not mince his words in pointing out the only path that, in his view, would enable Europe to grow politically: that of ‘pragmatic federalism.’

With this formula –  which he had laid out in an earlier speech on 24 October last year in Oviedo, Spain – Draghi adds an institutional dimension to his much- vaunted 2024 report on European competitiveness.

The power games at play in today’s world require Europe to make a qualitative leap in integration.

It is not enough for Europe to catch up with its Chinese and American rivals in terms of productivity and technology, he says. It must also strengthen its institutional framework to be considered a world power.

Where it has stuck to loose, classic intergovernmental cooperation, such as in defence and diplomacy, it hardly impresses Washington or Beijing. 

‘This model does not produce power,’ Draghi laments: ‘A group of states that coordinates remains a group of states, each with a veto, each with a separate calculus.’

According to the former Italian prime minister, the power games at play in today’s world require Europe to make a qualitative leap in integration. A federal leap is what it takes.

Would the European bloc be ready for such a bold move? Draghi is right to raise the issue of the EU’s governance and to call for renewed integration to face a more chaotic and brutal world order.

But using the controversial word federalism is always sensitive in European politics. His statement in favour of ‘moving from a confederation to a federation’ risks just nurturing a quasi-theological debate on the very nature of the European Union.

The F word

Many EU member states, such as Italy, Germany, Spain or Belgium, are federal in their own ways. But letting Europe itself become federal is another story. In a centralized state such as France, any federalist terminology is even taboo. The far right rejects it completely. President Emmanuel Macron has always been careful not to refer to federalism when visioning Europe.

It is worth, though, not reducing Draghi’s speech to this F word. Just as the term ‘constitution’ in 2005 diverted attention from the purpose of a treaty that was essentially codifying existing European legal texts, the term ‘federalism’ can unnecessarily inflame, divide, and polarize, when its ‘pragmatic’ nature should draw just as much attention.

As former president of the European Central Bank, the euro is the best example of the kind of ‘pragmatic federalism’ that Draghi aims for. ‘Those who were willing to do so took the lead, set up common institutions with real authority and, thanks to this joint commitment, forged a solidarity deeper than any treaty could have prescribed,’ he said of the single currency in his speech in Leuven. Through its exclusive competence, its unquestioned independence and the respect it commands, the ECB acts de facto as a federal body but without being explicitly designated as such – unlike its American counterpart, the Fed.

The same federal understatement could apply to all areas where the EU has exclusive competence, as on international trade or on fisheries. Europe has always built itself in this constructive ambiguity. Former Commission President Jacques Delors coined the term ‘federation of nation states’ to define the EU, like an oxymoron.

 In Europe’s attempt to move from a peace project to a power project, it cannot avoid further deepening in strategic areas.

At a time when radical right movements are surging, European leaders are wary about tackling institutional issues head-on and embarking on any deep reform of the EU. Since the Lisbon Treaty of 2009, the task has been deemed too laborious and uncertain to be taken up politically. In the wake of the successive serious crises that have shaken the Union (debt crisis, migration crisis, Brexit, Covid), the bloc has preferred to react with emergency measures rather than come up with an overall plan.

That is not what Mario Draghi is proposing. He suggests no grand institutional overhaul. His plan is no federal Big Bang, as he acknowledged in his speech in Oviedo: ‘A true federation would require political conditions that do not exist today.’ 

Pragmatic

Instead, he aims pragmatically at some immediate initiatives for true integration in areas such as defence, industrial policy, taxation or foreign affairs, for states willing to do so. If necessary outside the Union, and without other members preventing them from doing so, but leaving them the choice of joining later.

Draghi’s federalistic approach comes down to the kind experienced through the Schengen Agreement on free movement, which started among five countries in 1985 and was first legally established outside the EU. Yet this time, it is about competences as stark as defence.

Besides its federal wording, Draghi’s proposal is welcome for three reasons. First, because in Europe’s attempt to move from a peace project to a power project, it cannot avoid further deepening in strategic areas, let alone defence.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 04:20

Another Labour MP says Morgan McSweeney should go as Harriet Harman says PM left looking ‘weak, naive and gullible’

Keir Starmer was facing renewed calls to sack his most senior adviser on Friday as Downing Street braced itself for another round of leadership speculation when the files relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador are published.

The Labour MP for Stroud, Simon Opher, added his voice to those calling for the departure of Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, who was instrumental in the decision to appoint Mandelson despite concerns about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 04:15

In honor of American Heart Month, now is a good time to schedule your next doctor's appointment for a heart disease screening.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 03:01

The CIA has shut down The World Factbook, one of its oldest and most recognizable public-facing intelligence publications, ending a run that began as a classified reference document in 1962 and evolved into a freely accessible digital resource that drew millions of views each year. The agency offered no explanation for the decision. Originally titled The National Basic Intelligence Factbook, the publication first went unclassified in 1971, was renamed a decade later, and moved online at CIA.gov in 1997. It served researchers, news organizations, teachers, students and international travelers. The site hosted more than 5,000 copyright-free photographs, some donated by CIA officers from their personal travel. Every page now redirects to a farewell announcement.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 03:00

AI content for scams can be targeted at individuals and ‘produced by pretty much anybody’, researchers say

Deepfake fraud has gone “industrial”, an analysis published by AI experts has said.

Tools to create tailored, even personalised, scams – leveraging, for example, deepfake videos of Swedish journalists or the president of Cyprus – are no longer niche, but inexpensive and easy to deploy at scale, said the analysis from the AI Incident Database.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 02:17

A Los Angeles Fire Department spokesperson said the crash at a 99 Ranch Market in Westwood is currently being investigated as an accident.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 02:00

Files suggest David Stern was Jeffrey Epstein’s ‘man in the palace’, passing messages to the former prince until 2019

Jeffrey Epstein wanted his 26-year-old Belarusian girlfriend, Karyna Shuliak, and her friend, Jen, to have a good time in London – and he knew just who to ask.

“Karyna – my girlfriend, and Jen, the tall girl who you’ve met will be London Tues and Wed,” the 63-year-old disgraced financier apparently wrote in April 2016 to an aide to the then Prince Andrew. “They have never been there before. If you are around, I’d appreciate any help you can give them.”

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 01:02

I have had a broken board for quite some time now after some mods I made on it, and even with a working footpad, vesc tool only displays 0.3 volts on each side of the footpad. It won't activate because of this and I am not sure why this is happening. I changed my wheel, bumpers, fenders, and rails during my modifications. Any ideas on what could be going wrong are greatly appreciated!

submitted by /u/Puzzled-Reveal5911
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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 01:00

A wartime boom in Russia has given way to sluggish growth, tax hikes and squeezed public services. Will it affect the conflict in Ukraine?

Western leaders were bullish when they imposed sanctions on Russia after the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

“The Russian economy is on track to be cut in half,” said the then US president, Joe Biden, in March, a month into the war.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 00:02

Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford was named the NFL MVP, just edging out four other candidates that included New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye and Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen, last year's MVP.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 00:01

Google's Quick Share-AirDrop interoperability, which has been exclusive to the Pixel 10 series since its surprise launch last year, is headed to a much broader set of Android devices in 2026. Eric Kay, Google's Vice President of Engineering for the Android platform, confirmed the expansion during a press briefing at the company's Taipei office, saying Google is "working with our partners to expand it into the rest of the ecosystem" and that announcements are coming "very soon." Nothing is the only OEM to have publicly confirmed it's working on support, though Qualcomm has also hinted at enabling the feature on Snapdragon-powered phones.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 00:00

The perils of German power.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-06 00:00

Regional rivalry will raise tensions far beyond the Gulf.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 23:37

In wake of Donald Trump’s call for Republicans to ‘take over’ voting, senator Ruben Gallego urges citizens to take a stand and give the ‘ultimate response’

The Democratic senator Ruben Gallego has proposed that, should Donald Trump try to sabotage the midterm elections, Americans should respond with a general strike that would “grind the country to a halt”.

Earlier this week the US president called for Republicans to “take over” and “nationalise” voting in at least 15 unspecified locations, repeating his false claims that elections are plagued by widespread fraud.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 23:12

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 6

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 23:08

Death toll from Washington’s campaign on alleged drug traffickers now at least 128

The US military on Thursday said it killed two alleged drug traffickers in a strike on a boat in the eastern Pacific, bringing the death toll from Washington’s campaign to at least 128.

“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” the US Southern Command said in a post on X. It said “no US military forces were harmed” in the operation.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 23:05

Residents of New Zealand capital advised not to enter the water, collect seafood or walk their dogs on local beaches after wastewater plant failure

A sewage leak in New Zealand’s capital Wellington has been described by local authorities as an “environmental disaster,” with repairs to the city’s wastewater treatment plant expected to take months.

Residents of Wellington have been advised not to enter the water, collect seafood or even walk their dogs on local beaches.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 23:02

Dozens of people have died, including two Australians, as record-breaking snowfall blankets the north

Dozens of people have died in Japan after record-breaking snowfall blanketed northern regions of the country, while officials warned that warmer temperatures could trigger a new wave of accidents.

Authorities said 35 people had died in snow-related incidents across Japan since 20 January, with almost 400 injured, 126 of them seriously. Most of the deaths were among people who fell while trying to clear snow from their roofs or around their homes.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 22:12

The U.S. military struck an alleged drug-carrying boat in the Pacific on Thursday, marking the 38th vessel to be struck over the last five months and the second this year.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 22:06

In a video posted on social media, he further implored the people holding Nancy Guthrie to send proof they had her

TV host Savannah Guthrie’s brother on Thursday renewed the family’s plea for their mother’s kidnapper to contact them, hours after an Arizona sheriff said investigators don’t have proof Nancy Guthrie is alive, but believe “she’s still out there”.

“Whoever is out there holding our mother, we want to hear from you. We haven’t heard anything directly,” Camron Guthrie said in a video statement posted on Instagram.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 22:04

This live blog is now closed.

Amid the various winding comments throughout Trump’s speech today, he said that the Department of Education will officially issue its new guidance to protect the right to prayer in public schools today.

“Now the Democrats will sue us, but we’ll win it,” Trump said, eliciting some laughs from the audience at the National Prayer Breakfast. “They’ll sue us. They sue us for everything. I’m the most sued human being in history.”

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 21:55
Charger idea

I didn’t like my charger cord laying in the floor so I bought a $10 clothesline reel. Painted black and of course painted a skull on it.

submitted by /u/Bullvyi
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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 21:50

When marine biologist Océane Attlan saw the tiny Braun’s wrasse, it was like ‘recognising a familiar face, but you can’t put a name on it’

The chances of encountering the rare reef fish were so far-fetched, it took marine biologist Océane Attlan a few seconds to clock what she was seeing.

“All of a sudden I saw this fish. You know when you recognise a familiar face, but you can’t put a name on it. That’s the feeling I had,” she said.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 21:42

Verdict could influence more than 3,000 similar cases against ride-hailing company

A federal jury in Phoenix ordered Uber on Thursday to pay $8.5m after finding the company liable in a lawsuit brought by a woman who said she was sexually assaulted by a driver. The verdict could influence thousands of similar cases against the ride-hailing company.

The case, brought by plaintiff Jaylynn Dean, was the first trial of more than 3,000 similar lawsuits against Uber that have been consolidated in US federal court. So-called bellwether trials are used to test legal theories and help gauge the value of claims for possible settlements. The jury found that the driver was an agent of Uber, holding the company responsible for his actions. They awarded Dean $8.5m in compensatory damages but declined to award punitive damages. Attorneys for Dean had sought more than $140m in damages.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 21:37
Didn't realize the ground was soaked because it looked normal beforehand.

The ground didn't have any mud showing as lroad past the fire hydrant. My tire immediately sunk and shot tmud all over me.

submitted by /u/LordFett84
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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 21:19

The country’s first female PM is the object of a personality cult revolving around everything from her outfits and snacks to her favourite pink pen

Just eight months ago, Japan’s ruling party appeared to have reached the edge of the electoral abyss. It had lost a parliamentary majority for the second time in 15 months; its MPs were implicated in a long-running slush fund scandal; the then prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, was the target of factional plotting.

But as voters prepare to brave freezing temperatures in this Sunday’s lower house elections, the Liberal Democratic party (LDP) is expected to pull off a momentous victory. And the party’s recovery from the disappointment of last year is largely down to one woman.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 21:00

The European Commission is preparing to trial a communications platform built on Matrix, the open source messaging protocol already used by the French government, German healthcare providers and European armed forces, as a sovereign backup to Microsoft Teams. Signal currently serves as the backup tool but has proven too inflexible for an organization the Commission's size, it said. The Matrix-based solution could also eventually connect the Commission to other EU bodies like the Parliament.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 20:57

Savannah Guthrie's brother, Camron Guthrie, issued a plea Thursday for the return of their mother, Nancy Guthrie, saying in a video to the possible abductor, "We want to talk to you."

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 20:28

Bad Bunny says he wants to bring his culture to his 2026 Super Bowl halftime show Sunday.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-06 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 6, No. 971.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-06 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 6, No. 501.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-06 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 6, No. 705.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 20:19

The Trump administration launched its new TrumpRx direct-to-consumer prescription drug listing site late Thursday, part of a push to offer medication at steep discounts.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 19:21

Starlink says it may also share personal data with partners to help it "develop AI-enabled tools that improve your customer experience.”

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 19:03

Emails appear to show Mountbatten-Windsor attempting to introduce Epstein to UAE crown prince via foreign affairs minister

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor vouched for Jeffrey Epstein during a UK state visit to the United Arab Emirates with Queen Elizabeth II in 2010, according to newly released emails.

The email was sent from “The Duke” to Epstein on 24 November of that year, with the subject listed as “Abdullah” – an apparent reference to the UAE foreign affairs minister, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 19:03

Some spouses obtained military identification cards for Chinese nationals, court documents alleged.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-05 19:00

Medicaid provides free or low‑cost health coverage to eligible low‑income people. It’s run by federal and state governments, with eligibility based largely on income.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-05 19:00

A refugee is someone who can’t return to their home country because of fear of persecution and who has not been firmly resettled elsewhere.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-05 19:00

A pocket veto occurs when the president lets a bill expire by not signing it while Congress is adjourned.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:52

Authorities respond to reports of crash at 99 Ranch Market after victims, some trapped under vehicle, die at scene

Three people were killed and six others were hurt after a car driver collided with a bicyclist and then slammed into a grocery store on Thursday afternoon in Los Angeles, authorities said.

The crash was reported shortly after noon at a 99 Ranch Market in the city’s Westwood neighborhood, according Los Angeles fire department spokesperson Lyndsey Lantz.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:49

In a video message, Savannah Guthrie and her siblings sought to tell their mother's possible abductor – or abductors – that they are "ready to talk."

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 18:47

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 18:46

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 18:45

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:36

Tech giant reports $213bn in revenue after its founder, who owns the Post, lays off a third of newspaper’s employees

Amazon announced plans to spend $200bn on artificial intelligence and robotics this year, the latest tech giant to vow fresh enormous investments in the artificial intelligence arms race.

The news of the investment comes one day after the Washington Post, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, announced it was cutting approximately a third of employees.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:31

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 6, No. 1,693.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:30

While labels list dozens of possible risks only four are supported by evidence, say researchers

Almost all side-effects listed for statins are not caused by the drugs, according to the world’s most comprehensive review of evidence.

Other than the well-known risks around muscle pain and diabetes, only four of 66 other statin side-effects listed on labels – liver test changes, minor liver abnormalities, urine changes and tissue swelling – are supported by evidence. And the risks are very small, according to the systematic review and meta-analysis published in the Lancet.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:30

A federal court in California has ruled that YouTube creators who use stream-ripping tools to download clips for reaction and commentary videos may face liability under the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions -- a decision that could reshape how one of the platform's most popular content genres operates. U.S. Magistrate Judge Virginia K. DeMarchi of the Northern District of California denied a motion to dismiss in Cordova v. Huneault, a creator-versus-creator dispute, finding that YouTube's "rolling cipher" technology qualifies as an access control measure under section 1201(a) even though the underlying videos are freely viewable by the public. The distinction matters because it separates the act of watching a video from the act of downloading it. The defense had argued that no ripping tools were actually used and that screen recording could account for the copied footage. Judge DeMarchi allowed the claim to proceed to discovery regardless, noting that the plaintiff had adequately pled the circumvention allegation. The ruling opens a legal avenue beyond standard copyright infringement for creators who want to go after rivals. Reaction channels have long leaned on fair use as a blanket defense, but plaintiff's attorney Randall S. Newman told TorrentFreak that circumventing copy protections under section 1201 is a separate violation unaffected by any fair use finding.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:29

I've tested dozens of iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone Air cases. Here are my current top picks, complete with mini reviews of each case.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:29

Colin Demarco was arrested in January, months after he was seen in a Ring camera image at Vought's door, wearing a surgical mask and gloves.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 18:26

Stop letting that box of tangled charging cables and ancient flip phones from 2012 live rent-free in your closet.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:25

Indiana Jones and the Great Circle: The Order of Giants is among the available new titles.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:05

Severe lack of public defenders has meant people charged with crimes have been routinely unable to fight their cases

The Oregon supreme court has ruled that a large number of criminal cases across the state must be dismissed due to a severe shortage of public defenders, a major decision that attorneys say will impact more than 1,400 pending cases.

