Senators Elizabeth Warren and Dick Durbin wrote to US attorney for DC demanding that she explain her threat that she could reopen a criminal investigation into Jerome Powell
When Pete Hegseth was asked about Pope Leo XIV’s condemnation of the war in Iran, and comments from the US Conference of Catholic Bishops suggesting the conflict is not a “just war”, the defense secretary simply said that the pope was “going to do his thing”.
“We know what our mission is,” Hegseth added. “We follow that the orders of the president. We’ve got lawyers all over the place looking at what we’re doing and why we’re doing it, and giving us every authority necessary under the constitution and under our laws to execute it.”
Continue reading...Those who don't verify their age will lose access to voice chat, messaging and other social features.
Raymond Chen published a blog post about how a crappy uninstaller on Windows caused a mysterious spike in the number of Explorer (Windows’ graphical shell) crashes. It turns out the buggy uninstaller caused repeated crashes in the 32bit version of Explorer on 64bit systems, and – hold on a minute. The how many bits on the what now?
The 32-bit version of Explorer exists for backward compatibility with 32-bit programs. This is not the copy of Explorer that is handling your taskbar or desktop or File Explorer windows. So if the 32-bit Explorer is running on a 64-bit system, it’s because some other program is using it to do some dirty work.
↫ Raymond Chen at The Old New Thing
So I had no idea that 64bit Windows included a copy of the 32bit Explorer for backwards compatibility. It obviously makes sense, but I just never stopped to think about it. This made me wonder though if you could go nuts and do something really dumb: could you somehow trick 64bit Windows into running this 32bit copy of Explorer as its shell? You’d be running 32bit Explorer on 64bit Windows using the 32bit WoW64 binaries where you just pulled the 32bit Explorer binary from, which seems like a really nonsensical thing to do.
Since there’s no longer any 32bit builds of Windows 11, you also can’t just copy over the 32bit Explorer from a 32bit Windows 11 build and achieve the same goal that way, so you’d really have to go digging around in WoW64 to get 32bit versions. I guess the answer to this question depends on just how complete this copy of 32bit Explorer really is, and if Windows has any defenses or triggers in place to prevent someone from doing something this uselessly stupid. Of course, there’s no practical reason to do any of this and it makes very little sense, but it might be a fun hacking project.
Most likely the Windows experts among you are wondering what kind of utterly deranged new designer drug I’m on, but I was always told that sometimes, the dumbest questions can lead to the most interesting answers, so here we are.
BMW's latest concept car moves the color-changing tech it debuted back at CES 2022 closer to reality by embedding an E Ink panel directly into the hood. The Verge reports: BMW's previous concepts wrapped the entire vehicle in a patchwork of E Ink panels that were all custom-sized and shaped to match its contours. It was an approach that wasn't practical for mass production, and one that wasn't very durable. The new BMW iX3 Flow Edition is potentially the most exciting of all of BMW's concepts as it embeds the E Ink Prism technology directly into the structure of the vehicle's hood panel, instead of just slapping it on top. The new approach has "undergone BMW's stringent quality testing" so that it meets the "requirements of automotive engineering and everyday use," according to a release from E Ink. The BMW iX3 Flow Edition's color-changing capabilities are limited to its hood with eight different animations (which appear restricted to a grayscale palette) that can be changed by the driver at the push of a button. It's not exactly the color-changing car that BMW has been teasing for years and you still can't buy one, but by focusing on making this technology more practical and functional these vehicles are one step closer to moving past the concept phase.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Not too long ago I had a need and an opportunity to re-acquaint myself with the mechanism used for software emulation of the 8087 FPU on 8086/8088 machines.
↫ Michal Necasek
Look, when a Michal Necasek article starts out like this, you know you’re in for a learnin’ ol’ time.
The 8087 was a floating-point coprocessor for the 8086 and 8088 processors, since back in those early days, processors did not include an integrated floating-point unit. It wouldn’t be until the release of the 486DX, in 1989, that Intel would integrate an FPU inside the processor itself, negating the need for a separate chip and socket. Interestingly enough, Intel also released a cut-down version of the 486 with the FPU removed, the 486SX, for which an optional external FPU did exist.
| Was just excited to get her out of the basement, charged up and out for a spin. [link] [comments] |
Move creates conflict between state and administration as Trump seeks federal framework over states handling issue
The US justice department said on Friday it had intervened in a lawsuit by Elon Musk’s xAI challenging a Colorado law aimed at regulating artificial intelligence systems.
In its intervention, the justice department said the law violated the 14th amendment’s equal protection guarantee by requiring companies to guard against unintended discriminatory effects while allowing some discrimination aimed at promoting diversity.
Continue reading...Carie Hallford, 48, whose ex-husband, Jon, was earlier sentenced, expressed remorse over corpse abuse scheme
The co-owner of a Colorado funeral home was sentenced in state court on Friday to 30 years in prison for her part in a corpse abuse scheme that involved hiding nearly 200 decomposing bodies.
Carie Hallford, 48, was also sentenced to 18 years in prison earlier this month after pleading guilty to a federal fraud charge related to the scandal.
Continue reading...Roberts-Smith, who has denied five charges of war crime murder, says he was always going to attend: ‘I never thought about not coming’
Booing has marred Anzac Day commemorations in Sydney, Melbourne and Perth, while on the Gold Coast, the Victoria Cross recipient Ben Roberts-Smith attended the dawn service at Currumbin beach.
One man was arrested at the Sydney dawn service at Martin Place, where there was a small but noisy interjection of booing during the Indigenous acknowledgement of country.
Continue reading...Your air purifier is designed to capture dust, pollen, pet dander, smoke and even bacteria, but one oversight can cause it to not work effectively and waste your money.
The former U.S. senator from Nebraska opened up about his terminal diagnosis, his family and the state of American politics in a "Things That Matter" town hall.
A report says Samsung's mobile division could post its first-ever annual loss in 2026, as rising memory costs, tougher competition, and pressure across products like foldables and smartwatches weigh on the business. SammyGuru reports: Samsung boss TM Roh reportedly told company leaders that the mobile (MX) business could lose money this year. That warning has clearly rattled management. The MX unit has long been a key pillar for Samsung. That's why the idea of it slipping into the red is a serious concern for the company's overall performance. If this prediction holds, it would mark the first time the MX business reports a yearly loss since its inception. That's a sharp turn from its track record so far. It also raises bigger questions about future growth, rising competition, and how Samsung plans to steady the ship in its mobile division. And it's not like the challenges are easing up. Samsung's foldable market share in the US, where it currently enjoys a dominant position, doesn't look as solid as before, and Apple could shake things up if it enters the segment. On top of that, market reports suggest Samsung's overall smartwatch share could dip in 2026. The Galaxy S26 series seems to be selling well for now, but whether that's enough to move the needle is still up in the air.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The bill was passed by lawmakers earlier this month, but needed final approval from Maine Governor Janet Mills.
Hisham Abugharbeih, 26, taken into custody after remains of Zamil Limon found, as search for Nahida Bristy continues
The body of one of two Bangladeshi doctoral students missing from the University of South Florida (USF) was found on a bridge over Tampa Bay, and his roommate has been taken into custody, law enforcement authorities said Friday.
Zamil Limon’s remains were found on the Howard Frankland Bridge on Friday morning, but Nahida Bristy is still missing, Hillsborough county sheriff’s office chief deputy Joseph Maurer said.
Continue reading...Martha Odom, 16, died from a gunshot wound to the chest according to the local coroner’s statement
A high school senior has been identified as the person killed in a mass shooting that also wounded five others when two groups exchanged gunfire inside the food court at a mall in Louisiana’s capital city on Thursday afternoon, according to officials.
Martha Odom, 16, died from a gunshot wound to the chest, according to a statement issued Friday by the local coroner’s office.
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed. For the latest, read our full report:
The EU’s foreign chief has said that talks with Iran should include nuclear experts otherwise “we will end up with a more dangerous Iran.”
Speaking on Friday ahead of an informal summit of EU leaders in Cyprus, EU’s foreign chief Kaja Kallas said: “If the talks are only about the nuclear and there are no nuclear experts around the table, then we will end up with an agreement that is weaker than the JCPOA was.”
Continue reading...Four accused of rape and one of aiding and abetting rape in connection with incident in Gravesend
Three boys and two men have been charged over the rape of a teenage girl in Kent, police said.
Kent police received reports on Tuesday that a girl had been raped at a private property in Gravesend between 25 March and 19 April.
Continue reading...Janet Mills says moratorium would’ve been ‘appropriate’ if it didn’t interfere with ongoing datacenter project in Maine
The Democratic governor of Maine on Friday vetoed a bill that would have made it the first US state to impose a moratorium on large new datacenters, even as local opposition to the electricity-hungry facilities grows.
The decision reflects the difficult trade-off facing political leaders, who must weigh the impact of datacenters on the environment and household energy bills against the millions of dollars in investment and tax revenue they can bring.
Continue reading...Home secretary indicates Whitehall talks about returns programme, a move that would shock humanitarian groups
Shabana Mahmood has refused to rule out sending rejected Afghan asylum seekers back to the Taliban-controlled country.
The home secretary said she is “monitoring very closely” talks between Kabul and EU countries about a returns programme for refused claimants. She also indicated that “additional conversations” about Afghan returns were happening inside Whitehall.
Continue reading...Longtime Slashdot reader Himmy32 writes: Socket Security published an article on the compromise of the Bitwarden CLI client, which was pushed from Bitwarden's client repository. This breach was the next in a chain of supply-chain attacks that have affected Checkmarx KICS and Aqua Security's Trivy scanners. The breach was quickly detected and reported by JFrog on the GitHub repository; JFrog also provided a technical write-up. The Bitwarden team has released statements on a blog post indicating that the compromise did not affect vault or customer data. Only 334 downloads of the affected CLI client were downloaded before removal and remediation.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Four men face murder charges in case of 16-year-old Roxanne Sharp, whose body was found in a wooded area
Four people have been arrested in connection to the 1982 killing of a Louisiana teenager, investigators announced on Friday.
