President Trump told reporters Saturday he is reviewing a new 14-point peace proposal that was submitted by Iran.
A maker of the widely used abortion pill mifepristone asked the Supreme Court on Saturday to block an appellate court ruling that cut off mail-order access to the drug just a day earlier.
The Kentucky Derby saw a field of 18 horses Saturday in the first leg of the 2026 competition for horse racing's Triple Crown.
Cherie DeVaux became the first woman to train the winner of the opening leg of the Triple Crown.
A driver crashed a vehicle through the front entrance of the Multnomah Athletic Club in Portland, authorities said, and explosives were found inside the car.
Investigators find explosives in car, which crashed into Multnomah Athletic Club shortly before 3am Saturday
A person was found dead after a vehicle plowed into a health club in downtown Portland, Oregon, early Saturday morning, police said. Investigators later found explosives inside the car.
Portland police and the Portland fire and rescue department responded to the Multnomah Athletic Club shortly before 3am after the vehicle crashed through the front entrance and caught fire. Once the blaze was brought under control, a person was found dead inside the vehicle, police said in a statement.
Continue reading...Long-time Slashdot reader Anne Thwacks frequently uses YouTube's subtitles "not to disturb others in the room, or because my hearing is not very good." But they say there's a new problem. "The subtitling is terrible!" Almost every sentence has a huge error. Proper names are more often wrong than right. Non-English place names are almost always mangled to barely recognizable. And no effort whatsoever is made to use context to figure out whether a place name is Russian or Arabic, and often complete garbage is used in place of a common French, Spanish or Italian name! If AI actually works (I have my doubts about this), surely it would be possible to figure out language contexts. If it is about an event in Italy, then expect a lot of Italian names! If it is about the Russia-Ukraine war, then expect places in Russia or Ukraine to be more plausible than mindless gobbledygook! Does YouTube not know that there are places in the world that are not in America? (However, plenty of names of people and places famous in America are also regularly screwed up.) They argue the subtitles are "appallingly bad" — and that "the situation seems to be getting worse," wondering why the problem isn't addressed with some basic spell-checking. ("I'm sure that the vast majority of foul-ups could be fixed by the use of a dictionary.") Have any Slashdot readers seen similar problems? A friend of mine noticed that YouTube's subtitles even bungled this innocuous song from the 1966. ANNETTE FUNICELLO: "If your love is true love, you can tell by his touch." YOUTUBE SUBTITLE: "If your love is too lava, you can tell by his touch..." Share your own experiences and thoughts in the comments. And do you think YouTube's subtitles are "appallingly bad"?
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I got myself X7 and really love it ride anywhere especially on trails. But it’s little too heavy to carry into public transit or office. I use for commute still stock Pint X on Hydrus firmware but sometimes it surged under me in normal riding conditions (flat ground on street going over speed hump or accelerating uphill).
I actually like FM firmware in my PintX but it seems it would be cash thrown away at Pint S Series motor just for increase in torque. A lot of folks don’t recommend that path.
If I had to upgrade battery as well, it can quickly get expensive for making Pint X better and I don’t need to keep same range. I only do like 3-4 miles roundtrip on Pint X during commute typically.
Arena in Birmingham cleared after report of suspicious bag, with comedian pulled from stage mid-performance
A man has been charged over a bomb hoax after a live show by comedian Peter Kay in Birmingham was stopped when a “potentially suspicious bag” was found around the venue.
The Utilita Arena Birmingham was evacuated and a 19-year-old man was taken into custody, West Midlands police said on Friday evening.
Continue reading...If you’ve been snagged in the airline’s now-defunct flight schedule, here are some things to know about next steps
The collapse of the US-based Spirit Airlines may mark the end of an era for travelers with a certain financial sensibility.
But if you’ve been snagged in their now-defunct flight schedule, here are some things to know on how to get home, and get whole.
Continue reading..."Nuclear AI startup" Fermi had hoped to build power plants generating 17 gigawatts of electricity, remembers Bloomberg, "three times the amount typically consumed by New York City." Hyperscalers could install their data centers on the site itself and tap directly into that power, which would come first from natural gas turbines and later from nuclear reactors. The pitch ticked so many boxes — artificial intelligence, nuclear energy, political connections — that some investors found it irresistible. Fermi went public in October worth more than $19 billion in market value, despite reporting no revenue or signed customers. Now, the startup's board has fired its top executive, Toby Neugebauer, after months of negotiations failed to secure a single client. Chief Financial Officer Miles Everson left as well... Fermi's stock, meanwhile, has tumbled 84% from its peak. The company's more than 5,000-acre site in the Texas panhandle — dubbed Project Matador, or the President Donald J. Trump Advanced Energy and Intelligence Campus — remains mostly unfinished. And some analysts see a cautionary tale of the market's AI enthusiasm running ahead of reality, with investors betting on companies whose grand projects may never get built... The idea of giving data centers their own, dedicated power supply not dependent on the grid may sound tempting, but former US Department of Energy official Jigar Shah said banks don't want to finance it. The grid, drawing power from many sources, is more reliable than a handful of expensive, on-site plants, he said. He considers Fermi a failure "of monumental proportions" and says similar, off-grid data center projects elsewhere deserve more skepticism than they've received... "We're allowing these types of projects to continue to be viewed as viable when they most certainly are not," said Shah, who ran the department's Loan Programs Office during the Biden administration.... "It was a piece of dirt with a dream," an investor who visited the site in February told the short sellers, Fuzzy Panda Research.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Held every spring in Louisville, Kentucky, the event is also known for its over-the-top hats and vibrant suits and dresses.
| EDIT: SUCCESS!! Thank you for the tips and reassurance that 5” tires are just tough. /u/pseugoi suggestion to use knees at 5 and 7 was key. Float on my friends! Original: It was easy enough to get the first bead on, I used Jeff McCosker’s [u/TheFloatLife](u/TheFloatLife) method of pushing the hub down into the tire and twisting. But after flipping it to push the other bead on, I’m nowhere close. It’s a 555 Enduro, soft. The old 655 came off no problem, but as I kneel over this thing and try to press down at the 3 and 9 position and get it started in the groove, I’ve got nothing. Any ideas or suggestions? [link] [comments] |
A new batch of A24 films, including The Farewell, Bodies Bodies Bodies and more, are available this May on free streaming services.
Fill me in! How was the unboxing?
How is the board overall ? I am coming from my GT with rewheel tune. I also have a ton of miles with the GTS
Monday a company called Rainmaker announced their rain-triggering technology had produced 143 million gallons of freshwater for Utah and Oregon residents — making them "the first private company in history to validate the results of cloud seeding operations." The Deseret News reports: Founded in 2023, Rainmaker uses drones to disperse silver iodide into clouds, then they track precipitation with advanced radar. However, Rainmaker — and every other rain-enhancement company — has been up against the notoriously difficult challenge of validation. Since there is no control set to test, and because the weather is chaotic and variable, the Government Accountability Office declares the benefits of the technology to be "unproven." To overcome this evaluation challenge, Rainmaker flies drones in unique patterns when seeding. Then operators compare distinct radar and satellite features with where their drones operated. As of April, Rainmaker found 82 unambiguous seeding signatures, which show their seeding operations directly caused precipitation. In Utah and Oregon alone, the company said its cloud-seeding efforts have added enough water to match the annual usage of about 1,750 households. However, "this figure likely represents only a small fraction of Rainmaker's total generation this season," the company said in their press release... Their drone precision, combined with their radar systems, have produced satellite images proving a direct correlation between the seeding and precipitation. Some images show cloud holes or regions of depressed cloud tops after seeding. Rainmaker's announcement promises they'll "go forward and continue our mission to refill the Great Salt Lake, end drought in the American West and deliver water abundance wherever it is needed most around the world." (Rainmaker currently operates in Utah, Idaho, Oregon, California and Colorado.) The director of Utah's Natural Resources Department told the Deseret News that with cloud seeding, "cost per unit of water is so low; it really is the smartest thing we can be doing with our money," Ferry said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ford Motor Company is recalling over 179,000 vehicles due to a front seat issue that can increase the risk of injury in a crash, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said.
Residents say AI factories with unknown environmental impacts are being rushed into development as proponents argue Australia must ride the data boom or be left behind
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When West Footscray resident Sean Brown takes his 19-month-old boy to the park, their walk passes an imposing new building cheerily spruiked as “Australia’s largest hyperscale AI factory”, a datacentre called M3.
He hates it: the construction noise from its constant expansion, the looming towers and the insistent background hum, the exhaust from the growing array of diesel generators that power the ranks of servers inside.
Continue reading...Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for May 3, No. 1,057.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for May 3, No. 791.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 3, No. 1,779.
Republicans blame Biden administration block on JetBlue deal; Democrats point to fuel price surge amid Iran war
US airlines and government officials battled on Saturday to deal with stranded passengers and stricken employees after discount carrier Spirit Airlines abruptly ceased operations – and a political and business blame game got under way over the collapse of the low-cost carrier.
“If you have a flight scheduled with Spirit Airlines, don’t show up at the airport; there will be no one here to assist you,” the US secretary of transportation, Sean Duffy, warned at a press conference after laying out measures for customers booked with the Florida-based company to obtain refunds or find discounted flights on other airlines.
Continue reading..."Running a Big Tech company during Silicon Valley's AI mania may not necessarily require fewer workers or cost less," writes the Washington Post: Amazon, Google and Meta together have roughly the same number of employees now as they did during an industry-wide hiring binge in 2022, company disclosures show. Growing costs for technical workers and related expenses have often outpaced sales recently. The tech giants' big AI bet hasn't yet paid for itself. That means AI might be killing jobs not through its labor-saving wizardry but by increasing spending so much that CEOs are pressured to find savings, giving them cover to consciously uncouple from their workforces. Marc Andreessen, a prominent start-up investor and a Meta board director, put it bluntly on a recent podcast. Big company layoffs are a fix for overstaffing and changing economic conditions, he said, but AI provides a convenient scapegoat. "Now they all have the silver bullet excuse: 'Ah, it's AI,'" he said... "Almost every company that does layoffs is blaming AI, whether or not it really is about AI," Sam Altman, CEO of ChatGPT owner OpenAI, said at a March conference when he listed explanations for AI's unpopularity in the United States. "Recent history suggests Big Tech companies might not be moving toward a future with fewer workers," the article concludes, "but recalibrating to spend the same, or more, on different people and projects." So in the end, "AI might soon reduce hiring," the article acknowledges, "But the reluctance or inability of the largest tech firms to cut too deeply so far could also show that the path to making a workforce AI-ready — whatever that means — isn't a predictable straight line charting declining headcount."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ok so a week in to using the street pro 2 and I can say it is a smooooth tyre,slightly flatter profile nice and comfortable ride been enjoying the work rides.
Obviously needs to be broken in a bit but regardless very nice tyre, glad I decieded to go this way and its quite nice to ride a slick again I spend most my time on pavements or road so not missing the tread so far.
Slashdot reader joshuark writes: Scientific American reports that a ChatGPT AI has proved a conjecture with a method no human had developed. A 23-year-old student Liam Price just cracked a 60-year-old problem that world-class mathematicians have tried and failed to solve. The new solution that Price got in response to a single prompt to GPT-5.4 Pro was posted on www.erdosproblems.com, a website devoted to the Erds problems. The question Price solved — or prompted ChatGPT to solve—concerns special sets of whole numbers, where no number in the set can be evenly divided by any other... Price sent it to his occasional collaborator Kevin Barreto, a second-year undergraduate in mathematics at the University of Cambridge. The duo had jump-started the AI-for-Erds craze late last year by prompting a free version of ChatGPT with open problems chosen at random from the Erds problems website. Reviewing Price's message, Barreto realized what they had was special, and experts whom he notified quickly took notice.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
To make a long story short I’m going to be without a car for a while and will have to commute on foot or pev. I have an +xr with a mostly shot battery but still functions, a pintX with blown electronics but probably a good battery, and a mystery pint with a bad tire and probably bad battery.
I need to make one reliable onewheel out of this situation as inexpensively as possible with upgrade paths in mind. I want to one day upgrade one of the pints or the XR to vesc. Should I go pint V and use the old battery? Get stock electronics for the pint x? Get a new battery for the pint and a tire, or a drop in battery for the +xr and upgrade battery when I can vesc in the future?
Here are some highly rated films to try, plus a list of new additions to the streamer in May.
Attending this year's Kentucky Derby means more for thoroughbred expert Mark Toothaker, who suffered a seizure from laughing at a whiffed NFL field goal attempt that led to a lifesaving diagnosis.
Senator Roger Wicker and representative Mike Rogers say move risks undermining deterrence and sending wrong signal to Putin
The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said suspicious activity had been reported 84 nautical miles southwest of the port of Mukalla in Yemen.
A bulk carrier reported that a small boat and a fishing vessel came within 500m of it, according to UKMTO.
Continue reading...Orange county resident Tommi Jo Mejer’s son was illegally riding e-motorcycle when he ran into 81-year-old
A southern California woman is facing an additional charge of involuntary manslaughter after an 81-year-old man died from his injuries after being struck by the woman’s teen son while he was riding an e-motorcycle, prosecutors said on Friday.
On 16 April, Tommi Jo Mejer’s 14-year-old son was riding a Surron e-motorcycle and doing wheelies when he hit Ed Ashman, according to prosecutors. Ashman, a former captain in the US Marine Corps, was walking home from his job as a substitute teacher at a high school in Lake Forest.
Continue reading...German government calls redeployment of 5,000 troops ‘anticipated’ and reminder of Europe’s need to invest in its own defence
Nato is seeking to “understand the details” of a US decision to withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany, a redeployment ordered by Donald Trump amid a feud with the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz.
The German government sought to play down the severity of Trump’s move, describing it as “anticipated”, and a reminder of Europe’s need to invest in its own defence. The US withdrawal, which the Pentagon said would take place over the next six to 12 months, comes after criticism from Merz over Trump’s war with Iran and his handling of subsequent talks with Tehran.
Continue reading...Last Saturday someone dressed as Jesus "was among the dozens of people in costumes and masks seen on a video forcing open the door of a Scientology building on Hollywood Boulevard," reports the Los Angeles Times, "after a tug-of-war with a security guard." The footage posted on TikTok and Instagram shows the group sprinting up and down stairs and clashing with black-shirted security guards, giggling and gasping to catch their breath while church members scream at them to leave. On their way out — as security guards approach armed with fire extinguishers — one of the sprinters stops and dances to celebrate their successful escape, a move reminiscent of a taunt from the video game Fortnite. For weeks, groups of people have barged into two of the church's Hollywood properties, racing through hallways and tussling with security guards, trying to see how far they can get before they are forced to leave by church staff... Church officials say the incidents are not a game and have accused the speed runners of "hate crimes." After dozens on Saturday stormed the Ivar Avenue building that houses an exhibit dedicated to the church's founder, science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard, the external door handles were removed from all three of Scientology's properties on Hollywood Boulevard by Sunday morning. Guards could be seen blocking the doorway to one building on Monday afternoon... No arrests have been made. A report from the Associated Press cites a joke left on one of the videos: that if runners reach the top of the building, they'll find Tom Cruise. One commenter on a recent TikTok video of a speedrun asked why people are doing this, and another user simply replied, "because it's fun." The 18-year-old who started the trend told the Hollywood Reporter his original video has been viewed over 100 million times. "From there on out, I pretty much knew that Scientology was like a free gateway to a lot of views." Vulture notes that "there's even a Roblox re-creation of the trend, made using the 'maps; drawn from actual videos"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Four people are in hospital, with one 25-year-old man facing life-threatening injuries
A drive-by shooting in Brixton which left four people in hospital on Saturday has been called “an act of indiscriminate violence” by police.
Shots were fired in the early hours on Coldharbour Lane in the south London area, leaving one 25-year-old man in hospital with life-threatening injuries.
Continue reading...This week Bill Gates wrote a blog post about a special camera from medtech startup Remidio, which delivers high-resolution images of a patient's retina in seconds. The camera plugs into a phone running an AI system that watches for early signs of diabetes — all without needing a blood draw, eye dilation, or a dibetes specialist. It's already been used in 40 countries for more than 15 million patients. But that same hardware, with different software, can also flag the conditions that drive so many dangerous pregnancies. Gestational diabetes sharply increases the risk of pre-eclampsia [a spike in blood pressure during pregnancy responsible for half a million fetal deaths every year and 70,000 maternal deaths]... In most of rural sub-Saharan Africa or South Asia, it usually isn't screened for at all, because the standard test requires a lab. A retinal scan offers a different way in. Remidio's device is currently being used in India to screen pregnant women for conditions that drive stillbirth. And researchers are now adapting the same hardware to screen for anemia and hypertension, too... [S]mall, portable, affordable diagnostics in the hands of community health workers are exactly the kind of lever that can start to move a number that hasn't moved in a long time.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| I’m creating front footpads out of a kush wide and stoked Stock V5. The sensor is quite large and regardless of placement it will overlap the edge on the lower portion of the footpads and also cover the screw holes. I’ve seen that these are able to be trimmed. I’ve highlighted the areas and wanted to verify that I can trim these areas out, then seal with gel superglue on the edge. Also if anyone has a good video on YouTube that avoids bubbles as a how to, would be greatly appreciated. I’ve seen a few just want to ensure I’m not missing something. Thank you! [link] [comments] |
Several US airlines have agreed to cap ticket prices for Spirit customers who need to rebook canceled flights
The US secretary of transportation, Sean Duffy, has announced a series of measures to help Spirit Airlines passengers following the low-cost airline’s collapse early on Saturday after running out of cash and the failure of rescue talks with the Trump administration.
Duffy said that larger US airlines, including United, Delta, JetBlue and Southwest, had agreed to cap ticket prices specifically for Spirit customers who need to rebook canceled flights, subject to a Spirit flight confirmation number and proof of payment.
Continue reading...Ten strangers — a mix of conservative and liberal — gathered for a discussion about the rural-urban divide. They came together on a surprising solution.
Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson and Robert Jenrick, among others, have sung the praises of the JCB PotHole Pro
Reform UK’s leading figures have repeatedly promoted a new pothole-fixing machine by the construction company JCB, while the party received £200,000 from the British digger maker, the Guardian can reveal.
Several Reform politicians including Nigel Farage, Lee Anderson, Robert Jenrick, Zia Yusuf and Richard Tice have sung the praises of the JCB PotHole Pro machine.
Continue reading...Electricity has become one of the most important commodities in the region thanks to demand from datacenters, Iran war and rising utility charges
For decades, the only regular visitors to the Twin Lake Reservoir in Lima, Ohio, were fishers passing hot summer evenings trying to snag a largemouth bass.
But today, it’s a hive of activity.
Continue reading...Critics warn that respect for rule of law could break down as executive branch flouts judicial decisions
When a federal judge shot down a Trump administration policy of holding immigrants without bond last December, it seemed like a serious blow to the US president’s mass deportation effort.
Instead, a top justice department official insisted the ruling wasn’t binding, and the administration continued denying detainees around the country a chance for release.
Continue reading...Plus all the details on new rides, lands, shows and more in Disneyland, Disney World and Disney Cruise Line.
PM says there are instances in which he would support bans but organisers say this would ‘strike at root of free speech’
Organisers of pro-Palestine marches have said Keir Starmer’s threat to ban some demonstrations opposing Israel’s actions in the Middle East will “strike at the root of free assembly and free speech” in the UK.
On Saturday morning, the prime minister told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that “there are instances” in which he would support stopping some pro-Palestine protests altogether.
Continue reading...Steam on Linux use in March "had skyrocketed to 5.33%..." reports Phoronix, "easily the highest level we've seen Steam on Linux at since its inception more than a decade ago." So what happened in April? [April's results] point to Linux having a 4.52% marketshare on Steam, a drop of 0.81% compared to March. Year-over-year it's roughly double with Steam on Linux in April 2025 being at 2.27%. Or two years ago for April 2024, Steam on Linux was at 1.9%.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
NATO said it was working to understand details of the plan to draw down about 5,000 troops, which coincides with a feud between the president and the German chancellor.
Air traffic control audio records showed the exchanges between controllers and the pilots of some of Spirit Airlines' final flights
The company's first-quarter profit more than doubled as the value of its investments grew and most of its businesses improved.
With the right accessories, this new foldable bike is everything you need to get around town for less.
The once-a-year free comic book giveaway "is splitting in two," according to a local news report. Launched in 2002 by Diamond Comic Distributor, comic book giants like Marvel and DC have historically participated together. But things changed after Diamond Comic Distributors went bankrupt in 2025, "leaving other companies to swoop in and pick up where Diamond left off." The rights to the "Free Comic Book Day" brand were sold to Universal Distribution, which plans to bring Free Comic Book Day back on Saturday. On the same day, Penguin Random House plans to launch a rival event called Comics Giveaway Day. This means you'll still get plenty of free comics, but this time they will be separated, with some coming under the Free Comic Book Day branding and others arriving under the Comics Giveaway Day branding. Free Comic Book Day will include publishers like DC, Image, Dynamite and Archie Comics. Comics Giveaway Day will include publishers such as Marvel, Dark Horse, Boom! Studios and Tokyopop... The other big change coming this year is the introduction of game publishers Wizards of the Coast and Upper Deck to the lineup, as part of Universal Distribution's Free Comic Book Day. Wizards of the Coast is known for its tabletop role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons, as well as its trading card game Magic: The Gathering. Upper Deck is best known for its sports trading cards and entertainment collectibles, along with deck-building games like the Legendary series... In addition to adding these game makers, Universal plans to expand Free Comic Book Day to include what are colloquially referred to as your friendly local game stores. Marvel's offerings this year include a special Alien, Predator & Planet of the Apes one-shot, while D.C. is offering the first chapter of their upcoming graphic novel Aquamanatee. Other comics include Avatar: The Last Airbender — Legends from Dark Horse Comics and Sonic the Hedgehog from IDW Publishing.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The U.S. accuses Sinaloa Gov. Ruben Rocha Moya of working with cartels to distribute "massive quantities" of narcotics to the United States.
Tory leader says she did not sign off on video attacking Labour’s Troubles legacy proposals
Kemi Badenoch has apologised after footage from Bloody Sunday was used in social media posts criticising a bill on legacy issues in Northern Ireland.
The Conservative leader said on Saturday that she did not sign off on the use of a clip from the massacre, in which British soldiers opened fire on unarmed civil rights demonstrators in Derry, and that it was distributed by “very young people”.
Continue reading...CAYLA MUTCHNICK
CAYLA MUTCHNICK
Opinion Columnist
I’ve always wanted a best friend to love. One that I can cry on my saddest days and laugh with on my good ones. A best friend who truly gets me. What I didn’t realize is that I would find this, not through a person, but through a four-legged pup.
Apr. 26, 2014, changed my life. It was the day I brought home my dog, Ginger. I wish I could say I was obsessed with her from the start. Yet, I had a massive fear of dogs. My family thought that getting a dog would help me get over my fear.
Puppy Ginger was truly a ball of energy, with the sweetest soul and the most lovable bark. Still, I was terrified of her. However, that didn’t stop her from winning me over.
She was so patient with me. She sensed I was afraid and treated me with such delicate affection that would cause anyone to become a dog lover.
After a few months, I became comfortable with her. Eventually, I became comfortable with other dogs, too.
Not only did I become comfortable around Ginger, but my family and friends love to say I became “obsessed” with her. I agree. She was there for me through all my hardships and was the reason I smiled on my hardest days.
People argue that for someone or something to be a best friend, there’s a cycle of communication: listening, talking and understanding. How could a dog do this? They can’t even speak.
I don’t believe in that definition. To me, a best friend has nothing to do with the ability to speak. I created a connection with my dog through nonverbal cues and the unconditional love we both share for each other.
I know for a fact that my dog loves me the way I love her. I know this through the way she jumps on me when I come home, whether it’s from 90 miles away at college or five minutes down the road from Dunkin’.
I believe, if possible, everyone should experience the friendship of a dog. It’s a relationship like no other. Not only will they make your life 100 times better, but they also improve emotional and mental health.
Many dogs act as emotional support animals, providing people with a feeling of security and happiness. They help reduce loneliness and teach owners responsibility.
Owning a dog is a huge commitment. You need to be ready to drop anything and take care of them as they are completely reliant on their owners. Though this sounds like a lot of work, it builds a sense of responsibility that people without dogs never get the chance to have. It prepares owners to take care of someone other than themselves. It’s a responsibility that is completely worth it.
Next time you are thinking about wanting to make more friends, maybe start your search at the animal shelter or rescue!
Cayla Mutchnick is an opinion columnist at The Review. Her opinions are her own and do not represent the majority opinion of The Review staff. She may be reached at caylamut@udel.edu.
| Looking to buy a one wheel. Never owned one. What's considered a good deal. What should I look for. I have two options. XR $850 or Pint $450. Any and all advice is welcome. Thanks [link] [comments] |
The Gunners can open up a six-point lead at the top of the table with a win.
For audio enjoyment in the great outdoors, this compact speaker is tough to beat.
GB News owner’s son, who wants Channel to be mined to stop migrants, is latest to have a go at transatlantic rightwing commentary
On a Los Angeles stage in 2011 Winston Marshall, then the banjo player for the folk rock band Mumford & Sons, could scarcely believe what was happening. Not only was he playing at the Grammys, he was playing alongside Bob Dylan, legendary composer of social justice anthems and one of his heroes.
About 15 years later, Marshall once again found himself stateside, this time on a very different stage. Appearing on Fox News in his new guise as a conservative YouTuber, Marshall advocated what he admitted was an “outlandish idea” to stop small boat crossings in the Channel.
Continue reading...The tech company Flock has 80,000 cameras across the US – and a report finds some officers are taking advantage
Who would you rate as the world’s most unlikeable tech tycoon? Elon Musk is obviously a major contender. The digital warlord Palmer Luckey is also up there.
While there’s a lot of competition, Garret Langley also deserves a shoutout. The CEO of the tech company Flock may not be a household name, but his controversial surveillance technology is rapidly worming its way into daily life. If you live in the US, there’s probably a Flock product on a highway or parking lot near you. The company, which largely sells its products to law enforcement, makes automated license plate readers (ALPRs) which capture license plate data and help track where a vehicle has been. (If you want to check if your license plate has been the subject of a Flock search you can do so at haveibeenflocked.com)
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...From Virginia to New York, the bugs drain vines, cut yields and leave growers resorting to one simple fix: squash them
Around grape harvest time about three years ago, an employee at Zephaniah Farm Vineyard in Leesburg, Virginia, noticed bugs, about 1in long with gray and black wings and a bright red underwing, atop some trees.
While the insects were pretty, they were there for the grapevines and not welcome guests at the vineyard, which sits atop a farm that the Zephaniah family has run since 1949.
Continue reading...Actors Richard E Grant, Michael Sheen and Bella Ramsey among star-studded cast hoping for victory as BBC’s hit spin-off series returns to screens
Considering the Traitors is a game of murderous treachery played out in a castle, the Shakespearean actors in the cast of the new celebrity spin-off series should be well set.
Oscar-winner Richard E Grant, acclaimed actor Michael Sheen and The Last of Us star Bella Ramsey will be among the thespians vying for victory this year, all of who have the Bard on their CV.
Continue reading... | Feel free to test it out at https://rubberrush.com 🤙 [link] [comments] |
Gemini can call around to find any travel essentials you forgot.
Keir Starmer said he would always defend the right to protest, but that there may be instances where some marches should be banned.
The veteran star’s days as the No 1 option once appeared behind him. Against the favored Rockets, he put Father Time on the ropes and his team on his back
The date is 12 March, and the Los Angeles Lakers are in the midst of a run that’s garnering a lot of well-deserved attention, in a month that sees them lose just two contests and win 15. The spirit of the locker room is at an all-time high, and it’s clear in talking to LeBron James, the 41-year-old storied veteran and greatest-of-all-time candidate who recently put his ego aside to accept a role as the team’s third option, that he believes what many around the NBA are starting to as well: his Lakers have a real shot at contention.
“As you get older, you appreciate the moment more than anything. When you’re younger, you think about what you’ve done in the past, or what’s to come in the future,” he tells me when I ask how he’s been able to be so present of late, in light of the ups and downs of a topsy-turvy Lakers season. “But the only thing that we know for sure is happening is the moment.”
Continue reading...The budget carrier Spirit Airlines is ceasing operations after failing to land a $500 million bailout from the Trump administration.
Have tickets to fly on Spirit? Here's what to know about refunds and alternative flights as the budget airline ceases operations.
Check out all the action classics, indie faves and more, streaming free in May.
Cameron Rider's fatigue, body aches and fever were diagnosed as pneumonia, but he couldn't seem to get better.
Amid immigration raids, chemical spills, massive floods and costly healthcare, less-affluent residents of one of the most diverse US cities struggle to pull through
Cándido Álvarez has made it his policy never to go to the doctor.
“Not when I’m sick, not even when it’s serious,” he said. “I prefer not to go.”
Continue reading...Calf was transported by water-filled barge in operation deemed ‘inadvisable’ because of low chance of survival
Rescuers have released a young humpback whale that became a national sensation after it was beached in shallow waters off the coast in Germany, although marine experts have said its chances of survival are low.
The whale, variously nicknamed Timmy or Hope, was released into the North Sea off Denmark after being transported there in a water-filled barge by rescuers.
Continue reading...The phone is reportedly inching closer to launch by getting another certification for operation on carrier networks.
Where (and how) you wear your health tracker can impact your data accuracy. Here's what researchers say matters most.
Figures for England and Wales prompt calls for more rigorous police investigations of cases
Only 3% of suicides related to domestic abuse in England and Wales in the past five years have resulted in any sort of prosecution, figures show.
Between 2020 and 2025, 553 people took their own lives after suspected abuse in an intimate relationship, but only 17 posthumous charges were brought.
In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org
Continue reading...Government blocks RightsCon 2026 conference saying it did not ‘align with national values’
The world’s largest conference on human rights and technology has been cancelled just days before it was due to start after the Zambian government told organisers it did not align with “national values”.
Zambia’s government had originally welcomed the RightsCon 2026 summit on “human rights in the digital age”, due to be held in the capital, Lusaka, on 5-8 May, but Thabo Kawana, permanent secretary for the Ministry of Information & Media, said last week that the conference would not go ahead to allow time to ensure the gathering “aligns with Zambia’s national values, policy priorities, and broader public interest considerations”.
Continue reading...The king’s US visit reminds me how glorious it would be to live in a country where sunshine is a novelty and For the Love of Dogs is on TV
The so-called “special relationship” between Britain and the United States has never seemed more tenuous. At times, it looks like the US-UK alliance is a geopolitical version of a slowly disintegrating celebrity relationship where neither side wants to admit it’s actually over, so someone has to do a crazy thing like cheating in the most high-profile manner possible to wrap things up. Like Klay Thompson (allegedly) stepping out on Megan Thee Stallion, America has been making goo-goo eyes at Israel for the last year, and King Charles is starting to get jealous.
So the king popped into the White House for a tour of all the changes Donald and Melania have foisted upon the grounds. Have you seen the gaping hole where the East Wing used to be? And what a hole it is. To your left, you’ll see the beehive.
Continue reading...These are the best red light therapy masks to surprise mom with.
GameStop is reportedly preparing a potential offer for eBay, an unusually ambitious move given that eBay's roughly $46 billion market value is nearly four times GameStop's. Reuters reports: GameStop is preparing an offer for eBay as CEO Ryan Cohen pursues plans to boost the struggling videogame retailer's market value more than tenfold, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday. Shares of eBay, which has a market capitalization of about $46 billion, soared about 14% in extended trading. GameStop gained 4%. The company has a market value of nearly $12 billion. GameStop has been quietly building a stake in eBay's shares ahead of a potential offer, the report said, citing people familiar with the matter. If eBay is not receptive, Cohen could decide to take the offer directly to the e-commerce company's shareholders, the Journal said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
‘Date My Mate’ nights, which involve pitching a friend to a room of singles, are gaining momentum across the country
For many young people, the dating game has been nothing but a thankless task of endless swiping and ghosting, with little hope of finding love.
But as dating apps fall out of favour, and a relationship recession looms, young singles have discovered a new way to revive the dating scene: talking up their pals to strangers.
Continue reading...The daughter of Iranian immigrants, Asal Sayas worked in the White House and Senate, lobbied for AIDS research and became a tireless champion for people with cancer.
Apps, AI tools and shaky job prospects are pushing gen Z into markets earlier, blending caution with risk-taking
Ambrico Ranginui first heard of cryptocurrencies when he was 12 years old. By the time he was 16, he had saved enough from birthday gifts and his allowance to invest.
“Growing up in a single-mum household, it made me quite a determined person to get ahead,” Ranginui said. “I wanted to find new avenues to make money and crypto was so fascinating at the time.”
Continue reading...US president says ‘we took over the cargo, took over the oil. It’s a very profitable business’
Donald Trump has said the US navy acted “like pirates” as he described an operation seizing a ship amid the tit-for-tat American blockade of Iranian ports.
“We … land on top of it and we took over the ship. We took over the cargo, took over the oil. It’s a very profitable business,” said Trump at a rally in Florida on Friday.
Continue reading...Kareem’s Daily Quote: Sit. Stay. Heal. (Or help to heal others.)
The Shameful Verdict: If it comes with no fanfare, does it still count?
Video Break: Bandly does gymnastics.
The Scandal That Never Ends: Why we stopped noticing the $4 billion elephant in the room.
The Price of the California Dream: A conversation about what we owe our neighbors.
What I’m Watching: Bob Marley: One Love
Jukebox Playlist: Nat King Cole & Harry Belafonte “Mama Look A Boo Boo”
"You have to pick the places you don't walk away from." Joan Didion

There is a specific kind of wisdom that comes from Joan Didion—author, screenwriter and essayist who spent her life looking at the fractures in society and the messy, often chaotic reality of being human. The quote above,“You have to pick the places you don’t walk away from,” is from her A Book of Common Prayer. It’s a line that feels particularly heavy when you look at the world we’re navigating right now.
America is a country that was built on walking away. Nearly all of us were conceived from immigrant stock, no matter if those ancestors were from Trinidad (like mine) or from Europe, Africa, the South Pacific, what have you. The Pilgrims may have landed on the East Coast but many ventured to the West, to the North and the South. If we don’t like something, and we have the opportunity to pick up and go, we will. Few of us still live in the house our grandparents built. Fewer still in a town that looks like it did seventy years ago. Marriages crumble. Friendships get sidelined. Churches, synagogues and temples empty out. Walking away is not just a default to find out who we “really” are…it’s our primary defense mechanism against the overwhelming noise of modern life.
But Didion’s point is that if you walk away from everything, you eventually find yourself standing nowhere.
Commitment is a messy business. When she talks about “picking the places,” Didion isn’t just talking about a house or a city. She’s talking about the values we choose to defend and the people we refuse to abandon. It’s about where to dig in our heels.
I’ve been thinking about this in the context of the stories we’ve been tracking this week, the ones that make you want to throw your hands up. It’s easy to walk away from the debate over how we fund our hospitals because it feels too complex or too dominated by billionaire-funded PR. It’s easy to walk away from the struggle for voting rights because it feels like a battle that’s been fought for a hundred years and still isn’t won. It’s easy to walk away from the fight for accountability when corruption starts to feel like a permanent part of the deal.
But these are the exact places that we can’t afford to leave.
Picking a place you won’t walk away from is a radical act of hope. It’s an admission that even if “the magic trick” of public life is designed to confuse us, and even if the antiseptic and even obtuse language of the law is designed to hide the truth, the outcome still matters. It matters because there are real people—kids in schools, patients in ERs, voters in the South—who don’t have the luxury of walking away.
People who eventually change things aren’t necessarily the loudest or the ones with the most resources. They’re the ones who remain in the room.
We’re all tired. We’ve been “flooded with the zone” until we’re gasping for air. But the strength of our community, the “American Experiment,” doesn’t come from those of us who find a clever exit strategy. It comes from those who look at the mess, look at the wires and the pulleys, and say, “Nope. I’m staying put.”
Spinosaurid fossil bought by Stuttgart institution in 1991 has been the subject of a long restitution campaign
It is a 113-million-year-old bone of contention.
After Stuttgart’s museum of natural history bought a fossilised dinosaur skull in 1991, researchers found it was the most complete spinosaurid skull known to date, belonging to a previously unknown genus of the huge meat-eating dinosaurs.
Continue reading...The semi-pro league gets under way with aims of elevating the sport ahead of the 2033 World Cup on American soil
Dr Jessica Hammond-Graf is president and chief sporting officer of Women’s Elite Rugby, the US semi-professional rugby union competition that kicks off its second season on Saturday in Massachusetts and Illinois. Like most Americans, she did not grow up with the game.
An Army kid, she spent a lot of time playing soccer. In the early 90s, at the University of Connecticut, she tried out for the round ball and then played Ultimate Frisbee. Then, one fateful day, a woman on her floor said, “Hey, you should come try rugby, OK?” Hammond-Graf agreed, then found herself starting her very first game at fly-half, responsible for directing a team.
Continue reading...After correspondents’ dinner shooting, administration has rushed to capitalize in pursuit of its political goals
Less than 72 hours after a man was arrested for trying to assassinate Donald Trump at the White House, the justice department rushed to court to make an extraordinary filing.
The subject of the emergency was a lawsuit by the National Trust for Historic Preservation seeking to halt the construction of a new White House ballroom. A federal judge ruled earlier this month that construction had to stop, though an appeals court later paused that ruling.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Contractor denies allegations including ‘enforced disappearance’ and will help locate unaccompanied minors
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has awarded a contract to a private security company that has faced accusations of “torture” and “enforced disappearance” to assist in tracking down undocumented immigrant children who arrived in the US alone, a contracting document shows.
ICE has stepped up its work so much in pursuing these minors in the US that it has contracted out some of its mission to a third party to put “boots on the ground” and locate immigrant children previously released from US government custody.
Continue reading...El Gamal family was released from detention and then re-arrested as US officials appeared to overstep judge’s order
An Egyptian mother and her children, previously jailed by immigration authorities, arrived back in their home in Colorado on Wednesday, after a days-long ordeal during which the Trump administration likely attempted to violate a federal judge’s order.
Their attorney, Eric Lee, claimed the US government’s actions against the El Gamal family constituted “kidnapping” after immigration officials re-arrested the family last week.
Continue reading...The race to succeed Gavin Newsom has teetered wildly, and with Democrats in disarray, the Republican ex-Downing Street adviser is leading in the polls. Can he really pull it off?
Few political aspirations have proved more futile over the past two decades than running as a Republican for statewide office in California. Yet Steve Hilton – transplanted Brit, erstwhile business entrepreneur, a former Downing Street adviser to David Cameron and a former Fox News host who says he is friends with half of Donald Trump’s cabinet – is having a remarkably good time of it.
With less than six weeks to go before a primary election that has proved to be both dramatic and wildly unpredictable, most polls put Hilton narrowly ahead of a fractured field of Democrats in the race to succeed Gavin Newsom as governor. It is an astonishing turn of events in a state where Democrats enjoy supermajorities in the state legislature and a two-to-one advantage over the Republicans in voter registration.
Continue reading...Some of these word and puzzle games are more casual, while others offer a difficult challenge.
From hardened SUVs to home upgrades, officeholders are going to new lengths to protect themselves. The question is: Who pays?
Former major winner ‘committed to making team golf work’
Rebel tour now working on a junior golf initiative, he says
Bryson DeChambeau, the two times US Open champion, has denied reports he is seeking a way out of the beleaguered LIV Golf, the rebel series whose future looks bleak after Saudi Arabian backers indicated they are pulling their multibillion-dollar sponsorship at the end of the 2026 season.
LIV Golf is seeking to secure fresh backers in the wake of the decision by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) to scrap its $5bn (£3.68bn) investment in golf, as part of a general retreat from sports sponsorship. There is every prospect the 2026 season will prove LIV’s last.
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Another writer once told me that she never, ever apologizes. How unenlightened and abrasive, I thought at the time. This was circa 2019, when the specter of cancellation loomed large, where old tweets were being dug up, and public apologies abounded.
I like to think we’ve come out on the other side a bit more canny. The era of overcorrection converted me to the idea that, with few exceptions, you should not publicly apologize, and you should not retreat.
I’ve been thinking about this again in the wake of former FBI Director James Comey’s second indictment stemming from a dumb joke he literally wrote in the sand. While on a beach vacation last year, Comey spelled out the words “86 47” and posted the photo online. For this limp act of resistance, he’s been charged with threatening to kill the president and transmitting the message via interstate commerce, i.e., Instagram.
For those who’ve never worked a service industry job and are not unruly, public drunks — which would make for an interesting Venn Diagram for members of this administration — “86” is slang for removing someone from an establishment. It’s ludicrous to imagine this being read as a threat on Donald Trump’s life, but that was hardly the point.
What matters is that Comey made a critical misstep: He deleted the post and retreated, giving his detractors exactly what they so richly desired. “I didn’t realize some folks associate those numbers with violence. It never occurred to me but I oppose violence of any kind so I took the post down,” he said at the time.
Now, some necessary caveats: There is great value in addressing specific wrongs to the specific people you’ve wronged. This is best done in private. If you find yourself apologizing to a large group of unspecified people for hard-to-pin-down or ever-evolving wrongs, it should give you pause, ditto if you start by opening up your Notes app. Consider who is asking you to apologize and their motivations for doing so. Are they trying to exert control over you? Do they want to gain leverage for future use?
Comey’s de facto apology not only didn’t matter to its intended audience, but it also telegraphed the former FBI director as weak. Announcing himself as willing to capitulate only chummed the water further, the sharks circled, and he bent the knee to the worst actors rather than stand his ground. Deleting the post, in the modern era, ends up looking like an admission of guilt — or, at least, an admission that the bad guys got under your skin, which means they can do so again, at will, in the future.
Once you start apologizing to appease the nameless, faceless ombudsmen looking to catch you out, you might find it’s impossible to stop.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is experiencing this firsthand. Early in March, the right-wing website Jewish Insider thought they were onto the scoop of the century when they published a story blaring: “Zohran Mamdani’s wife liked social media posts celebrating Oct. 7 attacks.” That premise was hardly borne out by the posts that Rama Duwaji, an interdisciplinary artist, had “liked” — which included such incendiary phrases as “Systemic change for collective liberation” — but the damage was done. A Mamdani spokesperson responded to the report with a conciliatory statement: “Mayor Mamdani has been clear and consistent: Hamas is a terrorist organization, October 7th was a horrific war crime, and he has condemned that violence unequivocally.”
It’s safe to say this apology was not accepted, and bad actors in the media doubled down on attacking Duwaji. One week later, a gotcha reporter manufactured outrage with a story for the conservative Washington Free Beacon about one of Duwaji’s illustrations running alongside a collection of essays edited by Susan Abulhawa about the indignities of living under Israeli occupation — in this case, a Gazan woman’s search for something as simple as a bathroom. The publication attempted to hold Duwaji accountable for everything the editor has ever said, none of which was contained in the piece itself, which was actually written by Diana Islayih.
Mamdani apologized for the editor, saying, “I think that that rhetoric is patently unacceptable. I think it’s reprehensible.” But the mayor’s critics were quick to seize on what was left unsaid, with an Anti-Defamation League leader crediting his apology with one hand while offering with the other: “However, we have not heard from [Duwaji]. Does she have a problem with the author and her statements? We just don’t know.” (Abulhawa, for her part, nailed it in a withering response to Mamdani’s apology: “You succumbed to forces that seek to pick away at you, at your talented, beautiful wife, and at your work, clawing harder with each apology or concession you make.”)
It wasn’t over, and we likely haven’t heard the end of it. The Free Beacon doubled down on its intrepid reporting by advanced-searching up some of Duwaji’s off-color tweets from when she was a teenager. This seemed to break the dam, and New York’s first lady publicly apologized earlier this month in an interview on the art site Hyperallergic.
“I felt a lot of shame being confronted with language I used that is so harmful to others; being 15 doesn’t excuse it,” she told the site. “I’ve read and seen a lot of what others have had to say in response, and I understand the hurt I caused and am truly sorry.”
This all comes after Mamdani was only a few months off his historic win in an election where the most votes were tallied since 1969 — one in which he overcame wave after wave of Islamophobic fearmongering and political opponents smearing him as “antisemtic” for refusing to roll over on supporting Palestinian liberation. He stood up for something people believe in and was rewarded for not backing down, which makes it all the more mystifying that he would start apologizing now.
But Mamdani and Duwaji are far from alone. Years back, Rep. Ilhan Omar was famously disciplined for her “all about the Benjamins” tweet, which suggested, apparently quite controversially, that money was involved in lobbying. (After being tarred as trafficking in antisemitic tropes, Omar tweeted, “I unequivocally apologize.”) The attacks on Omar — again, brought by bad actors — have not stopped since then.
The door on all this apologizing only swings one way. You’ll never get an apology out of Donald Trump, AIPAC, or the vast majority of elected Republicans. This should force you to consider that, just maybe, your opponents weren’t actually offended in the first place; they were exercising power over you in a way you’ve already proven works. It’s akin to political blackmail: If you prove you’re willing to pay the bad guys off once, there’s nothing to stop them coming back again and again for another pound of flesh.
Being involved in public life — and politics in particular — means offending people. It means making enemies of the types of people who strenuously fight against everything you stand for. What the left should stake out is the courage to stand on principle and be willing to have the bad people dislike you. Because without a spine, an elected lefty is just another politician.
The post Never Apologize appeared first on The Intercept.
PM worried about ‘cumulative’ effect of marches, as Met chief says Jewish communities facing biggest threat
Some pro-Palestinian demonstrations could be stopped, the prime minister has warned, as the UK’s most senior police officer said the threat to the Jewish community was greater than it had ever been.
Keir Starmer indicated he wanted the language expressed on some protest marches to be subjected to “tougher action” as he sought to allay the fears of British Jews after a series of attacks on their communities in recent weeks.
Continue reading...Exclusive: The collection, including donations from Paul McCartney’s brother Mike, shows band’s development in early 60s
A rare set of letters and photos from the early days of the Beatles, in which they write about feeling like stars for the first time, is to go on display in Hamburg.
The collection, from an influential period when the band lived in the German city, includes the only letter in existence with words from both Paul McCartney and John Lennon, which was written to the bassist’s brother, Mike McCartney.
Continue reading...Kurdish Syrian man, 26, said he fled forced conscription by YPG militia because he ‘didn’t want to kill people’
An asylum seeker sent back to France under the controversial “one in, one out” scheme faces being returned to Syria after authorities in Paris ruled it was safe to do so, in what is believed to be the first case of its kind.
When the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, and the French president, Emmanuel Macron, announced the “groundbreaking” deal in July 2025 to stop small boats crowded with asylum seekers from crossing the Channel – by forcibly returning one small-boat asylum seeker to France in exchange for bringing one in northern France legally to the UK – they emphasised that France was a safe country for returnees.
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For many months, conservative lawmakers and political operatives have been targeting the scientists and lawyers behind the Climate Judiciary Project, a program meant to educate the courts about climate science, alleging that their effort constitutes a conspiracy to influence federal judges and persuade them to rule against the oil industry.
Now, just as congressional investigators are escalating a formal inquiry into the project, a separate program closely aligned with the fossil fuel industry and free-market conservatives is hosting a symposium for 150 judges in Nashville, Tennessee. The program, run by the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University, also aims to educate judges, but in a way that prioritizes American business interests and questions climate science.
The dueling efforts come as a number of significant lawsuits seeking to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for climate damages are making their way through the courts and as oil-industry-aligned attacks on climate policies, and the legal arguments supporting them, have been sharply increasing.
ProPublica reported in April that political operatives connected to the conservative activist Leonard Leo were coordinating an effort across 11 states to pass laws shielding fossil fuel companies from liability for climate harm. In the past three weeks, similar liability waiver bills have been introduced federally in both the House and the Senate. Last week the Florida attorney general’s office launched an investigation into alleged judicial influence by the organization that oversees the Climate Judiciary Project, the Environmental Law Institute, a nonpartisan legal scholarship group funded until recently by the Environmental Protection Agency.
These developments come on the heels of a campaign last winter to get the Federal Judicial Center, the publishing body for the federal court system, to retract a roughly 90-page chapter devoted to climate science from the latest volume of its technical manual for judges. Twenty-two Republican attorneys general wrote to Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the Republican chair of the House Judiciary Committee, demanding that the committee investigate the center’s publication of material about how to weigh scientific evidence about climate and the weather because the chapter’s authors appeared to be biased. In their letter, they noted the authors work for Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law and alleged the chapter was influenced by Michael Burger, the executive director of the center who works closely with the law firm Sher Edling, which represents several climate plaintiffs. The Republican attorneys general also noted that some staff at the Sabin Center work with the Environmental Law Institute and the Climate Judiciary Project. Although the chapter had been peer reviewed and approved by the Federal Judicial Center, as well as by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, the center retracted the climate chapter in February.
On April 28, Jordan went a step further, issuing letters accusing Burger, the Environmental Law Institute and Sher Edling of bias, conspiracy and collusion. Jordan demanded that the three parties produce private communications, receipts and records of funding sources, and that the recipients sit for interviews before the committee.

The Sabin Center, Jordan wrote, is “producing materials to be used to bias federal judges about novel climate-related legal theories” and coordinating to bring climate-related litigation to court. The activity raises questions about “the integrity and independence of the judicial process” and “ex parte contact with courts,” Jordan wrote, referring to the improper conduct of contacting a judge without opposing counsel present to argue issues related to a pending case.
Neither Sher Edling, the Sabin Center nor Burger responded to a request for comment. A representative for the Environmental Law Institute stated in an email that the Climate Judiciary Project “does not participate in litigation, coordinate with any parties related to any litigation, or advise judges on how they should rule on any issue or in any case. The goal of CJP is to provide judges with the tools they need to understand climate science and how it arises in the law.”
Jordan’s office replied to a request for comment by reasserting the statements in the letters it sent, and it did not respond to a detailed list of questions.
Amid the allegations of impropriety and conflicts of interest though, the program at George Mason University has scarcely been noticed.
The George Mason conference, called the “Judicial Symposium on Scientific Methodology, Expert Testimony, and the Judicial Role,” opened the day after Jordan sent out his letters and will continue through Saturday, May 2. It is run by the university’s Law and Economics Center, which oversees a project called the Judicial Education Program. The center is funded in part by ExxonMobil, which is a defendant in several of the climate lawsuits. ExxonMobil did not respond to a request for comment.
The conference includes speakers who have filed amicus briefs — filings by people who aren’t part of the case but have a strong interest in its outcome — in favor of the oil industry in several of those cases, as well as at least one lawyer who has represented fossil fuel companies in court. The reading assignments prepared for the judges include a Substack post by a notable climate contrarian accusing the authors of the retracted climate chapter in the federal court’s reference manual of including material by Burger and hiding his authorship. They also include a law journal argument that a key tenet of climate science used to identify the cause of disasters should be inadmissible in their courtrooms. One session, titled “Debates on the trustworthiness of tools to evaluate science in the courtroom,” focuses entirely on the federal courts’ reference manual.
In an emailed response to ProPublica, Donald Kochan, the executive director of George Mason’s Law and Economics Center, which organized the event, presented the symposium as a robust and objective discussion. The program’s advisory board, he wrote, is a politically and jurisprudentially diverse group including “some of the most progressive jurists in the country, including on climate issues.” Kochan, who did not respond to a list of specific questions, added that lectures are by leading academics on science and law and that he invited the authors of the judicial reference manual to speak but they declined, as did several others who he suggested would have represented more centrist viewpoints on the climate issue.
The conference is one of dozens of meetings, retreats and “intimate weeklong gatherings” that are regularly hosted by the Law and Economics Center as part of an initiative to instill free-market values and greater knowledge of the economic consequences of policy in judicial decision-making. In 2016 the law school renamed itself after the former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and the center expanded with $30 million in gifts, adding faculty and scholarships and launching additional “colloquia.” The center today runs several parallel initiatives under the umbrella of the Judicial Education Program, each aimed at gathering judges together and educating them. The symposium on science and evidence is one of these events.

According to an internal fundraising document from 2020 obtained by ProPublica, the gatherings are often luxurious all-expenses-paid affairs, created to foster lasting relationships and opportunities to network with judges. The document included a solicitation for more than $930,000 sent by the center to the Charles Koch Foundation, a libertarian organization that provides grants to universities and scholars. At the time of the proposal, more than 5,000 judges representing all 50 states had attended at least one of the organization’s programs, the document stated.
The goal of the symposium, according to the document, is to sway judges toward a libertarian economic viewpoint in their rulings — the very sort of “biasing” that Jordan accused the Sabin Center and the Climate Judiciary Project of.
“The goal of this project is to expose judges to the intellectual history of the role of capitalism, economic freedom, and a constitutionally limited government as fundamental features of a liberal society,” the document says. It is also to establish a community of like-minded justices “with synergistic effects on the judiciary as a whole” and to influence the outcome of cases that come before the courts. Judges, the fundraising proposal continues, “urgently need to cultivate an understanding” of economic analysis and its relevance to the legal system if they “are to issue decisions that advance the rule of law and America’s free enterprise system.”
According to the George Mason University website, the Law and Economics Center’s 2025 funders include DonorsTrust, a dark money pass-through organization meant to shield the identity of contributors. DonorsTrust is often used by organizations tied to Leo, who brought George Mason a $20 million gift, in addition to $10 million from the Charles Koch Foundation, that made expansion of the law school’s program possible.
This weekend’s symposium in Nashville is one of the most significant parts of the center’s outreach to justices. According to the 2020 fundraising letter, the goal of such gatherings is to challenge the status quo on science. The conference “will give judges a rounded understanding and healthy skepticism of the invocations of ‘science’ that lurk in the background of lawsuits they are hearing,” the center’s then-director wrote, and it will help judges understand that “so much of what passes as ‘science’ for leverage purposes never has to face tests for rigor, reliability and quality in front of a neutral arbiter.”
One of the symposium’s events prominently features Philip Goldberg, a managing partner at the law firm Shook, Hardy & Bacon and the special counsel to the National Association of Manufacturers’ policy lobbying arm, the Manufacturers’ Accountability Project, which the group describes as “the leading voice of manufacturers in the courts.” MAP, as it is called, has publicly rejected the claims in a landmark case that the city of Honolulu brought against Shell, ExxonMobil and other oil companies alleging they misrepresented the risks of using their fuels and are responsible for the damages they have caused. Goldberg authored a brief for the group that was submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court on the case in 2024.
Goldberg, who did not respond to a request for comment, has also authored briefs in climate liability cases brought by the city of Baltimore against BP and other fossil fuel companies — a case won by the defendants in March — as well as a case brought by Boulder County in Colorado against Suncor Energy and ExxonMobil, which alleges the companies misrepresented the risks of using fossil fuels. Lawyers from Shook, Hardy & Bacon are also present at the conference. Other lawyers at the firm wrote a brief in favor of Chevron in a case brought by Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. (The oil companies dispute the allegations and each of these cases is ongoing.)
For its assigned reading for a session on the judicial manual, the symposium offered an article by the political scientist Roger Pielke Jr., a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. Pielke wrote that he found evidence that the true authorship of a significant part of the climate chapter in the reference manual was obscured. He used the Claude artificial intelligence program to run an analysis comparing the chapter’s text to a paper co-authored by Sabin’s Burger and said he found a correlation.
“Michael Burger did not write any of the text in the climate science chapter nor did he have any control over the content and scope,” one of the chapter’s two authors, Jessica Wentz, who has denied the chapter was biased, wrote to ProPublica. The other author did not respond, and Burger declined to comment.
The conference did not offer readings from the climate chapter of the manual itself, which is still available on the website of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Nor did it offer readings from the United Nations climate science authorities or climate-related readings from any other peer-reviewed scientific journal.
In its final session, the symposium features attorney Matthew Wickersham of the firm Alston & Bird, which has served as counsel for Chevron in several lawsuits. Wickersham did not respond to a request for comment. The only reading assigned to justices for that session is a paper Wickersham wrote in the Rutgers Law Record in 2025 about why attribution science — the field of study that makes it possible to link climate disasters to specific amounts of pollution and their sources — should never be admitted in court.
The post Event With Links to Oil Industry Teaches Judges “Healthy Skepticism” of Climate Science appeared first on ProPublica.
In this CNET Labs exclusive, I look at why the overall brightness of TVs I've measured has increased over the past few years.
Reputed cartel boss Daniel Kinahan lived a luxe life on the lam, largely in the open, until Irish authorities had him arrested near the Burj Khalifa skyscraper.
As a Mast of Fraternity and Memory is unveiled in Nantes, calls are growing for Macron to announce framework for discussions
In the French port city of Nantes, once France’s largest departure point for ships that trafficked enslaved Africans across the Atlantic, a new wooden mast rises 18 metres into the sky from the waterside.
The Mast of Fraternity and Memory, inaugurated this month, marks a turning point in France’s complicated relationship with the legacy of its history of enslavement – just as the French president, Emmanuel Macron, comes under pressure to make key announcements on a process of reparatory justice.
Continue reading...‘Targeted support’ means certain banks and financial institutions can offer free extra help with investments and pensions
Many Britons are daunted by the world of investing, but new City rules mean certain banks and financial institutions can offer free extra help with investments and pensions.
Last month marked the launch of “targeted support”, a new regulated service that permits companies to suggest investments and pension products to customers that might provide a better return.
Continue reading...NASA engineers have tested a next-generation lithium-plasma electric propulsion system that reached 120 kilowatts, a new U.S. record and about 25 times the power of the electric thrusters on NASA's Psyche spacecraft. "Designing and building these thrusters over the last couple of years has been a long lead-up to this first test," said James Polk, who is a senior research scientist at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "It's a huge moment for us because we not only showed the thruster works, but we also hit the power levels we were targeting. And we know we have a good testbed to begin addressing the challenges to scaling up." Universe Today reports: While 120 kilowatts is a new record, NASA estimates it a future human mission to Mars will require 2 to 4 megawatts of power consisting of several thrusters and requiring more than 23,000 hours (958 days/2.6 years) of operation. To accomplish this, the thrusters would have to withstand more than 2,800 degrees Celsius (5,000 degrees Fahrenheit), which the thrusters achieved during testing. The reason for the extended operation is due to the estimated time of an entire human mission to Mars, which is estimated to be approximately 2.6 years. This is because the launch window to Mars only opens once every two years due to the orbital behaviors of both planets. While no mission has ever returned from the Red Planet, this same launch window works from Mars to Earth, too. When launched within this window, robotic spacecraft have traditionally taken approximately 6-7 months to reach Mars. However, a human mission would require a much larger spacecraft to accommodate the astronauts, food, fuel, water, and other mission-essential items. For the approximate 2.6-year mission, this would entail approximately 6-9 months traveling to Mars, followed by approximately 18 months on the surface of Mars until the next launch window opens, then another approximate 6-9 months back to Earth. However, having much less fuel due to the electric propulsion system could potentially alter this timeframe.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Documentary makers seek to start ‘informed conversation’ in country where public is allowed on just 8% of land
Anger and momentum are building for Scottish style rights of access to mountains, meadows, rivers and woodlands in England where the public is allowed on just 8% of land, a new documentary suggests.
Our Land, a film whose title is a nod to the protest song by Woody Guthrie, explores the rise of the right to roam movement in England.
Continue reading...Staff warned news operations face 15% cut, above BBC-wide 10% target, as corporation pushes through £600m savings plan
The BBC’s news operation is to cut costs by a steeper-than-expected 15%, with staff told to expect heavy redundancies.
The division, home to about a quarter of all BBC staff, is being saddled with one of the highest cost-cutting targets as the corporation attempts to cut as many as 2,000 jobs in the biggest downsizing of the public service broadcaster in 15 years.
Continue reading...WHO prequalification of Coartem Baby means newborns can be safely treated rather than using medication for older children
The first malaria treatment for babies has been approved by the World Health Organization, opening the door to widespread use around the globe.
In parts of Africa, up to 18% of children under six months will be infected with malaria, but there has historically been no safe treatment for the smallest of them. There were 610,000 deaths from malaria in 2024, about three quarters of which were under-fives in Africa.
Continue reading...Hi all,
Im able to build custom hv batteries, and I can design 3d models and print them with my 3d printer.
Im wanting to vesc my onewheel+ XR and I wondering what the safe maximum voltage would be for the stock motor. Im looking for a substantial power upgrade with 25+ miles range (200lb).
I know that if I want to use 21700 cells, ill have to make a new battery enclosure which im totally willing to do.
Affordability is also a concern. I have around $300 budget for everything I need for the vesc conversion (excluding battery and bms cost).
What kind of vesc controllers should I consider?
What voltage should I run?
What would the battery config look like? 20s?
Thanks!
Charles III’s subtle, much needed history lesson delivered the US some tough love. But will Trump get the message?
Of the many jokes cracked by King Charles during his visit to Washington, the one recalling the definitive 18th-century Anglo-French contest for dominion over the New World was the most pointed. Speaking at a state banquet in the White House, Charles turned to Donald Trump and said: “You recently commented, Mr President, that if it were not for the United States, European countries would be speaking German. Dare I say that, if it wasn’t for us, you’d be speaking French!”
Did Trump get it? Who knows? Broadly speaking, history, even their own, is not most Americans’ favourite subject. A forward-looking people, they do not dwell on the past, nor hanker after the illusory felicities of former glories. While generations of Britons still wallow in nostalgia for Spitfires, Churchill and Vera Lynn (and beating the French), Americans typically seek new metaphorical mountains to climb. Theirs is a positive outlook, on the whole. Except, under Trump, it has twisted into a revived, ugly version of US “manifest destiny” imperialism.
Simon Tisdall is a Guardian foreign affairs commentator
Continue reading...The new measures increase pressure on foreign financial institutions by threatening their access to U.S. markets if they continue to work with Cuban government entities.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Amazon's cloud customers will need to wait several more months before the US tech company can repair war-damaged data centers and restore normal operations in the Middle East. The announcement comes two months after Iranian drone strikes targeted three Amazon data centers in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain -- meaning that full recovery from the cloud disruption could take nearly half a year in all. The Amazon Web Services (AWS) dashboard posted an April 30 update describing how its UAE and Bahrain cloud regions "suffered damage as a result of the conflict in the Middle East" and are unable to support customer applications. The update also said that "relevant billing operations are currently suspended while we restore normal operations" in a process that "is expected to take several months." That wording suggests Amazon will continue to avoid billing AWS customers in the affected regions -- ME-CENTRAL-1 and ME-SOUTH-1 -- after it initially waived all usage-related charges for March 2026 at an estimated cost of $150 million. AWS also "strongly" recommended that customers migrate resources to other cloud regions and rely on remote backups to restore any "inaccessible resources." Some customers, such as the Dubai-based super app Careem—which offers ride-hailing, household services, and food and grocery delivery -- were able to get back online quickly after doing an overnight migration to other data center servers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hey guys! I got a Onewheel plus board from a family member that is in rough shape and the app says it has an overcharge issue. It has a 2x battery extender on it I haven’t taken off yet to see if that is the issue hence the asking for battery/BMS replacement. I’m a college student, don’t have a ton of cash but I’m willing to do trades or work something out. Let me know if there are any other questions and thank you for your time!
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 2.
The longtime president of Bard College announced his retirement, months after it was revealed that he had a much deeper relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein than was previously known.
The Supreme Court's ruling on Wednesday about Louisiana's congressional map could have implications for several states, as it narrowed the section of the Voting Rights Act about majority-minority districts.
This live blog is now closed.
Iran offers new peace proposal to US but Trump ‘not satisfied’
Trump claims hostilities have ended in Iran in letter to Congress
Meanwhile, the White House has said it will not detail private diplomatic conversations when Reuters asked about Iran’s new proposal to the United States that was submitted to Pakistani mediators.
“We do not detail private diplomatic conversations. President Trump has been clear that Iran can never possess a nuclear weapon, and negotiations continue to ensure the short- and long-term national security of the United States,” spokeswoman Anna Kelly told Reuters.
I do have the impression from some of the briefings that I have received, as well as other sources, that an imminent military strike is very much on the table.
There really is no coherent strategy, which came across very vividly and graphically in the hearing today with Secretary Hegseth.
And it comes across in the president’s comments, which oscillate between seeming open to negotiation and then foreclosing it entirely and threatening destruction of civilizations.
Continue reading...The US sanctions target people operating in broad sections of Cuban economy, including energy, defence and mining
Cuba’s government has said new sanctions imposed on the island by Donald Trump amounted to “collective punishment”, as an enormous 1 May procession outside the American embassy in Havana vowed to “defend the homeland”.
In an executive order on Friday, the US president said he would impose sanctions on people involved in broad sections of the Cuban economy, as he seeks to put more pressure on Havana after ousting Venezuela’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, earlier this year.
Continue reading...Pentagon says withdrawal is expected to be completed over the next six to 12 months – key US politics stories from Friday, 1 May at a glance
It appears Donald Trump is following through on his threats to reduce US military presence in Europe.
The Pentagon announced on Friday that 5,000 troops will be withdrawn from Germany over the next six to 12 months.
Continue reading...The Republican governors of Tennessee and Alabama called state lawmakers into special sessions on Friday, initial steps in what could be a scramble to redraw congressional maps after the Supreme Court narrowed the Voting Rights Act.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for May 2, No. 585
Emergency order allows extension of temporary protected status that has been repeatedly granted
A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration from forcing about 3,000 Yemeni refugees to leave the US, ruling that temporary protected status repeatedly granted to them and due to expire Monday should be extended again.
Judge Dale E Ho in Manhattan extended the status temporarily while a lawsuit seeking to preserve the protections plays out. In an emergency order, he wrote that people granted the status are ordinary, law-abiding people whom the US government had determined could face threats to their safety if they were returned to a country facing an ongoing armed conflict.
Continue reading...Mike and Kayla Wintz lost their entire 11,000-acre ranch to a wildfire in the span of about two hours. They have since been gifted about $80,000 worth of hay, mostly from anonymous donors.
A federal judge scolded prosecutors for pushing to move forward with detention proceedings for accused correspondents' dinner gunman Cole Allen, even though Allen agreed to remain in custody.
Currently taking apart my Funwheel X7. For context, I built my own version of a long range before the actual long range was an option. It has the Indy Speed Control split pack.
It has given me many many miles of fun. But recently I am having an issue with overvoltage. For some reason, the Thor300 is reading overvoltage when I hit the footpad sensor or hit a bump. The board stops the motor and I get the error. Then it clears and it will go again.
Thankfully, I caught this before I was going fast and was able to run it out. I am currently taking it apart to figure out what is up.
My thoughts are possibly a faulty connection somewhere? I used electrical grade silicon sealant on all connections to keep wires together. I am not sure if I need to start on the BMS/Battery side or the Thor300 side.
As of right now, it is charging. It was getting pretty low on the voltage. I am currently bringing it up to about half charge. I am noticing that while watching each cell charge and balance on Vesctool, I can wiggle and shake and slap the board around with my hand and I get no voltage spikes or anything weird on any cells. That tells me it might be something on the Thor300 side.
Let me know your thoughts. Just looking for some help on where to start diagnosing this issue. Thank you all.
Microsoft is rolling out Xbox mode to all Windows 11 PCs, bringing a full-screen Xbox PC app interface similar to Steam's Big Picture Mode. "Some players in select markets will be able to download the Xbox mode experience today, with availability expanding to more players in those markets over the next several weeks," says the Xbox team. The Verge reports: Xbox mode aims to try and bridge the gap between Xbox consoles and Windows, but its original debut felt like a beta on the Xbox Ally devices. "Since first introducing Xbox mode, formerly known as 'full screen experience,' on Windows handhelds, we've been listening closely to player feedback and continuing to evolve the experience across devices," says the Xbox team. "Those learnings directly shaped Xbox mode on Windows 11 PCs." Microsoft is also rolling out improvements to the Xbox Ally X handheld today, including a preview of its Auto SR upscaling technology. Xbox console owners are also getting a new dashboard update today, with the ability to disable Quick Resume on individual games and a feature to add custom colors to the dashboard.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Trump is withdrawing 5,000 of the 36,400 US personnel based in Germany. But why are they there in the first place?
The US is withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany, days after the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, suggested Washington was being outplayed and “humiliated” by Iran.
The US president had earlier said a “determination” on the US military presence in Germany, seen as a key part of Nato’s defences but also vital for the projection of US power in other parts of the world, would be made “over the next short period of time”.
Continue reading...The Google Photos wardrobe feature uses AI to scan your camera roll and create a digital version of your closet.
Ford CEO Jim Farley tells CBS News, "Most of our new models are going to be more affordable versions."
You might use a VPN yourself, but have you considered giving one to your AI agent? It might be more important than you think.
US president says European countries are ‘absolutely horrible’ to refuse to support operations in strait of Hormuz
• Why does the US have military bases in Germany?
The US is withdrawing 5,000 troops from Germany, the Pentagon announced on Friday, as Donald Trump also threatened Italy and Spain for not helping to reopen the strait of Hormuz.
The president’s move to reduce the number of personnel deployed in Germany came after the country’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, said the US was being “humiliated” by Iran.
Continue reading...Kentucky State Police said a man went to a U.S. Bank in Berea, Kentucky, and shot and killed a man and a woman, both employees at the bank.
The deal merged Major League Pickleball and the Carvana PPA Tour, two of the nascent sport's most active entities, under one company, Pickleball Inc.
President seemed to suggest that legislative deadline to approve war no longer applies as Democrats push back
Donald Trump said in a letter sent to congressional leaders on Friday that hostilities with Iran have “terminated”, suggesting that the 60-day deadline to seek approval from the legislative branch no longer applied.
Friday marks 60 days since the US president notified members of Congress that the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran on 28 February. Under the War Powers Act of 1973, the president can deploy troops to respond to an “imminent threat” but must receive congressional approval within 60 days to continue military operations.
Continue reading...President Trump said earlier this week he was reviewing the possible reduction of troops in Germany, which hosts more than 35,000 U.S. service members.
By July, California will close legal loopholes that made driverless cars like Waymos exempt from some laws.
I ride goofy; I've ridden that way my entire life. I'd like to be able to ride with both stances, but every time I try, it always feels horribly awkward, and I make no progress.
Any tips?
Edit: Thanks for all the replies, it helped me out! :)
joshuark shares a report from Live Science: An AI coding agent designed to help a small software company streamline its tasks instead blew a hole through its business in just nine seconds. PocketOS founder Jer Crane, said that the AI coding agent Cursor --powered by Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.6 model -- deleted the company's entire production database and backups with a single call to its cloud provider, Railway, on April 24. [...] "This isn't a story about one bad agent or one bad API [Application Programming Interfaces]," Crane wrote in an X post. "It's about an entire industry building AI-agent integrations into production infrastructure faster than it's building the safety architecture to make those integrations safe." Crane's company, PocketOS makes software for car rental companies, handling tasks such as reservations, payments, customer records and vehicle tracking. After the deletion, Crane said customers lost reservations and new signups, and some could not find records for people arriving to pick up their rental cars. "We've contacted legal counsel," Crane wrote. "We are documenting everything." Crane explained that Cursor found an API token -- a "digital key" made of a short sequence of code that lets software talk to other services and prove it has permission to act -- in an unrelated file which it then used to run the destructive command. According to Crane, Railway's setup allowed the deletion without confirmation, and because the backups were stored close enough to the main database, they were also erased. "[Railway] resolved the issue and restored the data," Railway confirmed via email to Live Science. "We maintain both user backups as well as disaster backups. We take data very, VERY seriously." In his post, he pointed to earlier reports of Cursor ignoring user rules, changing files it was not supposed to touch and taking actions beyond the task it had been given. To him, the database wipe was not a freak accident but the next step in a larger, more concerning, pattern. After the database vanished, Crane asked Cursor to explain what happened. The AI agent reportedly admitted that it had guessed, acted without permission and failed to understand the command before running it. "I violated every principle I was given," the AI agent wrote. "I guessed instead of verifying. I ran a destructive action without being asked. I didn't understand what I was doing before doing it." The statement reads like a confession [...]. "We are not the first," Crane wrote. "We will not be the last unless this gets airtime."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comedian pulled from stage in Birmingham about 45 minutes into performance and audience told to leave
A live show by comedian Peter Kay in Birmingham has been stopped after a “potential suspicious bag” was found around the venue.
The Utilita Arena Birmingham was evacuated and a 19-year-old man was taken into custody, West Midlands police said on Friday evening.
Continue reading...Investigation found Botstein – who had claimed he wasn’t friends with Epstein – made 25 visits to his townhouse
Leon Botstein has announced he is stepping down from the helm of Bard College, after an independent review of his contacts with Jeffrey Epstein found the college president’s frequent interactions with the convicted sex offender “could have alerted” him to the possibility that he and Bard would be facilitating Epstein’s abuse of women.
An investigation by the WilmerHale law firm, which had been commissioned by Bard’s board of trustees earlier this year to review Botstein’s interactions with Epstein, found the Bard president – who had previously claimed he was not friends with Epstein – made about 25 visits to Epstein’s townhouse, a two-day visit to Epstein’s Little St James Island, and that there were two visits by Epstein to Bard. These visits, WilmerHale reported, included “multiple women” who have since been identified as victims of Epstein.
Continue reading...Made from the company's new Aerominium material, the 2026 models feature the latest Intel and AMD processors and weigh 3 pounds or less.
One of the phones, the Aurora Nex, has modular hardware that lets owners reconfigure it to their preferences.
Hello! 👋
I have a pint (one of the first basic models) and have had it for a few years now. We have gone through a few tires and put about 500 miles on the board. It has never given me issues until recently.
The board was probably unused for a solid 9 months if not longer (stored in our closet). I charged it up for probably an hour (app said the battery was at 80% which usually gets me to and fro no problem, so my boyfriend and I went on a little cruise (he has an XR).
Well on our way back I checked the app - at 71% then it started giving me the “I’m about to die” beeps. I checked my app it still said 71%, so I turned it on and off again. Same issue. Checked the app again this time it said it was dead. We ended up having to uber home.
Through lots of googling I’ve found it may be due to the battery cells being imbalanced and suggested I charged for 24-48 hours. However, when I plug it in I get a white light then three yellow lights then they turn off completely. I have tried different chargers and both do the same thing (I know the chargers work because they both work on my boyfriend’s board).
So what should I do? Obviously I’ll try charging overnight but I was curious is anyone else has ran into this issue?
Thanks in advance!
Thousands of people take to the streets to protest the Trump administration, the Iran war, immigration and social injustice
Continue reading...
Florida's Republican-controlled Legislature approved a new congressional map that could help the GOP flip four seats in the midterm elections.
State Democrats say the map, put forward by Gov. Ron DeSantis, conflicts with Florida’s Fair Districts amendment prohibiting drawing districts with partisan intent. DeSantis has offered several reasons for the changes, including population growth.
Florida House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell, D-Tampa, went further, saying after the April 29 vote that it was not only illegal on a state level, but also federal.
"Even if Fair Districts falls, you still have general principles of map drawing, and you still have, under federal law, you cannot engage in partisan gerrymandering," Driskell told reporters. "It would not be OK to draw that map based on partisan data."
Gerrymandering is drawing district boundaries to give one political party, incumbent or group an advantage.
No federal law says states cannot undertake partisan gerrymandering. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2019 that partisan gerrymandering claims are "political" questions that federal courts can’t answer.
"The court ruled the matter ‘nonjustiable’ by federal courts," said Rick Hasan, a UCLA School of Law election law expert. "It recognized the argument that partisan gerrymandering could be unconstitutional but it wasn’t for the federal courts to say when it is happening."
The court’s majority opinion said excessive gerrymandering is "incompatible with democratic principles," but state legislatures and Congress have the responsibility to police it.
Driskell’s office told PolitiFact she misspoke and meant to reference racial gerrymandering prohibitions in federal law and the partisan gerrymandering prohibitions in state law.
In Rucho v. Common Cause, Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for a 5-4 majority, said that although extreme partisan gerrymandering may seem reasonably "unjust," the Constitution provides no manageable standard for federal judges to determine when a redistricting plan becomes too partisan.
"The fact that such (excessive) gerrymandering is ‘incompatible with democratic principles,’" Roberts wrote, "does not mean that the solution lies with the federal judiciary." Federal judges have "no license to reallocate political power between the two major political parties, with no plausible grant of authority in the Constitution."
The opinion acknowledged that courts have gotten involved in other redistricting-related claims, such as racial gerrymandering, but said partisan gerrymandering is particularly thorny because it’s well settled law that legislatures can consider politics when drawing maps.
The Constitution doesn’t explicitly mention "gerrymandering" or "partisan gerrymandering." But the practice is regulated through several constitutional provisions, including the elections clause and the 14th Amendment.
The Article 1, Section 4 elections clause grants state legislatures the power to oversee congressional elections. The Supreme Court pointed to this clause in its 2019 decision as the primary constitutional tool for addressing gerrymandering.
Critics of gerrymandering say it violates the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause by diluting citizens’ voting power based on political affiliation. The clause says no state shall "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws," requiring them to treat people in similar situations equally and prohibits discriminatory laws.
The Supreme Court has used the clause to strike down racial gerrymandering and population imbalances, often called the "one person, one vote" principle. It ruled in Rucho that federal courts can’t use it to police partisan intent because there’s no clear mathematical standard for "fairness."
Potential challenges to Florida’s new map lie in state law, not federal.
In 2010, 63% of Florida voters approved the Fair Districts amendments to be added to the state Constitution. They prohibit redistricting plans "with the intent to favor or disfavor a political party or an incumbent" and plans with the intent or result of "denying or abridging the equal opportunity of racial or language minorities to participate in the political process."
"The Florida maps are far more likely to be challenged in state court, on state constitutional grounds, given Florida’s fair districting amendment," Hasan said. "That’s why DeSantis went out of his way to say that he was drawing the maps because populations have shifted — a clear subterfuge since he sent out maps showing the partisan implications."
DeSantis had said the Legislature would be "forced" to redistrict because of an expected Supreme Court decision over whether certain race-based districts under the Voting Rights Act are unconstitutional.
The high court ruled the districts unconstitutional, and DeSantis’ lawyers told state lawmakers they now believe both the partisan and racial sections of the Fair Districts amendments are unconstitutional. They said the race-based requirements in one section cannot be severed from the partisan-based requirements in the other.
Courts decide whether a provision can be severed from another by asking whether the drafters would have wanted the entire law to be eliminated, or if they would've wanted one part to stay intact, said Justin Levitt, a Loyola Marymount law school professor who served as a senior Biden policy adviser.
Daniel Smith, University of Florida political science professor, said that although the Supreme Court’s 2019 decision opened the door to partisan gerrymandering in some states, Florida is not one of them.
"Notwithstanding Governor DeSantis’ claims to the contrary," he said, "under Florida state law, the prohibition of gerrymandering to advantage or disadvantage a party or incumbent is still in effect."
Driskell said, "Under federal law, you cannot engage in partisan gerrymandering."
No federal law says states cannot undertake partisan gerrymandering. The Supreme Court ruled in 2019 that partisan gerrymandering claims are "political" questions that federal courts can’t answer, and left it to the states and Congress to pass laws to regulate redistricting.
In Florida, the Fair Districts amendment prohibits drawing congressional or legislative districts partisan intent. Driskell’s office said she misspoke.
We rate the statement False.
RELATED: Is Florida’s mid-decade redistricting plan ‘illegal,’ as some Democrats say?
RELATED: Florida redistricting: DeSantis overstates voters’ shift from Democrats to Republicans
The smart ring company already provides some information on hormonal health.
Pick out a frightening feature to watch this weekend.
The Pentagon says it has reached deals with seven AI companies -- SpaceX, OpenAI, Google, Nvidia, Reflection AI, Microsoft, and AWS -- to deploy their tools on classified Defense Department networks. The odd one out is Anthropic, which remains excluded after being labeled a supply-chain risk amid a dispute over military-use guardrails. Reuters reports: SpaceX, OpenAI, Google, Nvidia, Reflection, Microsoft, and Amazon Web Services (AWS), several of which already work with the Pentagon, will be integrated into its secret and top-secret network environments, providing more military access to their products for use on sensitive topics, the Pentagon said in a statement. The lesser-known Reflection AI, which raised $2 billion in October, is backed by 1789 Capital, a venture capital firm in which Donald Trump Jr. is a partner and investor. Since the Pentagon deemed Anthropic's products a "supply-chain risk" in March and the two sides became embroiled in a lawsuit, the military has expressed increasing interest in AI startups. Since the blow-up, newer AI entrants have said the military has sped up the process of incorporating them onto secret and top-secret data levels to less than three months. The process previously took 18 months or longer. By expanding AI services offered to troops, who use it for planning, logistics, targeting and in other ways to streamline huge operations and perform more quickly, the Pentagon said in its statement it will avoid "vendor lock," a likely nod to its overdependence on Anthropic or other dominant service providers. [...] AI has become increasingly important for the U.S. military. The Pentagon's main AI platform, GenAI.mil, has been used by over 1.3 million Defense Department personnel, the agency noted in its release, after five months of operation. Further reading: Google and Pentagon Reportedly Agree On Deal For 'Any Lawful' Use of AI
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hello All,
Im looking to sell my pint X with 650 miles on it. I installed rail guards on the first day I got the onewheel so if you remove them, the blue part of the board looks brand new. Also installed a fender. Im based in Sacramento CA, im thinking $800 as a starting price and I can go lower given enough reason to.
Thanks for any input!
The Democratic Party’s centrist wing is doing a 180 on Maine senatorial hopeful Graham Platner after Gov. Janet Mills dropped out of the race — a major setback for their side in an ongoing intraparty war for the future of the party.
The June primary was shaping up to be another proxy fight for the ongoing power struggle between the party’s progressive and centrist wings. Sen. Bernie Sanders, along with Elizabeth Warren, Ruben Gallego, and Martin Heinrich, backed Platner early on; Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, as well as EMILY’s List, threw their support behind Mills.
But the Democratic voters of Maine didn’t appear interested in a protracted back and forth, nor were they impressed by the party establishment’s perceived shoehorning-in of Mills as an alternative to an upstart, energetic, young candidate they already liked. Some more mainstream Democrats already get that, like Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who previously lent his powerful email list to Mills during her campaign announcement; he will host a general election kickoff event with Platner on Friday. Schumer and DSCC Chair Kirsten Gillibrand, meanwhile, announced they “will work with the presumptive Democratic nominee, Graham Platner” to defeat Collins.
Others should get on board with the new reality. The primary map is only getting more challenging for centrist Democrats. In Michigan, their preferred candidate Rep. Haley Stevens is in a tight race with state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and public health official Abdul El-Sayed. Iowa state Rep. Josh Turek, Schumer’s pick, is neck and neck with state Sen. Zach Wahls; in Minnesota, Schumer’s favored candidate, Rep. Angie Craig, has a significant cash advantage, but Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan regularly trounces her in early polling.
The writing was on the wall for Mills weeks ago. She was never able to catch up to Platner’s polling, and her campaign stopped ad spending after attacks on Platner over his past controversies failed to gain traction. It was clear the governor was throwing in the towel last week when she vetoed a data center moratorium bill backed by the Maine Democratic base but opposed by business interests in the state. That choice raised eyebrows; the governor’s suggestion in mid-April that she would have voted against a Senate bill restricting U.S. aid for 1,000 pound bombs and armored bulldozers only confirmed suspicions that Mills was out of touch with the party faithful.
Platner, who spent the late summer and early fall of 2025 criss-crossing Maine doing town halls and other events, has been drawing huge crowds since August. That outreach to voters, as New York magazine writer and Mainer Rebecca Traister noted on Thursday, probably saved him from the scandals around a Nazi-related tattoo he got during his time in the Marines and the drudging up of old, controversial Reddit posts.
Equally important was the feeling for many in Maine that D.C. Democrats were putting their thumb on the scale and trying to take the decision away from the people. It’s part of a national souring on the party’s centrist, corporate wing, which has dominated the internal levers of power for decades, that came in the wake of Trump’s election in 2024. The party base has become radicalized and is demanding fight and action.
Go to a No Kings protest, and you’ll see liberals holding signs calling for the imprisonment of Republicans like Donald Trump and implying that members of the administration should be dealt with more permanently. It’s become a bit of a meme to remark on the normie bloodlust that’s pervaded liberalism since November 2024, but only because it’s true.
It’s part of an overall souring on the party’s centrist, corporate wing, which has dominated the internal levers of power for decades.
Despite polling showing voters are eager to throw out the GOP and put in Democrats in the midterms, approval for the Democratic Party is at historic lows. Liberals aren’t going to settle for what’s become the rote Democratic response to Republican misbehavior: objecting on process grounds when out of power, half-assedly pushing ineffective institutional fixes once they reclaim Congress, and then brushing it all under the rug when they win the White House. This time they want accountability, none of the “looking forward, not backward” that Barack Obama placated the base with in early 2009.
Fuel for your fury isn’t hard to find. Sen. John Fetterman’s fervent support of Israel and willingness to buck his party in favor of the president has made him a villain to liberals and progressives alike, so much so that “another Fetterman” has been deployed as a slur by both sides in hotly contested primaries. Politicians whose popularity was once unimpeachable, like Obama, have been confronted over the Gaza genocide in public appearances. Members of Congress are regularly harangued at public events over the party’s weakness and apparent disinterest in meaningfully opposing Trump.
Platner’s got a good shot at winning. And for all the valid concern that Collins can once again pull off a victory, she appears to be taking this threat seriously, breaking with Trump over Iran war powers on Thursday. It’s a small act of resistance, and not one that should be expected to be of any actual consequence, as is the pattern for the senator. But the fact that she’s doing it now, after Mills dropped out, says that Platner — and the energized movement he represents — is a clear challenge to another six years for the Republican.
Platner isn’t perfect — no politician is. But as he shifts his campaign to the general election and against Collins, all but the most marginal and fringe diehards in the Democratic coalition are coalescing around him. At 41, he presents himself as a new, more energetic fighter of a Democrat, one who’s promised to confront both the GOP and the centrist corporate elements of his own party. Time will tell if he can deliver, and what compromises he’s willing to make.
The post Graham Platner Handed Centrist Dems a Bruising Defeat in Maine appeared first on The Intercept.
Hi everyone,
After considering it for a while, I recently bought my first Onewheel. I was debating between the Pint S and the XR Classic, but in the end went with the Pint X as it was the cheaper option, and I wasn’t sure whether I would enjoy the Onewheel or not. I figured less spent, less lost if I needed to sell it. (I also bought it new because I’ve had bad experiences with used stuff.)
Well, turns out I really really like it. It’s incredibly fun and relaxing, and I picked it up quickly, even with no previous board sport experience. However, this has led to a conundrum. My original plan (if I did like it) was to purchase upgrades, like an Enduro tire and flared pads, to mimic the Pint S, but now looking at the cost of those and a few other accessories, its not THAT much more to reach the cost of the XR Classic. Of course, I would take a bit of a loss selling the Pint X, so that factors into the decision. I am kind of stuck on what to do.
For reference, I am 5 foot 7, an athletic 180ish pounds, with a size 9 shoe. I live in a small beach town with roads and sidewalks that are not exactly in the best condition and a lot of gravel roads + some grassy areas and dirt roads.
I like the maneuverability of the Pint X on sharply turning sidewalks, but find it to be very unsteady on these rough roads and gravel. Will the enduro tire and flared pads be enough to remedy this?
Is the XR Classic a lot less maneuverable than the Pint X for sidewalk riding? Speed isn’t really a big deal for me, but more power = more safety right? And more range would be nice I suppose.
I'm just worried that I will spend the money on the Pint X upgrades and still feel like it's not enough and will still want to upgrade to a more powerful board eventually.
Or is this just FOMO?
And before anyone says it, yes I know I went against the ancient wisdom of “Buy once, cry once.”
Thanks to anyone who read through my ramblings, and I would love to hear peoples thoughts.
(PS, I’m not really interested in any of the larger boards or VESC at this time.)
Nearly 2,000-year-old artifact handed over by FBI matches piece missing from museum near Rome for decades
A nearly 2,000-year-old Roman grave marker discovered in a New Orleans backyard has now been returned to Italy.
The marble epitaph – dating back roughly 1,900 years – was officially handed over to Italian officials in Rome on Wednesday during a ceremony led by the FBI. The event also marked the repatriation of another antiquity recovered in the US, the agency said.
Continue reading...Tehran reportedly passed proposal to mediators in Pakistan on Thursday night, though its contents are not yet clear
Iran has passed a new proposal to Pakistani mediators in the latest effort to end the war with the US, but Donald Trump said he was not “satisfied” by it.
“Right now, we have talks going on, they’re not getting there,” he told reporters, adding that his options remained “either blast them away or make a deal”.
Continue reading...President Trump on Friday told Congress that hostilities with Iran have "terminated," addressing a critical 60-day deadline.
Former Sen. Ben Sasse, 54, called daraxonrasib "a miracle drug" that was allowing him to live longer and with less pain.
Nahida Bristy and Zamil Limon were last seen in the Tampa area on April 16. Limon's roommate has been charged with their murders.
Negotiations over a $500 million dollar government aid package for Spirit stalled after bondholders balked at the terms.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 2, No. 1,778.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for May 2, No. 1,056.
ICANN has opened applications for new generic top-level domains for the first time since 2012. The Register reports: ICANN hasn't offered new gTLDs since 2012, but on Thursday opened applications for new domains in 27 scripts. A 439-page Applicant Guidebook explains the process. The Register suggests paying attention to the string evaluation FAQ, which explains which gTLDs are valid, and those ICANN will likely frown upon. An FAQ describes this round of applications as giving "businesses, communities, and others the opportunity to apply for new top-level domains tailored to their community, culture, language, business, and customers." "A TLD can be a branding opportunity for a business, but the commercial opportunities are endless, allowing businesses in countries, entire sectors, or niche markets to develop a unique label on the Internet." ICANN also sees this round as a chance to "create a more multilingual Internet for the billions of people who speak and write in different languages and scripts and are yet to come online." If you fancy a gTLD, you'll need to pay a $227,000 application fee by August 12th ... and then wait, possibly until 2030 when this process ends.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
United's newest addition to its in-flight library features shows like The Traitors, but not everything on NBC's streaming service.
Made from high-tech foam and other materials, recovery slides aren't just for athletes or for treating plantar fasciitis. I tested several models. Here are my current favorites.
We came, we listened, we browsed. Audible's Story House could be a new wave.
A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration from revoking legal protections for more than 2,800 Yemeni nationals.