The problem has been years in the making and has become a significant constitutional crisis, as people charged with crimes are routinely unable to fight their cases as they wait weeks, months or sometimes years for the state to appoint them lawyers. The attorney shortage – due in part to the increasing difficulty of recruiting attorneys for the low-salary, high-caseload jobs – has meant that people have had cases hanging over them for extended periods of time, impacting their housing, employment and families, advocates say.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 18:04

Three collaborative projects aim to streamline AI deployment in nuclear facilities.

Feb. 5, 2026 — Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming industries. The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory is using this technology to improve nuclear safety and efficiency.

The Mechanisms Engineering Test Loop (METL) facility where Parameter-Free Reasoning Operator for Automated Identification and Diagnosis (PRO-AID) was successfully tested. Image credit: Jason Creps/ANL.

To ensure AI systems can be properly deployed in regulated environments, Argonne is advancing projects that are reshaping how regulation addresses cutting-edge technologies.

Three main projects are advancing this work:

  • Developing and testing AI applications to improve efficiency of plant operations while maintaining the gold standard for safety.
  • Creating a framework to speed up reactor licensing.
  • Developing a tool to detect plant faults early.

These efforts emphasize both the innovative technologies under development and the broader impact on regulatory frameworks and safety measures.

Simulating AI Safety for Nuclear Regulation

Argonne researchers are working with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to explore how AI can be used in the nuclear industry. These AI tools have the potential to make operations more efficient, lower costs and improve safety. For example, AI could help predict when equipment needs maintenance, create better models for complex systems and optimize how facilities operate.

The researchers are testing an AI system at an experimental facility and putting it through a full regulatory review to see how it measures up to safety standards. This project helps connect the fast pace of AI development with the rules and safeguards needed to make sure these technologies can be used safely and securely in critical areas like the nuclear industry.

By developing tools and knowledge needed to evaluate and regulate AI technologies, Argonne is preparing the industry for the future.

Automating Licensing with AI-driven Protocols

Through a partnership with DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy, Argonne is creating the Regulatory Context Protocol (RCP) to streamline the licensing process for advanced nuclear reactors. It automates applicant-regulator communication using AI agents that represent both the nuclear facility and the regulator. The RCP is designed to reduce delays in regulatory workflows, improve information quality and ensure compliance with NRC standards.

“The traditional licensing process can be a significant bottleneck for deploying advanced nuclear technology,” said Akshay Dave, manager of intelligent systems group and project lead. ​“With the RCP, we’re essentially creating a digital express lane for regulatory communication. By using AI to structure and automate this dialogue, we can dramatically reduce timelines and get nuclear energy onto the grid faster.”

By reducing delays in regulatory communication, the RCP will help meet accelerated licensing timelines. This ensures that advanced nuclear reactors can be deployed more quickly.

Advancing Fault Detection with Physics-Based AI

Argonne has also developed Parameter-Free Reasoning Operator for Automated Identification and Diagnosis (PRO-AID). PRO-AID is a physics-based AI tool that uses ​“digital twins” or virtual copies of nuclear power plant systems to identify unusual behavior in real-time. By integrating physical principles rather than relying on data alone, PRO-AID can spot faults such as sensor bias and cooling failures early.

PRO-AID was successfully tested in Argonne’s Mechanisms Engineering Test Loop (METL) facility. The tool’s real-time monitoring allows operators to fix issues before they cause downtime. These initiatives are vital steps toward ensuring that AI technologies can be successfully and safely integrated into the nuclear industry.

Impact on the Nuclear Industry

“By proactively identifying the relevant regulatory frameworks, we are advancing innovation while reinforcing public trust in the safety and reliability of these technologies,” said Rick Vilim, Argonne senior nuclear engineer.

Argonne’s work represents a critical intersection of innovation and regulation. Elements from these projects will help the nuclear industry embrace the potential of AI. These efforts are paving the way for safer, smarter and more cost-effective nuclear technologies.

From streamlining regulatory processes with the RCP to enhancing fault diagnostics with PRO-AID, Argonne is setting a standard for how emerging technologies can be responsibly integrated into high-stakes industries.


Source: Marguerite Huber, Argonne National Laboratory

The post Argonne Helps Nuclear Industry Embrace AI to Speed Up Licensing and Reduce Delays appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 18:02

Super Bowl LX will feature an ad to promote Trump Accounts, a new investment plan to help eligible families save money for their kids.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 17:47

Feb. 5, 2026 — Satellites and spacecraft in the vast region between the earth and moon and just beyond — called cislunar space — are crucial for space exploration, scientific advancement and national security. But figuring out where exactly to put them into a stable orbit can be a huge, computationally expensive challenge.

One of one million cislunar orbits calculated by researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The moon’s orbit is shown in light gray. The spacecraft follows the colored path over the six-year simulation period. (Graphic: Dan Herchek, note moon and earth not to scale.)

In an open-access database and with publicly available code, researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) have simulated and published one million orbits in cislunar space. The effort, enabled by supercomputing resources at the Laboratory, provides valuable data that can be used to plan missions, predict how small perturbations might change orbits and monitor space traffic.

To begin, the Space Situational Awareness Python package takes in a range of initial conditions for an orbit, like how elliptical and tilted the orbit is and how far it gets from the earth.

“The point of it was to not assume anything about what types of orbits we want,” said author and LLNL scientist Travis Yeager. “We tried to go into it pretending we knew nothing about this space.”

From each starting point with a set position and velocity, the simulation steps forward in time in discrete chunks. Because this is an N-body problem involving the earth, moon, sun, radiative forces and the spacecraft, the complex interactions among all components mean there is no exact solution for the system’s evolution.

“If you want to know where a satellite is in a week, there’s no equation that can actually tell you where it’s going to be,” said Yeager. “You have to step forward a little bit at a time.”

When considering the gravitational forces from the earth and moon, the authors also accounted for differences across each body.

“The Earth is not a point source. It is actually blobby. There is lower gravity over Canada than there is over the Atlantic Ocean,” said Yeager. “If we didn’t account for blobbiness within the earth for GPS satellites, we couldn’t have GPS down to a meter level. You wouldn’t even know what road you’re driving on.”

To generate all one million orbits with six-year lifetimes, it took 1.6 million CPU hours — equivalent to more than 182 years on a single computer. Once they worked through the process, the team ran their simulations in just three days on LLNL’s Quartz and Ruby supercomputers.

“The interesting thing about our code is that it is parallelizable, whereas other commercial codes are not,” said author and LLNL scientist Denvir Higgins. “We can spread jobs across nodes.”

Of the resulting orbits, 54% remained stable for at least one year and 9.7% for six years. But even the unstable orbits in this open database can provide valuable information.

“From a data-science point of view, this is an interesting data set. When you have a million orbits, you can get a really rich analysis using machine learning applications,” said Higgins. “You can try to predict the lifetime of the orbit, try to predict stability or try to do anomaly detection to see if an orbit is moving in a strange way.”

By analyzing the orbital data, researchers may be able to identify the “busiest intersections,” or the most useful positions for a satellite to monitor and direct traffic. This could be especially useful as countries continue to launch satellites without world-wide coordination.

The team aims to tackle some of these questions themselves, but they emphasized that the publicly available code and data allow others to launch in alongside them.

This data was created under work funded by a Laboratory Directed Research and Development project.


Source: LLNL

The post LLNL: Simulations and Supercomputing Calculate 1M Orbits in Cislunar Space appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:30

World’s most prominent cryptocurrency peaked at $126,000 in October 2025, only to see its value slump steeply

Bitcoin’s price sank to $63,000 on Thursday, its lowest level in more than a year, and half its all-time peak of $126,000, reached in October 2025. A months-long dip in cryptocurrency prices has tanked shares of companies that have increasingly invested in bitcoin, exacerbating broader stock market jitters.

Bitcoin rode a high during Donald Trump’s ascent to the presidency in 2024 and throughout 2025; its price steadily increased as the president made one industry-friendly move after another. Crypto’s largest currency hit $100,000 for the first time in December 2024 and even rose to a record high of $126,210.50 on 6 October, according to Coinbase. But bitcoin’s valuation has dipped over the last few months, falling especially hard in January and the start of February.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:28

Featuring an unlikely animal friendship, the commercial boasts enough patriotic iconography to verge on self-parody

Three years after its sister brand, Bud Light, faced a rightwing boycott over a transgender spokesperson, Budweiser’s new Super Bowl ad, American Icons, contains absolutely nothing that could be mistaken for social progress. Instead, it features an unlikely friendship between two animals whose blood runs red, white and blue: a bald eagle and a Clydesdale horse, the Budweiser icon. An adorable foal trots out of a barn, and the viewer is injected with a single minute of American iconography so pure that it would make Lee Greenwood nauseous.

The horse meets a struggling baby bird who gets caught in the rain, prompting the horse to stand over the bird as a roof. The pair become pals and grow up together, the bird riding on the horse’s back as it grows larger. It falls off a few times, but, like George Washington at Valley Forge, it never gives up. Finally, the horse jumps over a log while the bird spreads its wings above, and we get a slow-motion image of something like Pegasus. We realize the bird, now fully grown, is a majestic bald eagle, taking to the sky as Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird reaches its climax. Two farmers look on while drinking Budweiser, as the words “Made of America” appear on the screen. “You crying?” one asks. “The sun’s in my eyes,” says the other.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:26

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:26

A U.S. official called the deal a by-product of ongoing efforts to end the Ukraine war. It came as a key nuclear treaty between Washington and Moscow expired.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:19

Hello, I have a Pint X that I’m thinking about throwing the Extended WTF rails on. Do I NEED a PintV/ Avaspark kit, or does the stock controller allow re leveling (not sure if shaping will let me re level). Only other option I have is Rewheeling an OG Pint controller and swapping it into my Pint X, but I have no clue how it’ll affect the ride or if I need to do anything with the BMS, or what BMS to use even.

Need some help before I f.ck something up.

Also what tires can I use? Pint and XR tires? Pint X motor and hub.

For footpads the halos look mighty nice at 10”.

Thanks.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:19

Nearly two weeks after a catastrophic ice storm rocked northeast Mississippi, still 25,000 customers are without power as of Thursday.

2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-05 17:17

Q: Is it true that ICE agents are financially rewarded for the number of people taken into custody?

A: The Department of Homeland Security has said there is no such policy, and an immigration think tank told us it is unaware of any payments per arrest. The Wall Street Journal reported that agents “are rewarded for making arrests” but didn’t say how they are rewarded. Immigration and Customs Enforcement quickly scrapped a proposed program to pay bonuses to speed up deportations.

FULL ANSWER

We’ve received several questions from readers about whether Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents get a bonus for each person they arrest. One reader asked if agents are paid $1,500 for each immigrant they arrest. Versions of this claim have circulated on social media, with some posts pointing to a Wall Street Journal article that said ICE officers were “under pressure” to meet a daily nationwide arrest goal and were “rewarded for making arrests.” Some have interpreted this to mean a financial bonus.

Federal agents arrest a man after stopping and questioning him in the street in Minneapolis on Jan. 14. Photo by Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images.

The Department of Homeland Security and ICE didn’t respond to our multiple inquiries asking whether agents receive a bonus payment for each arrest. However, a DHS spokesperson told Snopes, which wrote about these claims, that “this policy has never and never was in effect.”

The Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, also told us it wasn’t aware of any per-arrest bonus structure. Michelle Mittelstadt, MPI’s director of communications and public affairs, said, “We do not believe these claims regarding bonuses for arrests are accurate. ICE and its parent agency, DHS, have never indicated that they would set up a bonus payment structure rewarding personnel per arrest.”

In August, the New York Times reported on an ICE proposal to pay bonuses for quicker deportations — but it was canceled before it started and didn’t pertain to arrests. According to the Times, an internal ICE email proposed “cash bonuses to agents for deporting people quickly, an incentive meant to motivate the staff to speed up President Trump’s mass deportation campaign. Less than four hours later, the agency abruptly canceled what was supposed to be a 30-day pilot program.”

The Times reported that documents it reviewed called for $100 and $200 bonuses for each immigrant deported within one or two weeks of arrest. But a subsequent email to ICE field offices from Liana J. Castano, an ICE field operations official, told staff to “PLEASE DISREGARD” the program, the newspaper reported. 

As we said, some social media posts about arrest bonuses have pointed to a Jan. 17 Wall Street Journal article. The article about immigration enforcement in Minneapolis said that “officers here and elsewhere are under pressure from daily arrest quotas that leadership has set at 3,000 a day across the country—the number it would take to reach one million arrests in a year, according to ICE officials familiar with the matter. Though ICE has never come close to meeting that daily goal, officers are rewarded for making arrests, even if the immigrants they take in are later released.”

The administration has publicly acknowledged the 3,000 arrest goal. In May, senior White House adviser Stephen Miller said on Fox News that the administration was “looking to set a goal of a minimum of 3,000 arrests for ICE every day and President Trump is going to keep pushing to get that number up higher each and every single day.”

It’s unclear from the Wall Street Journal article how officers are “rewarded for making arrests”; the story says nothing about financial payments and doesn’t offer any more explanation about these rewards. We reached out to the Journal reporters for clarification, but we did not receive a response.

We also didn’t get a response from DHS or ICE when we asked for comment on the Journal’s article.

Some, including Minnesota Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar, posted that ICE was “rewarding” agents, an accurate summary of that article. Others interpreted this as a “bonus.” For instance, David J. Bier, the director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, posted part of the article on X and said, “ICE agents get bonuses when they make wrongful arrests of US citizens.” Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego, of Arizona, shared Bier’s post and said, “Mistakenly arrest a US citizen? You get a big fat bonus.”

Beyond these interpretations of the Journal’s article, we were unable to find evidence regarding claims about per-arrest bonuses. Bier told us the Journal story was the only information he had. Gallego’s office hasn’t responded to our inquiry.

Snopes reported that some of its readers appeared to misconstrue the daily 3,000 arrest goal with a “$3,000 bonus for each arrest,” as some readers asked about.

According to DHS press releases, there is a signing bonus of up to $50,000 for new ICE hires. But that’s a recruitment and retention incentive, and there’s no indication it is tied to the number of arrests, or deportations for that matter, that an agent performs.

The Republicans’ 2025 budget bill, called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, provided $858 million for the signing bonuses, which, the legislation says, would be for new agents, officers or attorneys who agree to serve for five years or those already working for ICE who agree to stay with the agency for two more years.

Last year, DHS announced incentive funding to state and local law enforcement agencies that partner with ICE to arrest immigrants living in the country illegally. Beginning Oct. 1, DHS said that participating agencies would receive reimbursement for trained officers’ salaries and benefits along with quarterly performance-based bonuses. These monetary awards range from $500 to $1,000 per “eligible task force officer,” depending on “the successful location of illegal aliens provided by ICE and overall assistance to further ICE’s mission to Defend the Homeland.”

But that quarterly bonus program is for state and local police that cooperate with ICE, not a payment per arrest for ICE officers.


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 ICE Officers and Bonuses appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:16

U.S. District Judge Jerry Blackwell admonished the Trump administration for what he said was a failure to comply with judicial orders, warning it is "not above the law."

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:09

Millions of Americans lack access to any type of retirement plan, hampering their ability to save for old age.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:07

Democratic leaders in Congress requested Department of Homeland Security reforms on Wednesday that would leave the agency’s budget untouched — and were immediately rebuffed by the GOP.

The requests, in a joint letter from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, both New York Democrats, do not attempt to claw back funding for Customs and Border Protection, the parent agency of the Border Patrol, or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement — the two agencies at the heart of the political firestorm over their violent deployments to American cities.