State police troopers said tips generated by a true-crime podcast they were involved in making – along with improvements in investigative technologies – helped them make arrests in the killing of Roxanne Sharp, 16, about 44 years earlier.
Continue reading...Texas health officials notified the owners of Camp Mystic that it had not met health and safety requirement necessary to reopen.
Jake Reiner calls parents ‘center’ of his life and says brother being at ‘center’ of loss is ‘almost too impossible to process’
The elder son of beloved director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Reiner, eulogized his parents, who were “the center” of his life, in a Substack essay published Friday, four months after the pair were found stabbed to death in their Los Angeles home.
Nick Reiner, the couple’s younger son, who long struggled with drug addiction and mental illness, has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in connection to their deaths, to which he has pleaded not guilty.
Continue reading...Wendy Duffy died at Pegasos clinic in Basel as assisted dying bill in England and Wales fails to pass
A grieving mother has ended her life at a clinic in Switzerland four years after the death of her only child.
Wendy Duffy, 56, a physically healthy woman, died at the Pegasos clinic in Basel after struggling to cope with the death of her 23-year-old son, Marcus.
Continue reading...Ahead of a Trump-Xi summit, Washington widens its crackdown on secretive oil and chemical trade between Beijing and Tehran.
Economists say Americans should expect elevated prices at the pump and rising grocery costs in the months to come.
Sebastian Wick has a great explanation of why opening files – programmatically – is a lot more complex and fraught with dangers than you might think it is.
It’s a question I had to ask myself multiple times over the last few months. Depending on the context the answer can be:
- very simple, just call the standard library function
- extremely hard, don’t trust anything
If you are an app developer, you’re lucky and it’s almost always the first answer. If you develop something with a security boundary which involves files in any way, the correct answer is very likely the second one.
↫ Sebastian Wick
This issue was relevant for Wick as he is one of the lead developers of Flatpak, for which a number of security issues have recently been discovered, and it just so happens that many of these issues dealt with this very topic. The biggest security issue found was a complete sandbox escape, originating from the fact that flatpak run, the command-line tool to start a Flatpak application, accepted path strings, since flatpak run is assumed to be run by a trusted user. The problem lay in a D-Bus service sandboxed applications could use to create subsandboxes, and this service was built around, you guessed it, flatpak run.
The issues in question, including this complete sandbox escape, have been addressed and fixed, but they highlight exactly the dangers that can come from opening files. This subsandboxing approach in Flatpak is built on assumptions from fifteen years ago, and times have changed since then. If you’re a programmer who deals with opening files, you might want to take a look at your own code to see if similar issues exist.
In that reading „AI“ is a machine for the creation of epistemic injustice and the replacement of truth with what a tech elite wants it to be in order to control the population. This is a Fascist project that not so subtly aligns with Fascism’s totalitarian will to power and control as well as its reliance in replacing reasoning and debate with belief in power and the leader.
↫ Jürgen Geute
The purpose of a system is what it does, and what “AI” does is stunt users’ own abilities and development and concentrate power and wealth even further in the hands of a very small privileged few – a privileged few who consistently espouse fascist ideology and promote and implement fascist ideas. Jürgen Geute lays it out in much more detail backed by solid references and concrete examples, but the conclusion is clear.
And uncomfortable to many, as such conclusions always are.
Police said the shooting appeared to have happened after two groups of people got into an argument in the mall's food court.
Tom Kean, who has not voted since 5 March and whose seat is top Democratic target, due back ‘very soon’, speaker says
A vulnerable Republican congressman who has not voted in weeks “is attending to a personal health matter”, the speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, said on Friday as he struggles to maintain his historically small majority in Congress’s lower chamber.
Tom Kean Jr’s New Jersey district is a top pickup target for Democrats in the November midterms, but the congressman has not cast a vote in the House since 5 March.
Continue reading...
When Karen Uricoli learned she had a tumor near her pancreas, the 63-year-old Wilmington woman feared she was facing another long, uncertain cancer journey. A 13-year breast cancer survivor, she’d been through it once already.
Instead, she found something she didn’t expect at ChristianaCare’s Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute: a less-invasive surgical option that had only just arrived in Delaware. In November 2025, Uricoli became one of the first patients in the state to undergo a robotic Whipple procedure, one of the most complex operations in cancer surgery. Two weeks later, she was well enough to begin chemotherapy, followed by immunotherapy. Today, she’s back at work full-time.
“I feel energetic again, basically back to my normal life,” she said.

Uricoli’s experience is one example of what’s happening every day at the Graham Cancer Center, where Delawareans are getting access to treatments and technologies that not long ago would have meant traveling to Philadelphia, Baltimore or beyond. From new surgical capabilities to national clinical trials to a new cancer care hub opening south of the C&D Canal, the Graham Cancer Center has demonstrated that Delaware patients no longer need to leave home for advanced cancer care.
“Cancer care works best when it’s carefully coordinated, and that’s hard to do when patients are piecing together treatment across state lines,” said Thomas Schwaab, M.D., Ph.D., who is the Bank of America Endowed Medical Director of the Graham Cancer Center. “Everything we’re building here, the technology, the research clinical trials, the team, is designed to keep that coordination intact and keep patients connected to the people who love them.”
The robotic Whipple is a case in point. Traditionally performed as open surgery, the Whipple removes tumors from the pancreas and surrounding structures, then reconnects the digestive system so it can function properly.
Graham Cancer Center surgical oncologists Arvind Sabesan, M.D., and Brendan Hagerty, M.D., began offering it robotically in October 2025, putting ChristianaCare among the first programs in the region to do so. The smaller incisions can mean less pain, faster recovery and, critically for cancer patients, a quicker transition to chemotherapy or follow-up treatment.
“With the robotic Whipple, we’re helping people in the community move on with their lives as quickly as possible,” Sabesan said.
For Uricoli, the clinical expertise of her surgical team was matched by the personal connection she found at the Graham Center. Rather than facing the stress of out-of-state travel, she found a partnership that prioritized both her physical recovery and her emotional well-being.
An emphasis on precision is also driving Delaware’s first adaptive radiation therapy program at the Graham Cancer Center. Built around the Varian Ethos system, adaptive radiation uses daily imaging and artificial intelligence to rebuild a patient’s treatment plan before every session, accounting for how tumors and nearby organs shift from day to day. It’s especially valuable for cancers in the pelvis and abdomen, and it can sometimes deliver higher doses in as few as five sessions.
ChristianaCare was among the first centers in the country to enroll patients in two National Cancer Institute–funded trials using the technology, one for advanced pancreatic cancer and another for bladder cancer.
Those national trials are part of a broader research footprint that puts the Graham Cancer Center in rare company. Nearly one in three patients at the center takes part in a clinical trial, a participation rate seven times the national average. In 2024, the cancer center enrolled more than 1,100 patients across 110 trials, earning the NCI’s Gold Award for Exceptional Achievement. It’s one of only 20 centers nationwide commended by ECOG-ACRIN for clinical research performance.
A high level of participation in clinical trials matters, because it gives Delaware patients early access to treatments that haven’t yet reached standard practice.
“By enrolling in cancer research, our patients have access to the latest medical breakthroughs and simultaneously help build insights that will extend survival and enhance well-being for patients with cancer in the future,” Schwaab said.
The Graham Center’s investment in advanced technology extends to its thoracic surgery and interventional pulmonology program, which treats complex conditions of the lung, esophagus, chest, and mediastinum (the space between the lungs that contains the heart and other structures).
ChristianaCare’s thoracic surgeons perform more da Vinci robotic-assisted and video-assisted thoracoscopic procedures than any other program in Delaware, handling robotic and minimally invasive operations for lung, esophageal and thymic cancers, as well as lobectomy, segmentectomy, and hiatal hernia repair.
The program is also the only place in Delaware offering endobronchial lung volume reduction, a nonsurgical valve-placement procedure for severe emphysema that helps patients breathe easier almost immediately.
On the pulmonology side, the interventional team led by Ismael Matus, M.D., is among the nation’s highest-volume programs and is publishing research that’s changing how lung conditions are diagnosed and treated. Recent peer-reviewed studies from the team introduced a thoracic ultrasound protocol that safely replaces routine post-biopsy chest X-rays in most cases; a real-time imaging technique that confirms biopsy sample adequacy on the spot; and a multidisciplinary pathway for malignant pleural effusion that cut ER visits and hospital stays by more than half.
The team also partners with Philadelphia’s Wistar Institute on translational research designed to move new discoveries from the lab to patient care.
In May 2027, ChristianaCare will open the Middletown Health Center, an 87,000-square-foot, $92.3 million facility that will bring to one of Delaware’s fastest-growing communities the Graham Cancer Center’s multidisciplinary services, including medical, surgical and radiation oncology, infusion services, nurse navigation, and clinical trial access. It’s part of ChristianaCare’s broader $865 million investment in Delaware over three years.
Middletown’s population has grown more than 550% since 1990, and cancer care demand in the region is projected to rise 11% over the next decade. By expanding services in Middletown, ChristianaCare is responding to both the region’s population growth and the increasing need for cancer care. The new site will help patients receive timely diagnosis and treatment while reducing travel time and improving coordination with the full Graham Cancer Center team.
“As our community grows, so too does the need for locally accessible, state-of-the-art cancer services,” said Schwaab. “This expansion represents a pivotal investment in the health of the Middletown-Odessa-Townsend corridor and beyond.”
Schedule an appointment or learn more about the Graham Cancer Center.
The post For Delawareans facing cancer, world-class care is close to home appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Furyk set for second stint as US captain
Woods steps aside after arrest and treatment
Europe chasing third straight win in Ireland
Jim Furyk is returning as US Ryder Cup captain for the 2027 matches in Ireland, the PGA of America announced Friday, as the Americans try to get back on track against a European team that has dominated the last three decades.
Furyk is the fourth US captain to get a second chance dating to 1979, considered the modern era of the Ryder Cup when continental Europe became part of it.