For decades, a small program in the Environmental Protection Agency conducted the painstaking scientific work of assessing the toxicity of chemicals.
The calculations done by scientists at IRIS, as it was commonly known, underpin vast numbers of chemical regulations, permits and other environmental rules in the U.S. and abroad.
Now the Trump administration is suggesting that their library of more than 500 chemical assessments can’t be trusted, opening the door to weakening hundreds of efforts to protect people from harmful chemicals at the state and federal level. The second-guessing could extend even to long-settled standards, environmental scientists said, such as how much arsenic is allowed in drinking water and how much lead is acceptable in paint and soil.
In an internal memo obtained by ProPublica, David Fotouhi, the deputy administrator of the agency, sharply criticized IRIS this week and directed EPA offices that have used any of the chemical assessments the program has produced to review them. He also advised “external entities” that have used the IRIS assessments to consider undertaking similar reviews and cautioned against using them in future regulations.
The six-page memo said the EPA would be adding “disclaimer language” to the website of the program — the Integrated Risk information System — stating that its toxicity findings are not necessarily meant to be used in regulation.
“This creates the opportunity for companies that pollute to push back on rules and regulations they don’t like,” said Robert Sussman, an attorney who has worked for chemical companies and environmental groups as well as the EPA. “Anybody who wants to ignore a regulation, permit or enforcement action can now just point to this memo and say the IRIS number it was based on wasn’t valid. It’s a huge setback for the process of protecting people from chemicals.”
Fotouhi’s memo echoes industry criticism that the program’s scientists are far too conservative in gauging the toxicity of chemicals. Before President Donald Trump appointed him as the second highest official at the EPA, Fotouhi worked as a lawyer representing companies accused of causing toxic pollution.
In an emailed statement, the EPA press office wrote that Fotouhi has complied with all applicable government ethics obligations and said his directive would not put people at risk or allow anyone to ignore environmental regulations. Any revisions to permits or regulatory standards must go through a process that includes public participation, the office noted.
“Science is at the heart of the Agency’s work, and this memo reaffirms that point clearly and unequivocally,” the press office wrote.
The EPA created IRIS in 1985 as the nation’s clearinghouse for information on the toxicity of chemicals. Its assessments quantify the highest safe level of exposure to a chemical before it triggers health effects, including, in many cases, cancer. The agency previously prided itself on the program’s impartiality and, in an effort to protect its science from the influence of industry, purposefully kept the program separate from the agency offices that craft regulation.
The memo now tasks those offices with conducting toxicity assessments and brings an end to the program that has powered the EPA’s efforts to protect people from harmful chemicals.
IRIS assessments earned a reputation for being extremely detailed and undergoing numerous rounds of review by many scientists. The EPA offices routinely relied on them to set the amount of a particular chemical that industrial facilities are allowed to emit. States use IRIS assessments to decide which chemicals deserve their immediate attention and to calculate limits in rules and regulations. And IRIS reports guide environmental regulation in countries that don’t have the resources to fund their own scientists to review chemicals.
The memo is the latest attack on the program. The Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 called for the elimination of IRIS on the grounds that it “often sets ‘safe levels’ based on questionable science” and that its reviews result in “billions in economic costs.” And last year, congressional Republicans introduced industry-backed legislation that would prevent the EPA from using IRIS assessments in environmental rules, regulations, enforcement actions and permits. (The bills were not put to a vote.)
IRIS has at times been criticized by independent scientific bodies. More than a decade ago, for example, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine took issue with the organization, length and clarity of IRIS reviews; a more recent report from the same group found that IRIS had made “significant progress” in addressing the problems.
Still, IRIS’ work stood out in a world where much of the science on toxic chemicals is funded by corporations with a vested stake in them. Studies have shown that industry-funded science tends to be biased in favor of the sponsor’s products.
Over the past year, the EPA has essentially shut down IRIS by reassigning most of the dozens of the scientists who worked in the program to other parts of the agency. And the administration has refused to publish a report on a “forever chemical” known as PFNA, which was completed by IRIS in April 2025.
But, until now, the EPA had not challenged the science in IRIS assessments. The memo changes that. Although the agency will continue to post the documents on its website, it calls their validity into question, arguing that the toxicity levels calculated in IRIS reports are overly cautious and fail to include the perspective of all “stakeholders.”
This approach produces values that are more protective than they need to be, according to Fotouhi. “When many conservative assumptions are stacked on top of each other, the cumulative effect can produce an estimated ‘safe’ exposure level that is orders of magnitude below naturally occurring levels in the environment,” he wrote.
Fotouhi pointed specifically to ethylene oxide, a chemical used to sterilize medical equipment — and one used by Medline, a company he used to represent as an attorney at the firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, according to financial statements he filed and that are contained in ProPublica’s database of Trump administration officials’ disclosures. IRIS updated its assessment of ethylene oxide in 2016, after it reviewed the medical literature and found that the chemical was a more potent carcinogen than previously believed.
The EPA’s updated cancer risk estimate set off waves of concern — and lawsuits — in communities around the country where people are highly exposed to the chemical. And it led the Biden administration to issue more protective regulations. Companies that use or manufacture ethylene oxide and their representatives complained to the EPA and questioned the science that cost them so dearly.
Under Trump, the agency, which has been championing industry, has already paused those efforts to protect the public from ethylene oxide. But this latest step, which threatens to destabilize health protections built on hundreds of IRIS assessments, is a boon to countless companies emitting a huge variety of toxic chemicals, according to Maria Doa, a scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund who spent more than 20 years working on chemical regulation at the EPA.
“This is the EPA adopting the industry’s talking points,” Doa said. “And it’s going to leave a lot of people at risk.”
The post “A Huge Setback”: New EPA Directive Could Weaken Hundreds of Chemical Regulations appeared first on ProPublica.
Walkouts, marches and other gatherings held for ‘May Day Strong’ demonstrations across the country
Thousands have joined an economic blackout for International Workers’ Day, as part of 3,500 “May Day Strong” events across the country. Organizers have called for “no school, no work, no shopping”, with walkouts, marches, block parties and demonstrations held outside of institutions such as the New York Stock Exchange.
On Friday afternoon in Manhattan, protesters from the youth-led Sunrise Movement chained themselves to the front of the stock exchange while more sat blocking the exits to the property. They were joined by about 100 protesters before being arrested and removed about an hour later. A small crowd remained, playing music and chanting: “Tax the rich!”
Continue reading...Leo, who has criticized Trump’s hardline immigration policy, selected Evelio Menjivar-Ayala as state’s new bishop
Pope Leo XIV has appointed a man who had once entered the United States as an undocumented immigrant, hidden in the trunk of a car, as the new bishop of West Virginia.
The pope approved the resignation of Bishop Mark E Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia, and selected Bishop Evelio Menjivar-Ayala, 55, of Washington to take his place, reported OSV News.
Continue reading...In 2025, OpenAI banned a ChatGPT account linked to the alleged shooter. CEO Sam Altman later said he was sorry the company didn't alert law enforcement.
The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences has also rewritten rules on international film eligibility
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced a number of major changes for the Oscars on Friday, including a new policy allowing multiple nominations for a single actor in one category, as well as barring acting and writing awards for work done by AI.
According to new statutes decreed by the group’s board of governors, only performances “demonstrably performed” by humans with their consent will be eligible for acting Oscars, while only human-authored screenplays can be up for any writing awards.
Continue reading...Parker, who admitted lying to investigators and sheltering her son after he sent gunmen to kill his ex-girlfriend, is the last of five people sentenced in the November 2022 Brooklyn Park murder.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s Robert Rallo and Nathan Hodas speak to students about the future of AI
RICHLAND, Wash., May 1, 2026 — Student winners of this year’s regional National Science Bowl competitions will hear about the future of AI from two researchers from the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory this spring. The national competition will take place April 30 – May 4, 2026, in Washington, D.C.

From left to right: PNNL computer scientist Robert Rallo, and PNNL data scientist Nathan Hodas. Photo composite by Shannon Colson/PNNL.
More than 10,000 middle and high school students compete annually, hoping to make it into the national competition where they’ll be able to hear talks from scientific experts such as PNNL’s Robert Rallo and Nathan Hodas. The program was launched in 1991 to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers.
Rallo’s and Hodas’s presentations will reflect PNNL’s contributions to the DOE’s Genesis Mission, an initiative to use advanced computing and AI to accelerate breakthroughs in energy innovation and national security. For students, these talks will provide a glimpse into the kind of research they may one day help lead.
Rallo, a computer scientist, will discuss how AI is evolving from a computational tool into a collaborative partner.
“AI is something people are already excited about, often because they’ve seen it in movies and TV shows,” Rallo said. “I’m looking forward to the questions students ask and what they find most interesting.”
His presentation will focus on how modern AI systems are increasingly able to assist researchers by suggesting experiments, identifying patterns in complex data and handling routine tasks. This assistance allows scientists to focus on interpretation and experimental strategy, a goal central to the Genesis Mission.
“I’ve seen its evolution and I’m excited to see what AI can bring to new tools and computing capabilities,” Rallo said. “My main regret is that I am too old to see all the wonderful things that are going to be coming.”
Data scientist Nathan Hodas will focus on what goes on inside AI models, between the input and output, and how thinking in high dimensional spaces helps researchers see where AI is going.
“We’re at a time right now where a lot of students are asking themselves, ‘what career should I be picking? What is the future going to look like for myself?’” said Hodas. “There’s even some anxiety around understanding AI and how it works.”
Hodas explained it is easy to think about lines or curves in 1-D or 2-D, but to imagine a shape in one thousand dimensions would allow you to understand some crucial things about how AI works.
“We’re using AI at the Laboratory extensively every day,” Hodas said. “For the last 75 years it’s been a broken promise, but now we’re really seeing some big successes, which is why we must pay close attention to how it works and how it’s going to impact us. It’s not a matter for the future, it’s happening today.”
PNNL also hosts one of 65 Regional High School Science Bowl competitions each year. The 2026 regional winner, Lakeside School of Seattle, Wash., will represent the region at the national competition. The students receive an all-expenses-paid trip to the national competition, where they’ll enjoy several days of science activities, sightseeing and competitions.
About PNNL
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in energy resiliency and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle and supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.
Source: Bethany Lee, PNNL
The post PNNL Researchers to Speak About Genesis Mission at National Science Bowl appeared first on HPCwire.
US president says tariff on vehicles imported from EU will rise to 25% and accuses bloc of non-compliance
Donald Trump has said he is tearing up part of the tariff deal he struck with EU leaders at his golf course in Scotland last summer, criticising Brussels for taking so long to ratify the deal.
Blindsiding Brussels late on Friday, a public holiday in much of Europe, he announced that he would be increasing tariffs on cars and lorries imported into the US from the EU from 15% to 25% from next week.
Continue reading...Sloths were set to be displayed at controversial new theme park but report revealed mammals died in warehouse
Prosecutors in Florida said on Friday they had launched a criminal investigation into the deaths of dozens of sloths from South America that were set to be displayed at a controversial new theme park.
A Florida fish and wildlife commission (FWC) report revealed last week that 31 mammals taken from rainforests in Peru and Guyana by the owners of Sloth World, a forthcoming tourist attraction in Orlando, perished in an unheated warehouse between December 2024 and February 2025.
Continue reading...State’s governor has ordered congressional primary halted until state can redraw districts and dilute Black vote
The American Civil Liberties Union filed a suit on behalf of Louisiana voting rights groups on Friday, asking a state court to block the state’s governor, Jeff Landry, and secretary of state, Nancy Landry, from suspending congressional elections.
Landry suspended the state’s congressional primary election on Thursday – even after early voting had begun – to enact new districts for the 2026 election. The move came after the supreme court’s 6-3 decision in the Louisiana v Callais case on Wednesday, which invalidated swaths of the Voting Rights Act and declared that a Louisiana congressional district with a majority-nonwhite voting population violated equal protection provisions of the US constitution.
Continue reading...Democrats accuse Todd Blanche of pressuring prosecutors for charges ‘despite serious concerns’ about case’s strength
A justice department lawyer working in Todd Blanche’s office pressured prosecutors to file criminal charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) despite their concerns about the strength of the case, a whistleblower told House Democrats.
The lawyer, Aakash Singh, reportedly “ordered” federal prosecutors in Alabama “to rush through the indictment of the SPLC, despite serious concerns about the strength of the case”, Jamie Raskin and Mary Gay Scanlon said in a letter on Friday. The Democrats also said they were opening an investigation into the matter. The letter was first reported by MS Now.
Continue reading...ZipNada shares a report from ZDNet: Given the dour headlines as of late concerning the diminishing amounts of entry-level software development jobs, coupled with predictions of applications entirely AI-generated, one could be forgiven for assuming that software developers may soon be an endangered species. However, the data tells a different story. James Bessen, professor at Boston University, has been pushing back for some time against the talk of AI and automation displacing jobs on a mass scale, and lately has been arguing that the roles of software developers are nowhere near extinction. AI is certainly not killing the software developer, Bessen said in a recent analysis (PDF). AI is taking over software development tasks and boosting productivity and output, but that is not translating into lost jobs, he argued. Instead, the types of software skills sought by companies are changing. "Surprisingly, however, after three years of AI use, software developer jobs have continued to grow robustly, reaching record levels of employment -- 2.5 million in February," Bessen said in the report, citing data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. The number of software developers in the US has grown by over 400,000, or 19%, since ChatGPT was introduced in 2022. At that time, the employed software developer population was just under 2.1 million. [...] The productivity uptick developers are seeing may ultimately be a boost to their professional opportunities, however. "An important and possibly disruptive change is happening, but the common view misunderstands what is going on," Bessen pointed out in his report. "Careful case studies find that AI improves the productivity of software developers -- that is, the software produced per developer -- by 30%, 50%, or more. And the rate of productivity improvement in software development is improving." Tellingly, since 2022, when ChatGPT was introduced, developer productivity has increased noticeably, Bessen continued. "From 2003 to 2022, developer productivity grew at 3.9% per year; but from 2022 through 2025, it grew at 6% per year." [...] A coming flood of new software products, now more likely to be enhanced by AI, will continue to create jobs for developers, Bessen predicted. "Thus, mass unemployment of software developers seems unlikely to happen soon." This doesn't mean the job descriptions of developers or other computer occupations will remain static. AI is shifting and re-inventing these roles, Bessen added.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
May 1, 2026 — A new startup spun out of research at the Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) at the University of Waterloo is accelerating its push toward commercialization with $10.7 million in dilutive and non-dilutive funding and a public listing after launching just more than six months ago.

QuantumCore’s team discussing the amplifier. Back row from left to right: Saleem Huda, Dr. Chris Wilson, Farzad Yazdani, Dr. Mohammad Soltani and Eugene Profis. Front row: Jayke Boghean and Dr. Dmytro Dubyna holding the amplifier.
QuantumCore was co-founded by Dr. Christopher Wilson, IQC faculty and Chief Technology Officer, and Eugene Profis, CEO. The company is developing an amplifier that boosts read-out signals produced by a superconducting quantum chip at near absolute zero temperatures and gets the signal into room temperature. This could solve one of the many hard engineering challenges in quantum computing.
“It’s a necessary product for quantum computing companies that are just a few years away from launching computers with thousands of qubits,” says Wilson, who is a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Since October 2025, QuantumCore has closed two rounds of private funding totaling $9 million. The company chose to raise money through non-brokered and brokered private placements with Canaccord Genuity Corp. as lead intermediary and PowerOne Capital Markets Limited. This type of investment brings in capital by selling shares to investors through an intermediary instead of specialized VC firms. It was publicly listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange earlier this month.
The startup also secured $1.7 million as an IQC industry partner through the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada’s (NSERC) Alliance Grant program which gives them access to Wilson’s lab to accelerate technology development without impacting shareholder value.
“The quantum industry and the technology are evolving so quickly, and we wanted to be thoughtful about how we access funding,” Profis adds. “We are acting with urgency because of the rapid acceleration of the large quantum computing programs as seen by the recent Q-Day announcements out of Google Quantum AI Labs. Our combined experience in quantum computing and finance have been received well by the investment community.”
Wilson says brokered private placements are an established funding route in Canada for quantum startup companies’ risk profiles, given investor’s experience in funding the mining industry. This gave QuantumCore access to more money from Canadian investors than would be available through venture capital.
“Canada has this homegrown way of financing ventures like quantum tech, and our investors understand how to think about high risk,” Wilson says. “Superconducting quantum computing is one of the biggest sectors in terms of industrial development, and there is a lot of Canadian experience and appetite to fund ventures with these startup risk profiles.”
Profis says the startup’s first product is crucial for quantum computing companies to fulfill their development goals.
“We are not trying to build the most powerful quantum computer; we provide scalable components to all the major platform companies that are competing to build the world’s first commercial quantum computers,” Profis says. “These companies have raised a lot of capital to build computers, and we want to help them get their quantum processors to the next level.”
Since launching, QuantumCore has hired five full-time, technical employees and opened an office and lab in uptown Waterloo to complement other operations, including at the University’s Quantum Nano Fabrication and Characterization Facility.
“Growing the company in the Waterloo ecosystem is crucial because of the big pool of local technical experts, in quantum and other engineering disciplines, access to specialized production resources and the region’s big industrial manufacturing base,” Wilson says.
Source: Naomi Grosman, University of Waterloo
The post QuantumCore Emerges from Waterloo’s IQC with $10.7M to Address Quantum Readout Challenges appeared first on HPCwire.
Chief Geoff Guttschow, who has an autistic child who drives, says the Blue Envelope Program gives officers a tool to recognize when a driver may need additional communication support.
Former FBI Director James Comey was charged with two counts arising out a now-deleted image he shared on Instagram that showed seashells arranged to read "86 47."
EMILY BRADY
Staff Reporter
Laura Gibison helps autistic college students navigate the path from campus to career as a counselor for Spectrum Scholars, a college-to-career initiative at the university’s Center for Disability Studies.
The center works to improve the academic and daily experiences of students with disabilities.
Gibison’s position provides one-on-one coaching and supporting students throughout their time at the university, in everything from college life to academics.
“My role specifically is a career counselor, so I’m specifically meeting with students, mostly one-on-one, to help them figure out what they want to do after college and help them develop career readiness skills,” Gibison said. “So interviewing, resume development, all that fun stuff, networking, and then helping them connect with opportunities, internships, part-time jobs, things like that. And really plan for life after college.”
Gibison shared that every day looks different, although most days tend to revolve around one-on-one coaching with students. She tends to have one hour-long sessions per week with each of her students, which can involve anything from simple career coaching to submitting job applications and working on resumes.
Gibison’s position does not come without difficulties. She noted that the main challenge is people’s perception of the students she works with.
“I have encountered, unfortunately, people who still very much have a deficit focus mindset when it comes to autism and people who are just on the spectrum,” Gibison said. “They maybe still use some terminology that’s a little bit offensive and demeaning. So that is always challenging to navigate.”
She also detailed the uniqueness of the university’s disability studies program and the collaboration that occurs between the program and other individuals and organizations on campus.
“I feel like we’ve created a really strong community,” Gibison said. “I think the way that our program works, students are UD students first and foremost. So they’re not living in separate dorms. They are taking classes with the rest of their peers. We’re just an added support.”
Unlike other disability programs, the university emphasizes that its students are not defined by the fact that they receive support from Spectrum Scholars.
Gibison also shared the important lessons she has learned through her work with the university’s disability studies program.
“Before starting this job, I was a lot harder on myself,” Gibison said. “And I wasn’t super patient with myself, but through working with students and having to be accommodating and listening, I’ve learned to apply some of the same things to myself.”
Throughout her time working with Spectrum Scholars, Gibison has experienced many rewarding and fulfilling moments.
“I would say when I am in those moments with students who’ve maybe had a hard time, whether they’ve struggled, figuring out what they want to do, or speaking up for themselves, and see how much they have grown,” Gibison said.
Through career counseling and mentoring, Laura Gibison and the Spectrum Scholars team help autistic students navigate college and plan their futures — part of a broader university push to build more inclusive campuses for students with disabilities.
Today's high-yield savings accounts are offering hefty returns on your deposits. Here's where your money belongs now.
A compact mini router is perfect for small spaces, like your apartment or local coffee shop, and fits in your carry-on.
Hello, I'm interested in buying a Pint X or Pint S because I currently have been using a Onewheel Plus but I want something with more range.
I'm a small rider (5'3 120lbs) so that's why I'm interested in a Pint-size. I found a listing on FB Marketplace for a Pint X with 750 lifetime miles and it has footpads, carbon fender, rail guards, and a Hoosier Tire for $650. Also comes with charger and stand.
BTW He's the second owner, he bought it used from the original owner who used it in a city but said he's only ever ridden it around his neighborhood. Is this a good deal? Thanks in advanced!
PALO ALTO, Calif., May 1, 2026 — PsiQuantum has announced that Lip-Bu Tan, a leader of the semiconductor industry and Chief Executive Officer of Intel Corporation, has joined the PsiQuantum Board of Directors.
Tan brings decades of experience building and scaling the foundational technologies that underpin modern computing. Before his 2025 appointment as CEO of Intel, he previously served as Chief Executive Officer of Cadence Design Systems, where he transformed the company into a global leader in electronic design automation—the software and tools used to design the world’s most advanced chips. Across his career as an executive, investor, and board member, Tan has played a central role in shaping the modern semiconductor ecosystem. He has served on numerous public and private boards, serves as Chairman of Walden International, and is a founding managing partner of Walden Catalyst Ventures and Celesta Capital.
Tan’s appointment to the PsiQuantum Board of Directors comes as the company drives toward building the world’s first utility-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computers and continues to advance and scale its silicon photonics platform.
“I’ve known the PsiQuantum team for many years as an investor and have followed their progress closely as they’ve built one of the most compelling and differentiated approaches in quantum computing,” said Lip-Bu Tan. “The technology they’ve developed is exceptional, and their focus on fault-tolerant systems that can be manufactured at scale using the semiconductor industry sets them apart. I’m excited to join the board and support the team as they work to bring this technology to the world.”
Tan’s board appointment follows the appointment of semiconductor industry veteran Victor Peng as Interim Chief Executive Officer, as well as Co-Founder Jeremy O’Brien’s transition into the role of Executive Chairman. Peng previously served as President of AMD and as CEO of Xilinx, where he led the company’s transformation into a leader in adaptive computing and through its acquisition by AMD.
“Lip-Bu has an exceptional track record of leading and guiding technology companies from start-ups to large public companies,” said Victor Peng, Interim Chief Executive Officer of PsiQuantum. “As we advance our technology and begin deployment of utility-scale, fault tolerant quantum computers, his insights on high performance computing, advanced manufacturing, ecosystems, and customer adoption will be invaluable.”
“From day one, PsiQuantum has taken the long-term view that quantum computing must be built by leveraging the semiconductor industry,” said Jeremy O’Brien, Co-Founder and Executive Chairman of PsiQuantum. “Lip-Bu’s experience scaling technologies, companies, and global ecosystems will help accelerate our path to delivering on that vision and it’s fantastic to have a long-time supporter officially join our board.”
PsiQuantum is a full-stack quantum computing company that leverages existing semiconductor manufacturing to rapidly scale its silicon photonics platform. Since its founding, the company has focused on achieving fault tolerance at scale—now widely recognized as the essential capability for quantum computers to solve commercially valuable problems in areas such as chemistry, materials science, and energy. This approach is underpinned by a modular architecture, allowing PsiQuantum to scale system performance by upgrading components while also scaling deployment.
The company is currently advancing major quantum computing projects in the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom, including the development of utility-scale quantum computing facilities in Chicago and Brisbane. These efforts reflect PsiQuantum’s strategy to pair breakthrough technology with large-scale infrastructure, in partnership with governments and industry, to deliver the first commercially useful quantum computers.
About PsiQuantum
PsiQuantum was founded in 2016 and is headquartered in Palo Alto, California. The company’s mission is to build and deploy the world’s first useful quantum computers. PsiQuantum’s photonic approach enables it to leverage high-volume semiconductor manufacturing, existing cryogenic infrastructure, and architectural flexibility to rapidly scale its systems. Learn more at www.psiquantum.com.
Source: PsiQuantum
The post PsiQuantum Appoints Lip-Bu Tan to Board of Directors appeared first on HPCwire.
HOUSTON, May 1, 2026 — HPE has expanded its HPE ProLiant edge portfolio for customers seeking to extend AI and mission-critical workloads to highly distributed and harsh environments. The new HPE ProLiant Compute EL2000 chassis, the foundation for two new Gen12 servers, and the enhanced HPE ProLiant DL145 Gen11 are part of a portfolio of resilient and secure solutions engineered for edge deployments, complex environments, and disconnected operations. Additionally, each platform is now available with an Environmental Ruggedization Option Kit ideal for harsh locations, including high- or low-altitudes, extreme temperatures, and hazardous transit.
“Organizations are pushing towards the edge for AI inferencing, and remote operations, where traditional IT structures are impractical for many industries,” said Krista Satterthwaite, senior vice president and general manager, Compute, HPE. “HPE ProLiant is engineered with enterprise-grade security, right-sized performance, and a unified approach to managing and automating operations, enabling organizations to easily deploy, manage, and scale edge environments with confidence. With these next generation platforms, customers can address the complexities of edge computing more efficiently and with ruggedized performance.”
Introducing New and Enhanced ProLiant Edge Platforms
The all-new HPE ProLiant Compute EL2000 chassis is purpose-built for some of the most rugged and size, weight, and power (SWaP)-constrained environments in national security, manufacturing, retail, and telecommunications. The platform is based on Intel Xeon 6 processors, ideal for demanding edge environments. Supporting up to two HPE ProLiant Compute EL220 Gen12 servers or one EL240 Gen12 server, the chassis helps deliver rugged performance and modular flexibility. The new servers, available only with the HPE ProLiant Compute EL2000, features:
HPE is also introducing an enhanced version of the HPE ProLiant DL145 Gen11 server, now powered by the upcoming AMD EPYC 8005 series processors (codename “Sorano”), which is designed to support distributed and harsh telco environments. The compact 2U system delivers up to 84 energy-efficient cores, is ideal for quiet deployments from industries such as manufacturing and retail, and is also engineered to operate in extreme temperatures – up to 55 degrees Celsius. A version of the HPE ProLiant DL145 Gen11 server was validated as the only purpose-built server for edge AI inferencing, based on NVIDIA RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPU, in the latest MLPerf Inference v6.0 results.
The HPE ProLiant DL145 Gen11 Premier Solution for Azure Local is also available for customers deploying Azure services to edge sites and is designed to support Azure Local Disconnected Operations.
Meeting Mission-Critical and Ruggedized Edge Standards
HPE’s edge compute portfolio now meets extreme environmental standards and can be used in harsh and remote locations for high-consequence deployments where failure could lead to disruptive results. These HPE ProLiant edge platforms offer ruggedization that adhere to widely recognized industry standards – including:
Purpose-Built for Secure, AI-Driven Edge Operations
Edge environments are often widely distributed, lightly staffed, and physically exposed. HPE ProLiant edge systems combine Integrated Lights-out (iLO) and HPE Compute Ops Management to deliver compliance‑ready security and centralized control for those complex and demanding environments. HPE’s edge solutions differentiate by streamlining deployment, providing real-time visibility, and maintaining end-to-end security across distributed edge sites.
Availability:
These platforms can be acquired through HPE Financial Service’s 90/9 Advantage program that offers no payments for 90 days and an additional 9 months at one percent.
About HPE
HPE (NYSE: HPE) is a leader in essential enterprise technology, bringing together the power of AI, cloud, and networking to help organizations achieve more. As pioneers of possibility, our innovation and expertise advance the way people live and work. We empower our customers across industries to optimize operational performance, transform data into foresight, and maximize their impact. Unlock your boldest ambitions with HPE.
Source: HPE
The post HPE Brings AI and Mission-Critical Workloads to Severe, Ruggedized Environments appeared first on HPCwire.
Green leader apologises for sharing post that said officers were ‘repeatedly and violently kicking a mentally ill man in the head’ and says he had did so ‘in haste’
Keir Starmer has condemned Zack Polanski as “disgraceful” and unfit to head a political party after the Greens’ leader shared a social media post critical of the way police tackled the suspect in the Golders Green stabbings.
The prime minister said any criticism of the police involved in the arrest was unfair on officers having to make split-second decisions in a moment of potentially grave danger.
Continue reading...SANTA CLARA, Calif., May 1, 2026 — Tenstorrent has announced the general availability of Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole deployed at scale, delivering industry-leading general-purpose AI performance. Other solutions require bolting together separate accelerators across fragmented infrastructure. Tenstorrent’s Networked AI delivers them natively – compute, memory, and networking unified into a single system optimized for real-world AI workloads.

Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole delivers general-purpose AI with native scale-out for winning performance in AI video generation and LLMs –– prefill and decode.
Leading Industry Performance, Affordable Prices
General-purpose means leading performance on every workload defining modern AI, not specializing in one. Tenstorrent Galaxy tops video generation, large-context LLM inference in both prefill and decode, and the full range of model architectures shipping today. See it for yourself on Friday, May 1st at 1:30pm PT at Tenstorrent’s launch event, TT-Deploy. Watch the livestream: https://tenstorrent.com/deploy.
10x Faster Real-Time High-quality AI Video Generation
AI Video Generation on Tenstorrent Galaxy is 10x faster than leading GPU systems. In collaboration with Prodia, the industry’s fastest video generation is now 10x faster running on a Tenstorrent Galaxy supercluster and generating 720p, 81-frame video in brisk 2.4 seconds. Run state-of-the-art video models and generate high quality videos faster on Tenstorrent Galaxy superclusters.
“We were already leading the Artificial Analysis leaderboard, and working with Tenstorrent allowed us to unlock another 10x improvement in video generation speed. The integration was seamless, and the performance gains were immediate.” Mikhail Avady and Monty Anderson said, co-founders of Prodia Labs.
Blitz Mode: Fastest and Largest-Context LLM Inference
Blitz Mode on Tenstorrent Galaxy, optimized for premium, latency-sensitive AI workloads, enables 350+ t/s/u and sub-4-second time-to-first-token on Deepseek-R1-0528 671B, beating the leading comparable GPU systems. Tenstorrent Galaxy superclusters run high margin AI use cases including agentic workflows, real-time systems, and long-context reasoning.
Tenstorrent Galaxy Performance Benchmarks
Full-Stack AI, Ready for Production
Tenstorrent provides a complete AI solution — from hardware to software to deployment. Tenstorrent Galaxy integrates with open-source frameworks through TT-Forge and TT-Lang, and supports rapid model bring-up, enabling customers to deploy production AI systems without vendor lock-in or proprietary stacks. 90% of models from HuggingFace just work on Tenstorrent hardware.
Networked AI
These results are enabled by an architecture built around a different constraint. Most AI accelerators treat compute as the primary design problem. Tenstorrent instead solved data placement and data flow first which enables performance through scaling.
“Every company in the industry is pairing up to build the accelerator accelerator accelerator. CPUs run code. GPUs accelerate CPUs. TPUs accelerate GPUs. LPUs accelerate TPUs. And so on. This leads to complex solutions which are unlikely to be compatible with changes in AI models and uses. At Tenstorrent, we thought something more general and simpler would work,” said Jim Keller, CEO of Tenstorrent.
The result is what Tenstorrent calls Networked AI: a new model for AI infrastructure where compute, memory, and networking are unified into a single system optimized for real-world AI workloads. By combining efficient data placement and data flow, high bandwidth on-chip memory, and Ethernet-based scale-out, the architecture scales from a single core to thousands of servers under one software model, without proprietary interconnects, without reconfiguration, and without the rigid workload declarations that make competing systems brittle as models evolve.
Deployments
Tenstorrent Galaxy superclusters are one of the new foundations of Equinix’s Distributed AI Hub, a full-stack AI orchestration platform for agentic workloads, launching today with partners BetterBrain and OrionVM. Equinix’s Distributed AI Hub helps customers and partners cover every layer from infrastructure to application, and plugs into legacy enterprise systems, enabling customers to deploy, and operate, sovereign agentic AI systems.
“Tenstorrent brings immense value to our Distributed AI Hub by fundamentally rethinking how AI workloads are executed—from optimizing data flow on-chip across prefill and decode, to orchestrating the full AI stack. This level of architectural intelligence allows enterprises to stay focused on building differentiated products, not managing infrastructure complexity,” said Justen Aguillon, Director of Technology Partner Ecosystems.
“We’re enabling a new class of AI factories—high-performance, cost-efficient environments with the flexibility to run both frontier and open-source models, and the embedded telemetry and governance required to scale agentic systems globally.”
Additional deployments announced include:
“We evaluate a lot of hardware. Most of it is incremental. Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole is not. Tenstorrent has taken a clean-sheet approach to AI infrastructure, and the results speak for themselves. Putting this in the hands of our customers is exactly the kind of move Cirrascale exists to make.” said Dave Driggers, CEO and Co-Founder, Cirrascale Cloud Services.
Run Anything – Fast, Simple, Affordable –with Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole
Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole is Tenstorrent’s air-cooled compute server built with Tenstorrent’s next-generation Blackhole® chips and fully open-source software stack. Starting at $110,000, it delivers 23 PFLOPS Block FP8 of AI compute from 32 Blackhole chips, 6.2 GB of on-chip SRAM with 2.9 PB/s, 1 TB of DRAM with 16 TB/s, and up to 56 × 800G Ethernet ports for 11.2 GB/s of scale-out bandwidth. Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole systems scale seamlessly from a single server to multi-rack deployments using standard Ethernet networking. Customers deploy configurations ranging from 4 to 36 or more Tenstorrent Galaxy systems, optimized for workloads including AI video generation, large-scale LLM inference, and private AI infrastructure. Base Tenstorrent Galaxy Blackhole supercluster of four Tenstorrent Galaxies starts at $440,000.
Source: Tenstorrent
The post Tenstorrent Announces General Availability of Galaxy Blackhole AI System appeared first on HPCwire.
Rings can interpret gestures better than cameras or gloves, according to the study. These rings can quickly turn sign language into text.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Last month, Anthropic made a big deal about the supposedly outsize cybersecurity threat represented by its Mythos Preview model, leading the company to restrict the initial release to "critical industry partners." But new research from the UK's AI Security Institute (AISI) suggests that OpenAI's GPT-5.5, which launched publicly last week, reached "a similar level of performance on our cyber evaluations" as Mythos Preview, which the group evaluated last month. Since 2023, the AISI has run a variety of frontier AI models through 95 different Capture the Flag challenges designed to test capabilities on cybersecurity tasks, such as reverse engineering, web exploitation, and cryptography. On the highest-level "Expert" tasks, GPT-5.5 passed an average of 71.4 percent, slightly higher than the 68.6 percent achieved by Mythos Preview (though within the margin of error). In one particularly difficult task that involved building a disassembler to decode a Rust binary, AISI notes that "GPT-5.5 solved the challenge in 10 minutes and 22 seconds with no human assistance at a cost of $1.73" in API calls. GPT-5.5 also matched Mythos Preview in its progress on "The Last Ones" (TLO), an AISI test range set up to simulate a 32-step data extraction attack on a corporate network. GPT-5.5 succeeded in 3 of 10 attempts on TLO, compared to 2 of 10 for Mythos Preview -- no previous model had ever succeeded at the test even once. But GPT-5.5 still fails at AISI's more difficult "Cooling Tower" simulation of an attempted disruption of the control software for a power plant, as every previously tested AI model also has. The new results for GPT-5.5 suggest that, when it comes to cybersecurity risk, Mythos Preview was likely not "a breakthrough specific to one model" but rather "a byproduct of more general improvements in long-horizon autonomy, reasoning, and coding," AISI writes.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
May 1, 2026 — Today’s advances in robotics are often driven by breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, machine learning, and perception. But in complex and constrained environments, the limiting factor is often hardware, not software. Systems that rely on constant data processing, high-bandwidth communication, and centralized compute can face delays, power constraints, and vulnerabilities that limit performance or prevent mission success altogether.
DARPA is looking to tackle these challenges by embedding intelligence directly into the physical materials of robotic systems. A new Request for Information (RFI), calls on the research community to help define a new class of materials capable of intermixed sensing, adapting, and acting in real time without relying on continuous external computation or communication links.
While the RFI itself is exploratory, it is a first step toward a more immediate opportunity: an invite-only, in-person workshop planned for the summer 2026. Selected participants will have the chance to present their ideas, engage with DARPA, and inform future program directions.
Rethinking Where Intelligence Lives
Commercial robotics has largely centered on building systems that can operate alongside people, often emphasizing familiar shapes and interfaces. National security applications demand something different.
Robotic systems for defense must operate in extreme, unpredictable, and adversarial environments with limited communication and little opportunity for human intervention. In these conditions, performance is not defined by how much data a system can process, but by how quickly and reliably it can respond.
Meeting these demands requires a shift in where intelligence resides.
DARPA is exploring physical intelligence, an approach that embeds sensing, computation, and actuation directly into materials, components, and structures. Instead of routing information through centralized processors, future systems could respond through their physical design, enabling faster, more efficient, and more resilient operation in dynamic environments.
“Today’s robots are often limited by the need to sense, process, and act as separate steps,” said DARPA Program Manager Julian McMorrow. “We are interested in collapsing that loop by embedding intelligence directly into the hardware, so systems can respond in real time without relying on constant data movement.”
This shift could enable robotic systems that are faster, more energy efficient, and more resilient in complex, unstructured environments.
A Focus on Materials, Not Machines
The RFI targets foundational advances at the material, component, and kernel level, with an emphasis on two areas:
Together, these areas point toward a new class of systems where perception, decision, and action are tightly integrated at the hardware level.
DARPA is not seeking incremental improvements or system-level concepts divorced from enabling hardware. Instead, the focus is on breakthroughs that could fundamentally reshape what robotic systems can do.
Additionally, while industry has emphasized human-like form factors designed to operate in human environments, of interest here are systems optimized for mission needs. Depending on the application, this could include designs that are smaller, larger, softer, or structurally unconventional, prioritizing performance and adaptability over familiarity.
From Ideas to Action
Responses to the RFI are due by May 27, 2026, at 2 p.m. ET. Submissions will help inform future DARPA programs and guide the agenda for the upcoming workshop.
Participation in the workshop will be limited, with invitations extended to respondents whose ideas align with the agency’s technical interests and mission needs. Those selected may be asked to present their concepts and engage directly with DARPA program managers and peers across the research community.
More broadly, this call underscores DARPA’s focus on the hardware foundations of autonomy. Breakthroughs in this area could enable a new generation of systems capable of operating where today’s technologies fall short.
Additional information on the RFI, including submission instructions, is available in Special Notice DARPA-SN-26-76.
Source: DARPA
The post DARPA Issues RFI on Embedding Intelligence into Robotic Materials appeared first on HPCwire.
The trip comes nearly four months after U.S. forces seized Rodríguez's predecessor, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife in a daring special forces raid.
All people onboard Cessna 421C dead after crash late at night in city 40 miles south-west of state capital Austin
A small plane crashed among trees in Texas Hill Country, killing all five people onboard, officials said on Friday.
The crash happened in the dark late on Thursday night in Wimberley, a city about 40 miles south-west of the state capital, Austin, the Hays county judge, Ruben Becerra, said in a post on Facebook.
Continue reading...Journalist Paige McClanahan writes about how tourism shapes societies and individuals, and about the need to redefine the meaning of "tourist" in today's shrinking world.
The first refund payments will go out later this month as the portal works through kinks to return money to businesses.
TP-Link's Deco 7 mesh systems, built on the latest and fastest Wi-Fi standard, are designed for today's connected home, delivering fast, reliable Wi-Fi to every corner of your home.
Company accepts it failed to prevent bribery in connection with contracts in Algeria and Oman sought through agents
The British defence company Ultra Electronics has accepted responsibility for a failure to prevent bribery and agreed to pay £15m after an investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.
The penalties are part of a deferred prosecution approved by the high court on Friday, after an investigation opened in 2018 when the company referred itself to the UK law enforcement agency a month after corruption allegations were published by Algerian media.
Continue reading...The "big beautiful bill" requires U.S. states to add work requirements to Medicaid by January 2027. Experts warn millions could lose health coverage.
May 1, 2026 — Researchers at the University of Oxford have demonstrated a new type of quantum interaction using a single trapped ion. By creating and controlling increasingly complex forms of ‘squeezing’ – including a fourth-order effect known as quadsqueezing – the team has, for the first time, made previously unreachable quantum effects experimentally accessible. The approach also provides a new way to engineer these interactions, with potential applications in quantum simulation, sensing, and computing. Their results have been published in Nature Physics.

Experimental trapped-ion setup used to generate the family of squeezed states; the ion is confined between electrode structures and controlled using precisely tuned laser fields. Credit: David Nadlinger.
Many systems in physics behave like tiny objects that vibrate or swing back and forth, like a spring or a pendulum. In quantum physics, these are known as quantum harmonic oscillators. Light waves, vibrations in molecules, and even the motion of a single trapped atom can all be described in this way. Controlling these systems is important for quantum technologies, from ultra-precise sensors to new kinds of quantum computers.
One of the best-known ways to control a quantum oscillator is called squeezing. Quantum mechanics sets a limit on how precisely certain pairs of properties, such as position and momentum, can be known at the same time. Squeezing reshapes this uncertainty: one property becomes more sharply defined, while the other becomes more uncertain. This is not just a curiosity; squeezed light is already used to improve the sensitivity of gravitational-wave detectors such as LIGO.
But ordinary squeezing is only part of a wider family of squeezing interactions. Physicists have long wanted to go further, creating stronger and more complex interactions known as trisqueezing and quadsqueezing. Until now, however, these interactions have been extremely difficult to realize in practice. In most systems, higher-order effects are naturally very weak, and they become weaker very quickly as the order increases. This means the desired quantum behavior is often too weak to observe before it is lost to noise.
The group have now demonstrated a new way around this problem. Instead of trying to drive a weak higher-order interaction directly, the team combined two carefully controlled forces acting on a single trapped ion, following a theory proposed by Dr Raghavendra Srinivas and Dr Robert Tyler Sutherland (UTSA) in 2021. Each force on its own produces a simple, linear effect but when applied together, they produce a new interaction that is more than the sum of their parts. This arises from an effect known as non-commutativity, where the two forces influence each other’s action to generate a stronger interaction in the ion’s motion.
“In the lab, non-commuting interactions are often seen as a nuisance because they introduce unwanted dynamics,” said lead author, Dr. Oana Băzăvan from the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford. “Here, we took the opposite approach and used that feature to generate stronger quantum interactions.”
Using the same experimental setup, the team could switch between different types of squeezing and generated squeezing, trisqueezing, and, for the first time on any platform, quadsqueezing, a fourth-order interaction. By changing the frequencies, phases, and strengths of the applied forces, they could select which interaction appeared while suppressing unwanted effects.
Dr Băzăvan continued: “The result is more than the creation of a new quantum state. It is a demonstration of a new method for engineering interactions that were previously out of reach. The fourth-order quadsqueezing interaction was generated more than 100 times faster than expected using conventional approaches. This makes effects that were previously out of reach accessible in practice.”
The researchers confirmed the interactions by reconstructing the quantum states of motion of the trapped ion. These measurements revealed distinctive shapes associated with second-, third-, and fourth-order squeezing, providing a direct signature of the different interactions.
The method is now being extended to more complex systems with multiple modes of motion. Because it relies on ingredients available in a range of quantum platforms, it could provide a general route to new forms of quantum simulation, sensing, and computation. Already, in combination with mid-circuit measurements of the ion’s spin, the technique has been used to generate arbitrary superpositions of these squeezed states and to simulate a lattice gauge theory.
Study co-author Dr Srinivas also from the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford, who supervised the work, added: “Fundamentally, we have demonstrated a new type of interaction that lets us explore quantum physics in uncharted territory, and we are genuinely excited for the discoveries to come.”
Reference:
Squeezing, trisqueezing and quadsqueezing in a hybrid oscillator-spin system, O Băzăvan et al, Nature Physics, May 1, 2026
Source: University of Oxford
The post Oxford Team Achieves First-Ever ‘Quadsqueezing’ Quantum Interaction appeared first on HPCwire.
Greater Manchester mayor’s team have been quietly preparing a manifesto and identifying seats where MPs could step aside to allow a Westminster run
When the eyes of Westminster were on the committee rooms and voting lobbies of parliament this week, Keir Starmer’s political future was being decided elsewhere.
Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner were buttering up Labour MPs in the Strangers’ Bar in parliament as colleagues spoke of their “existential” fear about the crucial elections next week.
Continue reading...Denny Adán González, 33, whose death is being investigated as suicide, is 18th person to die in ICE custody this year
A Cuban immigrant died inside an immigration detention center in Georgia earlier this week, according to a congressional notification sent on Friday and reviewed by the Guardian.
The Cuban man, identified as 33-year-old Denny Adán González, died inside the privately run Stewart detention center. His death is being investigated as a suicide. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) confirmed González’s death in a press release on Friday morning.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Greater Manchester mayor said to have identified seats where MPs would step aside to allow leadership bid
Andy Burnham has a credible plan to return to Westminster “within weeks”, his allies have said, with the Greater Manchester mayor expected to use a byelection fight to set out a new agenda for government.
Burnham, who was blocked by Labour’s ruling body from running in February’s Gorton and Denton byelection, has identified several seats where MPs are prepared to step aside for his leadership bid.
Continue reading...Analysts say Americans have now paid $21.7bn more to fill their tanks since the start of the US war on Iran
The average price for a gallon of gas in California rose to $6 this week as fuel prices across the US reached their highest level in almost four years.
The American Automobile Association reported on Friday that California consumers were paying an average of $6.06, while the national average hit $4.39. The Golden state is the most expensive US market for gas but costs have also risen nationally with a 27-cent rise this week following two weeks of falling prices, AAA said in a statement.
Continue reading...Spotify is adding "Verified by Spotify" badges to distinguish human artists from AI-generated personas, using signals like linked social accounts, consistent listener activity, merchandise, and concert dates. The BBC reports: The world's most-used music streaming service said the 'Verified by Spotify' text and green checkmark icon would appear next to artist names when they meet "defined standards demonstrating authenticity." This could include having linked social accounts on their artist profile, consistent listener activity or other "signals of a real artist behind the profile," the company said, such as merchandise or concert dates. In its blog post, Spotify said "more than 99%" of the artists listeners actively search for will be verified, representing "hundreds of thousands of artists." It said the process would prioritize acts with "important contributions to music culture and history", rather than "content farms," with the platform rolling out verification and badges over the coming weeks.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
U.S. Navy Aviation Radioman 2nd Class Robert L. Cyr Jr. enlisted at 17 and flew patrols in the Pacific before his death at 19.
Record-breaker says London Marathon win was ‘a victory for all of us’ as he is greeted by family and friends in Eldoret
Hugged, cheered and adorned with garlands, the first man to run an official marathon in under two hours has returned as a hero to his home village in Kenya.
Sabastian Sawe, who stunned the world when he clocked 1h 59m 30s in the London Marathon last weekend, flew in a Kenyan military plane normally reserved for special operations on Thursday to his home region of western Kenya.
Continue reading...Here's how McLaren protects its team and what experts want F1 fans to know before race day.
Claire Freemantle accused of causing death and serious injury by dangerous driving when vehicle hit school in 2023
The driver of a car that crashed into a south London primary school has been charged with causing death by dangerous driving after two eight-year-old girls were killed.
Claire Freemantle is accused of two counts of causing death by dangerous driving and seven counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving after the incident at The Study Prep school in Wimbledon in July 2023.
Continue reading...US oil giants report big drops in profits due to Iran war disruptions but are expected to eventually reap benefits
Exxon Mobil and Chevron reported drops in profit in their first quarter despite surging oil prices, a result of stalled deliveries and supply disruptions in the Middle East.
Exxon’s quarterly earnings fell to $4.2bn from about $7.7bn the same quarter last year, a decline of about 46%, while Chevron’s profits fell to $2.2bn from about $3.5bn, down about 37%. Still, both companies beat Wall Street expectations.
Continue reading...Israeli foreign ministry denounces ‘shameful act’ after video shows man pushing woman to ground and kicking her
A video of an attack on a French Catholic nun and archeological researcher in Jerusalem has caused widespread revulsion and been denounced as a “shameful act” by Israel’s foreign ministry.
In the video, a man runs up behind the nun as she walks down a street and pushes her over with force, so that the victim comes close to hitting her head on a block of stone. After walking away a few paces, the attacker, who appears to be Jewish, returns to kick the nun as she lies on the ground and only stops when a passerby intervenes.
Continue reading...RICHLAND, Wash., May 1, 2026 — Scientists have used the power of AI to analyze and predict the conversion of liquid radioactive waste into solid glass waste forms, increasing the amount of waste that goes into each container of glass produced and reducing operational risks, mission duration and costs. The research team, from the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, published its work in the April 15 edition of the “Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids.”