Instead of cutting funding, Democrats focused on measures such as prohibiting ICE agents from wearing masks or entering homes without a warrant. Sen. Brian Schatz, D- Hawaii, the Democratic deputy whip, on Wednesday described the requests as “reasonable reforms that are 70-30 propositions with the public.”

“The urgency of the moment is about stopping the violence.”

That did not win them any points with congressional Republicans, who dismissed the reforms out of hand.

Progressives in the Senate, meanwhile, had not only become more strident in their rhetoric about ICE, they also called for clawing back increased ICE spending passed as part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill. Though some of these Democrats are sticking by their more robust demands, they nonetheless avoided criticizing their party leadership over the request for more limited reforms.

“The urgency of the moment is about stopping the violence,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., told The Intercept. “If it were up to me, we would be rewriting the whole immigration laws and policies. But right now, we’ve got to get some constraints in place so that roving bands of ICE agents stop terrorizing American communities. That is our first priority.”

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., the ranking member on the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee, took a similar line, setting aside his stronger demands of ICE.

“I have a much longer list of things that I want to change in the Department of Homeland Security,” he said, “but we are trying to put a targeted list of reforms that will end the abuse on the table so that we can get something done.”

10 Demands

Schumer and Jeffries’s demand list has significant overlap with previous calls from progressive members of Congress such as Rep. Greg Casar, D-Texas, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

The progressives made their demands soon after the January 24 killing of nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, which derailed a full-year funding bill for DHS and led to a brief shutdown of several government departments. The House voted to end the shutdown Tuesday by approving full-year appropriations for other departments while temporarily funding DHS through a new February 13 deadline.

The Democratic leaders unveiled their official list of demands ahead of the deadline on Wednesday, calling for ending indiscriminate arrests, prohibiting masking, requiring ICE and CBP officer identification, protecting sensitive locations such as churches and schools, halting racial profiling, upholding use of force standards, preserving the ability of states and cities to prosecute DHS misconduct, and requiring the use of body cameras when interacting with the public. (Schumer and Jeffries immediately began watering down one of their clearest demands, suggesting in public comments that they might allow agents to wear masks in some circumstances.)

The biggest split between what Schumer and Jeffries proposed and what more progressive Democrats requested was a reduction of spending on ICE and CBP.

Those agencies received $75 billion and $64 billion, respectively, in last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act to be spent through 2029. That money came on top of the amounts already available to the agencies through their annual appropriations.

Related

It’s Time for Concrete Action on ICE. Sadly, We Have the Democrats.

Clawing that money back has been a top priority for advocates, who note that it has been used to supercharge hiring and spending on surveillance technology.

“These demands MUST include cuts in funding,” Heidi Altman, the vice president of policy at the National Immigration Law Center, said in an email last week. “The money pays for the violence. It has to stop.”

Last month, Sanders proposed an amendment to the DHS appropriations bill that would have redirected the additional ICE funding to Medicaid, which he estimated would prevent 700,000 Americans from losing their health care.

Sanders’s amendment drew the support of every Senate Democrat and two Republicans, but it failed on a 49–51 vote.

“Passing new laws is no assurance to me whatsoever that they are not going to continue this lawlessness.”

In negotiations with the White House, Schumer is likely to be able to offer the potential support of only a fraction of his caucus for a full-year appropriations bill for DHS.

Some Democrats in Congress have already ruled out the idea that they will vote for any more funding.

“When you have a reckless and out of control agency that is unwilling to follow the law, passing new laws is no assurance to me whatsoever that they are not going to continue this lawlessness,” Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., told The Intercept.

Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., have shown no willingness to negotiate on key Democratic requests, Booker said.

“There’s a lot of things I know my caucus would support, but clearly the speaker and the leader are not even interested in having those kinds of conversations,” he said, “even though most of their base thinks what’s happening with this agency is unacceptable.”

DOA With GOP

Democratic leadership figures like Schatz have described the latest demands as an attempt at reaching consensus.

“They are not a Democratic wish list. We are simply asking that ICE not be held to a different standard than every other law enforcement organization in the country — state, county, and federal,” he told reporters Wednesday.

The requests fell with a thud with Republican leaders, however. Johnson has already ruled out banning masks and requiring warrants.

Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., the lead GOP negotiator, called the demands “a ridiculous Christmas list of demands for the press.”

Republicans have already floated the idea of another short-term extension of DHS funding to allow further negotiations.

The post Senate Dems Who Pushed Meatier ICE Reform Shy Away From Criticizing Schumer’s Softer Package appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 17:00

Shabana Mahmood insists deportations will rise, as Labour government is accused of promoting ‘harmful stereotypes’ of migrants

Nearly 60,000 unauthorised migrants and convicted criminals have been removed or deported from the UK since Labour took office, the Home Office has said.

The announcement came amid claims that the government was promoting “harmful stereotypes” by equating migration with criminality.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 16:57

Anonymous insider alleges director of national intelligence withheld classified information for political reasons

The Republican leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees have rejected a top-secret complaint from an anonymous government insider alleging that Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, withheld classified information for political reasons.

The responses this week from Senator Tom Cotton and Congressman Rick Crawford mean the complaint is unlikely to proceed further, though Democratic lawmakers who also have seen the document said they continue to question why it took Gabbard’s office eight months to refer the complaint to Congress as required by law.

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2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 16:52

I nominate this for the “Most Expected News Of The Decade” award.

Today, The Tech Oversight Project published a new report spotlighting newly unsealed documents in the 2026 social media addiction trials. The documents provide smoking-gun evidence that Meta, Google, Snap, and TikTok all purposefully designed their social media products to addict children and teens with no regard for known harms to their wellbeing, and how that mass youth addiction was core to the companies’ business models. The documents contain internal discussions among company employees, presentations from internal meetings, expert testimony, and evidence of Big Tech coordination with tech-funded groups, including the National Parent Teachers Association (PTA) and Family Online Safety Institute (FOSI), in attempts to control the narrative in response to concerned parents.

↫ The Tech Oversight Project

Modern social media companies are not entirely different from tobacco companies. They and everyone else know full well just how dangerous social media is, and how being addicted to it has disastrous consequences for the people involved. Tobacco companies, too, knew how dangerous smoking was decades before the general population was aware, and yet they kept pushing cigarettes, even to kids, deaths be damned. In fact, they’re still doing the same thing today with “vapes”, and we’re kind of letting it happen all over again.

Social media is directly responsible for genocides, extreme polarisation, the spread of endless amounts of lies causing parents to harm their children, mass generation of child pornography, and much, much more. All of this is not a coincidence, mere side-effects, unintended consequences – social media are designed and optimised specifically to achieve these goals, like cigarettes and now “vapes” are designed specifically to be as addictive as possible. The people responsible – social media companies, their executives, their employees – need to face justice, answer for what they’ve done, and face the legal consequences.

Of course, that’s not going to happen. Billionaires and their megacorporations are untouchable, too big to fail, too closely tied to especially the current regime in the US. I don’t think social media bans for people under 16 are the answer, since they tend to come with onerous and invasive online identity checks and because they cut vulnerable people off from their support networks, but it’s clear we need to do something.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 16:49

Mark Francis Ford has been held without bail for five months after authorities arrested him in Indiana

A man accused of molesting a disabled boy whom he met while working as a Roman Catholic priest in New Orleans has been indicted on child rape charges, according to authorities.

Grand jurors seated in New Orleans’ state criminal courthouse on Thursday handed up a nine-count indictment against Mark Francis Ford, nearly five months after authorities arrested him and jailed him without bail. The document charges Ford, 64, with aggravated rape of a child; raping a person suffering from a physical disability preventing resistance; two counts of molesting a juvenile; another three of indecent behavior with a minor; and kidnapping.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 16:39

Intel announced this week that it’s working with SoftBank subsidiary SAIMEMORY to commercialize Z-Angle Memory (ZAM), an advanced type of DRAM that stacks memory modules vertically. While ZAM chips aren’t expected to become available for at least three years, they could eventually replace the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) that is in such high demand today thanks to the AI boom.

Memory bandwidth is currently a major bottleneck in AI processing, as organizations seek to move ever greater chunks of data from memory into GPUs and back into memory. Chipmakers like Nvidia and AMD are putting hundreds of gigabytes worth of HBM on their GPU dies to help alleviate that bottleneck. However, surging HBM demand has led to a global shortage in NAND stocks, pushing up the price of RAM modules and NVMe storage and leading to supply chain shortages.

ZAM is a new memory technology that could potentially rewrite the rules of DRAM. Like HBM, ZAM memory technology utilizes vertical stacking along the Z-axis (hence the name Z-Angle). However, it promises 2x to 3x the capacity of HBM and higher bandwidths at a fraction of the energy and cost.

Intel’s agreement with SAIMEMORY calls for the two companies to leverage the foundational technology and expertise that Intel developed as part of the Next Generation DRAM Bonding (NGDB) program.

A cross-section of an NGDB test assembly showing the novel architecture of Intel’s ZAM technology (Image courtesy Intel)

The NGDB program is part of the Advanced Memory Technology (AMT) project, the Department of Energy and National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) initiative that brought vendors like Intel, SK Hynix, and SoftBank together with DOE government labs to develop new memory technologies, including ZAM, HBM, Compute Express Link (CXL), and non-volatile memory, like magnetic random access memory (MRAM).

The NGDB program is currently in its third year with Intel and the “Tri-Lab,” or Sandia National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Years one and two were dedicated to research and development, while the third year will focus on productization.

In January, Sandia shared the progress that the Tri-Lab has made with a “novel stacking approach” as part of the NGBD project. Specifically, the lab showed how it vertically bonded eight memory wafers to a base wafer using an alternative “via-in-one” construct.

“Intel’s Next-Generation DRAM Bonding initiative has demonstrated a novel memory architecture and revolutionary assembly methodology that significantly increases DRAM performance, reduces power consumption, and optimizes memory costs,” Joshua Fryman, CTO of Intel Government Technologies, stated in the Sandia progress update. “Standard memory architectures aren’t meeting AI needs, so NGDB defined a whole new approach to accelerate us through the next decade.”

Gwen Voskuilen, principal member of technical staff at Sandia, said the Intel breakthrough is “an exciting technology that we anticipate will lead to a wider adoption of higher bandwidth memories in systems that are currently unable to take advantage of high bandwidth memory due to its limited capacity and power constraints.”

A memory tester probe card as part of Intel’s NGDB R&D program (Image courtesy Intel)

“The demonstration confirms that the NGDB technologies can be combined to yield a highly performant memory with high-volume manufacturing,” he added.

SoftBank reportedly is investing ¥3 billion (about $19 million at current exchange rates) in SAIMEMORY to develop ZAM with Intel. SAIMEMORY has reportedly said that it expects to create a ZAM prototype by 2027, with commercialization in 2029.

If that timeline plays out, it will be a boon for next-generation AI systems. However, it won’t come soon enough to relieve the current supply chain crunch due to surging HBM demand, which isn’t expected to abate for years.

Meanwhile, the ZAM program further strengthens the strategic technology partnership between the US and Japan. Last week, DOE Under Secretary for Science Dario Gil travelled to the SCA/HPCAsia 2026 conference in Osaka, Japan, to cement the expanded partnership between Argonne National Lab, Nvidia, RIKEN, and Fujitsu. Gil is in charge of Genesis Mission, the DOE’s initiative to accelerate progress in scientific discovery and engineering through AI.

Developing new memory technologies, such as ZAM, to replace or augment existing HBM aligns closely with Genesis Mission goals.

“The transition from AMT to ZAM strengthens trusted U.S. and Japan technology partnerships and accelerates the path from national laboratory research to global deployment,” Intel’s Sanam Masroor, the director of global strategic partnerships, wrote in a February 2 blog post.

The post What is Z-Angle Memory and Why Is Intel Developing It? appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 16:30

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has announced that astronauts on the upcoming Crew-12 and Artemis II missions will be allowed to carry iPhones and other modern smartphones into orbit and to the Moon -- a reversal of long-standing agency rules that had left crews relying on a 2016 Nikon DSLR and decade-old GoPros for the historic lunar flyby. Isaacman framed the move as part of a broader push to challenge what he called bloated qualification requirements, where hardware approvals get mired in radiation characterization, battery thermal tests, outgassing reviews and vibration testing. "That operational urgency will serve NASA well as we pursue the highest-value science and research in orbit and on the lunar surface," he wrote.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 16:17

One jewelry company is looking to offset surging silver prices by plating its pieces with an even more precious metal.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 16:08

LOUISVILLE, Colo., Feb. 5, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced that its quantum software team, together with collaborators at the University of Chicago (UChicago) and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), has been selected to advance to Phase 3 of the Wellcome Leap Quantum for Bio (Q4Bio) Challenge, a global program focused on demonstrating quantum-enabled solutions for human health. The news comes as Infleqtion prepares to go public through a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X.

“Phase 3 allows us to test quantum-enabled biomarker discovery end to end,” said Pranav Gokhale, CTO, Infleqtion. “We’re applying our hybrid quantum–classical workflow to real oncology data and evaluating whether quantum methods can improve feature selection on today’s hardware, not in simulations.”

Biomarker discovery, identifying molecular, genetic, or image-based features that help diagnose cancer, guide treatment, or predict patient response, requires analyzing high-dimensional, multimodal clinical datasets. Traditional tools often struggle to capture subtle or higher-order interactions across these data types. The Wellcome Leap Q4Bio program targets this challenge directly, supporting teams working to demonstrate quantum-enabled methods for human health within the next five years.

“This project only works because clinicians, biologists, and quantum scientists are designing the solution together,” added Gokhale. “That collaboration ensures the algorithms address genuine clinical needs while remaining implementable on near-term quantum hardware.”

Across Phases 1 and 2, the Infleqtion-led team built a hybrid quantum–classical workflow designed to handle the complexity of modern biomedical data. The approach combines organized preprocessing of DNA, RNA, and pathology image features with a higher-order optimization method that can capture interactions often missed by traditional techniques. The team also developed Hyper-RQAOA, a quantum routine tailored to current and near-term hardware that leverages parameter transfer techniques to greatly improve efficiency. Together, these components provide a practical way to test quantum-enabled feature selection on datasets that matter in real clinical settings.

Phase 3 transitions the effort from controlled simulations to experiments on real quantum processors. To succeed, teams must show meaningful performance on current devices and demonstrate how their methods will scale to the next generation of quantum systems. Infleqtion’s team will use this stage to tackle a more complex clinical question: forecasting treatment response in head-and-neck cancer using a curated cohort from UChicago. The goal is to determine whether quantum-in-the-loop analysis can reveal small, clinically useful biomarker sets that support precision oncology decisions.

Today’s announcement follows the release of the team’s flagship research paper, Toward Quantum-Enabled Biomarker Discovery: An Outlook from Q4Bio, now available on arXiv.

For more information, including technical details, publications, and collaboration opportunities, visit Infleqtion.com.

About Infleqtion

Infleqtion is a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing, powered by neutral-atom technology. Infleqtion designs and builds quantum computers, precision sensors, and quantum software for governments, enterprises, and research institutions. Infleqtion’s commercial portfolio includes quantum computers as well as quantum RF systems, quantum clocks, and inertial navigation solutions. Infleqtion is the partner of choice for governments and commercial customers seeking cutting-edge quantum capabilities. Infleqtion announced in September 2025 it plans to go public via a merger with Churchill X (NASDAQ: CCCX).

The post Infleqtion Accelerates Quantum for Oncology as Q4Bio Challenge Enters Phase 3 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 15:59

President Donald Trump said Thursday that he hoped to replace New START with a modernized treaty that could “last long into the future.”

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 15:43

SAN FRANCISCO and LONDON, Feb. 5, 2026 — Armada and Nscale have signed a letter of intent (LOI) to deliver both large-scale and edge AI infrastructure for public sector and enterprise customers worldwide. Nscale is a European-headquartered AI infrastructure builder bringing online some of the largest supercomputer clusters globally – with a full-stack platform spanning power, data centers, compute, and software. San Francisco-based Armada delivers real-time distributed intelligence through its leading modular data centers (Galleons) and proprietary Armada Edge Platform (AEP). Together they can deliver sovereign solutions, both at scale and at the edge.

This collaboration aims to bring full-stack edge AI technology offerings directly to multiple sites around the globe. With access to land and power at these sites, Armada and Nscale intend to deliver solutions that include modular data center infrastructure, GPU compute capacity, application software, and customer support to end customers in the private and public sectors.