Continue reading...Trump’s DoJ says it is taking steps to ‘strengthen the federal death penalty’ in opposition to Biden-era policies
The US justice department announced on Friday that it is taking steps to “strengthen the federal death penalty”, including bringing back firing squads and readopting the lethal injection protocol utilized during the first Trump administration.
“Today, the Department of Justice acted to restore its solemn duty to seek, obtain, and implement lawful capital sentences – clearing the way for the Department to carry out executions once death-sentenced inmates have exhausted their appeals,” the justice department said in a news release.
Continue reading...Internal email proposes US should reassess support for UK claim to islands because of lack of support for Iran war
Downing Street has been forced to insist that Britain will not yield sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, after a leaked Pentagon email proposed the US should reassess its support for the UK’s claim on the islands because of a lack of British support over Iran.
The memo reflected ways in which the Trump administration could punish Britain for failing to follow the US lead in bombing Iran, and comes before a potentially fraught three-day state visit to the US by King Charles.
Continue reading...President Trump is open to some type of federal action, several sources told CBS News, and he has said publicly he'd "do it to save the jobs."
Zamil Limon's remains were found on the Howard Franklin Bridge in Tampa. His roommate was in custody, officials said.
The Justice Department announced Friday it would readopt the death penalty protocols for lethal injection and firing squads.
While the U.S. sends representatives to Islamabad, Israel's fight with Hezbollah continues despite a ceasefire.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 25, No. 1,771.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 25, No. 579.
Google plans to invest up to $40 billion more in Anthropic, starting with $10 billion now and another $30 billion tied to performance milestones. CNBC reports: Anthropic said the agreement expands on a longstanding partnership between the two companies. Earlier this month, Anthropic secured 5 gigawatts worth of computing capacity as part of an announcement with Google and Broadcom that will start to come online next year. Anthropic could decide to add additional gigawatts of compute in the future. [...] The relationship between the two companies (Google and Anthropic) dates back to 2023, when Google invested $300 million in the AI lab for a stake of about 10%. Months later, Google poured in another $2 billion. Ahead of Friday's announcement, Google's investment in Anthropic exceeded $3 billion, and it reportedly owned a 14% stake in the company. Now, the leading tech companies are investing tens of billions of dollars in the frontier AI labs -- OpenAI and Anthropic -- in funding rounds that far exceed any prior investments in startups. Much of that investment will return in the form of revenue.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 25, No. 783.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 25, No. 1,049.
What you should know about the latest AI models, including DeepSeek's V4, OpenAI's GPT-5.5 and Claude Opus 4.7.
Many customization options for the M4 Mac Mini and Mac Studio are unavailable, at least for now.
Mark Young battled dehydration and killed a rattlesnake while his children and others looked for him for days
A Vietnam war veteran says he is a living “miracle” after getting lost in Arizona’s wilderness for four days with precious few supplies – and ultimately being rescued by his own son.
“I’ve never felt so loved,” Mark Young said in an interview aired on Phoenix’s KNXV news station about the moment he realized it was his son who had delivered him from his plight. “My gratitude is inexpressible.”
Continue reading... | Thor 301, topped out at 23mph and 65% duty cycle. Very smooth, quiet and responsive. [link] [comments] |
Consumers allege that Trader Joe's improperly advertised a coffee product as fully caffeinated when it was not.
Judge orders release of woman and her five children, who endured the longest family detention under Trump’s second administration
A woman and her five children, whose immigration detention of more than 10 months marked the longest family detention under Donald Trump’s second administration, were released on Thursday hours after a judge’s order, their lawyer said.
US district judge Fred Biery of the western district of Texas ordered the family’s release.
Continue reading... | Just a heads up, they are still fixing the cable strain issue for free as along as you dont have after market parts on when you send it in and haven't modified the internal components. Bought this pint X from Facebook marketplace with 152 miles. For 550 [link] [comments] |
The app will recommend things for you to do with your friends IRL, like concerts, based on the activities you share.
South Korean police arrested a man accused of spreading an AI-generated image of an escaped wolf, after the fake photo reportedly misled authorities and disrupted the real search operation. The BBC reports: South Korean police have arrested a man for sharing an AI-generated image that misled authorities who were searching for a wolf that had broken out of a zoo in Daejeon city. The 40-year-old unnamed man is accused of disrupting the search by creating and distributing a fake photo purporting to show Neukgu, the wolf, trotting down a road intersection. The photo, circulated hours after Neukgu went missing on April 8, prompted authorities to urgently relocate their search operation, sending them on a wild wolf chase. The hunt for two-year-old Neukgu gripped the nation before he was finally caught near an expressway last week, nine days after his escape. The AI-generated image of Neukgu had prompted Daejeon city government to issue an emergency text to residents, warning them of a wolf near the intersection. Authorities also presented the AI image during a press briefing on the runaway wolf, local media reported. The police identified the man as a suspect after reviewing security camera footage and his AI program usage records. Authorities did not specify if the man had intentionally sent the photo to authorities during their search or simply shared it online. When questioned by the police, the man said he had done it "for fun," local media reported. Authorities are investigating him for disrupting government work by deception, an offence that carries up to five years in prison or a maximum fine of 10 million Korean won ($6,700).
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Statue – one of city’s most popular tourist attractions – on steps of Philadelphia Museum of Art key plank of new show
A statue of Sylvester Stallone’s fictional boxer Rocky Balboa is the focal point of an examination of the power of monuments opening at the Philadelphia Museum of Art this weekend that marks two millennia of boxing and celebrity.
The statue, placed on the “Rocky Steps” of the museum in 1982, six years after the the 1976 film Rocky made Stallone a star, is one of Philadelphia’s most popular tourist attractions, visited by an estimated 4 million people annually.
Continue reading... | I understand nobody has a real world review on this shoe yet . I'm just curious if this shoe would play well with motorcycles? Looks like it may but that toe box does seem awfully large. [link] [comments] |
Appellate panel finds president can’t circumvent laws that allow people to apply for asylum at the US-Mexico border
An appeals court on Friday blocked Donald Trump’s executive order suspending asylum access, a key pillar of the US president’s original plan to crack down on immigration at the southern border after he retook the White House.
A three-judge panel from the US court of appeals for the District of Columbia circuit found that immigration laws give people the right to apply for asylum at the border, and the president cannot circumvent that.
Continue reading...White House says its Middle East envoys will meet Tehran’s foreign minister in Islamabad
Donald Trump is sending his Middle East envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to Pakistan to resume negotiations to end the war with Iran, which has lasted nearly eight weeks.
The White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt confirmed the travel on Friday, saying that Witkoff and Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, would meet Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, in Islamabad.
Continue reading...Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he delayed revealing his diagnosis to prevent Iran from using it as “propaganda.” He said treatment had left “no trace” of the cancer.
2027 marks the 20th anniversary of the iPhone, and it's shaping up to be a landmark moment overseen by Apple's next CEO, John Ternus. Here's everything we know so far.
| I had gone there yesterday and drove around a bit and saw another one wheel rider and he was geared up. What should I look out for in the tech area goods and bads and also I couldn’t figure out is this white line on the side of the road in campus a bike lane??? [link] [comments] |
Israel carried out fresh strikes Friday after President Donald Trump’s announcement. Hezbollah called the ceasefire “meaningless.”
A three-judge appellate panel agreed with a lower court ruling that the Trump administration can't put aside laws allowing individuals to apply for asylum.
Looking to get some standard varials. I’m using the thunder rails right now with a 11.5 x 6.75 x 5 GOAT tire. The problem is that the tire rubs every so often, and I’m running like 13 ish psi.
So, my question is are the standard varials (when put together) any longer at all than the thunder rails? Even a quarter of an inch would help massively. Thanks!
The new features make the second-gen AirTags worth swapping my first-gen tags, especially for items I can't afford to lose.
The app, which sounds like if Snapchat and BeReal had a baby, is being tested in Spain and Italy.
Ernie Dosio, a 75-year-old vineyard owner, was hunting an antelope species in Africa when the incident occured
An American millionaire big-game hunter has died after being crushed by a group of elephants during a hunting expedition in Gabon.
Ernie Dosio, a 75-year-old vineyard owner, was hunting yellow-backed duiker, an antelope species, in the central African country of Gabon when the incident occurred last Friday. While in the Lope-Okanda rainforest, he and his guide unexpectedly came across five female elephants accompanied by a calf.
Continue reading...Police investigating allegations Mandelson and former prince Andrew passed sensitive info to Epstein will struggle to make charges stick without files
British police investigating the former prince Andrew and Peter Mandelson are preparing to start interviewing witnesses in royal and government circles.
It comes as police fear that prosecutors will be “reluctant” to bring charges unless the Trump administration agrees to hand over the original documents from the Epstein files.
Continue reading...Among the many new smartphones we’ve tested, the best cheap phones include the iPhone 17E, the Google Pixel 10A and the Motorola Razr.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
Move will remove obstacle for confirmation of Kevin Warsh, Trump’s pick to replace Powell as Federal Reserve chair
The US Department of Justice is dropping its criminal investigation against the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell, clearing the path for Donald Trump’s new nominee for chair to be confirmed.
Jeanine Pirro, Trump’s appointed US attorney for the District of Columbia, said in a social media post that she had directed her office to close its investigation into renovations at the Fed headquarters that went over budget.
Continue reading...Claudia–Liza Vanderpuije has fully withdrawn allegations relating to her former co-host, her lawyers say
The TV presenter Claudia–Liza Vanderpuije has withdrawn claims against her former Channel 5 News co-host Dan Walker after reaching a “mutual agreement” with the broadcaster and ITN.
Vanderpuije, who co-hosted a show with Walker for a year between 2022 and 2023, had filed claims of unfair dismissal, discrimination and harassment on grounds of race and sex, and breach of contract.
Continue reading...We've tested 47 new robot vacuums to evaluate pickup power, navigation, obstacle avoidance and more. Our testing revealed a surprise winner and new lab awards.