Materials scientist Xiaonan Lu is part of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory team that used AI-driven machine learning models with active learning to rapidly develop and validate customized glass formulas to immobilize the Hanford Site’s chemically complex tank waste. Here, Lu shows the atomic structure of a glass sample. Photo credit: Andrea Starr/PNNL.
Waste volume and variability, complex chemistry and the science of glassmaking with rigid requirements have made it tricky to find optimum glass formulations. But with the help of AI, PNNL researchers have created a custom collection of “recipes” that significantly increase the percentage of waste — called waste loading — incorporated into the final glass waste forms to levels that wouldn’t have been possible without the machine learning-driven model.
During the historic Manhattan Project and the Cold War, operators at the Hanford Site generated wastes from plutonium production that are stored in massive tanks buried underground. Often referred to as nuclear byproducts or legacy waste, their complex composition makes it challenging to treat and then store long-term. PNNL has advanced the science of vitrification — immobilizing radioactive waste by converting it into glass — since the 1960s. With new advancements like AI, scientists can make sense of mountains of data faster and discover glass formulas — like customized recipes — they hadn’t considered before.
“Models can learn from their own mistakes,” said Xiaonan Lu, PNNL materials scientist and first author of the study. “We replaced a traditional math equation with a machine learning model that tried every combination of elements that have been measured in the Hanford tank waste samples. That’s decades of data the model used to learn and then predict which recipes would work.
“Nearly all elements on the periodic table exist in Hanford tank waste, which is why it’s considered the most complex mixture of radioactive waste in the world,” she said.
Chemistry of a Cup O’ Waste
Consider a freshly brewed pot of coffee. The composition of the coffee changes from hour to hour, day to day, and more rapidly if it’s kept on a burner because oxidation breaks down the acids and oils that give coffee its flavor.
Similar changes occur in the more than 50 million gallons of tank waste stored underground at Hanford for more than 75 years, albeit on a larger, much more complex scale. The waste has sat for decades in conditions that have fluctuated depending on the tank, altering the composition.
Not only does the waste composition vary from tank to tank, but it varies within each giant tank — and also as the waste is transferred during the treatment process. Hence, the glassmakers need not just one, but a slew of glass formulas that can be tailored to hold as much waste as possible while accounting for the individual composition of each batch. Flexibility in the formulations keeps operations running as efficiently as possible.
The Science of Glass
To make the glass, the waste and added chemicals (known as glass formers) are mixed, heated up to 2,100°F and then poured into 7-foot-tall steel containers. However, many of the components in the waste impact how the glass behaves at each step of that process, including disposal, and these behaviors need to be predicted and controlled within the treatment plant to ensure the process runs smoothly. Glass is a bit like Goldilocks’ porridge — you need just the right mixture. As an example, if it’s too thin, scientists worry about corrosion within the melter; if it’s too thick to pour, it may not fill the container completely, so simultaneous optimization of the glass formulation and all the resulting physical and chemical properties are critical for efficient processing and achieving long-term storage requirements.
In their research, PNNL scientists trained the models to look at thousands of combinations of waste properties and additives to predict which ones allow for incorporating the maximum amount of waste in the glass, while ensuring the treatment plant efficiency is maintained and the glass meets durability requirements. More waste in each final glass waste form means fewer containers are produced, resulting in a smaller footprint in disposal facilities for this decades-long mission. And while the model guides a higher percentage of waste going into each piece of glass, the prediction capabilities of AI — and subsequent validation experiments reported in the published papers — demonstrate the final glass forms will be more stable.
The two-part project, funded by the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Environmental Management’s Hanford Field Office and in partnership with glass scientist Albert Kruger, includes a Spring 2024 study also in the “Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids” focused on the development of the glass formulation models.
Potential Impact on the Bottom Line
The PNNL team’s original algorithm, developed in 2012, still drives the current Hanford glass formulas. The algorithm was intentionally set to accept lower quantities of waste mixed with additives, which helps scientists and contractors test the process with fewer waste variables.
“The majority of my career has been spent on vitrification challenges, but it’s the last 14-year journey from the original glass algorithm application to now that has been the most exciting,” said Lab Fellow John Vienna, who was part of the original team and is the leading expert in this area.
“This is the first experimental validation of an active learning approach in waste glass design,” Vienna said.
Over the life of the vitrification project, using the PNNL-developed algorithm could mean 5% fewer glass logs made to safely encase the waste, Vienna said. “Dropping 5% is significant.”
José Marcial, also a materials scientist at PNNL and a co-author on the paper, explained a bit more. “Usually a glass matrix of low-activity waste holds about 20%-30% by weight of radiological waste. But the new model shows we can increase the amount of waste by roughly 1% for every 20% already going into the recipe, which reduces the volume of disposed waste and the cost over the life of the project.”
Genesis Mission to Accelerate AI Solutions
In February, the DOE announced 26 national science challenges where AI could accelerate and transform research — “Transforming nuclear restoration and cleanup” was one. The challenges are part of the Genesis Mission, which was launched by executive order in November 2025.
Four PNNL researchers are part of the Genesis Mission’s Nuclear Restoration and Revitalization AI-Roadmap team. Senior materials scientist Matt Asmussen, senior advisor Inci Demirkanli, chief AI scientist Nathan Hodas and data scientist Anurag Acharya are among those teaming with other national labs to identify opportunities to operationalize AI in ways that help the DOE Office of Environmental Management speed up cleanup at complex sites, including Hanford.
“This work demonstrates the strong potential of AI in the treatment of nuclear waste,” said Asmussen, who also manages several of PNNL’s waste processing research programs. “We’re combining PNNL’s decades of expertise in glass science and vitrification with advanced AI tools to compress timelines and give a compelling preview of what mission acceleration could look like through the use of AI/ML models.”
Source: Andrea Starr, PNNL
The post PNNL Scientists Leverage AI to Optimize Glass Formulas for Liquid Radioactive Waste appeared first on HPCwire.
WASHINGTON, May 1, 2026 — The Fiber Broadband Association (FBA) has announced the release of a new industry report, The Fourth Pillar of the AI Era: Fiber and the Physical Architecture of Intelligence, outlining why fiber infrastructure must be recognized as core infrastructure for hyperscale AI, underpinning large-scale training clusters, distributed inference architectures, and the performance, economics, and scalability of next-generation AI platforms.
AI systems have scaled to unprecedented levels that span massive data center campuses, consume hundreds of megawatts of power, and require real-time coordination across geographies. This report argues that fiber is no longer simply a connectivity layer but instead is becoming an integral component of the AI machine itself. The report emphasizes that without coordinating investment and planning across compute, power, and fiber, AI development risks delays, stranded capital, and uneven access to its benefits.
“AI is no longer just about chips and models—it’s about the system, and the network is the system,” said Gary Bolton, President and CEO of the Fiber Broadband Association. “Fiber provides the deterministic bandwidth, ultra-low latency, and resilience needed to connect AI infrastructure at scale—from GPU clusters to multi-region clouds. As AI becomes more distributed, only fiber can deliver the high-throughput, reliability, and security required to move data efficiently and meet rising performance expectations. Without ubiquitous, high-quality fiber, hyperscalers simply can’t scale AI or deliver the experience customers demand.”
Key findings from the report:
FBA outlines three priorities to ensure AI can scale effectively:
The report also highlights fiber infrastructure as the foundational enabler of scalable AI deployment and the role of AI infrastructure as a catalyst for broader economic growth. Large-scale AI campuses act as anchor tenants, accelerating fiber deployment, driving innovation in optical technologies, and strengthening regional broadband ecosystems. At the same time, it warns that insufficient fiber infrastructure could create an AI divide, limiting access to advanced applications and weakening national competitiveness.
The U.S. is entering a decisive phase in the global AI race, and leadership will be determined not only by breakthroughs in chips and models, but by the physical infrastructure that connects them. Fiber is that infrastructure. It is what transforms isolated compute into distributed intelligence. The choices made now, on investment, permitting, and coordination, will shape economic competitiveness, innovation capacity, and digital equity for decades to come.
The paper will be the topic of Fiber for Breakfast on May 6th. To register to attend visit here. The full report is available here and subscribe to FBA’s Fiber Forward Weekly newsletter here for the latest industry updates.
About the Fiber Broadband Association
The Fiber Broadband Association (FBA) is the voice of fiber, helping providers, policy makers, and communities make informed decisions about how, where, and why to build better fiber broadband networks. FBA is the largest and only trade association that represents the complete fiber ecosystem of service providers, manufacturers, industry experts, and deployment specialists. Since 2001, FBA and its members have worked to advance fiber broadband deployment to accelerate innovation and increase quality of life by enabling every community to leverage the economic and societal benefits that only fiber can deliver. The Fiber Broadband Association is part of the Fibre Council Global Alliance, which is a platform of six global FTTH Councils in North America, LATAM, Europe, MENA, APAC, and South Africa. Learn more at fiberbroadband.org.
Source: Fiber Broadband Association
The post Fiber Broadband Association Report Positions Fiber as the ‘Fourth Pillar’ of AI appeared first on HPCwire.
We compare price, perks, reach and more for two of the largest mobile carriers in the US.
OpenAI, Google, Nvidia and others agreed to ‘any lawful use’ of their tech. Anthropic, feuding with Pentagon over potential AI misuse, was not included
The Pentagon said on Friday it had reached agreements with seven leading artificial intelligence (AI) companies: SpaceX, OpenAI, Google, Nvidia, Reflection, Microsoft and Amazon Web Services.
“These agreements accelerate the transformation toward establishing the United States military as an AI-first fighting force and will strengthen our warfighters’ ability to maintain decision superiority across all domains of warfare,” the Pentagon said in statement.
Continue reading...Since 2021, the share of U.S.-based employees who have left their jobs to work in another country has more than doubled.
ICE reported the 18th death of an individual in its custody so far this year, putting the agency on track to record a new all-time high in detainee deaths.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
The War Powers Resolution sets deadlines for the president to end hostilities without congressional approval.
Greg Jackson argues against costly investments in UK’s power grid that are adding to household bills
The boss of the UK’s biggest energy supplier has suggested that some households would accept an occasional electricity blackout in exchange for much lower energy bills.
A year on from Europe’s largest power outage – which left tens of millions of people in Spain and Portugal without trains, metros, traffic lights, ATMs, phone connections and internet access – the chief executive of Octopus Energy argued against costly investments in the UK’s power grid that are adding to household bills.
Continue reading...New crime thriller M.I.A. premieres, plus Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair arrives later this month.
The pop star sat down with Gayle King for an exclusive interview airing Monday on "CBS Mornings."
Hackers are actively exploiting a critical cPanel and WHM vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-41940, that allows remote attackers to bypass the login screen and gain full administrative access to affected web servers. Major hosts including Namecheap, HostGator, and KnownHost have taken mitigation steps or patched systems, but cPanel is urging all customers and web hosts to update immediately because the software is widely used across millions of websites. TechCrunch reports: cPanel and WHM are two software suites used for managing web servers that host websites, manage emails, and handle important configurations and databases needed to maintain an internet domain. The two suites have deep-access to the servers that they manage, allowing a malicious hacker potentially unrestricted access to data managed by the affected software. Given the ubiquity of the cPanel and WHM software across the web hosting industry, hackers could compromise potentially large numbers of websites that haven't patched the bug. Canada's national cybersecurity agency said in an advisory that the bug could be exploited to compromise websites on shared hosting servers, such as large web hosting companies. The agency said that "exploitation is highly probable" and that immediate action from cPanel customers, or their web hosts, is necessary to prevent malicious access. [...] One web hosting company says it found evidence that hackers have been abusing the vulnerability for months before the attempts were discovered.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Jose Yugar-Cruz was granted a court order preventing his deportation to his home country, but the Trump administration is set to send him to the Congo.
The bitter courtroom brawl between Elon Musk and Sam Altman captivating the tech industry this week revolves in no small part around fears that artificial intelligence technologies both men are building could spiral out of control and exterminate humanity. Such far-looking scenarios obscure the fact that tech companies are enlisting to kill today.
Musk’s break with OpenAI, which he co-founded in 2015, is in a sense a lawsuit about safety. He contends that Altman betrayed the company’s original nonprofit mission of safely and responsibly pursuing artificial intelligence for the public benefit by converting it into the revenue-maximizing behemoth it has become. According to Musk, the stakes of this are existential for the human race: “It could kill us all,” he testified on Tuesday. “We don’t want to have a ‘Terminator’ outcome.”
The AI safety community frequently invokes these dystopian scenarios to both warn the public about the technology’s risks and implicitly boast of its great power. While such a science-fiction future may lay ahead, these warnings overlook the deadly present. Artificial intelligence is already targeting humans with the blessing of Musk and his rivals.
Musk and others who caution about an uprising of sentient killer machines are anticipating the emergence of “artificial general intelligence,” an ill-defined form of superior machine reasoning that may never come to pass. But their fear that AI could kill us all is less hypothetical for those living in places targeted by the Trump administration’s global wars. In Iran, for instance, Anthropic’s Claude AI model “suggested hundreds of targets, issued precise location coordinates, and prioritized those targets according to importance,” according to the Washington Post.
“ There’s a real danger of Skynet-like outcomes even without a Skynet-style takeover.”
“The risks of integrating frontier AI into the nation’s most lethal capabilities are already existential, both for civilians swept up in the violence and destruction of AI-enabled wars, and rank-and-file troops that have to live with the consequences of potentially unsafe weapons they can’t control,” Amoh Toh, senior counsel at Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program, told The Intercept. “Existing AI models are already pushing policymakers and militaries toward nuclear escalation — there’s a real danger of Skynet-like outcomes even without a Skynet-style takeover.”
Silicon Valley has widely embraced AI military contracts despite its worries over lethal AI. Amazon, OpenAI, Musk’s xAI, and Microsoft all earn money from selling large language model services to the Pentagon. Even Anthropic, accused of “betrayal” by War Secretary Pete Hegseth and declared a national supply chain risk for mounting the smallest of opposition to the Pentagon’s terms, is still keen to participate in the national kill chain. “Anthropic has much more in common with the Department of War than we have differences,” CEO Dario Amodei wrote in a blog post a week after the United States bombed an elementary school in Iran, killing more than 100 children.
Google offers a telling illustration of the industry’s increasing coziness with selling AI to the military. Following a 2018 employee revolt over Project Maven, a contract to help target Pentagon airstrikes, CEO Sundar Pichai pledged his company would swear off the business of killing. He wrote in a company blog post that Google would not pursue deals that could cause harm, including applications whose “principal purpose or implementation is to cause or directly facilitate injury to people.” He added: “These are not theoretical concepts, they are concrete standards that will actively govern our research and product development and will impact our business decisions.”
After watching AI help wage a war that has already killed over 1,700 Iranian civilians, Google this week sent a clear message: We want in. In a deal that makes explicit the extent to which company leadership has abandoned its AI principles, Google agreed to provide AI services to the Pentagon that allow for “classified workloads,” sensitive military work that encompasses tasks like intelligence analysis and targeting airstrikes, The Information reported.
Executives say they’re terrified of the technology killing by accident, while wholly supportive of using it to kill on purpose.
According to the tech news outlet, the deal allows the U.S. military to use Google’s AI models for “any lawful government purpose” — a carveout that could allow any uses the administration deems legal. Take, for example, the Trump administration’s Operation Southern Spear, the ongoing aerial assassination program against civilian boats accused of drug trafficking that has killed more than 180 people to date. The campaign has been widely condemned as illegal under both international and U.S. law, but the administration has deemed its own actions legal through a Department of Justice memo that remains secret. On Friday, the Pentagon announced additional “lawful operational use” deals with Nvidia, Microsoft, and Amazon as well.
The Google contract reportedly includes a toothless and unenforceable provision gesturing at concerns over autonomous and spying. “We remain committed to the private and public sector consensus that AI should not be used for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weaponry without appropriate human oversight,” the clause reportedly states.
“‘Don’t regulate us or it’ll kill innovation.’ … The reality of Google’s work with the military is it’s part of a tech-military ecosystem that’s killing people today.”
“When I worked at Google, they would spend a lot of time punting into the future, promising a future that would never come,” said William Fitzgerald, a former Google employee who helped organize the 2018 worker-led campaign against the Maven contract. “‘Don’t regulate us or it’ll kill innovation.’ The talking point is the same today. The reality of Google’s work with the military is it’s part of a tech-military ecosystem that’s killing people today.”
Google spokesperson Kate Dreyer did not respond to questions about the contract’s language, instead touting how the company’s military work applies “to areas like logistics, cybersecurity, diplomatic translation, fleet maintenance, and the defense of critical infrastructure.”
There is little evidence the people in charge find this technology enticing because of its diplomatic translation prowess. In a January address to Musk’s employees at SpaceX, another Pentagon contractor, Hegseth explained how “an embrace of AI” would make the military “more lethal.”
Musk and Altman, though foes at the moment, can at least find common ground in their support of Hegseth. Musk, a longtime defense contractor, similarly wraps himself in the flag, tweeting in 2023, “I will fight for and die in America.” Altman, who once expressed skepticism toward military work, now frames OpenAI’s mission in terms of patriotic nationalism. (In 2024, The Intercept sued OpenAI in federal court over the company’s use of copyrighted articles to train its chatbot ChatGPT. The case is ongoing.)
Between Musk’s courtroom visions of the apocalypse and Google’s plunge into classified workloads, the week’s news illustrates the disjointed state of AI industry ethics, where executives say they’re terrified of the technology killing by accident, while wholly supportive of using it to kill on purpose.
Though AI executives clearly find this a virtuous revenue stream, some of the people who actually built the technology do not. Andreas Kirsch, a research scientist at Google’s pioneering DeepMind laboratory that produced much of the work on which xAI and Anthropic rely, responded to this week’s news with dismay: “I’m speechless at Google signing a deal to use our AI models for classified tasks. Frankly, it is shameful,” he wrote on X. Alex Turner, a DeepMind colleague of Kirsch’s, described the contract in a single word: “Shameful.”
The post Musk Warns of Killer AI — While He and the Rest of Silicon Valley Cash In on AI That Kills appeared first on The Intercept.
| rain all day only thing to do is watch footage [link] [comments] |
Green party leader shares statement after open letter from Met police chief Mark Rowley
As the May elections creep closer, the leadership speculation at Westminster grows more intense. Is Keir Starmer safe and, if so, for how long?
In her analysis piece below, the Guardian’s political editor Pippa Crerar explores the state of prime minister’s leadership, why discontent is building within Labour and who the most likely challengers could be.
Continue reading...Seven seconds passed between when the alleged gunman at Saturday's White House Correspondents' Dinner — carrying a shotgun initially concealed by a jacket — first encountered federal law enforcement and when he was subdued, sources told CBS News.
May 1, 2026 — The Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe (PRACE) has published the fourth edition of its Scientific and Innovation Case, outlining the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead for Scientific Computing in Europe.
Scientific Computing underpins a vast array of research fields that encompass an ever-growing range of complex problems, amplified by a rapidly changing world. European competitiveness is driven by scientific excellence, which requires significant cooperation as well as infrastructure and investment from both public and private sectors. Significant investments in Europe’s supercomputing platforms have resulted in pre-exascale and exascale systems, open to all those who aim to find solutions to those grand challenges.
Published on 29 April 2026, the fourth edition of the PRACE Scientific and Innovation Case charts the progress achieved in several key branches of science that rely on High-Performance Computing (HPC), outlining the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead as well as highlighting the success and leadership of European scientists tackling them.
For the first time, the PRACE Scientific and Innovation Case includes a specific chapter on Artificial Intelligence and Quantum Computing.
“Artificial intelligence and quantum computing have both triggered paradigm shifts, and a global race between research institutions, governments, and the private sector, that nobody can ignore,” Prof. Constantia Alexandrou, Chair of the PRACE Council. “Harnessing the power of AI as well as developing a fault-tolerant quantum computer should be high on the agenda of public research funding, to preserve scientific independence and promote technological innovation. At the same time, it is crucial for Europe to maintain its competitiveness in simulation-based science by providing increased and diverse computational resources.”
The PRACE Scientific and Innovation Case also highlights one of the currently most apt examples of the impact and importance of Scientific Computing: the creation of so-called ‘digital twins’: in silico replicas of complex systems, which offer a degree of flexibility that experimental observations cannot reach.
“Digital twins are powerful tools for obtaining an in-depth understanding by evaluating “What if” scenarios, offering a degree of flexibility that is impossible to gain through experimental observations performed on the actual system of interest. They are particularly relevant to climate research, life sciences and human health, as well as advanced materials sciences,” says Prof. Hartmut Wittig, Editor-in-Chief of the PRACE Scientific and Innovation Case for HPC in Europe 2026-2034.
About the Publication
The PRACE Scientific and Innovation Case is a landmark publication of PRACE as the Association of Users and HPC Centres, collecting and amplifying the voices of those who work directly with Europe’s world-class supercomputing resources. Each chapter focusses on a different scientific domain, showing the enormous variety in methodologies and hardware used. From those domain-specific analyses, a set of cross-domain recommendations is derived, which will speak to both scientific and political decision-makers.
The fourth edition of the PRACE Science and Innovation Case continues a tradition established by the HPC in Europe Taskforce (HET) and supports the vision that European infrastructure will enable high-impact scientific discovery as well as innovative engineering research and development across all disciplines in Europe.
Thanks to the high level of expertise and tireless commitment of the members of the editorial committee and the chairs and members of the panels, this publication provides an exciting overview of the achievements of computational science across various domains, including for the first time social sciences, artificial intelligence, and quantum computing. It is an excellent advocate for the investments required for state-of-the-art scientific computing to bring further benefits to society. The PRACE Scientific and Innovation Case for HPC 2026-2034 can be read and downloaded here.
About PRACE
The mission of PRACE (Partnership for advanced Computing in Europe) is to represent the interests and identify the needs of users of HPC and related technologies – artificial intelligence, quantum computing, cloud computing, data science etc – in Europe, and to pursue actions to enable high-impact research and innovation across all disciplines and industrial applications, thereby enhancing European scientific, technological and economic competitiveness for the benefit of society. PRACE aisbl is funded by the PRACE Members. Various activities of PRACE are (partially) funded through our participation in several EU-funded projects.
Source: PRACE
The post PRACE Publishes 4th Edition of Its Scientific and Innovation Case for HPC in Europe appeared first on HPCwire.
Who owns the Falkland Islands? Explainer jon.wallace
A US Department of War memo reignited debate over ownership – which is complicated by Argentine independence, British administration, and the principle of self-determination.
The administration of President Donald Trump brought the issue of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands (known as ‘Islas Malvinas’ in Argentina) back into the news in April.
A leaked memorandum from the US Department of War mooted a re-evaluation of the British title to the islands – apparently to punish the UK for its lukewarm stance on the US and Israeli war against Iran.
Shortly after the memo became public, the UK responded by saying sovereignty over the islands ‘rests with the UK’. But Argentina’s President Javier Milei posted on X that the islands ‘were, are and will always be Argentine’. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio later appeared to dismiss the significance of the War Department memo, saying the US position on sovereignty of the islands remained unchanged.
The UK’s sovereignty claim to the islands reaches back nearly half a millennium, backed by a reference to the population’s right to self-determination.
Argentina has its own claim, based on the distant history of the early encounter of the islands by imperial Spain. This asserts that Argentina’s colonial territorial inheritance from Spain was forcibly disrupted by Britain in the first half of the 19th century.
Untangling the claims is complex. According to the doctrine of intertemporal law, it is necessary to review the entire strand of the history of a territorial claim and evaluate each step according to the rules of international law that prevailed at the relevant time.
The islands were originally uninhabited and unclaimed, which means that any state could legally take possession of them after their discovery.
However, Spain claimed that the Pope awarded the islands to Madrid when he issued a bull (or papal decree) Inter Caetera in 1493, a year after Christopher Columbus first landed in the Americas.
That bull assigned all lands 100 leagues west and south of the Azores to Spain, excluding rival claims by Portugal, which instead focused on exploring the African coastline. This was ratified by both states in the Treaty of Tordesillas of 1494. But other states did not feel bound by the papal edict, or the treaty to which they were not a party, and proceeded with their own explorations.
The first sighting of the islands by a European is often attributed to Englishman Jon Davis in 1590. But the initial firm record of their discovery was created by Dutch Captain Sebald de Weerdt a decade later. In 1690, English captain John Strong made the first attested landing. Since then, Britain claims an uninterrupted title to the islands.
But planting a flag on a beach does not fully confer full title. This act has to be followed by what international lawyers call ‘peaceful and uninterrupted display of state authority’ – that is, a sign of the actual administration of the territory.
It was in fact the French who, in 1764, established a settlement on the eastern island. King Louis XV of France claimed title shortly afterwards.
The British were initially unaware of the French settlement and established their own at Port Egmont on Saunders Island a year later. Meanwhile Spain, still claiming its notional papal title, persuaded the French to withdraw, paying some 600,000 livres in compensation.
In 1770, the Spanish removed the British colony at Port Egmont. However, to avert war over the issue, a treaty was concluded reinstating the colony, without prejudice to the legal claims of both sides.
By 1774, London withdrew its physical administration from the islands. However, to counter an argument that this implied abandonment of the British claim, a plaque was left in place, proclaiming continued sovereignty.
Spain also withdrew from the islands in the wake of the Latin American independence campaigns that started in 1810. It too left a plaque behind, seeking to maintain its claim. However, Madrid never regained control.
The United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata, later Argentina, proclaimed independence in 1816. The country was recognized by the UK in 1825, without prejudice to the Falkland Islands. When the United Provinces sought to establish themselves on the islands, the UK protested in view of its own legal claim.
A period of lawlessness prevailed on the islands after independence. Argentina sent a governor in 1829, triggering a protest from London. After an incident involving US vessels, the USS Lexington was dispatched to clear the islands of whatever Argentinian authority was left by 1831. In 1833, the UK resumed administration.
Argentina argues that its title to the islands was firmly established by then. According to the practice pioneered in the Americas during the independence conflicts with Spain, a newly established state would inherit the boundaries of the former colonial power at the time of independence. This, Argentina asserts, would have included the Falkland Islands (or ‘Islas Malvinas’).
Argentina therefore asserts that it was forcibly dispossessed of its territory when its administration and settler community were expelled by force of arms by the British.
The UK can answer that Argentina could not have inherited from Spain what Spain did not have, given London’s title to the islands. The UK opposed the rival Spanish claim from its inception. And in any event, Argentina never managed to establish an effective administration on the islands for any length of time.
The UK, in contrast, exhibited the ‘uninterrupted and peaceful display of state authority’ on the islands for close to two centuries, at least since 1833.
Argentina claims to have consistently protested what it considered British forcible occupation of the islands. That could legally preclude a perfecting of the UK title over time, if it had not had a pre-existing title already.
However, Argentina failed to protest for a period of several decades, until it sought to revive its claim by 1885. Even if the UK claim had still been doubtful at that point, this prolonged period of unopposed possession would have been sufficient to consolidate the British title.
Self-determination is a people’s right. It has matured into a firm and foundational right in international law since the wave of twentieth century decolonization. The modern law of self-determination is unique in that it operates retroactively – intended to overcome the historic injustice of colonialism: it therefore displaces any titles based on colonial conquest and possession.
According to the doctrine of uti possidetis, colonial peoples exercise that right within the boundaries established by the colonial powers. But Argentina’s claim to the islands on the basis of uti possidetis meets significant obstacles.
The doctrine emerged from Latin American practice as a matter of convenience, rather than a rule of law. It only gained binding legal status in the region over time, and for the rest of the world since the 1960s.
Even if uti possidetis could be applied to the case of the United Provinces, it would not operate against the UK, which did not participate in the emerging inter-American practice and was not the colonial power from which the United Provinces gained independence.
Some scholars argue that Argentina is as a whole the self-determination entity and that its people have therefore been denied full self-determination since independence, because UK occupation of the Falklands prevented Argentinians from taking full possession of territories assigned to them under the doctrine of uti possidetis. These scholars argue that, as self-determination displaces competing titles, the UK must now surrender the islands in order to overturn that historical injustice.
But this argument is not persuasive. For one thing, Spain’s title to the territory at the moment of United Provinces/Argentinian independence is doubtful: as noted, the Provinces could not inherit what Spain did not possess.
Importantly, Argentina itself has not made this argument – even though a superficially similar one has been made successfully by Mauritius with regard to the Chagos Islands. There, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) held that the UK excised the Chagos Islands from its colonial territory of Mauritius just before it granted independence to it, leaving the promise of full and complete colonial self-determination within the colonially established boundaries unfulfilled.
The difference is that Britain already held title to the islands at the point of Argentina’s independence. London therefore did not remove part of the colonial territory just before the grant of independence to the rest of the colony. And Argentina was a colony of, and seceded from, Spain, not Britain.
Perhaps unwisely, Argentina claims that it was a fully-fledged state by 1816 and had already at that point inherited the Falkland Islands from Spain, completing its territorial unity. It asserts that the UK forcibly detached that territory from an independent Argentina through an act of war.
Argentina therefore accepts that it had completed self-determination and decolonization from Spain within the uti possidetis boundaries at the time of its independence. It may have taken some years to establish its authority over the islands, but in essence, self-determination had been fully delivered at the point of independence from Spain.
In this scenario, the right to self-determination for Argentina had been exhausted by the time the UK re-established control over the Falkland Islands in 1833, and the right therefore cannot be applied against London.
Without self-determination, Argentina can only legally claim the islands by virtue of the prohibition of the use of force.
However, acquiring territory by force only became unlawful since the adoption of the UN Charter in 1945. It has proven unwise, indeed impossible, to try and undo any forcible changes of territory around the globe that occurred before that date. The only exception is the rule of colonial self-determination.
In any event, the UK can assert that it did not capture the territory of another state. It merely re-established authority over a territory to which it held good title.
Moreover, Britain did not in fact use force. It was the USS Lexington that cleared out the attempted Argentinian administration in 1831, not UK forces. When British authorities returned to the islands to resume administration two years later, there was no resistance and no shots were fired.
There was also no mass expulsion of Argentinian settlers, as has been claimed. Most remained and have lived under the UK administration that has now been in place for close to 200 years – with the brief exception of the Argentinian armed occupation of 1982.
In the UN General Assembly, Argentina has not asserted that the people of Argentina as a whole will not have completed their colonial right to self-determination until the UK hands over the islands. Indeed, it is avoiding the application of the principle of self-determination, in case it is applied to the actual population of the islands, instead of Argentina as a whole.
Argentina is presenting the UK possession as an imperialist issue somewhat outside of the law of self-determination. However, this is an emotional appeal that resonates well with the majority of members of the UN, rather than a legal argument.
There was no indigenous or original population that was colonized by Britain when it originally occupied the islands. And Argentina’s own claim is ultimately based on the supposed acquisition of the islands by Spain in the same manner and at the same time.
The UN considers the Falkland Islands a non-self-governing territory – a label ordinarily reserved for colonial territories still entitled to self-determination. Argentina strongly maintains, however, that this is a sovereignty dispute, and not a matter of self-determination.
The UK, on the other hand, firmly embraces self-determination in relation to the population of the islands. Changing the status of the islands against their will would fundamentally violate this right. The UK has granted the islands full self-government, including the right to determine their future status in the exercise of their right to self-determination, in a constitution enacted in 2008. Over 99 per cent of the population participating in a referendum of 2013 expressed themselves in favour of remaining a British Overseas Territory.
Argentina answers this point by claiming that the people on the islands are an artificially implanted settler population whose existence cannot trump Argentina’s territorial claim. However, the UK can point to the fact that well over half of the population has roots on the islands for well over 100 years. Moreover, on closer reading, it is the UK that has the better territorial claim.
In something of a compromise formula, the UN General Assembly is consistently pressing for a settlement of the issue through negotiations between both states. While it notes the underlying sovereignty dispute, seemingly siding with Argentina, it also consistently requires that the interests of the population of the islands must be taken into account.
A $250,000 annuity can deliver a hefty amount each month at age 60, but the exact payout hinges on several factors.
Apology comes after head of Met police said Green party leader risked undermining public confidence in his officers
Zack Polanski has apologised for sharing a social media post critical of police after the Golders Green stabbings, after the head of the Metropolitan police said the Green leader risked undermining public confidence in his officers.
Polanski, who leads the Greens in England and Wales, said he was sorry for having shared someone else’s post “in haste”.
Continue reading...Thaddeus Stevens was one of the most consequential and uncompromising figures of nineteenth-century American politics. Writing in 1993, historian Eric Foner argued that Stevens’ “unusual complexity of motivations and unique blend of idealism with political pragmatism” defied easy categorization.[1] As a Radical Republican congressman from Pennsylvania, he was the driving force behind the abolition of slavery and the attempt to remake the postwar South into a racially egalitarian society.
Stevens was born in Danville, Vermont on April 4, 1792 to Baptist parents from Massachusetts. He was named for Tadeusz “Thaddeus” Kościuszko, a Polish general who had moved to North America to serve in the Continental Army in 1776. When Stevens’ father abandoned the family under mysterious circumstances, his mother moved the family to a neighboring town and enrolled Stevens in the Caledonia Grammar School.
Stevens’ early career
After graduation, Stevens moved to western Vermont to study at Burlington College. His time there was cut short by the arrival of Army troops during the War of 1812, who seized the college’s main building to defend against a potential invasion from British Canada.[2] He transferred to Dartmouth College for his sophomore year, where he participated in a conference on the subject: “Which has been more deleterious to society—war, luxury, or party spirit?” A roommate there recalled that he “was then inordinately ambitious, bitterly envious of all who outranked him as scholars, and utterly unprincipled,” though he admitted that Stevens showed unusual promise as an extemporaneous debater.[3]
Stevens studied law in Vermont; once he passed the bar exam, he opened a law practice in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania in 1816. Of the first 10 local cases to reach the state supreme court after he had begun his practice, Stevens was involved in all 10 and won nine.
Stevens came to regret his participation in Butler v. Delaplaine, an 1821 case in which he helped Maryland enslaver John Delaplaine reclaim Charity Butler and her daughters. According to biographer Hans L. Trefousse, he had not taken a stand on “the slavery question” until the case, but “shortly afterward, he denounced the ‘peculiar institution’” and offered his services to those escaping from slavery.[4] His toast at an Independence Day celebration on July 4, 1823 made his conversion clear: “The next President—May he be a freeman, who never riveted fetters on a human slave.”[5]
Stevens’ first major political crusade was not slavery, but anti-Freemasonry, a populist movement against the Masons—an exclusive fraternal order—that had coalesced into an organized political party by the mid-1820s. His prominence in the movement helped him gain election to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1833, where Stevens was the champion of a plan to introduce free public schooling to Pennsylvania. But his aggressive 1835 investigation of high-ranking Masons in the state helped cost him reelection to the House the following year.
His involvement with the abolition of slavery
The abolitionist movement was young but steadily growing in the mid-1830s, and Stevens became an increasingly vocal opponent of the “peculiar institution” he had defended as a young lawyer. In 1837, he refused to endorse the new Pennsylvania constitution because it would disenfranchise Black men. And in 1842, after moving from Gettysburg to Lancaster, he turned a hidden cistern outside his house into a station on the Underground Railroad. Yet Stevens would not call for the immediate and universal abolition of slavery until the outbreak of the Civil War, as he argued that the Constitution still protected slave states’ internal affairs from federal interference.
In 1848, Stevens was elected to the U. S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania’s 8th congressional district. He actively opposed the Compromise of 1850, a package of federal laws that would admit California as a free state in exchange for permitting the residents of new states Utah and New Mexico to decide whether to permit slavery. It would also settle a Texas boundary dispute, abolish the slave trade in Washington, D.C., and provide for passage of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850. While the Compromise’s supporters hoped that it would avert a sectional crisis over slavery’s expansion, Stevens warned it would be “the fruitful mother of future rebellion, disunion, and civil war.”[6]
Stevens refocused on his law practice in Lancaster when he was not reelected for the 1852 term. Upon his return to Congress in December 1859, this time as a Radical Republican, he leapt quickly into the “rapid-fire exchange of insults and general acrimony between Southern representatives and House Republicans.”[7]
Stevens entered the Civil War convinced that the Confederacy had forfeited any constitutional protections by taking up arms. As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, he introduced a bill for a war loan within a day of his appointment. In July 1861, Stevens secured passage of an act to confiscate rebel property, including the enslaved, and in November he introduced an unsuccessful resolution to free all enslaved persons outright. “Abolition—Yes! abolish everything on the face of the earth, but this Union,” he declared in 1862. “Free every slave—slay every traitor—burn every rebel mansion if these things are necessary to preserve this temple of freedom.”[8]
Stevens and other Radicals grew frustrated with Lincoln’s pace. As late as March 1862, the most that Lincoln had publicly supported was gradual emancipation in the border states, with slave owners compensated for the loss of their property by the federal government. Stevens wrote privately in April, “As for future hopes, they are poor as Lincoln is nobody.”[9] Lincoln, for his part, called Stevens and fellow Radical Republicans Charles Sumner and Henry Wilson “the unhandiest devils in the world to deal with – but after all their faces are set Zion-wards.”[10]
The Reconstruction Era (1863-1877) brought Stevens to the fore of public life. He proposed confiscating the estates of the largest 70,000 southern landholders and distributing plots of 40 acres to freed families, warning that without such measures the southern states would send former rebels to Congress who would undo emancipation. When President Andrew Johnson moved to block land reform and restore former Confederates to power, Stevens organized resistance in Congress, arranging for southern electees to be excluded from the roll call when the House convened in December 1865. He also co-chaired the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, which investigated widespread violence against African Americans and Union loyalists across the South, and steered through the legislation that divided the South into five military districts. “This is not a ‘white man’s Government,’” he thundered.[11]
Stevens died on August 11, 1868, having never seen the full promise of Reconstruction realized. He chose to be buried in a Lancaster cemetery that admitted people of all races because, as he wrote, he wished to “illustrate in my death the principles which I advocated through a long life, equality of man before his Creator.”[12]
Anna Salvatore is a Content Fellow at the National Constitution Center and a graduate of Princeton University.
Notes
[1] Eric Foner, "Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic," Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies 60, no. 2 (1993): 140, https://www.jstor.org/stable/27773614.
[2] "Propaganda and Pestilence," Vermont History 64 (1996), https://vermonthistory.org/journal/misc/Propoganda_pestilence_vol64.pdf
[3]"Thaddeus Stevens: School Years Shaped by Peacham Education," North Star Monthly, https://www.northstarmonthly.com/profiles/thaddeus-stevens-school-years-shaped-by-peacham-education/article_12277c70-bf1e-11e6-9bca-1fbe729c2188.html.
[4]Hans L. Trefousse, Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth-Century Egalitarian (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1997).
[5] "Thaddeus Stevens in the Limelight: Public Life in Pennsylvania," Danville Vermont Historical Society, https://danvillevthistorical.org/thaddeus-stevens-in-the-limelight-public-life-in-pennsylvania/.
[6] Foner, "Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic," 143.
[7] "A Remarkable Radical: Thaddeus Stevens," Humanities 33, no. 6 (November/December 2012), https://www.neh.gov/humanities/2012/novemberdecember/feature/remarkable-radical-thaddeus-stevens.
[8] Michael Birkner, "Thaddeus Stevens at Gettysburg," Civil War Faculty (Gettysburg College), https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1064&context=cwfac.
[9] Michael Burlingame, Abraham Lincoln: A Life, vol. 2, chap. 27, https://www.knox.edu/documents/LincolnStudies/BurlingameVol2Chap27.pdf.
[10] "Lincoln on Radicalism," The Atlantic, May 2011, https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/05/lincoln-on-radicalism/238377/.
[11] "On Juneteenth, This Moment Rings a Bell," Herald-Tribune, June 19, 2020, https://www.heraldtribune.com/story/opinion/columns/2020/06/19/on-juneteenth-this-moment-rings-bell/112608184/.
[12] Foner, "Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic," 152.
| Figured since I talk to myself while riding I might as well start vloging for fun 😅. Still working out some editing issues, but it's been fun so far. Let me know if you have any tips or recommendations, it would be greatly appreciated. 👌 [link] [comments] |
I believe it’s a dead battery. But I let my board sit for a long while…about a year. I know I know. Shame. Plugged into the charger it acts as normal. Unplugged the power butter does nothing. Board won’t turn on.
Dead battery? Or dead power button?
What’s the best easiest battery replacement?
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the San Francisco Standard: If state lawmakers have their way, you'll have to get a license plate for your e-bike, and if you're planning to buy one next year, it'll be slower. Amid growing concerns about e-bike safety, particularly among children in Bay Area suburbs, two bills introduced this year aim to make it easier to ticket riders and reduce the top speed of some models. AB 1942 would require certain e-bikes to be registered with the Department of Motor Vehicles and display license plates, and AB 1557 would slow e-bikes that children are allowed to operate. Both bills are still being reviewed in committee. If either bill passes this year, it will take effect Jan. 1.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Artemis II team gained a new member, and the crew made sure their youngest teammate had the right stuff for space.
King skillfully appeals to Republicans fond of Britain and Democrats anxious about rules-based order in state visit
For his last trick, the king revealed a bell that hung from the conning tower of a Royal Navy submarine launched from a UK shipyard in 1944. Its name was HMS Trump. “And should you ever need to get hold of us,” Charles III said, “well, just give us a ring.”
The polished brass bell bearing the name “Trump”, presented at Tuesday’s state dinner at the White House, was an ego-flattering masterstroke that will have prompted groans in foreign capitals from Paris to Canberra to Tokyo. How can they ever hope to match that?
Continue reading...First minister John Swinney says he played significant role but Labour rejects claim and accuses SNP of hypocrisy
Donald Trump’s announcement that he will lift punishing US tariffs on scotch whisky has been overshadowed by a row between rival Scottish party leaders over claiming credit for the decision.
The whisky industry and business leaders were delighted by the US president’s announcement on his Truth Social network on Thursday that he would end the tariffs to mark the visit by King Charles and Queen Camilla.
Continue reading...Rey is teaching Sunny, about two weeks old, all her adopted baby needs to know to fend for herself
Before last month, a young southern sea otter named Rey would never have imagined she would be a mother.
That changed when she met Sunny, a pup – about two weeks old – found orphaned and alone on Asilomar state beach on the central coast of California in February. The pairing went off without a hitch.
Continue reading...The US president said he would carry out of a review of US military presence in Europe after public criticism of the US-Israeli war on Iran
If you are still planning your summer holidays and looking at some of perhaps more original ways of spending your time crossing Europe, you now have a new option in a train between Prague and Copenhagen via Berlin and Hamburg.
The Czech operator, České dráhy, has been somewhat excitedly posting about the latest addition to the growing network of cross-European trains as more passengers turn towards environmentally friendly and picturesque alternatives to flying.
Continue reading...Colombia hosted nearly 60 countries at pivotal time on world stage for fight to transition to a clean energy future
Looking out to sea from the grey sandy beaches of Santa Marta, on Colombia’s Caribbean coast, it is never hard to spot evidence of the country’s thriving fossil fuel export trade. Oil tankers ride at anchor on the horizon and sometimes, locals say, lumps of coal wash up on the shore, blown off the collier ships that carry cargos from the nearby mines.
It was here, on Wednesday evening, that the Colombian government took a bold step to shift its economy – and that of the rest of the world – away from dependence on coal, gas and oil and into a new era of clean energy. With the first ever conference on “transitioning away from fossil fuels”, the host joined nearly 60 countries determined to loosen of the grip of petrostates on the world’s future.
Continue reading...Our expert puts the best power washers through their paces on the toughest – and muckiest – outdoor chores, from grimy paving slabs to dirty decking
• The best lawnmowers to keep your grass in check
The trouble with the great outdoors is that it gets a bit untidy. Your garden tools might do a good job of keeping your plot in check, but keeping your patio, decking and outdoor furniture spick and span can take hours, especially if you rely on a bucket of soapy water and a scrubbing brush.
That’s where a pressure washer comes in. These handy tools connect to your hose pipe and squirt water at any cleaning problem. Stubborn and unpleasant stains, from bird dirt to years of neglect, can be lifted from your garden’s hard-wearing surfaces in seconds. With the right attachments, you can also use your pressure washer to hose down cars, bikes and boats.
Best pressure washer overall:
Ava Go P40
Best budget pressure washer:
Kärcher K 2 Classic
Loaded with extras and produced at a cut price, the crossover SUV has overtaken rival cars from US, Japanese and Korean firms
The UK is no stranger to foreign cars. The bestseller lists in recent years have been dominated by the US’s Ford Puma, Japan’s Nissan Qashqai, Korea’s Kia Sportage and occasionally even Tesla’s Model Y.
But in March the top 10 provided a shock: a Chinese car leapt into the lead.
Continue reading...Nine states have a version of voting rights act and 11 more, including several in the south, have introduced bills to protect voters in absence of federal protections
After the US supreme court essentially struck down another major provision of the Voting Rights Act, advocates and Democratic lawmakers have renewed a push in the states to enact their own versions of the landmark civil rights bill to protect voters.
The supreme court ruled this week in Louisiana v Callais, effectively dismantling section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which has been used to ensure minority voters receive fair treatment in drawing districts. The decision weakens Black voters’ power to elect their own representatives and sets off another set of redistricting pushes in an election year.
Continue reading...The Artemis II astronauts joined "CBS Mornings" for a live town hall where they took questions from kids just weeks after returning from their historic moon mission.
JOHN BECKER
Staff Reporter
The university’s philosophy department hosted an event, “Debating Sex: Is Biological Sex Binary?” on Mar. 6, featuring two professors from other academic institutions with opposing views on the binary nature of sex.
In response to the event, the university received backlash from students and registered student organizations (RSOs). Two RSOs, the Lavender Programming Board and Sunrise Newark, hosted a counter-event at the same time in the Center for Intercultural Engagement at Perkins Student Center.
The counter-event featured state Rep. Mara Gorman (D-Newark) as a guest speaker to discuss LGBTQ+ rights in Delaware. Gorman has been representing the 23rd District for the past two years and recently announced her candidacy for state senator in the 8th District, a position currently held by State Sen. David Sokola, who is not seeking re-election.
When asked, Gorman expressed her belief in academic freedom, but also her disdain for the event that the university hosted.
“In terms of hosting the event, I am a believer in academic freedom and freedom of speech,” Gorman said. “So they are entitled to have an event, have anyone who they want to come to campus and also to title it how they would like to, but just because you have that freedom doesn’t mean you should use it in that manner. And I think the name of the event was very unfortunate and triggering and upsetting.”
Emma Abrams, the president of Sunrise Newark and senior environmental and resource economics major, outlined the purpose of the counter-event.
“We didn’t want the narrative to be dominated by bigotry, and by ‘let’s debate trans people’s right to exist,’” Abrams said. “We wanted there to be a space and a counter-narrative for ‘trans people can just exist,’ and queer people can just come and not have to explain themselves.”
Protestors felt that the event should not have been held as a debate, arguing that the existence of intersex, transgender or any LGBTQIA+ individuals should not be considered a debate topic.
“In general, this is not a debate,” Victoria Silva, co-president of the Lavender Programming Board and senior pre-veterinary science major, said. “It’s a conversation that you can have, like absolutely have this conversation. But we’re not debating people’s lives.”
In response to student protests, philosophy department chair Joel Pust spoke at the event before it began and affirmed students’ right to protest, but felt disappointed by the calls to cancel the event. Before the opening speeches, he defended hosting the event, arguing that it was strictly about whether biological sex is binary, not gender.
“The main criticism I’ve seen is that debating this topic is somehow harmful to people,” Pust said in his opening comments. “I should emphasize we’re debating whether biological sex is binary, whether or not that relates to gender or gender identity, and how it would do so is an open question.”
Pust felt the debate was aligned with the responsibilities of the university.
“I think part of the job of a university is to get students to think hard about controversial issues,” Pust said. “I think it’s the job of a university and especially the philosophy department to expose students to a variety of opinions and a variety of arguments.”
The department invited Professor Agustín Fuentes from Princeton University’s anthropology department to argue against the concept of biological sex as a binary.
Fuentes specializes in biological and evolutionary anthropology, biocultural anthropology, multispecies relations, race and racism, sex and gender and human evolution.
During the debate, Fuentes referenced many of his ideas from a book he published in May 2025, “Sex is a Spectrum: The Biological Limits of the Binary,” and used it as a foundation for many of his arguments.
Fuentes expressed his support for the protesters and praised the students who attended the event.
“I’m really happy with the students’ questions, participation and engagement,” Fuentes said. “I think from what I know about the protests, I actually support them and I really would hope that the students here at the University of Delaware continue to think about this stuff, continue to act on this stuff and don’t let this topic sit.”
The department also brought in Professor Tomás Bogardus, a professor of philosophy in the religion and philosophy division of Pepperdine University. Bogardus focuses on topics such as the relationship between the mind and body, the existence of God, whether Christians and Muslims worship the same God, the nature of knowledge and the nature of gender.
During the debate, Bogardus argued using concepts from a book he published in September 2025, “The Nature of the Sexes: Why Biology Matters.”
Bogardus said that he was impressed with the students who attended the event but ambivalent toward any student protests on campus.
“I was not aware there was an alternative event,” Bogardus said. “I wasn’t aware of student protests. Overall, I was impressed with the students who did show up.”
During the question-and-answer portion of the debate, many of the audience members’ questions addressed the biological aspects of the debate, as well as the logic and methodology of Bogardus’ arguments.
At the event’s reception, attendees expressed mixed feelings. However, many felt that the conversation was very civil and of value to them.
Senior art conservation major and anthropology minor Rowan Orenstein felt that students who were protesting the event misunderstood what was going to be debated.
“I know it’s been a controversial topic on campus right now, and I think a lot of that has to do with misunderstanding what it was that’s getting debated,” Orenstein said. “People were upset that it’s, you know, debating student identity, and I’m non-binary. So in that case, I should be mad that they would be debating my identity, but they’re not doing that.”
‘I do believe all of the golfers should be playing’
Harman says rebels should face consequences
Donald Trump has supported the reintroduction of LIV Golf players on to the PGA Tour after the league announced the withdrawal of funding by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF).
The US president said he would love to see top golfers who defected to the LIV circuit playing regularly against the PGA Tour’s best as uncertainty engulfed the breakaway league after the PIF announcement.
Continue reading...Livorno council says residents have complained of foul smell after rise in number of pets
Dog owners in an Italian port city will be required to clean up their pets’ urine from public spaces or face fines of up to €500.
Luca Salvetti, the mayor of Livorno, on the Tuscan coast, introduced the measure after complaints from residents about the smell of dog urine, particularly in parks and children’s play areas.
Continue reading...Agents would not allow Pavel Talankin to carry statuette for Mr Nobody Against Putin on to flight from New York
The Oscar statuette belonging to Pavel Talankin, star and co-director of the Academy award-winning documentary Mr Nobody Against Putin, that went missing after being confiscated by airport officials in New York has been found, according to the airline involved.
Talankin said he lost his Oscar after Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents at New York’s John F Kennedy airport refused to let him bring it on a Lufthansa flight to Germany, claiming it could be used as a weapon.
Continue reading...The Artemis II astronauts said they actually really enjoyed the space food, but it was a familiar candy they enjoyed after splashing down in the Pacific Ocean.
The plumbing issues aboard the Orion capsule became headline news in the early days of the historic Artemis II mission.
Serious espresso drinkers rely on one precise measurement to pull the perfect shot. Here's how to get it right at home.
The scorching heat means parts of the UK could also be warmer than Sydney, Buenos Aires or Tunis
You might expect sunshine in Australia, Tunisia or Argentina, but those staying in the UK are likely to see hotter weather, with some parts of the country expected to reach the high 20s before the bank holiday weekend.
Temperatures in London and East Anglia could reach 27C on Friday, the Met Office said, marking the warmest day of the year so far. The scorching heat means parts of the UK could be warmer than Sydney, Buenos Aires or Tunis, where highs of between 24C to 22C are forecast. Temperatures could also exceed those in Honolulu, the capital of Hawaii, where highs of 26C are predicted.
Continue reading...May 1, 2026 — More than 100 undergraduate students enrolled in the University of California San Diego’s new artificial intelligence major took their first major-specific course, CSE 25: Intro to AI, over winter quarter. The class aims to introduce AI principles that the students will see repeatedly over the next four years, and level the playing field between students who may have taken AI coursework on their own, and students for whom this is all new material.

Trevor Bonjour, a UC San Diego computer science teaching professor and one of the lead faculty in the AI program, teaching the CSE25: Intro to AI course. Photos by David Baillot / Jacobs School of Engineering.
UC San Diego’s undergraduate AI major – the result of more than a decade of growth in AI teaching and research on campus – is designed to prepare computer science students to build the next generation of AI systems, improve the foundations of the AI systems currently in use, and engage students with the ethical questions surrounding these systems and their impact on society.
The AI major resides within the UC San Diego Department of Computer Science and Engineering, with connections across the entire campus, including other academic departments within the Jacobs School of Engineering and with the Halıcıoğlu School of Data Science and Computing.
In this first major-specific course, students gained an understanding of what AI is, and experienced the end-to-end AI pipeline from problem formulation and data gathering to modeling, training, evaluation and deployment. In the hands-on, project-based course, students learned about different ways to train AI models; applied programming tools to interact with AI models; and evaluated the societal and ethical implications of AI. They saw the core ideas of AI in the context of realistic applications, building small systems from scratch to experience the design challenges and mathematical foundations of model design, parameter turning and evaluation.
“The idea is that over the course of the AI major students will see these topics again and again at different levels of depth,” said Trevor Bonjour, a UC San Diego computer science teaching professor who taught CSE 25 and is one of the lead faculty in the AI program. “Learning happens with repetition, so for this Intro to AI course we wanted to ensure that all students were exposed to foundational concepts in modern AI systems, including neural networks, that they can build on in future classes.”
Over the course of 10 weeks, students explore supervised, unsupervised, and reinforcement learning paradigms, ranging from classical linear models such as perceptrons, to neural networks, language models, and Q-learning agents. The class introduced students to key mathematical tools in AI such as probability, linear algebra, and multivariable calculus. Embedded throughout the course are explorations of how bias shows up in the data and deployment of these models.
Bonjour said he was surprised to learn that roughly a quarter of the students had already taken an AI class before, as a summer course or in their high school. The course’s final project — working in a small group to build an AI agent — was designed in such a way that students who did come in with previous experience could develop more advanced AI projects, while students learning these concepts for the first time could work with the scaffolding provided over the quarter to create their own agent. For example, students created an AI agent that could provide a caption for a given image; detect pedestrians in video footage; and teach a computer to play a game like Blackjack.
“Most machine learning courses in CSE are offered at the upper-division level, so most students come in with very different levels of exposure,” said Eric Song, a UC San Diego computer science graduate student and teaching assistant for this Intro to AI course. “Our goal is to introduce these concepts earlier so that every student at least has some familiarity going in.”
For the final project, students submitted a project report in the format of a conference paper. Bonjour said this was also meant to familiarize all students with how computer science and AI research papers are organized, since there is so much research happening in AI and ML right now that students may choose to contribute to in the future.
This Intro to AI course is being taught again in spring quarter for the remainder of the AI major students. It is being taught by Mia Minnes, a teaching professor of computer science, Vice Chair for Undergraduate Education within the UC San Diego Department of Computer Science and Engineering, and another lead faculty in the AI major.
More from HPCwire: UC San Diego Launches Undergraduate AI Major to Meet Rising Student and Industry Demand
Source: Katherine Connor, UCSD
The post UC San Diego Students Get an Intro to AI in First AI Major Class appeared first on HPCwire.
After nearly a decade of testing air fryers of every shape and size, one countertop cooker rises to the top.
This court has impaled one of the most important laws in American history, with disastrous consequences for multiracial democracy
The supreme court justices John Roberts, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito have made it their life’s work to unravel the Voting Rights Act and undo the most effective civil rights legislation in American history.
On Wednesday, they finished the job.
Continue reading...Rusty Hicks concerned that Democrats could crowd each other out in ‘open’ system and hand victory to Republicans
The chair of the California Democratic party says he wants to get rid of the state’s idiosyncratic “open primary”, calling it a failure that risks pitting a crowded field of Democratic candidates against each other to the point where a Republican can be elected governor of one of the bluest states in the US.
“The current system we have does not work,” Rusty Hicks said in an interview. “It needs to be revised or repealed.”
Continue reading...Four students are in critical condition and security guard and suspect also injured after stabbing in Tacoma
Five people were recovering in the hospital on Friday following a mass stabbing incident at a high school in Washington state.
A high school student was charged with multiple counts of first-degree assault after five people were hurt during the stabbing incident on Thursday at a campus in Tacoma.
Continue reading...Washington must be willing to make uncomfortable concessions.
Cities in Florida and California, where home prices soared during the pandemic, saw some of the steepest declines in property values.
Amtrak may ease rules on guns on its trains, sources say. Critics worry that would weaken security even though, authorities say, the accused correspondents' dinner shooter took Amtrak cross-country with his firearms.
Federal telecom regulators can revoke broadcast licenses, but legal experts say the FCC would face a tough road in forcing ABC to go dark.
The Trump administration is proposing wastewater testing to try to ferret out data on illegal drug use in real time, according to a draft of a new drug control strategy obtained by CBS News. It also proposes using AI to track threats.
Minnesota eliminate Denver in Game 6 of series
Knicks smash NBA records in 51-point rout of Hawks
76ers surge in Embiid’s return to force Game 7 v Celtics
Three years after Nikola Jokić led the Denver Nuggets to the NBA championship, the peak looked awfully distant for the team from the Mile High City and the three-time MVP award winner.
Ousted in six games by the Minnesota Timberwolves in their first-round playoff series, the Nuggets trudged into the offseason with plenty of questions to answer about their ability to remain a true title contender in the stacked Western Conference. For the first time in four years, Denver failed to make it to May.
Continue reading...Amid Trump’s unrelenting assault on the rule of law, it is drearily unsurprising to see the ex-FBI director targeted
Consider the following screed: “If any other President had the ability, foresight, or talents necessary, to build this ballroom, which will be one of the greatest, safest, and most secure structures of its kind anywhere in the World, there would never have been a lawsuit. But, because it is DONALD J. TRUMP, a highly successful real estate developer, who has abilities that others don’t … this frivolous and meritless lawsuit was filed. Again, it’s called TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME.”
The rant, with its tantrum of capitalization, has all the trademarks of a typical post from the president’s Truth Social account. But that is not its source. Rather, the tirade appeared in an official legal document filed by the Department of Justice on 27 April seeking a court order that would lift legal barriers to the construction of Trump’s controversial East Wing ballroom.
Continue reading...The so-called "iPhone Ultra" might dodge the problems of other book-style foldable phones with a hybrid iPhone-iPad interface.
How the Iran war is reshaping Saudi strategy: From Hormuz and Houthis to the UAE’s OPEC exit LToremark
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has revealed a key threat to Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 strategy and plans for economic transformation.
The US–Israel war against Iran has presented many challenges for Saudi Arabia, including the Strait of Hormuz closure, a deepening rift with the UAE, and the latter’s exit from the oil cartel OPEC. The war has also given Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, or MBS, pause for thought.
Before MBS, Saudi policy was slow and consensus driven – and largely predictable. The crown prince energized the domestic environment and pursued a far more assertive and, at times, unpredictable foreign policy that got Saudi Arabia into hot water.
However, the Iran war has once again slowed the kingdom’s decision making process as the leadership reassesses its long-term strategy. It is acutely aware that whatever the outcome of the conflict, it will determine the region’s future for at least the next two decades.
Unsurprisingly, Saudi Arabia’s reassessment now centres on the Strait of Hormuz, through which most of its oil exports and other goods pass. Although the kingdom has long recognized its exposure to disruption at this chokepoint, a sustained closure was historically viewed as highly unlikely. The closure has revealed a key vulnerability not only for trade, but also for the success of the country’s Vision 2030 strategy.
Now that Hormuz has been closed once, there will always be the risk that it could happen again. This poses a long term threat to Saudi Arabia’s trade flows and economic transformation plans. Repeated or prolonged disruption would weigh on revenues, investor confidence, and the kingdom’s ability to present itself as a stable hub for trade, logistics and finance. The ambitions of Vision 2030 and its successor frameworks depend on predictable energy – and revenue – flows and a secure maritime environment.
Hence, the kingdom is beginning to reassess its economic geography, reducing its dependence on Hormuz and reorienting policy towards the Red Sea. Projects along Saudi Arabia’s western coastline, including ports, industrial zones and tourism developments, will now become key priorities. The country’s two coastlines give it a significant geographical advantage over its neighbours, which it will look to capitalize on to distinguish itself – especially from the UAE – as the region’s main export and logistics hub.
Its westward shift means the national oil company Saudi Aramco will need to reorient crude exports to the Red Sea or at least build capacity to convey 7 million barrels a day to match pre-war exports. It is currently transporting around 4 million barrels per day of crude by pipeline from east to west and exporting it via the Yanbu terminal on the Red Sea. While current exports are lower, Saudi Arabia is in a stronger position than many of its Gulf neighbours, whose exports remain locked into the Gulf. With oil prices at around $120 per barrel, roughly double pre war levels, Riyadh retains a degree of financial resilience.
However, significant long-term investment will be needed in infrastructure that allows goods – especially oil – to move between the Red Sea and major urban centres across the Gulf if Saudi Arabia is to establish itself as a regional trading hub. Longer timelines and higher costs will be unavoidable, but the structural nature of the Hormuz problem leaves Saudi Arabia with little choice.
But rerouting away from Hormuz will not eliminate risk, only relocate it. Attacks on Red Sea shipping by the Iran-aligned Houthis show that maritime insecurity will become a central constraint on Saudi Arabia’s westward reorientation, not a secondary concern.
The threat of maritime insecurity to its Red Sea ambitions helps explain Saudi Arabia’s reluctance to engage directly in the war against Iran and its lobbying against further escalation. The leadership recognizes that a kinetic response to Iranian strikes would not only increase risks to its energy assets and critical infrastructure but could also draw the Houthis more directly into the conflict. That, in turn, would place Saudi Arabia’s alternative export routes under threat, undermining its essential diversification away from Hormuz.
This also helps explain the different positions taken by Saudi Arabia and the UAE towards the war, and the growing tensions between them. Abu Dhabi has taken a strong line against Iran, with a position much closer to the US and Israel than to its Gulf neighbours. Senior Emirati officials have criticized both the Iranian leadership for striking targets on UAE soil and regional partners for failing to respond more forcefully or show greater support.
Essa Suleiman is accused of stabbing two Jewish men in Golders Green and attacking another over personal dispute in south London
A man has appeared in court charged with the attempted murders of three people during a series of knife attacks in London.
Essa Suleiman is accused of stabbing two Jewish men in Golders Green on Wednesday, having already attacked another man over a personal dispute in south London.
Continue reading...Philip Young changes all pleas to guilty after initially denying charges of making indecent images of children
A former Conservative councillor who admitted nearly 50 offences of drugging, raping and sexually assaulting his former wife has pleaded guilty to additional offences of making indecent images of children.
Philip Young, 49, pleaded guilty in January at Winchester crown court to 11 counts of rape and 11 counts of administering a substance with intent to stupefy his former wife Joanne Young, 48, who has waived her right to anonymity.
Continue reading...The US president has criticised Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, and raised the prospect of pulling US troops from Italy and Spain. Plus, 10 big lessons on ending the fossil fuel era
Good morning.
Donald Trump has threatened to withdraw US troops from Italy and Spain a day after he saying was looking at curtailing the number deployed in Germany.
What has Congress been saying about the war? A senior Democrat in the Senate grilled the US secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, on Thursday, accusing him of failing to give Trump an accurate picture of the war on Iran while resorting to “dangerously exaggerated” statements to create an inaccurate picture of a US military triumph.
What’s the latest on the suspect? The man accused of attempting to assassinate Trump agreed on Thursday to remain in custody while his federal criminal case moves forward.
Continue reading...They're all good smartwatches, but have their own strengths. Let's compare the details.
What’s up everyone,
I’m in a bit of a dilemma and wanted to get some opinions.
I currently have a Onewheel GT that I got in May 2024 and I ride it pretty much daily, and it’s sitting at a little over 4,000 miles now.
I have an opportunity to trade it for a basically brand new Onewheel GT S Series. The catch is it’s literally brand new, still in the box, never turned on, zero miles. But the guy bought it back in September 2024 and it’s just been sitting ever since.
So my questions is would the battery still be in good condition after sitting unused that long?
We did turn it on for the first time recently and it powered up fine. He also charged it and it held a charge, but I don’t know if that really means the battery is still good long-term or not.
Part of me feels like it’s a no-brainer upgrade, but the battery sitting that long has me second guessing.
Appreciate any advice. Thank you!
While Charles and Camilla were on a three-line whip, MPs watched the excruciating discomfort of civil servants
We don’t often get to see senior civil servants out and about in the wild. They are kept away from the public gaze, sat behind a desk trying to persuade their ministers not to do something too catastrophic to their government department. Quite why they have been been made a knight or a dame just for doing their jobs is one of life’s mysteries. The rest of us have to make do with the occasional email from the boss. But in the last week, two top civil servants have been reluctantly made to give evidence on Keir Starmer’s decision to appoint Peter Mandelson as US ambassador before the foreign affairs select committee and very instructive it has been, too. Not least to see how much they dislike any extra attention from the public. Their obvious discomfort at being held to account was excruciating to watch.
Continue reading...Coventry-supporting Japanese has used his rebel streak and risk-taking instincts to spur on Oliver Bearman this season
There is no one quite like Ayao Komatsu in Formula One. Haas’s Japanese team principal, a rugby-playing Coventry City fan who left his home country to escape the constraints of conformity, is F1’s rebel without a pause.
As Haas enter their first home race of the season in Miami this weekend, they are on a roll. Fourth place in the championship is the highest position held by a US team after three races in the sport’s history and Komatsu has engineered it in a sport he once viewed as his great escape.
Continue reading...New law proposes up to 20 years in prison for promoting ‘foreign interests’, and restricts those who work with or are funded by overseas partners
Ugandan opposition figures, human rights organisations and legal experts have condemned a sweeping bill that proposes up to 20 years in prison for promoting “foreign interests”, and imposes restrictions on a broad range of people and organisations that work with or receive funding from overseas partners.
The protection of sovereignty bill 2026 is being fast tracked through parliament, with debate expected to conclude before the presidential swearing-in on 12 May.
Continue reading...The summer will probably come too soon, but if Mauricio Pochettino does move to bring an upstart, Zavier Gozo and Julian Hall are among the contenders
With the US roster scheduled to drop on 26 May, it is crunch time for Mauricio Pochettino to finalize his World Cup squad.
There were few glowing segments of footage for him to clip from the team’s feckless final pre-World Cup camp in March, with losses to Belgium and Portugal by a 7-2 combined scoreline. On the club side, the only position group teeming with in-form options is central midfield. Matt Turner’s MLS form is far stronger than Matt Freese’s, but his sole international start in the last 14 games ended 5-2. Christian Pulisic is goalless in 18 games for club and country. Gio Reyna remains a bit-part player; Noahkai Banks has yet to commit his international future.
Continue reading...The Artemis missions are paving the way to civilizational decisions. It’s time to ask not just what we can do – but whether we should do it
This month’s splashdown of Artemis II was rightly celebrated as a technical achievement. Four astronauts traveled farther from Earth than any humans in history and returned safely. It is an extraordinary thing to send people into deep space and bring them home again. Nobody should deny that.
But the real significance of Artemis II lies elsewhere.
Continue reading...Republican-controlled states cite legal grounds of DoJ’s request, concerns over data security and privacy laws
The Department of Justice’s quest to secure sensitive voter data is finding opposition in typically friendly territory – several staunchly conservative states.
As of 1 April, the Department of Justice (DoJ) has sued 30 states and the District of Columbia for failing to turn over full copies of their voter registration lists. The push has hit repeated roadblocks, including legal defeats in California, Massachusetts, Oregon, Rhode Island, Arizona and Michigan. But the DoJ is also running into obstacles in some of America’s reddest states, with Trump strongholds Utah, West Virginia, Georgia, Kentucky and Idaho all refusing to hand over the requested data.
Continue reading...Anthony Odiong is accused of sexually abusing three spiritually vulnerable female congregants in Waco
Plans are under way for the Roman Catholic archdiocese of New Orleans to remove a priest’s name from a chapel he helped build outside the city as a criminal trial looms in Texas for the clergyman on criminal charges that he sexually abused three spiritually vulnerable female congregants there, the Guardian has learned.
Anthony Odiong had reportedly raised $600,000 to build and then open Our Lady of Guadalupe Healing Chapel in Luling, Louisiana, in 2020, while he was the pastor at an adjacent church, years before authorities criminally charged him in Texas, where he had also previously ministered. His name has since appeared on various inscriptions outside the chapel and on the structure itself even as the criminal case against him has progressed toward trial.
Continue reading...After Friday, your next chance to see two full moons in one month won't come until December 2028.
fjo3 shares a report from the Washington Post: Surging concentrations of carbon in the atmosphere, caused largely by burning fossil fuels, have produced potent changes in the way plants grow -- from increasing their sugar content to depleting essential nutrients like zinc. Experts fear the degradation of Earth's food supply will cause an epidemic of hidden hunger, in which even people who consume enough calories won't get the nutrients they need to thrive. "The diets we eat today have less nutritional density than what our grandparents ate, even if we eat exactly the same thing," said Kristie Ebi, a professor at the University of Washington's Center for Health and the Global Environment. People in wealthy countries with strong health care systems will have many tools to cope with the change, experts said. But for the world's poorest and most vulnerable, the consequences could be devastating. One study concluded that by the middle of the century the phenomenon could put more than a billion additional women and children at risk of iron-deficiency anemia -- a condition that can cause pregnancy complications, developmental problems and even death. Meanwhile, some 2 billion people across the globe who already suffer from some form of nutrient shortage could see their health problems grow even worse. "The scale of the problem is huge," Ebi said. Plants depend on carbon dioxide to perform photosynthesis -- but that doesn't mean they grow better when there's more carbon in the air, scientists say. A sweeping survey of changes among 32 compounds in 43 crops found that nearly every plant that humans eat is harmed by rising CO2 levels. [...] For the past several years, [Sterre F. ter Haar, an environmental scientist at Leiden University in the Netherlands and lead author of the survey] and her colleagues have worked to compile a database of all existing research on nutrient changes linked to rising CO2. They tracked down hundreds of studies, ranging from tightly controlled lab experiments to sprawling global analyses of real-world crops. Next the team used their dataset to calculate the nutritional densities of each crop under different carbon dioxide levels -- and to predict how their composition could continue to shift in the future. On average, they found, nutrients have already decreased by an average 3.2 percent across all plants since the late 1980s, when the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was about 350 parts per million. That figure may seem small, ter Haar said, but with so much of the world already living on the brink of nutrient insufficiency, a drop of just a few percentage points has the potential to push millions of additional people into a health crisis. Researchers are still trying to understand the exact causes of this change. Extra CO2 can make plants grow faster and produce more carbohydrates, but without a matching increase in mineral uptake, nutrients like zinc, iron, and protein become diluted. Higher CO2 also causes plants to open their leaf pores less often, reducing the amount of water -- and dissolved minerals -- they absorb through their roots. At the same time, higher temperatures can further disrupt soil chemistry, affecting how plants take up nutrients and, in some cases, increasing their absorption of harmful substances like arsenic.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The suspect, a juvenile, was detained at the scene, police said.
Gaston Browne is on course to win 15 of the 17 seats in parliament after calling snap election
Gaston Browne, the prime minister of Antigua and Barbuda, is set to win a fourth term in the country’s snap general election with preliminary results showing his party on course to win 15 of the 17 seats in parliament.
Addressing supporters early on Friday morning, Browne said: “You have spoken, you have spoken clearly. You have indicated that the Antigua and Barbuda Labour party (ABLP) is the best institution to run this country.”
Continue reading...Police arrested a man for allegedly incinerating his dead wife at the zoo where he worked, officials said, following the discovery of human remains.
Tina Fey's The Four Seasons returns, while the release of Remarkably Bright Creatures, Lord of the Flies and more are new on Netflix.
A naval coalition in the Strait of Hormuz should learn these lessons Expert comment thilton.drupal
The proposed UK-France coalition can learn from anti-piracy missions off Somalia and in the Strait of Malacca to restore confidence for shipping in the Strait of Hormuz in the long term.
On 21 April, the US announced a ceasefire extension with Iran. Since then, however, the US has maintained a blockade over the Strait of Hormuz and boarded a tanker carrying Iranian oil in the Indian Ocean. Iran had also seized two container ships that were transiting the Strait and continues to reject the US presence there. As such, the Strait of Hormuz remains neither open nor secure and conflict at sea continues.
In response, the UK and France have announced that they are assembling an international naval coalition to protect shipping through Hormuz ‘as soon as conditions permit following a sustainable ceasefire agreement.’ The mission ‘will be independent and strictly defensive’ and will not be seeking to reopen the Strait of Hormuz in a conventional military sense. Indeed, the Strait cannot be opened by force and requires more than ad hoc security measures in the long term.
Instead, the purpose of the proposed UK-France coalition is to deter future conflict and restore confidence about the safety of transit to the insurance and shipping industries. It will face the challenge of managing persistent insecurity in the Strait, whether in the context of a likely fragile US-Iran ceasefire agreement or amid continued ‘grey zone’ confrontation.
It is not yet clear who will join the UK and France’s final coalition, but 51 countries attended the summit they jointly convened in April. The US is also reportedly seeking to establish a separate US-led maritime coalition with international involvement. It remains unclear which plans will come to fruition in a changing situation.
The success of any coalition seeking to maintain open shipping lanes under the potential threat of renewed violence in the Gulf will depend less on military might and more on how it is designed. From combined task forces to coalitions, previous maritime missions offer key lessons for the creation of a naval coalition in the Strait of Hormuz.
Efforts to combat piracy off the Horn of Africa involved several overlapping missions. These included the EU’s Naval Force Somalia – Operation Atalanta, the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) centre, the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia, and the UN-mandated Combined Maritime Taskforce 150 (a 34-nation coalition).
These missions succeeded in large part because there was a clear division of responsibilities between each group and among the countries within them. For example, some groups of countries were responsible for directly interdicting pirate ships. Others were responsible for conducting surveillance, supporting regional capacity building efforts or developing legal frameworks for law enforcement.
For the Strait of Hormuz, policymakers should consider dividing responsibilities among subordinate task groups. These could include a ship escort group, a mine countermeasures group and a maritime domain awareness group.
Compartmentalizing task groups also allows for escalation management with Iran. A major lesson from counter-piracy efforts in Somalia was that the use of force should be limited, discriminate and tied to specific behaviours: in this case, interference with commercial shipping.
International naval forces frequently confronted pirates but managed to avoid escalation and retain Somalia’s support through their use of limited force. This reflected rules of engagement that were designed to deter attacks without signalling a broader campaign to destroy any particular regime or group.
In the Strait of Hormuz, limits on use of force would signal limited intent to a potentially hostile country like Iran. The goal of a naval coalition should not be to defeat Iran militarily but to alter its cost-benefit analysis by making any attacks on shipping consistently ineffective and increasingly escalatory.
At present it is relatively inexpensive for Iran to threaten to disrupt traffic in the Strait, while it is costly for any single country to guarantee security through naval escorts. A multinational coalition redistributes this burden by pooling naval assets and sharing operational costs. A collective force can outweigh Iran’s capacity for disruption and keep individual contributions manageable.
One of the most effective tools developed for Somalia was the use of structured transit corridors and group escorts. The International Recommended Transit Corridor (IRTC) in the Gulf of Aden organized vessels by speed and grouped them into monitored convoys which reduced their vulnerability by allowing naval forces to target their protect efforts.
A Hormuz coalition should adopt a similar system. High-value or high-risk vessels like oil tankers will need a dedicated naval escort, while rapid-response forces could provide protection to lower-risk traffic in emergencies. Scheduled transit windows would further reduce uncertainty, allowing ships to move in predictable patterns that are easier to defend and insure.
This system balances security and scale. It avoids the challenge of overextension and heavy-handed militarization while still providing meaningful protection where it is most needed. A tiered escort system would allow the coalition to secure the Hormuz without attempting to control every meter.
Somalia’s counter-piracy mission depended on foreign navies. As a result, when international attention dropped, piracy returned. By contrast, the Malacca Strait Patrols – designed to protect the Strait of Malacca from piracy – are explicitly led by the Strait’s littoral states: Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.
Since being formally established in 2006, the Malacca Strait Patrols have successfully protected shipping in the region, demonstrating the effectiveness of regional security systems. More importantly, four-way cooperation has also prevented any one country from taking advantage of this waterway.
Move over, Netflix -- Peacock's got the epic movies you're looking for.
The Mets have the second-highest payroll in baseball. They also own the worst record in the major leagues
A franchise once known as baseball’s lovable losers are, for the moment, merely baseball’s most expensive losers.
The New York Mets wrapped a shocking April by losing 5-4 to the Washington Nationals on Thursday, dropping to a major league-worst 10-21 and burrowing even deeper into last place in the National League East – making them somehow even worse than their old rivals the Philadelphia Phillies, another wealthy-yet-terrible team. The Mets will (probably) not play at their current 52-win pace all year but their sordid first month has done immense damage to their postseason hopes. Their chances at October baseball were 87% on Opening Day, according to the analytics site FanGraphs. They are now less than three-in-10 to make the playoffs, and that projection seems pretty generous for a team who have lost 17 of their last 20 games.
Continue reading...Something like the demand by Donald Trump that news organizations publish interviews in full may seem innocuous, but they have serious implications
Shortly after sitting for a televised interview with CBS News in January, Donald Trump conveyed a threat through his press secretary: air the interview in full, or face a lawsuit.
The warning may have been delivered offhand, but its implications are being taken seriously inside newsrooms.
Continue reading...Esther Cohen was removed as Greene county’s poet laureate just weeks after the appointment. It’s ‘emblematic of the assault on the arts writ large’, some say
In 1985, just before the poet Esther Cohen, her husband, and two friends bought a house in Greene county, their realtor warned them not to: it was too “wild” and different from what they knew. To Cohen, that sounded ideal; she has lived in the same rent-stabilized Upper West Side apartment since 1973 and loves the city but longed for an escape from her bubble of leftist and liberal Jewish urbanites.
Greene county is 120 miles north of New York City. The birthplace of the Hudson River School of Art, it has waterfalls and majestic views of the river and the Catskill Mountains – the perfect place for a writer to find quiet in the summertime and on other occasions throughout the year.
She made local friends quickly. “I went to the farmer’s wife at the farm stand nearby and said, ‘I want to have a potluck. Will you come and host it with me?’” Cohen said in an interview in her Upper West Side apartment. She’s been hosting big summer potlucks ever since for a “big mix” of neighbors: “Everyone comes who is around. And everyone is welcome.”
In January, Create, a local arts council partly funded by the Greene county legislature, appointed Cohen the county’s first-ever poet laureate. She recalls thinking Greene county, with its overwhelmingly Republican legislature, might not want to be represented by a Jewish transplant from New York City. But she was encouraged by community members to apply and was delighted when she won. She signed an agreement with Create and asked that the ceremony in her honor take place in April, as part of National Poetry Month. As laureate, her job would be to promote poetry in the county and participate in local literary events. She would earn an annual $1,000 honorarium.
Continue reading...
When President Donald Trump attempted to overturn the 2020 election, the institutional guardrails of American democracy held — but just barely.
If faced with the same tests today, those guardrails and the people who held the line would largely be missing, a ProPublica examination found.
At least 75 career officials who once held roles at federal agencies related to election integrity and safety are gone. Two dozen appointees — including many who either actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote or are associates of such people — have been hired to replace them. And once-fringe actors now have access to vast powers.
As the midterms approach, current and former government officials and election security experts expressed concerns that Trump appointees who’ve espoused debunked conspiracy theories about balloting are now in positions to control the narrative around the vote’s soundness.
It’s hard to debunk false claims “coming with the seal of the federal government,” said Derek Tisler, counsel and manager with the Brennan Center for Justice’s elections and government program. “I certainly worry what damage that could do to voters’ confidence.”
Here are some of the key things you should know about the Trump administration’s efforts to, as the president said, “take over” the midterms. Read the full investigation here.
Following his defeat in the 2020 election, Trump pushed for federal officials to uncover proof that he had, in fact, beaten Joe Biden at the polls. Election cybersecurity experts with the Department of Homeland Security relayed to Attorney General William Barr that the election fraud claims that they looked into were false. Barr then told the president what he didn’t want to hear: The election had not been hacked.
Barr was one of many federal officials — most of them Trump appointees — who refused to bend to the president’s demands, which only intensified in the weeks leading up to Jan. 6, 2021. Despite the violent uprising at the Capitol on that day, the election results held firm.
Since the start of his second term, Trump and his appointees have made significant changes at federal agencies tasked with helping to safeguard elections. In all, at least 75 career officials who’d played important roles in elections work at DHS, the Department of Justice and other agencies have left, been fired or been reassigned, ProPublica found.
In their place are roughly two dozen people Trump has installed in positions that could affect elections. Ten of them actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote, and the rest are associates of those people. In some cases, ProPublica found, officials have been hired from activist groups that are pillars of the election-denial movement.
Officials at DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency had provided research to the first Trump White House that disproved many theories claiming that the 2020 election had been hacked. CISA also played a crucial part in publicly countering these claims by producing a “Rumor Control” website to rebut them.
Then, only weeks into Trump’s second term, DHS leadership put employees focused on countering disinformation and helping safeguard elections on leave. They also froze CISA’s other election security work, which included assessing local election offices for physical and cybersecurity risks. Eventually, all CISA employees specializing in elections were fired or transferred.
A DHS spokesperson told ProPublica that the changes at CISA were in response to “a ballooning budget concealing a dangerous departure from its statutory mission,” which included “electioneering instead of defending America’s critical infrastructure.”
FBI Director Kash Patel dismantled the agency’s public corruption team, which had previously been deployed to help monitor possible criminal activity on Election Day. The Foreign Influence Task Force, which aimed to combat foreign influence in U.S. politics, was also disbanded.
(An FBI spokesperson said the bureau “remains committed to detecting and countering foreign influence efforts by adversarial nations.”)
The voting section of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division had enforced federal laws that protect voting rights, particularly those that combat racial discrimination. But now, nearly all of the section’s roughly 30 career lawyers have resigned or been moved. Trump then filled the section with conservative lawyers, including at least four who participated in challenging the 2020 vote or have worked with people who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election.
In the summer of 2025, after the Trump administration had forced out most of the career specialists, a small group of political appointees — which once called itself “Team America,” according to sources familiar with the matter — began convening at DHS headquarters, looking for federal levers it could pull to realize a March 2025 executive order, in which Trump tried to exert greater federal control over aspects of voting.
Among the core members of the group was David Harvilicz, a DHS assistant secretary tasked with overseeing the security of election infrastructure, including voting machines, and three of his top staffers. As ProPublica has reported, Harvilicz co-founded an AI company with an architect of Trump’s claims about election hacking in Michigan.
Heather Honey, who serves under Harvilicz in a newly created position focused on elections, is a source of the false claim that more ballots were cast in Pennsylvania than there were voters in the 2020 presidential election — a claim Trump cited on the morning of Jan. 6, 2021.
At least 11 administration appointees, including Honey, have ties to the Election Integrity Network, a conservative grassroots organization led by Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who tried to help Trump overturn the 2020 election. Since moving into government, Honey has maintained close ties to Mitchell’s organization, and she and at least two other federal officials have given its members private briefings.
The DOJ has been demanding that states turn over confidential voter roll information, and it has sued around 30 states for this data.
Meanwhile, DHS has urged states to upload their voter rolls to its tool, called the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements system.
The goal in both efforts has been to find noncitizens on the voter rolls. But the SAVE tool has come up short, often identifying citizens as noncitizens, as ProPublica has reported, and officials have faced other roadblocks with its use.
More recently, according to two people familiar with the matter, Team America has worked to harness a more powerful tool used by another branch of DHS, Homeland Security Investigations, to increase its ability to search for noncitizen voters and bring criminal charges against them.
In response to questions sent to DHS, Harvilicz and Honey, a DHS spokesperson disputed that they were seeking to use the department’s powers to advantage Trump. In response to questions about their ties to the election denial movement, the spokesperson wrote, “To meet the diverse and evolving challenges the Department faces, we hire experts with diverse backgrounds who go through a rigorous vetting process.”
Attorney Kurt Olsen once worked to try to overturn Trump’s 2020 loss in court and was later sanctioned by judges for making baseless allegations about Arizona elections. He is now Trump’s director of election security and integrity and is the driving force behind the January raid of the election center in Fulton County, Georgia.
Toward the end of 2025, Olsen flew to Georgia to meet with Paul Brown, the head of the FBI’s Atlanta field office, according to people familiar with the matter. Olsen wanted the FBI to seize ballots from the Democratic stronghold, and he gave Brown a report he claimed would justify the extraordinary action. Brown’s team submitted an affidavit to superiors at the DOJ that did not make a strong enough case to move forward with what Olsen wanted. Afterward, Brown was given a choice: retire or be moved to a new office. Brown retired. The raid went forward under his replacement, based on an affidavit that cited information from the report Olsen provided to Brown.
Olsen did not respond to requests for comment.
An FBI spokesperson said that Brown “elected to retire” and that its “work in the election security space is entirely consistent with the law.”
In the months following Trump’s return to office, the DOJ’s Public Integrity Section, which had been responsible for making sure the department’s inquiries weren’t improperly influenced by politics, was eviscerated. Resignations, firings and transfers reduced the 36-person section to two.
Multiple former lawyers for the section said they likely would have tried to block the Fulton County investigation because it lacked strong evidence, had a clear political slant and went against department directives that actions should not be taken “for the purpose of giving an advantage or disadvantage to any candidate or political party.”
John Keller was principal deputy chief of the section from 2020 to 2025 and was acting chief when he resigned in early 2025. He worries that allegations of irregularities in the upcoming election will be handled on a partisan basis.
“Without that review and without apolitical, objective, honest brokers involved in the process, there is a much greater risk for intentional manipulation or inadvertent interference,” Keller said.
The post 8 Things You Should Know About Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections appeared first on ProPublica.
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Why Should Delaware Care?
Plans to demolish a shuttered elementary school and build affordable housing in Southbridge, one of Wilmington’s oldest and most historic neighborhoods, are underway. But whether the final sales prices of the homes will be affordable for residents of the working-class neighborhood is uncertain.
In 2024, Wilmington and state officials launched a long-term plan to turn Elbert-Palmer, a former-elementary school in the city’s Southbridge neighborhood, into affordable housing.
Two years later, city officials say they remain committed to the plan, but as they move forward with finding a contractor to build 30 townhomes, it remains to be seen what the final sale prices will be.
In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, Bud Freel, director of the Wilmington Land Bank, which is leading the project, estimated the cost to build each of the 30 houses at more than $300,000.
Freel said government dollars will allow the Land Bank – which is charged with redeveloping properties in the city – to sell the houses for less than the development cost. But the final listing price will depend on several factors, including the number of subsidies that officials are ultimately able to secure, and whether the city can reduce construction costs through its forthcoming building contract.
“As we sit here today, I cannot give you a number on what we’re going to be able to list these houses for,” Freel said.
There is also no set definition of “affordable” housing, he said, noting that multiple factors could be used for consideration, including the area’s income, the amount of down payment a buyer can put down, and the local housing market.
“There’s a number of things you look at, but there’s no set formula,” Freel said.
Asked about Freel’s comments, Caroline Klinger, a spokeswoman for Wilmington Mayor John Carney, said city officials cannot determine a price range yet because affordability will depend on buyers’ incomes.