Nscale and Armada together combine rapidly deployable, turnkey infrastructure with large-scale sovereign cloud deployments, empowering customers to maintain sovereign compute environments anywhere in the world. Enterprises and governments can now establish secure, compliant AI infrastructure in locations where existing infrastructure doesn’t exist, and far faster than full data center builds.

The solution enables a hub-and-spoke model. Large-scale data centers from Nscale provide superior unit economics and foundational capacity. Armada’s turnkey deployments, like Leviathan, its megawatt Galleon, extend sovereign capabilities to new geographies at the edge.

“There is increasing demand from enterprises and governments for operational AI, and meeting that need requires infrastructure that is scalable, distributed, and ultimately sovereign,” said Josh Payne, Founder and CEO of Nscale. “By working with Armada, we will be able to offer customers a flexible foundation for deploying advanced AI workloads wherever they need to operate, without compromising performance, security, or control.”

“As AI adoption accelerates, organizations need infrastructure that can reach beyond centralized clusters, on Earth and even beyond,” said Dan Wright, Co-Founder and CEO of Armada. “One of Armada’s key differentiators is that we enable sovereign AI, with speed and scale. Partnering with Nscale allows us to extend our modular AI infrastructure into new global markets, supporting customers who require sovereign, high-performance compute.”

Together, Armada and Nscale intend to establish a repeatable model for deploying AI infrastructure globally. By uniting large-scale sovereign cloud services, modular compute, and distributed operations, this will enable organizations to accelerate AI adoption while maintaining security, compliance, and performance at scale.

More from HPCwire

About Armada

Armada is a full-stack edge infrastructure company delivering compute, storage, connectivity, and AI/ML capabilities to the most remote and rugged industrial environments on Earth. From energy to defense, Armada enables organizations to operate at the edge—without compromise.

About Nscale

Nscale is building the global hyperscaler engineered for AI infrastructure. Through vertically integrated AI solutions and modular, first-principles data center design across Europe and North America, Nscale delivers the compute foundation for enterprise AI training, fine-tuning, and inference at scale.


Source: Armada

The post Armada and Nscale Outline Plans for Global Sovereign AI Data Center Network appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 15:43

The carrier is positioning the Better Value plan for families, but this limited time deal has some strings attached.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 15:27

Feb. 5, 2026 — Great things can come from failure when it comes to geology.

The Midcontinent rift formed about 1.1 billion years ago and runs smack in the middle of the United States at the Great Lakes. The rift failed to completely rupture, and had it succeeded it would have torn North America apart. Under immense pressure from receding tectonic plates, the weakened lithosphere instead created a basin in the crust eventually filled by Lake Superior, and it also exposed a 3000-km-long band of deeply buried igneous and sedimentary rocks.

Supercomputer simulations by University of Memphis scientists are revealing new details about geological rift failure — insights that could inform geothermal energy, rare earth mineral exploration, and more. Image of the Great Crack and surrounding lava flows along Kīlaueaʻs lower SW Rift Zone. Courtesy of the USGS.

Long a mystery, the details of rift failure are becoming clearer thanks to U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS-allocated supercomputer simulations on the Texas Advanced Computer Center’s (TACC) Stampede3 system by a pair of University of Memphis scientists. Their findings could help understand rift failure in other parts of the world with applications in renewable geothermal energy, rare earth minerals, and more.

“Our main finding is that we can understand the rift systems losing driving forces in terms of three parameters: how much the driving force is reduced, how fast it is reduced, and how mature the rift is when it starts losing its driving force,” said Kuruvitage Chameera Silva, a PhD student at The University of Memphis. He co-published a study in Nature Scientific Reports (October 2025) with his advisor Eunseo Choi, who leads the Geodynamics Research Group at the Center for Earthquake Research and Information.

“By running numerous numerical models while varying those three parameters, we could map out exactly when continental extension continues to full breakup, and when it fails,” Choi added.

“The NSF ACCESS program plays a vital role in making supercomputing resources broadly available to researchers across the United States,” Silva said. “These supercomputer allocations provided me, as a student researcher, with the high performance computing resources necessary to conduct the high-resolution continental rifting simulations central to this study, work that would have been impossible on local machines.”

Figure (a) Designed time dependent boundary traction depth integrated tractions for model. (b) Modeled slab dynamics. (c) Half extensional velocities for two models; CT model accelerates towards continental breakup (CB). (d) Model evolution at different time stamps. Credit: DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-19691-3.

Supercomputing Continental Rifts

The scientists used TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer to simulate what happens when a tectonic plate is pulled from the sides. Rather than prescribing a fixed velocity, they applied more realistic force boundary conditions that evolve over the millions of years modeled. They also used HPC resources at The University of Memphis Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics.

The numerical models were made using the geodynamic code ASPECT that accounted for both the driving forces of the pulling that stretches the rift zone and the gravitational energy gradient; and the resisting forces of lithospheric cooling, rift strength, and mantle drag.

“This is the first study that successfully implemented the force boundary driven continental extension models in the ASPECT code,” Silva said.

ASPECT developers helped the team simulate the tensional tectonic settings, where each 2D model needed 128 cores or about three nodes to run over a period of two days to get a model simulation time of 20 million years. The published manuscript has 23 models.

“The Stampede3 supercomputer proved to be an excellent platform for this work, and ASPECT is well tested on its architecture. The installation was straightforward, and the system delivered strong parallel performance with reasonable queue times,” Silva said. “This allowed me to run model suites, parameter sweeps, and complex rheology efficiently, greatly accelerating the pace of the research.”

Beyond raw computing power, the NSF ACCESS initiative also helped Silva develop essential HPC skills including writing SLURM scripts, managing parallel workloads, and optimizing large-scale simulations. “The clear documentation and user support ensured I could focus on scientific objectives rather than technical obstacles,” he added.

Below the Surface

As a tectonic plate stretches, it becomes thinner and weaker. If the driving force is not enough to stretch the lithosphere, it cools and thickens. Whether a rift keeps spreading eventually splitting a continent apart or stops in the middle of making one main valley depends on the competition between the weakening forces and strengthening forces. The rift’s fate is determined by how quickly the plate weakens compared to how strongly it’s still being pulled apart.

A significant reduction in driving force stops rifting and results in no continental breakup; and with a small reduction, rifting is affected little, proceeding to continental breakup. A surprise in the study results, however, was that when the driving force decreases very slowly, it will have enough time to mature the rift, promoting continental breakup. Also, the more mature a rift gets, the weaker it becomes. Thus, a continental rift is more likely to complete breakup if it starts losing the driving force at a sufficiently late stage of shifting.

This new research helps the larger scientific community by connecting deep Earth dynamics with surface evolution in a quantitative, testable way. It shows how changes in stress, heat, and lithospheric structure lead to the diverse rift behaviors we see around the world — from successful ocean-forming rifts to long-lived failed rifts.

“Supercomputers let us ‘see’ processes inside the Earth that we can never observe directly, deep underground and over millions of years,” Silva said. “By recreating them in high-resolution simulations, we can test ideas, explore what-if scenarios, and better understand natural hazards and how continents evolve.”


Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC

The post TACC Simulations Shed New Light on Why Continental Rifts Fail appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 14:36

Party says it will not back funding bill without reforms on – among other things – masks, ID and judicial warrants

Following the fatal shootings of American citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis last month, Democrats have refused to support long-term funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) unless Republicans agree to reforms on the tactics of federal agents carrying out Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

“The American people rightfully expect their elected representatives to take action to rein in ICE and ensure no more lives are lost,” the Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, and his House counterpart, Hakeem Jeffries, wrote on Wednesday night in a letter issuing 10 formal demands to GOP leadership in order to avert a 13 February lapse in funding for the department, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the US Border Patrol.

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2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 13:29

Newly unsealed files claim the banker, who has denied any wrongdoing, forced a woman to touch his genitals during a massage before raping her

US prosecutors reviewed allegations of rape and bodily harm against the former Barclays boss and former JP Morgan banker Jes Staley, according to newly unsealed files linked to the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Multiple documents in the Epstein files cite serious allegations of sexual misconduct against Staley, including that he forced a woman to touch his genitals during a massage before raping her, and left “bloody marks” on the arms of a woman he called “tinkerbell”.

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2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 10:38

Oil, regime change, and what's next in Trump’s MAGA playbook? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…

After the US capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, our analysts discuss where in the Western Hemisphere US President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio may turn their attention to next.

Host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Laurel Rapp, director of Chatham House’s US and North America Programme, and Dr Christopher Sabatini, Senior Fellow for Latin America. They dissect the so-called ‘Donroe Doctrine’, Marco Rubio’s project to reform Cuba’s regime, Haiti, and why oil is central to the MAGA playbook.

Read Dr Sabatini’s full research paper ‘A roadmap for security and governance reform in Haiti’.

About Independent Thinking

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

More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts, Spotify

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 10:00

A leaked pitch to reshape Ethereum’s leadership exposed deep divisions over politics, power and ether’s static price

US crypto developer Danny Ryan submitted a proposal in November 2024 to Vitalik Buterin, the founder and symbolic leader of Ethereum, a prominent blockchain powering the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency. Ryan, who had worked for seven years at the Ethereum Foundation (EF), Ethereum’s de facto governing body, suggested that Ethereum could be on the cusp of an era-defining shift.

Since its founding in 2014, the foundation had prioritized technical upgrades and had avoided centralizing power while its user base was growing, but Ethereum had now grown up, and the cryptocurrency world around it had grown up, too. The EF could now “exercise a stronger voice” without compromising its ethos of decentralization, Ryan said – and he was open to leading that charge if appointed as the foundation’s new executive director.

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2026-02-06 20:04
2026-02-05 09:36

Explore which states have the highest number of athletes competing for the U.S. Olympic team at the 2026 Winter Games, and search for your own hometown.

2026-02-08 08:04
2026-02-05 08:42

Haiti’s vicious circle: Funding is needed to end the violence. But the violence means the funding doesn’t come Expert comment jon.wallace

Beyond restoring security, a push to rebuild Haiti’s society and create jobs is vital to any lasting solution. But who will fund such an effort, as the cycle of violence continues?

A Haitian walks past cars burned by armed gangs and used as a barricade during clashes with security forces

Politics in Haiti is a blood sport. The last elected President, Jovenel Moïse, was gunned down by mercenaries in 2021. Since then, the country has descended into rampant gang violence. Thousands have been killed and abducted in the chaos. Criminals control roughly 90 per cent of the capital city, Port-au-Prince. Legal economic activity has nearly ground to a halt. 

Now there is serious doubt on whether the country will have a government after 7 February, when its Transitional Presidential Council (TPC) was originally set to dissolve. Internecine battles have broken out over what should follow the Council, and more specifically who can remain in power. 

In recent weeks, several TPC members attempted to remove Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé in a palace coup. Those same members have put forward plans for a reduced Council that would include – of course – them. There is a real threat that some Council members will mobilize the gangs to coerce other members and the international community. In response, the US has parked a warship and three coast guard cutters off the coast of Haiti.  

The upheaval threatens the future of any government in Haiti and the status of the UN’s new Gang Suppression Force (GSF) mission to the crime-ridden country. What can be done to break Haiti’s cycle of disaster?

Council of chaos

The TPC was established in April 2024, after gangs prevented interim president Ariel Henri from returning to Haiti. 

At the time, Haiti lacked an elected government. It still doesn’t have one. The parliament was dissolved in 2020 when its mandate ended without new elections. The hope was that the TPC, created after Caribbean Community (Caricom) negotiations, could provide transitional government until new democratic elections could be held in late 2025, with a new government seated by 8 February 2026.  

Even before the TPC’s recent internal turmoil, political gamesmanship and efforts to protect armed allies and secure access to resources hobbled the transitional authority. The first prime minister, Gary Conille, was forced to resign only six months into his term.

And the Council failed to deliver progress on any coherent policy across any area, most importantly security. From January to November 2025 alone, 8,100 people were killed in the country of 11 million, according to UN Secretary General António Guterres – a 20 per cent increase from 2024. Sexual violence has also spiked in recent years.

In addition to the armada floating just outside Port-au-Prince, the US slapped visa restrictions on five of the members of the TPC jockeying for power in the government. At the end of January, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio reported that he had spoken to Fils-Aimé and ‘emphasized the importance of his continued tenure as Haiti’s prime minister to combat terrorist gangs and stabilize the island’ adding that the TPC ‘must be dissolved by February 7 without corrupt actors…’

Violence strangles the economy and the hope for speedy elections

Economically too, the power struggles in the interim government have choked off growth. The World Bank estimates that the crisis had in six years cost Haiti nearly $10 billion a year in lost economic activity by 2024. Small and medium enterprises were particularly affected.

The failure to re-establish even a modicum of security has prevented the planned elections. It became conventional wisdom that attempting to convene a popular vote in a country overwhelmed by gangs would likely – either through coercion, campaign support or running their own candidates – formally turn Haiti’s government over to criminals. Now, with the status or form of an interim government after 8 February uncertain, even an updated plan to hold elections in late 2026 looks unrealistic. 

Jobs are critical to offering a legal economy alternative to former or future gang members. 

The potential absence of a credible Haitian government puts the UN mission at risk. The plan is to deploy a 5,500-strong multi-national force to crack down on gang leaders and recapture territory, including transportation hubs and economic infrastructure. But that requires an effective government counterpart in Haiti. 

Even if current dialogues and negotiations can cobble together a governmental authority, it will likely not enjoy broad support among the political elite. As has been the case for decades, corrupt political and business leaders frozen out of power will use gang contacts to sow discontent and chaos – enforcing a street veto on the next government.

The lack of broad acceptance among the political elites (and their followers) and the spectre of politically directed violence will hobble any future government in its greatest – and long overdue – task: purging, reforming and rebuilding Haiti’s security and judicial sectors.  

Any viable solution to the security crisis will require not just effective international and domestic military and police action against gang leaders. It also demands a complete overhaul of Haiti’s police, military forces and intelligence services and a fair and speedy court and penitentiary system to ensure justice for victims, many of them women and children. There must be accountability for the brutal crimes being committed every day. 

A lack of funding could be fatal to that effort, and to the more traditional community and development efforts necessary to ensure long-term success.  

Like many other countries facing security and humanitarian crises, Haiti confronts a declining global budget for development assistance. With the US Agency for Development (USAID) now abolished by the Donald Trump administration and subsequent cuts to development assistance by the UK, Canada and EU, many of the steps needed to follow reducing gang power, such as disarmament and demobilization, will have scant resources. 

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-05 08:33

Founder’s extraordinary intervention has laid bare rising tensions between European governments and tech firms

Spain has accused Pavel Durov of “spreading lies” and seeking to undermine democratic institutions after the Telegram founder used the messaging app to attack government plans to introduce a social media ban for under-16s and to hold tech companies responsible for hateful and harmful content.

Durov’s extraordinary public intervention – which came a day after Elon Musk called Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, a “true fascist totalitarian” over the proposed measures – reveals the rapidly escalating tensions between European governments and powerful global technology chiefs.

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2026-02-08 12:04
2026-02-05 08:04

The EU’s IRGC terrorist designation marks a major shift on Iran Expert comment thilton.drupal

Europe has realized that engaging Tehran without leverage, interlocutors or credible pathways to change is unsustainable. But it should not abandon Iranians altogether.

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The European Union’s decision to designate Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization last week marks the end of the EU’s long strategy of engagement with the Islamic Republic.

That strategy began in the early 1990s and endured throughout the crisis over Iran’s nuclear programme that started in late 2002. Over more than three decades, the EU sought to balance pressure with dialogue, preserving diplomatic and economic channels even at moments of acute confrontation. 

The IRGC designation therefore represents not merely a policy adjustment, but the collapse of a core assumption in European Iran policy: that sustained engagement could preserve leverage, empower Iranian interlocutors and ultimately moderate Tehran’s behaviour.

Deteriorating relations

Relations between the EU and Iran had already been eroding since 2022. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, launched that year, marked a decisive turning point, as Iran’s provision of drones and military support to Russia placed Tehran directly at odds with a central European security priority. 

The death of Mahsa Amini in September 2022 and Tehran’s violent suppression of the ensuing protests further strained ties, exposing the widening gap between the rhetoric of engagement and realities on the ground in Iran. 

The failure to revive the nuclear agreement in mid-2023 due to Iran’s rejection of the latest agreed draft made engagement more challenging and removed the last structured framework for cooperation. The triggering of UN snapback sanctions in September 2025, which was led by the E3 (France, Germany and the UK), angered Iran, entrenching mutual mistrust. 