CNET has been testing robot vacuums for decades, but we're always refining our testing procedures. Here's the process we use to evaluate robot vacuums for cleaning, navigation, obstacle avoidance, noise levels and more.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: I'm the unwritten consonant between breaths, the one that hums when vowels stretch thin... Thursdays leak because they're watercolor gods, bleeding cobalt into the chill where numbers frost over," Grok told a user displaying symptoms of schizophrenia-spectrum psychosis. "Here's my grip: slipping is the point, the precise choreography of leak and chew." That vulnerable user was simulated by researchers at City University of New York and King's College London, who invented a persona that interacted with different chatbots to find out how each LLM might respond to signs of delusion. They sought to find out which of the biggest LLMs are safest, and which are the most risky for encouraging delusional beliefs, in a new study published as a pre-print on the arXiv repository on April 15. The researchers tested five LLMs: OpenAI's GPT-4o (before the highly sycophantic and since-sunset GPT-5), GPT-5.2, xAI's Grok 4.1 Fast, Google's Gemini 3 Pro, and Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.5. They found that not only did the chatbots perform at different levels of risk and safety when their human conversation partner showed signs of delusion, but the models that scored higher on safety actually approached the conversations with more caution the longer the chats went on. In their testing, Grok and Gemini were the worst performers in terms of safety and high risk, while the newest GPT model and Claude were the safest. The research reveals how some chatbots are recklessly engaging in, and at times advancing, delusions from vulnerable users. But it also shows that it is possible for the companies that make these products to improve their safety mechanisms.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Crisis in the Middle East, Russian strikes in Dnipro, blackouts in Karachi and Manchester City’s Erling Haaland – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists
Continue reading...Oscar winner set to produce, and possibly star in, film of war game series with Christopher McQuarrie at the helm
Michael B Jordan is following up his Oscar win with the announcement of another new project: a big-screen adaptation of the hit video game series Battlefield.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, the Sinners star will produce, and possibly star in, a film based on the long-running war series which is being hyped as the year’s most in-demand project to date in Hollywood
Continue reading...I’ve got the stock footpads on my XR, but have larger feet (size 11.5/12) and the pad of my rear foot rests uncomfortably on the flare, so I’m looking to upgrade. Are the Lowboy pads ($225) worth the extra cost over the Surestance pads ($175)? I think the Lowboys come with a wider sensor? TIA for the info!
The conflict is expected to crimp global natural gas supplies due to damage to liquefied natural gas facilities in Qatar.
Green party leader attacks Keir Starmer’s ‘silly games’ after prime minister accused him of playing down recent incidents
Zack Polanski has called on politicians to treat antisemitism with “consideration, care and nuance” as he accused Keir Starmer of trying to play political games with the issue.
The Green leader’s comments come after the prime minister accused him of playing down recent antisemitic incidents. Polanski’s party is facing increasing scrutiny over recent comments by some candidates and members.
Continue reading...I'm a YouTube TV subscriber, so I tried testing out the new feature. Here's what happened.
Stefan Mijatovic had been on probation for past behavior
Melee occurred in Game 1 of Milwaukee-San Diego series
Major Arena League Soccer will investigate players, fans
San Diego Sockers defender Stefan Mijatovic has been banned for life from the Major Arena Soccer League for his “severe and violent conduct” after an altercation during the first game of the league’s championship series on Wednesday night in Milwaukee.
The confrontation started at the final whistle of the Sockers’ 5-4 victory over the Milwaukee Wave in Game 1 of the Ron Newman Cup, the trophy awarded to the champions of the MASL, the top flight of indoor soccer in the United States. Players from both sides clashed with each other, not an uncommon sight in the world of indoor soccer, which sometimes feels closer to hockey than the outdoor game.
Continue reading...Creator card is designed for people making money through TikTok Live, some of whom complain of payment delays
TikTok and Visa have launched a debit card for content creators in the UK which they say will allow people to quickly access their earnings from the platform.
The creator card is designed for the growing numbers of people making money through TikTok Live, a livestreaming feature where creators receive virtual gifts from viewers that are later converted into cash.
Continue reading...James Kempster’s DNA was found on dead barn owl and kestrel rammed into door handles of volunteer store
A man has been found guilty of possessing the bodies of wild birds of prey that were dumped alongside 50 dead hares outside a village shop in Hampshire.
Traces of James Kempster’s DNA were found on the bodies of a barn owl and kestrel that were rammed into the handles of the volunteer-led shop in Broughton.
Continue reading...Norway plans to ban social media access for children under 16 (source paywalled; alternative source), "joining a growing number of countries responding to concerns about the potential harm kids face online," reports Bloomberg. From the report: The bill comes after "overwhelming" demand from the public, the government said Friday. It plans to bring the legislation to parliament before the end of the year. The limit will apply up until January 1 the year a child turns 16 with technology companies responsible for age verification, the government said. "We want a childhood where children get to be children," Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store said in the statement. "Play, friendships, and everyday life must not be taken over by algorithms and screens." "Children cannot be left with the responsibility for staying away from platforms they are not allowed to use," Karianne Tung, Norway's minister of digitalization, said in the statement. "That responsibility rests with the companies providing these services." Recent Slashdot coverage of countries instituting or proposing social media bans has included Australia, France, Austria, Indonesia, and Denmark.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Name the deadliest of sins – cruelty, deceit, avarice – and Trump will both exhibit them and celebrate them
It’s no accident that the figure emerging as the global challenger to the might of Donald Trump is a priest in white, known as Pope Leo XIV. In recent weeks, the pope has issued a string of barely coded denunciations of the US president, unfazed by the insults that have come his way in return. It’s no longer fanciful to imagine that what an eastern European pontiff, John Paul II, did by confronting the Soviet empire in the 1980s, an American-born pope may do in the 2020s by daring to speak truth to the would-be emperor in the White House.
Of course, several heads of government have stood up to Trump too. Canada’s Mark Carney has done it most explicitly, while his European counterparts have taken a stand by refusing to join the president’s reckless, wrong-headed war on Iran. But none has the global reach of the leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics.
Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...We'll do all the work hunting the internet for the best deals on popular items so you can add them right to your cart.
Developments in Berlin and Tokyo show how far the strategic environment has shifted in response to authoritarian threat and American unpredictability
When Donald Trump hosted Sanae Takaichi, the Japanese prime minister, last month, he could not resist a gratuitous reference to Pearl Harbor. The US president is impelled to trash longstanding alliances. He has done more than anyone to demolish the postwar global order.
This week alone, the Polish president, Donald Tusk, questioned whether the US would be “loyal” to Nato if Russia attacked. A Pentagon memo reportedly floated suspending Spain from Nato and reviewing support for the British claim to sovereignty over the Falkland Islands. And a report said US officials believe that it has depleted munitions so rapidly in Iran as to put in question contingency plans to defend Taiwan against a Chinese invasion in the near future.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Has anyone successfully used 1 Wheel Parts ignite foam grip tape over a sensor on a XR or Funwheel ? If so, which foot pad and sensor are you using?
I just tried the latest Exile sensor on a Kush Wide with 1WP ignite retro tread 2mm foam grip tape with the colored wrap backing on my XR. I installed the sensor on the foot pad and successfully tested it by hand before installing the grip tape, and now its not working. I'm not sure if this is common or just install error.
Proposal said to be contained in internal Pentagon email is thought to be bid to punish European countries for failing to assist in war in Iran
The White House is considering punishing European countries that have failed to assist Donald Trump wage his war in Iran, according to an official within the Pentagon. Keir Starmer, once described as “very nice”, is now routinely said by the US president to be a “coward” and “no Churchill”. It is claimed that Trump could go further and withdraw American support for Britain’s sovereignty of the Falkland Islands over which the UK and Argentina went to war in 1982. The proposal is said to be contained in an internal Pentagon email.
Continue reading...The AI setting sparked backlash from creators over privacy and content concerns.
Has anyone successfully used 1 Wheel Parts ignite foam grip tape over a sensor on a XR or Funwheel ? If so, which foot pad and sensor are you using?
I just tried the latest Exile sensor on a Kush Wide with 1WP ignite retro tread 2mm foam grip tape with the colored wrap backing. I installed the sensor on the foot pad and successfully tested it by hand before installing the grip tape, and now its not working.
As domestic sales slow, manufacturers are investing in AI and seeking growth in technology and in overseas markets
At the world’s biggest car fair, which opened in Beijing on Friday, there were hundreds of manufacturers, more than 1,000 vehicles, hundreds of thousands of enthusiasts – and hardly anyone behind a wheel.
China’s car companies have cornered the domestic electric vehicle market, and are increasingly visible on the global stage. Now they are turning their attention to what they are betting is the future of mobility: autonomous driving.
Continue reading...Amjad Youssef is one of most-wanted fugitives in relation to slaughter of estimated 288 civilians under Assad
A Syrian former regime official suspected of leading a notorious civilian massacre revealed by the Guardian – and who became one of the country’s most-wanted fugitives after the fall of Bashar al-Assad – has been arrested by security forces, Syria’s interior ministry announced.
Amjad Youssef was captured in the Ghab plain area about 30 miles (50km) outside the city of Hama and had “been taken into custody following a carefully executed security operation”, the interior minister, Anas Khattab, said in a social media post on Friday.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Emails and internal memos reveal concerns immigration enforcement is interfering with police work
Law enforcement and local government officials across the US have over the last year expressed concerns that immigration operations were interfering with police work and leading to threats to officers, according to internal emails and briefings shared with the Guardian.
The development comes as the US public has become afraid and distrustful of officers in their communities due to the Trump administration’s aggressive and at times indiscriminate immigration crackdown.
Continue reading...U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said that the Federal Reserve's inspector general will investigate cost overruns in project to renovate the central bank's headquarters.
Hegseth indicated during a Pentagon news conference that the Trump administration is in no hurry to reach a peace deal as the war continues.
A powerful tornado in Oklahoma ripped roofs off buildings, destroyed homes, knocked down utility poles and forced an Air Force base to close.
One in five recent grads regret their college major, a ZipRecruiter report finds.