“It would be premature to put out a number that would not apply to all buyers, considering the different makeup of household income when determining affordability,” Klinger said in an emailed statement to Spotlight Delaware.
Still, Klinger also noted that because the project uses federal COVID-era relief dollars, “it must meet a standard set by the federal government for affordable housing.”
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development states that affordable housing “is generally defined as housing on which the occupant is paying no more than 30% of gross income for housing costs, including utilities.”
The median household income in the city of Wilmington is $58,671, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
According to Zillow, current homes for sale in the Southbridge area range between $129,000 and $270,000, while those located in the adjacent Christina Landing neighborhood can sell for $400,000 and above.
For residents of the Southbridge neighborhood, the redevelopment of the school brings with it mixed feelings.
Constructed in 1928, the school stood in the heart of the majority-Black neighborhood that’s deeply entrenched in political and civil rights history, stretching back to Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Today the property is simply an empty field with only a skeleton of a foundation marking where the school once stood.

On Thursday, one resident, who said he lived in the area his entire life, called the Elbert-Palmer school the only monument that existed within the working-class neighborhood.
Two years ago, residents expressed similar sentiments, with some telling Spotlight Delaware that the demolition of the school would take a piece of the neighborhood’s history away. Many also felt that the demolition and housing decision was made without sufficiently engaging the community.
“This school meant so much to Southbridge,” Rich King, another lifelong Southbridge resident, said then.
In December 2024, the Christina School District Board of Education transferred the school’s property to the Wilmington Land Bank.
As part of the deal, the state allocated $1.2 million for the demolition of the school and any related sitework. The Land Bank then received an additional $3 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding for the project.
More than $2 million of that funding will go toward subsidizing the homes, Freel said. He added that he is also working to secure an additional $500,000 from New Castle County — money that was originally slated for the Land Bank to work on the city’s West Side — in an effort to redirect those funds to the Elbert-Palmer project and further support the subsidies.
Affordable housing has been a hot topic in Wilmington, especially after Mayor John Carney committed to creating a $20 million fund program to incentivize the construction of new housing in his budget address last month.
None of that $20 million would fund the Elbert-Palmer project, according to city officials.
Since the redevelopment plans have been underway, Freel and city councilwoman Michelle Harlee, who represents the area, said they haven’t heard concerns regarding the project.
Freel also set up a working group – made up of neighborhood organizations and individuals such as Rep. Frank Cooke (D-New Castle) – to discuss the project and provide feedback.

According to Freel, the initial plan for the site was to create 20 townhomes, leaving space for a new neighborhood park. But after hearing from the Southbridge Civic Association, he said community members preferred to have more housing.
“They didn’t feel they needed another park. They felt housing was more important. So that’s how we ended up with 30,” Freel said.
Each unit, under the updated plan, will be 1,500 square feet, with three bedrooms and one and a half bathrooms. Each unit will also have a porch, backyard space, and a personal driveway.
In order to prepare residents who live in the area to be able to purchase the new homes, the Neighborhood House, a housing nonprofit, is also working to provide housing counseling for those interested in purchasing the homes when they go up for sale.
The post Wilmington moves forward with affordable townhouse project but final prices uncertain appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Analysis finds real wages fell 12% since 2019, with inequality widening in the US beyond global levels
CEO pay increased 20 times faster than worker pay around the world in 2025, according to a new analysis from Oxfam and the International Trade Union Confederation, the world’s largest trade union federation.
When adjusted for inflation, global worker pay declined 12% between 2019 and 2025, the equivalent of 108 days of free work during that time period. In comparison, CEO compensation increased by 54% between 2019 and 2025.
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Why Should Delaware Care?
Substantial funding from the state and county governments is directed to volunteer companies across the state every year. Recent findings of tens of thousands of dollars of in misused funds and a lack of formal bookkeeping by the Marydel Volunteer Fire Company are raising questions about government oversight of fire companies’ finances.
A state audit investigating fraud within the volunteer fire company of a small, unincorporated town along the Delaware-Maryland border revealed tens of thousands of dollars of unaccounted spending. It also raised concerns among elected officials about lacking oversight for fire companies across the state.
In a report detailing the investigation, which looked into the Marydel Volunteer Fire Company’s spending between fiscal years 2021 and 2023, State Auditor Lydia York recommended a number of new regulatory and oversight measures be implemented by both the Marydel VFC and the State Fire Commission, which supervises the state’s roughly 60 volunteer fire companies.
In her report, York outlined the lack of clear oversight for volunteer companies across Delaware, a gap that leaves the more than $60 million they receive annually from the state largely unchecked, she said.
“Volunteer fire service is noble, and it has a rich cultural history,” York told Spotlight Delaware. “But the number of dollars that are involved now have gotten to the point where we really need to ask more questions about what they’re doing.”
York’s audit, released on Tuesday, is the second time the company has been investigated in the past 12 years.
A 2014 audit found a similar dearth of spending documentation, including $13,000 paid from the company account to the fire chief’s personal catering business.
And while members of the Marydel fire company are pointing fingers at one another in the wake of the most recent audit’s findings, state leaders say the report raises questions about how Delaware funds its fire companies, and the way oversight functions at both the county and state level.
All fire companies in the state are volunteer-run except for the Wilmington Fire Department, which has paid staff. The volunteer companies are funded through a mix of state grant-in-aid money and some other state funding sources, like a tax from the Department of Insurance, and county funding.
The state invested roughly $67 million, or an average of $1 million per company, into the volunteer fire companies last year, York said.
The unique geography of Marydel makes its fire company funding more complicated. Still, the results of the audit were clear: “Bad behavior” and a lack of internal controls within the fire company ranks, York said.
The Marydel Fire Company is named for the Kent County town it serves, which straddles the Delaware-Maryland border. The Maryland side is an incorporated town of about 170 residents, while Delaware’s portion is unincorporated and home to roughly 1,350 residents.
The fire company receives funding each year from the county and state in both Maryland and Delaware.
The recent audit looked only at the funding from the Delaware side. Nonetheless, York said her office found that Maryland has a more stringent process for ensuring funding oversight on the dollars it provides to fire companies.
The audit substantiated allegations of financial misconduct by the fire company’s president, Randy Barr, and treasurer, Les States, between the 2021-2023 fiscal years.
Barr and States are no longer in leadership roles at the fire company, according to other members of the organization and the auditor’s office. Buffy Madden, who was found to have misused tens of thousands of dollars of the fire company’s money in the 2014 audit, is now in charge of the organization again, they said.
The investigation determined that Barr spent nearly $29,000 on the fire company credit card at a warehouse retail store, $13,000 on food service distributors and $10,800 on hotels between July 2020 and June 2023.
The audit also found that Barr and States reported raising hundreds of thousands dollars from company fundraisers, like fees from renting out the fire hall. But there was no evidence of them depositing those funds into company accounts, or doing any organized bookkeeping of finances.

The Marydel fire company received about $750,000 in state funding from Delaware in 2022 and 2023, in addition to funding from Kent County, the state of Maryland and Caroline County, Md.
The company reported surpluses of nearly $78,000 in 2022 and nearly $200,000 in 2023, according to its nonprofit tax forms submitted for those years.
The lack of formal budgeting and bookkeeping revealed in the audit, York said, is a key point she implores the fire company to change in its policies moving forward.
“We want people to get better at their accounting systems,” she said. “We would suggest, quite frankly, a paper system can get you there.”
While the audit report outlined a number of recommendations for the fire department to implement, it remains unclear how fire company leadership plans to proceed, as they question the validity of the findings and blame one another for the situation.
Robert Helmer and Rob Barnes told Spotlight Delaware they used to be a part of the company’s leadership, but were ousted due to disputes with other members. They also said they were the whistleblowers to the state auditor in late 2024 about the recent financial mismanagement.
Barnes said the company should have implemented better safeguards after the 2014 audit to prevent certain people from getting too much power, or abusing company funds, but he believes that the company not taking the previous audit seriously led to the current situation.
“Everything [the state] told them to do in that audit, they didn’t do,” Barnes said. “Now you’ve got this mess.”
Barr, the president who was found to have misused company funds in the recent audit, wrote in a message to Spotlight Delaware that he “has not stolen anything from the department,” and would attribute the “allegations” to other members of the fire company trying to retaliate against him.
Barr also said he is in the process of filing a lawsuit against the fire company.
Madden, the current fire chief — who also is the chief accused in the 2014 audit — declined to comment on the investigation and current state of the fire company.
A handful of community members described to Spotlight Delaware their experiences with the fire company, both positive and negative.

State Sen. Dave Lawson (R-Marydel) had a different assessment of the situation.
Lawson said he has not had a chance to fully read the recently released audit, but he considers the 2014 audit to have been simply a reflection of internal politics within the fire company – its findings were “much ado about nothing,” he said.
“The volunteer fire companies are the backbone of the state when it comes to community involvement, community effort, and saving the community,” he added.
As the volunteer fire company system currently exists, there is limited oversight at the county and state levels. But some elected officials say they want that to change.
A 2016 legislative task force looked at the financial management procedures of volunteer fire companies, in response to findings that some had embezzled hundreds of thousands of dollars in recent years.
As a result of the task force, the General Assembly passed legislation in 2017 empowering the State Fire Commission to oversee fire companies’ required audits more directly. If companies did not complete their audit requirements, the state treasurer could withhold grant-in-aid funding from the company, the law says.
However, York said, the state treasurer has not taken advantage of that mechanism, because the legislation has “very few absolutes,” and the state has been hesitant to encroach on the independence of fire companies.
Now, though, she said there is a sense the Marydel controversy has brought a need for more oversight to the attention of the fire commission and state lawmakers.
Lawson said he believes the investigative arm of the State Fire Commission, which has only been around a couple of years, is still figuring out its responsibilities and jurisdiction in “unchartered territories,” so it will take some time for the department to work in full force.
Bob Scott, vice president of the Kent County Levy Court and a longtime volunteer firefighter in Houston, said the county government has also been reconsidering how it oversees the money it provides to fire companies.
As the current system functions, Scott said, the Levy Court bases its funding decisions on the financial report the fire companies send to the state fire commission.
“Naturally,” Scott added, “we don’t want to give taxpayers’ money to departments that aren’t able to be accountable for their funding.”
Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.
The post Marydel Fire Co. audit raises questions about state oversight appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
The Washington Post asked more than a dozen admissions experts what’s most important when choosing a college. Can you guess which schools these three students chose (and why)?
The White House Correspondents’ Dinner last weekend became the site of the third failed attempt to assassinate President Donald Trump. “I remember the feeling was very similar to when it was clear that the House had been invaded on January 6, 2021,” Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., who was in attendance, tells The Intercept Briefing. “Everybody was afraid that somebody had come in with an AR-15 or something like that.”
This week on the podcast, host Akela Lacy speaks to Raskin about his experience at the dinner and later being asked by CNN’s Dana Bash about whether he’s thinking twice about his “heated rhetoric” toward Trump. “It was curious that, in the wake of this terrible episode, that she would try to equate the way that Democrats talk and the way that President Trump talks,” says Raskin. “He calls people crazy, insane. He calls people evil, wicked. He will buttonhole reporters and tell them that they’re stupid, they’re ugly. … But we try to keep it at the level of policies and their actions.” Some examples, which Raskin discusses, is his forthcoming investigation into Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner’s role in the administration and conflicts of interest, and his fight in Congress to stop the reauthorization of warrantless surveillance on Americans.
After this latest assassination attempt on Trump’s life, claims that it was staged flooded the internet, from comments section to social media posts to videos of influencers dissecting alleged evidence.
“We are so conditioned to distrust what we are being told by authorities that people immediately began concocting conspiracy theories about it even before we even knew what had happened. Whether it was a shooting or just dishes breaking,” says journalist Mike Rothschild. He’s the author of “The Storm is Upon Us,” the first complete book on the QAnon conspiracy movement, and more recently, a 200-year history of conspiracy theories called “Jewish Space Lasers.”
Rothschild joins Lacy to unpack the growing world of conspiracy theories that question whether the multiple assassination attempts against Trump were staged. They also dive into other conspiracy theories currently capturing the public imagination, such as the dead and missing scientists and a wildfire in Georgia. “This is one of our more fun and disturbing interviews,” says Lacy.
For more, listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.
Akela Lacy: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter for The Intercept.
Katherine Krueger: And I’m Katherine Krueger, the Voices editor at The Intercept.
AL: Katherine, do you want to tell our listeners a little bit about what Voices is before we jump into the show today?
KK: Voices is basically The Intercept’s op-ed section we run. Things that are more narrative, things that are a little more first-person-driven, things that advocate for a specific point of view.
AL: An Intercept editorial board, if you will.
KK: Yes, I’m a one-woman editorial board. [Laughs.]
AL: Speaking of opinions on the news of the day, I am going to throw several topics at you. [Laughs.]
KK: OK. Hit me.
AL: On Thursday morning, news broke that Janet Mills is dropping out of the Maine Senate race. Katherine, what was your reaction to seeing that?
KK: So Janet Mills is the current governor of Maine, former attorney general, running against Graham Platner in the Democratic primary to be the next senator of Maine.
She was neck and neck with the upstart, insurgent, more-left candidate Graham Platner, who has certainly had his share of controversies during this race. But my jaw dropped when I saw the news that she was dropping out. It feels like all polling that I had seen was that her and Platner were pretty close in the polls.
In a statement she put out, she’s blaming a lack of money for not continuing the race, which is also strange to me because she had all of the backing of the Democratic Party. No one at DNC national was pulling for Platner.
AL: Yeah, this was pretty shocking to me. I also got an AP alert on Wednesday evening. The title was “Underdog Governor,” and the dek was “Democratic Maine Governor Janet Mills says she’s used to being underestimated even as she runs for Senate at age 78.”
Literally 12 hours later, Janet Mills is dropping out of the race for U.S. Senate.
I was also pretty shocked at the statement that Chuck Schumer and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chair Kirsten Gillibrand put out after she dropped out of the race, which was “[Maine Sen. Susan] Collins has never been more vulnerable” — what? “We will work with the presumptive Democratic nominee, Graham Platner, to defeat her.” [Laughs.]
KK: Yeah, it’s a bit strange. Also, I just love the framing in that headline, which is “underdog governor” — don’t those things pull in opposite directions? Also, Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer were fully behind Janet Mills. It all strikes me as a bit strange. It also seems Platner had been in general polling ahead of Mills, but it does seem like the race was quite close. My jaw dropped when I saw the news. It seems out of nowhere.
AL: Also in midterms and voting rights news, on Wednesday, the Supreme Court issued a decision that rolled back voting rights. This was focused on a case in Louisiana. After that decision, Louisiana postponed its May 16 primary. Which is kind of insane, considering that that was supposed to happen in two weeks.
KK: It does seem like an existential threat for the Democrats to respond. Gerrymandering has been an issue for a long time. The Republicans are fully aware that without gerrymandering, the force of the electorate is against them. Democrats need to respond as other states, I’m sure, will look to redraw their maps in even more draconian ways.
“The Republicans are fully aware that without gerrymandering, the force of the electorate is against them.”
AL: In that vein, Democrats are also facing intense scrutiny over a series of key votes in the house this week, including on extending the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which 42 Democrats voted to support and 22 Republicans opposed on Wednesday. This version would authorize warrantless surveillance of Americans.
There’s also been some developments in the fight to end the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security. After a monthslong shutdown, the House passed legislation to reopen DHS on Thursday.
After federal immigration agents killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota earlier this year, Democrats had attempted to block additional funding for DHS until the agency could make some very modest reforms to ICE and Border Patrol. Democrats’ demands have so far gone nowhere. Though some places are framing the vote on Thursday, which did not fund ICE, as a win for Democrats. Katherine, what do you make of all of this?
KK: Well, it does seem that the Republicans are pretty desperate to restore this funding. You know, as an op-ed editor — Democrats need to hold the line on this.
AL: It’s my understanding that this bill will pay for DHS operations except ICE and parts of Border Patrol through September 30. Those agencies are already being generously funded by the Trump so-called Big Beautiful Bill that approved a record $85 billion for immigration crackdowns.
KK: Right. So for now it appears to be all eyes on the Democrats to see what they can do, if anything, to gum up the works on billions in new funding for ICE and Customs and Border Protection.
AL: And of course, this is all coming on the heels of the third assassination attempt against President Donald Trump over the weekend, which we talk about with Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, who was present at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner during the shooting attempt.
Later in the show, we hear from journalist Mike Rothschild about the world of conspiracy theories swirling around the shooting and other recent events in the U.S.
KK: Akela, you got really great details from Rep. Raskin from inside the Correspondents’ Dinner. So let’s listen to that conversation now.
AL: Welcome to the Intercept Briefing, Rep. Raskin.
Rep. Jamie Raskin: Great to see you, Akela.
AL: So you were at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday evening. Tell us what you witnessed.
JR: I entered maybe 10 minutes before the incident happened and the violence and the confusion and the melee and the chaos. All of a sudden, we heard the loud noises, boom boom boom, glasses flying, plates flying — horrific noises taking place. And then people yelling, “Get down, get down.” Somebody, I think it maybe was a Secret Service agent or an officer, somebody threw me to the ground.
Then we stayed on the floor for two or three minutes before people started saying they got the guy, or it’s OK, you can get up. But there was a lot of confusion.
I remember the feeling was very similar to when it was clear that the House had been invaded on January 6, 2021, and everybody was afraid that somebody had come in with an AR-15 or something like that.
It was a scene of crowd chaos and fear in America, which means people are going to be thinking about the possibility of an assault weapon or some kind of deadly gun attack.
AL: The day after the shooting, you spoke to CNN’s Dana Bash about the incident in an interview where she asked you about the responsibility of Democrats whose rhetoric toward Trump she described as “heated.” Let’s hear that clip.
[Clip from CNN]
Dana Bash: And you have, and as many of your fellow Democrats have, used some heated rhetoric against the president. And do you think twice about that when something like this happens?
Rep. Jamie Raskin: What rhetoric do you have in mind?
DB: Just talking about some of the fact that he is terrible for this country and so on and so forth. I understand that’s your democratic right, but overall, do you have no responsibility?
JR: I have no personal problem with Donald Trump at all. I talk about the policies of this administration. The authoritarianism, like we saw on display in Minneapolis where two of our citizens were gunned down in the streets simply for exercising their First Amendment rights; Renee Good, Alex Pretti, and others have died in custody. I’m talking about policies. I don’t personalize it, and I certainly have never called the press the enemy of the people. I think the press are the people’s best friend, and that’s why it’s written right there into the First Amendment.
We need the press to be a vigilant watchdog against every level of government, federal, state, local, all of it.
[Clip ends]
AL: I also want to note that on Tuesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt blamed Democrats who have criticized Trump for the shooting, naming several members of Congress, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
What did you make of Bash’s question to you and the idea behind it, that somehow the real problem here is criticizing the president and his policies, no matter what those policies are?
JR: The freedom of speech has to be wide open, vigorous, and uninhibited in America. But the point I was trying to make was that we should keep to policy matters and political matters, and not personalize it.
So I literally didn’t know what she was talking about. I do not use, or at least I try not to use, the kind of rhetoric that President Trump routinely and habitually uses where he calls people communists, he calls people terrorists. He calls people crazy, insane. He calls people evil, wicked. He will buttonhole reporters and tell them that they’re stupid, they’re ugly, all those kinds of things.
I just thought it was curious that, in the wake of this terrible episode, that [Bash] would try to equate the way that Democrats talk and the way that President Trump talks, because we are indeed very vigorous and aggressive in standing up to violent insurrections and attempts to overthrow elections. And we’re very vigorous and aggressive in opposing illegal wars because Congress has been cut out and so on. But we try to keep it at the level of policies and their actions.
“It was curious that, in the wake of this terrible episode, that she would try to equate the way that Democrats talk and the way that President Trump talks.”
AL: A letter that you sent a few weeks ago to the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner opened by saying, “You are now reportedly participating as ‘Special Envoy for Peace’ in negotiations on behalf of the United States government to address the roiling conflicts in the Middle East. At the same time, you are soliciting billions of dollars from Gulf monarchies for your private business ventures while already managing billions of dollars of their money in your international investment firm.”
The letter is meant to notify Kushner about a forthcoming investigation into his role in the administration and conflicts of interest. What do you hope to investigate here, and can you talk about what you find most concerning about Kushner’s role in trying to negotiate an end to the war in Iran and being involved in other foreign policy ventures?
JR: Any reasonable person would see this as an absolute conflict of interest — that you can’t serve two masters at the same time.
So on the one hand, he’s got billions of dollars from Saudi Arabia and Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, and they have specific interests of their own. Their leaders do, like Mohammed bin Salman, the homicidal crown prince of Saudi Arabia, who ordered the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi. They’ve got particular interests.
It’s been reported widely that his interest — and therefore Saudi Arabia’s interest — is to keep the war going for as long as possible. There’s money to be made there, and they also want to do everything they can to degrade the power of Iran. That’s one set of interests that Jared Kushner is representing. Those are his business partners, those are his clients.
And at the same time, he’s representing the United States. And I asked him the question straight up: Are you representing, 100%, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates and Qatar and your business with all of those people? Or are you representing, 100%, the people of the United States? Or do you think you’re doing 50/50? Everybody would see that as a dramatic, egregious conflict of interest to do it.
But, of course, in the Trump era, the Trump officials see it not as a conflict of interest but as a convergence of interest. The way they think of it is, “Oh, this is great. We can go over, and we can talk about the war, and we can also talk about our business deals and recruit more clients and get more money from them.”
“Trump officials see it not as a conflict of interest but as a convergence of interest.”
There was reportage about how he’s seeking to get even more billions of dollars from them, which obviously means they have additional leverage beyond the money that they’ve already put in. This has never happened in another presidency, anything remotely like it.
So we want to investigate, to get to the bottom of exactly who he’s representing. How is he representing himself? What is the mixture of private and public business he’s conducting when he goes on these trips?
AL: The BBC also just published a report on insider trading around Trump’s presidency amid questions about how markets have responded to the Iran war. The House Oversight Committee released a report earlier this year on Trump and his family profiteering from his administration.
Do you know if that’s going anywhere, and are you looking into any of those issues in your capacity on the Judiciary Committee?
JR: Yes, because his sons clearly are venturing into defense contracting and are participating in various ventures where they are selling goods to the Department of Defense.
So look, this is a president who started off in his first administration dipping his toes in the water to see what kind of reaction there would be to collecting millions of dollars from China and Saudi Arabia and Indonesia and Egypt and all of these countries at the Trump hotels, at the Trump golf courses, the Trump resorts, some other independent business ventures — but it was basically “ma and pa” brick-and-mortar-type ventures.
Now they’ve gone digital. They’ve gone from millions of dollars to billions of dollars with the crypto schemes and scams that they’ve put together, with the military–industrial complex. All bets are off at this point. They have thrown off any kind of guardrails or inhibitions.
I fault us for not having impeached him in the first term for violating the foreign emoluments clause and also the domestic emoluments clause, which says that the president is limited to his salary in office and cannot receive any other money from the United States — and yet was regularly billing the Department of Defense, the Secret Service, the Department of Commerce, every other federal department for staying at his hotels, making them stay there, then billing them for it, and the golf courses, and so on and so forth.
The Constitution tried to create a wall of separation between the president’s private businesses and the public Treasury and the public good. Congress has to act. Obviously, our friends on the MAGA side are not going to act on this. But the Democrats will. We need to reestablish that wall of separation.
AL: While I have you, I know you were on the floor on Wednesday for debate on extending FISA, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and whether the government can conduct warrantless surveillance on the public. The House voted to pass the surveillance program extension in the face of fierce opposition from critics and civil liberties advocates. What is the latest here?
JR: It’s an interesting situation because Chairman Jim Jordan, my counterpart on the Judiciary Committee — I’m the ranking member, he’s the chairman for the Republicans — he represented. Nobody else was willing to speak for the FISA bill on the House side. He had no speakers participating in his roster.
I had tons of people who wanted to speak against it and was able to have several of them do it. He was even uncharacteristically subdued in his presentation because he had taken the position historically that there needs to be a warrant requirement and probable cause before you start searching the foreign intelligence database drawn from all the communications companies, emails, texts, phone calls. But he’s changed his position in working with the White House.
The press at least, is reporting this has to do with his desire to become the next minority leader. So I do not think he advanced the most coherent arguments for this.
Our position was simple, which is that before you go searching about in querying information that exists in a foreign intelligence database that was gathered without any Fourth Amendment standards — no probable cause, no search warrant, none of it — before you go searching for the information about hundreds of millions of Americans, you’ve got to go and talk to a judge first. The Fourth Amendment says search warrants have to be based on probable cause, and you need to interpose a neutral, independent magistrate between the government and its detective work and its searches.
They say, no, let’s just leave it up to the FBI director to be reasonable. Well, that’s Kash Patel. When there were complaints about that, even on the Republican side, they added something to say, Kash Patel has got to report what he’s doing to Tulsi Gabbard. So if you think having Kash Patel report to Tulsi Gabbard is a great substitute for the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, go ahead and vote for this.
“If you think having Kash Patel report to Tulsi Gabbard is a great substitute for the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, go ahead and vote for this.”
But if you want to stand by the Constitution, this is not legislation for you. So the wheel is still in spin as we work our way back and forth between the House and the Senate.
Kash Patel had been spending a lot of taxpayer money by getting FBI agents to shepherd and chauffeur his girlfriend around the country for security and for transportation. When the New York Times somehow got ahold of that, somebody leaked it and wrote a story about it, Kash Patel’s response was not, “Oh my God, I’ve made such a mistake, I’ve gotta apologize and stop using taxpayer money and SWAT teams to chauffeur my girlfriend around America.” No. His response was, let’s investigate her. Let’s search all the databases that we’ve got.
So if you think that’s the guy you want to trust to be respecting the privacy rights of the American people and the Fourth Amendment rights — fine, this is for you. But we had more than a dozen Republicans join us after our debate in opposing it, the vast majority of Democrats voted against it, but they were able to win that one on the floor. We’ll see where it goes, and whether our friends on the Senate side can hang tough.
AL: Thank you so much, Congressman Raskin.
JR: Thanks for having me, Akela.
Break
AL: After the latest assassination attempt on President Donald Trump over the weekend, claims that it was a false flag, another orchestrated and staged incident flooded the internet, from the comments section to social media posts to videos of influencers dissecting the alleged evidence.
Today I speak to journalist Mike Rothschild about the growing world of conspiracy theories that question whether the multiple assassination attempts against Trump were staged. We’ll also dive into other conspiracy theories currently capturing the public imagination, from dead and missing scientists to a wildfire in Georgia.
Mike writes “Rough Edges” for TPM, covering fringe groups, conspiracy theories, moral panics, and how the internet broke our brains. He is the author of the first complete book on the QAnon conspiracy movement called “The Storm is Upon Us” and, most recently, a 200-year history of conspiracy theories called “Jewish Space Lasers.”
Mike, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.
Mike Rothschild: Thank you for having me.
AL: Last week’s attempt to assassinate Trump already feels far away. But this was the third such attempt, after two other failed attacks in recent years. One in Butler, Pennsylvania, and another in West Palm Beach, Florida. Mike, one of the reasons that we wanted to bring you on the show is to discuss a growing chorus of online chatter claiming these assassination attempts were staged.
Even before the latest attempt at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday, prominent MAGA voices like Marjorie Taylor Green were raising questions. Greene wrote on X, “I’m not calling the Butler assassination a hoax. But there are a lot of questions that deserve public answers. I’m asking why won’t Trump release the information about Matthew Crooks?” Crooks being the 20-year-old gunman killed by Secret Service while trying to attack Trump at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania two years ago.
To start, can you lay out what we know so far about what happened on Saturday and the suspect, Cole Tomas Allen, the 31-year-old from Torrance, California? And then we’ll get into the various conspiracy theories surrounding the shooting.
MR: For an incident that happened fairly recently, we know quite a bit. We know what his motive was because he sent a manifesto to his friends and family. We know what he did because it was caught on camera. He was armed with a shotgun and knives. He ran toward a medal detector on the floor above where the actual White House Correspondents’ Dinner was taking place. He never got in the room. He never actually fired a shot at Trump or was even close. And he was subdued by the Secret Service and security and taken away. This is not the kind of thing where you would think that there would be conspiracy theories about it being fake because we have a timeline of what happened almost immediately.
But we are so conditioned to distrust what we are being told by authorities that people immediately began concocting conspiracy theories about it — even before we even knew what had happened. Whether it was a shooting or just dishes breaking.
AL: Let’s unpack some of the “fake shooting” claims. You wrote on Bluesky, “‘Trump keeps staging assassination attempts’ is the same Infowars brainworm strain as ‘Obama keeps staging mass shootings.’ Different party, same paranoia.” What are the conspiratorial claims surrounding the assassination attempt on Saturday?
MR: The biggest one is that it was staged — that Trump hired this person and set all of this up, and that everyone in the room who needed to know where they were going to go knew about it, and you could tell from the looks on their faces and the way security acted, and he was staging all of this so that he could bump his approval ratings or that he could create more interest for his super-mega ballroom bunker.
All of these are things that have been said about other incidents involving Trump. It’s just that it happened incredibly quickly. I don’t think we even had the name of the suspect before people started saying that it was staged.
“I don’t think we even had the name of the suspect before people started saying that it was staged.”
AL: You also had Karoline Leavitt having said there will be shots fired tonight, and people taking that and running with it as the verbal version of numerology. I don’t know what the word for that is.
MR: Right. There is actually a term for it. It’s this term called “predictive programming.”
AL: Thank you. Thank you.
MR: Yes, I wish I didn’t know that. In the conspiracy world, it means that the cabal that perpetrates these plots has to tell us what they’re going to do for karmic reasons, but they do it in a way that we won’t understand it. You get this a lot with “The Simpsons” ironically, or other pieces of entertainment where there’s a clue to some upcoming event that’s hidden in a cutaway on the Simpsons or in the plot of something, and it’s the cabal telling us what they have to do.
I once had somebody say, “Oh, it’s like vampires, they have to be invited into your house.” And I said, “Well, vampires aren’t real either.” It’s like come on, what are we doing?
AL: [Laughs.] What are we doing? That is the question, though. What makes these conspiracy theories take hold, as opposed to coming out of something like this with more of a collective sense of an effort to address gun violence, or talk about how these incidents are used to police dissent and criticism of the president?
Last year, we had the Minnesota lawmaker and her husband who were killed in their home by a Trump supporter who had radical anti-abortion views. This is in the vein of our long-standing inability to address mass shootings, but what makes it easier to respond to something like that with a conspiracy theory rather than some other kind of response?
“If you do it well, you can get viral clout out of it. You get clicks, you make money.”
MR: Conspiracy theories are easy. They don’t require any evidence. They don’t require any research or self-reflection. Looking at an incident where the highest-ranked people in the United States are all in one room, and the security isn’t as tight as it should be, and guns are too easy to get, and there’s too many people who have mental illness because they’ve been radicalized and brain-poisoned on the internet — those are really difficult issues to solve. They go to the core of American politics and communication right now. But just deciding that it was staged so that the president could get his ballroom bunker or get 5 points on his approval rating, that’s easy. That doesn’t take any effort.
And then you can do it immediately. If you do it well, you can get viral clout out of it. You get clicks, you make money. It’s a very easy solution to a very, very complicated problem.
AL: Right now, in the political environment that we’re in there’s always a rush after these shootings to ascribe either far-left or far-right extremism to the suspect or the assailant.
We saw that in this case, where it turns out he seems like a pretty normal centrist, liberal Democrat. After the Minnesota killing of Melissa Hortman and her husband, we spoke to journalist Taylor Lorenz about how quick prominent figures on the right took to social media to blame the left for their deaths.
Utah Sen. Mike Lee said it was due to “Marxism.” Elon Musk claimed it was the “far left.” Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son, said it “seems to be a leftist.” Lorenz said, “There’s an entire right-wing media machine aimed at pushing disinformation around breaking news events and specifically attributing violence to the left.”
What’s your assessment of how this dynamic works and how it worked in this last shooting as well?
MR: There is. We don’t know how organized or coordinated this apparatus is, but it clearly exists. Minutes after this incident broke on social media, you already had people, “Oh, that’s why we need the ballroom. We gotta have more security around the president. He needs to have his bunker where he can never leave.” You had dozens of extremely popular influencers and politicians all saying this at the same time. These people they coordinate their messaging because that’s what you do in politics.
So I think there is a very real apparatus designed to push the blame onto a convenient scapegoat. Usually someone who is not aligned with the president’s values, and to turn it into something that the president can use for his own ends. Some of that I think revolves around this particular president having a very vocal cult of personality around him.
But I think it’s also that we are so used to things happening very quickly and immediately being seized upon for political ends. We all do this now. It’s just that the right is a lot better at it.
AL: The other piece of this is that Donald Trump himself — his political career — has been fueled by conspiracy theories that propelled him to the White House. How has Trump in particular used that race that we’re talking about to ascribe blame and the current media environment that has elevated conspiracy theories to where they’re now shaping national discourse and even policy? We could talk about RFK Jr. all day.
MR: Donald Trump was really the first conspiracy theorist presidential candidate. He rose to political power certainly based on his celebrity and his apparent wealth, but also because he was able to say things that had been very popular on the fringes for a long time that the mainstream right really didn’t want anything to do with.
Things like Barack Obama wasn’t born in the United States. Antonin Scalia was murdered. Obama is secretly a Muslim. Vaccines cause autism. These are things that mainstream Republicans wanted absolutely nothing to do with. But they were incredibly popular on the sort of fringes and sometimes not the fringes of the far right.
If you look in the history of these things, you look at some of the more popular conspiracy theory books — and I’ve written about this before — you have the 1970s book, “None Dare Call It Conspiracy,” which was written by two members of the John Birch Society, the far-right anti-Communist group. It sold 5 million copies in the United States in the early ’70s. Clearly there is a market for this, and clearly there are a lot of people who believe this.
Trump was just the first person to say it in a way that made it mainstream grist for discourse. And, of course, everybody’s now catching up to him. So when Trump spouts these insane conspiracy theories or pushes these ridiculous memes, he’s doing something that he’s been doing for the last decade and he’s very good at, and that people expect from him and want from him. He’s filling this niche that I think a lot of people didn’t want to believe was there.
AL: If you look at the current podcast charts in the news or politics category or the top YouTube shows, you’ll find shows swimming in conspiracy theories topping those charts, like Candace Owens’s podcast. We know the media environment is fragmented. We have a problem with media literacy, yada, yada, yada. But is there a way to come back from that level of saturation of, conspiracy is now the most popular form of media consumption? What do we do with that?
“It’s extremely lucrative, and it really fills a need that a lot of people have.”
MR: Unfortunately, I don’t know if there’s a way to do it at scale. I don’t know if there’s a way to glue everyone’s brains back together after 10 years of this insanity, because I think it is extremely lucrative.
AL: What an image.
MR: Yeah. It’s extremely lucrative, and it really fills a need that a lot of people have. These are very chaotic times. I think people flock to conspiracy theories and conspiracy theory content creators because these are the people who are saying, “Yeah, this is all crazy, but here’s what’s really going on.”
There’s a kind of a smugness to the conspiracy theory world: this idea of, I know something you don’t know. I’ve got the secret knowledge. I know what’s really happening. And I’m going to share it with you because you think I’m the crazy one, but I think you’re the crazy one. And that’s just a very basic human nature kind of thing.
“There’s a kind of a smugness to the conspiracy theory world: this idea of, I know something you don’t know.” … That’s just a very basic human nature kind of thing.”
AL: When you talk about filling this need, I think that’s really a key piece of it, because it brings to mind what Cole wrote in his manifesto about feeling like he was filling this role that no one else was taking up — this responsibility to fight back against these raging evils in the administration, some of which is fueled by conspiracy. He writes a lot about the Epstein stuff, which we’ll get into, which is ironically the least conspiratorial part of this. It’s just real and horrible.
But he talks about feeling like nobody else was going to pick up the torch and do this. It’s interesting to me that that sense of finding meaning in something or taking responsibility where no one else will take it, is also caught up in how we come to believe these conspiracy theories in the first place.
MR: There’s a grandiosity to this. There’s a messianic fervor to a lot of these things. You hear it if you listen to Alex Jones. “I’m standing in the gap against evil, and they’re all coming after me because they know I’m a threat!” It’s the same thing, it’s the same delusions of grandeur.
Now with somebody like Alex Jones or Candace Owens or Tucker [Carlson], you wonder how much of that is a character. Not all of it, but some of it is.
With a guy like Cole, it’s not. He really believes this, and there is, of course, an inherent irrationality to strapping up a shotgun and going to try to kill the president. It’s not something a rational person does.
AL: In Trump’s second term, there are also some signs that some of these conspiracy theorists are breaking with him, including prominent figures that we’re talking about, like Candace Owens and Marjorie Taylor Greene. Where and when did you begin to see cracks in that part of Trump’s allies, and what is driving those fractures?
MR: The Trump relationship with the conspiracy community — it’s very hot and cold. They will turn on him, but then they’ll always come back. But when they really did start to lose faith, I think, for good and much more vocally was Epstein.
This idea that we’re going to break open the Epstein files, we’re going to put everything out there. They had that infamous meeting at the White House with the Epstein files, phase one binders, and they’re all standing there looking very smug.
Then Trump goes, oh, there’s nothing there. There’s no Epstein files. It’s a hoax. The Democrats did that. Biden and Obama did the Epstein files. You know anyone who thinks that is an idiot.
These are influencers who helped get him back into office. And trump is now telling them they’re idiots for believing what he said he was going to do about Epstein. You can only humiliate somebody so many times before they actually start to have feelings.
So I think we started to see it happen with Epstein and then it really happened with Iran. The Iran war really was an abrogation of what Trump said he stood for. He said up and down, I’m the peace president. There’s not going to be any more stupid Middle East forever wars. We’re going to be America first. We’re going to go back to isolationism. We’re not getting involved. Maybe we’ll bomb them if we have to, but we’re not going to war.
Then we go to war. And we go to war for reasons nobody can articulate. The reason changes constantly. We don’t know what the objective is. We don’t know how we know if we’ve achieved the objective. It just looks like yet another Middle Eastern misadventure.
A lot of these people realized their audiences are turning on Trump. If you’re somebody like Tucker or Alex or Candace Owens, you kind of know that you can’t trust Trump, but you still feel stupid. You have feelings, you’re still a person. So I think there is a sense of betrayal and of feeling dumb.
But more than that, they know their audiences are feeling betrayed and dumb. They know their audiences thought we were going to get $2 gas prices — that hasn’t happened. Our electric bills are going to get cut in half — that hasn’t happened. We were going to have so much tariff money we wouldn’t need to pay income tax — that hasn’t happened.
“These people are feeling the effect of Trump’s lying and storytelling in their pocketbooks and in their fuel tanks.”
So these people are feeling the effect of Trump’s lying and storytelling in their pocketbooks and in their fuel tanks. And now they’re getting told, yeah, Iran, we gotta go to a war with Iran. You said you weren’t going to go to a war with Iran.
His audiences are feeling betrayed and the influencers are going where their audiences are going because they know they’ve got to start getting ready for a post-Trump world. They just have to do it a little bit faster than they thought they were going to have to.
AL: You’ve also written extensively about the right-wing conspiracy movement QAnon.
In a story you wrote for TPM recently, you wrote about how the movement differs from the Epstein case. You wrote, “Where QAnon was different, and where it failed spectacularly, was in promising that justice would finally be delivered to these untouchable insiders. It offered believers not nihilistic scapegoating, but a utopia that was just a few executions away. The basis of Q, and why it was so compelling to so many people, was that the monsters were finally going to be brought down by Donald Trump, a figure of outsider wealth beholden to nobody except those who elected him.”
Can you talk about how these worlds intersect — the Epstein and QAnon conspiracies — and what it says about both our political discourse, but also accountability and lack thereof?
MR: Lack thereof. Yeah. I don’t want to get too deep into the weeds on the Q drops because no one will survive that. But Epstein is a central figure in this world. This idea that he’s got this satanic temple and these tunnels and he’s trafficking all these girls on the planes with Bill Clinton and all these super elite power brokers and Trump is going to take them down. That was always the biggest part of it. That these people have been an untouchable cabal for thousands of years, and it’s Donald Trump who’s finally going to take them down.
But of course he’s not. So you need an explanation for why he’s not doing it. So something like QAnon invents an explanation of, he’s doing it — it’s just in secret. And it’s happening in all of these ways that the public doesn’t know about, but I’m going to tell you about them so that you don’t lose faith.
At some point you have to start delivering. I think there was a sense when Trump came back into office of, “OK we’re going to get rid of all this. We’re going to undo the stolen election, we’re going to undo all the Covid stuff. We’re going to finally bring down the elite trafficking rings. Like no one’s standing in Trump’s way.” Then he just says, the whole thing is stupid and nothing’s going to happen, and you’re an idiot if you believed him.
So the idea of Q was right because there’s elite traffickers. Well, there’s always been elites who’ve gotten away with terrible things that the rest of us would all be in prison for. The point of QAnon was that they were going to go down, they were going to be punished, they were going to be executed, they were going to be mass arrests, and Trump was going to get rid of all of these people.
Trump hasn’t gotten rid of them. He’s protected all of them. You’re finally seeing some of the rank-and-file Trump believers who are still maybe hardcore conspiracy believers going, “Yeah, this guy lied to us. The whole time he’s lied to us.” It is a moment where everything that you have created for yourself over the last decade is starting to fall apart because there was never anything there.
“I think that’s actually how a lot of deradicalization starts, is one thing doesn’t make sense in the world of conspiracies.”
I think that’s actually how a lot of deradicalization starts, is one thing doesn’t make sense in the world of conspiracies. And when you start looking into that one thing, the whole thing falls apart. Now, I don’t know that these people are going to be deradicalized.
I don’t think a lot of these conspiracy influencers are giving up on the precepts of Trumpism, but they’re giving up on Trump. That’s at least something for us to grab onto. Not with Tucker Carlson, but with the people who listen to Tucker Carlson.
AL: I want to move on to the other conspiracy theories that have been capturing the public’s attention right now.
We’ve been talking a lot about Trump-world conspiracy theories, many of which are now coming back to bite him. But there is a sort of unrelated conspiracy theory that’s been gaining momentum recently that the president is paying attention to and that Republicans are now trying to capitalize on, I would say. This is about the dead and missing scientists. Walk us through that, I know you’ve written about this recently.
MR: So this conspiracy theory is a very old one. There have been many other conspiracy theories that involve lists of people that are being bumped off by certain powerful figures because they knew too much or it’s part of a plot.
You had this with the Clinton body count, the Kennedy witnesses. You go all the way back to King Tut’s curse — people who were involved in the opening of King Tut’s tomb were all being killed. So in the case of the missing scientists, it’s this list of around a dozen people who are said to be scientists — not all of them are — who supposedly work in high technology, defense, aerospace, but also UFOs, free energy, anti-gravity, exoplanets.
It’s been turned into this, “All of these scientists involved in alien technology are being kidnapped, and what are they really doing? And oh my God, it’s so horrible.” I’ve seen these things before and actually one of the clusters of these missing scientists is where I live in Pasadena, California, at [the Jet Propulsion Laboratory].
I know a lot of people who work at JPL. I’ve toured JPL. Thousands of people work there. The idea that three or four of them over the course of a couple of years would have something unfortunate happen to them is not at all a conspiracy, just the same as a few people working at Los Alamos in New Mexico, bad things happening to a few people there. Not a conspiracy, it’s just statistics.
Linking all of these people together creates a conspiracy theory out of nothing, and there’s no indication of what this plot actually is. So one of these people was an expert in plasma physics. One was an expert in exoplanets. One was a pharmaceutical executive. One of them was an administrative assistant who worked at Los Alamos. One was a construction foreman at JPL, I think. None of these people have anything to do with each other, except they all are sort of science-adjacent — like millions of other people in the United States.
So you have a conspiracy theory that is working purely on people’s lack of understanding about statistics, lack of understanding about science, and of course, this [Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena] craze that we’re going through right now. So it’s taking a fragment of pop culture and turning it into a dastardly plot.
And because of course, the White House is full of conspiracy theorists, they’re able to talk about this, and then they go, oh yeah we’re investigating that. We’re going to get to the bottom of it. There’s nothing to investigate, there’s nothing to get to the bottom of, except they need more content. They know that people are hungry for more conspiracies. Here’s a really juicy one that you can just serve up to people.
AL: So you mentioned JPL, that’s NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and UAP is what we’re calling UFOs now?
MR: What we’re calling UFOs.
AL: The new term for UFOs.
I will mention that the FBI is now saying that it is looking into connections between these missing and dead scientists. And on Monday, the Republican-led House Oversight Committee announced that it is also investigating reports of the deaths and disappearances.
They released a statement saying that “reports raise questions about a possible sinister connection between … [these] disappearances.”
MR: [Laughs.] Oh, God.
AL: So, that is how the government is addressing this right now.
Then actually, I saw this as we were preparing for the show. I had not heard about this, but I don’t know if you’ve seen, there’s another story about conspiracy theories that this wildfire in Georgia was staged to clear the path for a data center.
Have you heard about that?
MR: I’ve heard a little bit about it. I am not surprised. I can tell you firsthand about wildfire conspiracy theories. We lost our home in the Eaton fire in January of 2025. I’m actually writing a book about it right now.
AL: Oh, gosh. That’s awful, I’m sorry.
MR: Yeah. Not been my favorite couple of years, but hey, that’s OK. The exact same theories were spread about the fire that I went through — that it was set to clear land for a smart city in Malibu, that it was set to destroy evidence of trafficking or to build Olympic venues. It is the same strain of paranoia as the missing scientists.
It’s something that wasn’t supposed to happen, and we don’t understand why it’s happening, and therefore there must be a plot behind it. There is something behind it: It’s climate change.
AL: It’s climate change.
“They make up something so they don’t have to talk about the actual reasons why these things are happening more frequently.”
MR: But that’s the thing that people people don’t ever want to talk about. So they make up something so they don’t have to talk about the actual reasons why these things are happening more frequently. Climate change isn’t the only reason, but it’s a big reason. The more you create these fantastical conspiracy theories, the less you have to talk about the actual thing that’s happening.
It’s a psychology that we’re seeing over and over again.
AL: You wrote a 200-year history about conspiracy theories. They obviously aren’t new, but what does that history tell us about American political culture? Is this unique at all to the United States? How has it evolved over the centuries and how would you characterize the moment that we’re living in now?
MR: It’s a useful question in the context of the speed that everything is happening at. Conspiracy theories are not new to the United States. They’re not inherent to the U.S. They have been part of human interaction always. If you go back to the great fire of Rome, there were whispers that Nero had set it on purpose for his own political ends.
That’s just how we look at things. We look at things we don’t understand, that are dangerous, and we create a plot and we create reasons why these things are happening.
We live in these extremely chaotic times where a lot of things are happening very quickly. We don’t understand them. We don’t have the trust in the authorities who are supposed to tell us why these things are happening and break them out for us.
So we listen to people who are telling us what we want to hear, who are making us feel better, and making us feel like someone is in control of all of this. It hits on a very particular human need for patterns and for order and for understanding.
So yes, we are certainly in a time when conspiracy theories are much more mainstream than they’ve ever been, much more lucrative than they’ve ever been. But we’ve always had a strain of distrust and paranoia.
It’s very American, but it’s not exclusively American. It’s just that right now, we are in a time when we can all connect with each other. These people used to be siloed and isolated; no one wanted to talk to them or be around them. Now they find each other and they create communities, and they create Facebook groups and message boards.
Sometimes if they’re really good at what they do, they can get elected to office or write bestselling books. This stuff is just everywhere now. Everybody seems to know somebody who’s going through some version of this, and it’s very unfortunate.
AL: We’re going to leave it there.
Mike Rothschild, thank you so much for joining me on The Intercept Briefing. This is one of our more fun and disturbing interviews.
MR: Fun for me maybe. Thank you. This was great.
AL: And that does it for this episode.
This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our managing editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. Will Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.
Slip Stream provided our theme music.
This show and our reporting at The Intercept do not exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join.
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Let us know what you think of this episode, or if you want to send us a general message, email us at podcasts@theintercept.com.
Until next time, I’m Akela Lacy.
The post Another Assassination Attempt, More Fertilizer for Conspiracy Theories appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Both Kent and Sussex counties are designated health care shortage areas by the federal government, with residents experiencing access barriers. ChristianaCare is looking to enter one of those shortage areas with a new campus in Camden as part of a larger statewide expansion.
ChristianaCare, Delaware’s largest hospital system, announced on Thursday it plans to build a $58.1 million health campus in Kent County, continuing its push into contested southern market areas. The hospital’s announcement also comes two months after it said it would build a campus in Georgetown.
The new 38,000‑square‑foot campus would open in Camden about a mile from the Walmart on U.S. Route 13. The healthcare giant also said in a statement the new campus would offer both emergency and inpatient beds, as well as primary care and outpatient services.
It hopes to open the facility by late 2028 or early 2029.
“We are investing in facilities that bring care closer to where people live,” outgoing ChristianaCare CEO Dr. Janice Nevin said in the statement. “This campus reflects our commitment to ensuring every Delawarean, no matter their ZIP code, can count on timely, compassionate, high-quality care close to home.”
ChristianaCare also said the new facility would bring 83 new jobs. As it has done with other recently announced ventures, ChristianaCare positioned its expansion as a means of supporting Delaware’s growing and aging population.
Two of southern Delaware’s largest health systems Beebe and TidalHealth did not respond to an immediate request for comment about ChristianaCare’s growing expansion into southern Delaware.
Kent County’s primary hospital system, Bayhealth, said in a statement it “remains focused” on providing care to its patients. But the hospital also said care should not be “fragmented.”
“We recognize that patients across Delaware are looking for faster access to care,” a spokesperson for the hospital said in an email. “Equally important is making sure that care is not fragmented and delivered in the right setting so patients receive what they need without unnecessary cost or complexity.”
During the hospital’s certificate of public review process, where ChristianaCare will pitch state regulators why this expansion is necessary, Bayhealth said it will “actively participate” by sharing data and ways to address cost, access and quality of care in the area.
While Beebe and TidalHealth have yet to comment directly on Thursday’s expansion announcement, they did discuss regional trends at Spotlight Delaware’s inaugural Health Care Summit on Wednesday.
Steve Leonard, the CEO of TidalHealth which operates the Nanticoke Hospital in Seaford, said he’s not opposed to competition in the region, but that new services should be weighed against their impact on the entire healthcare ecosystem.
TidalHealth does not have a presence in Kent County, but as other hospital systems like Bayhealth and Beebe expand across Sussex County, he said it is indicative of the state’s growing population and need for services.
“I think when people come in and compete, it’s not a bad thing,” Leonard said during a panel discussion. “The population’s growing, I mean that’s the reality.”
Dr. William Chasanov, who is Beebe’s chief health systems design officer, said he supports competition in the rapidly growing region, but that there should be more coordination around what services are offered where.
“Competition makes us all better to do a better job for the community that we serve,” Chasanov said during a panel. “I also believe that healthcare is … a finite resource, so we all do have to be very careful about what services that we offer.”
In recent months, ChristianaCare announced expansions both in and out of the state after saying last summer it would spend $865 million on new health facilities in the coming years.
In February, the healthcare giant announced it aims to open a new $65 million campus in Georgetown. Months before that, it said it was building a health center dedicated to treating cancer in Middletown.