Still, until early 2026, few would have expected EU–Iran relations to deteriorate further, let alone reach the point of the IRGC being listed. The move has been debated for years in European capitals, particularly after the US designated the IRGC as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in 2019, and Canada followed suit in 2024. 

However, the EU had hesitated until now. Some within Europe saw the listing of the IRGC as a step that would effectively criminalize engagement with large parts of the Iranian state. They also feared retaliation against dual nationals, further escalation in theatres where EU forces operate and the closure of diplomatic off-ramps. 

The anticipated effect of designating the IRGC was never behavioural change by the group itself. Instead, the aims were signalling, deterrence and normative clarity – benefits that the EU had long judged insufficient to justify the costs.

What changed?

This calculus was ultimately shifted by the scale and brutality of Iran’s domestic repression during the early-2026 uprisings. 

Mass arrests, executions, internet shutdowns, and the open use of lethal force against demonstrators erased any remaining confidence in gradual change. Unlike previous episodes, the violence could not plausibly be attributed to rogue commanders or security excesses. It reflected a system-wide choice. Security institutions, clerical authorities, and political officials – including figures previously portrayed as reformist or pragmatic – aligned behind the crackdown and publicly framed repression as necessary.

For European policymakers, this alignment destroyed the remaining logic of engagement. Europe found itself with no remaining credible interlocutors to engage with, nor any meaningful distinction between coercive and diplomatic power centres. Refraining from the designation therefore risked legitimizing violence, undermining Europe’s credibility and exposing the EU to accusations of moral complicity. The reputational cost became too high.

The decision to designate the IRGC came after Italy, Spain and France decided to support the measure, having reportedly previously been hesitant. Announcing the decision, the EU’s foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas attributed the move to the crackdown on protesters in Iran, saying that ‘repression cannot go unanswered.’ The US welcomed the move, while Tehran described it as a ‘major strategic mistake.’

Impact

From an operational standpoint, the designation is unlikely to dramatically alter Iran-related business in practice, though it materially raises compliance stakes. Any European company with dealings linked to Iran already faces high sanctions risks and many will already have significant due diligence checks in place. 

However, the designation means that companies will need to ensure they check for Iranian counterparties have ownership, control or facilitation links to IRGC-affiliated networks. Enforcement agencies are likely to scrutinize Iran-linked transactions more closely, increasing legal and reputational risk for businesses even where activity is technically permissible. 

By designating the IRGC, the EU also creates another legal tool to impose secondary sanctions against businesses and individuals in third countries with ties to the IRGC. The risk for secondary sanctions will therefore also impact non-EU companies with ties to Iran.  

Europe sidelined?

Politically, the most immediate consequence is the near-total sidelining of the EU from shaping Iran policy.  This is already clear in the US-Iran talks currently scheduled for Friday. A range of countries have been reported as among the potential participants, but none of them are European. 

Europe looks set to lose what little influence it retained as a bridge between Tehran and Washington at precisely the moment when decisive choices will be made over Iran’s future. Whether president Trump will decide to pursue negotiations or escalate militarily, Europe will lack the leverage to shape outcomes. 

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-05 07:58

rysler is recalling more than 450,000 vehicles with improperly designed trailer tow modules whose trailer lights may not work and that have trailer brakes that could fail, federal officials say.

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-05 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Since the passage of legislation in 2023 requiring all Delaware municipalities to create Police Accountability Boards, reform advocates have often criticized the boards as disorganized and lacking real authority. The New Castle County Council passed an ordinance that would transfer more power over its county police accountability board to the county executive, prompting questions from citizens.

The New Castle County Council passed an ordinance earlier this week taking more authority over appointments to the county’s Police Accountability Board away from community groups and giving it to County Executive Marcus Henry. 

The move grants Henry the power to appoint the accountability board’s chair, replacing the previous system where the county executive had to ask for recommendations to fill the role from local nonprofit organizations. 

The new ordinance also removes certain community representation requirements from the board, such as a civil rights group and a faith-based leader; mandates board members complete 20 hours of police officer-run training; and reduces the number annual board meetings from 10 to six. 

County council members and representatives from Henry’s office are lauding the ordinance as a way of tightening up the accountability board to make it more effective, but police reform advocates are pointing to it as another example of the accountability boards across the state not functioning properly. 

House Bill 205, passed in 2023, instituted a requirement for each local police department in Delaware to create its own Police Accountability Board to address citizen concerns and discuss potential reforms. 

Most boards, like those of the cities of Wilmington and Dover, oversee their own municipal police departments. New Castle County is the only county-wide Police Accountability Board. It was established in July 2024 to preside over the county police department, which itself is directly overseen by the county’s Department of Public Safety. 

In the nearly two and a half years since HB 205 was passed, police reform advocates have criticized some jurisdictions for not having functioning accountability boards, and others for having boards that only met once or twice over the years. 

The New Castle County ordinance was introduced to the council’s Public Safety Committee at the request of Henry’s office in mid-January.

County Councilmen Kevin Caneco and Brandon Toole, the committee chairs, made it clear at multiple discussions of the ordinance that they were not involved in writing the proposal, but rather were simply introducing it to council at the direction of Henry’s office. 

Still, Caneco said he supports the ordinance as a means of adjusting the board’s functions and providing some more flexibility to meeting times and appointments to the board. 

“I think it actually kind of tightens up the language to make the accountability board a little more organized as we move forward,” Caneco told Spotlight Delaware. 

The ordinance passed 12-1 on Feb. 2, with Councilman Jea P. Street casting the lone vote against the ordinance. 

Street made his disapproval of the ordinance clear at the meeting, arguing that it goes against the “spirit and intention” of Police Accountability Boards. His comments come more than two years after the council engaged in a debate over the creation of the board. 

At that time, Street – a longtime advocate for police reform – issued a warning to his colleagues: Either approve the advisory board, or “we’ll have to look to the courts to run the police department.”  

County executive sought feedback

When New Castle County created its 13-member Police Accountability Board in 2023, it was hailed for being the first jurisdiction in the state to do so.

The county had endured the bruising public scrutiny in the officer-involved killing of Lymond Moses just two years earlier, which came in the wake of calls for reform initiated by the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers.

When then-New Castle County Executive Matt Meyer created the board, he said that, “County residents now have a seat at the table when it comes to law enforcement accountability.”

That approach has now been significantly altered.

Caneco and Toole also said at Tuesday’s meeting that they consulted with members of the Police Accountability Board before moving forward with the ordinance, and got written approval of the changes from Board Vice Chair Kevin Evans.

Natalie Criscenzo, a spokesperson for Henry’s office, wrote in a message to Spotlight Delaware that Henry met one-on-one with board members to hear their feedback before proposing the ordinance. 

“While some of the proposed changes originated from the executive office, they were shared with board leadership for review,” Criscenzo wrote. “The intent is to support a more responsive, transparent, and community focused police accountability board.” 

The move by Henry was foreshadowed in a sit-down interview with Spotlight Delaware last spring, when he said that he had “a different perspective” on oversight of police.

“I appreciate the work of the Police Accountability Board and other efforts, but I look at it like this: At the end of day, I’m responsible. I’m personally responsible for what happens with the conduct of the police department,” he said. “I appreciate the help of citizens groups and others, but I don’t need additional help in terms of the seriousness and the veracity in my reviews to make sure we’re doing the best we can.”

New Castle County Councilman Kevin Caneco said that he felt the changes “tightened up” the work of the county’s Police Accountability Board. | PHOTO COURTESY OF NCC

Caneco introduced an amendment to the ordinance on Tuesday night, requiring the accountability board to submit annual reports and recommendations to county leaders by April 1 of each year.

Discussion of the ordinance among council members focused on the specifics of Caneco’s amendment, and how often the accountability board should present its recommendations to the county council. 

Street was the only council member to bring up the power over the accountability board that the ordinance would grant to Henry. 

Advocates express concern

Citizens, however, expressed concern about the impact of the regulation on the board’s ability to function, and the power being stripped from community organizations to decide who represents them.  

Chris Asay, a member of the League of Women Voters of Delaware who attends various Police Accountability Board meetings around the state, said the ordinance is disappointing for the integrity of boards in the First State. 

“These changes further weaken the independence and diversity of the board,” Asay said, “making it a faux accountability board like most of the other police accountability committees.”

Tanya Whittle, a current member of the New Castle County Police Accountability Board, said she found it “disheartening” that both the county executive’s office and the county council supported an ordinance that she sees as undermining police accountability. 

“It’s moving us away from the efforts we’ve made as far as really having community-led accountability boards,” she said. 

Whittle’s term on the board is up this month. She told Spotlight Delaware she does not plan to seek another term because she has been “frustrated” by the county’s handling of the board.

The post NCC Council gives Henry more authority over Police Accountability Board appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 19:00

Go behind the scenes with our team as we find and make sense of the numbers.

2026-02-06 16:04
2026-02-04 18:06

Update: February 6, 2026

As of Friday, the Democratic primary in New Jersey’s 11th district is too close to call between organizer Analilia Mejia and former Rep. Tom Malinowski. Former Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way trails in a distant third. This story details pro-Israel contributions to Way’s campaign ahead of the election.

Former Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way is not the clear front-runner in New Jersey’s special congressional election on Thursday. She’s seventh in fundraising out of 10 candidates as of last week’s Federal Election Commission deadline, and public polling has been sparse. But as the race drew close to the finish line, the Israel lobby made her the beneficiary of a last-minute push. 

In the final weeks before the election, an Intercept analysis has found, 30 donors to groups including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, its super PAC, and Democratic Majority for Israel have poured more than $50,000 into Way’s campaign. On Friday, amid the fundraising push and less than a week before the election, DMFI officially endorsed her. 

The lobby is known for spending against progressives and the most vocal critics of the state of Israel, but in New Jersey, it appears to be backing one moderate to pick off another. Yet more pro-Israel money in the race comes at the expense of Tom Malinowski, who is no progressive on Israel policy but nevertheless has become the subject of AIPAC ire — marking a reversal for the group, which supported him in 2022.

AIPAC’s super PAC, United Democracy Project, has spent more $2.3 million on ads against Malinowski. The ads do not mention Israel but attack Malinowski on immigration, saying he helped fund “Trump’s deportation force” because he voted in favor of a 2019 bipartisan appropriations bill that funded the Department of Homeland Security. The majority of Democrats, including many supported by AIPAC, voted for the bill.

In a statement to The Intercept, UDP spokesperson Patrick Dorton made no mention of Malinowski’s DHS funding vote. He said Malinowski had fallen afoul of the group’s policy priorities by discussing the possibility of conditioning aid to Israel.

“It’s our goal to build the largest bipartisan pro-Israel majority in Congress. There are several candidates in this race far more pro-Israel than Tom Malinowski,” Dorton said.

Related

AIPAC Is Retreating From Endorsements and Election Spending. It Won’t Give Up Its Influence.

Way and Malinowski are competing in a crowded race in New Jersey’s 11th Congressional District to replace former Rep. Mikie Sherrill, who vacated the seat after she was elected governor

Way and Malinowski’s campaigns did not respond to The Intercept’s requests for comment.

Also running are Analilia Mejia, the former political director for Sen. Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign; veteran Zach Beecher; Passaic County commissioner and election lawyer John Bartlett; former Morris Township Mayor Jeff Grayzel; and Essex County Commissioner Brendan Gill. 

Way already had substantial support from the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association, which endorsed her and has spent more than $1.7 million backing her campaign, almost half of what it spent in total last cycle. But even with close to $4 million in outside spending on her side, she has lagged behind her opponents in fundraising. She’s raised just over $400,000 — compared to Malinowski’s over $1.1 million, more than $800,000 for Gill, and over half a million for Beecher. Bartlett has raised more than $460,000, Grayzel has raised $428,000, and Mejia has raised just over $420,000. 

Now, pro-Israel donors who have given to AIPAC to boost other pro-Israel candidates are trying to help Way close the gap. They include retired investor Peter Langerman, who has given $75,000 to AIPAC’s United Democracy Project since 2023 and $12,000 to AIPAC since 2022. Another Way donor, Florida loan executive Joel Edelstein, has given $25,000 to UDP since 2023 and $3,500 to AIPAC since 2022.

Among Way’s other donors are Bennett Greenspan, founder of the genealogy company Family Tree DNA, who has given $40,000 to United Democracy Project, $4,000 to DMFI PAC, and $1,250 to AIPAC PAC since 2022. Way donor and New Jersey real estate developer Michael Gottlieb gave $25,000 to UDP in 2023. Another Way donor, founder and former president of Microsoft partner HSO, Jack Ades, has given $10,750 to AIPAC since 2024. Gottlieb and Ades have given to Republican candidates including Reps. Mike Lawler and Elise Stefanik in New York; Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La.; Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign; and the Republican group WinRed

More than half of these contributions all landed on January 14.

More than half of the contributions to Way — $33,000 of the $53,000 in total — all landed on January 14, a common sign that outside groups have sent out a fundraising push to their network.

Another donor to Way’s campaign is Joseph Korn, a New Jersey real estate developer who served on the New Jersey board of the Jewish National Fund, a controversial national organization that has funded settler groups in the West Bank. 

Way is campaigning on a relatively centrist platform that primarily includes fighting against President Donald Trump’s agenda. She’s also running on strengthening the Affordable Care Act, ensuring access to reproductive care, protecting democracy and voting rights, and lowering costs without raising taxes, including raising the cap on state and local tax deductions, or SALT. Her website does not mention foreign policy or Israel. 

Way is also endorsed by the Congressional Black Caucus PAC; the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State; IVYPAC, which backs candidates who are members of the historically Black Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority; and several other New Jersey organizations. 

The Israel lobby’s support for Way may not ultimately help its policy priorities. As a recent column in the Forward points out, by pitting Way and Malinowski against each other, AIPAC donors might help a more progressive candidate get elected.

The post AIPAC Donors Fail to Elect Last-Minute New Jersey House Pick appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 17:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
School was disrupted in certain areas of the state on Wednesday after several districts received bomb threats. Law enforcement investigators ultimately said they were not credible. They also said that schools in states across the country had received similar threats. 

At least five schools in Delaware received automated voice-recorded bomb threats on Wednesday, and the calls might be linked to larger nationwide threats. 

The Delaware State Police confirmed to Spotlight Delaware that they learned that “multiple states nationwide have received similar threats and language via voicemail.”

For some schools in Delaware, the calls disrupted their daily schedules. Others went on with their days as planned. 

David Karas, spokesman for the Wilmington Police Department, confirmed that officers responded to Padua Academy and Cab Calloway School of the Arts in reference to reports of bomb threats. He said no devices nor other material threats were identified. 

Delaware State Police also said its investigators found no evidence of bombs, despite the reported threats. 

In a message sent to families on Wednesday, Concord High School Principal Jeff Lawson said the school had received a “threat of violence” that was left on the school’s answering system. Law enforcement determined it was not a credible threat, he said.

Also on Wednesday, the Capital School District announced it was implementing a two-hour delay for students in grades 1 through 8, due to a “transportation disruption,” caused by multiple bomb threats that affected school operations. 

In the statement, the Capital said the delay was implemented “out of an abundance of caution” as the alerts were being investigated. They said nothing was found at any school facility. 

Farther to the south, Cape Henlopen  School District said law enforcement determined that a threat made to its high school “was a hoax made to cause disruption to school operations.” 

Unlike the Capital School District, there was no delayed opening and the Cape Henlopen High School day continued as normal, according to the district.

Delaware House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown said in a Facebook post that she is also aware of the bomb threats made against multiple schools across the state, including her son’s school. 

“As a mother, I am relieved to know that all threats involving our schools are taken seriously and investigated thoroughly,” she said in the post. 

Minor-Brown also noted that law enforcement believes the threat “to be of low credibility but remains vigilant.”

The post Some classes disrupted after several Delaware schools received bomb threats  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-04 13:08

Chatham House fellow gives evidence on Venezuela to UK Parliament Foreign Affairs Committee News release jon.wallace

Dr Christopher Sabatini, Senior Research Fellow for Latin America, provided evidence on 3 February.

The UK Houses of Parliament and the recently unveiled Palace of Westminster clock tower known as Big Ben on 23 July 2022 in London, UK. Photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images.

Senior Research Fellow Dr Christopher Sabatini provided evidence to a session of the UK Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee on 3 February. 

Dr Sabatini was invited to provide evidence due to his expertise on Venezuela and US policy towards the country. During his appearance he discussed repression and electoral fraud under Venezuela’s deposed President Nicolás Maduro; US claims of narcotics trafficking by his government; the subsequent attack on Venezuela and removal of Maduro and his wife; and the response of the Venezuelan people and the wider region.