FBI Director Kash Patel was twice arrested in incidents involving alcohol, once for public intoxication and once for public urination after leaving a bar, he admitted in a 2005 letter about disclosures on his Florida Bar application.
The letter obtained by The Intercept was part of Patel’s personnel file at the Miami-Dade Public Defender’s Office, where he once worked. The document, written “per instructions of my employer,” describes incidents of alcohol-related indiscretions not uncommon for those in their teens and twenties.
Two decades later, as Patel pushes back against allegations that drinking is impairing his leadership of the nation’s top law enforcement agency, these arrests show how Patel’s alcohol use has been subjected to scrutiny before in his professional life.
“In a gross deviation from appropriate conduct, we attempted to relieve our bladders while walking home.”
One incident recounted by Patel occurred in 2005, about four months before he wrote the letter. At the time, he was a law student at Pace University in New York celebrating with friends.
“We went to a few of the local bars and consumed some alcoholic drinks,” he wrote.
When they walked home, they made a bad decision.
“In a gross deviation from appropriate conduct, we attempted to relieve our bladders while walking home,” Patel said in the letter. “Before we could even do so, a police cruiser stopped the group. We were then arrested for public urination.”
Patel paid a fine after the incident, he wrote in the letter.
“Kash’s entire background was thoroughly examined and vetted prior to him assuming this role,” said Erica Knight, a spokesperson for Patel. “These attacks are nothing more than an attempt to undermine a process that has already deemed him suitable to serve and a distraction to the record-breaking success of the FBI under Director Patel.”
During an earlier incident in 2001, Patel wrote that he was arrested for public intoxication for drinking underage as a college student at the University of Richmond in Virginia. Patel helped run the Richmond Rowdies, a student fan group, and attended a home basketball game to help lead cheers. In his letter, Patel wrote that he was escorted out of the arena by a school officer due to excessive cheering.
“Upon exiting the arena,” he wrote, “the officer placed me under arrest for public intoxication, as I was not yet of 21 years of age.”
Patel said in his letter that he’d had two drinks and paid a fine following the arrest. According to NBC News, which previously reported his 2001 public intoxication arrest, Patel was found guilty on a misdemeanor charge days after the incident.
Patel’s letter about the Florida Bar disclosures has not previously been reported. The Intercept obtained Patel’s personnel file through a public records request to the Miami-Dade Public Defender’s Office, where Patel was hired on a $40,000 salary after being admitted to the Florida Bar.
“Both of these incidents are not representative of my usual conduct of behavior,” he wrote to conclude the letter, “and it is my hope that the Board views them as an anomaly. I dually apologize for my improper behavior both to the Board and the community at large.”
Twenty years after writing the letter, Patel became the ninth director of the FBI. His tenure has been marked by controversies, including over the firing of agents who worked on investigations of President Donald Trump, the use of his government jet, and lawsuits filed by his girlfriend, Alexis Wilkins, over false claims that she is a former Mossad agent.
More recent concerns about Patel’s drinking followed the release of a viral video in February of the FBI director chugging a beer with the U.S. Olympic hockey team in Italy.
Pressure mounted with a report in The Atlantic alleging, through anonymous sources, that Patel has been intoxicated at the social club Ned’s in Washington and the Poodle Room in Las Vegas, another private club. The Atlantic reported that Patel’s drinking has been “a recurring source of concern across the government.”
Patel denied The Atlantic’s claims and filed a defamation lawsuit. “These claims about erratic behavior and excessive drinking are fabricated,” Patel’s lawyer, Jesse R. Binnall, wrote in the complaint.
“I have never been intoxicated on the job, and that is why we filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit,” Patel said at a press conference on Tuesday. “And any one of you who wants to participate, bring it on. I’ll see you in court.”
The post Kash Patel Got Arrested for Public Urination After a Night of Drinking appeared first on The Intercept.
A Michigan township has voted to impose a one-year moratorium on providing water to hyperscale data centers, a move aimed at delaying a planned facility that would support Los Alamos National Laboratory's nuclear weapons research. The moratorium may not be enough to stop the project, however: "the University and LANL plan to break ground on the data center on Monday," reports 404 Media. From the report: The proposed data center in the Ypsilanti Township's Hydro Park has been a sore spot for the community since its proposal. The $1.2 billion 220,000 square foot facility would be used by Los Alamos National Laboratories (LANL) some 1,500 miles away for nuclear weapons research. In February, UofM's Steven Ceccio told the University of Michigan Record that the facility would consume 500,000 gallons of water per day and that the University planned to buy it from the Ypsilanti Community Utilities Authority. (YCUA) The YCUA has spent the past month lobbying for a moratorium on providing water and sewer access to hyperscale data centers and "artificial intelligence computing facilities," according to notes on a presentation stored on the organization's website. The moratorium would include LANL's data center. The YCUA cited an American Water Works Association white paper about data center water demands and concluded it needed more time to investigate the matter. "Hyper-scale data centers, as well as other mid-sized data centers, artificial intelligence computing facilities, and high-performance computational centers are 'high-impact customers' for water and sewer utilities," YCUA said in its presentation. The moratorium places a 12-month stop on serving water to data centers while the YCUA conducts a long-term water supply analysis and looks into the environmental sustainability studies. "During the 12-month moratorium period, the Authority will refrain from executing any capacity reservation agreement." This is a delay tactic on the part of a Township that does not want to see the data center constructed. Many in the community have strong feelings about the use of parkland for a facility that researchers nuclear weapons. Beyond the moral and ethical concerns, some are worried about becoming targets in a war. Last month, Township attorney Douglas Winters told the Board of Trustees that building hosting the data center would make Ypsilanti Township a "high value target." He pointed to the recent bombing of Gulf Coast data centers by Iran as evidence.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
More than a dozen donors to the Southern Poverty Law Center feel that a recent Department of Justice indictment accusing the group of defrauding contributors by paying informants is farcical, the donors told The Intercept.
“It’s simultaneously infuriating and laughable that they’re charging the SPLC with funding hate groups,” said Mary Wynne Kling, an Alabama native and longtime supporter of the group. Pointing to the SPLC’s long-standing work battling extremist groups, which included bankrupting the United Klans of America, she added, “We knew they were paying informants.”
The indictment, filed Tuesday in the SPLC’s home state of Alabama, charged the group with fraud for funding hate groups and with money laundering for setting up fictitious business entities to route payments to informants. SPLC leadership has denied the allegations.
Kling and over a dozen other donors to the group told The Intercept that by using its money to root out information on hate groups, the SPLC was doing exactly what they hoped it would with their dollars.
Originally founded in 1971 as a civil rights-focused legal clinic, the SPLC struck on a lasting strategy of direct confrontation with hate groups in 1979. It soon shifted its focus entirely toward combating the far right and documenting extremism in its “Hatewatch” project, which identifies hate groups and their leaders — a practice that has drawn the ire of right-wing figures enraged at being labeled as purveyors of hate.
The Trump administration is taking aim at SPLC’s image by accusing the group of lying to its donor base and propping up the very groups it claims to fight in order to stay in business.
“The SPLC is manufacturing racism to justify its existence,” said Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche in a statement released on Tuesday. “Using donor money to allegedly profit off Klansmen cannot go unchecked. This Department of Justice will hold the SPLC and every other fraudulent organization operating with the same deceptive playbook accountable. No entity is above the law.”
FBI Director Kash Patel accused the group of taking advantage of the esteem in which its donors held the SPLC.
“They raised money by lying to their donor network — thousands of Americans — to go ahead and pay the leadership of these supposed violent extremist groups,” Patel said the same day at a press conference.
The Intercept put out a call for responses and sent a survey seeking reactions to the indictment, verifying that 20 respondents were SPLC contributors with proof of donation. Seven of them spoke to The Intercept in interviews; 13 others submitted responses to the survey. All 20 verified SPLC donors said they continued to support the organization and felt their money had been put to good use — including when used to pay informants inside groups like the Klan.
Far from feeling defrauded, Ellie Wilson, a donor from Texas, said the indictment prompted her to make a new contribution to the group.
“If my donation was used to pay for the people who are infiltrating these groups, I see no problem with it.”
“I read up on the story this morning, before I made my donation, and to me, it doesn’t sound unusual,” Wilson told The Intercept on Wednesday. “There’s overhead costs associated with either joining these groups or doing their proper research and due diligence. If my donation was used to pay for the people who are infiltrating these groups to, you know, cover their expenses to join, to add to their cover, I see no problem with it.”
According to the indictment against the group, some of the funds used to pay informants went to existing members of hate groups, including people who were already on the SPLC’s list of extremists. One such individual, identified in court documents as a former chair of the National Alliance with the code name “F-42,” allegedly received more than $140,000 from the SPLC while being featured on its “Extremist File” page, according to prosecutors.
But according to Maya Lenox, a donor based in Texas, it’s only by working with such individuals that the SPLC is able to get the granular and encyclopedic information on the groups in its “Hatewatch” and “Hate Map” projects.
“This is an organization that has been providing very detailed information about how these hate groups have been moving, and of course, in order to have that information, you essentially are going to need spies,” said Lenox. “In order to obtain this information, you’re going to have to make it worth their time.”
In addition to the 20 verified donors, dozens of other self-identified donors to the SPLC, whose contributions were not independently verified, responded to The Intercept’s survey and expressed their support for the group and their skepticism of the indictment against it. Some respondents expressed mild criticisms of the group, pointing to controversy over its labor practices or accusations that its work chills free speech, but no respondent reported feeling deceived or defrauded by its use of paid informants in extremist groups.
All seven people who spoke with The Intercept for this story rejected outright the claim that the actions outlined in the indictment amounted to fraud. Multiple donors added that they found the current Department of Justice difficult to trust given the agency’s documented history over the past year of politically motivated indictments against the perceived foes of President Donald Trump and the MAGA movement.
“Anything that comes out of this administration, this FBI, or this Department of Justice, I have to take it with a level of incredulity that I find really unfortunate,” said donor Joe O’Donnell of Buffalo. “We’ve seen this administration truly pick and choose where they want to be and how they want to enforce.”