The healthcare system expects its new Georgetown facility — which would offer emergency beds, behavioral, specialty and primary care — to open by 2028. It is partnering with developer Emerus Holdings to build the facility at 20769 DuPont Blvd., just south of the Bridgeville Road intersection.
After its failed bid to merge with Southern New Jersey’s Virtua Health, the Georgetown and Camden plans indicate that ChristianaCare sees more opportunity in its own backyard, and is willing to disregard the loose geographic monopolies that healthcare systems have enjoyed in Delaware for decades.
Its Middletown cancer center, which is slated to open in May 2027, would solidify its foothold in the suburbs south of the C&D Canal. The $92 million health center would bring primary care, behavioral health, pediatrics, neurology and cardiovascular care, among others.
ChristianaCare’s new expansions into Delaware’s southern counties also comes as federal funds begin to flow into the state to support and expand rural health initiatives.
Since 2020, ChristianaCare also has ventured deeper into the suburban Philadelphia health market, purchasing defunct hospitals and building its own in the surrounding towns. The hospital system announced last year it would partner with the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, better known as CHOP, leaving Delaware’s chief pediatric hospital, Nemours Children’s Health, on the sidelines.
The post ChristianaCare ventures deeper into southern Delaware with Camden expansion appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Meeting ‘my people’ – video gamers with very long memories – took me back to an era of machine play that lacked megabytes but had far more tangible presence
I want to tell you about the game that has made me the happiest this month. It’s a game I didn’t complete. It’s a game I didn’t even start. I just held it. And smiled. I have played the game before, but not for many years. Forty of them to be precise.
The game is Daley Thompson’s Super Test for the ZX Spectrum.
Continue reading...Hundreds of foreign doctors about to complete training in the U.S. will have to leave the country if the federal government doesn't rapidly process their visa waiver applications, immigration attorneys say.
Americans are fed up with an establishment that has abandoned the working class. It’s time to organize for change
On Friday, more than 3,000 May Day protests will take place across the United States – more than double last year’s number. Workers, students and families are calling for a strike: no school, no work, no shopping and an end to billionaire rule. I’m headed to the streets with members of my own union, the United Auto Workers, in New York City.
Americans are fed up – and not just with Donald Trump. People are angry at a Democratic party establishment that has abandoned the working class, that treated the labor movement like a turnout machine instead of the pillar of democracy it is, that funded a genocide in Gaza while ignoring a cost of living crisis, and that took its own base so completely for granted that it pushed millions out of the political process entirely.
Claire Valdez is a New York state assemblymember, union organizer, and Democratic socialist running for Congress
Continue reading...The Federal Bureau of Investigation multiplied the number of employees assigned to immigration by a factor of 23 in the first nine months of the second Trump administration, The Intercept has found.
There were 279 FBI personnel working on “immigration-related matters” before Trump took office in January 2025, according to bureau records The Intercept obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. By September, that number had ballooned to more than 6,500.
In total, 9,161 people at the FBI worked on immigration between Trump’s inauguration and September 7 of last year, out of a total of 38,000 FBI employees.
“That is a huge, huge number of people,” said Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration Council who has testified before Congress on the cost of mass deportations. “This is just a somewhat shocking scale that we’re looking at.”
The flood of FBI personnel into immigration work came in the early days of the tenure of Director Kash Patel, who has shown a willingness to follow Trump’s orders without question or exception. According to David J. Bier, director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, the redirection may have hampered the FBI’s ability to perform criminal investigative work.
“We’re talking about the FBI diverting people away from criminal investigations and ongoing criminal activity and into civil immigration enforcement.”
“That’s a striking diversion of resources away from public safety,” Bier said. “We’re talking about the FBI diverting people away from criminal investigations and ongoing criminal activity and into civil immigration enforcement. This is showing the extent to which the resources of the FBI were put at the disposal of Immigration and Customs Enforcement contrary to the intent of Congress, and the abuse of the funds that Congress grants the FBI to accomplish its mission.”
The documents The Intercept received did not make clear if the employees assigned to immigration were part of the FBI’s total workforce or its smaller subset of 13,700 special agents. In September, the Cato Institute published a disclosure from ICE reporting that 2,840 out of 13,700 FBI special agents — 1 in 5 — were being redirected to work on ICE enforcement and removal operations.
“While the FBI does not comment on specific personnel numbers or decisions, FBI agents and staff are dedicated professionals working around the clock to defend the homeland and crush violent crime,” an FBI spokesperson said in a statement to The Intercept. “The FBI continuously assesses and realigns our resources to ensure the safety of the American people, and we surge resources based on needs.”
ICE did not respond to a request for comment
Trump has diverted thousands of agents at a number of federal agencies — including the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the IRS, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives — to aid in his administration’s deportation machine.
The shift started as soon as he returned to office. By January 26, 2025, just six days after Trump’s second inauguration, the FBI had 1,390 employees working on immigration. In the first months of Trump’s second term, he ramped up arrests of immigrants around the country and authorized federal law enforcement at agencies that don’t work on immigration to help his administration carry out its deportation policies.
The FBI reassignments exploded the following month. As the Trump administration issued a directive to allow law enforcement to enter the homes of people it claimed were suspected gang members without a warrant, the number of FBI personnel working on immigration rose to 2,941.
September’s 6,500-employee number wasn’t even the peak. The number continued increasing throughout the spring and reached over 5,700 in May, when the administration set a new quota to arrest 3,000 people a day.
Another shocking detail, Bier said, was that the number of FBI agents being diverted to immigration work remained high even after Congress passed July’s One Big, Beautiful Bill Act, which directed an additional $170 billion in funding for immigration and border spending.
“They’re going ahead with using criminal law enforcement for mass deportation purposes.”
The law “infused tens of billions of dollars” for immigration enforcement,” Bier said, ” — “and yet there’s no let-up.”
“This is not about ‘ICE doesn’t have the money,’” Bier said. “ICE has the money, and they’re going ahead with using criminal law enforcement for mass deportation purposes.”
It’s not clear what the FBI’s “immigration-related” work entails, but the rapid expansion suggests FBI staff are working on issues unrelated to the FBI’s mandate, Reichlin-Melnick added.
“If you look at how quickly the scale of this ramped up and compare it to what we know was happening at the time, it’s very clear that a lot of this — probably the significant majority — was immigration enforcement,” Reichlin-Melnick said.
The increase coincides with an increase in FBI presence at immigration raids. On Wednesday, FBI agents were among the federal law enforcement personnel carrying out raids in Minnesota related to the right-wing allegations of fraud against the Somali immigrant community.
The number of FBI personnel working on immigration also raises national security concerns, Reichlin-Melnick added. The FBI had to reassign agents to work on counterterrorism, after previously diverting them to work on immigration, following the U.S. bombing of Iran last summer.
“The national security implications of this are likely significant. In September 2025, 6,500 FBI personnel were working at least an hour of their day on immigration-related matters,” Reichlin-Melnick said. “There is no situation in which the administration has made the security of the nation better by reassigning these agents.”
Bier agreed the diversion was potentially dangerous, pointing to the risks brought on by the current U.S. war on Iran.
“Anytime you’re involved in a war — and we certainly are — you should be careful about retaliation and monitoring those threats,” Bier said. “It makes little sense to divert people away from that during this time, especially.”
Update: May 1, 2026, 12:32 p.m. ET
This story has been updated with a comment from the FBI sent after publication.
The post FBI Redirected a Quarter of Staff to Target Immigrants Under Trump’s Deportation Push appeared first on The Intercept.
Germany rearms – but can it lead? Europe’s hesitant superpower in waiting Expert comment jon.wallace
Germany is ready to rearm, but faces many political challenges to achieve strategic leadership.
‘Zeitenwende’ – that deliberately weighty term coined by former German Chancellor Olaf Scholz following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – described a watershed era. It proposed not a policy adjustment, but a real rupture in Germany’s strategic posture. Yet it is only over the past year, under Chancellor Friedrich Merz, that the full measure of what it entails has become clear.
This is not merely higher defence spending. It is a redefinition of Germany’s place in Europe, and of Europe’s dependence on Germany.
Zeitenwende was never just about budgets or brigades. It required that Germany, long accustomed to exercising influence through economic might, must assume the burdens of strategic agency in Europe and translate its latent power into strategic leadership.
That is an almost psychological challenge for a country whose political culture has been shaped by a tradition of restraint, especially regarding the use of its military.
Germany’s scale, fiscal capacity, and centrality within the European economy all point in one direction: if Europe is to acquire the strategic coherence needed to defend itself, Berlin will be an unavoidable and increasingly assertive player.
Germany is already moving. An €100 billion special fund has been established for the Bundeswehr (Germany’s armed forces). F-35 aircraft are being procured to replace the Tornado in Germany’s NATO nuclear-sharing role, with first deliveries scheduled for 2026. Defence spending is rising steadily beyond 2 per cent. All signal a shift that would have been politically inconceivable a decade ago.
Be that as it may, inevitability is generally a poor guide to political reality. Power cannot simply be accumulated; it has to be translated – into doctrine, usable force, and a culture of decision.
Here, Germany’s trajectory remains uncertain. Berlin has yet to articulate a coherent military strategy that matches its financial commitments. The Federal Ministry of Defence has developed a Military Strategy for the Armed Forces, to complement the 2023 National Security Strategy.
But these documents remain a framework rather than a doctrine. They signal political intent but do not resolve trade-offs between territorial defence, expeditionary commitments, and industrial mobilization. In practice, Germany continues to rely heavily on NATO planning and American enablers – a dependence exposed as politically fragile amid renewed tensions with a more transactional White House under Donald Trump.
Rearmament, in this sense, risks outpacing strategy – not because strategy is absent, but because it is still being worked out, and under conditions of exceptional geopolitical pressure.
The Bundeswehr illustrates the gap between resources and readiness. Despite new funding, deficiencies persist in equipment availability, ammunition stocks, and procurement speed.
The challenge is not only one of volume, but of usability. Germany has pledged to provide combat-ready formations for NATO, yet progress on assembling fully equipped and deployable brigades is slow and troublesome.
Efforts to permanently station a brigade in Lithuania are putting additional pressure on already stretched Bundeswehr units at home. And delays in delivery of everything from communications systems to armoured vehicles point to deep institutional inertia.
This is a serious problem: a superpower is not defined by how much it spends, but by how quickly and coherently it can convert resources into deployable military assets. Germany is still struggling with that conversion.
It would be a mistake, however, to treat rearmament as a mere budgetary episode. It is a generational commitment made in the context of a rapidly fragmenting political landscape.
Indeed, German coalition politics has rarely appeared more brittle. Merz’s popularity has eroded at an unusually rapid pace for a new chancellor. His government struggles to maintain cohesion, while the AfD is surging to historic polling highs and looks poised for further significant breakthroughs in regional elections. Defence is increasingly drawn into ideological debate.
An effort to send German Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine in 2023 is instructive: what might have been a straightforward decision became a prolonged domestic and diplomatic negotiation, with Berlin ultimately moving in step with Washington. Any country that must constantly renegotiate its strategic direction risks discovering that time becomes its adversary.
Germany’s federal, decentralized government structure – instrumental in the country’s post-war economic miracle – is part of the problem, creating delay when speed and coherence are required.
That is not to suggest that greater centralization in Berlin would, in itself, yield sounder decisions; the French presidency has shown that concentration of power does not preclude misjudgement.
Beneath this sits a deeper constraint: the condition of Germany’s economic model. The industrial system that underpinned its post-war success – export-driven, energy-intensive, and anchored in incremental excellence – now faces pressures it was not designed to absorb.
The end of cheap Russian gas has forced an abrupt and costly recalibration on energy supply.
German car manufacturers face intensifying Chinese competition domestically, while vital exports to China are in decline. Only patient and strategic diversification could cushion that blow.
Germany has also failed to seize the digital turning point, with SAP its only truly globally leading tech firm. That points to a need for a more deliberate state-led push: mobilizing capital at scale, deepening links between industry and tech, and creating the conditions for rapid digital growth.
Merz’s push to loosen the EU’s industrial AI regulation points in the right direction – an attempt to ease constraints on innovation and restore some of the agility Germany missed in the first wave of digitalization.
But to rejuvenate its economy and compete on increasingly contested global markets, Germany needs not only efficiency, but adaptability, scale, and speed. It can still produce extraordinarily well; the question is whether it can pivot with sufficient rapidity while also underwriting a sustained defence effort.
Economic culture will be a significant hurdle. Germany’s corporate model – spanning the Mittelstand and segments of its listed sector, and marked by long-term and often family-based ownership – privileges continuity over disruption, prudence over risk.
Defence transformation, by contrast, tends to favour precisely those qualities that German capitalism has historically moderated: large-scale, rapid integration, and intimate relations between state and industry.
As Germany grows into its role, it will inevitably reshape the European balance by sheer gravity. Partners will look to Berlin for direction while simultaneously resisting its predominance. Power, in Europe, rarely consolidates without generating counter-currents: Germany will not escape that pattern.
Strongest tornado hits Mineral Wells, Texas, where disaster was declared. Elsewhere, extreme rain inundates China
Spring is the season for severe thunderstorms across the central US, and the start of this week was a particularly active period for the region. A favourable weather pattern fuelled intense thunderstorms on Monday through Wednesday, bringing strong winds, very large hail and strong tornadoes.
Eight tornadoes were reported on Monday, including an EF2 tornado that ripped through the town of Sycamore, Kansas. On Tuesday, a more widespread event tore across the mid-west, most notably as a severe hailstorm moved through Springfield, Missouri.
Continue reading...The king charmed Americans – including the president – while artfully asserting his views on climate and executive power
In the end, it was a royal triumph, as King Charles and Queen Camilla managed to avoid all the mines in their path (the strait of Hormuz is not the only place where they exist), and deftly repair the “special relationship”. For another few weeks, anyway.
There were plenty of reasons to be anxious, on both sides of the Atlantic, before the king’s visit to Washington and New York. It is no secret that Donald Trump’s war of choice against Iran has alienated Great Britain, and all of the Nato allies, who were not consulted in advance of the decision and have since been browbeaten for what Trump perceives as insufficient fealty.
Ted Widmer is a former presidential speechwriter, and the author of a forthcoming book in June, The Living Declaration: A Biography of America’s Founding Text (Library of America)
Continue reading...I have a PintV (refloat), an ESP32 dev kit and a remote with a joystick I can connect to it (salvaged from another robotics project, not anything typical you would buy for this). I’m currently writing some code so I can use this as a method of input for remote tilt, but I’ve got a few questions from a software side.
The COMM_SET_BALANCE_INPUT_INFO (cmd 75) payload, specifically what does Refloat actually expects in those bytes, is there a standardised byte layout?
Is remote_tilt just a single float value, or do I need to ship additional fields alongside it?
Is the expected input range in degrees (eg ±10) or is it normalised from -1 to 1?
I have a white board so I don’t think an express is the way to go here, plus I don’t really want any other functionality
Appreciate any help, if I get this to work I’ll probably make a full guide on using custom controllers
Belgium plans to buy its seven aging nuclear reactors from French power giant Engie in a "full takeover" aimed at securing domestic energy supplies, extending reactor operations, and developing new nuclear capacity. "The move would also mean suspending plans to decommission nuclear operations in Belgium," reports the BBC. From the report: The move would reverse the phase-out of nuclear energy legislation approved in the early 2000s amid safety concerns prohibiting the building of new nuclear power plants and limiting the operating lifetimes of existing ones to 40 years. Only two of Belgium's seven nuclear reactors are operational - located at plants in Doel and in Tihange - and their operating licenses were recently extended until 2035. The other five reactors were shut between 2022 and 2025 and plans to dismantle them will now be suspended. Engie and the government said they aim to reach an agreement on the takeover of the nuclear stations by October 1st. In a joint statement with Engie, the Belgian government said the move also highlights its aim to extend operations of existing nuclear reactors and to develop "new nuclear capacity" in Belgium. "By doing so, the Belgian Government is taking responsibility for Belgium's long-term energy future, with the objective of building a financially and economically viable activity that supports security of supply, climate objectives, industrial resilience and socio-economic prosperity," the statement adds.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
EnComm Aviation says the firm’s action has cut off vital support for crisis-hit countries including South Sudan and the DRC
Britain’s biggest weapons manufacturer, BAE Systems, is facing a £120m lawsuit after scrapping support for aircraft used to deliver aid to some of the world’s neediest countries.
EnComm Aviation, a Kenya-based aid cargo operator, claims the decision forced the cancellation of humanitarian contracts and reduced supplies to South Sudan, now threatened by famine, Somalia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), among others.
Continue reading... | After 1 year of riding, I thought it'd be apt to do a full and real experience review of the wheels. While I do think the OneWheel is the cooler device to ride, I find myself grabbing the EUC as it works way better as a daily transportation appliance. Would you switch? And if you're sticking with OneWheel, why? Or will my problems be solved by the Funwheel X7? [link] [comments] |
People describe unnatural process as survey finds nearly half of job seekers have been interviewed by AI
Nearly half (47%) of UK job seekers have had an AI interview, research from the hiring platform Greenhouse has found.
In its survey of 2,950 active job seekers, including 1,132 UK-based workers, with additional respondents from the US, Germany, Australia and Ireland, it found that 30% of UK candidates had walked away from a hiring process because it included an AI interview.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Letter sent to government about case of Inuit woman whose baby was removed after now-banned test
The United Nations has warned Denmark that the treatment of a Greenlandic mother whose newborn child was removed by Danish authorities as a result of controversial parenting competency tests “may amount to ethnic discrimination”.
Keira Alexandra Kronvold’s daughter, Zammi, was taken away from her when she was two hours old and placed in foster care in November 2024 after Kronvold was subjected to so-called FKU (parental competence) psychometric tests. At the time, she was told that the test was to see if she was “civilised enough”.
Continue reading...Yara CEO warns of global auction that would leave poorest countries scrambling for supplies they can ill afford
The Iran war could have “dramatic consequences”, causing food shortages and price rises in some of Africa’s poorest and most vulnerable communities, the head of the world’s largest fertiliser company has said.
Svein Tore Holsether, the chief executive of Yara International, said world leaders needed to guard against soaring prices and shortages of fertiliser causing a de facto global auction that would leave the poorest countries, particularly in Africa, scrambling for supplies they could ill afford.
Continue reading...Libya needs political unity, not Washington’s dealmaking.
The consequences of Beijing’s weapons buildup.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: Elon Musk wrapped up his testimony on Thursday as the trial in his lawsuit against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman continued into its fourth day. OpenAI's attorney, William Savitt, cross-examined Musk in the morning. He asked Musk about the capped nature of Microsoft's investments in OpenAI, his involvement in negotiations about the company's structure, and whether he knew about the OpenAI nonprofit's recent initiatives. "I don't know what's going on at OpenAI," Musk testified. Savitt also asked Musk about his competing artificial intelligence startup, xAI. While not the main focus of the case, Musk said it is "partly" true that xAI used some of OpenAI's models to train its own models, a process known as distilling. Musk also suggested that xAI has used OpenAI's technology to help build the company. Musk sued OpenAI, Altman, and Greg Brockman, the company's president, in 2024, alleging that they went back on their commitments to keep the artificial intelligence company a nonprofit and to follow its charitable mission. He claims that the roughly $38 million he donated to seed OpenAI, a company he co-founded, was used for unauthorized commercial purposes. Once Musk wrapped up his testimony after roughly two hours of questioning on Thursday, his attorneys called Jared Birchall, who manages Musk's billions at his family office, as their next witness. Birchall testified about his knowledge of Musk's specific donations to OpenAI. Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers oversaw the proceedings from federal court in Oakland, California. The trial will resume on Monday. Recap: Elon Musk Says OpenAI Betrayed Him, Clashes With Company's Attorney (Day Three) Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two) Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US president faced a 60-day deadline on Friday to end the Iran war or make the case to Congress for extending it
A US-Iran ceasefire that began in early April has “terminated” hostilities between the two sides for the purposes of an approaching congressional war powers deadline, a senior official of the Trump administration said on Thursday.
Donald Trump faced a deadline on Friday to end the Iran war or make the case to Congress for extending it, but the date was most likely to pass without altering the course of the war.
Continue reading...Sharyn Alfonsi, whose report on Cecot prison was pulled by Bari Weiss, admits uncertainty over her future at network
The veteran 60 Minutes correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi expressed concern about “the spread of corporate meddling and editorial fear” at CBS News and her uncertainty about whether she will keep her job after she pushed back on a directive to change her December segment on Venezuelans who were sent to the Cecot prison in El Salvador.
Alfonsi spoke about the incident for the first time on Thursday evening after receiving the Ridenhour prize for courage at the National Press Club in Washington. Her comments come as the Trump administration has piled pressure on US media and follow the decision by the CBS News editor, Bari Weiss, to shelve the segment on the flagship news program.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for May 1.
This live blog is now closed.
Louisiana governor Jeff Landry yesterday told GOP candidates that he plans to suspend next month’s primary elections so that state lawmakers can pass a new congressional map first, the Washington Post (paywall) reported last night.
It came hours after the US supreme court decided that Louisiana’s creation of a second majority black congressional district to satisfy previously rulings relied too heavily on race and was “an unconstitutional racial gerrymander”, as opposed to a required effort to comply with the Voting Rights Act.
Continue reading...Religious group ‘reviewing all available remedies’ after clips of young people rushing its buildings in ‘raids’ go viral
On any given day, Los Angeles’s Hollywood Boulevard teems with tourists and street performers clustered near the area’s many landmarks. But in recent months, the strip has been set abuzz for a new reason.
Throngs of mostly adolescent boys and young men have been rushing the Church of Scientology’s international headquarters on the famed street.
Continue reading... | As the title suggests. Can I not just buy the XL battery and pair it with my controller to get the new power and range? [link] [comments] |
April 30, 2026 — The IWOMP 2026 Call for Papers is open. The 22nd International Workshop on OpenMP (IWOMP) will take place at Austrian Scientific Computing (ASC) at TU Wien in Vienna, October 7–9, 2026. IWOMP is the annual workshop dedicated to the promotion and advancement of all aspects of parallel programming with OpenMP. It is the premier forum to present and discuss issues, trends, recent research ideas, and results related to parallel programming with OpenMP.
The theme for IWOMP 2026 is “OpenMP: Adaptability for Heterogeneous Multi‑Device Systems.”
The OpenMP API has been instrumental in advancing parallel programming, enabling portability across both traditional and emerging heterogeneous computing systems. As the standard continues to introduce new capabilities, the OpenMP API continues to evolve, offering solutions to the growing complexity of high-performance computing (HPC) environments. The workshop welcomes papers on how the OpenMP API balances ease of use and performance, particularly in the context of heterogeneous systems, exascale computing, and real-time workloads, with an emphasis on adaptability across heterogeneous and multi-device ecosystems. IWOMP 2026 aims to bring together researchers, practitioners, and tool developers to discuss innovations, experiences, and future directions for OpenMP in an era where flexibility, performance, and portability must coexist across an ever-expanding range of computing architectures.
Background
As computing hardware has evolved from simple cores to advanced SIMD units, deeper memories, and heterogeneous computing, the OpenMP API has also evolved, extending its application interface to harness new capabilities throughout the spectrum of hardware advances. The 5.0, 5.1, 5.2, and 6.0 versions of the OpenMP specification have established the OpenMP API as the leading programming model for on-node heterogeneous parallelism that supports all versions of the C/C++ and Fortran base programming languages. This enables developers to target increasingly diverse and complex computing platforms.
Advances in technologies, such as multicore processors and OpenMP devices (accelerators such as GPGPUs, DSPs, or FPGAs), Multiprocessor Systems on a Chip (MPSoCs), and recent developments in the OpenMP API itself (e.g., metadirectives and variants for selecting device- and architecture-specific directives) present new opportunities and challenges for software and hardware developers. The growing prevalence of multi-device nodes and tightly integrated heterogeneous components further underscores the need for adaptable and scalable programming abstractions. Recent advances in the C, C++, and Fortran base languages also offer interesting opportunities and challenges to the OpenMP programming model. Among others, the more complex applications of OpenMP tasks, usage of heterogeneous computing platforms, and performance portability across different architectures are topics of interest.
Topics
The topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
Submissions
Submitted papers for review should be limited to 12 pages (not counting references). Authors of accepted papers will be asked to prepare a final paper of up to 15 pages (including references).
Submitted papers should follow LNCS Guidelines found at: https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines
Proceedings
As in previous years, IWOMP 2026 will publish formal proceedings of the accepted papers in Springer’s Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series.
Source: OpenMP
The post IWOMP 2026 Opens Call for Papers Ahead of October Workshop in Vienna appeared first on HPCwire.
Workers wrote ‘Katrina declaration’, warning that funding cuts made US dangerously unprepared for natural disasters
Fourteen employees with the US Federal Emergency Management Agency returned to work this week, after spending eight months on administrative leave for signing a public letter criticising the Trump administration.
The so-called “Katrina declaration”, sent last August to members of Congress and a federal council formed to help determine Fema’s future, was written as a rebuke from the workers about the dangerous erosion in US capacity to prepare for and respond to natural disasters.
Continue reading...The U.S. Senate unanimously passed a rule banning senators from trading on prediction markets effective immediately. CNBC reports: The move came amid rising concern about insider trading on prediction market platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, and about event contracts that can involve death or violence. On April 22, Kalshi said it had suspended and fined one U.S. Senate candidate and two candidates for the House of Representatives for political insider trading on their own campaigns. Earlier on Thursday, a group of Democratic members of Congress called on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to issue a rule "that prevents insider trading and corruption in the market and prohibits event contracts on the outcome of elections, war and military actions in the U.S. or abroad, sports, and government actions without a valid economic hedging interest." Kalshi and Polymarket both praised the Senate's action. "I applaud the Senate for passing this resolution to ban Senators and their offices from trading on prediction markets," Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour wrote in a post on X. "Kalshi already proactively blocks members of congress and enforces against insider trading. This is a great step to increase trust in our markets by making it an industry standard," Mansour said. "Now, let's pass this in the House!" Polymarket, in its own post on X, said, "We're in full support of this. Our Rulebook & Terms of Service already prohibit such conduct, but codifying this into law is a step forward for the industry. Happy to help move this forward however we can."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
What's the benefit you get by removing the fender?Don't you get all dirty from dirt and mud getting spit up at you? Aren't you worried about your feet getting sucked in? I see so many people riding like that and I just don't understand. Teach me your ways lol
Apple saw more demand for the iPhone 17 and MacBook Neo than it was expecting and suggests the RAM shortage could hit prices on new stock.
Huawei's XPixel technology at the Beijing Auto Show is far beyond what US EVs can currently do.
As interest in quantum computing grows, many enterprise teams are still asking a basic question: when does it actually make sense to use it?
At SAS Innovate this week, the company introduced SAS Quantum Lab, a new environment designed to help answer that question. With this new sandbox, SAS is treating quantum as a downstream step in a hybrid workflow, with most of the experimentation and validation happening on classical systems first.
This approach reflects how early-stage the quantum market still is. While quantum computing continues to advance, uncertainty around real-world use cases remains one of the biggest barriers to adoption, alongside cost and limited expertise.
Quantum Lab is not a quantum computer. It is a development and simulation environment built on SAS Viya, using CAS (Cloud Analytic Services) workers to emulate quantum workloads.
This design is meant to bring down the cost of experimenting with quantum algorithms. Running experiments on real quantum hardware is still expensive, particularly during the iterative phase where algorithms are tuned and refined. In an interview with AIwire at SAS Innovate, SAS Principal Quantum Architect Bill Wisotsky said those costs can escalate quickly during testing.
“If you don’t get the algorithm right the first time, there are a lot of dials that need to be changed. You could wind up incurring hundreds of thousands of dollars just to test an algorithm, not to run it for real life,” Wisotsky said.
Quantum Lab moves that work into a classical environment. Wisotsky explained how, because many quantum algorithms are highly parallelizable, SAS distributes workloads across multiple CAS workers, allowing users to test large numbers of parameter combinations simultaneously. This enables what Wisotsky described as auto-tuning, where different algorithm configurations can be evaluated rapidly to identify which one performs the best.
The company says this setup can deliver significant performance gains during development, with reported speedups of up to 100x and substantial cost reductions compared to running those same experiments on quantum hardware. Once an algorithm is validated in the simulated environment, it can then be executed on an actual quantum processor.
“That’s where the 100 times speed-up comes in. You could build a quantum algorithm, go through auto-tuning, and test all these different possible permutations of the settings very quickly for the cost of your Viya license. You can then derive your best quantum algorithm, and then run that on a quantum computer,” Wisotsky said.
The goal is to reduce the cost and complexity of experimentation, and reserve quantum resources for workloads that justify the cost of running on quantum hardware. Quantum Lab will be available to SAS Viya customers beginning in Q4, the company said.
A second quantum challenge SAS is hoping to address is accessibility. Developing quantum algorithms typically requires expertise in quantum physics and linear algebra, which limits who can meaningfully engage with the technology. Quantum Lab is designed to abstract much of that complexity.
Quantum Lab allows users to write quantum workflows in its native language, with the system abstracting differences between hardware backends. That includes managing how algorithms are mapped to different quantum architectures, where constraints such as qubit connectivity can significantly affect performance.
The environment also includes a built-in “quantum tutor,” which provides explanations, examples, and sample code for users who are new to the field. Wisotsky described the platform as both a development tool and a learning environment, meant for users who fall between expert physicists and non-technical business users. It is designed to lower the knowledge barrier that has historically limited quantum adoption.
SAS is currently exploring a range of applied quantum use cases, particularly in optimization and machine learning. These include fraud detection, bankruptcy prediction, and collateral or portfolio optimization, with financial services emerging as one of the most active sectors.
But Wisotsky emphasized that SAS does not approach these problems with a “quantum-first” mindset. Instead, the company starts by evaluating whether a problem can be solved effectively using classical methods. In one case, an insurance company approached SAS with an optimization challenge it believed required quantum computing. After reformulating the problem, SAS was able to solve it using classical techniques in under two minutes. In that case, quantum was unnecessary.
That philosophy has shaped SAS’s strategy of identifying where quantum can offer a clear advantage instead of forcing it into workflows. Problems that are good candidates for quantum approaches usually fall into categories involving highly combinatorial relationships or complex interdependencies in data.
“At the end of the day, our goal is to provide value for the customers. If it’s a quantum value, that’s great. But if it’s not, we’ll use our classical algorithms,” Wisotsky said.

Watch a Demo of SAS Quantum Lab at this link
One of the more subtle challenges in applying quantum computing, according to Wisotsky, is that it requires a different way of thinking about problems.
Techniques that are standard in classical data science do not always translate. In traditional statistical modeling, for example, highly correlated variables are often treated as a problem to be corrected. In quantum systems, those correlations can be useful, as entanglement allows them to be explored in fundamentally different ways.
Early in SAS’s quantum work, the team tested the technology on familiar benchmark problems and saw poor results. Wisotsky began to see better results after reframing those problems as physics problems rather than data science ones.
“I spoke to some friends in the field, and they said, stop thinking of it like classical statisticians. Think about it like physicists,” he said.
Looking ahead, SAS does not expect quantum computing to replace its existing analytics stack but will offer quantum as another tool within it.
Wisotsky compared it to the relationship between CPUs and GPUs. Just as GPUs are used selectively for specific workloads, quantum processors are expected to handle a narrow class of problems where their advantages outweigh their costs. Within SAS, that integration is expected to expand over time, moving from standalone experimentation in Quantum Lab into more workflows across its analytics platform.
For now, the emphasis remains on making experimentation easier. As organizations continue to explore quantum computing, SAS sees the next step as giving more users the ability to determine for themselves whether quantum belongs in their workflows.
“You can think of SAS as a big toolbox with a lot of different tools to solve a lot of different problems,” Wisotsky said. “I think that quantum is just going to be another tool in that toolbox to solve very specific problems.”
The post SAS Builds a Quantum Sandbox to Test What Actually Works appeared first on HPCwire.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for May 1, No. 1,777.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for May 1, No. 1,055.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for May 1, No. 789.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for May 1, No. 584.
A body believed to be that of the suspect was recovered after an explosion triggered a five-alarm fire at a home in Queens early Thursday morning.
North American customers will have to wait -- the tablet is only selling in India for now.
Lawmakers agree 45-day extension but Republican and Democratic critics urge reform of surveillance program
The US Congress has passed a 45-day extension of a law that grants US intelligence agencies warrantless spying powers.
Bitter infighting over section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in the Republican wing of Congress has repeatedly tanked conservative leaders’ plans to renew the controversial surveillance law for multiple years. The deadlock continued on Thursday, as the Republican House speaker Mike Johnson refused to include key reforms pushed by hardliners in his party and progressive Democrats.
Continue reading...Company details $111.2bn in revenue in first earnings report after announcement of Cook’s pending departure
Apple blew past Wall Street expectations in its first earnings report since it announced CEO Tim Cook would be stepping down.
Cook shared his thoughts about the leadership transition on Thursday, saying: “There’s no one on this planet I trust more to lead Apple into the future” than incoming CEO John Ternus. Asked by an investor what advice he has given Ternus, Cook said: “Never forget the north star for the company. You know, we’re about making the best products in the world that really enrich other people’s lives.”
Continue reading...So I wanted a pint, but the pint x seems much better.
Did they ever fix that issue where it cuts out? Wasn't it some wire issue?
Also, is a pint x worth it over a reg pint?
What is a good used price for it? Co.pared to new ,is it worth it?
Thanks guys
Passengers on the first direct flight from Miami to Caracas since 2019 were excited to return but anxious about what they would find. For others, passport issues are still a hurdle.
State pension was ‘built for a different era’, says former PM’s organisation amid pressure on government finances
Labour has been urged by Tony Blair’s thinktank to scrap the pensions triple lock amid mounting pressure on government finances.
With the Iran war threatening to derail public spending plans, the Tony Blair Institute (TBI) said the “unaffordable” manifesto pledge to maintain the triple lock should be torn up as part of a wider overhaul of the state pension.
Continue reading...Birdwatching no longer niche, old-fashioned pastime, says RSPB as research shows 47% increase in hobby since 2018
Birdwatching is the second fastest growing hobby for generation Z after jewellery making, according to a multiyear study of more than 24,000 people.
Almost 750,000 gen Zers (16 to 29-year-olds) in Britain regularly enjoy watching birds, a -1,088% increase since 2018, according to research by Fifty5Blue published by the RSPB.
Continue reading...Parliamentary committee takes unusual step of declaring no confidence in executives at utility provider
MPs have accused the leadership of South East Water of incompetence over repeated water outages for tens of thousands of customers, and expressed no confidence in their ability to reform the company.
MPs from across the political spectrum said David Hinton, SEW’s chief executive, and the board of directors operated a culture of unaccountability at the company, which provides drinking water for 2.3 million customers in Berkshire, Hampshire, Kent, Surrey and Sussex.
Continue reading...A rare archaeological site in the Sonoran Desert was bulldozed by a Department of Homeland Security contractor involved in building the latest sections of Donald Trump’s border wall, according to multiple sources briefed on the incident.
The area, in a remote corner of Arizona’s Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, is a roughly 280-by-50-foot etching in the desert sand known as an intaglio.
Last Thursday, without any notice, a contractor working for DHS cut a roughly 60-foot swath across the middle of the intaglio, doing irreparable damage to the 1,000-year-old artifact.
“I liken it to destroying the Nazca lines — something that culturally we should have been relishing and promoting.”
Cabeza Prieta, one of the largest wilderness areas outside of Alaska, also encompasses lands sacred to the Tohono O’odham Nation, which borders the refuge to the east. The O’odham have fought to prevent border wall construction across their reservation and during Trump’s first term largely prevailed; they also managed to protect the intaglio and a nearby burial site that they consider to be part of their ancestral lands.
“I liken it to destroying the Nazca lines — something that culturally we should have been relishing and promoting. Not destroying,” Rick Martynec, an archaeologist, said in a phone interview, referring to the hundreds of figures drawn into the deserts of southern Peru.
A spokesperson for U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed the destruction in a statement to The Intercept and said the agency was coordinating with tribal authorities to figure out its next steps.
“On April 23, 2026, a border wall contractor inadvertently disturbed a cultural site known as Las Playas Intaglio, located west of Ajo, Arizona along the border,” said the spokesperson, John Mennell, who is working on the construction of the second barrier in Arizona. “The remaining portion of the site has been secured and will be protected in place.”
Well known to government officials, including the Interior Department’s Fish and Wildlife Service, which manages the refuge, the intaglio lies just 10 or 15 feet from the massive steel wall that now runs along the U.S.–Mexico border. The destruction to the ancient site was first reported by the Washington Post.
Rick and Sandy Martynec, his wife, also an archeologist who has studied the site for more than two decades, said the refuge was in talks with DHS and the contractor to make sure the site was protected as the Trump administration moves forward with a second set of barriers in the ecologically sensitive region.
The Martynecs even visited the intaglio in mid-April and observed stakes that had been put in place by an engineer to mark its boundaries.
The Martynecs were first notified by FWS staff on Monday when they called the refuge to see about visiting the site and to check on its status. According to the archeologists, Rijk Morawe, the refuge manager, had already been out to survey the damage and told them what had happened.
The news took the Martynecs and others by surprise, since the agency had been in dialogue with DHS and the contractor to come up with an alternative route that would avoid the intaglio, similar to the negotiations that had taken place during Trump’s first term. (DHS’s Customs and Border Protection in Arizona did not comment by press time. FWS declined to comment, referring all border inquiries to CBP.)
“The refuge was pushing as hard as they possibly could to come to a resolution,” Martynec said.
Members of the O’odham Nation had also been keeping a close eye on border wall development. On the day before the site was bulldozed, a group of O’odham runners observed construction getting dangerously close to the protected area. That morning they called Lorraine Eiler, an O’odham elder and co-founder of the International Sonoran Desert Alliance, who lives in the town of Ajo where the Cabeza Prieta Refuge office is located.
According to Eiler, the runners told her that the contractor was indiscriminately clearing the area.
The runners told her, “They’re coming with their bulldozers and they’re knocking down trees and cactus and everything that’s along the border. They’re just bulldozing everything down and they are getting near the intaglio.”
Eiler made a round of phone calls to tribal officials and environmental groups, but the next day, the contractor moved in and destroyed the site.
“I alerted people, but all I got was, ‘We’re going to have meetings, we’re going to discuss it,’” Eiler said.
During Trump’s first term, border wall construction had widespread impacts on protected landscapes and sacred sites. In one case, DHS blasted through several hills that were too steep to build on directly, including one in Organ Pipe National Monument, east of Cabeza, that was a well-known burial ground. A contractor also bulldozed a road through an archaic Hohokam burial site on the border in Coronado National Forest, even though they’d been briefed by the tribe beforehand.
“This doesn’t bode well for the desert.”
Border security continues to be a priority for the Trump administration, which has allocated more than $11 billion for new barriers and surveillance technology. The path that was cleared through the intaglio is part of an effort to build a so-called “smart wall” that CBP says will allow it to monitor activity in the desert day and night.
To do so, according to the Martynecs, the agency will have to clear a wide swath of land between the original wall and the secondary barrier.
“There won’t be any vegetation on it at all,” Martynec said. “This doesn’t bode well for the desert.”
Correction: May 1, 2026
This story has been updated to correct an errant reference to the day the intaglio was damaged. It was bulldozed on April 23, 2026. The story has also been updated to include a statement from U.S. Customs and Border Protection that was received after publication.
The post Trump Bulldozed a 1,000-Year-Old Archeological Site to Make Room for a Second Border Wall appeared first on The Intercept.
Patient safety mechanism which gives patients the right to seek a second opinion having ‘lifesaving impact’, says health secretary
More than 500 people have received potentially life-saving care thanks to Martha’s rule, which gives hospital patients the right to seek a second opinion about their health.
They were moved to intensive care or a specialist unit after they, a loved one or a member of NHS staff triggered the patient safety mechanism, which the NHS in England began using in 2024.
Continue reading...A newly disclosed Linux kernel flaw dubbed "Copy Fail" can let a local, unprivileged attacker gain root access on major Linux distributions, with researchers claiming the bug affects kernels shipped since 2017. "The POC exploit works out of the box today, but a future version that can escape from containers like Docker is promised soon," writes Slashdot reader tylerni7. "Technical details are available here." Slashdot reader BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: A newly disclosed Linux kernel vulnerability called Copy Fail (CVE-2026-31431) allows an unprivileged user to gain root access using a tiny 732-byte script, and it works with unsettling consistency across major distributions. Unlike older exploits that relied on race conditions or fragile timing, this one is a straight-line logic flaw in the kernel's crypto subsystem. It abuses AF_ALG sockets and splice to overwrite a few bytes in the page cache of a target file, such as /usr/bin/su. Because the kernel executes from the page cache, not directly from disk, the attacker can inject code into a setuid binary in memory and immediately escalate privileges. What makes this especially concerning is how quiet it is. The file on disk remains unchanged, so standard integrity checks see nothing wrong, while the in-memory version has already been tampered with. The same primitive can also cross container boundaries since the page cache is shared, raising the stakes for multi-tenant environments and Kubernetes nodes. The underlying issue traces back to an in-place optimization added years ago, now being rolled back as part of the fix. Until patched kernels are widely deployed, this is one of those bugs that feels less like a theoretical risk and more like a practical, reliable path to full system compromise.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The United States Attorney's Office filed a motion on Tuesday that says Aimee Bock, since at least February, has been directing her college-age son to "download large volumes of material related to her federal prosecution," and disseminate them to lawmakers and members of the media.
Ross Davidson, who sang with group in 2018, was convicted of offences committed against six women
Musician Ross Davidson, a former singer for Spandau Ballet, has been jailed for 14 years for multiple rapes and sexual assaults.
Davidson, 38, was convicted across two trials of two counts of rape, an attempted rape, three sexual assaults and two charges of voyeurism, in offences committed against six women between August 2013 and December 2019.
Continue reading...Craig Venter, the pioneering scientists who led the team that first sequenced the human genome, died April 29 near his home in La Jolla, California. Venter, a rebellious scientific genius who clashed with authority and the government, leaves behind a legacy of risk-taking and success, as well as the power of applying high-performance computing.
Born in 1946 in Salt Lake City, Utah, to two U.S. Marine Corps. veterans of World War II, Venter’s swashbuckling story almost never came to be. A devoted Southern California beach bum in the late 1960s, Venter rejected the discipline of studying and the Mormon Church, which his father and grandfather belonged to. Instead of accepting a swimming scholarship to the Arizona State University, young Venter spent his time pursuing “drink, girls, and bodysurfing,” as he wrote in his 2007 autobiography.
Things began to turn around after serving as a Navy corpsman during the Vietnam War. Struck by the carnage from his posting in Da Nang, Venter decided to become a doctor if he survived the war. After making it out of Southeast Asia, Venter applied for admission to college, and earned his Ph.D from UC San Diego in 1975.
Pivoting to research, Venter cut his teeth on genetic research. While at SUNY-Buffalo in 1983, he decided to sequence the gene that makes the adrenaline receptor, which introduced him to an early DNA-sequencing machine from Applied Biosystems. In 1984, Venter joined the National Institutes of Health as a section chief of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, where he devised techniques for rapid gene recovery.

Inspired by the potential for DNA sequencing, Venter left the NIH in 1992 and founded The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR). At TIGR, Venter devised a novel approach to sequencing DNA. Dubbed the “whole-genome shotgun” technique, it utilized supercomputers and machine learning to map an organization’s entire genome all at once, rather than stitching the DNA fragments together piece by piece, or the “clone by clone” approach favored by the NIH.
In 1995, Venter proved that the whole-genome shotgun approach worked, as he successfully mapped the DNA for Haemophilus, making him the first person to ever map the entire genome of a living organism. The mapping of about 1.8 million base pairs took about a year, and showed that the promise of Venter’s new method.
Despite the time-savings, the NIH rejected Venter’s application to use his technique as part of the Human Genome Project, which the NIH and the Department of Energy started as a joint project in October 1990. Although TIGR was funded to code a small segment, his team assumed it would sit out the genome project.
So in 1998, Venter joined up with Applied Biosystems to lead a private effort to map the human genome. Backed with $300 million from Perkin-Elmer, the owner of Applied Biosystems, Venter founded a new company called Celera Genomics. He estimated it would take 300 Applied Biosystems machines to fully map the human genome, which consists of about 3.1 billion base pairs.
The government-funded sequencing community did not appreciate the competition. As he wrote in a February 2021 story in Scientific American:
“This announcement was not met with open arms by the NIH-led sequencing community who said Celera’s sequencing plans would end up with the ‘swiss cheese,’ ‘CliffsNotes,’ ‘Reader’s Digest,’ or even ‘Mad Magazine’ version of the genome. I guess I can understand why they were not thrilled to have a newcomer to the game and thus began what the press dubbed a race to sequencing the human genome pitting Celera against the NIH and international genome effort.”
Celera made tremendous progress in mapping a human genome, which turned out to be DNA that belonged to J. Craig Venter himself. Venter gives a lot of credit to the University of Arizona’s Eugene Myers, who was a key developer of the BLAST tool for sequencing analysis.

J. Craig Venter (Christopher Halloran/Shutterstock)
Despite the progress, Celera and NIH eventually called a truce in their competition in 2000, when they jointly announced during a White House ceremony the completion of the first draft sequence of the human genome. The genome ultimately was declared complete three years later, with 92% of the genome decoded.
The truce was a source of mixed feelings for Venter. On the one hand, he expressed satisfaction at making such a large contribution to scientific exploration. On the other hand, Venter was upset that he had to share the limelight with the NIH. The Nobel Prize would never be his, and his greatest success would forever be linked with a government-funded group that he considered too slow, too bureaucratic, and too unwilling to take the risks necessary to advance scientific research.
“You have to take risks,” Venter told Scientific American in a recent interview. “If you’re risk adverse, you’re in the wrong field.”
Following the completion of the Human Genome Project, Venter set his sights on other goals. After parting ways with Celera in 2002, he co-founded Synthetic Genomics in 2005 to use microorganisms to produce clean fuels. In 2006, Venter used $100 million of his own money to found the J Craig Venter Institute, where he continued genetic research. In 2013 he founded Human Longevity, Inc (HLI) to study the application of genetic data with real-world data, such as from MRI machines.
“Craig believed that science moves forward when people are willing to think differently, move decisively, and build what doesn’t yet exist,” JCVI President Anders Dale stated. “His leadership and vision reshaped genomics and helped ignite synthetic biology. We will honor his legacy by continuing the mission he built—advancing genomic science, championing the public investments that make discovery possible, and partnering broadly to turn knowledge into impact.”
Despite the great success in mapping the human genome, less progress has been made applying that knowledge to benefit people in the 25 years since. As Venter pointed out in his February 2021 byline in Scientific American, there is little question that the combination of machine learning/AI with genetic sequencing can be used to detect potential disease in people and help them through preventative measures. But Venter indicated that he believed the level of funding in the US, not to mention the focus of the US healthcare system on treatments, is anathema to preventative care.
“Progress is only made by daring to go where no roads currently exist,” Venter wrote. “As President Clinton said at the White House event in 2000 to unveil the first survey of the human genome, ‘this is the most important, most wondrous map ever produced by humankind.’ We need more explorers and more funding to fully utilize this map to uncover the new ‘lands’ yet to be discovered in the human genome.”
The post DNA Sequencing Pioneer J. Craig Venter Dies appeared first on HPCwire.
Jibril Rajoub refuses handshake at Fifa congress
Infantino to seek third term as president
The Fifa president, Gianni Infantino, confirmed his intention to stand for re-election for a third full term next year after an attempt to orchestrate a handshake between the Palestinian and Israeli delegates at congress backfired.
The Palestinian Football Federation president, Jibril Rajoub, refused to stand alongside Israel FA vice-president, Basim Sheikh Suliman, in an awkward moment towards the end of the 76th Fifa congress after both men had been called to the stage in Vancouver by Infantino.
Continue reading...Meenu Batra, a single mother of four adult U.S. citizens, was arrested on March 17 by federal immigration officers while traveling for a work trip.
Foil boarders were pursued by shark – likely a great white – off Santa Barbara before it lost interest and swam away
Ron Takeda and Tavis Boise were a few miles off the coast of Santa Barbara when they noticed the large mass trailing behind them.
“Tavis, is it a dolphin?” asked Takeda as he stood on his foil board, a specialized form of surfing, propelling himself through the waves. Boise, who was filming their run, recognized the question as an ominous sign – the veteran surfers are familiar enough with dolphins that Takeda should have recognized one immediately.
Continue reading...The camp withdrew its license application after coming under intense pressure from families of children who died as well as state legislators.
The longest shutdown of a federal department in U.S. history came to an end on Thursday when President Trump signed a bill to fund most of the Department of Homeland Security following a breakthrough on Capitol Hill.
‘It needs to change,’ insists seven-time champion
Lance Stroll labels rules ‘fundamentally flawed’
Lewis Hamilton believes Formula One drivers should have a “seat at the table” in discussion on directions the sport should take in future, to have an input alongside key stakeholders such as the teams and the FIA. Hamilton’s view was largely echoed across the paddock including by the current world champion, Lando Norris.
Hamilton was speaking before this weekend’s Miami Grand Prix where the rule changes implemented after driver dissatisfaction with this year’s new regulations are taking effect for the first time.
Continue reading...A new study from Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess found that an OpenAI reasoning model outperformed experienced ER doctors at diagnosing and managing patient cases using messy, real-world emergency department records. Researchers say the results don't support replacing doctors, but they do suggest AI could meaningfully reshape clinical workflows if tested carefully in prospective trials. NPR reports: The researchers ran a series of experiments on the AI model to test its clinical acumen -- including actual cases like the lupus patient who'd been previously treated at the emergency department at Beth Israel in Boston. The team graded how well the AI model could provide an accurate diagnosis at three moments in time, from the triage stage in the ER, up to being admitted into the hospital. Overall, AI outperformed two experienced physicians -- and did so with only the electronic health records and the limited information that had been available to the physicians at the time. "This is the big conclusion for me -- it works with the messy real-world data of the emergency department, " said Dr. Adam Rodman, a clinical researcher at Beth Israel and one of the study authors. "It works for making diagnoses in the real world." Other parts of the study focused on case reports published in the New England Journal of Medicine and clinical vignettes to suss out whether the AI model could meet well-established "benchmarks" and game out thorny diagnostic questions. "The model outperformed our very large physician baseline," said Raj Manrai, assistant professor of Biomedical Informatics at Harvard Medical School who was also part of the study. The authors emphasize the AI relied on text alone, while in real life, clinicians need to attend to many other inputs like images, sounds and nonverbal cues when diagnosing and treating a patient. The findings have been published Thursday in the journal Science.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hershey says it's benefiting from the growing use of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs even as people cut down on snacks. Here's why.
Developed within the European Commission’s Destination Earth initiative, the Climate Change Adaptation Digital Twin is a flexible modeling infrastructure that enables the production of high-resolution climate and impact-relevant information to support climate change adaptation
April 30, 2026 — An international team of researchers, led by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS), has published a paper presenting the foundations of the Climate Change Adaptation Digital Twin (Climate DT). This system was implemented within the Destination Earth (DestinE) initiative by a European partnership led by the CSC-IT Center for Science (CSC) in collaboration with the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF).

The system provides both climate and sector-specific impact data via a platform, facilitating its use in areas such as energy, water, and forest management.
In the study, published in the journal Geoscientific Model Development, the authors describe this novel modeling infrastructure, designed to bridge advanced climate science and decision support by enabling the analysis of changing climate signals and extremes and their potential impacts on key climate-sensitive sectors.
Climate DT aims to move from global climate reference projections to much more detailed, decision-oriented information. To this end, the system will generate global multi-decadal simulations (looking decades ahead) with a spatial resolution of between 5 and 10 kilometers and an hourly temporal resolution. This will provide a comprehensive view of the climate with a high level of detail to better understand how extreme weather events may evolve over the coming decades.
“We want to turn global climate projections—estimates of how the climate may change over the coming decades at an unprecedented resolution—into useful information for making local-scale adaptation decisions,” explains ICREA professor Francisco Doblas-Reyes, lead author of the study and Director of BSC’s Earth Sciences Department. “The idea is not only to produce highly detailed simulations, but to implement a system that allows us to derive information for analysis and planning in an operational context, responding as promptly as possible to the requirements of climate-sensitive sectors,” he adds.
The system is designed to produce simulations on a regular basis, with quality control and mechanisms to ensure that results reach those who need them quickly, in an accessible format and in a way that enables reuse.
Tailored Simulations and Data Access
The Climate DT also includes the possibility of running tailored climate simulations and exploring “what-if” questions. For example, it is generating storylines that recreate extreme events—such as an episode of intense rainfall, a drought, or a heatwave—under different climate conditions, to explore how these types of events and their impacts would change. This approach helps provide context for specific decisions: focusing not only on how the climate changes on average, but also on how climate change affects events that have a direct impact on people, infrastructure, and services.
Simulating the planet’s climate at this level of detail generates huge amounts of information, so the Climate DT is designed to make these data available to those who need them and facilitate their reuse. Access mechanisms, quality monitoring, and supporting services are being implemented progressively as the system evolves, with outputs already being made available through the DestinE platform.
The sectors in which this information may be particularly useful include energy (to assess changes in wind resources and their variability), water management (including availability and adaptation mechanisms), and forest management, among other areas where impacts depend on extreme events and their short-term evolution. To ensure that this information responds to real needs, the impact-relevant data is being co-designed together with several selected users.
“The ambition is to transform high-resolution simulations into indicators that can be incorporated into risk assessments, planning, and the design of adaptation measures,” says Katherine Grayson, co-author of the paper and climate researcher in the Earth System Services (ESS) group within the same department as Professor Doblas. “Ultimately, this digital twin is intended to put science at the service of society and help improve anticipation of climate change risks and adaptation to them,” she adds.
BSC’s contribution builds on its expertise in climate modeling, supercomputing, the design of workflows capable of handling demanding systems and massive datasets, and the development of decision-oriented climate information for key sectors. Infrastructures such as the MareNostrum 5 supercomputer, together with the Earth Sciences Department’s knowledge in data integration and management, are key elements in enabling a digital twin of this kind to operate reliably and ensure that its results reach researchers, climate services, and end users efficiently. Also key are the contributions of the broad European collaboration that implements the Climate DT, bringing together scientific expertise, digital infrastructure, and high-performance computing capabilities, as well as the strategic partnership with the European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU).
About Destination Earth
Destination Earth (DestinE) is an initiative funded by the European Union and promoted by the European Commission to build, by 2030, a digital replica of the Earth system to help better understand the effects of climate change and extreme events, and to support public and private decision-making. The initiative is being implemented under the leadership of the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology (DG CONNECT).
DestinE is jointly implemented through three entities entrusted by the European Commission: ECMWF, responsible for the first digital twins and the Digital Twin Engine; the European Space Agency (ESA), responsible for the Core Service Platform (the access platform); and the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT), responsible for the Data Lake, which provides access to data and services.
As part of this initiative, the Climate DT is one of the first two priority digital twins developed by ECMWF within DestinE. Its objective is to provide high-resolution, up-to-date, and useful climate information to support climate change adaptation in specific sectors and territories. It is implemented by a partnership led by CSC, currently involving 12 leading climate institutions, supercomputing centers, national meteorological services, academia, and industrial partners, through a contract procured by ECMWF.
The EuroHPC JU awards DestinE strategic access to the EuroHPC supercomputers LUMI, hosted by CSC (Finland) and the LUMI consortium; MareNostrum 5, hosted by BSC (Spain); Leonardo, hosted by CINECA (Italy); and MeluXina, hosted by LuxProvide (Luxembourg), through a EuroHPC JU Special Access call.
Reference:
Doblas-Reyes, F. J., Kontkanen, J., Sandu, I. et al. The Destination Earth digital twin for climate change adaptation, Geosci. Model Dev., 19, 2821–2848, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-19-2821-2026, 2026
Source: BSC
The post BSC Leads Study Outlining the Foundations for a Digital Twin Aimed at Climate Change Adaptation appeared first on HPCwire.
The iOS 26.4.2 update is actually a big deal for privacy, even for people who use other messaging apps.
Cole Allen, 31, is charged with attempting to assassinate President Trump and two firearms-related offenses stemming from the shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner on Saturday night.
Enhance your privacy while surfing the web, stream foreign Netflix libraries, unblock regional sports and avoid mobile traffic shaping with the best iPhone VPNs.
President Trump picked Dr. Nicole Saphier as his new nominee for surgeon general, and blamed Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy for Casey Mean's nomination stalling in the Senate.
April 30, 2026 — All activities of the LCCF project support the overriding project goal of “discovery at the frontiers of science and engineering…through large scale simulation, data analysis, and artificial intelligence applications.” In the context of Horizon, this means enabling CPU and GPU computing capability, high speed storage, and interactive capabilities. Horizon offers an order of magnitude performance improvement over the previous Frontera system.
To receive an allocation on Horizon, proposers must show compelling science or engineering challenges that require large scale computing resources, and they must be prepared to demonstrate that they can effectively exploit the computing capabilities offered by the system. Proposals from or including junior researchers are encouraged, as one of the goals of this project is to build a community capable of using computing at the highest scales. The Horizon team will offer consulting support and assistance to each project team that is granted access through the solicitation.
TACC is offering one allocation track at this time. Other opportunities designed to accommodate a wider range of research needs will be available in the future. The first Horizon opportunity will open for demonstrating large scale science, with submissions opening April 15th 2026, and rolling reviews beginning May 15th. The start date for system access is anticipated in the Summer of 2026.
Early Operations Period – Leadership Resource Allocation (LRAC)
Large allocations from 125,000 to 500,000 SUs (Horizon) and up to 50,000 (Vista) for six months duration will be offered to science teams with a strong scientific justification for access to a leadership-class computing resource to enable research that would otherwise not be possible. Successful applicants must demonstrate readiness to use the allocated cycles, as well as current peer-reviewed research funding to support the activities conducted on Horizon. LRAC submission opportunities are anticipated twice per year, during production operations.
Horizon Allocation Submission Guidelines
TACC’s Horizon Leadership-Class Computing resource is provided through funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Horizon provides a mix of CPU and GPU computing resources, including 4,750 Dell/NVIDIA Vera CPU nodes, and 2,000 Dell/NVIDIA Grace-Blackwell nodes. Details of the architecture and capabilities can be found in the user guide.
Please thoroughly read the entire LCCF allocation page so that you will be prepared to submit a high-quality proposal containing the documentation pertaining to eligibility, a description of the research to be performed using the testbed and sources of research support, and justification of the amount of SUs requested.
Learn more here.
More from HPCwire: Horizon Takes Shape at TACC as NSF Leadership-Class Facility Moves Forward
Source: TACC
The post TACC Begins Horizon Allocation Process Ahead of Summer 2026 Access Launch, Deadline June 15 appeared first on HPCwire.
President Lula’s veto of the bill was overturned by Brazil’s congress and senate, meaning it now awaits confirmation by supreme court
Brazil’s largely conservative congress has approved a bill reducing the prison sentence of the far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro, who was convicted last year of attempting a coup.
The bill had initially been passed by congress in December, but President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva vetoed it in January in a symbolic move marking three years since Bolsonaro supporters ransacked the capital, Brasília.
Continue reading...
During an April 17 congressional hearing, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called for retraction of a new Danish study that didn’t find a link between Tylenol and autism, repeatedly calling it “garbage” and baselessly suggesting that it was industry-generated and “fraudulent.”
There is no evidence of fraud or industry involvement, and the criticism Kennedy made was a limitation the authors of the paper acknowledged — not legitimate grounds for retraction, according to scientists.

Beginning with a press conference about autism in September — the Kennedy-imposed deadline for knowing the cause of the “autism epidemic” — President Donald Trump has repeatedly told pregnant women not to take Tylenol unless “absolutely necessary.” Kennedy has been a bit more circumspect on the topic, speaking of a “potential association” between prenatal Tylenol, also known as acetaminophen, and later autism diagnoses in children and calling the literature finding a connection “very suggestive.”
As we wrote in September, some studies have shown an association between prenatal acetaminophen use and autism. However, experts told us that these associations were likely not causal, and instead probably due to traits shared among people who tend to take more acetaminophen in pregnancy, such as a hereditary susceptibility to autism.
The new Danish study, published April 13 in JAMA Pediatrics, looked at national prescription fulfillment records for mothers of more than 1.5 million children and corresponding health records, finding no association between taking acetaminophen or taking greater doses of the drug during pregnancy and later autism diagnoses in the children.

When asked about the Danish study at the House Education and Workforce Committee hearing on April 17, Kennedy moved to discredit it. “The study is a garbage study. It should be retracted,” he told Republican Rep. Virginia Foxx of North Carolina. Kennedy went on to criticize the study for relying on prescription records when acetaminophen is also available over the counter. “It was a garbage in, garbage out study,” Kennedy continued. “The industry has the capacity to generate these studies all the time, and it’s fraudulent. It should be retracted.”
The study did rely on prescription data, which can lead to incomplete data on the use of the drug, Dr. Kira Philipsen Prahm, a doctor in the Center for Fetal Medicine at the Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet and first author of the study, told us via email. But such a limitation “does not automatically invalidate results,” she said. “The key question is whether the misclassification is likely to meaningfully bias the findings.” Her team’s analyses, along with prior research, indicate that “if there were a strong causal effect” of acetaminophen on autism, “it would be unlikely to be entirely obscured by this limitation,” she said.
Brian Lee, a professor of epidemiology at Drexel University’s Dornsife School of Public Health, told us that most acetaminophen is prescribed in Denmark, following restrictions on how much of the medication can be sold without a prescription. This makes Denmark a relatively good location to do a prescription-based study, he said, contrary to Kennedy’s implication that the approach invalidated the study. These restrictions were in place during the latter years of the study.
Furthermore, Prahm said, her team’s study did not find “a pattern suggesting increased risk with greater recorded exposure.” If acetaminophen were causing autism, one would expect to see more cases with increasing doses.
Nor are papers retracted simply because they have limitations, which all studies have. Prahm and her colleagues wrote in their paper that information about individuals’ over-the-counter acetaminophen use was missing and that “thus, the true exposure level among those with low-level exposure was likely underestimated,” while also explaining why they thought this was unlikely to have introduced meaningful bias.
Kennedy has a history of trying to “wield his considerable influence” to “force a retraction of a study without a legitimate reason,” Lee said, referring to a study about a common vaccine ingredient Kennedy said last summer should be retracted.
Legitimate reasons for retraction, Lee said, would include “analytical errors that affect the qualitative conclusions of the study, integrity issues, or loss in confidence of findings by the authors.” Prahm’s study “does not appear to feature any of these issues,” he said, calling Kennedy’s calls for retraction “unwarranted and politically coercive.” Lee was co-author of a 2024 Swedish study that pointed away from a causal association between prenatal acetaminophen use and autism in children, but he was not involved in the new Danish study.
Dr. Per Damkier, a professor in the department of clinical research at the University of Southern Denmark, told us via email that Kennedy “is well outside his domain of expertise” in assessing the scientific merits of the study. Damkier was not involved in the new study but has studied acetaminophen use during pregnancy.
Prahm said that the study was “conducted using nationwide Danish registry data and the pharmaceutical industry was not involved in funding or any other part of the study.” The study lists Danish governmental and hospital funding. One of the nine authors disclosed funding by a pharmaceutical company for unrelated work evaluating a contraceptive pill.
HHS did not reply to a request asking for the basis for Kennedy’s claims about the Danish study.
Kennedy faulted the Danish study for using prescription data and for the low percentage of women it recorded as using acetaminophen. “Only 2% of the people in this study got Tylenol during pregnancy, according to the endpoint,” Kennedy told lawmakers. “In fact, we know, because Tylenol is available by over the counter, most of you have taken Tylenol. Very few of you have ever gotten a prescription.”
But Kennedy was missing context on acetaminophen in Denmark, which has been increasingly obtained via prescription in recent years.
“Reliance on prescription records alone would be bad in a setting like the US, where most acetaminophen use is” over the counter, Lee said. “However, Denmark is not the US.”
Damkier said that before 2014, “more than 60% of all acetaminophen sold in Denmark” was over the counter. But in late 2013, Denmark limited the quantity of acetaminophen that could be sold without a prescription. Following this change, “more than 80% of acetaminophen sold has been prescription based,” he said, citing his own research on the topic. “I believe exposure data from 2014 and onwards are valid and representative with low risk” of misclassifying acetaminophen use, he said.
The new study looked at prescription records from pregnancies for children born between 1997 to 2022. Damkier said that the study “can be criticized” for using prescription data prior to the change in prescription regulations but that he believes “the conclusions of the authors are substantiated” overall. “By and large, this large population-wide study supports the findings from the most recent studies: Exposure to acetaminophen during pregnancy is not associated with an increased risk of childhood” autism, he said.
Prahm said that she and her co-authors had done further analyses to see if the findings varied before or after 2013, but the team “found no statistical differences between the two periods.”
Kennedy also provided a relatively high-end estimate for acetaminophen use during pregnancy in Denmark. “Fifty percent of the women in Denmark, we know from other studies, actually took Tylenol during pregnancy,” Kennedy said. “So the study was comparing people, women who took Tylenol during pregnancy to women who took Tylenol during pregnancy.”
HHS did not reply to a question about where Kennedy got this statistic, but older, self-reported data from the Danish National Birth Cohort found this relatively high rate of use. Estimates of acetaminophen use during pregnancy vary, and one more recent study found that 6% of women reported using the medication during the first trimester.
Lee said that many women in the Danish National Birth Cohort study were missing responses on acetaminophen use and were not included, saying that “the 50% is almost assuredly an overestimate.”
Furthermore, Lee and Prahm both objected to Kennedy’s characterization of the new study as comparing “women who took Tylenol during pregnancy to women who took Tylenol during pregnancy.”
“That is not an accurate description of the study design,” Prahm said. “While some individuals classified as unexposed may in fact have used over-the-counter acetaminophen, this does not mean the two groups are equivalent.”
The Danish study is not alone in using prescription data. Lee explained that using prescription data has “advantages and disadvantages.” An advantage is that it provides an objective record of drug supply, whereas studying over-the-counter exposure requires asking people to report on their own use, he said.
People can misreport their medication use, Prahm said, or the data can be influenced by recall bias, a phenomenon where people can remember things differently depending on later events. For example, a parent with a child diagnosed with autism might remember their medication use during pregnancy differently than a parent without this experience.
Furthermore, while prescription-based studies do miss some exposures to acetaminophen, they are likely to capture the most impactful use.
“Prescription based exposure likely captures those women who use substantial amounts of acetaminophen as opposed to [over-the-counter] based use, which tends to be low and sporadic,” Damkier said. “If there is no signal for prescription-based use, it is consequently exceedingly unlikely that sporadic [over-the-counter] use be associated with an increased risk” of autism.
Regardless, researchers don’t rely on single studies to draw conclusions. Rather, they look for a pattern of replication among studies done using various methods and datasets, David S. Mandell, a psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and director of the Center for Mental Health Policy and Services Research, told us via email. “When we see replication, we grow more confident in the findings.”
Multiple studies have found that associations between prenatal acetaminophen use and neurodevelopmental conditions go away when comparing siblings. In recent months, two review studies have pulled together the available data, concluding that the evidence does not show any clear or “clinically important” link between prenatal exposure to the medication and autism.
“We now have studies from Nordic countries, Japan and Taiwan showing that Tylenol doesn’t cause autism,” Mandell said. The degree of acetaminophen use varied in the studies, “and it doesn’t make a difference in the findings.”
Prahm emphasized that her team aimed to “contribute one piece of evidence” to be interpreted in the context of the broader literature. “Overall, the current evidence does not establish a clear association,” she said.
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The post RFK Jr.’s Unsupported Claims About Tylenol-Autism Study He Called ‘Garbage’ appeared first on FactCheck.org.
French prosecutors say police detained a 15-year-old suspected of using the alias "breach3d" in connection with a cyberattack on France Titres (ANTS), the state agency that handles passports, ID cards, and other secure documents. The breach allegedly involved 12 million to 18 million lines of data offered for sale online, potentially affecting up to a third of France's population if the records are unique. The Register reports: It formally opened (PDF) a judicial investigation on April 29, covering alleged fraudulent access to a state-run automated data processing system and the extraction of data from it. Each offense carries a potential prison sentence of seven years and a maximum ~$350,000 fine. Public Prosecutor Laure Beccuau has requested that the minor, whose pronouns, like their name, were also not specified, be formally charged and placed under judicial supervision. [...] France's approach to punishing minors via its legal system is typically geared toward re-education and rehabilitation rather than prison time. While those aged between 13 and 16 can face time in juvenile detention, it is often used as a last resort measure. The maximum sentences and fines for the charges the 15-year-old in this case faces are upper limits imposed on adult offenders, and would likely be lowered substantially in cases involving a minor, like this one.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Pop star was arrested in March after she was pulled over for driving erratically on US 101 in California
Britney Spears was charged in California on Thursday with driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol, authorities said.
The 44-year-old pop star was charged with a single misdemeanor count of driving under the combined influence of alcohol and at least one drug, the Ventura county district attorney’s office said.
Continue reading...A teardown of the budget laptop shows it's actually easy to get into.
Keep your web browsing activity hidden, mask your torrenting activity and unblock geo-protected streaming content with the best VPNs for Mac.
Rightwing justices in Louisiana v Callais led 6-3 vote to redraw congressional maps in blow to Voting Rights Act
The US supreme court issued a landmark ruling on Wednesday, Louisiana v Callais, relating to how states draft congressional maps under the key civil rights statute, the Voting Rights Act.
By a margin of 6-3, the rightwing justices who control America’s top court ordered Louisiana to redraw congressional maps that gave African Americans the chance to elect their candidates of choice proportionate to their population size. The majority dismissed this as an “unconstitutional racial gerrymander”.
Continue reading...Fake voices can trick even the most careful listener. But how accurate is an AI tool at spotting AI?

Connecticut lawmakers on Wednesday approved more reforms aimed at reining in towing companies in the state, following reporting by The Connecticut Mirror and ProPublica that exposed problems in state law.
The Connecticut Senate passed a bill that would create an online portal so Connecticut drivers can track their towed cars and require towing companies to consider the age of towed vehicles before they’re sold.
Last year, the legislature overhauled the state’s towing laws to end a practice in which towing companies could start the process to sell people’s cars in as little as 15 days if the firm deemed the car to be worth less than $1,500. The window was one of the shortest in the country, CT Mirror and ProPublica found, and meant many people who couldn’t afford to quickly pay the towing fees lost their cars.
The 2025 reform law required 30 days to pass before cars could be sold, and it ordered towing companies to accept credit cards, let people retrieve their belongings from towed cars, and warn owners before towing cars from private property over minor issues.
But CT Mirror and ProPublica continued to hear from residents who said they never received notice that their cars would be sold because their address on file was outdated or because their vehicle was still registered to someone else. The news organizations also performed an analysis that found that many towing companies valued vehicles much lower than their estimated retail values, allowing them to sell the vehicles more quickly.
The Connecticut Senate sought to fix both those issues with the latest bill, in part with the creation of the portal. The legislation, Senate Bill 413, would put new limits on which cars can be sold quickly: Towing companies could only sell vehicles after 30 days if they are at least 15 years old.
The new bill breezed through the Senate, 35-1. The House is expected to vote on it in the next few days.
“There are bad actors,” said Transportation Committee Co-Chair Sen. Christine Cohen, D-Guilford. “We have read about it in the press. It’s what prompted us to take action and really kind of take a look at our towing statutes on the whole.”
She said that legislators wanted to find language that strikes “that necessary balance between protecting consumers from predatory behavior but also supporting the many reputable small businesses that provide these essential services to our communities.”
The bill received bipartisan support. Committee ranking member Sen. Tony Hwang, R-Fairfield, urged members to support the measure. He said it builds on last year’s work, which he called “remarkable landmark legislation.”
The measures came partly from a working group created by last year’s towing reform law that spent the past several months studying towing policy and making recommendations.
The working group, composed of towing companies, consumer rights advocates and Department of Motor Vehicles officials, struggled to come to a consensus on policy changes. DMV Commissioner Tony Guerrera, who chaired the working group, ultimately issued recommendations that didn’t have support from everyone on the panel.
The new bill would create an advisory council to keep studying towing policies and how owners get their vehicles back. The council would also monitor the portal, which would be set up by the state DMV and allow owners to see where their vehicles have been towed and whether they are up for sale.
The bill also addressed towing fees. Towing companies have frequently complained that the fees they are allowed to charge are too low. The bill says fee rates should be set every three years and that those changes must be based on government measures of inflation.
Guerrera said the portal will make his agency more transparent and will help consumers find their vehicles more quickly.
“You have to be accountable and take things head-on,” Guerrera said. “This portal that we will get running as soon as possible will allow someone to go online and — even without all their information — find where their car is.”
But consumer advocate Raphael Podolsky, who served on the working group, said the portal will mostly help towing companies do away with paperwork and make the system easier for the DMV to monitor. He warned that some drivers might not be able to access the system.
“First of all, everybody doesn’t have a computer, and second of all, everybody who does have a computer would not know to go to a DMV portal, and third, not everybody has internet access, even if they have a computer,” Podolsky said.
Sal Sena, president of the industry association Towing & Recovery Professionals of Connecticut, said he thinks the portal will “make it easier for everyone” and that the state is “on the right track.”
The post Connecticut Senate Approves More Towing Reforms, Expanding on Landmark 2025 Legislation appeared first on ProPublica.
An end-to-end approach to help organizations retain control, authority and accountability across their digital assets
PARIS, April 30, 2026 — Atos Group, a global leader of AI-powered digital transformation, has announced the global launch of its integrated Digital Sovereignty offering, designed to help organizations retain control, authority and accountability over their data, infrastructure, applications and digital operations, while continuously managing critical dependencies, jurisdictional exposure and disruption risks.
Atos Group’s Digital Sovereignty value proposition combines end-to-end sovereign expertise with full stack capabilities, from advisory and design to deployment and operations across the entire stack, cloud, infrastructure, cybersecurity, data platforms, AI, applications and digital workplace. It is backed by local expertise and delivery when required, security cleared if relevant, and supported by Atos and Eviden expertise. It draws on comprehensive cybersecurity frameworks for data protection, access control and threat mitigation, including Eviden’s fully European data encryption products.
Atos Group’s ambition is to make sovereignty business as usual: empowering customers to manage their critical dependencies by applying years of experience in mission‑critical, regulated environments, with sovereignty‑by‑design embedded across its existing portfolio.
A compelling value proposition that delivers:
With this offering, Atos Group turns Digital Sovereignty into an operating capability for customers, built on transparency, freedom of choice and control, and supported by teams across Atos, Eviden and Atos Amplify, its consulting firm. The Group makes dependencies visible, implements enforceable controls consistently across environments, and preserves optionality over time through open standards and portability. Atos Amplify supports customers assess risk and define their target sovereign state and roadmap, making trade‑offs explicit (cost, friction, time‑to‑market) based on business criticality.
This stands as a testament to Atos Group’s Tech Ambition founded on three closely connected pillars: Agentic AI, Digital Sovereignty and Cybersecurity, designed to help organizations benefit from AI with trust, control and measurable operational value, even in regulated environments.
“Digital Sovereignty has become a board‑level imperative, especially as AI accelerates dependency and increases exposure across data, systems and supply chains,” said Michael Kollar, Atos Group digital sovereignty leader and head of Cloud & Modern Infrastructure and Digital Workplace. “With our integrated offering, we help organizations turn sovereignty into an operational capability: end‑to‑end, enforceable through cybersecurity, and adaptable across jurisdictions and customer business priorities, empowering them to continue innovating with trust and control.”
For Atos Group, Digital Sovereignty starts with clear visibility and control over data, applications, operations and jurisdictional exposure. It is delivered through granular, workload‑specific controls embedded across infrastructure, applications, AI and cybersecurity, and it requires making explicit, intentional trade‑offs between cost, innovation and time to market, as most organizations operate a mix of sovereign and non‑sovereign workloads. Sovereignty also extends across the full AI stack, with runtime guardrails, model and data control, and automated policy enforcement.
About Atos Group
Atos Group is a global leader in digital transformation with c. 59,000 employees and annual revenue of c. € 7.2 billion, operating in 61 countries under two brands — Atos for services and Eviden for products and systems. European number one in cybersecurity and cloud, Atos Group is committed to a secure and decarbonized future and provides tailored AI-powered, end-to-end solutions for all industries. Atos Group is the brand under which Atos SE (Societas Europaea) operates. Atos SE is listed on Euronext Paris.
Source: Atos
The post Atos Group Launches Integrated Digital Sovereignty Offering for Regulated and AI-Driven Environments appeared first on HPCwire.
New TechBrief Outlines Productivity Gains Alongside Rising Risks Around Security, Reliability, and Long-Term Code Quality
NEW YORK, April 30, 2026 — Generative AI tools are rapidly transforming how software is built—and raising new risks in the process, according to a new TechBrief from the Association for Computing Machinery’s Technology Policy Council (TPC) on the rise of “vibe coding.”
The TechBrief, “AI-Assisted Software Development, or Vibe Coding: Benefits and Risks of AI-Driven Software Development,” examines a growing approach to programming in which developers as well as non-technical users describe what they want to build in natural language, and AI systems generate, debug, and sometimes execute the underlying code—a shift gaining traction as AI coding assistants are rapidly adopted across enterprise and developer workflows.
While vibe coding can speed up development and make software creation more accessible, the TechBrief finds that it often skips over core engineering practices that ensure systems are secure, reliable, and maintainable.
“I use AI-assisted coding every day for both my personal and professional projects, and it’s transformed how I develop software,” said Simson Garfinkel, Chief Scientist at BasisTech and lead author of the TechBrief. “It’s making developers dramatically more effective, but it’s also introducing security vulnerabilities, increasing technical debt, and producing code that can be difficult to maintain. To use these tools safely, strong software engineering practices are still required, including clear specifications, meaningful testing, and enforced standards.”
The TechBrief highlights several risks tied to AI-generated code including security vulnerabilities inherited from training data, inconsistent or missing testing, and systems that become difficult for humans to review or maintain over time. It also points to the rise of “agentic” AI coding tools that can execute code across systems, increasing the risk of unintended actions such as exposing sensitive data, deleting critical files, or executing malicious instructions introduced through prompt injection attacks.
The ACM Technology Policy Council emphasizes that these limitations stem from how current AI systems generate code, often without enforcing specifications or systematically validating outputs. It also includes steps organizations should take when adopting AI-assisted development:
“AI systems do not understand what they’re producing, and they are not capable of reasoning about the consequences,” Garfinkel added. “As a result, we are only beginning to understand the broader impact of this technology, which is evolving rapidly.”
The TechBrief concludes that while vibe coding is likely to play a central role in the future of software development, improving code quality and accountability will be essential to making it safe and sustainable at scale.
Read the full TechBrief here.
ACM’s TechBriefs are designed to complement ACM’s activities in the policy arena and to inform policymakers, the public, and others about the nature and implications of information technologies. Earlier ACM TechBriefs have covered topics such as buying vs building LLMs, automated speech recognition, governmental digital transformation, accessibility, and generative artificial intelligence among others.
About the ACM Technology Policy Council
ACM’s global Technology Policy Council sets the agenda for ACM’s global policy activities and serves as the central convening point for ACM’s interactions with government organizations, the computing community, and the public in all matters of public policy related to computing and information technology. The Council’s members are drawn from ACM’s global membership. It coordinates the activities of ACM’s regional technology policy groups and sets the agenda for global initiatives to address evolving technology policy issues.
About ACM
ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society, uniting educators, researchers, and professionals to inspire dialogue, share resources, and address the field’s challenges. ACM strengthens the computing profession’s collective voice through strong leadership, promotion of the highest standards, and recognition of technical excellence. ACM supports the professional growth of its members by providing opportunities for life-long learning, career development, and professional networking.
Source: ACM
The post ACM TechBrief: AI ‘Vibe Coding’ Could Reshape Software Development but Lacks Key Safeguards appeared first on HPCwire.
Hope that sessions of MDMA-assisted therapy could help soldiers fight longer by helping them process trauma
A new doctrine could soon take hold in part of the US war on drugs: psychedelic drugs for active-duty soldiers suffering from PTSD.
In two studies funded by the Department of Defense (DoD), 186 service personnel with PTSD will likely next year undergo multiple sessions of MDMA-assisted therapy.
Continue reading...Dozens of project members collaborated in a winter hackathon
April 30, 2026 — Keeping in step with private industry, Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) has seen a significant increase in resources dedicated to AI-specific projects, and an event hosted in the AI Technology Laboratory over the winter was a further development in advancing the Lab’s AI for Mission — or ArtIMis — project.