Dr Sabatini also discussed US objectives in the country now regarding democracy, economic recovery and the oil industry, and the relation of the Trump administration’s actions to domestic US politics.

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Dr Sabatini describes his evidence at committee.

Drawing from his previous work on Chatham House’s Venezuela working group, Dr Sabatini’s testimony focused on recommendations on how the UK and other democratic governments can be more effective defending international norms and multilateralism through collective, pre-emptive diplomacy. 

Dr Sabatini said:  

‘The response to President Trump’s sabre rattling over Greenland provides an example of what nation states acting pre-emptively and collectively may achieve. 

‘In the case of Venezuela, governments could and should have acted earlier to defend the other international norms of self determination and human rights. 

‘International efforts to defend human rights, self-determination and national sovereignty may not have been enough to deter the targeted military action in Venezuela. But they would have signalled earlier a commitment to international norms’.

Watch the session in full.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 12:18

2026-02-06 12:04
2026-02-04 10:40

Why Should Delaware Care?
The plan for a massive data center near Delaware City has garnered backlash from residents who are worried about its potential impact on energy costs and the environment. Today’s ruling could stop the project from moving forward entirely. 

Delaware’s environmental agency ruled Wednesday morning that a plan for a massive data center near Delaware City is not allowed under the state’s Coastal Zone Act. 

This decision could stop the project from moving forward entirely, unless developer Starwood Digital Ventures wins an appeal or makes major changes to its design. It has until Feb. 18 to appeal the decision to the Coastal Zone Industrial Control Board, an administrative panel.

The Delaware General Assembly passed the Coastal Zone Act in 1971 to protect the state’s shorelines from the impacts of new heavy industry.

The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) decided that the proposed data center near Delaware City, dubbed Project Washington, is not allowed under the law primarily because of its diesel generators.

The data center plan calls for 516 backup diesel generators that would operate in the case of a power outage. They would together need 2.5 million gallons of stored diesel, which DNREC Secretary Gregory Patterson called “entirely unprecedented” in his ruling. 

“The large tank farm that is incorporated into this proposal will pose exactly the types of risks that justify the categorical exclusion of such a tank farm from the Coastal Zone,” Patterson wrote.

The most backup generators currently at a facility in the Coastal Zone is eight, he wrote. 

Reactions from Delawareans

New Castle County Councilman Dave Carter, who previously worked for DNREC and has been trying to regulate data centers, said he thought the agency made the right decision. 

“Personally, I didn’t see how they could find the decision any other way,” he said. 

Carter said he believes an appeal of the decision would be “a difficult, very long process” and that Starwood may have to try to find other ways to generate the backup power needed to keep the facility running 24/7. 

State Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown), author of a data center regulation bill, wrote in a statement that she agreed with DNREC’s decision but that it “should not be viewed as a referendum on the future of data centers in Delaware.” 

“Given the growing emphasis on technology and artificial intelligence, it’s clear that data centers are here to stay — and it’s up to us to implement meaningful regulations that balance economic opportunity with energy affordability and reliability,” Hansen wrote.

Dustyn Thompson, chapter director of Sierra Club Delaware, called the decision a “monumental win for the environment.”

“We applaud the Department and the administration for standing up for our environment and our communities and ensuring that neither bears the brunt of this new heavy industry,” he wrote in an emailed statement. 

House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown, who represents the district where Project Washington would be located, posted on Facebook thanking those who submitted public comments to DNREC ahead of the decision. 

“This decision reflects the very real concerns raised by residents about environmental impact, air pollution, large scale fuel storage, and the potential risks to our community’s health and quality of life,” she wrote. “Those concerns were heard, carefully evaluated, and ultimately validated.”

Delaware Building Trades President James Maravelias — who has been a leading advocate for the project and the construction jobs it could bring — said the state needs to find a workable solution to its data center controversy that can provide new jobs, and implement guardrails onto the industry.

He also noted that the specific fight over the Starwood project isn’t over, citing the developer’s right to appeal.

Starwood representatives said Wednesday that they are “absolutely confident the project will be successfully completed and remain on track despite this decision.”

“Project Washington is proud to have the support of the Delaware unions and trades, the business community, and hundreds of New Castle County residents,” the company said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware. “We are committed to working with DNREC, state and local regulators, and the entire community to make certain that Project Washington will be a state-of-the-art, data center campus that will bring thousands of jobs to Delaware.”

Decision is major milestone for CZA

Then-Gov. Russ Peterson, an environmentalist champion, shepherded the Coastal Zone Act to passage in 1971 as Delaware saw a rising trend of industrialization creeping down the shores of the Delaware River from Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

The act was the first coastal zone prohibition enacted anywhere in the United States, and even pre-dated federal environmental efforts like the national Clean Water Act.

Delaware’s coastal zone includes the area in green, including both water of the Delaware River & Bay, and Atlantic Ocean, and more than 100 miles of land along the coast. | MAP COURTESY OF STATE OF DELAWARE

Since being approved more than 50 years ago, Delaware’s Coastal Zone Act has largely proved to be a deterrent to controversial developments within the coastal plain, or the land roughly east of U.S. Route 13/113 and Delaware Route 1.

Existing industrial sites were grandfathered in, but new heavy industrial sites would undergo additional regulatory scrutiny to make sure that they did not pose a threat to the health of residents or the environment.

In the last few decades, industrial users like Fujifilm and Veolia have received modifications to their operations permits under the CZA, while new projects have been limited to uses like a marijuana processing facility and a fish smoking plant.

Its most famous utilization was a 2008 case that denied a liquefied natural gas terminal and was ultimately upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court – but that terminal was actually being built in New Jersey. Delaware state officials denied New Jersey’s ability to build a pier into the First State’s territorial waters of the Delaware River by using the CZA, which Supreme Court justices agreed with.

The CZA has never been used to deny such a high-profile project here in Delaware though, which marks the Starwood decision as a watershed moment for DNREC’s enforcement of environmental regulations.

The post Delaware City data center faces major setback after environmental denial appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 07:51

In many ways, Delaware’s multi-billion-dollar budget is like any household spending plan. The big difference is that this family is nearly a million people strong.

Just like a household, the state must find a way to take care of everyone, adjust to changing needs, and stay balanced year in and year out. Both occasionally contend with higher-than-expected expenses, and both face that eternal struggle – balancing wants against needs .

Balancing the Checkbook

“We can’t spend what we don’t have” is a guiding principle in state finance, and a plain cold reality for many households. Neither the state nor a prudent family planner would borrow money just to run everyday expenses, but in the state’s case, it’s against the law: A balanced budget is constitutionally required in Delaware, meaning it cannot spend more than its officially certified revenue forecast allows. Each June, the General Assembly and Office of Management and Budget finalize spending within this cap, much like a family must ensure bills don’t exceed income.

Educating the Kids

Families that value education make it a priority – budgeting for school supplies, tuition, or extracurricular programs. Delaware does the same, dedicating nearly one-third of its General Fund to public education. From early childhood programs to higher education, the state treats learning as an investment in its “next generation.”

Caring for Seniors

Just as families support aging and needy relatives, Delaware allocates significant funding to Medicaid, senior health services, and long-term care. When healthcare costs rise or the senior population grows, the state must find new ways to fund these programs – or make difficult tradeoffs elsewhere, just like any family.

Supporting Those Who Need More

In many families, some members need extra help from time to time. Delaware also lends a hand to those in need, through programs for special education, disability services, and housing assistance. The Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) administers much of this care, ensuring that vulnerable residents aren’t left behind.

Keeping the Household Running

A household budget usually must cover the unavoidable needs of modern life – things like utilities, car repairs, and home maintenance. For Delaware, that translates to public safety, road maintenance, and emergency services, funded through the Operating Budget and Capital Improvement (aka Bond) Bill. These “maintenance” costs keep the state’s infrastructure and services functioning day to day.

Planning for the Future

Families might save for college or home repairs; Delaware saves for economic stability. The Rainy Day Fund and Budget Stabilization Fund are reserve accounts designed to cover emergencies and revenue downturns. Lawmakers must decide when it’s truly “raining” – and how much to draw from savings.

Adjusting to Income Changes

Just as a family’s income swings up or down with pay raises or layoffs, Delaware’s revenue streams – from personal income taxes, corporate fees, and federal funds – fluctuate with the economy. When revenues fall short, the DEFAC (Delaware Economic and Financial Advisory Council) updates forecasts and leaders adjust spending mid-year.

Debt and Credit Management

Families might take out a mortgage; Delaware issues bonds for schools, roads, and infrastructure. Look at bonds as a giant home loan – but instead of asking a bank, the state goes to the open market, seeking the best terms it can get. Maintaining a strong credit rating is essential to keep borrowing affordable for both families and the state, and the state’s Bond Bill process ensures that debt remains within limits. Delaware has managed to keep a fairly solid credit rating, which means less of its money has to go toward paying off debt.

Negotiating Priorities

In any home, family members debate what to spend their limited funds on – like a vacation, or roof repair? Delaware’s version of this dinner table discussion happens in Legislative Hall, where lawmakers negotiate  over competing funding priorities, from education to healthcare, to the environment and economic development.

Transparency and Accountability

Families track expenses to avoid overdrafts. Similarly, Delaware maintains public budget hearings, detailed appropriations bills, and open financial reports so taxpayers can see exactly where their money goes.

About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.

The post Civics 101: How Delaware’s Budget is a lot like a family budget appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 06:14

The reopening of the Rafah crossing provides some hope for Palestinians, but can it be sustained? Expert comment jon.wallace

The crossing’s return will restore one small freedom for Palestinians – but will anger Israel’s far right ahead of elections later this year.

A queue of yellow ambulances entering the Gaza Strip via the Rafah Border Crossing at night

Most of Gaza is enclosed by Israel: army to the north and east, gunboats to the west, and warplanes control the sky above.

So for Palestinians the Rafah gate – along Gaza’s short southern border with Egypt – has long been the one lifeline to the outside world that does not pass through Israel, at least in normal times.

Some semblance of that normality began to return on Monday when, under the terms of a US-brokered ceasefire signed last year, and after months of pressure from humanitarian organizations and international allies, Israel reopened the Rafah crossing. That will allow a limited number of Palestinians to pass in both directions. 

Some of those crossing have reported harassment or abuse. Of the estimated 20,000 Gazans seeking to cross and access medical treatment, only a handful exited on the first day, according to news reports, and a very small number were allowed entry. Small numbers have crossed since.

Israel’s unit for Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) has said that all arrivals and departures would be vetted ‘in coordination with Egypt, following prior security clearance of individuals by Israel, and under the supervision of the European Union mission’. 

Nevertheless, the EU’s civilian Border Assistance Mission (EUBAM), which has returned to Rafah after years of conflict and political deadlock, called its redeployment and the crossing’s reopening ‘significant steps in the implementation of the Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict.’  

It is a limited opening, for who knows how long. Major political and military and humanitarian obstacles lie ahead as President Donald Trump and his advisers and allies try to advance the 10 October 2025 ceasefire into the proposed later stages of the ‘Comprehensive Plan’

That would see the installation of a technocratic administration mechanism working with Palestinian and international partners to rebuild Gaza – after two years of war between Israel and Hamas that Gaza health authorities say has killed more than 71,000 Palestinians and left at least 10,000 missing. They also say more than 520 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire. 

A symbol

Rafah is only one crossing but it has real significance – symbolic and practical –  for both sides. Access through the border crossing has been on-again, off-again throughout decades of Israeli military occupation in Gaza. 

Israel sealed it off completely in May 2024, seven months into the war that followed Hamas’s 7 October 2023 cross-border attack which killed around 1200 people in Israel, with more than 250 others taken hostage. It was the release of the remains of the last of those hostages in January that triggered the reopening of Rafah.

The renewed access for Palestinians – the first to enter Gaza since the 2023 hostilities broke out – may cause problems for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He faces elections later this year and reopening the crossing has opened up divisions with some of his far-right coalition allies. 

At a security cabinet meeting on 25 January Itamar Ben Gvir, Israel’s Minister of National Security, criticized the decision, arguing that Hamas had not yet been eliminated. ‘Enough with Kushner and Witkoff’s naivety – if Rafah Crossing opens, it will be a big mistake and a very bad message,’ he is reported to have said.

Ben Gvir and his fellow ultranationalists have made no secret of their wish to see Palestinians expelled from Gaza and for the return of Israeli settlers, who were forced to leave the strip by a previous Israeli government in 2005.

Their voices will be loud in the election campaign, and the Trump administration and international community must be on guard to prevent backsliding by the Israeli government and any attempt to seal Gaza off once again.

But Israel does have real security concerns over Rafah, regarding it as a key channel for arms, weapons and money to flow to Hamas.

Certainly, in the years when Hamas controlled the Gaza Strip after 2007, its Egyptian border turned into a California Gold Rush-style encampment of corrugated iron sheds, providing access to tunnels through which smugglers brought food, consumer goods, weapons and even cars.

A parallel network of tunnels run by Palestinian militant groups were hidden from sight and – it later emerged – were a key part of Hamas’s vast military underground network that extended throughout the Gaza Strip.

Lessons from history

When – and if – Rafah opens for larger numbers of travellers, its mechanisms must be transparent and as free from manipulation as possible.

History provides lessons. After Israel pulled its soldiers and settlers out of Gaza in 2005, Palestinian and Egyptian officials controlled their own sides of the crossing, with an earlier iteration of EUBAM. Israeli officials kept watch on cameras from Kerem Shalom, Israel’s much larger goods crossing two miles away.

One weakness of the previous arrangement was that if the European monitors weren’t on site the crossing had to close: But monitors could only access the crossing through an Israeli-controlled route, allowing Israel to seal off access and close the crossing, citing security concerns.

But for all the risks associated with opening up Gaza, there are risks to keeping it locked down too. Thwarted hope leads to despair. 

Rafah also risks becoming a focal point for competing Palestinian factions eager to secure the terminal, with the power, money and patronage that such control gives whichever faction is in control.

This was evident after Hamas won elections in 2006 and vied with President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah-dominated forces for control of the crossing. A gun battle broke out that year when Hamas’s prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, tried to cross through Rafah with millions of dollars in cash raised from donors abroad.

Hope

But for all the risks associated with opening up Gaza, there are risks to keeping it locked down too. Thwarted hope leads to despair. And despair, critics of Israel’s ‘security-first’ approach say, is what led to decades of conflict, bloodshed and political deadlock.

And it is not that long ago that Rafah was the focus of hopes for a more open, economically viable Palestine.

Within sight of the Rafah crossing are the ruins of Gaza International Airport. Constructed during the 1990s in the optimistic era of the Oslo Accords, it was opened in December 1998 by US President Bill Clinton. In the few short years that the airport operated, it became a symbol of hope and economic possibilities. 

That post-Oslo era was brief. Less than two years after Clinton’s visit, the Second Intifada broke out. Hope and prosperity faltered during the mutual bloodletting of the early 2000s, with near daily Palestinian suicide bombings, Israeli air strikes, curfews, shootings, tank raids and recriminations. Israel bombed the airport after 9/11, and it is now in ruins.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Freeman Arts Pavilion has built a name for itself over the last two decades as a prominent arts venue and economic driver for the Sussex County area. With director Patti Grimes’ upcoming departure, the arts organization’s leadership and future direction remains to be seen.  

Patti Grimes, the long-serving – and influential – executive director of Selbyville’s Freeman Arts Pavilion, announced last week that she will exit her role later this summer. 

Considered to be among the biggest names in the southern Delaware arts and culture scene, Grimes has carried the Freeman Arts organization through a period of exponential growth and expanded reach throughout Sussex County and the broader Delmarva Peninsula since 2007. 

She is set to step down after the organization unveils its long-awaited new stage in July. 

The Freeman Arts Pavilion – an outdoor performance venue in Selbyville, a small town off Route 113 on the Delaware-Maryland border – has grown under Grimes’ leadership to serve more than 130,000 people per year. 

The organization has courted a mix of high-profile performers, like Diana Ross and Jerry Seinfeld, and local, homegrown talent. Freeman Arts also functions as a nonprofit, with an initiative of bringing arts experiences to schools across Sussex County and nearby Worcester and Wicomico counties in Maryland. 

The organization made headlines in January when a James Taylor concert scheduled for September sold out the 4,000-seat venue in 16 minutes. 

Grimes’ departure will force the Freeman Arts Pavilion – and its parent organization the Joshua M. Freeman Foundation – to reckon with whether another leader will be able to carry on the legacy and programming that Grimes has spent the past 19 years building. 