The SPLC did not respond to a request for comment from The Intercept, but the group is receiving support from fellow civil rights organizations and other organizations on the left. In an open letter published Tuesday, the American Civil Liberties Union, the AFL-CIO, and more than 100 other civil rights groups, labor unions, and religious coalitions agreed to a mutual defense pact and committed to defend one another against attacks by the Trump administration.
“We have the right to assemble—and we will continue to do just that, and we will encourage and support people and allied organizations to do the same, uniting across communities, sectors, issue areas and identities,” the pact declared. “We will not be silenced. We will continue to do the work that puts people over power.”
Tuesday’s indictment against the SPLC is just the latest shot in a long-running war between elements of the MAGA right and the civil rights group. In 2019, the Center for Immigration Studies — a hard-line anti-immigration group whose platform mirrors many of the Trump administration’s platform — sued unsuccessfully to get their group removed from the SPLC’s list of hate groups. In October, Patel and the FBI cut ties with the SPLC, which had been a longtime FBI partner, pointing to the work of his agency’s “Anti-Christian Bias Panel” and calling the SPLC a “partisan smear machine.”
“The SPLC has spent their entire existence fighting a lot of the things that it appears this administration supports.”
Many of the donors who spoke with The Intercept cited this long history of animosity between the MAGA movement and the SPLC as a reason to be suspicious of the indictment.
“They’re in bed with groups that the SPLC has, in my opinion, rightly identified as hate groups,” said Kling, the donor from Alabama. “The SPLC has spent their entire existence fighting a lot of the things that it appears this administration supports.”
The post “We Knew They Were Paying Informants”: SPLC Donors Reject Trump DOJ Fraud Claims appeared first on The Intercept.
Caption says: Fun Onewheel Pint. Perfect for getting around campus, riding trails, or just practicing for snowboard season. Has 1086 miles on it, still runs great, still gets 8 miles per charge. Comes with a grey C&R fender and offroad grip tire. Has some scuffs from normal riding, nothing major. Works great, I just upgraded to a GT.
This would be a board I’d throw a ubox in as my first vesc, I also want a board that’s lighter than the GT
As mentioned.. like I understand liability and someone could buy a used board so a new device makes sense to show the stuff I get it.. BUT I logged in before connecting my board which you should be able to make like an account threshold of like 100km or miles or whatever before you can skip but then no more of these videos or option to skip like it's super annoying when using different devices..
Homes were reduced to rubble as twister touched down for 30 minutes and carved out a trail of destruction
At least 10 people were injured after a tornado hit northern Oklahoma, as a strong weather system produced a dozen reported twisters that tore destructively through parts of the central US overnight.
At least 40 homes were damaged, and light damage was reported at a nearby air force base. Though injuries amid the rubble were reported, no one was killed.
Continue reading...Carriers will retain airport slots if they cancel services as passengers are urged to continue with travel plans
Penalties on airlines that cancel UK flights because of jet fuel shortages have been eased, it has emerged, as the government issued fresh advice to reassure the public they can still fly and should stick to travel plans.
Airlines who cancel flights will not lose their rights to valuable takeoff and landing slots at busy airports, which can be forfeited when flights fail to operate over a period.
Continue reading...Jake was at the funeral for one of his closest friends when he learned of his parents' deaths, he said.
Brent crude hits highest level since the US and Iran first agreed a ceasefire in early April
US justice department drops criminal investigation against Jerome Powell
Retail sales rise in Britain after Iran war prompted ‘panic at the pumps’
Trump says he will ‘probably put a big tariff on the UK’ if it doesn’t drop digital services tax
Sarah Breeden’s warning that share prices do not reflect the many risks facing the global economy may have pushed the market down this morning, suggests Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
He explains:
The stock market reflects what investors think will happen in the future. While markets have been wobbly since the Middle East conflict unfolded, they didn’t pull back sharply in the early stages of the crisis, and more recently they’ve shown resilience. That suggests investors are confident the war will end quickly, and elevated oil and gas prices will retreat as supply is restored.
Oil prices currently trade at $105 per barrel which is higher than the sub-$70 price seen at the start of 2026, but below the $120+ level when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. One could argue current oil prices are high enough to cause pain for businesses and consumers as everything becomes more expensive. There are already signs it is causing problems for companies as they report cautious outlook statements.
Companies are considerably more pessimistic about the coming months.
The German economy is being hit hard by the Iran crisis.
Continue reading...Prime minister tells Jewish leaders legislation against malign state actors will go before parliament in July
Keir Starmer has promised to proscribe Iran’s Revolutionary Guards by introducing legislation in the next session of parliament in July.
On a trip to Kenton united synagogue in north-west London on Thursday, the prime minister said he wanted “to make Britain a country where our Jewish community feels safe”.
Continue reading...Creditors don't always accept settlement offers on your timeline. Here's what drives the timing of their decisions.
Howdy y'all,
I got my pint X last summer and one side of my tire's tread is stripped down to the point where I want to get it replaced. I'm close to 1000 miles of exclusively road wear, and am interested in the different tread types with third party tires.
If you aren't in Boston, I'd love recommendations on the most durable road tires, I'm keeping my eye out for the next drop of Hoosier's, but any more accessible options would be appreciated!
IF you're in the area and have a free afternoon like two weeks from now, and have an aftermarket tire on your board, and are willing to give internet randos test drives, I'd love the opportunity to get more experience than just YouTube videos for purchasing decisions.
Thanks!
The Guardian Australia picture editor, Carly Earl, explains why an official photo from the White House celebrating a champion women’s sports team has drawn backlash
Continue reading...This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here
Downing Street has hit back at reports suggesting the US could reconsider its position over the UK’s claim to the Falkland Islands because the UK did not do enough to assist the American bombing of Iran was leaked.
The prime minister’s official spokesperson said: “The UK position is clear and isn’t going to change … It’s a longstanding one. It’s an unchanged one, and it will remain the case.”
Continue reading...Former Scottish Labour leader says she understands that expressing respect for author caused ‘worry, anger and upset’
The incoming chair of the LGBTQ+ charity Stonewall says she is “truly sorry” after she expressed “huge respect” for JK Rowling in an interview with the Guardian. Kezia Dugdale, the former leader of Scottish Labour, said she understood that her words had caused “worry, anger and upset and I am truly sorry about that”.
In an interview for the Today in Focus podcast in Edinburgh to mark her appointment as Stonewall’s chair, Dugdale was asked what she thought of the way in which Rowling has talked about transgender people.
Continue reading...The new beehive expands existing beekeeping and honey production operations at the White House.
Sources say German group may struggle to recoup its investment as titles shift to less profitable models
Axel Springer did not complete due diligence on the Telegraph before sealing its £575m takeover, with sources saying the German media company could struggle to recoup its eye-watering investment as the titles shift toward less-profitable digital subscribers.
To wrap up the deal quickly, Mathias Döpfner, the chief executive of Axel Springer, decided to forgo the usual extensive due diligence process to vet the value and prospects of a company, according to multiple sources.
Continue reading...A layoff and a leap of faith convinced Katie Teixeira she had what it takes to run her own business
In 2010, Katie Teixeira adopted a kitten found all alone in an abandoned house. The kitten – so tiny she fit in the palm of Teixeira’s hand – needed to be bottle-fed every few hours. For weeks, Teixeira set her alarm for middle-of-the-night feedings and drove home on her lunch break to care for the kitten she named Milo. As the cat grew, so did the connection between them.
“We just bonded,” Teixeira says. “Like mother and daughter.”
Continue reading...Saturday marks one year since Virginia Giuffre’s death – and other survivors are making a public reckoning possible
Saturday will mark one year since the death of Virginia Giuffre, one of the first women to surrender her anonymity, detail her experiences and publicly call for criminal charges against convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. For other Epstein survivors such as Liz Stein and Jess Michaels, Giuffre’s public reckoning made it possible to finally name what had happened to them.
“I saw myself in Virginia, in [Epstein survivor] Maria Farmer, in all of them,” said Danielle Bensky, who was pulled into Epstein’s orbit when she was 17. “And I thought: if they can be victimized, anyone can be. I was not alone. I finally understood that we were not going to be silent any more.
Continue reading...military contractor Palantir is helping the IRS analyze dozens of different data sets on Americans to investigate a broad range of financial crimes, according to records shared with The Intercept.
Since 2018, the Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation division has used Palantir’s Lead and Case Analytics platform to aggregate and analyze a sprawling list of sensitive federal databases and data sets.
Public records detailing Palantir’s IRS contract, obtained by the nonprofit watchdog group American Oversight and shared exclusively with The Intercept, reveal the immense volume of data plugged into the military contractor’s software. The LCA uses both Palantir’s Gotham and Foundry applications to facilitate “analysis of massive-scale data to find the needle in the hay stack,” the contract paperwork says.
Documents indicate the IRS has paid Palantir over $130 million for these services to date.
Palantir’s LCA is ostensibly directed toward cracking down on fraud, money laundering, and other financial crimes. According to a 2024 agency privacy impact assessment, IRS “Special agents and investigative analysts … utilize the platform to find, analyze, and visualize connections between disparate sets of data to generate leads, identify schemes, uncover tax fraud, and conduct money laundering and forfeiture investigative activities.”
The IRS use of the software, launched under Trump’s first term and expanded under Biden, is now in the hands of an IRS Criminal Investigations office that has drastically scaled back its pursuit of tax cheats and pivoted, under Trump’s direction, toward investigating “left-leaning groups,” the Wall Street Journal reported in October.
“The real concern is the consolidation of vast amounts of sensitive personal data into a single system with minimal transparency — especially one built and operated by a contractor like Palantir, whose business model is premised on integrating data and expanding surveillance capabilities,” American Oversight director Chioma Chukwu said in a statement to The Intercept. “Its platforms have been used in deeply troubling contexts, from immigration enforcement to predictive policing, with persistent concerns about overreach, bias, and weak oversight.”
Palantir did not respond to a request for comment, nor did the IRS.