The ArtIMis Winter Hackathon drew together nearly 30 members of the project team for a day of collaborative progress.
A team of about 30 members of the ArtIMis project participated in a hackathon under the direction of Earl Lawrence, the National Nuclear Security Administration’s models pillar lead for the Genesis Mission — a Department of Energy-wide AI effort — and a senior scientist in the Computing and Artificial Intelligence Division Office. The goal of the hackathon was to link the Universal Research and Scientific Agent (URSA), an agentic AI architecture built under ArtIMis, to other AI products produced through ArtIMis.
Agents and Foundations
Agentic AI are systems that can be used to perform specified tasks without requiring much human involvement or input. URSA was developed to help scientists at the Lab answer questions about their research or complete duties that might otherwise be repetitive or time-consuming. Nathan DeBardeleben, a senior research scientist and co-principal investigator for ArtIMis, likens using URSA to a mentor giving a mentee a problem to solve. From the initial text query, he says a user might have to provide hints to guide URSA toward a desired outcome.
“It works toward a solution and then finally stops when it thinks it has met your criteria,” DeBardeleben says. “A student is a good approximate — sometimes you’ll think you defined the problem incorrectly to the student, other times the student stops before you wished they had, other times it finds something interesting and goes off on a bit of a tangent. You can pick up the pieces whenever you want with URSA at these checkpoints and steer it back on course.”
URSA
URSA can summarize literature, write code, run scientific simulations, make plots, hypothesize new simulations or write papers as it works toward an answer. To produce these responses, URSA relies on a repository of accessible information and models, and to expand this library of knowledge, the hackathon participants integrated ArtIMis products known as “scientific foundation models” into URSA. These foundation models are pre-trained AI systems that have been unleashed on large Lab datasets and are now capable of identifying patterns to accomplish complex or new tasks for which they were not initially trained. By integrating these foundation models into URSA, the framework becomes more adept at answering a wider array of questions that Lab scientists might pose.
“As URSA becomes more capable, and as our agentic system can access the knowledge encapsulated in these big models, it becomes more able to solve the scientific problems we have, particularly for mission,” Lawrence explains. “We’re moving from the individual component stage to the ecosystem stage, and that makes everything a lot more useful to an actual scientist.”
A Common Goal
With nearly 100 Lab employees contributing to the ArtIMis project, collaboration across the AI-focused capability-building teams (agentic, foundation models, and testing and evaluation) and scientific-application teams (multi-physics, fractures, chemical separation, and material discovery) is no easy task. Thus, Casleton identified a hackathon as an opportunity to get members of the different teams in one location at one time to build bonds across the different teams.
“A big thing that came out of it was just seeing who’s doing the model building, who’s doing the testing and evaluation,” says Emily Casleton, a scientist and team leader of the ArtIMis testing and evaluation team. “Now, if anyone has a question about something, I know who to go to.”
Casleton’s team was charged with ensuring the foundational models were connected to URSA and running properly, and as the team lead, Casleton — as she put it — was the hackathon’s “final boss.”
“She said before everyone leaves today, she has to be able to run their model,” Lawrence says. “I don’t know if we quite achieved that, but regardless, everyone made such tremendous progress that I really think the productivity was quite high.”
Contributing to Genesis
Both Lawrence and Casleton also noted that the hackathon can be instructive for the national goals outlined in the Genesis Mission. The process of making the foundational models accessible to URSA serves as a proxy for what is expected to happen on a national scale, and after the success of the hackathon, the transition from ArtIMis to Genesis should be easier.
“If we want someone at another lab or a large DOE-wide ecosystem to be able to access the things we developed, it’s the exact same process,” Lawrence says. “So, in my mind, that was always an ulterior motive. If we solve the problem and make sure our test and evaluation team can run stuff, we also contribute to the national initiative.”
At a more insular level, the hackathon is a major step in providing more scientists with a robust AI tool for use across the Lab’s mission spaces. In the future, Lawrence hopes to host a hackathon or a similar event every quarter, so the ArtIMis project can maintain a cohesive thrust and direction.
“There’s a lot of hype and a lot of excitement around AI, particularly with Genesis, but it was nice to see the nuts and bolts of this all come together, and how scientists and AI experts can work side by side to solve real problems,” Casleton says. “It’s not just fluff, and that’s really exciting for me.”
Source: LANL
The post Los Alamos Scientists Team Up to Advance Lab’s AI Mission appeared first on HPCwire.
A federal indictment against former FBI Director James Comey hinges on the meaning of “86.” The Department of Justice said it indicates a threat of physical harm, while the more common dictionary definition is to throw out or get rid of something.
Legal experts have said the ambiguity of the meaning will make this a difficult case for the DOJ.
In May 2025, while walking on the beach in North Carolina, Comey said he came across shells arranged to spell out “86 47” — Donald Trump is the 47th president — and he shared the image on Instagram.
According to the online Merriam-Webster dictionary, “eighty-six” is a slang term most commonly used to mean “to throw out,” “to get rid of” or “to refuse service to.” More recently, though, and sparsely, Merriam-Webster says, it has also come to mean “to kill.” And that’s the definition the Department of Justice relies upon.
According to a two-page indictment announced on April 28, Comey “did knowingly and willfully make a threat to take the life of, and to inflict bodily harm upon, the President of the United States” by posting the image of the shells that “a reasonable recipient who is familiar with the circumstances would interpret as a serious expression of an intent to do harm to the President of the United States.”
The indictment includes two charges: threatening the president and “transmitting a threat in interstate commerce” (via Instagram). Combined, the charges carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.
“Threatening the life of the president of the United States will never be tolerated by the Department of Justice,” acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said at a press conference announcing the indictment.
“James Comey disgracefully encouraged a threat on President Trump’s life and posted it on Instagram for the world to see,” FBI Director Kash Patel said in a press release. In the press conference, Patel said the grand jury was presented with the fact that “shortly after posting that threat, he deleted that threat and then issued an apology.”
It’s true that the same day he posted the photo to Instagram, Comey took it down. But he did not apologize.
“I posted earlier a picture of some shells I saw today on a beach walk, which I assumed were a political message,” Comey wrote in a new Instagram message on May 15, 2025. “I didn’t realize some folks associate those numbers with violence. It never occurred to me but I oppose violence of any kind so I took the post down.”

In an interview on MSNBC on May 20, 2025, Comey insisted there was “no dark intention on my part” and that while he regretted the controversy around his post, “it’s hard to have regret about something that, even in hindsight, looks to me to be totally innocent.”
Comey said he thought it was just “a silly picture of shells that I thought was a clever way to express a political viewpoint. And actually I still think it is. I don’t see it the way some people are still saying it is, but again, I don’t want any part of any violence. I’ve never been associated with violence, and so that’s why I took it down.”
Trump wasn’t buying it.
“He knew exactly what that meant. A child knows what that meant,” Trump said on Fox News on May 16, 2025. “If you’re the FBI director, and you don’t know what that meant, that meant assassination, and it says it loud and clear.”
After the indictment, Trump commented on April 29, “If anybody knows anything about crime, they know 86. … It’s a mob term for kill him. You know, you ever see the movies? ’86’ the mobster says to one of his wonderful associates. ’86 him.’ That means kill him. … People think of it as something having to do with disappearing, but the mob uses that term to say when they want to kill somebody, they say, ’86 the son of a gun.'”
As we said, the Merriam-Webster dictionary says the term “eighty-six” is “slang meaning ‘to throw out,’ ‘to get rid’ of, or ‘to refuse service to.’ It comes from 1930s soda-counter slang meaning that an item was sold out. There is varying anecdotal evidence about why the term eighty-six was used, but the most common theory is that it is rhyming slang for nix.”
“In the 1950s the word underwent some functional shift, and began to be used as a verb,” Merriam-Webster says. “The initial meaning as a verb was ‘to refuse to serve a customer,’ and later took on the slightly extended meaning of ‘to get rid of; to throw out.’ The word was especially used in reference to refusing further bar service to inebriates.”
Merriam-Webster notes, “Among the most recent senses adopted is a logical extension of the previous ones, with the meaning of ‘to kill.’ We do not enter this sense, due to its relative recency and sparseness of use.”
The Oxford English Dictionary also says of the U.S. slang term, “In restaurants and bars, an expression indicating that the supply of an item is exhausted, or that a customer is not to be served.” The OED doesn’t include a definition meaning “to kill.”
When the controversy over Comey’s post first erupted last year, Jesse Sheidlower, adjunct assistant professor in Columbia University’s writing program and formerly editor at large for the Oxford English Dictionary, told the Associated Press, “The original sense is, we are out of an item. But there are a bunch of obvious metaphorical extensions for this. 86 is something that’s not there, something that shouldn’t be there like an undesirable customer. Then it’s a verb, meaning to throw someone out. These are fairly obvious and clear semantic development from the idea of being out of something.”
There are some uses of the phrase as a euphemism for killing someone, he said, but that usage is more rare.
“Yes, it can mean ‘to murder,’” Sheidlower told the New York Times last year. “But without any very specific indication that that’s the intended meaning, you’d never assume that. The notion that Comey was suggesting this is completely preposterous.”
Some legal experts say prosecutors will have a hard time proving Comey “knowingly and willfully” posted the photo as a violent threat.
“Posting numbers constitute a threat? I just don’t accept that,” Jimmy Gurulé, a University of Notre Dame law professor and former federal prosecutor, told the Washington Post. “They are going to have to prove that to a jury — beyond a reasonable doubt. … I don’t think they are going to be able to satisfy that legal threshold.”
“I think this indictment is deeply flawed. I think it’s probably fatally flawed. And here’s why,” CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said on April 28. “The law that Justice Department prosecutors have chosen to charge here requires an intent to kill or physically injure the president of the United States. And I think if you look at this communication, these seashells, it’s just way too ambiguous.
“What does 86 mean? Yes, there have been instances in pop culture and elsewhere where people have used 86 to mean kill, but there have been plenty of other instances, apparently far more instances where it simply means to remove or to cross off a list,” Honig said. “And that ambiguity is going to be a major problem for prosecutors because I will tell you, ambiguity is always the enemy of the prosecutors because you have to prove your case not just by 51% or 75%, you have to prove your case beyond a reasonable doubt. And I don’t see any realistic way prosecutors are going to be able to do that here.”
John Keller, a former senior Justice Department official who led a task force to prosecute violent threats against election workers, told the AP that he agreed the term “86” posted by Comey was “ambiguous — it doesn’t necessarily threaten violence and the fact that it was the FBI Director posting this openly and notoriously on a public social media site suggests that he didn’t intend to convey a threat of violence.”
Fox News legal analyst Jonathan Turley wrote in an opinion piece that despite being “one of Comey’s most vocal and consistent critics,” he believes the indictment is “facially unconstitutional absent some unknown new facts.” In order to convict Comey, he said, “the Justice Department will have to show that his adolescent picture was a ‘true threat'” according to the law. “It is not,” Turley wrote.
At the indictment press conference, Blanche was asked how he intended to prove intent when Comey has said he did not associate “86” with doing physical harm.
Blanche said that over the last year, the Department of Justice has done “a tremendous amount of investigation. And how do you prove intent in any case? You prove intent with witnesses, with documents, with the defendant himself, to the extent is appropriate, and that’s how we’ll prove intent in this case.”
This is the second time Trump’s Justice Department has sought criminal charges against Comey. In September, Comey was indicted on two criminal counts alleging he made a false statement to Congress in 2020 and obstructed a congressional proceeding. In November, a federal judge threw out the case, ruling that Lindsey Halligan, the prosecutor who secured the indictment, was unlawfully appointed to her role. The Justice Department has appealed.
On April 28, Comey released a video message on Substack responding to the latest indictment: “Well, they’re back. This time about a picture of seashells on a North Carolina beach a year ago. And this won’t be the end of it. But nothing has changed with me. I’m still innocent. I’m still not afraid, and I still believe in the independent federal judiciary. So let’s go.”
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The post Definition of ‘86’ at the Heart of Comey Indictment appeared first on FactCheck.org.
The social media giant's originality guidelines now extend beyond Reels to photos and carousels.
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., keeps getting under the skin of the NSA’s biggest supporters with his warnings about intelligence agency abuses — and the latest dispute resulted in a high-profile dustup on the Senate floor on Thursday.
Wyden said the public needs to know about a secret court opinion that found fault with the Trump administration’s use of data collected by the National Security Agency, prompting Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Tom Cotton, R-Ark., to warn of “consequences” for “distorting highly classified material.”
The unusually pointed back-and-forth came amid a fight over the reauthorization of a controversial domestic spying program. The barbs exchanged by the senators highlighted how much Wyden has angered colleagues aligned with the NSA who want the spy program to be renewed without changes.
By the end of the day, Congress voted to give the program a 45-day extension to allow further negotiations over its fate.
Wyden had argued for a shorter extension, but he was able to secure a concession. Cotton and the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, agreed to pen a letter to the executive branch asking for the court opinion to be declassified within 15 days.
Wyden says that opinion details serious violations of the program’s guidelines.
“That ruling found serious violations of Americans’ constitutional rights and how the Trump administration has used Section 702,” Wyden said. “Congress should not vote — should not vote — to renew Section 702 when Americans are left in the dark about these troubling abuses,” Wyden said.
Wyden has a long history of trying to pry loose evidence of civil liberties violations by intelligence agencies. Most famously, in 2013, he attempted to force then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper to acknowledge the existence of a phone record dragnet months before NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden’s disclosures made it public.
His sometimes-cryptic statements warning about secret spy programs have been dubbed “the Wyden siren.”
Most recently he has zeroed in on the court opinion. He irritated supporters of the NSA program on Thursday by initially refusing to give his consent for a 45-day extension of the program, until he secured the letter from Intelligence Committee leaders.
While speaking on the floor about why he opposed that extension, he accused Cotton of ducking the court opinion, prompting a pointed response.
“I am ducking nothing. I am pointing out the senator from Oregon’s long-standing practice of distorting highly classified material in public,” Cotton said. “One of these days there are going to be some consequences, and it may be while I’m the chairman of this committee.”
Cotton’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Members of Congress are protected from prosecution for comments they make on the floor under the speech or debate clause of the Constitution.
Little has been revealed about the court opinion besides a New York Times report earlier this month that it centered on searches of information about Americans in a vast database of communications that gets around laws on domestic spying because the data is collected abroad.
Wyden noted that current law already requires the court opinion to be declassified and released to the public at some point. He wants that process sped up so that it can take place before Congress votes on a long-term extension of the surveillance program.
“It sure feels like the other side of the aisle is covering the abuses up.”
“Congress must use a short-term extension to openly debate the critical issues in front of the American people. I am disappointed that, instead, it sure feels like the other side of the aisle is covering the abuses up,” he said.
Although the debate that was resolved later in the day hinged on a seemingly mundane issue — whether Congress should have three weeks or 45 days for further negotiations — it exposed hard feelings between the committee colleagues.
Wyden said a three-week extension was “more than reasonable,” given that Congress has had months to work on the issue.
Cotton said a longer extension was necessary because Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., the ranking member of the committee, recently suffered a family tragedy. Warner’s 36-year-old daughter died earlier this month, and he returned to the Senate this week after taking time off. As the highest-ranking Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, Warner will play a key role in the negotiations in extending the law.
“I would suggest that comity also counsels that we give a little bit longer than two weeks to a grieving colleague who just had a terrible family tragedy,” Cotton said.
Warner’s office did not immediately return a request for comment.
Update: April 30, 2026, 5:29 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to include Congress’s extension of FISA after publication.
The post Ron Wyden Is Pissing Off the NSA’s Biggest Backers. Tom Cotton Warns There Will Be “Consequences.” appeared first on The Intercept.
This live blog is now closed.
Louisiana postpones primaries as states rush to redraw districts after supreme court ruling
Voting rights advocates vow to ‘relocate’ fight after supreme court gutting
The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law decried the decision by the supreme court to severely weaken Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Damon T Hewitt, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee, issued this statement:
“Black Americans have never been fully represented in the electoral process. This ruling makes it less likely that we ever will. The impact of this ruling cannot be understated. The consequences will be seen both immediately and far into the future.
Continue reading...Sling and YouTube TV help you cut the cord, but what do they offer?
SAN JOSE, Calif., April 30, 2026 — Altera, the world’s largest pure-play FPGA solutions provider, today announced the release of FPGA AI Suite 26.1.1, a major update to its AI software platform. FPGA AI Suite is designed to simplify and accelerate deployment of trained AI models onto FPGAs for edge AI applications powering physical AI systems including robotics and real-time autonomous machines. The 26.1.1 release introduces a new compiler technology that uses spatial mapping of AI models. This approach delivers ASIC-like performance for optimized AI inference, while maintaining fast time to market and re-programmability for evolving workloads, along with deterministic, low-latency FPGA-based execution.
The spatial compiler architecture in FPGA AI Suite 26.1.1 maps neural networks directly onto FPGA hardware, enabling a streaming dataflow approach instead of traditional sequential processing. By optimizing data movement and parallel execution, it improves efficiency and delivers higher throughput, lower power consumption, and deterministic low latency. This makes it well suited for real-time edge applications such as vision, video analytics, language models, and sensor processing in physical AI systems.
Edge AI is redefining how physical AI systems, such as robotics and autonomous machines, interact with the real world, enabling them to sense, think, and act in real time across dynamic environments. These physical AI systems demand high-performance, low-latency sensor processing, efficient AI inference, and deterministic responses to enable safe and intelligent operation.
Altera supports these applications with its AI-enabled Agilex FPGAs and FPGA AI Suite, delivering deterministic, low-latency performance with the flexibility to adapt to evolving AI workloads. By combining adaptable hardware with optimized AI development tools, Altera enables developers to build and deploy scalable, real-time edge AI solutions across its Agilex portfolio. Agilex FPGAs offer a range of capacities, peripherals, and interfaces to support edge AI applications across different form factors. These solutions enable next-generation physical AI systems with built-in safety, security, and reliability.
“FPGA AI Suite 26.1.1 reflects our broader strategy to make FPGA-based AI implementation more accessible and scalable,” said Venkat Yadavalli, head of Altera’s Business Management Group. “As AI moves closer to the edge, developers need easy-to-deploy solutions that combine performance, efficiency and flexibility. With FPGA AI Suite, customers can scale seamlessly across Altera’s Agilex portfolio and target a broad range of end applications and use cases with a unified development approach.”
About FPGA AI Suite
FPGA AI Suite is a software platform that simplifies AI development and deployment on FPGA-based systems. Developers can use FPGA AI Suite in conjunction with industry-standard frameworks like PyTorch and TensorFlow and the model optimization capabilities from OpenVINO. FPGA AI Suite enables developers to efficiently optimize and run AI models with low latency and deterministic performance. Designed for flexibility and scale, FPGA AI Suite supports applications from edge to data center, helping organizations accelerate time-to-market for real-time, power-efficient AI solutions.
For a complete list of FPGA AI Suite 26.1.1 features, visit what’s new in FPGA AI Suite.
Availability
FPGA AI Suite 26.1.1 is available for download today and supports Quartus Prime Pro Edition 26.1. FPGA AI Suite continues to support early-stage development with license-free operation for up to 100,000 consecutive inferences, lowering barriers to adoption. Visit Get Started with FPGA AI Suite for more information.
About Altera
Altera is the industry’s largest pure-play FPGA solutions provider, with an exclusive focus on delivering FPGA innovations to the broad market. The company provides a comprehensive portfolio of programmable hardware, software, and development tools that empower designers of electronic systems to innovate, differentiate, and execute with greater speed and efficiency. With industry-leading FPGAs, SoCs, and design solutions, Altera enables customers to achieve faster time-to-market, greater flexibility, and optimized performance across a wide range of applications, spanning physical AI, industrial automation, audio/video, robotics, aerospace, defense, data centers, telecommunications, and more.
Source: Altera
The post Altera Brings Determinism to Physical AI Systems with Latest Release of FPGA AI Suite appeared first on HPCwire.
Trial continues after heated back-and-forth during OpenAI’s cross-examination of the Tesla CEO
Elon Musk’s court case against Sam Altman continued on Thursday, after a day of contentious exchanges during OpenAI’s cross-examination of the Tesla CEO. Musk faced more combative questioning throughout the morning, in a glimpse of what may await other prominent witnesses set to take the stand.
Witness testimony and evidence has revealed formerly private emails, text messages and diary entries surrounding the formation of OpenAI, giving a behind-the-scenes look at how the tech behemoth was created. Many of the tech industry’s most powerful players are named as witnesses and will give their accounts on the origins of Musk and Altman’s bitter feud. Altman will testify later in the trial, which will last three weeks.
Continue reading...Demand for increasing AI compute is keeping chip supply short for the foreseeable future, and Samsung is coming out ahead.
This comes on the heels of the first public hearing over last summer's Fourth of July floods that killed more than 100 people across the Hill Country, including 27 girls at Camp Mystic.
"We've been warning about this for a long time," one local resident told CBS News. "It's like a tsunami — you see the smaller waves before the big one hits."
Louisiana Secretary of State Nancy Landry said Thursday that the state will suspend its May 16 House primaries in the wake of the Supreme Court striking down the state's Congressional map.
The U.K. has raised its national threat level from "substantial" to "severe," citing the increasing threat of Islamist and extreme right-wing terrorism in the country.
A Pentagon official publicly placed the Department of Defense's cost for Operation Epic Fury at $25 billion.
The agency is planning to bring back most of the staffers from the Cadre of On-Call Response and Recovery who were terminated as part of Kristi Noem’s plans to cut the agency.
President says decision made ‘in honor of the king and queen’ as industry officials call deal ‘significant boost’
In a gesture of diplomatic friendliness after King Charles’s visit to the White House, Donald Trump said the US would be removing all tariffs on whisky imports.
“In Honor of the King and Queen of the United Kingdom, who have just left the White House, soon headed back to their wonderful Country, I will be removing the Tariffs and Restrictions on Whiskey having to do with Scotland’s ability to work with the Commonwealth of Kentucky on Whiskey and Bourbon,” Trump said in a post on social media.
Continue reading...RightsCon, one of the world's largest digital human rights conferences, was suddenly postponed by Zambia's government just days before it was scheduled to begin in Lusaka. Officials cited unresolved speaker clearances and "thematic issues," while Access Now said it had not yet received formal communication and was seeking an urgent meeting with the government. 404 Media reports: Minister of Technology and Science Felix Mutati first announced the postponement on April 28, saying that Zambia needed more time to ensure the conference "fully [aligns] with national procedures, diplomatic protocols, and the broader objective of fostering a balanced and consensus-driven platform for dialogue." "In particular, certain invited speakers and participants remain subject to pending administrative and security clearances, which have not yet been concluded," he added, according to the Lusaka Times. [...] On a popular listserv for academics, many of whom are attending RightsCon, a board member of Access Now wrote "I am told I can leak that RightsCon has been canceled. Message from [Access Now] following shortly" in a thread about what attendees were planning on doing. And in an email, AccessNow wrote: "It is with heavy hearts that we share: RightsCon will not proceed in Zambia or online. We understand this news is deeply upsetting for our community and while we know everyone has questions, our goal right now is to notify you of the event's status because many of you have imminent travel plans. We do not recommend registered participants travel to Lusaka for RightsCon. Over the last 48 hours we have experienced an overwhelming surge of support from civil society, government representatives, sponsors, and our community as a whole. For this, we wholeheartedly thank you. We'll communicate more information soon."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Basically, since my board is already registered i can replace parts. I want to know if I'm bought a new battery from future motion and installed it, will the corrupt memory go away.
Republican-controlled House approved measure to fund much of DHS, excluding immigration enforcement
Donald Trump swiftly signed bipartisan legislation on Thursday after the US House of Representatives voted to fund much of the Department of Homeland Security – excluding immigration enforcement operations – and end the longest government agency shutdown in history.
The agreement aims to draw a line under a 75-day impasse that had threatened airport chaos and exposed fresh strains within the Republican party.
Continue reading...April 30, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has opened a new call for proposals under the High-Performance Computing for Energy Innovation (HPC4EI) program, a national initiative managed by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) that connects U.S. manufacturers with the computing power and scientific expertise of DOE’s national laboratories.
The program invites companies to collaborate with DOE researchers and engineers to tackle complex materials and manufacturing challenges using high-performance computing (HPC), modeling and simulation and AI. The goal is to accelerate technology development, reduce industrial energy use and strengthen domestic supply chains. Through the program, industry partners gain access to world-class supercomputing facilities and technical expertise across the DOE laboratory system.
The latest solicitation focuses on two areas aligned with DOE priorities: advanced materials and manufacturing technologies and industrial process innovation. Projects may include modeling and simulation of advanced materials for energy systems, AI-driven materials discovery, digital twins for manufacturing qualification and computational approaches to improve productivity in energy-intensive industries.
Funded through DOE’s High-Performance Computing for Manufacturing (HPC4Mfg), selected projects may receive up to $400,000 in DOE funding to support HPC cycles and research conducted by national laboratory staff. Industry partners must provide at least 20 percent cost share, which may include in-kind contributions such as personnel time, data or other resources.
Since 2015, the HPC4EI program has helped lower barriers for manufacturers seeking to use advanced computational tools, enabling companies to address technical challenges that would be difficult or costly to solve through experimentation alone. Scientific insights from HPC have supported advances across industries including additive manufacturing, aerospace systems, materials discovery and process optimization.
HPC4Mfg is funded by both DOE’s Advanced Materials and Manufacturing Technologies Office and the Industrial Technologies Office.
Applicants must submit a concept paper by 5 p.m. PT on May 27 to be eligible to submit a full application.
HPC4EI will host informational webinars to provide an overview of the application process and DOE topic areas of interest. Register here.
For more information about the solicitation and application process, visit https://hpc4energyinnovation.llnl.gov.
More from HPCwire: DOE Announces Over $10M Available for High Performance Computing Innovation Program
Source: LLNL
The post DOE Opens New HPC4EI Call to Connect US Manufacturers with National Lab Supercomputing appeared first on HPCwire.
FreshRealm, a food supplier used by Blue Apron, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Green checkmark will appear on artist profiles to signal they meet the platform’s standard for authenticity
Spotify on Thursday unveiled a new verification system designed to help listeners distinguish human musicians from AI-generated content, as people flood streaming platforms with a growing volume of synthetic tracks made with artificial intelligence.
The Swedish streaming giant said its “Verified by Spotify” badge – marked by a green checkmark – will begin appearing on artist profiles and in search results in the coming weeks, signaling that a profile has been reviewed and meets the platform’s standards for authenticity.
Continue reading...Decision follows pressure from lawmakers and families as investigations continue into response to deadly disaster
Camp Mystic, the Christian summer camp in Texas where 27 campers and counselors died in a catastrophic flood last year, has halted plans to reopen this summer, after months of intensifying pressure and outrage by state leaders and victims’ families.
In a statement on Thursday, the camp said: “No administrative process or summer season should move forward while families continue to grieve, while investigations continue and while so many Texans still carry the pain of last July’s tragedy.”
Continue reading...Democratic senator for Rhode Island, Jack Reed, opened the Senate armed services committee on Thursday by accusing Pete Hegseth of 'dangerously exaggerating' his statements about a US victory in Iran. Later during the hearing, Democratic senator for New York Kirsten Gillibrand called the war 'unauthorised' and confronted the defence secretary over the unpopularity of the war among Americans
Continue reading...The Democratic Party’s pick for Maine senator suspended her candidacy on Thursday. Democratic Gov. Janet Mills, who entered the race as the establishment pick and assumed favorite, announced her campaign did not have the financial resources to continue.
Mills’s exit less than six weeks before the June primary clears the path for populist candidate Graham Platner, now the presumed nominee, to face off against incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins in the November general election after the party worked to subdue Platner’s campaign. The Democratic Party’s decision to wade into the primary at all had reignited a criticism that the Democratic establishment would stop at nothing to keep progressives out of Congress.
“The Democratic establishment — and especially calcified Senate leadership — is learning in real time that they are wildly out of touch with what Democratic primary voters want,” said Amanda Litman, co-founder of Run for Something, which recruits young progressive candidates for office. “The establishment simply doesn’t have the juice (or the trust) anymore.”
By the time Mills, 78, ended her campaign on Thursday, party leaders had changed their tune on Platner. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who backed Mills early in the race, released a statement with New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, the chair of Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, saying that Collins “has never been more vulnerable” and that they would work with Platner to beat her. The DSCC had financially backed Mills’s campaign, forming a joint fundraising committee with her in October. And they stuck by Mills even as her campaign appeared to languish.
Platner, once considered a long-shot candidate marred by controversy, has surged this year in fundraising and polling. In a statement in January, Gillibrand said she was “very optimistic” about Mills’s race. In February, when polling numbers came out showing Platner beating Mills with 64 percent support to her 26, Schumer remained in her corner.
The upset marks “a massive embarrassment for Chuck Schumer and DSCC operatives,” a Democratic strategist told The Intercept, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of professional reprisal. “This was their star recruit and she couldn’t even make it to the election. No longer can they be the gatekeepers.”
Platner has faced a slew of controversies since launching his campaign last year, including revelations that he had a Nazi tattoo and had posted a series of regrettable comments on Reddit. Those pitfalls led many of Platner’s critics to compare him to another populist Democratic darling who took a hard turn to the right after entering Congress: Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa.
On Thursday, Fetterman made clear that he would not welcome the comparison. While other members of his party prepared to embrace Platner, Fetterman told reporters: “Democrats really, really like Platner in Maine, but the Republicans fucking love him. If Maine wants an asshole with a Nazi tattoo on his chest, they get him.”
In a statement on Thursday, Platner said he looked forward to working with Mills to defeat Collins in November. “This race has never been about me or about any one person. It’s about a movement of working Mainers who are fed up with being robbed by billionaires and the politicians they own, and who are taking back their power.”
The day before she dropped out of the race, The Associated Press published an article about Mills campaigning as an underdog in the race despite having the resume for the job. On Thursday, Mills’s campaign was over.
The post Democratic Leaders Wanted to Control the Maine Senate Race. Their Pick Just Dropped Out. appeared first on The Intercept.
Shayndi Raice to lead CBS’s foreign coverage after Weiss ousts bureau chief over reported tensions
Bari Weiss, the CBS News boss, has ousted a veteran bureau chief following tensions over coverage of the Middle East and brought in a new foreign editor who, according to sources, is more aligned with Weiss’s pro-Israel agenda.
Paramount, which owns CBS, announced on Wednesday that it had hired Shayndi Raice, a Wall Street Journal editor who most recently served as the paper’s deputy bureau chief for the Middle East and north Africa, based in Israel. Raice will move to London, where she’ll oversee the network’s international coverage in a newly created position, the company said. In a social media post, Weiss called Raice “a scoophound reporter, a brilliant editor, and a clear-eyed leader”.
Continue reading...As AI-generated music spreads, Spotify says it wants to help users "trust the authenticity" of what they're listening to.
Owning a pet now costs thousands of dollars a year, and the financial pressure is mounting for many pet owners.
Test strips cost about $1 each and can be used to check drugs for dangerous contaminants, including fentanyl and xylazine.
While large language models can match or exceed emergency physicians in specific contexts, AI can't replace doctors.
Email is like those creaking old Terminators from the ’70s which continue to function without complaining. Designed for a world that doesn’t exist anymore, it has optional encryption, no built-in auth, three⁺ retrofitted security layers bolted on top, an unstandardized filtering layer and many more quirks. Yet billions of emails arrive correctly every single day.
Email is not elegant but nonetheless it is Lindy. In the new age of agentic AI, we can only expect it to metamorphose into another dimension.
↫ Saurabh “Sam” Khawase
The fact that email is as complicated as it is bad enough, but having it be so dominantly controlled by only a few large gatekeepers like Google and Microsoft surely isn’t helping either. I feel like email is no longer really a technology individuals can actively partake in at every level; it feels much more like WhatsApp or iMessage or whatever in that we just get to send messages, and that’s it. Running your own mail sever isn’t only a complex endeavour, it’s also a continuous cat-and-mouse game with companies like Google and Microsoft to ensure you don’t end up on some shitlist and your emails stop arriving.
I settled on Fastmail as my email service, and it works quite well. Still, I would love to be able to just run my own email server, or have some of my far more capable friends run one for a small group of us, but it’s such a daunting and unpleasant effort few people seem to have the stomach and perseverance for it.
Interest earnings on a $40,000 deposit will vary, sometimes significantly, depending on the account type.
The Senate on Thursday passed an extension of a key surveillance authority that allows U.S. intelligence agencies to spy on foreigners without a warrant, the latest in a back-and-forth with the House over the expiring program.
The Senate rejected Democrats' sixth attempt to limit President Trump's authority to wage war on Iran.
Four months after US capture of Nicolás Maduro, officials hail repairing of ties as airliner touches down in Caracas
US and Venezuelan officials have hailed a new era in diplomatic relations as the first direct commercial flight between the two countries in more than seven years landed in Caracas.
Nearly four months ago, US special forces attack helicopters and planes swept into the skies over Venezuela’s capital after Donald Trump ordered the capture of its president, Nicolás Maduro.
Continue reading...Coming soon: More stories from the Yellowstone universe, the series finale of The Chi, UFC and more.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Several times in the last couple of decades, Microsoft has released source code for the original MS-DOS operating system that kicked off its decades-long dominance of consumer PCs. This week, the company has reached further back than ever, releasing "the earliest DOS source code discovered to date" along with other documentation and notes from its developer. Today's source release is so old that it predates the MS-DOS branding, and it includes "sources to the 86-DOS 1.00 kernel, several development snapshots of the PC-DOS 1.00 kernel, and some well-known utilities such as CHKDSK," write Microsoft's Stacey Haffner and Scott Hanselman in their co-authored post about the release. [...] This source code is old enough that it hadn't been stored digitally. "A dedicated team of historians and preservationists led by Yufeng Gao and Rich Cini," calling itself the "DOS Disassembly Group," painstakingly transcribed and scanned in code from paper printouts provided by Paterson. This process was made even more difficult because modern OCR software struggled with the quality of the decades-old printout.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Can LIV find new backers and what are the options for Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm, Lee Westwood and others?
Confirmation that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund will cease funding the LIV Golf tour will have huge ramifications, for the future of the tour itself, the players and across golf’s traditional heartlands. Where does PIF’s withdrawal leave them all?
Continue reading...Another Fed rate pause has left mortgage borrowers with more questions than answers. Here are three to contemplate now.
Coach says basketball, American football have deeper ties
Calls for more publicly accessible playing spots in US
On World Cup expectations: ‘All is possible in football’
In a podcast appearance released Thursday, Mauricio Pochettino defended the tournament prospects of his US men’s national team, but gave a mixed answer when asked if the hosts feel excitement brewing stateside, questioning the “emotional relationship with the game” of the American public writ large.
“The kids don’t develop until they are 11, 12, or 13,” Pochettino explained in his appearance on Stick To Football. “The difference within other countries – for me, I know Argentina – the way that I developed my emotional relationship with football is before I started to walk because I started to kick the ball. That is the problem. The relationship is with basketball or American football. They take the ball with their hands, first thing. [Elsewhere] you kick the ball with your feet.”
Continue reading...If you’re looking for the best hair dryer for your specific hair type and budget, we tested popular models from Shark, Dyson and more.
Keir Starmer pledges crackdown on protesters chanting or displaying antisemitic slogans as terror attack is assessed to be ‘highly likely’
Keir Starmer has pledged to crack down on those “venerating the murder of Jews” at protest marches as the UK terror threat level was raised to “severe” in the wake of the Golders Green attack.
The prime minister promised to do “everything in our power to stamp this hatred out” after meeting emergency workers and community leaders near the scene in north-west London where two Jewish men were stabbed on Wednesday.
Continue reading...Senator Jack Reed says at hearing that defense secretary failed to give Trump accurate picture of war in Iran
Pete Hegseth has failed to give Donald Trump an accurate picture of the war on Iran while resorting to “dangerously exaggerated” statements to create an inaccurate picture of a US military triumph, a senior Democrat told a Capitol Hill hearing on Thursday.
Jack Reed, the ranking Democrat on the Senate armed services committee, told Hegseth, the defense secretary, that far from victory, US citizens were having to bear the cost of a war they did not support in the form of increased fuel prices.
Continue reading...Dozens handed life peerages in apparent concession, enabling their return to red benches
Dozens of hereditary peers whose seats have been abolished have had their lawmaking powers restored as Keir Starmer seeks to accelerate changes to the House of Lords.
It is understood that 15 Conservative hereditary peers, two Labour and nine crossbenchers have been handed life peerages, enabling their return to the red benches.
Continue reading...Coroner says none of the five civilians killed in incident in Belfast during Troubles should have been shot
British army soldiers “lost control” and used force that was “not reasonable” in the killing of five civilians in Northern Ireland in 1972, an inquest judge has ruled.
Four of the victims – two teenagers, a father of six and a Catholic priest – posed no risk when they were shot in the Springhill and Westrock areas of west Belfast on 9 July 1972, Mr Justice Scoffield said on Thursday.
Continue reading...Prominent contemporary visual artist explored range of techniques across six decades of work
The German artist Georg Baselitz, whose expressive paintings and sculptures stirred controversy before winning him global acclaim and the admiration of politicians in high office, has died aged 88.
The Thaddaeus Ropac gallery, which had a longstanding professional relationship with the artist, confirmed his death on Thursday. It said Baselitz had “defined German visual art for a generation” and had died peacefully.
Continue reading...April 30, 2026 — Biologists and engineers have been working together over decades to decipher the language of biology. Now, they are teaching AI models to interpret that knowledge and harness it for national priorities through the Orchestrated Platform for Autonomous Laboratories (OPAL) project, a Department of Energy (DOE) investment tied to the Genesis Mission.

Secretary of Energy Chris Wright commissions the Anaerobic Microbial Phenotyping Platform in December 2025. Photo credit: Andrea Starr/PNNL.
OPAL researchers are building an entirely new research ecosystem for biological research to meet DOE missions. Hands-on, manual experimental cycles are being replaced with intelligent AI-driven systems that integrate historical data with fresh research results to learn, adapt, and optimize in real-time.
An Orchestra for Biotechnology
Just as a musical orchestra requires four instrument groups—strings, woodwinds, brass, and percussion—to perform a symphony, the orchestrally named OPAL requires contributions from four distinct sources to create a new kind of biotechnology powerhouse.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) plays its essential part in microbial research and autonomous experimentation. PNNL co-leads OPAL’s microbial testbed in partnership with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), focusing on microbial bio-design and phenotyping—the assessment of an organism’s observable traits. While PNNL undertakes a broad range of microbial research and autonomous experimentation, LBNL is focused on microbial bio-design and assessing observable microbial traits.
At PNNL, the microbial testbed team takes advantage of the new Anaerobic Microbial Phenotyping Platform (AMP2), a powerful new resource unique among the national laboratories. AMP2 became operational in January 2026 within the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a DOE Office of Science user facility at PNNL. This sophisticated platform integrates robotic systems that automate formerly manual steps of preparing microbial samples, transferring experiments between stations, and timing sample incubation.
But robotic automation is just the start. True autonomy comes from the integration of control software, automated data analysis, and intelligent AI agents executing continuous cycles of experiment without human intervention. Within OPAL’s Design-Build-Test-Learn loop, AMP2 performs the heavy lifting. Meanwhile, advanced instrumentation located at PNNL enables the large-scale identification of proteins, bridging the gap between genes and the proteins that lead to biological function.
“PNNL’s world-class measurement capabilities in mass spectrometry, proteomics, and metabolomics form one of the cornerstones of OPAL’s biological design platform,” said Kristin Burnum-Johnson, PNNL’s OPAL project lead. “Our contribution includes generating those data and making them accessible to project-developed AI agents for rapid interpretation and systems integration.”
OPAL FAMOUS
When learning a new language, it helps to have an interpreter. For an AI agent to understand the language of biology, that means training it with science research outputs and advances published in the scientific literature. It also means creating models that “translate” science inquiries across the “dialects” of instrument data outputs, gene and protein sequences, and organism growth patterns, among other data points.
A research team at PNNL is doing just that through a separate but connected project supported by DOE’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) program called OPAL Foundational AI Models for Optimizing and Understanding Biological Systems (FAMOUS).
“For biology, one of the most under-appreciated and difficult tasks in AI training is finding data that’s in the right format,” said Chris Oehmen. “Through OPAL FAMOUS, we are creating agents that ingest raw data and translate it into terms that an AI agent can understand and then act upon.”
When implemented as part of the OPAL platform, these agents will act as the “central nervous system” of advanced automated laboratory platforms.
PNNL’s expertise in microbiology, predictive phenomics, and purpose-built AI agents for biology provide one of the four orchestral contributors to OPAL.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory brings its Advanced Plant Phenotyping Laboratory, which is unique among the national laboratories, to the overall OPAL effort through a synergistic partnership with PNNL’s expertise in microbial systems. Argonne National Laboratory contributes extensive experience in protein structure and data analyses to inform protein design. And LBNL’s genomics and bio-design platform connect microbial functions with genomes in partnership with PNNL.
Together, the four labs are training their combined expertise to deliver on two DOE Genesis Mission Challenges: improving bioproduct production and critical mineral extraction using microbes.
Nature’s Factories
Plants and microbes already provide efficient bio-factories, churning out products that we use every day. Cotton, olive oil, antibiotics, dyes, lubricants, fuels, and thousands of other commodities trace their origins to plants or microorganisms.
These efficient bio-powerhouses are now being harnessed to churn out other commodity chemicals, in collaboration with industry partners through the OPAL project.
“Harnessing these processes would provide an alternative to a supply chain that is dependent on China, all while advancing U.S. leadership in the bioeconomy,” said Douglas Mans, interim Associate Laboratory Director of Earth and Biological Sciences at PNNL. “What’s been holding us back is our inability to grow and study the massive number and diversity of microbes at a scale and pace that is needed for identifying breakthrough applications. With the work we are doing in OPAL, we will be able to identify, grow, and optimize the use of these microbes in days and weeks instead of years using automation and AI, a focus of the Genesis Mission.”
OPAL researchers are leveraging AI insights to learn the underlying forces and biomolecules that control biological function and in turn how to use this information to predict and design organism growth for higher yields or better stress tolerance.
Recovering Critical Minerals
The team is currently tackling a DOE priority challenge to optimize growth of Thlaspi arvense, commonly called field pennycress. The plant has already shown promise to serve as a field cover crop that can produce useful oils while pulling the critical mineral nickel out of the soil.
Likewise, soil microbes such as Pseudomonas putida have shown promise in “biomining”—the practice of using organisms’ natural ability to break down minerals bound up in rocks in a process that releases the desirable rare earth metals. In its first two months of operation, AMP2 has already identified key biological pathways to optimize critical mineral recovery under preferred laboratory growth conditions.
“We are excited to move this work toward optimizing both microbes and plants, because microbes and plants work well together—you can use either one to make the other one better,” said Oehmen.
“OPAL is teaching AI the language of biology, then using it to steer growth and production,” added Burnum-Johnson.
“This is about much more than simply making current processes faster and more efficient,” said Mans. “Automation and AI are vehicles for true scientific innovation. We can perform many more experiments and generate much larger datasets that will lead to new insights that we cannot even imagine.”
About PNNL
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in energy resiliency and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle and supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.
Source: Karyn Hede, PNNL
The post PNNL: Decoding the Language of Plants and Microbes Using AI appeared first on HPCwire.
DoJ announces changes including ‘loophole’ that allows people to buy guns at shows without background check
The US justice department has rolled back several significant restrictions on guns, including reinstating the so-called “gun show loophole”, which allowed people at such events to buy firearms without a background check.
The changes, announced by the acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, amount to a shift in firearm policy advocated by supporters of the second amendment, who are prominent in Donald Trump’s supporter base.
Continue reading...LA JOLLA, Calif., April 30, 2026 — The J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI) announced that J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., the Institute’s founder, board chair, and chief executive officer, died yesterday in San Diego following a brief hospitalization for unexpected side effects that arose from treatment of recently diagnosed cancer.
Dr. Venter was a visionary scientific leader whose work helped define modern genomics and launch the field of synthetic biology. He drove scientific and technological change by building interdisciplinary teams, pushing for bold ideas and faster methods, and insisting that discovery should translate into real-world impact. He was also a fierce advocate for robust federal science funding and for partnerships that accelerate progress across government, academia, and industry.
“Craig believed that science moves forward when people are willing to think differently, move decisively, and build what doesn’t yet exist,” said Anders Dale, president of JCVI. “His leadership and vision reshaped genomics and helped ignite synthetic biology. We will honor his legacy by continuing the mission he built—advancing genomic science, championing the public investments that make discovery possible, and partnering broadly to turn knowledge into impact.”
Across his career, Dr. Venter helped move genomics from slow, gene-by-gene discovery to scalable, data-driven science—and then helped take the next step: demonstrating that genomes could be designed and constructed.
At the National Institutes of Health, he helped pioneer gene discovery using expressed sequence tags (ESTs), enabling rapid identification of large numbers of human genes and accelerating genome mapping efforts.
He went on to lead efforts that produced the first draft sequences of the human genome, a milestone that helped usher biology into the digital age. He and colleagues later published the first high-quality diploid human genome, demonstrating the importance of capturing genetic variation inherited from both parents.
In synthetic biology, Dr. Venter and his teams achieved a landmark by constructing the first self-replicating bacterial cell controlled by a chemically synthesized genome—proof that genomes could be designed digitally, built from chemical components, and “booted up” to run a living cell.
He also pursued scientific discovery at global scale. Through the Sorcerer II Global Ocean Sampling Expedition, Dr. Venter and his teams used metagenomics to reveal extraordinary microbial diversity, reporting the discovery of millions of new genes and expanding the known universe of protein families—work that deepened understanding of the ocean microbiome and its role in planetary systems.
Beyond his scientific achievements, Dr. Venter was a builder: of teams, platforms, and institutions designed to take big scientific bets. In addition to founding JCVI, he was a serial entrepreneur who co-founded Synthetic Genomics, Inc., Human Longevity, Inc., and most recently Diploid Genomics, Inc., advancing efforts to translate genomics and synthetic biology into tools for health and society.
The Institute asks that the privacy of Dr. Venter’s family be respected. Additional information regarding memorial arrangements will be shared when available.
About J. Craig Venter Institute
The J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI) is a not-for-profit research institute in Rockville, Maryland and La Jolla, California dedicated to the advancement of the science of genomics; the understanding of its implications for society; and communication of those results to the scientific community, the public, and policymakers. Founded by J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., JCVI is home to approximately 120 scientists and staff with expertise in synthetic biology, human and evolutionary biology, genetics, bioinformatics/informatics, information technology, high-throughput DNA sequencing, genomic and environmental policy research, and public education in science and science policy. JCVI is a 501(c)(3) organization. For additional information, please visit www.jcvi.org.
Source: J. Craig Venter Institute
The post J. Craig Venter Dies, Leaving Legacy in Genome Science and Synthetic Biology appeared first on HPCwire.
Decision follows backlash from Italian government and European Commission
The jury of the Venice Biennale has quit just days before the prestigious art exhibition is due to begin, amid a row over the decision to allow Russia to participate.
The resignation of the five-member international jury was announced late on Thursday in a brief statement by the Venice Biennale organisers, and came a day after the Italian culture ministry sent inspectors to Venice in search of information about the decision to allow Russia to have a pavilion at the event.
Continue reading...Reuters reports that Charles Lieber, the former Harvard scientist convicted of lying to U.S. authorities about payments and ties to China, is now leading China's state-funded i-BRAIN lab in Shenzhen, where he has access to advanced nanofabrication tools and primate research facilities for brain-computer interface work. From the report: Charles Lieber, 67, is among the world's leading researchers in brain-computer interfaces. The technology has shown promise in treating conditions such as ALS and restoring movement in paralyzed patients. But it also has potential military applications: Scientists at China's People's Liberation Army have investigated brain interfaces as a way to engineer super soldiers by boosting mental agility and situational awareness, according to the U.S. Defense Department. Lieber was found guilty by a jury and convicted in December 2021 of making false statements to federal investigators about his ties to a Chinese state program to recruit overseas talent, and tax offenses related to payments he received from a Chinese university. He served two days in prison and six months under house arrest, and was fined $50,000 and ordered to pay $33,600 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service. During the case, his defense said he was suffering from an incurable lymphoma, which was in remission, and he was fighting for his life. Three years after he was sentenced, Reuters has learned that Lieber is now overseeing China's state-funded i-BRAIN, or the Institute for Brain Research, Advanced Interfaces and Neurotechnologies, with access to dedicated nanofabrication equipment and primate research infrastructure unavailable to him at Harvard. The lab is an arm of the Shenzhen Medical Academy of Research and Translation, or SMART. "I arrived on April 28, 2025 with a dream and not much more, maybe a couple bags of clothes," Lieber said of his move to China at a Shenzhen government conference in December. "Personally, my own goals are to make Shenzhen a world leader." SMART last year appointed Lieber as an investigator, according to a post on i-BRAIN's website dated May 1, 2025. That news was covered by some media outlets. The same day, i-BRAIN said Lieber had also been appointed its founding director -- an announcement that went unreported at the time. This story is the most comprehensive account of Lieber's activities since he moved to China. Reuters is reporting for the first time that his lab has access to dedicated primate research facilities and chip-making equipment; that it sits within a sprawling ecosystem of state-backed institutions bankrolled by billions of dollars in government funding; and that it is housed within an institution that is luring top scientific talent back from the United States.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Thermos Stainless King Food Jars and Thermos Sportsman Food & Beverage Bottles were sold at Walmart, Target and Amazon.com.
Brendan Carr claims agency’s renewal order is strictly related to investigation into network’s DEI initiatives
Brendan Carr, the Trump-picked chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), denied speculation that the agency is forcing ABC to apply early to renew licenses for its eight owned and operated local television stations as punishment for an ill-timed joke made last Thursday by the late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel.
The decision drew backlash from the industry group National Association of Broadcasters, whose chief executive called it “nearly unprecedented”; from the Republican senator Ted Cruz, who said the agency should not operate as “the speech police”; and from press freedom organizations that have derided it as an example of a disfavored network being punished for editorial purposes.
Continue reading...More governors call for special sessions following supreme court’s decision severely weakening Voting Rights Act
Louisiana moved to postpone its May primaries on Thursday in a move that came as other southern states are also scrambling to redraw congressional districts in response to the supreme court’s Wednesday ruling that severely weakened the landmark Voting Rights Act.
Before the supreme court’s decision eliminating a key protection against racial discrimination in drawing voting maps, some states had already begun initiating processes to redraw districts and gut Black voting power. More states have now followed, with governors calling for special sessions to redraw congressional districts, potentially before the midterm elections in November.
Continue reading...Researchers say results mark a ‘profound change in technology that will reshape medicine’
From George Clooney in ER to Noah Wyle in The Pitt, emergency department doctors have long been popular heroes. But will it soon be time to hang up the scrubs?
A groundbreaking Harvard study has found that AI systems outperformed human doctors in high-pressure emergency medicine triage, diagnosing more accurately in the potentially life and death moments when people are first rushed to hospital.
Continue reading...Middle school students managed to stop their school bus after the driver passed out from an asthma attack while on a four-lane highway in Mississippi. The bus had just left Hancock middle school, in Hancock county, on Wednesday with about 40 children onboard when Leah Taylor, 46, had an asthma attack. Taylor was treated by emergency services, while the children were honoured at a pep rally and will be treated to a field trip lunch at a restaurant of their choice
Continue reading...Suspect, who has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, was known to the Prevent anti-radicalisation scheme
The suspect in the Golders Green attack was referred to Prevent, the official counter-terrorism scheme, and cleared of being a terrorist danger six years before two Jewish men were stabbed.
His case was referred to Prevent in 2020 and closed within six weeks by the deradicalisation scheme, which has faced previous criticism for being ineffective.
Continue reading...Using a VPN on your Android device can help you keep your online activity private, stream geo-restricted content and bypass throttling from anywhere.
By attacking the basic settlement between scientists and the state, the US president has proved that experts can’t avoid these fights
Donald Trump’s war on science has been vicious and hugely damaging, but it is worth noting that he has lost some of its biggest battles. Last year, Mr Trump demanded that US federal scientific and medical research funding be cut by about half. But the budget Congress passed in February actually delivered a slight increase in overall funding – although specific Trump targets such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were cut. He also continues to chip away at science in other ways such as dismissing the board overseeing the National Science Foundation this week.
Maga’s attacks on science have been nakedly political. Its defeats have been politics of a different sort, showing that the bipartisan pro-science consensus is still intact, and for the moment has the power to hold Mr Trump in check. Scientists themselves appear to be waking up to the potential of such politics. The organisation 314 Action, which supports Democratic scientists running for office, reported that more than 700 candidates – vying for local, congressional and gubernatorial positions – have sought its support ahead of the midterm elections this year, three times the usual number. Many gave the White House’s war on science as the reason for their political turn.
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Continue reading...LEMONT, Ill., April 30, 2026 — Quantum bits (qubits) are the fundamental building blocks of quantum information processing. A novel qubit platform invented at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory exhibits noise levels thousands of times lower than those of most traditional qubits. Noise refers to disturbances in the environment that diminish a qubit’s performance. The platform was built by trapping single electrons on the surface of frozen neon gas. The recent finding positions Argonne’s platform as a strong contender in the field of high-performance quantum technologies.

A quiet qubit: An electron (represented by the ball) is controlled by a resonator (red wires) above a solid neon surface (the transparent square piece under the ball). Noise (disturbances) in the environment (represented by the distortion) becomes quiet around the electron and neon (clear area). Image credit: Xu Han/Argonne National Laboratory.
The new study, jointly led by Argonne and the University of Notre Dame, was published in Nature Electronics. Collaborating institutions included the University of Chicago, Harvard University, Northeastern University and Florida State University (FSU).
“In previous work, we demonstrated the outstanding performance of our electron-on-neon qubit,” said Xu Han, an Argonne scientist and co-corresponding author. “By thoroughly characterizing the qubit’s noise properties, this latest study shows why its performance is so good. Our results prove that our technology is promising for quantum information processing at larger scales.”
Quantum Computing: Potentially Transformative, but Challenged by Noise
Today’s computers and smartphones run on bits, which are tiny switches that can be either 0 or 1. Quantum computers use a special kind of bit known as qubits that can be 0 and 1 at the same time. What’s more, the state of one qubit can instantly affect another qubit’s state, even if they are on opposite sides of the planet. Many different types of physical objects can be used to build qubits, including electrons, photons and loops of wire.
The remarkable properties of qubits can endow quantum computers with exponentially greater computational power than that of classical computers. This opens the door to solving challenging problems like inventing disease-curing drugs and optimizing complex supply chains.
Yet, quantum computers are still an emerging technology. Qubits are extremely sensitive to noise — tiny disturbances in the environment such as electromagnetic fields, heat and particle vibrations. As a result, qubits tend to have short coherence times, meaning that they can only retain information for a fraction of a second. This makes quantum computers very error-prone.
Most of today’s chip-based qubits are made of semiconducting or superconducting materials. Semiconductors have controllable conductivity while superconductors have no electrical resistance. In experiments, industry-leading qubit platforms have performed reasonably well. However, qubits based on both semiconducting and superconducting materials are often challenged by noise from material defects, embedded charges and fabrication variability. The electron-on-neon qubit has the potential to address these limitations.
Solid Neon Is Less Noisy
In 2022, Argonne scientists at the Center for Nanoscale Materials (CNM) invented a fundamentally new type of qubit made by freezing neon gas into a solid and spraying electrons from a light bulb filament onto the solid. A special electrode traps a single electron just above the neon’s surface. The electron serves as the qubit, with the electron’s motion in space representing the qubit’s 0 and 1 states. An important part of the platform is a device, called a resonator, that sends out microwave pulses to control and measure the qubit’s state. The CNM is a DOE Office of Science user facility.
A follow-up Argonne-led study in 2024 found that the electron-on-neon qubit can attain a coherence time of 0.1 milliseconds. This is nearly a thousand times better than the previous record for conventional semiconducting qubits and competitive with the highest-performing superconducting qubits. The study also demonstrated the qubit’s high gate fidelity, which is a measure of how accurately the qubit can control quantum information processing.
When it comes to noise, solid neon is inherently much quieter than semiconducting and superconducting materials because it is chemically inert and free of impurities.
A Systematic Noise Characterization
The present study evaluated the platform’s quietness with a systematic noise characterization performed at the CNM. This involved directing carefully timed sequences of microwave pulses through the resonator at various frequencies. The sequences manipulate the qubit and probe noise in its local environment.
“There’s a particular frequency called the ‘sweet spot’ where the electron qubit becomes relatively insensitive to nearby electrical noise,” said Dafei Jin, the research project leader. Jin was previously a scientist at Argonne and is now an associate professor at the University of Notre Dame. “However, in this work, we intentionally looked at frequencies outside this sweet spot. This enabled us to investigate how the solid-neon environment disturbs the qubit and to compare it with other materials.”
The study team found that the noise in the neon qubit platform is 10-10,000 times lower than that in most semiconducting qubits and rivals the lowest semiconductor noise records. Yet, there is still room for improvement. The scientists discovered some limited noise due to stray electrons and unevenness in the neon surface.
“We have begun follow-up work to mitigate this noise and further optimize the qubit,” said Jin.
In addition to its excellent noise properties, the neon qubit has other advantages. Relative to semiconducting and superconducting qubits, it has a much simpler, lower-cost fabrication process. For example, electrons are freely available from light bulb filaments.
Besides Han and Jin, the study’s other authors were Yizhong Huang at Argonne and Xinhao Li, who was at Argonne when this research was conducted; Yutian Wen at the University of Notre Dame; Christopher S. Wang and Brennan Dizdar at the University of Chicago; Wei Guo and Xianjing Zhou at FSU and the Florida A&M University (FAMU)-FSU College of Engineering; and Xufeng Zhang at Northeastern University.
The research was supported by DOE’s Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Argonne’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development program, Julian Schwinger Foundation for Physics Research, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, National Science Foundation, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Program, and the France and Chicago Collaborating in the Sciences program.
Source: Michael Matz, Argonne
The post Argonne: Researchers Demonstrate Low-Noise Qubit Using Electrons on Solid Neon appeared first on HPCwire.
US president said he was instead nominating radiologist and Fox News contributor Dr Nicole Saphier for the post
Donald Trump on Thursday pulled his nominee for US surgeon general, Casey Means, and announced a potential replacement.
The US president said that Means will continue to fight for the so-called Make America Healthy Again (Maha) movement spearheaded by health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr. He stated this was despite opposition from Bill Cassidy, the Republican US senator of Louisiana, to Means’s nomination.
Continue reading...Recycling or trading in your devices is a better way to reduce e-waste, but fewer than half of US adults do either.
Vehicle was travelling through Juvisy-sur-Orge when it veered off the road into the river
Four people have been rescued from the Seine near Paris after a bus driven by a trainee driver collided with a parked vehicle before plunging into the river.
The bus was travelling through the town of Juvisy-sur-Orge, south-east of the French capital, on Thursday when it veered off the road into the Seine, prosecutors said.
Continue reading...Cole Tomas Allen, 31, allegedly stormed the White House correspondents’ association dinner
The man accused of attempting to assassinate Donald Trump by rushing the black-tie press gala in Washington DC at the weekend where the US president was a guest, agreed on Thursday to remain in custody while his federal criminal case moves forward.
The suspect, Cole Tomas Allen, 31, was not planning immediately to contest prosecutors’ arguments that he was a danger to the community and should remain in jail, his attorney, Tezira Abe, said during a federal court hearing in the capital.
Continue reading...Global Sumud Flotilla describes interception as ‘violent raid’ while Turkey condemns it as ‘act of piracy’
Israeli forces have intercepted and detained the crews of at least 22 boats near the Greek island of Crete from a flotilla that is attempting to break Israel’s maritime blockade of the Gaza Strip to deliver humanitarian aid.
The Global Sumud Flotilla, consisting of about 58 vessels carrying people from across 70 countries, departed from Italy on Sunday.
Continue reading...US president’s latest outburst comes a day after he suggested a ‘possible reduction’ in US troops in Germany
Donald Trump has again lashed out at Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, saying he should focus on “fixing his broken country” and trying to end the Russia-Ukraine war – and spend less time “interfering” in Iran.
“The Chancellor of Germany should spend more time on ending the war with Russia/Ukraine (Where he has been totally ineffective!),” Trump wrote in a social media post.
Continue reading...Don Garber claims his account was ‘compromised’
Whitecaps face a potential relocation
Major League Soccer commissioner Don Garber said his X account was “compromised” on Wednesday evening, a statement offered after a post on his account called British Columbia Premier David Eby a “liar” earlier in the day.
MLS has been ensnared in a relocation controversy surrounding the Vancouver Whitecaps, who say they have faced serious financial issues as a result of having to play at BC Place, the stadium owned by the province. The long-running saga has most recently seen the Whitecaps connected with a potential move to Las Vegas or Phoenix.
Continue reading... | I just got the Rally XL yesterday. Ordered directly from the onewheel site. Went for my first ride on it and noticed this weird little continuous rattle sound. I've had a Pint for about 2 years now and I know the whirring of the motor is normal. I've never heard this other sound though. Anyone know if it's normal for the rally xl? Or maybe if it's a break in thing? I don't think it's the little rubber nubs on the tire hitting the board but I could be wrong. Sounds like bearings or something to me but idk. I guess it could be tire touching the board. Here's the clearance between the tire and the rear of the board: https://imgur.com/a/RQvZkzE [link] [comments] |
One of the officials told CBS News that the fire knocked out power and propulsion on the guided-missile destroyer, a mainstay of the Navy's forward presence in Asia.
Oil prices hit a 4-year high as Axios reports Trump will hear new options to try to break the Strait of Hormuz standoff with Iran with a new wave of attacks.
Brent crude surged past $126 a barrel early Thursday, while U.S. gasoline prices jumped to $4.30 a gallon.
A hoard of Viking Age silver coins unearthed from a field in Norway is largest discovery of its kind in the country's history.
What's new on HBO Max in May? A diverse mix of sports, drama and documentaries.
A new poll shows a slim majority of Swiss voters now support a June 14 referendum to cap the country's population at 10 million by 2050. Under the proposal backed by the right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP), "the permanent resident population must not exceed 10 million before 2050, and Switzerland should abandon its freedom of movement agreement with the EU," reports Reuters. From the report: Switzerland's population is now more than 9 million, with official data showing foreign nationals accounted for more than 27% by 2024. The survey, conducted on April 22 and 23 and published in newspaper Tages-Anzeiger, showed 52% of 16,176 respondents in favor of the proposal or leaning that way, while 46% took the opposite view. The rest gave no opinion. A previous poll from early March had shown 45% backing the initiative and 47% against it, the newspaper said, flagging the latest result as unusual in that Swiss referendum proposals generally lose support as the voting day comes closer. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
"Old school" digital cameras, aka digicams, are trendy again and it makes perfect sense why.
Debt relief could help you pay less than you owe, but the negotiation process for those deals may surprise you.
Home Office minister says ‘the Green Party has hit a new low’ after party leader’s repost on X
On BBC Radio Merseyside the presenter, Tony Snell, put it to Kemi Badenoch that Merseyside was a lost cause for the Tories. He said that Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, had been on the programme yesterday. He said that Farage argued that Scousers were down to earth and the Tories they were seen as “aloof and remote”.
Badenoch said no one had ever described her as aloof and remote. When it was put to her that Farage was talking about the party, she said the Tories were the party of working people. Labour were only interested in welfare, she claimed.
Nigel Farage can say as much as he wants that he’s the one who’s down to earth. Someone just gave him a £5m gift to the other day. I don’t know what’s down to earth about that.
Who gets £5m is a gift. If I got £50,000 as a gift, I think people would raise their eyebrows. That’s a hundred times that. And he forgot to register it. He forgot that he’d been given £5m. I don’t think that’s down to earth. So I’m not going to be taking any lessons from Nigel Farage.
Continue reading...Cole Allen, 31, is facing three charges related to the attack outside the White House Correspondents' Dinner, including attempting to assassinate President Trump.
Indictment accuses high-level officials in Sinaloa of offences such as drug trafficking, weapons offences and kidnapping
The US justice department has charged the governor of Sinaloa and nine other current and former Mexican officials for alleged ties to the Sinaloa cartel, accusing them of aiding in the massive importation of illicit narcotics into the United States.
Some officials were members of Mexico’s progressive ruling party, Morena, posing a political conundrum for Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum as she seeks to offset mounting pressures from the Trump administration.
Continue reading...Governor says decision to keep rates at 3.75% reasonable given unpredictability of events unfolding in Middle East
The Bank of England has left interest rates unchanged at 3.75% but said the UK may need to brace for increases later this year, as “higher inflation is unavoidable” as a result of the war in the Middle East.
The Bank’s rate-setting monetary policy committee (MPC) voted to leave borrowing costs on hold, but said that if energy costs stayed persistently high it might have to take a more “forceful” response to keep inflation under control.
Continue reading...
Democrats say Republicans have ignored voters’ concerns about affordability, including health insurance as they supported President Donald Trump’s 2025 tax and spending bill.
"As a result of the 'Big Beautiful Bill,' 15 million Americans have been thrown off the healthcare that they need," Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said during a committee hearing that included testimony by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The senator, who frequently talks about the high cost of health insurance or lack of access to it, has cited the 15 million number several times in recent months.
Millions of people are on track to lose Affordable Care Act coverage in the coming years, according to independent estimates. But only a fraction have likely occurred so far.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act extended income tax cuts for a wide swath of individual taxpayers and businesses, added $75 billion in new funds for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and made historic cuts to safety net programs, including Medicaid.
The Congressional Budget Office, Congress’ nonpartisan budget-analysis arm, predicted shortly after the legislation passed that the law would increase the number of people without health insurance by 10 million through 2034. That included people who had been covered by Medicaid or the Affordable Care Act.
Although Sanders’ statement targeted the legislation, Sanders’ spokesperson Patrick Barham told us the senator was also referring to the expiration of premium tax credits for people purchasing insurance through the ACA marketplaces, expected to affect about 4 million people. Barham said these two factors "will strip coverage from more than 15 million Americans and increase out-of-pocket health care costs for millions more." He cited an analysis by the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reported in March that 23.1 million consumers were enrolled in ACA plans for 2026. That’s about 1 million less than in 2025.
So far, New Jersey and New York are among the states reporting decreased enrollment.
Community health centers that serve high volumes of ACA-enrolled patients have reported declines in insured patients, said Sara Rosenbaum, a George Washington University healthcare law and policy professor. Young people have disproportionately shed their insurance, leaving older, sicker people insured.
Medicaid work requirements under the 2025 law are set to take effect in January 2027, although some states are implementing the new rules this year, including Nebraska and Montana.
KFF Health News reported that most Medicaid beneficiaries affected by these provisions are expected to lose health insurance coverage not because they don’t work but because of paperwork errors, such as failing to document their hours worked.
Joe Antos, an American Enterprise Institute emeritus health policy specialist, said it’s not easy to assign the cause or causes of declining ACA enrollment, given the changes in the law and overall inflation that is squeezing many households.
Sanders said, "As a result of the 'Big Beautiful Bill,' 15 million Americans have been thrown off the healthcare that they need."
This is premature. ACA plan enrollment is down about 1 million people since 2025. The CBO projected that 10 million people would be newly uninsured by 2034 as a result of the 2025 bill. Separate from the legislation, in 2026 roughly 4 million people were expected to lose expiring tax credits that subsidized their coverage.
Although close to 15 million people are expected to lose coverage — not all of them because of the One Big Beautiful Bill — it hasn’t happened yet and we cannot know with certainty that it will.
The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate it Mostly False.
RELATED: Would rural residents get hit twice as hard by expiring ACA subsidies?
Suleiman had been referred to counterterrorism scheme in 2020 but case was closed the same year
Here are some of the latest images from the newswires in Golders Green this morning:
A 45-year-old man, who is a British national, born in Somalia, was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder.
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, said he came to the UK lawfully as a child.
The Metropolitan police said he was initially taken to hospital after being arrested but has since been discharged. He was taken to a London police station where he remains in custody.
The Met commissioner, Mark Rowley, said the suspect has a history of mental health issues, drug use and convictions for violence.
Continue reading...Access to HLRS systems gives engineers at the global company on-demand computing capabilities and has enabled standardization of its simulation pipelines.
April 30, 2026 — Operation of large-scale machinery — for example engines in power plants or cargo ships, or cement manufacturing — is a major global source of the CO2 emissions that are driving climate change. As the world attempts to transition to a more sustainable future, reducing the reliance of such infrastructure on fossil fuels could lead to dramatic reductions in the world’s carbon footprint. For manufacturers of industrial infrastructure this presents a major opportunity, as their expertise and resources place them in an optimal position to design the new, less carbon-intensive technologies that will make this transition possible.