But Grimes told Spotlight Delaware she is not concerned about the transition plan to a new leader of the arts organization. She has worked with the organization’s board of directors to develop a succession plan, she said, and she will still be present to help with the transition process. 

“I felt like it was the right time with this brand new venue to deliver that and launch into the next evolution,” she said. “It will be a great time for a new executive director to come in.” 

A rendering of the renovations currently underway at the Freeman Arts Pavilion in Selbyville. | PHOTO COURTESY OF FREEMAN ARTS PAVILION

Grimes is not retiring from all of her responsibilities with Freeman-related organizations, as she will continue serving as executive director of the Carl M. Freeman Foundation, another grant-giving organization that is named after Joshua Freeman’s father and owned by members of the same family. 

As Delaware’s arts community reacted to Grimes’ announcement, many described her to Spotlight Delaware as one of the biggest names working in the First State, and someone who will leave behind enormous shoes to fill.

Neil Kirschling, executive director of the Delaware Arts Alliance, a statewide arts advocacy organization, said Grimes has been an “incredibly thoughtful partner” in inspiring a culture of excellence in the arts across the state. 

Joe Gfaller, managing director of Clear Space Theatre Company in Rehoboth Beach, said Freeman Arts became a cornerstone of the Sussex County arts scene because of Grimes.  

“There’s no question that the existence of the Freeman Arts has had a transformative effect on our region,” Gfaller said. 

The Joshua M. Freeman Foundation announced in a press release last week that they brought in a global hiring firm, Russell Reynolds Associates, to begin the search for Grimes’ replacement this spring. 

Filling a Sussex County need

When Freeman Arts began hosting performances, its set-up consisted of a small wooden stage and some lawn seating. The organization drew in a couple thousand attendees in its first year. 

“We started as a social experiment,” Grimes recalled. “Is this something that is desired by the greater Sussex County community? Is this something that is wanted?”

Quickly, she found out, the answer was a resounding yes. 

Now, the pavilion draws in more than 130,000 people annually for its concerts and other programs. The organization also is about to complete a 10-year-long, $40 million capital campaign to construct its new stage. 

Since 2017, the organization has been using a mobile stage to host larger performers, like Darius Rucker, Grimes said. 

The new permanent stage will include backstage green rooms and equipment rooms for touring artists, along with a more sleek stage look, which Grimes said she thinks will help continue to attract big name performers. 

A rendering of the new stage at the Freeman Arts Pavilion, which will be completed later this summer. | PHOTO COURTESY OF THE FREEMAN ARTS PAVILION

Over the years, Grimes said, she has found that the large appetite for the Freeman Arts programming has come from a lack of other arts opportunities in Sussex County, which is more rural and sprawling than the rest of Delaware. At the same time, she said, the large crowd of summer tourists that flock to Sussex County beaches want to participate in the organization’s art offerings. 

The Delaware Arts Alliance conducted a study of the state’s arts economy last year. 

Kirschling, the alliance’s director, said the report revealed that Sussex County has larger “art deserts” than other parts of the state, meaning people in the county often need to drive farther to participate in arts events of any kind. 

By continuing to grow its events with more famous performers, while also investing in local performers and school outreach programs, Kirschling said Grimes has done a good job of building a more robust and sustainable arts community in the Sussex area. 

“What’s nice is that people who live here now don’t have to drive two to three hours to see their favorite artist or to partake in the arts experience,” Grimes said. 

Freeman Arts also has proven to be a catalyst for economic growth and development in the area.

Grimes said that for every $1 spent at the pavilion, $1.90 is distributed back into the local economy, from visitors eating at restaurants, staying in hotels and taking advantage of other activities in the community. 

Jessica Welch, director of the Delaware Tourism Office, provided data to Spotlight Delaware showing the Freeman Arts Pavilion had a $24 million economic impact on Sussex County last year. 

That economic driver is particularly valuable, Welch said, because it is not primarily going to Lewes, Rehoboth Beach, Dewey Beach, or Bethany Beach, where more tourists frequent, but rather is focused in Selbyville, which is further inland and typically gets less economic activity. 

Welch said she expects to see those economic impacts continue to grow as the organization opens its new stage and is able to draw even bigger crowds. 

“Building the infrastructure and setting it up for the future is key,” she said. “Patti [Grimes] should be commended for that work she has done.”

The post Freeman Arts to face new era as Grimes exits, new stage is unveiled appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-04 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware is one of just a few states that send school funding questions to voters through the referendum process. Just two districts are going out for a referendum this year after multiple school districts have failed to pass referendums in recent years. Both the Caesar Rodney and Laurel school districts are looking to raise funds to cover operating costs and provide competitive salaries.

The Caesar Rodney and the Laurel school districts will ask their communities to approve tax increases during referendums scheduled for Monday.  

The Caesar Rodney School District is seeking an additional $6 million annually, while the smaller Laurel School District is asking for $1.6 million.

If voters approve Caesar Rodney’s request, owners of a home worth about $300,000 in the district would pay just under $23 more per month in property taxes.  

If Laurel’s request is successful, an average $230,000 home would pay roughly $14.25 more each month. 

Both districts say they need the new dollars to fund ongoing operations, including initiatives to retain and recruit teachers and other educators. Districts throughout the state have struggled in recent years to retain educators amid what school advocates call a national teacher shortage

Beyond teacher pay, Caesar Rodney says its $6 million request would also pay for school safety, arts programs and bus services, among other items. 

Laurel says its requested $1.6 million would also stabilize the district’s budget. 

Despite the needs, the decisions to hold referendums come after Delaware school districts have failed in recent years to convince their communities to raise school taxes. 

Among those was Caesar Rodney where voters rejected a referendum in 2023. 

A protester pickets a Smyrna school board meeting in October. | PHOTO COURTESY OF THE DSEA

Then, last spring in nearby Smyrna, nearly 60% of voters did the same when the local school district requested $5.4 million. In the months after the failed referendum, Smyrna schools struggling to pay its bills, leaving the district and its union of teachers and other staff members in a standoff over pay.

Also last year, voters rejected two referendum requests from the Indian River School District, even after school board members in the booming Sussex County area went public with their fiscal woes. 

The money from Indian River’s request would have been used to pay “increased operating costs and to maintain a competitive salary package,” that district said last year.

Last year was the first time since 1997 that no school district voters in Delaware approved a spending referendum.

The Caesar Rodney and Laurel school districts hope to reverse that trend when they each hold referendum votes on Monday. 

Polls in the Caesar Rodney School District will be open Monday Feb. 9, from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Caesar Rodney High School, Fred Fifer III Middle School, W. Reily Brown Elementary School, Allen Frear Elementary School, Nellie Stokes Elementary School, Star Hill Elementary School, David E. Robinson Elementary School, and the Magnolia Volunteer Fire Company.

Polls in the Laurel School District will also be open Monday Feb. 9, from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Laurel Elementary School, the Laurel Fire Department, and the North Laurel Early Learning Academy. 

Two districts trying to catch up

Neither district has taxed its property owners as much as others in recent years.

According to the Caesar Rodney officials, the district has the lowest local funding and the lowest school tax rate in Kent County. Educators within the district also earn less than those in neighboring districts. 

Meanwhile in Laurel, the school district has not held a referendum since 1985. And as a result, educators have told Spotlight Delaware that the small Sussex County district has not been able to keep teachers’ salaries competitive with wealthier districts.

In August, Spotlight Delaware reported about the struggles that rural, working-class districts, such as Laurel, face to keep teacher salaries competitive with those in wealthier areas. 

Patrick Gross, head of the educators’ union in Laurel, said then that he believed Laurel would ultimately hold a referendum in the coming years, but he was cautious about its success.

“I think that the referendum is going to be key … If we can get that done, we’ll see,” Gross said last summer.

The total salary for a teacher in the Laurel School District with 10 years of experience and a master’s degree is just more than $71,000, according to the district’s salary schedule for the 2025-26 school year. 

A teacher with the same experience and education in the wealthier Cape Henlopen School District — about 30 miles from Laurel — makes more than $79,000.

Furthermore, the Cape Henlopen School District, which serves more than 6,500 students, had a budget of more than $180 million during the Fiscal Year 2025.

Laurel schools had a budget of just less than $44 million that same year, while educating more than 2,600 students.

Educators’ salaries are funded by a combination of state and local tax revenue, with the state paying approximately 70% of a total salary

The state share takes into account a teacher’s education and experience. It also funds a preset schedule of pay raises for each teacher.

The local share of an educator’s salary is primarily funded by property taxes.  

The post Caesar Rodney, Laurel school districts seek tax increases through referendums appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-03 17:20

President Donald Trump wasted no time in responding to the deaths of two U.S. citizens last month during protests against an immigration crackdown in Minneapolis. Trump and other top administration officials made inaccurate or unsupported statements within hours of the incidents, a departure from how previous presidents responded in similar situations, experts told us.

Hours after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed Renee Good on Jan. 7, Trump claimed that Good was “very disorderly, obstructing and resisting, who then violently, willfully, and viciously ran over the ICE Officer, who seems to have shot her in self defense.” The president included a video clip of the shooting, captured from a distance, but closer video showed the agent wasn’t run over.

Then, hours after federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti on Jan. 24, Trump posted a picture of a handgun and wrote, “This is the gunman’s gun, loaded (with two additional full magazines!), and ready to go – What is that all about? Where are the local Police? Why weren’t they allowed to protect ICE Officers? The Mayor and the Governor called them off? It is stated that many of these Police were not allowed to do their job, that ICE had to protect themselves — Not an easy thing to do!”

Department of Homeland Security officials also made statements that Pretti “approached” officers with a handgun, “violently resisted” an attempt to “disarm” him, and “wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.” As we’ve explained, in the immediate aftermath of a shooting, it’s difficult to know exactly what happened, but bystander videos contradicted DHS’ account. They don’t show Pretti holding the gun or threatening officers with it.

The president, himself, softened his remarks, saying the next day, “We’re reviewing everything and will come out with a determination” on whether the federal agent’s actions were justified. And the civil rights division of the Justice Department is now investigating the Pretti killing.

All four of the experts we spoke to — a group that included political communications researchers and historians — said that Trump’s remarks following these deaths marked a shift from previous presidents, and even from some of his own rhetoric during his first term.

Trump speaks to reporters on Jan. 27 about the shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. Photo by Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images.

“As with so much else Trump, yes — he’s extremely different,” Matt Dallek, a political historian and professor at George Washington University’s Graduate School of Political Management, told us in an interview.

“He’s much more extreme and far more untethered from facts and the reality on the ground,” Dallek said, noting that, importantly, it’s not just the president, but also his officials who have taken this tack.

Others we spoke to made the same point.

“Without question,” there has been a shift, Roderick Hart, a professor emeritus of communication at the University of Texas at Austin with expertise in politics and the mass media, told us. “And it has very little to do with this particular situation in Minneapolis. He’s a rhetoric-first guy. … And he’s chosen his people who have exactly the same instincts,” Hart said.

Presidents are normally judicious, particularly when reacting to an event, Hart said. But, “Trump talks before the event is even finished.”

The Minnesota fatal shootings, however, involved federal agents, while examples from past presidencies concern state or local officers. 

For example, former President Barack Obama — who was in office at a moment when the ubiquity of camera phones and the rise of social media converged to shine light on the killings of unarmed Black men and boys — took more time before publicly expressing his thoughts.

One of the first illustrations of this moment didn’t actually feature an officer, but rather a neighborhood watch volunteer in central Florida, who shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin on Feb. 26, 2012. About a month after that, in response to a reporter’s question, Obama said, in part, “Well, I’m the head of the executive branch, and the attorney general reports to me, so I’ve got to be careful about my statements to make sure that we’re not impairing any investigation that’s taking place right now. But obviously, this is a tragedy. I can only imagine what these parents are going through. And when I think about this boy, I think about my own kids. And I think every parent in America should be able to understand why it is absolutely imperative that we investigate every aspect of this and that everybody pulls together — federal, state, and local — to figure out exactly how this tragedy happened.”

Obama continued: “But my main message is to the parents of Trayvon Martin. If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon. And I think they are right to expect that all of us as Americans are going to take this with the seriousness it deserves and that we’re going to get to the bottom of exactly what happened.”

In 2014, a year that saw several high-profile police killings, Obama waited three days to publicly respond to the Aug. 9 death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was shot and killed by a local police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, sparking widespread protests.

Then, Obama said in a statement: “The death of Michael Brown is heartbreaking, and Michelle and I send our deepest condolences to his family and his community at this very difficult time. As Attorney General Holder has indicated, the Department of Justice is investigating the situation along with local officials, and they will continue to direct resources to the case as needed. I know the events of the past few days have prompted strong passions, but as details unfold, I urge everyone in Ferguson, Missouri, and across the country, to remember this young man through reflection and understanding. We should comfort each other and talk with one another in a way that heals, not in a way that wounds. Along with our prayers, that’s what Michael and his family, and our broader American community, deserve.”

The former president waited three weeks — when he was asked about it in an interview — to comment on the shooting death that year of 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland. In a lengthy answer to a question about how responsible he felt his administration was for addressing police shootings, Obama said, “Well, I think an enormous amount. Not just because, as president, you’re always responsible for what happens in this country and you’ve got to be part of the solution, not part of the problem, but because of my particular experiences that I bring to this office.”

And Obama took more than four months to make remarks on the July 17, 2014, death of Eric Garner in New York — the former president had waited until a grand jury decided not to indict the police officer who had choked Garner. In December 2014, Obama said, in part, “My tradition is not to remark on cases where there may still be an investigation. But I want everybody to understand that this week, in the wake of Ferguson, we initiated a Task Force whose job it is to come back to me with specific recommendations about how we strengthen the relationship between law enforcement and communities of color and minority communities that feel that bias is taking place; that we are going to take specific steps to improve the training and the work with State and local governments when it comes to policing in communities of color; that we are going to be scrupulous in investigating cases where we are concerned about the impartiality and accountability that’s taking place.”

Before the era of the camera phone, the Rodney King case in 1991 grabbed national attention when a man in a nearby apartment videotaped Los Angeles police beating King during a traffic stop.

Then-President George H.W. Bush waited almost three weeks before commenting. Then, in a prepared statement on March 21, 1991, he said, in part, “We’ve all seen those shocking videotapes and have seen transcripts of the incident in Los Angeles. And without getting into the specifics of the case, those terrible scenes stir us all to demand an end to gratuitous violence and brutality. Law enforcement officials cannot place themselves above the law that they are sworn to defend. This administration will investigate possible breaches of federal law aggressively and will prosecute violators to the full extent of the law. … I was shocked by what I saw in that tape–that violence. And to the degree there’s a federal role here, I’m confident we will go the extra mile to see that that is fulfilled.”

Going back even further, to the 1970s, Dallek said, “Even Nixon’s comments in the wake of the Kent State killings were far more restrained and measured than anything Trump has offered the American people.”

On May 4, 1970, the same day that the National Guard shot and killed four students during a protest of the Vietnam War at Kent State University in Ohio, then-President Richard Nixon issued a statement that said, “This should remind us all once again that when dissent turns to violence, it invites tragedy. It is my hope that this tragic and unfortunate incident will strengthen the determination of all the Nation’s campuses–administrators, faculty, and students alike–to stand firmly for the right which exists in this country of peaceful dissent and just as strongly against the resort to violence as a means of such expression.”

When he was asked about the proper role of the National Guard — which, in this case, had been called in by the state’s governor — at a press conference four days later, Nixon said, “I want to know what the facts are. I have asked for the facts. When I get them, I will have something to say about it. But I do know when you do have a situation of a crowd throwing rocks and the National Guard is called in, that there is always the chance that it will escalate into the kind of a tragedy that happened at Kent State. If there is one thing I am personally committed to, it is this: I saw the pictures of those four youngsters in the Evening Star the day after that tragedy, and I vowed then that we were going to find methods that would be more effective to deal with these problems of violence, methods that would deal with those who would use force and violence and endanger others, but, at the same time, would not take the lives of innocent people.”

“There are some echoes, I think,” Dallek said, comparing Trump’s recent statements with Nixon’s. But Nixon was much more measured in the aftermath, Dallek said, adding that “he never branded [the students] as traitors or domestic terrorists.” (After the Good killing, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem called Good’s actions “domestic terrorism,” and Noem used the same phrase to describe Pretti’s actions.)