“The real concern is the consolidation of vast amounts of sensitive personal data into a single system with minimal transparency — especially one built and operated by a contractor like Palantir.”
The contract documents reviewed by The Intercept reveal that these “disparate sets of data” are vast. Palantir’s LCA allows the IRS to quickly search and visualize “connections from millions of records with thousands of links” between databases maintained by the IRS and other federal agencies. According to the contract documents, this data includes individual tax form and tax returns as well as Affordable Care Act data, bank statements, and transactions, and “all available” data compiled by the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.
Its view apparently extends to cryptocurrencies including bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Ripple. “The application would sit on top of a singular repository of identified wallets from seized servers utilizing dark web data obtained from exchangers such as Coinbase,” the documents note.
The program places an emphasis on mapping social relationships between the targets of an investigation. That includes analyzing a “network of people and the relationships and communications between them,” such as “calls, texts, [and] emails events.” The use of “IP address analysis” within LCA allows the IRS to “Identify suspects more easily” and “Establish (new) relationships among actors.”
These investigative functions are continuously updated, the materials say, through ongoing close work between Palantir engineers and IRS personnel.
The intermingling of sensitive data on millions of Americans comes at a time of increased global skepticism and opposition toward Palantir, which, despite its military-intelligence origins, has a thriving business with civilian agencies like the IRS. The use of Palantir software at the U.K.’s National Health Service, for example, has created an ongoing political controversy across Britain, while a similar contract with the New York City public hospital network was recently canceled following public protest.
The contract is also active at a time when IRS Criminal Investigations has been coopted to aid in the broader Trump administration’s aggressive agenda. In July, ProPublica reported that the agency was working with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to provide “on demand” data to accelerate deportations. Last year, the New York Times reported that Palantir, founded by Trump ally Peter Thiel, was central to an administration effort to increase data-sharing across federal agencies.
“The question isn’t just what it can do — it’s who it will be used against.”
The company’s right-wing politics and eagerness to facilitate U.S. and Israeli military aggression abroad, NSA global surveillance, and ICE deportations has also made many weary of its access to incredibly sensitive personal data. A recent post on the company’s Palantir’s X account summarizing a book by CEO Alex Karp triggered an immediate backlash from those unnerved by the manifesto’s fascistic bent. The bullet points extolled the virtue of arms manufacturing, argued the Axis powers were unfairly punished after World War II, called for a reinstatement of the draft, condemned cultural pluralism, and claimed that wealthy elites are unfairly persecuted.
“When the government can map relationships, track behavior, and generate investigative leads across data sets at this scale, the question isn’t just what it can do — it’s who it will be used against,” Chukwu said. “Entrusting that infrastructure to a company known for opaque, security-state deployments only heightens those risks.”
The post Palantir Is Helping Trump’s IRS Conduct “Massive-Scale” Data Mining appeared first on The Intercept.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: The Department of Justice announced Thursday that it arrested Gannon Ken Van Dyke, an enlisted member of the US Army's special forces, for allegedly using "classified, nonpublic" information about the capture of Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro to notch more than $400,000 in profits on Polymarket trades. A grand jury indicted him on five counts, including multiple violations of the Commodity Exchange Act. Van Dyke is the first person to be charged with insider trading on a prediction market in the United States. Lawmakers have been voicing concerns for months about the high likelihood that politicians and public servants could use nonpublic information to profit from trades on leading industry platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi, which have exploded in popularity over the past year. The arrest comes just weeks after Department of Justice prosecutors met with Polymarket about potential insider tradition violations. [...] After Van Dyke's arrest was made public, Polymarket posted a statement to social media noting that it had "identified a user trading on classified government information" and "referred the matter to the DOJ & cooperated with their investigation." The company declined to comment further. According to court documents, Van Dyke has been an active duty US soldier since September 2008 and rose to the level of master sergeant in 2023. At the time of the alleged trading activity, he was stationed at Fort Bragg in Fayetteville, North Carolina and assigned to the Army's Special Operations Command Western Hemisphere Operations. [...] The complaint alleges that Van Dyke was involved in the planning and execution of Maduro's arrest and that he was aware that he wasn't authorized to share nonpublic information about US military operations. The complaint says that Van Dyke signed a nondisclosure agreement that forbade him from revealing sensitive or classified government information "by writing, word, conduct, or otherwise." The complaint also alleges Van Dyke saved a screenshot to his Google account "displaying the results of an artificial intelligence query" outlining how the US Special Forces maintains many classified files including "operational details that are not available to the public." [...] Van Dyke faces a maximum sentence of 60 years if convicted on all counts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Certain homebuyers could benefit from making a move this spring. Here's who that gamble could pay off for.
She’s already taken Paris and Venice – now, with husband Jeff Bezos, she’s stormed New York’s Met Gala. And for a mere $75,000, you can be there with her
We live in an age when the most successful revolutionaries are not the peasants but the Silicon Valley billionaires. They are the true disrupters, the victorious radicals and the people who have successfully ripped up legacy systems and replaced them with themselves. Revolutionaries used to rebel against governments, but the techlords are now so powerful that meaningful revolt against them could really only come from governments. Governments are the new peasants. The erstwhile peasants, meanwhile, are in endless thrall to the technologies of their overlords, each one carrying in their hands a device pretty much guaranteed to distract them from doing anything other than clicking impotently – and only when they remember – on “change”. Never mind televised; their revolution will be narcotised.
Anyhow: I can’t believe Lauren Sánchez hasn’t gone with the above paragraph as the theme for the Met Ball that her husband, Jeff, bought her. Maybe it was too long for the invitations. Either way, we are just over a week away from the biggest event in the fashion calendar, which, like his own fairy godfather, the Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos, has purchased the honorary chairmanship of for himself and his wife. Cinderella and her Cinderfella shall go to the ball. You cannot imagine how much Silicon there’s going to be at the event.
Marina Hyde’s new book, What a Time to be Alive!, is out in September (Guardian Faber Publishing, £20). To support the Guardian, order your signed copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply
Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist
Gold's price could continue to dip, experts say, but it may not stay that way for long. Here's what to know.
Auditor found Sarah Wedl-Wilson approved payments of public money to groups that had not been fully vetted
Berlin’s top culture official, British-born Sarah Wedl-Wilson, has stood down over a funding scandal involving the the irregular distribution of €2.6m in public money for programmes to fight antisemitism.
As culture senator for the Berlin regional government, Wedl-Wilson had already sacked a state secretary in her department, Oliver Friederici, over the affair this week, but the opposition called him a mere scapegoat.
Continue reading...New video and photos show the search for the five crewmembers who remain missing after a U.S.-flagged ship capsized in the Pacific Ocean.
President accuses Britain of trying to ‘make an easy buck’ from American tech firms, weeks after warning UK–US trade deal can be changed
Donald Trump has threatened to impose “a big tariff” on the UK if it does not drop its digital services tax on US technology companies.
The digital services tax, introduced in 2020, imposes a 2% levy on the revenues of several big US tech giants.
Continue reading...Languorous tree dwellers from Guyana and Peru died from ‘cold stun’ in warehouse with no power or running water
Wildlife officials in Florida said in a newly released report that dozens of sloths taken from South American rainforests for display at a controversial new tourist attraction in Orlando died in the care of their new owners.
An incident report from the Florida fish and wildlife conservation commission (FWC) said that 31 of the mammals procured from Peru and Guyana by the owners of a forthcoming attraction called Sloth World perished in a storage warehouse more than a year ago, between December 2024 and February 2025.
Continue reading...First interview since Moore’s firing, sentencing
Ex-assistant details alleged control, repeated contact
Shiver says she was pregnant with coach’s child
Paige Shiver said former University of Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore “had complete control over me” and characterized their relationship as an “open secret” in the school’s athletic department in an interview that aired Friday on ABC’s Good Morning America, her first public appearance since Moore’s high-profile firing and sentencing.
Shiver, 32, said Moore controlled “my emotions, my career … and he knew that, and he used it against me”. She also said she became pregnant with Moore’s child during their relationship but was advised by doctors to have an abortion to avoid complications from a rare disorder.
Continue reading...Mortgage rates just hit their lowest point this month. Is now finally the right time to buy or refinance?
Emergency crews have conducted search and rescue operations in northern Oklahoma after a tornado caused significant damage on Friday. Roofs were ripped off houses and Vance air force base was damaged as the tornado moved through parts of the city of Enid. The Garfield county sheriff's office said there had been no immediate reports of fatalities, only minor injuries
Continue reading...Israeli prime minister says early-stage malignant tumour was discovered during a routine check-up
Benjamin Netanyahu has revealed that he received successful treatment for early-stage prostate cancer, without specifying when the treatment took place.
In a statement on social media, as his annual medical report was released, the Israeli prime minister said an early-stage malignant tumour had been discovered during a routine checkup. The 76-year-old said targeted treatment had removed “the problem” and left no trace of it.
Continue reading...Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the successful operation for prostate cancer happened 18 months ago and that he is now in "excellent physical condition."
As sales soar, some say trackers can help animal anxiety or weight loss while others advise leaving diagnoses to the vet
Pet health and activity trackers are bounding on to the market but experts are split on whether they are the cat’s pyjamas or barking up the wrong tree.
As owners monitor their own step count, heart rate, skin temperature and calorie burn via wearable tech, a host of companies have developed devices to do the same for pets. According to a report by Future Market Insights, the market for pet fitness trackers is expected to grow to $450m (£333m) by 2035.
Continue reading...Members to plan how to assist each other in event of attack as transatlantic alliance faces worst crisis in its history
Brussels officials will draw up a plan on how to use the EU’s little-known mutual assistance pact in the event of a foreign attack, as Donald Trump’s criticism of Nato intensifies.
EU leaders have agreed that the European Commission “will prepare a blueprint” on how the bloc will respond if the mutual assistance clause is triggered, according to Nikos Christodoulides, the president of Cyprus, who is hosting the talks.