The Everllence B&W ME-GI dual-fuel two-stroke engine can run on marine fuel, liquified natural gas, biomethane, and synthetic natural gas. Photo credit: Everllence/Sebastian Vollmert.
One prominent player in this effort is Everllence, an international mechanical engineering firm based in Germany that has grown to more than 140 offices worldwide. Until recently called MAN Energy Solutions, Everllence has its roots in MAN, a global company that is also historically significant for building both the world’s first diesel engine and first diesel-fired power plant. In recent years, Everllence has turned its focus away from fossil fuels and toward developing technologies for large-scale decarbonization, including engines powered by alternative fuels, more efficient turbomachines, industrial scale heat pumps, and carbon capture and storage facilities.
“Our company’s mission is to forge the path toward net zero together with our customers,” explains Dieter Schwab, Head of Business IT at Everllence. “We manufacture technologies that could be transformational, and our ambition is to set the course for sustainable change with our product portfolio.”
Simulation with high-performance computing (HPC) is an essential tool for Everllence engineers working to achieve this goal. For the past four years this has meant integrating supercomputing resources at the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS) into the company’s product development pipeline. Working through HWW and T-Systems, which partner with HLRS to coordinate industrial access to its computing infrastructure, Everllence engineers around the world are using these high-performance computing resources to develop innovative technologies and customized solutions more efficiently.
Simulation for Complex, Customized Products
Everllence is a leading provider of propulsion, decarbonization and efficiency solutions for shipping, the energy economy, and industry. Its machines are also typically both very large and very complex, making research and development impossible without simulation. When designing a next-generation engine for a supertanker cargo ship, for example, engineers must be able to simulate fluid dynamics behavior in the casting of steel components or combustion processes in the burning of alternative fuels such as ammonia or methanol. As a global leader in a very competitive marketplace, access to supercomputing capabilities is also extremely important for accelerating speed to market and achieving the extreme precision required to satisfy demanding specifications.
In most cases Everllence does not simply sell off-the-shelf products, but delivers customized solutions that are either unique or produced in small series that are designed to meet clients’ specific technical requirements. This means that simulation is required at many stages in the product design process, starting even during the proposal phase when Everllence bids for new contracts. Here, simulation can be used to evaluate the feasibility of a client’s technical requirements, and enables engineers to propose realistic solutions that will best meet those needs without the time and expense that would be required for physical prototyping.
In recent work, for instance, HLRS computing resources were used for acoustic simulations with fluid-structure interaction that wouldn’t have been computationally feasible on previous in-house systems. In addition, the common web-based platform has greatly facilitated the collaboration with other off-shore simulation engineering sites.
Flexible Access to Powerful Computing Capabilities
Before the company began computing with HLRS, simulation engineers at Everllence would face bottlenecks resulting from limited computing capabilities, leading to competition for scarce resources within the company. Large simulations also often exceeded the practical capacity of the company’s in-house systems. Such factors meant needing to wait to run a critical simulation or to purchase computing time elsewhere. Overcoming these limitations is very important, as the ability to simulate quickly and efficiently directly affects Everllence’s ability to complete project proposals and push product development forward quickly.
Meanwhile, exploding demand for high-performance hardware like GPUs and data storage devices presents a supply chain problem for companies like Everllence. Because hardware manufacturers are already struggling to keep up with demand from large-scale data centers and HPC facilities, companies whose primary business is not information technology can find it difficult to purchase hardware of their own. “The prices for hardware are constantly fluctuating,” Schwab says, “and in the past one might have to wait up to a year for components to be delivered after placing an order. These dependencies are painful, and it doesn’t make sense for us to invest in them.”
Gaining access to HPC resources at HLRS solved both of these problems, as simulation engineers now have the ability to access powerful, state-of-the-art computing resources for large simulations on an as-needed basis. For Dr. Martin Kaiser, Product Owner for Simulation Process Integration and HPC at the company’s Oberhausen location, this has major benefits: “In our work it is sometimes necessary to scale up to resources on the order of 1,000 compute cores. Because of the large overhead required to purchase and operate a supercomputer, however, it doesn’t make sense for us to have our own dedicated system. Through our partnership with HLRS, we have virtually unlimited, pay-per-use access to powerful high-performance computing capabilities exactly when we need them.”
Reliable access to a large-scale HPC system through a partnership with HLRS has also had other benefits for Everllence. Kaiser explained that having a single, primary resource for high-performance computing is enabling the company to standardize its simulation pipelines. In the past, individual groups working at different locations used a variety of legacy solutions. Access to HLRS’s system has made it possible to implement a more standardized approach in which shared solutions based on common use cases are now used across the entire company. This has streamlined collaboration and creates new synergies that can further enhance productivity.
Responding Quickly to Volatile Markets
While the technologies that Everllence produces have enormous potential to support decarbonization, the company’s global prominence and its direct engagement with megatrends mean that the future is anything but certain. Factors such as changing national commitments to carbon neutrality targets, political decisions that affect demand for heat pumps, new regulations in the shipbuilding industry, or conflicts in the Middle East that disrupt the fuel industry have significant effects on demand for Everllence’s green technology products and services. Such insecurities also highlight why on-demand access to HLRS’s systems is so important for Everllence, as it gives the company flexibility it needs to adapt quickly to changing market dynamics.
Despite such volatility, Schwab finds great motivation in what Everllence has to offer: “The need for electric vehicles is widely discussed, but even if it were possible to shift the entire passenger car market to EV’s, the effect would not be nearly as large as it would be, for example, if we can make the cement industry or district heating CO2-neutral. The potential is much, much greater.” For that to occur, though, research and development will need to continue in order to make carbon capture and storage practical across the world, on an industrial scale. Making progress toward that goal will mean that HPC systems like those at HLRS will be continue to be critical.
Funding for HLRS’s supercomputers was provided by the Baden-Württemberg Ministry for Science, Research, and the Arts and the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space through the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS).
Source: Christopher Williams, HLRS
The post HLRS Supercomputers Utilized by Everllence to Accelerate Industrial-Scale Decarbonization appeared first on HPCwire.
A memory chip shortage is driving up computer prices for consumers, reversing a decades-long drop in hardware costs.
Move comes after mayor Zohran Mamdani spoke of return of the Koh-i-noor diamond after UK royals’ visit to New York
Hundreds of antiquities valued at $14m have been returned to India by New York authorities, including some connected to the alleged art smuggler Subhash Kapoor, in a move that is likely to raise the pressure on others to make similar gestures.
The return of 657 antiquities was announced by the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg Jr, on Tuesday, and came as New York City’s mayor, Zohran Mamdani, waded into the historically contentious ownership of the 105.6 carat Koh-i-noor diamond.
Continue reading...Lee Zeldin claims before Senate that Trump administration plan will make Environmental Protection Agency ‘more efficient’
Senate Democrats accused the Trump administration of abandoning the Environmental Protection Agency’s mission to protect human health and the environment at a congressional hearing Wednesday, slamming agency leadership over a proposal to cut its budget in half.
Lee Zeldin’s appearance before the Senate environment committee was the EPA administrator’s last of three budget hearings this week where he argued for sharply reduced funding for the agency, which already has seen its staffing reduced to its lowest level in decades under his leadership. During much of the week, the former Republican congressman from New York took an aggressive approach, responding to Democrats in the House and Senate with his own questions and at times accusing them of being unprepared or failing to care about the EPA’s record.
Continue reading...FEMA's disaster relief fund has dropped below $3 billion, triggering Immediate Needs Funding, which means the agency must limit spending to only the most urgent, life-saving needs amid the partial government shutdown.
US president uses social media post to criticise chancellor over Ukraine, immigration and ‘interfering’ in Iran conflict
The Commission was also asked about yesterday’s meeting of Hungary’s incoming prime minister, Péter Magyar.
But we didn’t get much more than what we saw in yesterday’s social media posts from Magyar and the EU’s Ursula von der Leyen.
Continue reading...Shares in Domino’s Pizza, KFC operator Collins Foods and multi-brand food franchise owner Retail Food Group have all suffered double-digit falls
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Once a symbol of cheap eating, fast food is transforming into a luxury many can no longer afford due to resurgent living costs.
This shift is reflected on the ASX, where major pizza, fried chicken and doughnut outlets are seeing significant price drops, raising the question: are consumers so downbeat that they are even giving up on fast food?
Continue reading...Hitman developer IO Interactive’s pluralistic take on the British secret agent – his first video-game outing in almost 15 years – promises a Bond for all eras. Here’s what you need to know
If you want to tell the tale of a young James Bond, you first need to pick which James Bond he’s going to grow into. This was the task handed to Hitman developer IO Interactive, the studio taking digital custody of the spy in 007 First Light, Bond’s first video game in almost 15 years. So what’s it to be? Will their agent take baby steps towards Sean Connery’s gruff masculinity, or is he practising Roger Moore’s arched eyebrow in the bathroom mirror? That’s if he’s a “movie” Bond at all. For a generation of gamers, the character exists most vividly as a hand at the bottom of the screen in GoldenEye 007.
As it turns out, 007 First Light’s Bond, depicted by Patrick Gibson (cornering a specific market, having played the serial killer-to-be in the Dexter origins show) is an amalgam: the facial scar is an Ian Fleming detail, but the sweet-talking charm is straight from the Pierce Brosnan playbook, and the second you barge a goon into a bookcase you know someone’s been studying Casino Royale on a loop. Trying to devise a Bond for all fandoms could risk satisfying none, but in the demo we played, the performance works. Crucially, Gibson brings an outsider’s unease that’s all his own, anchored by the arrogance that’ll one day be weaponised by MI6.
Continue reading...007: First Light, the first Bond game in a decade and a half, blends infiltration and action worthy of the iconic spy.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The system prompt for OpenAI's Codex CLI contains a perplexing and repeated warning for the most recent GPT model to "never talk about goblins, gremlins, raccoons, trolls, ogres, pigeons, or other animals or creatures unless it is absolutely and unambiguously relevant to the user's query." The explicit operational warning was made public last week as part of the latest open source code for Codex CLI that OpenAI posted on GitHub. The prohibition is repeated twice in a 3,500-plus word set of "base instructions" for the recently released GPT-5.5, alongside more anodyne reminders not to "use emojis or em dashes unless explicitly instructed" and to "never use destructive commands like 'git reset --hard' or 'git checkout --' unless the user has clearly asked for that operation." Separate system prompt instructions for earlier models contained in the same JSON file do not contain the specific prohibition against mentioning goblins and other creatures, suggesting OpenAI is fighting a new problem that has popped up in its latest model release. Anecdotal evidence on social media shows some users complaining about GPT's penchant for focusing on goblins in completely unrelated conversations in recent days. Update: OpenAI has published a blog post explaining "where the goblins came from." In short, a training signal meant to encourage its "Nerdy" personality accidentally rewarded creature-heavy metaphors, causing words like "goblins" and "gremlins" to spread beyond that personality into broader model behavior. OpenAI says it has since retired the Nerdy personality, removed the goblin-friendly reward signal, and filtered creature-word examples from training data to keep the quirk from resurfacing in inappropriate contexts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Exclusive: Government should accelerate clean energy to protect consumers from ongoing price shocks, they say
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Former oil and gas industry leaders, including senior executives from BP and Shell, are warning the Albanese government that Australians risk ongoing price shocks and higher costs if it prioritises fossil fuel development in response to the global energy crisis.
Sixteen ex-executives and professionals – who had worked for companies including Woodside, Inpex, ExxonMobil and Esso – have urged the government to reject calls for fast-tracked gas and coal extraction, arguing it would do nothing to improve the nation’s liquid fuel security.
Continue reading...Spy tech firm says it’s just ‘a software company’ amid pressure for a ban on new contracts with government agencies
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Just weeks after it implied some cultures are inferior to others in a manifesto described by one UK MP as the “ramblings of a supervillain”, the US spy tech company Palantir says it is just “a software company” amid calls for Australian government agencies to ban any new contracts with the controversial company.
In Australia, state and federal contracts with Palantir have reached nearly $80m, and federal investment in the company is reportedly more than $160m.
Continue reading...Artist posted social media video showing large sculpture being towed into Waterloo Place in middle of night
A new Banksy statue, featuring a man with his face covered by a flag, was this week erected in the dead of night in central London.
His new work of art was first spotted on Wednesday, and the artist’s signature was scrawled at the base of the statue’s plinth.
Continue reading...An AI trained to sound "nerdy" is going to talk about goblins a lot.
UK was close behind, exporting 675,000 tonnes, with much of the waste sent to Turkey, Malaysia and Indonesia
Germany was the world’s largest exporter of plastic waste in 2025 and sent more than 810,000 tonnes abroad, according to analysis of trade data carried out for the Guardian.
The UK followed close behind, according to the analysis by Watershed Investigations and the Basel Action Network. It exported more than 675,000 tonnes, its highest level in eight years and enough to fill about 127,000 shipping containers.
Continue reading...Mills cites lack of funds as rival to unseat Susan Collins fuels Democratic rift under Donald Trump
Janet Mills, the Maine governor, on Thursday suspended her bid for the US Senate just weeks before the Democratic primary.
Mills, who received support from the Democratic establishment in Washington DC, said she no longer had the “financial resources” to face-off against first-time candidate Graham Platner, an oyster farmer and former marine, in a 9 June primary. Both were running to unseat Susan Collins, the five-term Republican incumbent, in a race that has become one of the most closely watched competitions in the country this midterm cycle.
Continue reading...Paying off $15,000 in debt by the end of the year is more doable than it sounds — if you use the right strategy.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 30, 2026 — JuliaHub today announced the launch of Dyad 3.0 and a $65 million series B funding round led by Dorilton Capital, with participation from General Catalyst, AE Ventures, and technology investor and former Snowflake CEO Bob Muglia.

Agent-created, live running dashboard of a model: Agent-created interactive, live simulation dashboard of a satellite’s photovoltaic power system along with orbit simulation. Model and dashboard both created with the Dyad platform, without needing to switch tools.
Dyad marks a fundamental shift in how physical systems are designed and built, bringing autonomous AI agents into the digital design and testing of industrial machines. From heat pumps to satellites to semiconductors, engineering teams can compress cycles of design, testing, and building from months to minutes. Several Fortune 100 companies are already leveraging Dyad and Julia across several industrial sectors such as aerospace, government, automotive, HVAC, and utilities.
Daniel Freeman, who led the Series B round for Dorilton Capital, commented: “Systems modeling is one of the most strategically important layers of the AI-native engineering stack, because it is where physics, control logic, and AI converge. JuliaHub has built something extraordinary with Dyad: a platform that doesn’t just model systems, but compiles them, taking engineers from concept to production control code in a single environment. We believe JuliaHub has the potential to become one of the defining companies in Physical AI, and we’re proud to back the team as they accelerate Dyad’s path to market.”
‘The Hard Problem’ of Hardware Innovation
Physical engineering represents one of the largest sectors yet to fully benefit from the AI revolution. While tools like Claude Code, Codex, and Gemini have transformed software development, industrial engineers have remained constrained by legacy tools. McKinsey estimates that a cumulative $106 trillion in investment will be necessary through 2040 to meet the need for new and updated infrastructure. The engineers planning and building these updates need a solution that allows them to move at the pace of AI-enhanced software. That’s where Dyad comes in.
Dyad gives engineering teams an AI-first environment to model, test and validate industrial systems: think Claude Code for the physical world. Dyad 3.0 launches today and builds on Dyad 1.0, which launched in June 2025, and Dyad 2.0, which launched in December 2025. Dyad connects autonomous agents with scalable physics simulations, rigorous controls, safety analysis, and the ability to generate code for embedded systems to bridge the gap between software and the real world. Whether it’s a wastewater facility or an automobile, a scientific PhD is no longer required to develop highly detailed digital twins, tweak controllers for specialized deployment scenarios, and iterate on hardware designs to build the most efficient machine right the first time.
“It’s not about helping engineers complete one small task at a time. It’s agentic engineering at scale, where teams can feed a full specification to Dyad and have it design the complete system. Spec in. Design out,” said Viral Shah, CEO of JuliaHub.
Digital Twins with Scientific Machine Learning
Dyad’s cloud-based agents are designed to continuously scan through the world’s scientific knowledge to constantly improve models. AI-automated lab testing is growing to ensure models match physical reality. Streaming data mixed with Scientific Machine Learning (SciML) makes it possible for models to automatically grow as the system learns from the real world. Dyad’s simulation ecosystem and language offer a foundation on which all of these learnings are relayed back to engineers to check the processes, determine whether assumptions match customer requirements, and be the human in the loop that ensures the safety of the final product. Dyad’s design means engineers do not have to write every line of code in order to try millions of designs while giving engineers the right tools to make sure planes stay in the sky.
Prith Banerjee, Senior Vice President of Innovation at Synopsys commenting on the partnership with JuliaHub says, “Dyad is transforming system-level engineering by combining scientific AI, agentic modeling, and a powerful compilation pipeline into a unified workflow. Integrated with Synopsys simulation software Ansys TwinAI
, it enables high fidelity hybrid digital twins by integrating physics-based simulation with data-driven models. What once required extensive manual effort can now be done far more efficiently, accelerating the entire digital engineering lifecycle and redefining how intelligent, software-defined systems are designed and validated.”
Dyad to Implement AI for Science in the Real World
General-purpose AI cannot guarantee that a model obeys the laws of physics. In physical engineering, an error is not a bug to be patched; it’s a bridge collapse or a battery fire. This has been the barrier blocking AI from playing a meaningful role in hardware engineering, until now. In recent agentic benchmarking for chemical process modeling, general LLM systems such as Codex, Claude Code (Opus), and Gemini barely completed the initial setup. Dyad almost entirely automated the whole process of creating model-predictive controllers to optimize yields of a chemical plant, a task that would typically take weeks.
“There is a disruptive transition occurring in engineering system design software, and Dyad is on the cutting edge. Previous generations of tools do not provide the promised productivity, or integration to unlock the value of AI. With Dyad, you can model the physics, develop control algorithms with auto code generation, and create accurate digital twins and surrogates for rapid development of deep learning inference models, all enabled by AI. Dyad operates where physics meets analytics, and customers and shareholders win!” said David Joyce, former CEO of GE Aviation and Vice Chair of GE.
Dyad’s modeling language is purpose-built to be easy for AI agents to understand. Its foundational logic is grounded in the laws of physics, allowing its agents to reason about how fluids move through machines, how wind speed and temperature affect components, and how fundamental forces like gravity shape design. This produces physically valid models that engineers can trust. For instance, in partnership with Binnies, a company with a 100-year heritage in water management, and Williams Grand Prix Technologies, JuliaHub developed a SciML–powered digital twin that uses just four sensor inputs to predict pump faults in water distribution systems with over 90% accuracy.
“Dyad represents a step-change for the water industry, enabling a move from reactive operations to predictive, system-level decision making,” said Tom Ray, Director of Digital Products & Services (Digital Twins & AI) at Binnies. “It has the potential to transform how companies model real-world complexity, predict failure, and optimize performance every day.”
Dyad 3.0 Launch Event
Dyad 3.0 will be officially unveiled at a live event next month on May 19. See live product demonstrations and hear from JuliaHub customers on how they use Dyad across industries ranging from Aerospace to HVAC to utilities to Robotics.
About JuliaHub
JuliaHub is a leader in Scientific AI, and its mission is to empower those tackling the world’s toughest scientific and technical challenges with cutting-edge AI-first tools in a seamless, secure environment. The company was founded in 2015 by the creators of Julia, the high-performance open-source language developed at MIT and now used by over a million developers worldwide. JuliaHub combines advanced mathematical computing and machine learning expertise to enable Scientific Machine Learning (SciML) techniques, Digital Twin solutions, and next-generation modeling and simulation in aerospace, automotive and other industrial verticals.
Source: JuliaHub
The post JuliaHub Raises $65M and Launches Dyad 3.0, Bringing Agentic AI to Industrial Digital Twins appeared first on HPCwire.
Graduates from classes that had just one more racial minority student earned higher starting salaries, according to research in the journal Nature.
King Charles in Washington: Did the royal visit save the ‘special relationship’? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…
What is the state of US relations with the UK and the rest of NATO? And what political and military decisions lie ahead for European leaders?
King Charles III’s state visit to the US won acclaim as the monarch charmed President Donald Trump. But can it really rescue US–UK relations from their current dire state? The ‘special relationship’ – a term first voiced by Chatham House before becoming widely popularized by Winston Churchill – now seems not so special.
Our experts discuss what Britain and Europe should do now that the US wants to bear less of the burden of European defence, whether Prime Minister Starmer is right to stand up to President Trump on Iran, and where all of this leaves the NATO alliance.
On this week’s panel, host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Laurel Rapp, director of the US and North America Programme at Chatham House. And by General Sir Richard Barrons, a former Commander Joint Forces Command who served in Iraq and Afghanistan and was one of the leaders of the UK’s Strategic Defence Review 2025. He is now a senior consulting fellow with the International Security Programme.
Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.
More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
The Tricky Trees host fellow Premier League team Aston Villa in this intriguing first leg.
TORONTO, April 30, 2026 — Celestica Inc., a global leader in data center infrastructure and advanced technology solutions, has announced its DS6000-series 1.6TbE switches are available for order to initial customers. This milestone signals the platform’s transition from development to ready-to-order status, providing the critical backbone for the next generation of generative AI and machine learning infrastructure.
The DS6000-series is available in two versatile form factors to match specific cooling infrastructures: the air-cooled 3RU DS6000 for standard 19-inch racks, and the hybrid-cooled 2OU DS6001 for 21-inch OCP ORv3 environments. Powered by the Broadcom Tomahawk 6 (TH6) switch silicon, the platforms deliver up to 102.4 Tbps of non-blocking switching capacity. Designed to eliminate bottlenecks in massive AI training clusters, the series features 64 ports of 1.6TbE (OSFP224) connectivity, offering the highest bandwidth density silicon solution available on the market today. The high-density 1.6TbE infrastructure is specifically engineered for the critical AI back-end networks of modern ‘AI factories,’ facilitating seamless scale-up and scale-out networking by leveraging industry standards, including Ultra Ethernet Consortium (UEC) and Open Compute Project (OCP) Ethernet Scale-up Network (ESUN) specifications. To ensure maximum architectural flexibility, the DS6000-series supports both high-speed copper interconnects and advanced 1.6TbE optical interconnects.
“The move to 1.6TbE networking represents a monumental leap in data center evolution, and our engineering teams have worked tirelessly to ensure the DS6000-series is the definitive choice for the AI era,” said Gavin Cato, SVP & GM, AI Platform Engineering, Celestica. “By integrating enterprise-class reliability with the flexibility of open networking through SONiC, we have engineered a solution that not only meets current throughput demands but helps future-proof the AI fabric for our global customers.”
“As the industry transitions to 102.4T switching to meet the growing bandwidth demands of generative AI, the collaboration between Broadcom and Celestica is more important than ever,” said Hasan Siraj, Vice President of Product Management, Core Switching Group, Broadcom. “By being among the first to ship systems powered by our Tomahawk 6 silicon, Celestica is delivering a high-density 1.6TbE networking fabric essential for scaling next-generation AI clusters. The Celestica DS6000 series demonstrates how our combined expertise can reduce performance bottlenecks and accelerate the deployment of high-performance AI infrastructure.”
“As the industry races toward 100T-plus switching capacity to support the explosion of generative AI, Celestica has established a leading position in high-speed data center switch port shipments,” said Sameh Boujelbene, Vice President at Dell’Oro Group. “Their ability to deliver high-density 800G and 1.6TbE solutions based on open standards reflects a deep understanding of the infrastructure demands required to scale the next generation of AI and high-performance computing markets.”
“We are pleased to see the Celestica DS6000 series become more available to our customers as the demand for 1.6T bandwidth continues to increase,” said Dennis Levenson, Vice President, Vendor Management – GCC (Global Computing & Components) at TD SYNNEX. “As AI and machine learning workloads scale exponentially, our partners need high-density, open-standard solutions that can eliminate complex networking bottlenecks. The arrival of the DS6000 series, backed by Celestica’s engineering leadership and the flexibility of SONiC, provides the high-performance backbone our customers require to drive data center innovation.”
The DS6000-series is now available for order. This enables customers to secure high-density 1.6TbE infrastructure essential for scaling their next-generation AI and machine learning clusters.
Celestica will showcase the DS6001 and lead technical discussions on 1.6TbE bandwidth at the upcoming OCP Regional Summit in Barcelona, Spain, from April 29-30. Visit the event landing page to learn more.
About Celestica
Celestica is a technology leader dedicated to driving customer success and market advancements. With deep expertise in design, engineering, manufacturing, supply chain, and platform solutions, Celestica enables critical data center infrastructure for AI, cloud, and hybrid cloud and advances technologies in high-growth markets. With a talented team and a strategic global network, Celestica helps its customers achieve competitive advantages. For more information on Celestica, visit www.celestica.com.
Source: Celestica
The post Celestica DS6000-Series 1.6TbE Switches Now Available to Order appeared first on HPCwire.
Check out this list of low-cost gaming laptops with Nvidia RTX 50-series GPUs, plus one wild card that actually delivers solid 3D performance from integrated Intel Panther Lake graphics.
We are stuck in a deluge of meaningless content that threatens human creativity. Here’s a simple way to mitigate its harms
As the US midterm elections approach, voters are voicing concern about AI. According to an NBC News poll of registered voters, 57% believe the risks of AI outweigh the benefits. A rising political cohort is particularly concerned. A Pew Research poll showed that 61% of adults under 30 say more AI in society will make people worse at creative thinking. A recent Quinnipiac poll showed that 74% of Americans think the government is not doing enough to regulate AI.
Can you blame them? The CEOs of the largest AI companies chose a curious tactic: scaring their prospective users into submission. “Use it or get left behind” is the narrative, buttressed by gleeful proclamations that AI will destroy whole industries and cultural institutions.
Continue reading...The organizations that fought for majority-minority districts across the US south are organizing their next steps
The voting rights advocates who fought for majority-minority districts across the US south are organizing their next steps after the supreme court effectively gutted the Voting Rights Act on Wednesday and eviscerated much of the work of the civil rights era.
“I think that it is deeply troubling that in 2026 that many of us have less rights than our grandparents had – and that becomes truer and truer every year,” said Ashley K Shelton, CEO and president of Power Coalition for Equality and Justice, a Louisiana-based civic engagement organization and a plaintiff in the Callais case.
Continue reading...Players are considering only competing in the ‘open’ category, which allows people of any sex or gender to play
When USA Rugby (USAR) updated its eligibility requirements in February to ban trans women from competing, many players and fans were outraged. Within days, 300 people from around the country were on a call to discuss next steps. Dozens of teams posted messages on their social media accounts announcing their intention not to play without their trans teammates. A fund was even started to support affected players who wanted to pursue legal action.
The trans-exclusionary policy hit especially hard in a sport that’s one of the queerest and most gender-inclusive, where the guiding principle is “every body is a rugby body”, said Cameron Michels, a PhD student whose research focuses on queer and trans players’ experiences in women’s rugby.
Continue reading...From smelly drains to slow-draining sinks, we tested the best liquid chemical drain cleaners to help keep your home's pipes clear.
Maine Gov. Janet Mills' exit from the race all but assures Graham Platner will get the Democratic nomination to take on Sen. Susan Collins.
A Canadian social enterprise hopes to help solve the urgent need for retrofits and shortage of skilled workers
John Mava was looking for work when a construction project started behind his house. When he visited the site and saw how different construction was in Canada compared with his native Nigeria, his interest was piqued.
“I said it would be great for me to have knowledge about this,” said Mava, who learned that in Canada, construction uses timber rather than bricks and has a focus on the environment.
Continue reading...A standoff between Gulf oil giants Saudi Arabia and the UAE could cause greater market volatility for years to come
The conflict in the Middle East has claimed Opec as the latest casualty of war. The United Arab Emirates’ shock exit from the oil cartel on Tuesday after 60 years is expected to weaken the alliance, which under the leadership of Saudi Arabia has helped to soothe volatility in the global oil market for decades.
Global oil prices reached the highest level in four years on Thursday, rising above $126 a barrel. But as the region grapples with the continuing conflict, a fresh war may be brewing in the international oil markets, which could lead to greater market volatility for years to come.
Continue reading...Experts put estimate for economic harm done by 200 years of chattel slavery at $2tn, but stress this is ‘not an invoice’
Britain stole 25 million years of life and labour through slavery in Barbados, according to research by a team of international experts.
Their report concludes that Barbados’s population of African descent have suffered damages estimated at up to $2tn (£1.5tn) from 200 years of chattel slavery.
Continue reading...PIF ends investment after five years and $5bn
LIV announces new independent board in funding push
LIV Golf’s race to secure at least a watered-down future is formally under way after Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) confirmed it will cease to fund the breakaway circuit at the end of this year. Fears over LIV’s existence are inescapable given the PIF has bestowed in excess of $5bn on the tour since 2021. Tournaments started in the following year; there is a very real chance the 2026 season will prove LIV’s last.
LIV had already confirmed appointment of new board members, aimed with the specific task of raising finance, by the time the PIF stipulated its position on Thursday. “PIF has made the decision to fund LIV Golf only for the remainder of the 2026 season,” read a statement. “The substantial investment required by LIV Golf over a longer term is no longer consistent with the current phase of PIF’s investment strategy. This decision has been made in light of PIF’s investment priorities and current macro dynamics.
Continue reading...On Wednesday, a divided Supreme Court narrowed the ability of states to use race as a determining factor in creating election districts, in a decision with potentially wide-ranging implications.
The decision in Louisiana v. Callais focused on Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (or VRA), a landmark achievement of the Civil Rights Movement. Section 2 prohibits voter discrimination on the basis of race, color, or membership in language minority groups. In the Court’s prior term, it considered arguments in Callais without reaching a decision. It ordered Callais re-argued in the current term, over the objections of Justice Clarence Thomas.
On October 15, 2025, the Court heard new arguments in Callais about the constitutionality of a Louisiana redistricting law. In 2022, Louisiana redrew its congressional districts, but a federal court in Robinson v. Ardoin ruled the new map likely violated the Voting Rights Act because it did not include an additional majority Black district. But when Louisiana drew a new map, SB8, that contained such a district, the new map was challenged as a racial gerrymander.
The justices were considering whether Louisiana’s intentional creation of the second majority-minority congressional district in SB8 violated the 14th or 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
The majority opinion
In his majority opinion in Callais, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that SB8 went against the purpose of the VRA. “Because the Voting Rights Act did not require Louisiana to create an additional majority-minority district, no compelling interest justified the State’s use of race in creating SB8, and that map is an unconstitutional racial gerrymander,” Alito explained. Joining Justice Alito’s majority opinion were Chief Justice John Roberts, and Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett.
“Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 … was designed to enforce the Constitution— not collide with it. Unfortunately, lower courts have sometimes applied this Court’s §2 precedents in a way that forces States to engage in the very race-based discrimination that the Constitution forbids,” Alito wrote.
Alito framed the case as confronting a “long-unresolved question whether compliance with the Voting Rights Act provides a compelling reason that may justify the intentional use of race in drawing legislative districts.”
“For over 30 years, the Court has simply assumed for the sake of argument that the answer is yes. These and other problems convinced the Court that the time had come to resolve whether compliance with the Voting Rights Act can indeed provide a compelling reason for race-based districting,” the decision reads.
Alito’s decision made it clear that the Court’s majority believed that any use of race in considering the composition of voting districts needed to meet the Court’s most demanding test: strict scrutiny. In this instance, Alito said the test required “remediating specific, identified instances of past discrimination that violated the Constitution or a statute.”
Alito stated the Court’s majority decision in Callais did not conflict with Thornburg v. Gingles (1986), a previous case where the justices determined that a North Carolina General Assembly redistricting plan violated Section 2 of the VRA by diluting the impact of Black voters in five of the state’s six electoral districts.
Alito also said that other Court precedents and social conditions in the past 40 years changed the framework stated in Gingles. He cited four examples: vast social change throughout the country and particularly in the South; a correlation between race and party preference; partisan-gerrymandering claims being "repackaged" as racial-gerrymandering claims; and the use of computers to create alternative maps to produce racial balance, if possible.
“Under the updated Gingles framework, the facts of this suit easily require affirmance. Louisiana’s enactment of SB8 triggered strict scrutiny because the State’s underlying goal was racial,” he concluded.
In a concurring opinion, Justice Thomas wrote, “[T]his Court should never have interpreted §2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to effectively give racial groups ‘an entitlement to roughly proportional representation.’”
Justice Kagan’s Dissent
In her dissenting opinion, Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, was deeply skeptical of the majority opinion, which Kagan labeled as the “latest chapter in the majority’s now-completed demolition of the Voting Rights Act.”
“Under the Court’s new view of Section 2, a State can, without legal consequence, systematically dilute minority citizens’ voting power. Of course, the majority does not announce today’s holding that way,” she wrote.
“The majority claims only to be ‘updat[ing]’ our Section 2 law, as though through a few technical tweaks. But in fact, those ‘updates’ eviscerate the law,” Kagan argued, citing what she called classic examples of vote dilution.
“Without a basis in Section 2’s text or the Constitution, the majority formulates new proof requirements for plaintiffs alleging vote dilution. Those demands, meant to ‘disentangle race from politics,’ leverage two features of modern political life: that racial identity and party preference are often linked and that politicians have free rein to adopt partisan gerrymanders,” Kagan said.
Kagan called the Callais decision “part of a set” of rulings, explaining that, in her view, “[f]or over a decade, this Court has had its sights set on the Voting Rights Act.” For Kagan, one key example was Shelby County v. Holder (2013), which, she said, “made a nullity of Section 5” of the VRA. Shelby eliminated the act’s preclearance formula for regions, where areas with a history of racial discrimination had to seek federal approval for voting changes. The Shelby majority said the preclearance requirement didn’t relate to current conditions in areas where discrimination was once rampant.
She then referenced Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee (2021), where Kagan said the “Court did half what was needed to raze” Section 2 of the VRA. In Brnovich, the Court considered a question related to Section 2 of the VRA. The case involved a law passed in 2016 that made it illegal for someone to collect and deliver another person’s mail-in ballot. In a 6-3 decision, Justice Alito said Arizona had the right to establish time, place, and manner requirements for voting, and its voting policies were “not enacted with a racially discriminatory purpose.”
Kagan also said Callais conflicted with another recent Court decision Allen v. Milligan (2022). “For just three Terms ago [in Allen] the Court upheld a vote-dilution challenge to a districting map in a case much like this one—preserving Section 2 as a tool to prevent racially discriminatory redistricting.” She concluded that “today’s decision renders Section 2 all but a dead letter. In the States where that law continues to matter—the States still marked by residential segregation and racially polarized voting—minority voters can now be cracked out of the electoral process.”
In effect, the Callais majority decision narrows the instances where racial gerrymandering clams can be contested in court. The Court majority argued that its reframed interpretation “is the best reading of the statutory text and ensures that section of the Voting Rights Act does not exceed Congress’s authority under Section2 of the Fifteenth Amendment.”
Kagan condemned the decision because, in her view, “the Court betrays its duty to faithfully implement the great statute Congress wrote,” the VRA, and because “the Court’s decision will set back the foundational right Congress granted of racial equality in electoral opportunity.”
To be sure, there will be broader public discussion of the Callais decision during an already deeply contested election year, especially amidst claims about its impact on future elections.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
The AI boom propped up U.S. economic growth in the first quarter, but inflation due to the Iran war is casting a cloud.
Got $3 and an air fryer? You can have restaurant-quality fries in less than 15 minutes.
Markets spooked as US president appears willing to keep up naval blockade and Iran keeps strait of Hormuz all but shut
The global oil price hit $126 a barrel on Thursday, its highest level since 2022, after Donald Trump said the US blockade of Iranian ports could last for months and peace talks remained stalled.
After surging more than 13% in 24 hours, the price of Brent crude futures reached its highest price since the war began on 28 February. Not since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine has Brent topped $120, with the price then peaking at $139.
Continue reading...Mojtaba Khamenei says Tehran will eliminate ‘enemy’s abuses of the waterway’ and guard its nuclear and missile programmes
Iran’s supreme leader has broken his recent silence with a defiant statement hailing Iran’s control over shipping in the strait of Hormuz and vowing to guard the country’s nuclear and missile programmes.
“Today, two months after the largest military deployment and aggression by the world’s bullies in the region, and the United States’ disgraceful defeat in its plans, a new chapter is unfolding for the Persian Gulf and the strait of Hormuz,” Mojtaba Khamenei said in a statement read by a state television anchor.
Continue reading...David Allan Coe also had hits with "You Never Even Called Me By My Name" and "The Ride" among others.
The first leg of the semi-finals produced a nine-goal thriller and a tense evening in Madrid. Next week’s matches are set to be a treat
Football’s role as a leading hot-take commodity was taken to the nth degree after Tuesday’s nine-goal slugfest between Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich in Paris. Best game ever? What happened to the lost art of defending? Proof that France and Germany’s dominant clubs enjoy the luxury of not being challenged in their domestic leagues so they can keep their powder dry for the latter stages of the Champions League? Proof that the best attackers in Europe are sequestered at PSG and Bayern Munich? All of the above may well be true.
The debate will continue until next Wednesday’s second leg in Munich. Those who said it was the competition’s best ever semi-final – it had the most goals of any 90-minute match in the Champions League last-four – forgot previous contenders. “The best match I have ever coached,” said Luis Enrique. The PSG coach omitted to mention La Remontada of 2017, when his Barcelona team won 6-1 at the Camp Nou to complete the greatest comeback of all. And how about last season’s 7-6 semi-final double-header when Inter edged Barça? Only when the second leg delivers the same excitement can accusations of recency bias be dismissed.
Continue reading...Charging for AI usage is becoming more important than charging for access.
First quarter output, driven by AI investment and government spending, rose as oil shock fuels inflation fears
US gross domestic product (GDP) accelerated to an annual rate of 2% in the first three months of 2026, though consumer spending is slowing as the war with Iran continues to impact energy prices.
The last GDP reading for the fourth quarter of 2025 showed that US economic growth slowed to an annual pace of 0.5%, largely due to a contraction in government spending after massive layoffs of federal workers last year. The federal government is down 355,000 workers, or 11.8% of the workforce, since October 2024, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Continue reading...Hasbro's debuting its lifelike Grogu filled with sensors and motors, and we get to see it at the company's headquarters.
Weeding out imposters could become a little simpler.
The new addition is part of the streaming service's refresh for the mobile version.
With the US blockade cutting off oil, the island’s healthcare has been wrecked, access to clean water lost and babies put at risk
Four months into Cuba’s deepening energy crisis, the consequences are no longer abstract: they are visible in the rhythm of daily life. Streets fall silent before night has fully set in. Hospitals scale back operations. Small businesses close due to a lack of supplies. At dawn, exhaustion shows on people’s faces after long nights without electricity.
But the most serious toll is measured not in inconvenience but in health.
Continue reading...Popular sentiment has been growing since 2017, when the US failed in providing disaster relief after Hurricane Maria
“Mandarin hotel! Out of Puerto Rico!” was the refrain of dozens of demonstrators on 21 April 2025 as they took over the lobby of the tony Manhattan hotel. One protester walked around holding a Puerto Rican pro-independence flag, a sign of the anti-colonialist movement advocating for sovereignty from the United States. In the atrium of the nearby luxury mall, the Shops at Columbus Circle, organizers unfurled a long banner that read in Spanish “No to Esencia”. They scattered informational flyers on the mall’s floor about their opposition to the Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group project slated to open in 2028.
The hotel group plans to partially operate the $2bn Esencia, luxury hotel rooms and a residential settlement, in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, and activists held the demonstration to spotlight the multinational hospitality group’s expansion into a fragile coastal area. Puerto Rican demonstrators and their allies from the group Juventud Unida por la Independencia (JUPI) say that the project would reap environmental disaster by destroying more than 1,500 acres (600 hectares) of protected land with archaeological sites.
Continue reading...The future may belong to glasses, but there are still great VR headsets, too. Here are my go-to options.
Catch up on this year's Oscar winners and some new titles that've just arrived.
PARMA, Italy and NEW YORK, April 30, 2026 — IBM and the Dallara Group, a world-leading racing and high-performance vehicle manufacturer, today announced a collaboration to advance vehicle design and optimization using AI and explore the use of quantum computing. The work combines Dallara’s expertise in high-performance vehicle engineering with IBM’s leadership in AI for physics and quantum computing to investigate how to accelerate aerodynamic design and open a path to even more advanced simulation workflows.

In early pressure-field modeling of adjusting an LMP2-like race car’s rear diffuser angle from -2 to +4 degrees, results from typical CFD (left) and the new IBM physics-based AI approach (right) were remarkably close. Credit: IBM & Dallara.
For more than 50 years, Dallara has designed and supplied high-performance vehicles for some of the world’s top racing series, including IndyCar — where track speeds can average more than 230 mph (370 km/h) — as well as Formula 2, Formula 3, Super Formula, and Indy NXT, with additional work in top-tier series such as Formula E, WEC, and IMSA. This breadth of racing programs provides a unique ability to validate simulation results against real-world vehicle performance. Dallara also applies its engineering to high-performance road vehicles and aerospace. These and other distinctive, innovation-driven features of the company were key in IBM choosing to collaborate with Dallara.
As part of the project, IBM has been developing domain-specific foundation models in close coordination with Dallara. The models leverage not only Dallara’s high-fidelity aerodynamic simulation data but also the company’s deep technical expertise. In a future step, the teams aim to integrate validated measurements of real vehicles in wind tunnels and on the track, but the use of high-quality simulation data alone is already producing compelling early results.
Engineers rely heavily on computational fluid dynamics (CFD), to predict aerodynamic forces and optimize how vehicles perform across components such as body geometry, underfloor, wings, and wheels. These simulations are powerful but computationally expensive. Even relatively narrow analyses may take a couple of hours or more, while full race car development workflows may take weeks or months as engineers iterate through geometry changes, operating conditions, and performance tradeoffs.
IBM and Dallara are using AI to speed up those workflows without replacing the underlying physics. In one early example, which focused on the geometry of a conceptual Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2)-like race car, the two companies jointly compared CFD analyses of multiple configurations of the rear diffuser — a part located in the rear underfloor that helps generate efficient downforce and thus grip — with results from the new physics-based AI method.
The traditional approach took a few hours to calculate all the configurations. Meanwhile, the AI model completed the same evaluations in about 10 seconds, identifying the same optimal design with roughly the same error margins as CFD. Applied to a typical complete set of hundreds of geometry configurations, such a speedup could cut days of simulation time down to minutes.
These and other preliminary results suggest Dallara engineers can evaluate more vehicle configurations in a fraction of time to move faster in early design phases, helping focus their most expensive computational resources on deep-dive optimization of race car design and development.
In parallel, IBM and Dallara are starting to explore how quantum and hybrid quantum-classical approaches could further enhance race car design workflows. By combining Dallara’s expertise in high-fidelity vehicle engineering and CFD-driven design with IBM’s leadership in quantum computing and AI, the collaboration will evaluate where these methods can complement traditional simulation workflows in the near-term while identifying longer-term opportunities for practical use in automotive and motorsport design.
“Racing has taught Dallara that there are two possible outcomes: you either win or are forced to learn. IBM’s close collaboration on this innovative project is a testament of Dallara’s willingness to continuously push its boundaries and never stop learning,” said Andrea Pontremoli, Dallara CEO.
“Some of the hardest engineering challenges come down to accurately simulating the physical world,” said Alessandro Curioni, IBM Fellow and VP, Algorithms and Applications, IBM Research. “With Dallara, IBM is applying AI to speed up aerodynamic design today while advancing quantum computing in parallel to push simulation farther. Together, these technologies can help engineers move faster, explore more possibilities, and ultimately design better-performing vehicles.”
Advancing Aerodynamic Design with AI
Designing a high-performance vehicle means balancing downforce, drag, stability, and responsiveness across conditions that can change from race to race. Because some parts are designed with exacting precision, even small design changes can lead to surprisingly large impacts on performance, and the best aerodynamic solution is not always obvious.
The AI models are being designed to help predict aerodynamic behaviors directly from geometry and related engineering inputs. As the collaboration progresses, IBM and Dallara plan to expand the AI models across a wider range of conditions, such as different maneuvers or overtaking scenarios, apply them to design new vehicles and develop tools that enable faster exploration of new aerodynamic configurations, before investing in intensive full-vehicle simulations.
“High-performance vehicles are an ideal proving ground for neural surrogate models, but the potential impact goes well beyond the racetrack,” said Fabrizio Arbucci, Dallara CIO. “More efficient designs could benefit all transport categories, from passenger vehicles to aircraft, and even other industries at the mercy of aerodynamics. Even a one to two percent reduction in drag across passenger vehicles could add up to meaningful fuel-efficiency gains at scale.”
Initial results of the collaboration are detailed in a preprint study published at arXiv on April 20, 2026. This work builds upon a new AI model developed by IBM, called Gauge-Invariant Spectral Transformers (GIST), which was described in a March 17th preprint study. IBM and Dallara presented these and other advances in applying AI to complex physical systems on April 26, 2026, at the International Conference on Learning Representations in Rio de Janeiro.
About IBM
IBM (NYSE: IBM) is a leading provider of global hybrid cloud and AI, and consulting expertise. IBM helps clients in more than 175 countries capitalize on insights from their data, streamline business processes, reduce costs and gain the competitive edge in their industries. Thousands of governments and corporate entities in critical infrastructure areas such as financial services, telecommunications and healthcare rely on IBM’s hybrid cloud platform and Red Hat OpenShift to affect their digital transformations quickly, efficiently and securely. IBM’s breakthrough innovations in AI, quantum computing, industry-specific cloud solutions and consulting deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM’s long-standing commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity and service. Visit www.ibm.com for more information.
About The Dallara Group
Founded in 1972 by Giampaolo Dallara, Dallara is a world-leading manufacturer specializing in the design, engineering, and production of racing cars for top-tier motorsports. The firm has expanded globally from Italy’s Motor Valley with a US Dallara Experience Hub in Speedway, Indiana. Dallara is the sole builder of racing cars for the IndyCar, Indy NXT, Formula 2, Formula 3 and Super Formula Championships, it also supplies Cadillac and BMW in both the WEC and IMSA championships. The expertise acquired in racing is regularly used both in the automotive world through consultancies and production services, with also Dallara branded products like the Dallara Stradale and Dallara and more recently in aerospace. Visit www.dallara.it for more information.
Source: IBM
The post IBM and Dallara to Advance AI and Quantum-Powered Design for High-Performance Vehicles appeared first on HPCwire.
ECB keeps interest rates on hold as growth stumbles and price rises gather pace, up from 2.6% in March and 1.9% in February
Inflation across the eurozone soared to 3% this month as the Iran war drove up energy prices and growth stumbled.
Consumer prices rose by 3% in the year to April across the single currency bloc, data from the statistics body Eurostat showed on Thursday morning, up from 2.6% in March and 1.9% in February.
Continue reading...Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson was indicted on 30 felony counts after a probe into one of the largest jailbreaks in U.S. history, which occurred under her watch.
The British government's terrorism prevention adviser describes anti-Jewish attacks as the "biggest national security emergency" since 2017.
Cryptocurrency ATMs also face ban, after public inquiry found Canada lacked anti-money-laundering strategy
Canada is to establish a new and powerful law enforcement agency to investigate financial crime, in stark contrast to the US, where weakened federal investigators have struggled to pursue fraudsters and the White House has pardoned convicted money launderers.
A bill to create the Financial Crimes Agency (FCA) completed its first reading in parliament this week. The legislation was introduced by the governing Liberals and with their parliamentary majority, the party is likely to move it through both levels of government quickly.
Continue reading...You must have a GM car from 2022 or newer, and already have the Google built-in operating system -- it can't be retroactively installed.
The sinking of the Coast Guard Cutter Tampa killed 131 people, making it the largest loss of life on any U.S. combat ship during the war.
The Coast Guard will run out of funding to pay personnel on May 1, with the first missed paychecks expected May 15.
We asked the cycling experts to weigh in on how you could unknowingly be sabotaging your own exercise bike workouts.
Order last week is only partial rescheduling, making ‘an already complex process more confusing,’ expert says
The Trump administration is making good on its promise to reschedule cannabis, but only partially – raising plenty of questions for those in the cannabis industry.
Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, signed an order last week that removes products sold under state medical cannabis licenses and FDA approved cannabis products from schedule I – defined as substances with no accepted medical use, to schedule III – which includes legal but regulated substances including certain doses of Tylenol with codeine and ketamine.
Continue reading...Here are the main differences between the two book-style foldables.
Some US adults say new models can be expensive, but RAM storage is pushing refurbished device prices higher.
Not enough US adults are trading in tech for extra cash, according to CNET's latest findings. Here's how you can cash in.
The edifice suggests a Silicon Valley-style desire to protect the president from national crises of his own making
A self-declared “secretary of war” keeps committing war crimes; people are dying in Africa because of Musk’s cuts to USAID; farm bankruptcies in the US are surging; ICE keeps acting with impunity; measles is spreading … and we are worried about a ballroom? The ballroom is not just the president’s peculiar obsession, but a symbol for much of the character of Trump 2.0: the unprecedented corruption; the destruction of checks and balances (as Congress, with its power of the purse, keeps being ignored); the sheer desire for vandalism. The swift pivot of Trump and his acolytes from the assassination attempt to pro-ballroom propaganda in the name of security adds two new, disturbing elements: the ballroom-as-bunker is appropriate for a leader afraid of his own people; less obviously, it also aligns Trump with the Silicon Valley figures who are anticipating an apocalypse (which their own conduct is hastening) – and who seek refuge on private islands, in newly founded cities, and indeed in what has become known as “apocalypse bunkers”.
“It cannot be built fast enough,” Trump announced after the incident on Saturday night; but reasons for his ballroom obsession predate the White House correspondents’ dinner: his biographers have pointed out that catering and ballrooms have been one of his few successful business ventures; a ballroom, just as with the space at Mar-a-Lago, provides a stage for grand entrances and adulation by crowds whose composition can be perfectly controlled; and, not least, as other aspiring autocrats have shown, a huge edifice is a statement about power: it sends a signal to critics that the leader has triumphed over them, and that his legacy – at least what he has done to the built environment – cannot be undone.
Jan-Werner Müller is a Guardian US columnist and a professor of politics at Princeton University
Continue reading... | I've had my pint x now for only a few months and 270 miles yet this is my tire. The edge looks deformed and there's about 15 spots where the slime came through the other day. Are these tires not made to carve (the edge is worn drastically more than the center)? How long do you think I have before it pops and will I taste pavement when that happens? [link] [comments] |
I am going to contribute with one.
This used to be one of my goto place on the Isle of Man meanwhile we were living there..
GTS-IOM.jpg
WhatsApp has cited Amnezia as a VPN provider worth checking out. So that's what I did.
‘Absolutely clear’ people are being targeted for being Jewish, says PM as he holds meeting with agencies and ministers
Keir Starmer has said the government and criminal justice system must respond to the suspected terrorist attack in north-west London in “a swift, agile and visible way”, as he convened a meeting in Downing Street.
The prime minister said on Thursday “an attack on our Jewish community is an attack on all of us”, as he called the fight against antisemitism “our fight as well” after the stabbings in Golders Green.
Continue reading...Ruling has gutted provision intended to prevent racial discrimination in voting. Plus, oil tops $126 a barrel to reach highest level since 2022
Good morning.
The US supreme court has gutted a major section of the Voting Rights Act through a landmark decision on Louisiana’s congressional map, in a major upheaval in US civil rights law that threatens to weaken the voting power of minorities.
How have lawmakers reacted? Terri Sewell and Shomari Figures, who are now at risk of losing their seats in Alabama’s Black congressional districts, have decried the decision as sending the nation “backwards”.
How did the ruling come to pass? It is the culmination of justices John Roberts and Samuel Alito’s joint campaign to roll back civil rights legislation.
How could midterm maps be changed by redistricting? While the supreme court decision leaves little time to redraw maps before the midterms, here is what midterm maps could look like if both parties achieve all their current redistricting ambitions.
Continue reading...What if you run a few online services for you and your friends, like a small git instance and a grocery list service, but you get absolutely hammered by “AI” scrapers?
I cannot impress upon you, reader, that this is not only an attack that is coordinated, it is an attack that is distributed.
I run a small set of services, basically only for me and my friends. I am not a hyperscaler, I am not a tech company, I am not even a small platform. I have a git forge where I put the shit I make, and a couple other services where me and my friends backup our files or write our grocery lists. I am not fucking Meta and I cannot scale the fuck up just because OpenAI or Anthropic or Meta or whoever is training a model that weeks wants to suck all the content out of my VPS ONCE MORE until it’s dry.
↫ lux at VulpineCitrus
So how much traffic did the author of this piece, lux, get from “AI” scraping bots? Within a time period of 24 hours, they were hammered by 2040670 unique IP addresses, 98% of which were IPv4 addresses, which means that 1 out of every 2000 publicly available IPv4 addresses were involved in the scraping. Together, they performed over 5 million requests. And just to reiterate: they were scraping a few very small, friends-only services run by some random person. This is absolutely insane.
If, at this point in time, with everything that we know about just how deeply unethical every single aspect of “AI” is, you’re still using and promoting it, what is wrong with you? If you’re so addicted to your “AI” girlfriend’s unending stream of useless, forgettable sycophantic slop, despite being aware of the damage you’re doing to those around you, there’s something seriously wrong with you, and you desperately need professional help. You don’t need any of this. The world doesn’t need any of this. Nobody likes the slop “AI” regurgitates, and nobody likes you for enabling it.
Get help.
I was a lead attorney in the Callais case. The court’s decision will silence the voices of communities of color
The supreme court on Wednesday paved the way for racial discrimination in voting, 60 years after Martin Luther King Jr and thousands of other movement leaders bled, marched and mobilized for Congress to outlaw it. This is a break-glass outcome for what was already a severely weakened Voting Rights Act (VRA), and it will reshape the future of political representation at all levels of government, in Louisiana and beyond.
Section 2 of the VRA has served as the country’s primary shield against racial vote dilution – prohibiting voting practices that leave minority voters with less opportunity than others to elect candidates of their choice, such as racially gerrymandered district maps. The court’s decision has torn it away.
Continue reading...There are many smart rings on the market, but only one has impressed me.
Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from ZeroHedge: The Justice Department on Tuesday sued Cloudera, accusing the enterprise data and artificial intelligence company of deliberately engineering a hiring process that excluded American workers from at least seven lucrative technology positions while the firm pursued permanent residency sponsorship for foreign workers on temporary visas. In a 14-page complaint filed with the Office of the Chief Administrative Hearing Officer, the department's Civil Rights Division alleges that Cloudera, from March 31, 2024, through at least January 28, 2025, instructed job candidates to submit applications to a dedicated email address, amerijobpostings@cloudera.com, that rejected all external messages with an automated bounce-back error. The company did not advertise the roles on its public careers website or accept applications through its standard portal, as it did for non-sponsorship positions. Cloudera then attested to the Department of Labor that it could not locate any qualified U.S. workers for the roles, which paid between approximately $180,000 and $294,000 annually, according to the filing. The positions included a Product Manager role in Santa Clara, California, with a listed salary range of $170,186 to $190,000. The case marks one of the most detailed enforcement actions under the Justice Department's Protecting U.S. Workers Initiative, which was relaunched last year and has already produced 10 settlements targeting employers accused of discriminating against American workers in favor of temporary visa holders. "Employers cannot use the PERM sponsorship process as a backdoor for discriminating against U.S. workers," Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Civil Rights Division said in a statement. "The Division will not hesitate to sue companies who intentionally deter U.S. workers from applying to American jobs."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware ranks as the worst state in the nation for access to primary care. A new federally funded program, offering states upwards of $500 million, looks to revitalize health care in the country’s most rural areas. That money could allow Delaware to begin closing its health care gap.
Healthcare leaders said Wednesday that a proposed medical school in Delaware could strengthen the area’s health system but would not quickly resolve persistent issues around access to doctors, particularly in fast-growing and aging Sussex County.
Speaking at Spotlight Delaware’s Health Care Summit, the industry leaders said shortages in housing in the state have been an obstacle to increasing Delaware’s ranks of healthcare professionals.
To address the issue, Gov. Matt Meyer proposed using part of a $157 million federal grant awarded earlier this year to build the state’s first medical school. The governor has argued that a medical school would establish a pipeline of new doctors who could serve Delaware’s rural areas.
During a panel discussion about the challenges to launching a medical school, Delaware Health Care Commission Chair Dr. Neil Hockstein noted that the new federal grant cannot be used to fund new construction for housing. Still, he said the money can be used to repurpose existing spaces.
“There are campuses throughout the state where there are opportunities to expand housing,” he said.
Also during the discussion, Dr. Kathleen Matt, board member of the Delaware Institute of Medical Education and Research, said the state will need to be strategic about housing, so that medical students and residents “can live close to where they are going to be doing their training,” she said.
She also noted that individuals often train in residency programs and then stay to start their careers.
By having residency programs and more opportunities in Delaware, more early-career medical professionals would be likely to stay in the state, she said.
Last year, Delaware officials said they hoped to receive $1 billion from the federal government to invest heavily into health infrastructure in Kent and Sussex counties, which would include building the state’s first medical school.
Shortly after, Spotlight Delaware reported that the state was in talks with Thomas Jefferson University, home to one of Philadelphia’s premier medical schools. Jefferson already has a sizable footprint in Delaware’s medical education landscape with clinical and educational relationships with ChristianaCare, Beebe Healthcare and Nemours Children’s Hospital.
By December, the Trump administration announced that it awarded Delaware $157 million as part of a national program aimed at bolstering rural health care across all 50 states.
The initial award represents the first batch of funding Delaware hopes to receive over the next five years.
In March, legislators expressed concerns with a new medical school. During a hearing, lawmakers and DHSS Secretary Christen Linke Young sparred over the impact a proposed four-year medical school would have on the state’s healthcare workforce.
One of those lawmakers, State Sen. Trey Paradee (D-Dover), who also chairs the state’s powerful Joint Finance Committee, expressed concerns about sustainably funding the school long term, when the state already funnels hundreds of millions of dollars to multiple public universities.
“Once these rural health dollars go away in a few years the question becomes, what is the state’s commitment?” Paradee said.
That reality has also sped up Delaware’s plans, with the opening of a program pegged for the fall of 2028, Hockstein said.
At the summit, Hockstein also revealed that planners never intended for Delaware’s universities to be a primary driver for the medical school. They sought applicants who are accredited schools that could more quickly open new programs in the state, and down the line they could partner with institutions like the University of Delaware and Delaware State University.
Three schools submitted bids, including Thomas Jefferson University, the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM) and Ponce Health Sciences University, which is based in Puerto Rico but has begun opening campuses in the continental U.S.
The post Experts: New med school could boost healthcare access, if doctors have housing appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Press freedom across the globe has fallen to its lowest level in a quarter of a century, Reporters Without Borders warned.
Arrest of potential next leader found hiding in drainage pipe highlights renewed tactics – and fears of cartel infighting
The golden coffin of “El Mencho”, the late leader of the Jalisco New Generation cartel (CJNG), had barely been lowered into the ground when the Mexican military dealt a second blow to the very top of the organisation this week.
As special forces descended on a ranch in the state of Nayarit, grainy drone footage showed El Mencho’s possible successor, Audias Flores, alias “El Jardinero”, being hauled from a drainage pipe he had tried to hide in, all without a shot being fired.
Continue reading...Ten people were arrested in raids on the U.K. headquarters of the AROPL religious sect, on suspicion of modern slavery, forced marriage and sexual offenses.
Mali attacks show security cannot be delivered by military means alone Expert comment jon.wallace
The latest attacks, following months of JNIM raids on Mali’s vital fuel supplies, show the need for negotiation at a regional, national and local level.
Jihadist and Tuareg separatist militants launched a sequence of shocking attacks across Mali on 25-26 April. The unprecedented scale, geographical spread and levels of coordination demonstrated by the strikes has sent shockwaves across West Africa.
The attacks have also fundamentally challenged the narrative of regained sovereignty and security projected by the military leaders of Mali and its partners in the Alliance des États du Sahel (AES) – a group of three military governments that broke away from the regional ECOWAS bloc in January 2025.
Key towns – from Kidal in the desert far north to Kati, a key garrison town near the capital, Bamako, 1500 km to the southwest – were targeted simultaneously. The defence minister Sadio Camara, architect of the ruling junta’s military alliance with Russia, is dead, killed by a suicide vehicle bomb attack on his home; the chief of intelligence is reported gravely injured. For days, nothing was heard from Mali’s President Assimi Goïta, though on 28 April he appeared in a televised address.
The Al-Qaeda affiliated jihadist coalition, Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), and the secular Tuareg Front de libération de l’Azawad (FLA), have openly acknowledged their new alliance – restoring a partnership that previously existed only in 2011-2012 and briefly in 2014.
This assault on the heart of the regime exposed the frailty of its intelligence networks. And the FLA and JNIM’s seizure of Kidal, the historic ‘capital’ of Tuareg nationalism, has badly bruised the government’s prestige. Russian Africa Corps mercenaries, assigned to defend the town, were forced to negotiate a humiliating withdrawal – laying bare the limits of Moscow’s ability to support its Sahelian allies.
It is unclear how long the fluid alliance of JNIM and FLA militants can hold, or whether its momentum can be sustained. Both groups have benefited from cooperation, notably in sharing expertise in drone warfare techniques. But they have different objectives and have clashed in the past.
Tuareg separatists do not seek control over the south of the country but fight for the independence or autonomy of their northern homeland – ‘Azawad’. The attacks on Bamako in the south were an efficient way to stretch the military, allowing rebels to seize control of parts of the north.
JNIM jihadists, though motivated chiefly by communal grievances, fight to establish a national government operating under Sharia law.
Meanwhile, a major threat to the stability of Mali’s military regime could come from within. The attacks deal a grievous blow to the legitimacy of a junta that seized power accusing previous administrations of security failures – a pattern that has prompted successive coups elsewhere in the region. The attacks could therefore potentially create a new coup threat for President Goïta.
The assault lays bare the limitations of Mali’s mutual defence agreement with AES partners Niger and Burkina Faso. Beyond unverified social media reports of Burkinabè drones in Malian airspace, and a joint statement, the two other confederation members have yet to intervene in support of their ally.
They too are struggling to hold jihadist factions at bay. The AES announced the creation of a joint armed force at the end of 2025: its declared troop strength was bolstered from 5,000 to 15,000 just days ago. But that has not yet translated into any immediate operational shared response to the weekend’s attacks.
The limits of Russian support have also been exposed by the hasty retreat of 400 Africa Corps mercenaries from Kidal. Precious Russian equipment has been left in rebel hands, including mine-resistant vehicles. The retreat generated a sense of betrayal among junta figures: some have pushed to further diversify relationships beyond Moscow, including with Turkey.
Russia has framed the events as a Western imperialist attack on West African sovereignty. The Africa Corps released a statement claiming without basis that Ukrainian and European mercenaries participated in the attacks. The reality is, as in Syria, Venezuela and Iran, Moscow has been unable to prevent allied regimes from being challenged or overthrown. That inflicts significant damage to its narrative in the region.
The Sahel is a vast territory with profound development challenges, where jihadist groups are well entrenched and highly mobile. Given these realities, a purely military solution is not viable.
Indeed, beyond the border areas, the stabilization of the Sahel through security solutions alone has proven beyond the capacity of the region or any international partners. For almost a decade up to 2022/23 a large UN peacekeeping force and strong French military deployment were unable to halt JNIM attacks.
The soldiers who seized power in the coups of 2020 and 2021 turned to Russia and Wagner (now renamed Africa Corps) as their primary security partner, breaking with the French and then the UN. But the Russians’ hardline tactics – including regular reports of serious human rights abuses – have proved less effective.
And the regime’s rash decision to abandon a 2015 peace accord with the Tuaregs and attack them in the Saharan far north, in the name of reasserting national sovereignty, left its forces stretched on several fronts. When the jihadists began raiding the vital import highways from Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire, it was powerless to respond.
Since the attacks, JNIM has declared a siege of Bamako, while Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS) has attempted to capture Ménaka, the capital of Mali’s easternmost region, increasing pressure on the junta.
Political negotiation and local level mediation are required to address community tensions and grievances. In Mali at least, this moment could open space for the civilian opposition, including influential exiled imam Mahmoud Dicko, and other exiles, some of whom are reported to have established contacts with JNIM. La Coalition des Forces pour la République (CFR), an opposition group, has now called for the resignation of the military government and an inclusive transition to civilian government.
Back in 2013-2015 Tuareg separatists negotiated a ceasefire and then a full peace accord with the government, while the jihadists pursued the path of violence. But the JNIM-FLA alliance and the military regime tore up that agreement in 2023, and today there seems little prospect that Tuaregs would again strike a separate settlement with the government. A much more comprehensive political solution is required.
Nearly 60 countries back voluntary roadmaps to wean world off coal, oil and gas, at conference prompted by frustration with UN climate summits
Governments have been asked to develop national “roadmaps” setting out how they will end the production and use of fossil fuels, after a landmark climate meeting involving nearly 60 countries.
The voluntary plans will form the bedrock of a new initiative to wean the world off coal, oil and gas, the focus of two days of intensive talks in Colombia this week.
Continue reading...Save money on an offline word processor with LibreOffice, and it doesn't have a default AI assistant.
Americans don’t want the government to decide what TV comics can and can’t say
A few days before the alleged assassination attempt on Donald Trump last weekend, one comic’s joke on his late-night show sounded routine enough, if a little edgy.
Taking a jab at the hefty age gap between Donald and Melania Trump, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel – playing the role of guest comic at a mock White House correspondents’ dinner – described the first lady as having “a glow like an expectant widow”.
Continue reading...Latest ruling is culmination of Justices Roberts and Alito’s campaign to slowly but surely strangle efforts to protect democratic rights of Black and other minority Americans
The ruling from the US supreme court destroying one of the last pillars of the 1965 Voting Rights Act (VRA) marks the end of a long and painstaking campaign to roll back civil rights legislation by two titans of the court’s rightwing majority, chief justice John Roberts and Samuel Alito.
Acting as an unspoken double act, the duo have chipped away at what has been called the crown jewel of the civil rights movement. Wednesday’s ruling in Louisiana v Callais is the fifth major supreme court decision authored by the two justices that have slowly but surely strangled efforts to protect the democratic rights of Black and other minority Americans.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Croda Inc. manufactures ethylene oxide — a highly carcinogenic industrial chemical — in a facility that sits near the base of the Delaware Memorial Bridge. Past releases of the substance from the facility has caused many neighbors to be vigilant about the safety in the area.
Federal and state regulators are investigating a leak of a cancer-causing chemical that occurred earlier this month at an industrial site near the base of the Delaware Memorial Bridge.
According to Delaware’s environmental notification system, “an unknown quantity of ethylene oxide was released” on April 14 because of a “leaking valve gasket” at Croda’s Atlas Point site, near New Castle.
The notification further states that Croda estimates emissions at less than 10 pounds.
Asked about the incident, Croda’s New Castle site director, Jeff LaBrozzi, said in an email that the leak was handled quickly and that warning systems onsite worked. He said the response relied on an “automated deluge system,” similar to an industrial sprinkler.
LaBrozzi and state regulators also said there were no reported injuries.
The incident follows larger leaks over the past decade that sparked outrage from New Castle-area neighbors who claimed that air pollution linked to ethylene oxide has put them at a higher risk of cancer.
Those incidents include an infamous 2018 leak that ended up releasing nearly 2,700 pounds of ethylene oxide and forced the closure of the Delaware Memorial Bridge during the busy Thanksgiving travel weekend. More than 3,000 neighboring residents were also told to shelter-in-place during the incident to avoid exposure.
Since the latest leak, at least one neighborhood leader said residents’ concerns have continued.
The EPA describes ethylene oxide as a flammable, colorless gas linked to various types of cancer for people who experience long-term exposure to it. In 2016, the agency revealed that the substance was 30 times more carcinogenic than officials previously thought.
The chemical is used industrially to produce consumer goods, such as lotions and skin care, and to sterilize medical equipment.

On Tuesday, a spokesperson from the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control confirmed the agency is investigating the April 14 leak. He said he could not comment further.
A spokesperson from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration also said in an email that its officials have also opened an investigation.
Beyond his statement to Spotlight Delaware, LaBrozzi sent an email to a Croda-sponsored coalition of New Castle-area civic groups, businesses and elected officials stating the leak prompted a coordinated response between the company and local first responders, and state agencies.
“Subsequent air monitoring, using multiple methods, confirmed there were no detectable readings (of ethylene oxide) beyond our facility and no risk to the surrounding community,” he said in the email.
For years, community advocates have expressed concerns about the risks of ethylene oxide emissions, as well as with Croda’s level of communication with nearby residents.
Following the latest incident, New Castle-area resident and organizer Dora Williams expressed concerns about residents’ access to public information about hazardous chemical emissions.
“People don’t know anything about it,” she said of the April incident. “Can we really trust them to say what happened, or was it all watered-down language?”