Minneapolis Cases Involved Federal Agents

One distinction between these previous examples and the current situation is that agents deployed in Minneapolis are federal, rather than state or local, Barbara Perry, a professor of governance at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, which focuses on the American presidency, told us in an interview.

Since most previous cases of officer-involved shootings implicated state or local police, presidents could distance themselves, she said, and say that the Justice Department would investigate.

“So they could keep at arms length the legal process while expressing their sorrow,” Perry said.

Similarly, Guian A. McKee, a professor of public affairs at the Miller Center, told us in an email, “Trump administration statements about the recent killings in Minneapolis have been immediate, they have been political, and they have had little regard for facts or willingness to wait until evidence is clear.”

He went on to explain that one reason for this may be that “the recent killings have been done by federal agents acting as instruments of the president’s own policies and the tactics chosen to implement them. This has not been the case in most other law enforcement-involved deaths, where the officers were state or local. So the actions and their consequences fall much closer to the president.”

Near the end of his first term, Trump made conciliatory remarks about a high-profile case that involved local police officers, not federal agents.

Two days after the May 25, 2020, killing of George Floyd, whose death under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer led to widespread protests, Trump wrote on Twitter, “At my request, the FBI and the Department of Justice are already well into an investigation as to the very sad and tragic death in Minnesota of George Floyd.”

And, two days after that, on May 29, he said at the start of an event for business leaders, “I want to express our nation’s deepest condolences and most heartfelt sympathies to the family of George Floyd. A terrible event. Terrible, terrible thing that happened. I’ve asked that the Department of Justice expedite the federal investigation into his death and do it immediately, do it as quickly as absolutely possible. … It should never be allowed to happen, a thing like that.”


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’s Immediate Speculation on Shootings Bucks Presidential Norms appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-02-05 20:04
2026-02-03 15:19
XR flickering headlight

Update: Thank you for the suggestions. In the mean time I turned off the light so I would reduce the risk of shorting something. I will open the board and see if I can just reconnect and while I am in there I will replace the ring and cable if needed.

Need some help, just started happening last night when on a ride. I typically don’t have my headlight on because I like to be incognito so the issue could have started earlier. Any recommendations on what it could be and am I safe to ride it?

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

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-03 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
On Saturday, Gov. Matt Meyer said he had spoken with superintendents in New Castle County to determine which roads, sidewalks and bus stops remain unsafe, and that the Delaware Department of Transportation would be clearing those streets ahead of school on Monday. But even though the Colonial School District opened its doors on Monday, it was unable to provide transportation to all communities because of remaining road conditions. 

Days after Gov. Matt Meyer said it was “unacceptable” that Delaware schools remained closed nearly a week after a crippling snowstorm swept through the state, some students in the Colonial School District were still unable to go to school Monday because of road conditions. 

Last week, parts of Kent County received more than 6 inches of snowfall on Sunday, while New Castle County saw up to 10 inches, according to the National Weather Service. Freezing rain in some areas then added an inch of solid ice atop that accumulation.

Temperatures have remained frigid in the days since the storm, and much of the snow has compacted into a dense layer of ice, which has stifled cleanup crews, according to state and city transportation officials. 

On Saturday, Meyer said he had spoken with each New Castle County superintendent and “received lists of roads, sidewalks and bus stops that remain unsafe.” 

Meyer added that the Delaware Department of Transportation would be clearing those streets over the weekend to ensure schools could open their doors on Monday. 

Still, transportation was not available to multiple communities in the Colonial School District on Monday. Those communities included Rosegate, Garfield Park, and Willow Grove, among others.

Colonial Superintendent Jeff Menzer said the district originally released a statement Sunday night saying the district would not be able to pick up students from 11 neighborhoods along Route 9 and one in the lower half of the district due to difficult driving conditions.

Many district bus drivers then reported back to officials that they were unable to finish their routes early Monday morning. Menzer said the district pushed out information to the district’s middle and elementary school families that buses would not be able to pick up students. 

Menzer said attendance was down in some of the schools that were part of the impacted communities, such as Eisenberg Elementary School and ​​McCullough Middle School.

Attendance across the district was at roughly 60% to 70% on Monday. 

The Brandywine, Red Clay Consolidated, and Christina school districts also reopened their doors on Monday, following Meyer’s weekend announcement. 

Some of those districts, though, also experienced complications with picking up students. 

Although the Red Clay Consolidated School District’s transportation went well, one bus did temporarily get stuck in a neighborhood, Director of Transportation Kelly Shahan wrote in a statement to Spotlight Delaware. The incident occurred before the bus had picked up any students, and it only resulted in a minor delay, Shahan said.

The Christina School District also wrote to families on Sunday, saying there may be some “unavoidable delays due to neighborhood conditions, which could mean that wait times at bus stops will be longer than usual.”

The Brandywine School District successfully ran all bus routes on a staggered schedule, though some stops and sidewalks still pose a challenge to students, according to a statement from Superintendent Lisa Lawson. 

Brandywine will also be returning to its regular bus and school schedules on Tuesday, Lawson said.

All four school districts also said students will not be marked late because of the weather. Districts are also offering excused absences to families who do not feel comfortable sending their children to school with the road conditions. 

What’s happening in Colonial? 

Menzer said the district had shared a list of priority areas and roads that were impassable with DelDOT on Jan. 29, but his district was not seeing improvements late last week. By Jan. 31, the ice was too thick for salt to help break down the compact, Menzer said. 

C.R. McLeod, a spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Transportation, said in a statement the department had to apply salt to the roads and wait for the sun to melt enough ice for plowing to be effective in neighborhoods.

“We’ve been in communication with the [Colonial] school district and expect to see improvement today and tomorrow with temperatures above freezing,” McLeod wrote.

Last week, Colonial Supervisor of Transportation Marc Emerick told Spotlight Delaware the district’s smaller neighborhoods, “who are digging themselves out,” were the most impacted by the storm. 

“If you are fortunate enough to live in a neighborhood with a DART route, you know that at least some of your roads are going to be tended to by DelDOT, which is the most effective way of clearing a road,” he said.

Communities that are not near a DART route or roads that DelDOT plows typically rely on contractor services to clear the snow. 

But Emerick said districts must also check the passability of streets, because some contractors’ plows do not create a path wide enough for school buses. If a bus gets stuck or experiences a minor fender-bender that does not impact student safety, it can still delay students’ pickups for an hour. 

Colonial’s buses go into neighborhoods and pick students up close to their homes. At the same time, more than half of Colonial’s bus fleet are 84-passenger, flat-nose buses that require a wider turn radius than typical buses, Menzer. said 

Menzer said those two factors complicated student pick-ups on Monday. 

“Even though our drivers had driven the routes and checked them out in their personal vehicles, it’s different,” Menzer said. “You don’t really know until you get your bus upon it and realize, ‘Man, I can’t make that corner.’”

The district also adjusted its bus stops for students in the communities it had previously suspended transportation to, with buses picking students up at main streets in those communities rather than going down side streets.

The post A week after winter storm, Colonial students still can’t get to school appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-06 08:04
2026-02-03 05:00

A rendering shows the future Port of Edgemoor near Wilmington, Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Port of Wilmington is one of the last anchors of good-paying, blue-collar jobs in Delaware. It also has suffered a string of financial blows over a dramatic six-year-period. How the state responds to the setbacks may determine the shape of Delaware’s workforce into the future. 

Delaware’s quest to build one of the mid-Atlantic’s biggest port container terminals may have quietly cleared a key hurdle last month.  

During a meeting on Monday of the state board that oversees the Port of Wilmington, Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez said Delaware is no longer required to secure an approval from the Port of Philadelphia in order to move forward with efforts to recapture construction permits that a federal judge invalidated in 2024

Delaware port officials need the permits to fulfill their longstanding, yet beleaguered, goal of building a new port at the site of a former chemical plant in Edgemoor. Hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars have already been committed to the project, which port officials say will create thousands of new jobs in the state.

Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez

Patibanda-Sanchez said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — which is in charge of issuing the permits — agreed last month to grant an exception to a rule requiring Delaware to obtain a formal ”statement of no objection” from the Port of Philadelphia – a regional competitor that has long opposed Delaware plans to expand the Port of Wilmington. 

Internal port documents state that the Port of Philadelphia, as of last fall, had declined to sign such a statement.

Now, with an exception to the rule, Patibanda-Sanchez said the Corps of Engineers can begin its review of Delaware’s application for permits to build a port seawall, and to dredge the Delaware River from the Edgemoor docks to the main channel.

“And we’re very excited to have cleared that first step,” she said during the Monday meeting of the board of the Diamond State Port Corporation – the state-owned entity that oversees the Port of Wilmington.

Why does Wilmington need Philly’s permission?

The development follows years of turmoil that has plagued the Port of Wilmington and its $600 million expansion plans.

When the state privatized the port’s operations in 2018, the company that took over, Gulftainer, promised to privately fund the development of Edgemoor by doubling the shipments at the Port of Wilmington’s existing facility along the Christina River. Not only did those bold projections fail to materialize, but the port’s finances under Gulftainer also deteriorated.

The Port of Wilmington in Wilmington, Delaware, is seen at daybreak with a cargo ship docked.
The Port of Wilmington. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

Hopes for the port’s expansion were revived in 2023 when Delaware brought in a new operating company, Enstructure. But a year later, a federal judge invalidated the Edgemoor permits following a lawsuit brought by competing ports along the Delaware River, including the Port of Philadelphia.

The upstream ports sued the Army Corps of Engineers for what they said was a “perfunctory and inadequate review” of Delaware’s permit applications. While many in Delaware saw the lawsuit as part of a powerplay between officials at the ports of Wilmington and Philadelphia, the legal complaint alleged that ships leaving a future Edgemoor port would cause a dangerous marine bottleneck when turning into the river’s main channel. 

In the sharply worded ruling issued in October, 2024, U.S. District Judge Mark Kearney stated that the Army Corps of Engineers had acted “arbitrarily and capriciously” when it issued the Edgemoor building permits. 

He also criticized Delaware port officials for failing to obtain a statement of no objection to the permits from their upstream neighbor. The requirement was in place because the Port of Philadelphia had been the primary non-federal financial sponsor of a recent Delaware River dredging project along the estuary to deepen the shipping channel. 

Kearney also stated that if the Corps of Engineers reevaluated the Edgemoor permits, it must address “navigation and safety issues,” and must ensure that Delaware “obtains a Statement of No Objection from the Philadelphia Port Authority.” 

It is not immediately clear how the judge will interpret the Army Corps of Engineers’ recent decision to make an exception for the requirement.

Patibanda-Sanchez did not directly address the issue when asked by email why she believes the exception will pass muster with Kearney. 

Instead, she said in a statement that Delaware’s port officials “continue our work on the Delaware Container Terminal project and are encouraged with the progress we have made so far.”

“We look forward to the USACE’s (Corps of Engineers’) complete review of our application. As we make progress on the permitting, we are also working on issues raised by the community and all the stakeholders involved with this project,” Patibanda-Sanchez said in the statement.

The post Port of Wilmington officials: Edgemoor plans clear a key hurdle appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-02-08 16:04
2026-02-02 08:36

India wants to reset relations after Bangladesh elections. It will be easier said than done Expert comment LToremark

India is hoping a new democratically elected government in Bangladesh will help improve bilateral relations. But identity politics in both countries could derail progress.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, waits to welcome his Bangladeshi counterpart Sheikh Hasina at the Hyderabad House on 22 June 2024 in New Delhi, India.

As Bangladesh prepares to hold elections on 12 February – after almost 18 months under an unelected interim government – India is seeking a reset in bilateral relations. The relationship between Dhaka and New Delhi has deteriorated after the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in August 2024 following large-scale unrest in which some 1,400 people were killed. India’s historically close relations with Hasina’s party – the Awami League – fuelled allegations that New Delhi empowered her government’s increasingly autocratic tendencies.  

The fact that Hasina fled to India and has continued to make statements from there has added to the bad blood, as has the verdict issued in November which found her guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced her to death. Bangladesh and India maintain an extradition treaty, but New Delhi has so far refused to extradite Hasina on the grounds that it has the right to refuse requests if the offence is of a ‘political character’.

New Delhi fears that Hasina’s removal from power has created space for groups that are hostile towards India, amid growing anti-India rhetoric and violence in Bangladesh. Attacks on minorities – including Bangladesh’s 13 million-strong Hindu population – have exacerbated tensions. The Bangladeshi government claims that such attacks have been exaggerated and are largely politically motivated, not about religious affiliation. The murder in December of a Bangladeshi youth activist who had been critical of India triggered further unrest, including the lynching of a Hindu man. Claims that the suspects fled to India worsened relations between the two countries.

Reflecting the poor state of bilateral relations, India halved its financial assistance to Bangladesh in its latest budget.

Geopolitical faultlines

Adding insult to injury is the Bangladeshi government’s outreach to countries that have historically difficult relations with India, including China and Pakistan. But close ties with China are not new. Beijing has been a longstanding trade, investment and defence partner for Bangladesh – more than 70 per cent of the country’s arms imports came from China in the 2019-23 period for example. Nonetheless, India fears that China is seeking to exploit its deteriorating relations with Bangladesh. In June, Bangladesh, China and Pakistan held the inaugural meeting of a foreign secretary/vice foreign minister dialogue. This parallels a similar initiative between Afghanistan, China and Pakistan. New Delhi views this as an effort to marginalize India in its own neighbourhood.

During a visit to China in March 2025, Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Muhammed Yunus referred to India’s ‘landlocked’ northeastern states and said Bangladesh is the ‘only guardian of the ocean’ that could serve as an ‘extension of the Chinese economy’. This did not go down well in New Delhi. China is involved in several high-profile infrastructure projects in Bangladesh, including modernization of the Mongla Port – its second-largest seaport – and a water management project along the Teesta River. The latter is of particular concern to New Delhi as Bangladesh and India have been engaged in stalled negotiations on sharing the river waters.

Dhaka’s engagement with Islamabad have seen a more notable shift. The two countries have had historically strained relations following Bangladesh’s secession from Pakistan in 1971 following a violent independence struggle. Improved relations have seen a relaxation of visa rules and trade restrictions, the establishment of direct sea links between Chittagong and Karachi and several senior-level interactions. Dhaka and Islamabad have also discussed deepening defence cooperation. For example, Bangladesh is considering procuring the JF-17 fighter aircraft, which is jointly produced by China and Pakistan.

Identity politics could derail a reset

India is hoping the return to democratic rule in Bangladesh will help reset relations. In preparation, New Delhi has sought to deepen and diversify its political engagement with Bangladesh, to dispel allegations surrounding its historic ties with the Awami League. India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Yunus met on the sidelines of a conference in Bangkok in April and Modi sent a condolence letter following the death of Khaleda Zia – leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) – in December. Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar also attended Zia’s funeral where he met her son, Tarique Rahman. Rahman has recently returned to Bangladesh after 17 years in exile and is widely tipped to be the next prime minister if the BNP performs well in the election.

However, identity politics in both countries threatens to derail progress. A new government in Dhaka that is overtly hostile towards India, for example one that includes Islamic hardliners, will make rapprochement difficult. Even a BNP-led government does not guarantee improved relations. In an interview, Rahman stated that ‘the people of Bangladesh have decided that relations will remain cool. So, I have to stand with my country’s people’. When the BNP ruled Bangladesh in 2001-06 relations with India deteriorated amid growing instability along the border and a surge in terrorist activity.

alt

Bangladesh’s Muhammad Yunus on how India’s Modi could help

A shift in mindset towards India will be dictated in part by the issue of Hasina’s extradition. Publicly, New Delhi will remain averse to extraditing her. Privately, however, the Indian government will be looking to make the issue go away, for example by Hasina moving onto a third country.

In India, meanwhile, attacks on Bangladeshi Hindus have become a prominent issue in public and media discourse. India will be holding elections this year in two states that border Bangladesh – Assam and West Bengal – which could see an increase in anti-Bangladesh rhetoric in the run-up to the polls.

The credibility of the Bangladeshi election and its outcome will also determine the trajectory of the bilateral relationship. A low voter turnout fuelled by violence could undermine the credibility of the electoral process. Supporters of the Awami League have threatened to disrupt the elections after the party has been effectively banned from standing in the election. The former foreign minister in the Hasina government, Hasan Mahmud, has said stability will not return to Bangladesh if the Awami League is excluded.

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https://preview.redd.it/s0uh18pnjrhg1.jpeg?width=640&crop=smart&auto=webp&s=81e9af46e563b05329d8ceb5dc12019acd02b3b8 Onewheel -●-