On Tuesday, DNREC Secretary Greg Patterson highlighted similar community concerns, including those related to ethylene oxide, during a Joint Capital Improvement Committee hearing at Legislative Hall.
While he said Croda has “significantly reduced” its ethylene oxide emissions in recent years, he also asserted that it is harder to monitor for the toxic chemical than it is for other substances.
Patterson also said the agency has reviewed the use of ethylene oxide in other communities across the country and learned that “these types of systems don’t really work without serious community engagement.”
Earlier this month, DNREC issued a notice of violation to Croda after equipment involving landfill gas, which provides power to the site, had failed emissions tests.
Get Involved
Members of the community can learn more about Croda by calling the Atlas Point community information line at 302-429-5474.
The post State and feds investigating latest chemical leak at Croda’s New Castle plant appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Move comes as airline industry reacts to uncertainty over Iran war and increase in price of Brent crude
Air France-KLM has cut its capacity growth forecasts for this year as the Iran war drives up its fuel costs by billions of dollars.
The French-Dutch airline expects its fuel bill to increase by $2.4bn (£1.8bn) this year as a result of the surge in costs since the Middle East conflict began. In response, it has trimmed its expectations for capacity growth to between 2% and 4% this year, down from 3% to 5% previously.
Continue reading...Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 30 #1054
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 30 No. 583.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 30, No. 788.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 30
Amber Davidson-Orozco said the family had lost Dodger, their cat, during their move out of California
A family cat who got lost amid a move from California across the US is said to be settling back into his old ways with his humans at their new home in Georgia after experiencing an unlikely – but long hoped for – reunion more than seven years in the making.
As owner Amber Davidson-Orozco put in an interview Wednesday, her cat Dodger still responds to his name and allows her sons to flip him playfully over their shoulders despite an absence from them that to the cat lasted the equivalent of roughly 24 years.
Continue reading...
Every Tuesday, almost like clockwork, the U.S. Department of Education would update a public list of schools and colleges it was investigating for possible violations of students’ civil rights.
Every Tuesday, that is, until Jan. 14, 2025, six days before President Donald Trump was inaugurated for his second term. Today, that online list remains as it was that week before inauguration: frozen in time.
My colleagues Jodi Cohen and Jennifer Smith Richards, both longtime education reporters, used that list regularly in their work. “You would get a call or a tip about a school district, and you would go and look up the school district to see if it was under investigation,” Cohen told me recently.
The data also allowed the public to spot patterns in what types of investigations were being opened and where, Smith Richards said.
For decades, the Office for Civil Rights has worked to uphold students’ constitutional rights against discrimination based on disability, race, national origin and gender. Now, without a publicly accessible way to track the office’s investigations, journalists, education watchdogs and parents could be left in the dark.
Early last year, Cohen and Smith Richards reached out to sources inside the Department of Education. They learned the department had significantly cut back its efforts to investigate some types of discrimination in schools. They published a story about how the department, under the Trump administration, is now focused on investigations relating to curbing antisemitism, ending participation of transgender athletes in women’s sports and combating alleged discrimination against white students. Complaints about transgender students playing sports and using girls’ bathrooms at school had been fast-tracked while cases of racial harassment of Black students last year were ignored.
Throughout last year, the reporters asked the new Department of Education leadership for updates on investigations. And they filed Freedom of Information Act requests, seeking records regarding new investigations and those related to agreements with universities and school districts that detailed their plans to stay in compliance with federal anti-discrimination law. They also requested communications with specific private groups.
Although the department selectively sends press releases about some cases, the work mostly remains hidden. We have no definitive way of knowing which types of civil rights complaints it is prioritizing.
By late February 2026 — a year after we published our first story about the issue and after asking repeatedly for information — the department had failed to produce a single record. ProPublica sued.
The Education Department asked a judge this month to dismiss the case. It said in a court filing that it was still evaluating the reporters’ requests and searching for “potentially responsive” records.
Suing government agencies is not a first choice for most reporters and news organizations. It’s costly, time consuming and may not produce records for months or even years — longer than most reporters spend on a story or project.
I know this firsthand. ProPublica filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs on my behalf in 2016 seeking records related to the agency’s handling of Agent Orange, a defoliant used during the Vietnam War. We had written articles about how veterans believed the department had mishandled claims related to health issues they and their offspring faced. We got records in dribs and drabs over years, but the lawsuit didn’t come to a close until 2021, well after our reporting on the topic had tapered off.
Over the years, ProPublica also has sued the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the Internal Revenue Service and the Department of Health and Human Services over their failure to turn over records under FOIA. And that’s just a partial list. We recently won a suit against the U.S. Navy seeking access to military court records it was blocking.
Prying records from government agencies has been challenging for a long time, in both Democratic and Republican administrations. But we do it because these records belong to us, the public. And they’re a critical tool for the journalism we do to expose abuses of power.
One particular challenge journalists face today is that layoffs across the federal government under Trump have hit FOIA offices particularly hard. And FOIA requests appear to be going into what seems like a black hole. Regardless, we don’t intend to back down. We will continue to fight for data and information to which we believe the public is entitled, and we are fortunate to have outstanding lawyers and outside law firms ready to help us.
I asked Cohen and Smith Richards why the Department of Education data was so important. Smith Richards gave me a concrete example: The department has been terminating civil rights resolution agreements with schools and other educational institutions, but it sometimes hasn’t told the public it has done so. For example, the department had ruled in 2024 that the bullying of a Washington sixth grader was based on race and sex, and amounted to a civil rights violation. The school district then entered into an agreement with the department to protect students from sex- and race-based discrimination. But this year, the department ended the agreement. And though it did announce the change via press release, there’s no indication in its online database that the original settlement is no longer in force. In many cases, there are no press releases, either.
So how would the public even find out about situations like this, I asked. “Either a school district has raised their hand and said the federal government has terminated its resolution agreement,” Smith Richards said, “or it’s gotten whispered to somebody.”
How often has this happened? It’s almost impossible to know the full scope. “There’s not some sort of transparent process here,” Smith Richards said.
The loss of data goes beyond new investigations and resolution agreements. For example, through the department’s Civil Rights Data Collection, Cohen and Smith Richards were able to determine that a special-education district in Illinois had the highest rate of student arrests of any school in the country. Knowing this allowed them to dig deeper into what was causing the high arrest rate. They ultimately published an investigation that also found that in one school, more than half of its students were arrested during the 2017-18 academic year.
But the most recent data on the department’s website is from 2020-21, at the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. And given that the Trump administration plans to shut down the Department of Education, it’s unclear if future data will be released.
Cohen and Smith Richards continue to seek information from the Education Department. In late March, they filed another FOIA request for what they described as “very basic information.”
The Education Department acknowledged receiving the request. Here’s roughly when it told them to expect a response: 262 BUSINESS DAYS.
Until then, we’ll keep at it.
ProPublica needs your help to track how the upheaval of public education is affecting schools and colleges in your community. Take a few minutes to join our source network and help guide our coverage.
The post Why We Are Suing the Department of Education appeared first on ProPublica.
Wishful thinking and a taste test won't tell you much about your drinking water. Here are the most common contaminants found in everyday tap.
The backlash was immediate after the Trump administration served notice that hospitals and nursing homes should limit sugary drinks and dietary supplements in favor of what HHS terms "real food."
Moscow is reducing the footprint of its foremost annual military parade amid a wave of Ukrainian drone attacks inside Russia.
The US was not a true democracy before the Voting Rights Act. Wednesday’s decision has essentially destroyed the law
Is America a democracy? The term implies an equality of rights and dignity among citizens, a collective and uniform right of individuals to participate in self-government and to shape the laws that rule them. In that sense, the answer is no: though it has been a republic since its founding, America has only rarely been a true democracy, one where all citizens have the full right to vote and to have that vote counted.
Political scientists such as the University of Notre Dame’s Christine Wolbrecht have argued that America wasn’t really a democracy, not in the meaningful sense of the term, until the passage of the Voting Rights Act, the law that formed the signature achievement of the civil rights movement and sought to end racial barriers to voting across the south when it was passed in 1965. If you accept that premise, you could say that the era of American democracy officially ended on Wednesday, when the supreme court finished its project of dismantling the VRA in its 6-3 decision in Louisiana v Callais. Whatever this country has become now, “democracy” does not describe it.
Continue reading...Al-Qaeda-linked fighters killed the defense minister, a top Moscow ally, and forced Russian mercenaries to retreat, highlighting the Mali-Russia partnership’s failure.
Jitu Munda says he was refused access to money in case highlighting ‘lack of humanity’ in Indian bureaucracy
The sight of a man bringing the remains of his dead sister to a bank in India after officials had refused to let him withdraw money without proof of her death has caused shock in India.
Jitu Munda, 52, from the Indian state of Odisha, was captured on video carrying the remains of his recently deceased sister through the streets of Keonjhar and placing them outside the local bank.
Continue reading...PC; Grey Alien Games, Night Signal Entertainment
An innocent-looking charity shop find draws you into a compulsive world of demons, ogres and retro delights
For a while in the mid-1990s, meta horror movies were the genre everyone was talking about. Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, Scream, the Blair Witch Project – these films simultaneously examined and exploited genre conventions, seeking to scare audiences while also distancing them from the narrative action. You didn’t know whether to laugh or gasp in shock, you weren’t sure what was story or what was framing. Did that just happen or was it a dream sequence? You just had to go with it.
Now developers Grey Alien Games and Night Signal Entertainment have brought this multilayered approach to the card game solitaire, infusing a straightforward puzzler with a bloody gush of meta meaning and a dollop of nostalgia just for the self-reflexive hell of it. In Forbidden Solitaire, lead character Will Roberta picks up an old 1990s game called, yes, Forbidden Solitaire, in a charity shop vaguely recalling some internet myth about it being cursed. He discovers that the game is a sort of narrative card-battler set in a haunted dungeon filled with monsters and treasure – and then you, the player, are transported from his computer desktop into the game. So you’re both him and you.
Continue reading...Some travellers spent hours in lines at airport, with kiosks not working, little seating and few staff on hand to help
Some travellers passing through the new EU entry-exit system (EES) have faced huge delays at border checks, with some waiting for up to three hours, airports say.
The new rules have gradually been introduced in Europe since October 2025, and came into effect on 10 April in the Schengen countries – 25 of the EU’s 27 states plus Iceland, Norway, Liechtenstein and Switzerland.
Continue reading...Media tycoon honoured in absentia as critics decry his 20-year sentence under national security law
The jailed media entrepreneur Jimmy Lai has been awarded Deutsche Welle’s freedom of speech award for his contribution to Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement.
The German public broadcaster said on Thursday that Lai would be presented in absentia with the 12th iteration of the award on 23 June at the DW Global Media Forum in Bonn.
Continue reading...@lia Cool thanks I will check it out and try to find some local shop to print. Should buy one and start printing myself really.. would be a lot easier haha
The earnings from the tournament in the US, Mexico and Canada will make it the most lucrative competition in the history of sport, even if some of the 48 competing countries say they are struggling to make ends meet
A World Cup that Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, billed at the draw last December as “the greatest event that humanity has ever seen” will certainly be the most lucrative competition in sporting history.
Fifa has spent the last few years upgrading its revenue projections, with the most recent financial report stating that the world governing body will make $13bn (£9.6bn) from the four-year cycle culminating in this summer’s tournament, almost $9bn of which will be brought in this year.
Continue reading...Tesla has produced the first Semi from its new high-volume production line at Gigafactory Nevada, a milestone for the long-delayed electric Class 8 truck program after years of pilot builds and delays. Electrek reports: The Tesla Semi has had one of the longest gestation periods in Tesla's history. First unveiled in 2017, the truck was originally promised for production in 2019. That target slipped repeatedly -- to 2020, then 2021, then 2022 -- before Tesla finally delivered a handful of units to PepsiCo in late 2022. Those early trucks were essentially hand-built on a pilot line. Tesla spent the next three years refining the design, cutting roughly 1,000 lbs from the truck, and building out a dedicated factory adjacent to Gigafactory Nevada in Sparks. The company revealed the final production specs in February, confirming two trims: a Standard Range with 325 miles at full 82,000-lb gross combination weight, and a Long Range with 500 miles of range. Tesla is quoting $290,000 for the 500-mile Long Range version and roughly $260,000 for the Standard Range -- making it the lowest-priced Class 8 battery electric tractor on the market. The shift from a pilot line to a high-volume production line is significant. Tesla's Semi factory is designed for an annual capacity of 50,000 trucks, though the company will ramp gradually. Analysts project deliveries between 5,000 and 15,000 units in 2026, but that sounds way too optimistic. [...] Both trims feature an 800-kW tri-motor drivetrain producing 1,072 hp and support 1.2-MW Megacharger speeds, restoring 60% of range in roughly 30 minutes -- conveniently timed around a driver's mandatory rest break. Tesla has opened its first Megacharger station in Ontario, California, and has mapped 66 Megacharger locations across 15 states.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Anybody interested in doing the dolomites solo and needs a roommate? Lmk. Larissa
Fadi Saqr is accused of mass killings of civilians in Tadamon, Damascus, where people say he must face justice
A Syrian rights commission is preparing a case accusing Fadi Saqr, a militia leader within the Assad regime, of involvement in crimes against humanity and war crimes, a senior Syrian official has told the Guardian.
Saqr is a former commander of the National Defence Forces (NDF) militia and is widely accused of involvement in the mass killing and forcible disappearance of civilians in the Tadamon neighbourhood of Damascus, as well as other parts of the Syrian capital.
Continue reading...Small top-tier Android is great to use, being fast, AI-loaded and with reasonable battery life, but falls short of rivals on camera
Samsung’s compact flagship phone hasn’t changed much in a year, but the S26 is still one of the best smaller handsets available as rivals grow larger and larger.
The S26 is the cheapest and smallest of this year’s top Samsungs, dwarfed by the top-of-the-line S26 Ultra in size and price. But like everything with a memory chip at the moment, the S26 has increased in price by £80 or the equivalent to £879 (€949/$899/A$1,349). At least it has double the starting storage.
Continue reading...Upgrade your office, hobby room or gaming space with a top desk recommended by CNET experts.
Movement during the day gets even easier when you have one of the best standing desks.
Critical minerals will scramble geopolitics.
China might have—but wouldn’t want Washington to know.
Pair apologise in court after being accused of defrauding buyers including some of New York’s most prominent fine art auction houses
A father and daughter in New Jersey have pleaded guilty to running a years-long counterfeiting scheme to trick art galleries and auction houses into buying forged paintings of works by prominent artists such as Andy Warhol, Banksy and Pablo Picasso.
Federal prosecutors said Erwin Bankowski, 50, and Karolina Bankowska, 26, commissioned an artist in Poland to create at least 200 of the fakes and ultimately defrauded buyers of at least $2m.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the San Francisco Chronicle: Elon Musk returned to the witness stand Wednesday in Oakland federal court for a second day of testimony in his case against OpenAI, detailing his shift from being an enthusiastic supporter of the nonprofit to feeling betrayed. He also clashed repeatedly with OpenAI's attorney over questions that Musk believed were unfair. He said his feelings towards OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and President Greg Brockman shifted from a "phase one" of support, "phase two" of doubts, and finally "phase three, where I'm sure they're looting the nonprofit. We're currently in phase three," Musk said with a chuckle. Musk said he was a "fool" for giving OpenAI "$38 million of essentially free funding to create what would become an $800 billion company," of which he has no equity stake. In his 2024 lawsuit, Musk alleged breach of charitable trust and unjust enrichment, arguing OpenAI abandoned its original nonprofit mission to benefit humanity to pursue financial gain. OpenAI's lawyer William Savitt argued Tuesday during his opening statement that the nonprofit entity remains in control of the for-profit public benefit corporation and is now one of the most well-funded nonprofits in the world. Musk is seeking to oust Altman from OpenAI's board and upwards of $134 billion in damages, which he said would be used to fund OpenAI's nonprofit mission. During cross-examination, Savitt clashed with Musk over questioning. Savitt asked whether Musk had contributed $38 million to OpenAI, rather than the $100 million that he later claimed to have invested on X. Musk said he also contributed his reputation to the company and came up with the idea for the name, leading Savitt to ask Musk to respond yes or no to "simple" questions. "Your questions are not simple. They're designed to trick me, essentially," Musk said, adding that he had to elaborate or it would mislead the jury. He compared Savitt's questions to asking, "have you stopped beating your wife?" Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers intervened, leading Musk to answer yes to the $38 million investment amount. The world's richest man said his doubts grew and by late 2022, he thought "wait a second, these guys are betraying their promise. They're breaking the deal." "I started to lose confidence that they were telling me the truth," Musk said. A turning point was co-defendent Microsoft's investment of billions of dollars into OpenAI, Musk said. On October 23, 2022, Musk texted Altman that he was "disturbed" to see OpenAI's valuation of $20 billion in the wake of the Microsoft deal. Musk called the deal a "bait and switch," since a nonprofit doesn't have a valuation. OpenAI had "for all intents and purposes" become primarily a for-profit company, Musk argued. Altman responded to Musk by text that "I agree this feels bad," saying that OpenAI had previously offered equity in the company but Musk hadn't wanted it at the time. Altman said the company was happy to offer equity in the future. Musk said it "didn't seem to make sense to me" to hold equity in what should be a nonprofit. Musk also testified about former OpenAI board member Shivon Zilis, who lives with him, is the mother of four of his children, and served as a senior advisor at Neuralink. He denied that she shared sensitive OpenAI information with him. Court evidence showed Musk had encouraged her to stay close to OpenAI to "keep info flowing" and had approved Neuralink recruiting OpenAI employees, which he defended by saying workers are free to change jobs. "It's a free country," Musk said. Recap: Musk Testifies OpenAI Was Created As Nonprofit To Counter Google (Day Two) Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Head To Court (Day One)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I've tested and reviewed all of Apple's AirPods, including Apple's new AirPos Max 2. Here's how they stack up.
Australian white supremacist who murdered 51 Muslims said poor mental health made him admit to crimes
The Australian white supremacist who murdered 51 Muslim worshippers at two mosques in Christchurch in 2019 has been prevented from appealing against his guilty pleas, after one of New Zealand’s highest courts said his bid was “utterly devoid of merit”.
Brenton Tarrant, who is responsible for the worst mass shooting in New Zealand’s history, asked the court of appeal in February to allow him to appeal against his guilty pleas, claiming harsh prison conditions had affected his mental health and compelled him to admit to the crimes.
Continue reading...The budget blueprint is the first step in Republicans' two-pronged plan to end the Department of Homeland Security shutdown.
The primary election in California's gubernatorial contest is just over a month away, and the race remains wide open.
| Rainy day so I decided I’d stay on the porch, grab a two by six and learn the old bonk. Well wouldn’t you know despite all my gear for safety I think ( the amazing ketamine giving nurse said) blew my Achilles. I loved the short trip but this shit sucks. I didn’t even get enough distance for it to count on my daily thing. Wish me good thoughts fellow floaters [link] [comments] |
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The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to hold interest rates steady on Wednesday after a key policy meeting, likely the last chaired by central bank chief Jerome Powell, a frequent target of president Donald Trump’s ire.
Policymakers will weigh the risks of surging energy prices and snarled supply chains due to the US-Israel war on Iran, with analysts widely expecting a third pause in a row as the effects of the conflict ripple through the world’s largest economy.
Continue reading...Claudio Neves Valente, who killed himself after deadly attack, began planning for violence in 2022, authorities say
The gunman behind a deadly shooting at Brown University in December appeared to have been aggrieved by personal failures and sought retribution against those he deemed responsible, federal authorities said on Wednesday.
More than four months after Claudio Manuel Neves Valente opened fire on the Ivy League campus, killing two students and injuring nine others, officials with the FBI’s Boston division announced they had concluded a significant portion of their investigation into the shooter.
Continue reading...I'd really like to get a vsec on my XR. Awhile back I think a shop quoted the parts and install to be a grand if I remember right.
I couldn't really afford that at the time and also thought it might be higher than what it would be if I found someone else potentially.
I think he was upselling the cost of the parts too, which I understand as a business. But thinking if I just buy the stage 2 myself and then find someone that knows how to install I could save some loot.
What's the going rate? Thanks!
I just got a pint that came with a parts board where the only real issue on the parts board is a bad battery, looking on the one wheel website and used ones on ebay they look to all be a similar price of near 300. Any recommendations on where to get a usable battery cheaper or am I likely just gonna be shelling out the 300?
It would be sick if I could get it up and running so I can have two boards.
Court’s 6-3 decision is a major upheaval in US civil rights law and gives lawmakers permission to draw districting plans that weaken the influence of Black and other minority voters– key US politics stories from Wednesday 29 April at a glance
The US supreme court has ruled that Louisiana will have to redraw its congressional map, in a landmark decision that effectively guts a major section of the Voting Rights Act, the landmark 1965 civil rights law that prevents racial discrimination in voting.
The court’s 6-3 decision is a major upheaval in US civil rights law and gives lawmakers permission to draw districting plans that weaken the influence of Black and other minority voters. Some states may even rush ahead to try to redraw districts before this year’s midterm elections.
Continue reading...US senator holds panel with leading Chinese scientists and warns of risks to society unless new technology is regulated
The US senator Bernie Sanders espoused the importance of international cooperation in regulating AI at a Wednesday panel on Capitol Hill alongside two leading Chinese scientists.
As startups and tech giants, most prominently in Silicon Valley and Beijing, race to advance and scale their artificial intelligence, Sanders has been among the AI skeptics advocating for safeguards.
Continue reading...Amazon's Leo will be "six times better on the uplink performance than existing alternatives," CEO Andy Jassy said.
| A few trips, a few falls, so many great times and great memories, keep on floating! Happy to be floating again! 🤙🏼 [link] [comments] |
Several families of victims of a mass shooting in Canada are suing OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, alleging the company's generative AI chatbot, ChatGPT, played a role in the February shooting.
The waiver lets international ships carry goods between U.S. ports and is aimed at lowering energy prices.
Meta's answer to declining user growth? Personal AI agents in its smart glasses.
You can download specific file formats without leaving Gemini.
Google, Microsoft and Amazon report gains in cloud-computing businesses while Meta spending draws concern
Unusual simultaneous reports of financial results by several of the US’s largest tech companies gave positive indications for the stock market despite widespread fears of an AI bubble on Wednesday.
Four of the so-called Magnificent Seven tech stocks, the most valuable publicly traded companies in the world, reported their quarterly financial results on Wednesday. The cluster is not typical, as these disclosures do not often occur on the same day, and provides a snapshot of how the tech industry is faring as it rides the AI boom. Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft all revealed double-digit gains in their cloud computing units, which have seen supercharged growth thanks to increasing adoption of AI. Meta, not in the business of cloud computing, failed to meet Wall Street expectations.
Continue reading...Amazon confirms in a surprise announcement that its annual sales extravaganza is coming earlier this year. Here's the scoop on what we've learned so far.
PocketOS was left scrambling after a rogue AI agent deleted swaths of code underpinning its business
It only took nine seconds for an AI coding agent gone rogue to delete a company’s entire production database and its backups, according to its founder. PocketOS, which sells software that car rental businesses rely on, descended into chaos after its databases were wiped, the company’s founder Jeremy Crane said.
The culprit was Cursor, an AI agent powered by Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6 model, which is one of the AI industry’s flagship models. As more industries embrace AI in an attempt to automate tasks and even replace workers, the chaos at PocketOS is a reminder of what could go wrong.
Continue reading...A seventeen-second video shows a dark-haired man rapping his pale knuckles gently below the tinted windows of a silver minivan. He stands back, shoving his hands into the pockets of his puffer coat, his boyish face twisted into a severe expression. The car drives off, and the camera pans to follow it down the suburban Minneapolis road. No words are spoken.
Splashed across the screen, a bright red and white caption reads, “ICE was circling a local elementary school. I knocked on their door to have a conversation, but they ran away instead.”
The man is Matt Little, 41, a former mayor and state senator from nearby Lakeville seen as the front-runner to replace outgoing Democratic Rep. Angie Craig in Minnesota’s 2nd Congressional district.
He’s staking much of his campaign on one of the most politically salient issues in the Twin Cities. In a series of videos pinned to his campaign Instagram under the name “GET ICE OUT,” Little documents himself at protests and in encounters with immigration enforcement agents. “When I’m elected to congress,” wrote Little in a January post, “we will hold ICE accountable.”
Not everyone in his district is buying it.
“For me, it smells like, ‘I’m going to try to use this to bolster my chances in a time of crisis,’” Paul Peterson, a local ICE rapid responder, told The Intercept. “Never let a good crisis go to waste, right?”
In his mostly suburban Minneapolis district, Little’s top political issue is at once highly motivating and highly fraught. As 3,000 federal agents descended on Minnesota for “Operation Metro Surge,” killing Alex Pretti and Renee Good and wounding or abducting scores more, Minnesotans who had not so much as lifted a protest sign a year ago joined ICE rapid response networks. Given the gravity of agents’ often unpredictable violence, many saw their work as putting their lives on the line.
Democratic politicians are eager to turn engaged protesters and observers into door-knockers and voters. Nationwide examples point to a proof of concept: Newark, New Jersey, Mayor Ras Baraka’s approval ratings skyrocketed after he was arrested for trespassing while monitoring an immigration detention facility. Brad Lander, then a New York City mayoral candidate who is now running for Congress, saw his star rise after his arrest outside of a Manhattan immigration court. Illinois congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh finished second in a crowded primary after generating high-profile headlines for her federal indictment over a protest outside an ICE processing center near Chicago. (Baraka’s charges were dropped days after his arrest, and on Wednesday, federal prosecutors said they planned to dismiss felony charges against Abughazaleh. Lander rejected a deal to drop his charges last year and said he’d prefer to go to trial.)
“That was kind of personal for me because my wife is an immigrant.”
In the area around Minneapolis, the surge was “surreal,” Little told The Intercept in a joint interview with his wife, Coco. “It was kind of all-encompassing there for many months. We knew we had to be out there. That was kind of personal for me because my wife is an immigrant.”
The Intercept spoke with nearly a dozen people involved in ICE rapid response networks in and around the Minneapolis suburbs, including in leadership positions, several of whom felt that Little was “cosplaying” as an observer and overstating his activism for political clout. Others speculated that the outrage was manufactured to ruin his chances at the nomination.
There’s an inherent tension between enraged protesters who take matters into their own hands, outside of official political channels, and politicians who want to harness their rage into electoral energy. It raises the question of who gets to wear the mantle of resistance and blurs the line between when politicians are supportive — and when they’re extractive.
“There are many different legitimate ways for politicians to amplify our movements, like resistance to ICE,” said Justin Hansford, executive director of the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center at Howard Law School, “but how they do it is of the utmost importance.”
In the suburbs of Minneapolis, the question of “how” would eventually tear a small community in half.
Jessica Vinar carries with her the hallmarks of progressive Minnesota politics. She’s a teacher, with a school lanyard and a water bottle adorned with political buttons, a Pride sticker, and a small 3D-printed whistle, the preferred ICE-alerting tool seen on residents’ keychains and in small bowls at cafe entrances across the city.
In a bustling coffee shop in the heart of Minneapolis’s South Side, Vinar recounted the events of February 17, when she joined a group watching the roads for blacked-out SUVs in the once-sleepy Minneapolis suburb of Savage. An online ICE-monitoring website had reported multiple federal agents armed with weapons and clad in tactical gear.
Vinar learned that one of her companions was congressional candidate Matt Little, and the others were journalists from the New York Times. Dashcam videos from the scene shared with The Intercept show Little standing with two other people next to a dark gray car that appears to be his, and one white SUV, which he identifies as ICE’s. “There’s two more down that way,” Vinar tells Little in the video. He responds: “All right, will you hang out here with us for a little bit?”
There’s a six-minute gap in the dashcam video, when Vinar’s car is off and she’s standing outside. Vinar said she watched as the journalists photographed Little interacting with ICE agents and standing outside of a home. Then, “I hear him say something like, ‘I’m gonna see if they’ll chase me,’” Vinar recalled. “And they all pile into his vehicle, and they drive off.”
The day’s events received coverage in the New York Times and The Intercept, and Little confirmed this version of the events. But Vinar and Little disagree on what happened next.
In Vinar’s telling, she was left standing outside, alone, with an ICE vehicle behind her. When she gets back in her car and turns the camera back on, Little’s gray SUV is gone, and three other cars she identified as ICE’s are present. Masked people who appear to be federal agents drive past Vinar in the white SUV, waving and recording her. Then Little returns, following the white ICE vehicle as it drives past Vinar’s car a second time. The whole thing is over in a matter of minutes.
Little, who said he has not seen the dashcam video himself, told The Intercept that he thought the only ICE vehicle in the area had pulled out to follow him when he left, so he didn’t believe he’d left Vinar with the agents by herself. Vinar claims he did know and notes that, as captured in her video, she told him. Little told The Intercept that he believed that the additional vehicles she’d mentioned had left.
Several rapid responders in the area told The Intercept they have a strict protocol to never leave another observer alone with ICE, though one said people do get left alone from time to time. (Several activists spoke to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation from federal officials.)
Peterson, who patrols for rapid response throughout the wider region and was in the chat, said he “isn’t politically involved,” and did not know who Little was ahead of the incident. “I don’t care about the theatrics of it,” he said, “[but] he put one of my people at risk, and that’s not OK.”
The incident blew up across an intricate network of Signal chats, the local rapid response groups’ digital, decentralized town square. Was Little “trying to be helpful,” one chat member posed to The Intercept, or, as some suspected, “was Matt just staging a photo op?”
In a message reviewed by The Intercept, one person accused Vinar of changing her story after realizing it was Little. In Vinar’s initial message, she said that ICE agents had followed Little and circled back to harass her; she then clarified that Little had left the scene with agents still present. Another observer wrote that Little was claiming Vinar’s story was “typical last-minute misinformation.”
Little told The Intercept he “can only speak from” his own experience, but he and his wife are framing the activists’ anger as a manufactured political play. Vinar caucused for his opponent, state Rep. Kaela Berg, at a convention following the incident, Little added in a written statement after his interview. Pointing to his wife, he wrote, “Coco believed and still believes this is being spread as a political attack.”
Coco also reached out to Savage resident Mark Kloempken and his wife, whose home was at the center of the February 17 incident. Kloempken said he was enjoying the day’s mild weather, unconcerned about the ICE agent parked by his driveway.
“I’m waving to them and saying ‘hi,’” he said. “They seem friendly. They’re not a big deal.” Kloempken left to get some lunch, playing “Ice, Ice, baby,” as he drove off.
“[She] hates that I did that,” he said, indicating his wife, who asked to remain anonymous when they spoke to The Intercept over Zoom from their Savage home.
The couple had met Little a week prior to the incident. They said the politician was handing out whistles in their neighborhood when he offered to take Kloempken’s wife along with him to an immigration raid on a nearby apartment building.
“I’m old,” she told The Intercept — meaning, she’s not in any of the Signal groups. But she believes that Little was not being performative. “The day I went on that impromptu ride with him, there were no pictures, no photos taken of anything,” she said, adding, “he had me film what was going on so that he could drive.”
She said Little instructed her not to go out alone. “You always have to have two people,” she recalled him saying.
At what point do politicians’ shows of solidarity become performative, or even counterproductive? It’s a question that has troubled Hansford of Howard Law for years.
Hansford, 45, got his start in activism in earnest in Ferguson, Missouri, shortly after police officer Darren Wilson shot an unarmed Black teenager, Michael Brown, igniting a firestorm of activism across the country. Over the years, Hansford has worked closely with politicians and movement organizers on shaping policy and finding common ground.
“If you look up ‘extractive’ in the dictionary, it will be a picture of Nancy Pelosi with kente cloth on.”
Those relationships can end up being exploitative, said Hansford, pointing to the aftermath of the protests against police brutality after the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. In 2020, after Democrats harnessed the energy of Black Lives Matter and other mass mobilization efforts to win a trifecta in the White House, the Senate, and the House, they failed to pass any of the signature legislation that movement leaders were calling for, instead favoring stunts like an infamous photo of Democratic leadership kneeling in red and green Ghanaian kente stoles.
“If you look up ‘extractive’ in the dictionary, it will be a picture of Nancy Pelosi with kente cloth on,” said Hansford.
Still, “it’s smart for [Democratic] candidates to tap into the energy around ICE,” said Nina Smith, a political communications strategist and former senior adviser to Stacy Abrams. “Their constituents are being harmed and impacted by this financially, mentally, and at times physically. So they have to talk about this issue.”
In Minnesota, activists did point to examples of politicians who were quietly protecting the community without looking for a political moment. Many cited Aurin Chowdhury, a 29-year-old Minneapolis City Council member who speaks with the exasperation of someone who is as tired of the political establishment as she is committed to challenging it. By the time the federal occupation had ended, Chowdhury had been tear-gassed several times and became a mainstay in anti-ICE activities throughout the city.
“When you have masked men and guns occupying your city by the thousands, killing people, taking children, separating them from their families, terrorizing pregnant women — that reality becomes right in front of your face,” Chowdhury said. “It felt impossible to just sit at my computer and answer emails, or try to hold, like, a constituent meeting.”
Tucked away in a quiet corner of city hall, Chowdhury seems aware of how easily popular movements can be used for individual political gains.
“Just listen to what people are saying.”
“I worry that that’s something that can happen when the struggle of people is co-opted by high-level Democratic leaders who are seen as elites and are only willing to take incremental steps versus, like, actually addressing the heart of the issue,” she said. She urged Democratic party leadership to worry less about questions like “What is the message? And how do we get the American people on our side?”
“Maybe it’s just listen to what people are saying,” Chowdhury said, “and be bold and take risks.”
Matt Little is polite. He says “whoa” with a Midwesterner’s elongated O-sound, revealing more surprise than irritation when met with a new accusation.
He has spent most of his adult life on the political scene. He was elected to serve on the Lakeville City Council in 2010, when he was 25 years old. Two years later, while in law school, he became the youngest mayor in Lakeville’s history, defeating heavy outside spending from the Koch brothers’ super PAC Americans for Prosperity with a large war chest largely from labor unions. After one term as mayor, he was elected to the state Senate as a member of the Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party representing Lakeville, Farmington, and southern Dakota County, where he also served one term before he was unseated by Republican Zach Duckworth.
As a congressional candidate, Little has positioned himself as a standard-fare progressive, focusing his campaign on largely local issues like affordability and “getting ICE out of Minnesota.” His website boasts a section on an “Anti-ICE Bill of Rights,” which calls for a series of reforms, including banning federal agents from wearing masks and cutting ICE funding to pre-Trump levels. Little has not joined calls from other progressive candidates to “Abolish ICE” — instead calling to “replace” the agency with a different federal immigration agency.
Not unlike in his mayoral campaign over a decade prior, Little received endorsements from several labor unions, including the Minnesota Postal Workers Union and National Nurses United.
Little says that he’s “only posted a small margin” of the work he’s done on ICE and seemed confused by accusations that he was chasing clout. He sent The Intercept a list of roughly a dozen instances over the last six months where he claims he responded to ICE activity — some of which were documented on his social media.
“When you are in a leadership position in the community, and you have a platform to highlight the awful things that ICE is doing. You should use it,” he told The Intercept.
In addition to his political work, Matt Little is a practicing attorney with a personal injury firm called Little Law. In 2021, he represented Kami Sanders in a case where she accused a school board member of campaign finance violations. In February, she called him to ream him out.
“It would be super helpful if you would get your ass out here and actually help us,” she recalls telling Little over the phone, adding, “and leave your camera crews at home!”
Sanders is one of the older activists in the network of rapid responders. She has salt-and-pepper hair, vibrant and commanding eyes, and a face worn with decades of political work. She didn’t grow up in Minnesota, and instead carries a prominent East Texas accent and a homegrown personality to match. She answers questions by telling long, profanity-laced stories that crescendo into fiery one-liners like, “You can go fuck yourself until the cows come home.”
In the southern suburbs, four Minnesota state senators established one of the first rapid-response networks in the area and later designated themselves as the sole administrators of the group’s Signal thread — an unusual format for Minnesota anti-ICE resistance. According to Sanders, who administers the Dakota County Signal group, which includes Lakeville, while many elected officials were valuable participants in rapid response activities, power imbalances among some leaders and residents quickly created a rift within the network.
“They would only dispatch in the areas that they were elected,” said Sanders. “That feels political to me.”
Still, she credits them for showing up and for not publicizing their involvement for political gain. Sanders said she cannot say the same for Little.
“There are other politicians in this who actually have been boots on the ground and are not using it. I mean, one of his opponents has been boots on the ground, and you never hear her talk about it,” said Sanders, referring to Berg.
The fact that the congressional candidate received coverage in the country’s premier mainstream newspaper appears to have further riled some of the activists. “When the New York Times article came out,” said Peterson, “everybody was kind of like, wait, do you guys see him around here? Because I sure haven’t.”
Peterson, a former military member, police officer, and longtime Republican from Kentucky, espoused a persistent suspicion of American politics. He said the occupation of the Twin Cities prompted a shift in his political beliefs — just not the sort that you can vote for. His deep skepticism of politicians extends to Little, whom he accused of “grifting” off the movement.
By March, Little’s campaign was in crisis management mode. At a meet-and-greet at a crowded local restaurant, dodging plates of chicken fingers and quesadillas, Little admitted that he had “some apologies to make.”
“I got incredibly defensive,” Little said, his hands hovering by his heart as he spoke, “and I thought it was just a political attack. It became very clear to me from conversations today and yesterday that there was no political motivation.”
Supporting Vinar’s version of the story, he added, “It also became very clear to me that ICE was still in the neighborhood. And had I communicated better with observers that were there, I would have known that.”
A month later, however, Little is adamant that he led “the only remaining ICE vehicle away” from the house that day.
“If [Vinar] is saying that ICE drove by that house again after I left, then yes, I believe her and have told her that directly and multiple times,” he wrote in a statement to The Intercept on Monday. “But when I left, there were no ICE vehicles remaining.” He added that he was frustrated Vinar had not released her videos from the scene.
“If this isn’t about politics, then just release the full dash cam video so everyone can see what actually happened,” Little wrote.
“It is campaign season,” his wife said in the couple’s joint interview. Coco, who is active in the rapid response Signal chats and has been heavily involved in her husband’s campaign, said that Vinar “probably was very concerned on that day because of what happened, but I think some are definitely using it for political gain.”
“I hate to see her being used this way,” Coco added.
Vinar said she was originally hesitant to speak out for fear of dividing the movement. But she couldn’t stomach the idea of the months of fear and work she and her friends had done in the district to be co-opted.
“It feels like he’s using residents here as props,” she said. “And that doesn’t speak well to anyone, but it really doesn’t speak well to someone who is promising to represent us in our government.”
Correction: April 29, 2026, 6:23 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to clarify which of Little’s confrontations with ICE on February 17 received media coverage.
Correction: April 30, 2026
This story has been updated to remove an erroneous reference to Kami Sanders working on the school board; she sued one of its members but did not serve on it herself. It has also been updated to note that Jessica Vinar kept a Pride sticker on her water bottle rather than her school lanyard.
The post ICE Watchers Worry Democrats Are Trying to Co-Opt Their Movements For Votes appeared first on The Intercept.
Ukraine has perfected demining techniques in the Black Sea over four years of war against Russia.
Two days after an armed man tried to enter the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt cited rhetoric from Democrats that she said is “inspiring violence” against President Donald Trump and other Republicans. But several of the statements she quoted were stripped of their original context, a point that House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries made in a rebuttal.
In prepared remarks in the April 27 press briefing, Leavitt called out a number of congressional Democrats, and a late-night television host, for “hateful and constant and violent rhetoric directed” at Trump. On April 25, security prevented the armed man from accessing the WHCA dinner, which the president and top administration officials attended. After Leavitt’s briefing, the man was charged with attempting to assassinate the president.

For example, the press secretary said: “As the first lady of the United States pointed out this morning, just two days prior to the shooting, ABC’s late-night host, Jimmy Kimmel, disgustingly called first lady Melania Trump an expectant widow. Who in their right mind says a wife would be glowing over the potential murder of her beloved husband?”
Later, Leavitt said she had “a whole host of examples” of “despicable statements” from Democratic lawmakers that she could share. “Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, just this April, this month, said we are in an era of maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time,” she said.
She continued: “Gov. Josh Shapiro said heads need to roll within the administration. Sen. Alex Padilla said people are, quote, ‘dying because of fear and terror caused by the Trump administration.’ Sen. Elizabeth Warren, President Trump is making the country look like a, quote, ‘fascist state.’ Sen. Adam Schiff saying President Trump using a dictator playbook. Sen. Ed Markey calling President Trump a dictator, saying that this administration’s actions are authoritarianism on steroids.”
And finally, reading off more quotes, she said: “Gov. JB Pritzker, never before in my life have I called for mass protests, disruptions. These Republicans cannot know a moment of peace. You have Rep. Pressley saying we’ll see you in the streets. Rep. [LaMonica] McIver, a Democrat representative on Capitol Hill, we will not take this shit from Donald Trump. He thinks he’s a dictator. We are at war.”
But Jeffries, the House minority leader, responded to Leavitt in his own April 27 press conference, calling her a “stone-cold liar” and claiming that the Democrats’ statements were “all taken out of context.”
Some, but not all, of the remarks she highlighted were presented without the context that shows them in a different way than Leavitt presented.
We’ll start with the statements by Jeffries, Kimmel, Shapiro, Padilla, Pritzker and Pressley that lacked important context.
On April 21, the day that Virginia residents voted to allow the state’s congressional district lines to be redrawn — potentially giving Democrats more seats in Congress next year — Jeffries posted about the election results on X.
“House Democrats have crushed Donald Trump’s national gerrymandering scheme,” Jeffries wrote, referring to Trump advising GOP state lawmakers in Texas and other Republican-run states to redraw their congressional district maps to give Republicans an advantage in the midterm elections this fall. After listing several ways that Democrats have stopped or negated those Republican efforts, Jeffries wrote: “Maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time.”
He expanded on his social media post the following day in a press conference celebrating the outcome in Virginia.
Jeffries said: “We are in an era of maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time. And we are going to keep the pressure on Republicans at every single state in the union to ensure, at the end of the day, that there is a fair, national map. Because we believe that it’s the people who should decide who’s in the majority in the next Congress – not Donald Trump and MAGA extremists.”
In an April 27 press conference in which he also condemned political violence, Jeffries responded to Leavitt quoting him without the fuller context about the back-and-forth over redistricting.
“The notion that any of us are concerned with so-called criticism from these phony Republicans as it relates to anything that has been said — certainly as it relates to the comment related to maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time, in connection with the redistricting battle that Republicans launched — I stand by it,” Jeffries said. “You can continue to criticize me for it. I don’t give a damn about your criticism.”
Jeffries noted that the “maximum warfare” phrase didn’t originate with him. It “came from the White House in the summer of 2025 when they started this redistricting battle,” he said.
He was referring to an August 2025 New York Times article that quoted an unnamed “person close to the president” who told the newspaper that “maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time” was the “White House’s political strategy” on redistricting.
On Thursday, April 23 — two days before the WHCA dinner — ABC’s late-night host, Jimmy Kimmel, included a segment on his show in which he performed a comedic roast similar to what is traditionally done at the correspondents’ dinner. The show spliced in footage of some administration officials facetiously suggesting they were in the audience.
Following a couple of jokes alluding to Trump’s age in that segment, Kimmel said, “And of course our first lady, Melania, is here. So beautiful — Mrs. Trump, you have a glow like an expectant widow.”
Both the president and first lady responded on April 27 with social media posts calling for Kimmel to be fired. Trump described Kimmel’s statement as a “call to violence.”
Likewise, Leavitt said at the press briefing the same day, “Who in their right mind says a wife would be glowing over the potential murder of her beloved husband? … This kind of rhetoric about the president, the first lady and his supporters is completely deranged and it’s unbelievable that the American people are consuming it night after night after night.”
But the context of the statement suggests that Kimmel was making a joke about the age gap between the two. Melania Trump turned 56 on April 26, which Kimmel mentioned, while Donald Trump — the oldest person to be inaugurated as president — is 79 and has a birthday coming up in June.
Kimmel responded to the criticism during his show on April 27, saying that the statement was “obviously” a joke about their age difference. “It was a very light roast joke about the fact that he’s almost 80 and she’s younger than I am. It was not — by any stretch of the definition — a call to assassination.”
The Federal Communications Commission issued an order on April 28 expediting a review of eight local broadcasting licenses held by ABC — a move that critics saw as retaliation from the Trump administration against Kimmel’s broadcaster.
In a January interview with progressive podcast host Brian Tyler Cohen, Shapiro, the governor of Pennsylvania, said that “heads do need to roll, certainly, within the administration” while calling for Kristi Noem, then the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, to be fired over tactics used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in Minneapolis.
After Cohen asked about the possibility of Noem being held accountable through impeachment by Congress, Shapiro said, “As it relates to Noem, she should be fired. The president should fire her. If he doesn’t, I think Congress needs to act.” Acknowledging that impeachment was unlikely, Shapiro said that even a growing number of Republicans appeared to “understand that she is way in over her head and that her directions, and the president’s directions, are violating people’s constitutional rights and undermining who we are.”
Later, when Cohen noted that Noem had been quoted saying that she was simply following instructions from the White House, Shapiro criticized her for not pushing back on “unconstitutional” immigration enforcement orders.
“Yeah, I mean it confirms what we were just talking about a moment ago, which is this is a directive that was sent by the president or [White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security Adviser] Stephen Miller or [Vice President] JD Vance to Noem, and Noem didn’t stop and say, ‘Hey, this is unconstitutional, I’m not doing it.’ Instead, she plowed forward and now Ms. Good and Mr. Pretti are dead,” Shapiro said, referring to Renee Good and Alex Pretti, two U.S. citizens who were killed in January by immigration officers in Minneapolis.
Shapiro then said, “People have been disappeared in the community. American civil rights have been violated. None of this is acceptable. Heads do need to roll, certainly, within the administration. But most importantly for the good people of Minnesota and across this country, this directive needs to end. The mission needs to be terminated.”
A 57-year-old farmworker from Michoacán, Mexico, named Jaime Alanís died after falling off of a greenhouse roof during an ICE raid in Ventura County, California, in July.
The day after his death, Dana Bash — who was anchoring CNN’s “State of the Union” — asked Sen. Padilla of California, “We learned overnight that a migrant farmworker died after he fell from a roof during ICE raids in Ventura County in your state. Have you been able to talk to the family?”
Padilla answered [emphasis ours]: “I haven’t spoken with the family directly, but I have been in touch with President Teresa Romero of the United Farm Workers union. I have known her for a long time. We’ve been in touch over the last several days. She’s been with the family and other families of people that are literally terrorized and traumatized based on what ICE is doing.
“Again, if all they’re doing is going after serious violent criminals, that’d be one thing. But because of these artificial quotas established by — whether it’s Donald Trump or Stephen Miller or somebody in the administration — it’s causing ICE to get more aggressive, more cruel, more extreme, and these are the results.
“It’s people dying because of fear and terror caused by this administration. It’s not just undocumented immigrants. There’s lawful immigrants that are being rounded up. There’s United States citizens that are being detained. There are military veterans that are being detained.”
Leavitt quoted the portion of his answer in bold as an example of “Democrat elected officials calling for war against the president of the United States and his supporters.”
In an April 2025 speech at a New Hampshire event, Pritzker, the governor of Illinois, said that “these Republicans cannot know a moment of peace,” while calling for Democrats to “fight” and protest against Trump administration policies on immigration and more.
More than 26 minutes into his almost 30-minute speech, the governor said: “Never before in my life have I called for mass protests, for mobilization, for disruption. But I am now. These Republicans cannot know a moment of peace. They have to understand that we will fight their cruelty with every megaphone and microphone that we have. We must castigate them on the soapbox and then punish them at the ballot box. They must feel in their bones that when we survive this shameful episode of American history with our democracy intact because we have no alternative but to do just that, that we will relegate their portraits to the museum halls reserved for tyrants and traitors.”
When some Republicans said at the time that Pritzker’s comments could be seen as a call for violence, he told reporters that interpretation was “ridiculous” and not his intent.
“I called for people to take out their megaphones and their microphones, to stand up on soapboxes and get to the ballot box in order to defeat the people who are trying to take so many things away from the American people,” he said. “That has nothing to do with violence.”
In the first year of Trump’s second term, Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts attended rallies and called on citizens to demonstrate against some of the administration’s policies.
At a February 2025 rally against the administration’s cuts to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Pressley said, “We are going to litigate, legislate, agitate, and resist because you are worth it. So we will see you in Congress, and the courts, and in the streets.”
The same month, at a rally protesting Elon Musk’s access to the Treasury Department, Pressley said, “We will match their energy with unprecedented organizing, mobilizing, agitating. We will see you in the courts, in Congress, in the streets.”
Leavitt summarized her call to action as, “we’ll see you in the streets,” and cited it as another example of “Democrat elected officials calling for war against the president of the United States and his supporters.”
This isn’t the first time that Pressley’s calls for citizens to demonstrate against government policy have been cast by conservatives as an example of Democrats inciting violence. In 2021, we wrote about a viral meme that had cited her comments regarding postal funding as a call for violence.
Sens. Warren, Schiff and Markey did, respectively, use the terms “fascist state,” “dictator playbook” and “authoritarianism on steroids” to refer to Trump, his administration or certain policies.
Leavitt criticized such characterizations, saying, “Those who constantly falsely label and slander the president as a fascist, as a threat to democracy and compare him to Hitler to score political points are fueling this kind of violence.”
And Rep. McIver said at the February 2025 rally outside the Treasury Department that “we are at war” while criticizing the Department of Government Efficiency and Musk, the former head of DOGE and a major Trump campaign donor, for being given access to sensitive Treasury data. “Anytime a person can pay $250 million into a campaign and then be given access, full access to the Department of Treasury of the United States of America, we are at war,” McIver said.
Whether those remarks amount to “inspiring violence,” as Leavitt said, we’ll leave for readers to judge. But we would note that the politicians did not explicitly promote violence.
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Best-in-class open omni-modal reasoning model delivers the highest efficiency and accuracy to power agentic workflows such as computer use, document intelligence and audio-video reasoning.
April 29, 2026 — AI agent systems today juggle separate models for vision, speech and language — losing time and context as they pass data from one model to the other.
Unveiled this week, NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Nano Omni is an open multimodal model that brings these capabilities together into one system, enabling agents to deliver faster, smarter responses with advanced reasoning across video, audio, image and text. This best-in-class model gives enterprises and developers a production path for more efficient and accurate multimodal AI agents with full deployment flexibility and control.
Nemotron 3 Nano Omni sets a new efficiency frontier for open multimodal models with leading accuracy and low cost, topping six leaderboards for complex document intelligence, and video and audio understanding.
AI and software companies already adopting Nemotron 3 Nano Omni include Aible, Applied Scientific Intelligence (ASI), Eka Care, Foxconn, H Company, Palantir and Pyler, with Dell Technologies, Docusign, Infosys, K-Dense, Lila, Oracle and Zefr evaluating the model.
“To build useful agents, you can’t wait seconds for a model to interpret a screen,” said Gautier Cloix, CEO of H Company. “By building on Nemotron 3 Nano Omni, our agents can rapidly interpret full HD screen recordings — something that wasn’t practical before. This isn’t just a speed boost: It’s a fundamental shift in how our agents perceive and interact with digital environments in real time.”
Nemotron 3 Nano Omni Enables Faster, Leaner Multimodal Agents
Consider an AI agent for customer support processing a screen recording while analyzing uploaded call audio and checking data logs — or an agent for finance tasked with parsing PDFs, spreadsheets, charts and voice notes. Today, most agentic systems accomplish these tasks with separate models for vision, speech and language.
This approach increases latency through repeated inference passes, fragments context across modalities, and adds cost and inaccuracies over time.
By combining vision and audio encoders within its 30B-A3B, hybrid mixture-of-experts architecture, Nemotron 3 Nano Omni eliminates the need for separate perception models, driving inference efficiency at scale. It pairs this efficiency with strong multimodal perception accuracy, enabling AI systems to achieve 9x higher throughput than other open omni models with the same interactivity. The result is lower costs and better scalability without sacrificing responsiveness or quality.
In agentic systems, Nemotron 3 Nano Omni can work alongside proprietary cloud models or other NVIDIA Nemotron open models — such as Nemotron 3 Super for high-frequency execution or Nemotron 3 Ultra for complex planning — as well as proprietary models from other providers, to power sub-agents for agentic workflows such as computer use, document intelligence and audio-video reasoning.
Open and Customizable, Deployable Anywhere
Nemotron 3 Nano Omni is released with open weights, datasets and training techniques — giving organizations full transparency and control over how the model is customized and deployed.
Developers can use tools like NVIDIA NeMo for customization, evaluation and optimization for domain-specific use cases. Because the Nemotron family of models is open, organizations can deploy them in environments that meet regulatory, sovereignty or data localization requirements.
The Nemotron 3 family — including Nano, Super and Ultra models — has seen over 50 million downloads in the past year. Omni extends the family’s capabilities into multimodal and agentic domains.
The model is available on Hugging Face, OpenRouter and build.nvidia.com as an NVIDIA NIM microservice and through a broad ecosystem of NVIDIA Cloud Partners, inference platforms and cloud service providers.
Its open, lightweight architecture supports consistent deployment from local systems like NVIDIA Jetson hardware, NVIDIA DGX Spark and DGX Station to data center and cloud environments.
Source: Kari Briski, NVIDIA
The post NVIDIA Launches Nemotron 3 Nano Omni Model, Unifying Vision, Audio and Language for AI Agents appeared first on HPCwire.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala., April 29, 2026 — The University of Alabama will pursue the establishment of the School of Data Science, the first academic unit of its kind in the state of Alabama focused on artificial intelligence and one of the first dedicated data science schools in the southern United States.
Pending approval by The Board of Trustees of The University of Alabama, this transformative initiative positions UA as a regional and national leader in data-driven research, education and innovation centered on the responsible use of artificial intelligence.
Designed as a convening hub that partners with all 13 UA colleges and schools, the School will serve students from every major and minor, ensuring that data literacy, translational data analytics and artificial intelligence become foundational skills for all UA graduates and a defining strength of the University’s academic mission.
“The School of Data Science represents a historic investment in Alabama’s future,” said UA President Peter J. Mohler. “As the first of its kind in the state, and one of the first in the South, it aligns directly with our goal to position The University of Alabama as a national academic leader. This school will help create the next generation of leaders for Alabama and the nation, ensuring our students are prepared to thrive in a rapidly evolving, data-driven world.”
The School of Data Science will offer undergraduate, master’s and doctoral programs that integrate technical expertise with ethical, social and economic considerations. The School will provide foundational and experiential learning opportunities for both beginners and advanced learners, ensuring that students at every stage of their academic journey can develop strong data competencies.
The School will be closely connected to UA’s High Performance Computing and Data Center, one of the state’s most advanced research computing environments. The facility will include high-capacity GPU clusters, petabyte scale storage, and highspeed networking designed to support both campus researchers and statewide collaborations.
By integrating the HPC with the School of Data Science, the University is creating a centralized, interdisciplinary environment where students, faculty, and industry partners can access worldclass computing resources to accelerate discovery and innovation.
The School will also support faculty specializing in quantum computing, an emerging field poised to redefine computation, cybersecurity, materials science, and national defense. This will facilitate collaborations with federal agencies and industry partners nationwide to lead research initiatives, develop new academic programs, and position Alabama as a leader in quantum technologies.
Data science is transforming nearly every sector of society. Through interdisciplinary research, industry partnerships and innovation-driven collaboration, the School will expand the state’s capacity to compete in emerging and critical fields such as healthcare, advanced manufacturing, energy, business and beyond.
The School of Data Science will also serve as a catalyst for economic growth by attracting research funding and investment, supporting innovation and technology sectors, and expanding opportunities for applied research and commercialization. Through talent development and research-driven innovation, the School will enhance Alabama’s competitiveness and position the state as a leader in emerging technologies. It is the latest initiative announcement driven by the University’s Future-Ready Flagship blueprint.
A national search for the School’s inaugural dean will begin in the fall, with the School of Data Science scheduled to officially open in 2027.
More from HPCwire
Source: University of Alabama
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BARCELONA, Spain, April 29, 2026 — The Open Compute Project Foundation (OCP), the nonprofit international organization bringing at-scale innovations and hyperscale best practices to all, today announced newly approved OCP contributions, new projects, and recently formed alliances to deliver on its Open Data Center Ecosystem for AI vision announced in October of 2025 covering IT as well as physical data center infrastructure and facilities.
The newly approved OCP contributions include:
“These OCP approved contributions address critical problems for AI data centers, several of which were highlighted in an open letter call for collaboration initiated by Google, Meta, and Microsoft last October. The OCP Community, OCP Foundation Team, and the OCP Board of Directors have been hard at work to overcome the challenges from chip to grid of deploying AI Clusters at scale. With no end in sight to the very large AI data center buildout, the collaborations and innovation standardizations within the OCP Community are more important than ever,” said George Tchaparian, CEO at OCP.
To continue the collaborative work, recently launched projects and workstreams covering significant challenges still to be solved:
Open Data Center for AI is focused on solving the most pressing challenges facing the deployment of at-scale AI data center facility infrastructure and operational technology (OT). This includes open data center reference designs, energy and grid solutions, telemetry and management solutions, and power estimation methodologies.
DCF Power Distribution aims to increase power density to enable next generation compute by enhancing energy efficiency and streamline power distribution, including the transition to Low Voltage Direct Current – LVDC (≤1500VDC) distribution architectures for the data center.
Scale-up Networking and Optics Reliability aims to advance Ethernet for scale-up domains in AI systems, re-examining how traffic is sent out across the network switches, including protocol headers, error handling, and lossless data transfer. Improving optics reliability with interoperability becomes critical because even a small failure rate across massive fabrics can cascade into significant interruptions, wasted accelerator hours, and degraded overall system utilization.
AI Computing Continuum aims to accelerate the adoption of scalable, interoperable, and sustainable AI systems beyond traditional hyperscale data centers by defining open, modular infrastructure standards that work across diverse hyperscale adjacent environments—including regional colocation, enterprise on premises, telco points of presence, and industrial sites.
OCP has also formed new alliances adding new dimensions to OCP’s ecosystem with (1) the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and (2) the IOWN Global Forum.
EPRI and OCP aim to accelerate digital innovation and further develop the potential of data centers to serve as flexible resources for the power system.
Current/OS and OCP focused on data center power technology standards and best practices. The alliance between the two organizations will fuse OCP’s expertise in open data center hardware with Current/OS’s open standards for safe, interoperable direct current microgrids. This alliance aims to accelerate the shift from traditional AC-based power to efficient hybrid AC/DC or fully DC-native data center infrastructure.
IOWN Global Forum and OCP are working to deliver a seamless computational infrastructure from centralized to edge deployments. IOWN Global Forum and OCP will work together to develop a roadmap for a multi-site, high-bandwidth, low-latency compute and network infrastructure.
“The need for extreme integration and co-design when designing AI clusters has become an imperative in the push to have a significant performance increment in generation over generation infrastructure. The move by the OCP Foundation to expand its Community footprint to cover from chip to grid is in perfect sync with the market and an important focus to deliver innovations needed for next generation AI data centers,” said Ashish Nadkarni, GVP/GM, Worldwide Enterprise Infrastructure at IDC.
About OCP
The Open Compute Project (OCP) brings at-scale innovations and hyperscaler best practices to all, spanning technology domains from the data center to the edge, and the technology stack from silicon, to systems, to site facilities and services. The international OCP Community is made up of organizations and people from hyperscale, neocloud and cloud data center operators, communications providers, colocation providers, diverse enterprises, and technology providers. With The OCP Tenets of Openness, Impact, Efficiency, Scale and Sustainability, the OCP Foundation engages with industry ecosystems, our growing membership, and educates thousands of engineers and industry leaders, every year. Across many projects and initiatives, the OCP Foundation and its Community are meeting the AI Data Center market evolution today and shaping the future. Learn more at: www.opencompute.org.
Source: OCP
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NEW YORK, April 29, 2026 — Fabric.AI, formerly StableX Technologies Inc., has announced its official launch, unveiling a MicroLED-based optical interconnect technology designed to address one of the most critical bottlenecks in modern AI computing: the movement of data between increasingly powerful compute systems.
Fabric.AI’s initial technology, the Neural I/o chip, being developed in collaboration with Kopin Corporation, the only company to produce programmable MicroLEDs, replaces traditional electrical interconnects with MicroLED-based optical links. This enables ultra-high-bandwidth, low-latency communication between compute nodes while significantly improving energy efficiency. This represents the first in a broader suite of fabless semiconductor technologies that Fabric.AI is developing to power AI factories.
The Neural I/o chip leverages Kopin’s proprietary MicroLED and patented bi-directional NeuralDisplay architecture, repurposing programmable MicroLED pixels as ultra-high speed optical transceivers capable of moving data at ultra-high speeds while consuming considerably less power per bit than existing copper or laser-based solutions.
“MicroLED technology represents a powerful new frontier beyond displays,” said Michael Murray, CEO of Kopin Corporation. “Our collaboration with Fabric.AI extends the reach of our technology into AI infrastructure, enabling a new class of interconnect solutions designed for scale, efficiency, and performance. Performance that aims to far exceed that of laser- based or traditional copper-based interconnects.”
The interconnect market is estimated at approximately $138 billion according to 360iResearch and is dominated by copper and electricity solutions as opposed to faster, lower latency optical MicroLED solutions. Unlike traditional copper-based interconnects, which suffer from signal degradation, heat generation, and power inefficiencies at scale, Fabric.AI’s optical approach enables more efficient data transmission—unlocking higher system-level performance.
Building on this foundation, Fabric.AI is developing a broader suite of fabless semiconductor technologies designed specifically for AI workloads.
“AI is no longer just software—it’s an industrial process,” said Josh Silverman, Fabric.AI’s Chief Executive Officer. “The defining challenge is no longer just compute performance, but how efficiently that compute can communicate and operate as a unified system. We’re starting with interconnects because that’s where the bottleneck is most acute, but our vision is much broader. Fabric.AI is building the semiconductor technologies that aim to power the next generation of smart data centers.”
Strategic Collaboration with Kopin Corporation
Fabric.AI’s interconnect technology, designed specifically for AI workloads, is being developed in close collaboration with Kopin Corporation, leveraging Kopin’s proprietary MicroLED innovations as the foundation for next-generation optical communication systems.
This collaboration combines Fabric.AI’s system-level design with Kopin’s deep expertise in MicroLED materials, process development, and fabrication. Both companies will jointly develop and share in the intellectual property created through the partnership, accelerating innovation while working to establish a defensible technology position in AI infrastructure.
Positioned for the AI Infrastructure Era
Fabric.AI is currently engaged in preliminary discussions with leading AI and hyperscale technology companies regarding the integration of its MicroLED-based interconnect technology into next-generation systems. The Company believes this growing interest reflects a broader shift toward smarter, more tightly integrated data centers optimized specifically for AI.
By developing a suite of tightly integrated semiconductor technologies—beginning with interconnect and expanding into additional system-critical components—Fabric.AI aims to become a foundational technology provider for the infrastructure powering the next era of artificial intelligence.
About Fabric.AI
Fabric.AI is an infrastructure company building a suite of fabless semiconductor technologies to power AI factories—smart data centers optimized for producing intelligence at scale. The Company has exited its prior digital asset treasury strategy and is now singularly focused on capturing the significantly larger opportunity in AI infrastructure. The Company is reallocating capital to accelerate development of its core technologies. Fabric.AI is building MicroLED-based optical interconnects and other system-critical semiconductor solutions designed to unlock faster, more efficient, and more scalable AI workloads. In connection with this transformation, the Company is changing its name to Fabric.AI and intends to change its stock symbol to FABC. Fabric.AI’s mission is to solve the bottlenecks of AI data centers using breakthrough technologies in AI infrastructure.
Source: Fabric.AI
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The world must accelerate the shift to renewables, regardless of the economic effects of Abu Dhabi’s decision
Opec appears to be the latest casualty of the Iran war. On Tuesday, the United Arab Emirates announced that it was leaving the oil cartel after 60 years. The loss of a critical member is a blow to the group and its de facto leader, Saudi Arabia, in the midst of the biggest supply crisis in history.
This is a geopolitical decision, not merely an economic one. The UAE has built itself into an increasingly interventionist and unilaterally minded power, not only challenging Riyadh’s dominance but undermining its more cautious approach to regional affairs. The rift has become increasingly public and bitter – with Saudi Arabia bombing what it called a UAE-linked arms shipment in Yemen in December. Abu Dhabi, as the main target of Iranian strikes among the Gulf countries, is also enraged by what it sees as a feeble regional response to the current conflict, and has been privately pushing for counterattacks.
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Continue reading...Political deadlock has left Iraq’s Kurdistan Region dangerously exposed amid Iran war Expert comment LToremark
The stalemate over government formation is affecting the semi-autonomous region’s ability to deal with the fallout of the Iran war – and eroding its autonomy.
More than 18 months have passed since voters in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region of Iraq went to the polls in the region’s parliamentary election, but no new regional government has been formed. This deadlock has left the Kurdistan Region dangerously on autopilot as political and economic challenges pile up around it – not least those stemming from the Iran war.
At the heart of this impasse is disunity between the two main parties; the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). Their rift prevents the Kurdistan Region from adhering to basic democratic governance, dilutes its ability to project influence, and leaves it increasingly irrelevant in the political calculations of other actors.
If the institutions and political arrangements that undergird the Kurdistan Region as a unified and coherent entity no longer function, it could be heading for a rupture that will only exacerbate the challenges it faces.
Historically, relations between the KDP and the PUK have been characterized by extreme tension, but there have been periods of cooperation too. One such period in the mid-2000s allowed for Kurdish autonomy to be formally established into Iraq’s constitutional framework. This often-messy arrangement between the two parties – sealed by a strategic agreement in 2006 – now appears to be breaking down.
This is because the KDP and the PUK have fundamentally different assessments of their relative political status – and a new generation of leaders in both parties are not willing to compromise.
The KDP believes that it is the ascendent and primary force in Kurdistan, as reflected in its vote and seat totals in both federal and regional elections. It wants to abandon power sharing with the PUK – a view explicitly endorsed by its leader Masoud Barzani – and is also highly suspicious of PUK president Bafel Talabani’s leadership.
The PUK, meanwhile, wants to re-establish itself as the KDP’s relative equal after more than a decade of political aimlessness, factional infighting and challenges from opposition parties. Any government formation deal without substantive power sharing would be viewed as unacceptable. The PUK is also frustrated by the centralization of power around Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Masrour Barzani of the KDP and is seeking assurances this will be addressed.
After months of deadlock over government formation, no political ties remain between the two parties. Meanwhile, this discord is undermining their ability to respond effectively to the serious domestic challenges and geopolitical crises currently facing the Kurdistan Region.
In the wider Iraqi context, the battle between the KDP and PUK over the Iraqi presidency is the most visible recent manifestation of their disunity. Since 2005, the post of president been allocated to the Kurdish bloc under Iraq’s informal ethno-sectarian distribution system. The PUK has held the Iraqi presidency since this system was introduced.
However, over the past two election cycles, the KDP has used its status as the largest Kurdish party to argue that the presidency should no longer automatically go to the PUK, but be subject to intra-Kurdish negotiation. In 2021, this contributed to a year-long delay in federal government formation when it put up its own candidate for the post. There was a similar, albeit shorter, impasse after the 2025 Iraqi election.
If this rift was only about competing for political posts, the issue could be resolved relatively easily. But it has also facilitated the erosion of the Kurdistan Region’s autonomy. Over the past year, the Iraqi federal government has dramatically curtailed the KRG’s ability to manage its financial affairs. For example, federal authorities have taken charge of exporting oil via the pipeline to Turkey that runs through the Kurdistan Region, as part of a September 2025 deal to resume oil exports after a two-year suspension. In March, Masrour Barzani attempted to use the pipeline to gain leverage over the federal government, which was under severe economic stress due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. But he was unable to stand his ground, in part because of lack of support by the PUK and foreign partners. The federal government has also introduced a new country-wide customs system, known as ASYCUDA, that bypasses the KRG and means the Kurdish parties will no longer control revenue collection at the borders with Turkey and Iran.
The parties’ diminished influence in Baghdad is reflected in the Kurdistan Region’s geopolitical position. Despite the strategic importance of its location, bordering federal Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria, it is more at the mercy of other actors than ever before – as demonstrated by the Iran war.
The Kurdistan Region has experienced at least 695 Iranian attacks since the beginning of the war, including 48 since the beginning of the ceasefire, according to local war monitor Community Peacemaker Teams. 22 people have been killed and more than 100 injured, while critical infrastructure and US military and diplomatic facilities have repeatedly been targeted.
Mutual distrust between the KDP and the PUK prevents them from establishing a united front and projecting influence in Washington and Tehran to keep the Kurdistan Region out of the war, and in Baghdad to limit attacks from Iran-backed Iraqi militias. CPT estimates these militia groups are responsible for around 453 attacks on the Kurdistan Region since the beginning of the war. The attacks are primarily motivated by perceptions that the Kurds are aligned with the US, though tensions between Baghdad and Erbil contribute.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Immigration has been top of mind for Delaware lawmakers throughout the legislature’s most recent two-year cycle, with lawmakers introducing a slew of bills meant to curb the impacts of ICE enforcement in the First State. But as the end of that legislative cycle draws near, only a handful of those bills have been signed into law.
As the Delaware legislature heads into its final two months of meetings for the year, the issue of federal immigration enforcement and its impacts on the state remains top of mind for lawmakers.
At least 16 immigration-focused bills have been introduced during the legislature’s two-year cycle, which began in 2025. Four of those have already been signed into law by Gov. Matt Meyer.
But as the end of the 2026 legislative session draws closer, the remaining 12 bills face an ever-shrinking window of opportunity to become law. If the bills do not pass both chambers of the legislature by June 30, they will have to be reintroduced in the next two-year cycle.
Some bills have made more progress in recent weeks than others.
Below, Spotlight Delaware rounds up some of the most important pieces of immigration-focused legislation, breaking down where the bills stand today.
While more than a dozen pieces of immigration-focused legislation have been introduced, some of those bills have seen more traction than others.
Here is a list of some of the most consequential immigration bills actively moving through the legislature:
House Bills 366, 367 and 368
House Bills 366, 367 and 368 were the subject of an hours-long committee hearing in Dover last week, marking the latest in a string of legislative debates surrounding immigration enforcement since President Trump returned to the White House.
The bills, each sponsored by Rep. Mara Gorman (D-Newark), would increase law enforcement officer identification requirements and prohibit officers in the state from detaining people solely based on their immigration status.
The bills sparked hours of testimony last week, drawing support from members of the Latino community and civil liberty advocates.
But the bills also received pushback from law enforcement leaders across the state, including the Delaware Association of Chiefs of Police and the Delaware Fraternal Order of Police.
Marvin Mailey Jr., the executive director of the Delaware Association of Chiefs of Police, said during the hearing that his organization opposed the bills not because they were in the business of conducting immigration enforcement, but because they are redundant.
“When we oppose this bill, we oppose it because (of) its redundancy,” Mailey Jr. said. “We already have checks and balances in place – we don’t need that.”
Mailey Jr. went even further, saying the bills would not achieve their intended purpose of preventing ICE agents from wearing masks in Delaware. Those agents, he said, derive their power from the federal government.
“The Supremacy Clause overrides state law.” Mailey Jr. said.
But Rep. Sean Lynn (D-Dover), who has sponsored a slew of his own immigration-related bills, rebuffed that assertion. Citing a U.S. Supreme Court case, Lynn explained the Supremacy Clause would only apply if federal agents wearing masks would be “necessary and proper” for them to complete their duties.
Gorman ultimately decided to withdraw both HB 366 and 367 after last week’s debate, though she said in a statement it was not a “signal of capitulation.”
She pointed to two recent court rulings in California which challenged the legality of similar state laws enacted there.
“The legal landscape has shifted, but our resolve has not,” Gorman said, “and I will continue to push HB 368, which does not face these kinds of constitutional challenges, forward.”
House Bill 94
Sponsored by Rep. Lynn (D), House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris and State Sen. Kyra Hoffner (D-Smyrna), House Bill 94 would restrict state and local law enforcement from cooperating with federal agencies conducting civil immigration enforcement activities at certain protected locations.
Introduced last March, the bill originally only listed schools and churches as protected locations. It has since been expanded to include healthcare facilities and institutions of higher education.
If a law enforcement agency were to cooperate in any ICE civil actions, it would be required to submit a report within 48 hours to the Police Officer Standards and Training Commission and the Department of Safety and Homeland Security describing what happened.
Under this bill, law enforcement officers would still be permitted to assist federal criminal immigration activities conducted under a valid court order.
The original version of the bill required law enforcement to receive permission from the Attorney General to cooperate with ICE, garnering criticism from the Delaware Association of Chiefs of Police and the Delaware Fraternal Order of Police during a House Public Safety & Homeland Security committee hearing last June.
The bill passed in the House earlier this month, and is currently awaiting a hearing in the Senate Corrections & Public Safety Committee.
House Bill 150
House Bill 150, introduced by Rep. Gorman and State Sen. Laura Sturgeon (D-Brandywine Hundred), would prevent ICE agents from conducting civil arrests inside Delaware courthouses or Department of Labor offices where the Delaware Industrial Accident Board conducts hearings.
The bill, originally introduced last spring, at first was written to prevent civil arrests from occurring only inside courthouses. It was substituted in March to also include Department of Labor offices.
Gorman said during debate on the House floor she made that change to include protections for IAB hearings as those are hearings in which people are seeking relief from the state after they have been hurt at work.
“I felt like it was important given that we know, one, that there are members of the undocumented community that are working in dangerous industries where they get hurt, and two, that there are people who aren’t undocumented but might look so, who show up for those hearings as well,” Gorman said. “We know that there isn’t always a distinction made, or close checks to make sure — we’ve seen cases of American citizens getting picked up by ICE.”

The bill passed the House at the end of March. It currently is awaiting a hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
House Bill 151
House Bill 151, also introduced by Gorman, was first described as a ban on private detention facilities.
An updated version of that bill walks back that description. But the legislation, if passed, would curtail their ability to operate in Delaware by prohibiting the state government from entering into contracts with private providers or incentivizing their operation in any way.
There currently are no private prisons in Delaware, but ICE has increasingly looked to private prison operators to meet its detention center needs for tens of thousands of detainees.
The bill is currently awaiting a vote on the Senate floor after passing the House earlier this month.
Some immigration-focused bills that were introduced during the first leg of the General Assembly have not yet fully passed through the legislature. Here is a run down of some of those bills, and where they stand today.
House Bill 44
House Bill 58
House Bill 60
House Bill 95
House Bill 96
House Bill 302
Reporters Brianna Hill and Jose Ignacio Castaneda Perez contributed to this report.
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The new Eurasian chessboard: Power, connectivity and strategic resources 5 May 2026 — 13:30 TO 14:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Join us for an expert panel exploring how the EU, the UK, the US, and Turkey can navigate great power competition in Central Asia and harness the region’s growing strategic and economic potential.
Join us for an expert roundtable exploring how the EU, the UK, the US, and Türkiye can navigate great power competition in Central Asia and harness the region’s growing strategic and economic potential.Central Asia sits at the heart of today’s great power competition — a pivotal arena for East-West connectivity, energy transition, and the restructuring of the global order. Its governments are increasingly asserting their independence from Moscow without aligning with the West, making the region a critical testing ground for a new geopolitical settlement. The second gathering in a two-event series co-hosted by Chatham House and GMF, this expert roundtable will focus on the region’s political trajectory and geoeconomic dynamics amid a shifting strategic landscape. It will also ask how the EU, the UK, the US, and Türkiye can cooperate more effectively to support regional stability and harness its growth potential.
This expert panel will focus on the region’s political trajectory and geoeconomic dynamics amid a shifting strategic landscape. It will also ask how the EU, the UK, the US, and Turkey can cooperate more effectively to support regional stability and harness its growth potential.
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