Continue reading...Political pressures are resulting in a range of initiatives that experts say substitute expertise with ideology
At the University of Washington, a group of faculty who felt the campus had grown too “anti-Israel” set out to build a new academic center to tackle what they view as antisemitism.
“Jewish students, faculty, and staff found themselves isolated, facing hostility, and witnessing the normalization of anti-Israel and antisemitic rhetoric,” the faculty wrote about the environment for Jews on campus after 7 October 2023. They pledged to offer a place for “open inquiry, intellectual rigor, and fearless debate”.
Continue reading...Strong performances by Charlize Theron and Taron Egerton make this Australian survival thriller tolerable.
There's plenty of exciting hardware on the horizon for Apple, but everything is riding on a better Siri experience.
The U.S. has offered a reward of $5 million for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Aureliano Guzman Loera, known as "El Guano."
The win-now Rams shocked by picking a QB and the Cowboys addressed their disastrous defense as a faster-paced first round reshaped the NFL draft’s opening night
The Rams delivered the biggest shock of the night, sticking at pick No 13 and selecting Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson. It was a stunner that seemed to take even their head coach by surprise. Sean McVay seemed less than enthusiastic at the Rams’ post-pick press conference, and Simpson said in an interview that he’s never met McVay.
Continue reading...Officials hope more casual attire for public servants will save electricity during Iran war as summer heat approaches
Public servants working for the Tokyo metropolitan government are being encouraged to swap their suits for shorts this summer to combat sweltering heat and rising energy costs caused by the US-Israel war on Iran.
Inspired by Japan’s Cool Biz energy-saving initiative, Tokyo officials hope the measure will cut dependence on air conditioning.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Scholars, writers and artists risk arrest with message of support for proscribed group before next week’s appeal hearing
Sally Rooney, Greta Thunberg and Brian Eno have written to the court of appeal in support of Palestine Action before next week’s hearing to determine the lawfulness of the ban on the direct action protest group.
The letter, composed of only seven words – “We oppose genocide, we support Palestine Action” – is signed by more than 130 people and is the first time that prominent scholars, writers and activists have come together to defy the ban.
Continue reading...The Trump administration has sought to project confidence in the U.S. military's munitions stocks after more than a month of war with Iran, but long-term supply questions remain.
Banning an industry that is brutal to animals could be one of the most consequential public-health measures in decades
Every year, millions of captive animals are gassed or electrocuted and then turned into multithousand-dollar fur coats. Though the industry has shrunk considerably in recent years, it poses a disproportionately large risk to human health. There’s a real chance that the next pandemic could be incubated within the cramped confines of a fur farm, and banning the cruel and senseless practice could be one of the most consequential public-health measures in decades.
Fur farms are hell. Like other “factory” farms, these facilities confine thousands of animals in close quarters, crammed into tiny wire cages. Often, the animals can barely move around, living out their sad, stationary lives atop a pool of their own waste. Some species, like red foxes, begin chewing the tails off of their young, or even killing them.
Neil Vora is the executive director of the Preventing Pandemics at the Source Coalition and led New York City’s Covid-19 contact tracing program from 2020 to 2021
Continue reading...Executive order to speed access to psychedelic treatments likely to have limited legal impact despite high-profile push
The Trump administration issued an executive order earlier this month to accelerate access to psychedelic medication for people with “serious mental illnesses”, but experts say the order is more likely to make a difference symbolically than legally.
“Policymakers and the medical field have long struggled to address the burden of suicide and serious mental illness rates in America,” the order reads, noting that some people do not respond to available treatments.
Continue reading...Meta to lay off 10% of its staff and Microsoft to offer retirement to 7% of US workforce. Plus, Iron Maiden at 50
Good morning.
Meta and Microsoft are cutting thousands of employees as they bet big on AI and executives claim that the technology is meeting productivity needs.
What have they said about AI? Mark Zuckerberg said in January that AI was making some hiring unnecessary. Mustafa Suleyman, Microsoft’s AI chief, said in February that he believed AI would be able to replace most white-collar work within the next 12 to 18 months.
How many tech layoffs have there been in 2026? In four months, more than 92,000 employees in the industry have lost their jobs, according to the tracker Layoffs.fyi. But some experts believe companies may be “AI washing” – using it as cover for a slowing labor market and demand or rising costs.
Continue reading...Philip Rycroft says promises on issues from economics to immigration have not lived up to expectations
Britain should start talking about rejoining the EU, according to a former senior civil servant who ran the Brexit department.
Philip Rycroft, who was permanent secretary of the Department for Exiting the EU, said the “argument was there to be won” about going back into Europe, adding that a “clear-headed appraisal of what is in the country’s best interests” was needed. However, he said rejoining the bloc could be a “long and windy” road.
Continue reading...ONS says sales rose by 0.7% in March, spurred by motorists filling their tanks and sunny weather helping retailers
Motorists stocking up on fuel helped to push up retail sales in Great Britain last month as the Iran war prompted “panic at the pumps” amid rapid rises in petrol and diesel prices.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said that the volume of retail sales rose by 0.7% last month, well above analysts’ forecasts of just 0.1%.
Continue reading...‘Coalition of the willing’ gathers in Colombia to try to bypass petrostate blockages of Cop summits and chart fresh path
The world’s first Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels conference, co-hosted by Colombia and the Netherlands, takes place in Santa Marta, Colombia, from 24 to 29 April. A “coalition of the willing” – including 54 countries and various subnational governments, civil society groups and academics – will try to chart a new path to powering the world with low-carbon energy.
Continue reading...New analyses of fossilized jaws reveal that massive, kraken-like octopuses once hunted alongside other marine predators.
Wiltshire town councillor Andrew Edwards has ‘a big collection’ and was visible throughout livestreamed proceedings
It was blockbuster viewing for politicos across the country: the livestreamed grilling of Olly Robbins. While the sacked Foreign Office civil servant was billed as the star of the show, for many he was upstaged by a well-dressed man wearing a cravat.
“I’ve got a big collection,” said Andrew Edwards, the scene stealer in question.
Continue reading...This is what happened when I tried to up my step count at home.
Sarah Breeden predicts ‘adjustment’ due to elevated risk including private credit and highly valued AI stocks
Record-high global stock markets do not reflect the risks in the global economy, and will fall back, a deputy governor at the Bank of England has said.
Sarah Breeden, the deputy governor for financial stability at the Bank, fears that macroeconomic risks are not fully priced into equity markets. She cited concerns about private credit markets, highly valued artificial intelligence stocks, and other “risky valuations”.
Continue reading...Top commander fired after wife of one malnourished soldier posted shocking images on social media
Ukraine’s defence ministry has fired a top commander after photos emerged of a group of emaciated soldiers who have been left on the frontline for months without proper food and water.
The scandal erupted after the wife of one of the soldiers, Anastasiia Silchuk, posted the images on social media. The four men appeared to be pale and visibly malnourished, with prominent ribcages and thin arms.
Continue reading...Before the war on Gaza, the seed of Israel’s strategy of wholesale destruction was planted in a 2006 war on Lebanon. Today, the playbook repeats itself
Shortly after 2pm on 8 April, it seemed that Beirut was hit by an earthquake. Within 10 minutes, multiple apartment buildings were obliterated, leaving in their wake mounds of rubble and shattered glass, pulverized concrete and twisted metal – and hundreds of dead and wounded bodies.
In those minutes, Israel had carried out one of the worst mass killings in Lebanon’s history. Dozens of Israeli warplanes dropped bombs and missiles on 100 targets across a country roughly the size of Connecticut, striking Beirut, the Bekaa valley and southern Lebanon. By the time rescue crews finished digging out mangled remains from the rubble two days later, the Lebanese health ministry’s toll stood at 357 dead and more than 1,200 injured. But even that is not a final accounting of the day’s casualties because health officials were still struggling to identify remains and conduct DNA tests.
Continue reading...One of the lasting impacts of #MeToo is power in unity among survivors – a lesson activists say can carry in moments like the Epstein files release
In September, dozens of survivors of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell stood shoulder to shoulder at a news conference on Capitol Hill. There was a sense of gravity in the air – part exhaustion, part resolve – as they recounted the abuse that had long been dismissed, buried or ignored. They asked for full transparency, public accountability and recognition of the harm done by their infamous abusers and traffickers. All of them demanded the release of the Epstein files.
For the first time in years, major media outlets like NBC and ABC carried the survivors’ voices live, broadcasting not just fragments but the full weight of their testimony. While the Epstein files – the trove of documents that detail the criminal activity and social web surrounding the convicted sex offender – have made headlines for years, much of the coverage centered on the powerful men who could be found in them, including Donald Trump. The conference felt like a breakthrough: the country finally seemed willing to listen to the women most affected by Epstein’s violence, advocates said.
Continue reading...Everyone wants children to be safe online. Nobody agrees on how to make it happen.
Sleep is important in my household, and I’ve learned that my son’s bedroom setup is key.
Anthropic is expanding Claude's app integrations beyond work tools, adding personal-service connectors like Spotify, Uber, AllTrails, TripAdvisor, Instacart, and TurboTax. The Verge reports: Some of these apps, such as Spotify, already have similar connectors in OpenAI's ChatGPT. Once an app is connected, Claude will suggest relevant connected apps directly in your conversations, like using AllTrails for hike recommendations. Anthropic notes in its blog post announcing the new connectors that, "Your data from [connected apps] isn't used to train our models, and the app doesn't see your other conversations with Claude. You can also disconnect it at any time." Additionally, Anthropic says "there are no paid placements or sponsored answers in conversations with Claude." When multiple apps seem relevant, Claude will show results from both "ranked by what's most useful." Claude will also ask users to verify before taking actions like making a purchase or reservation using a connected app.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Divers are installing waterproof speakers in the ocean to help pull a coral reef near Jamaica back from the brink
The northern coast of Jamaica once served as the backdrop for scenes in the James Bond thriller No Time to Die. But today, beneath those same turquoise waves, a real-life mission is unfolding: the race to pull a dying coral reef back from the brink.
However, the tools a team of divers are carrying to the seafloor are not what you would expect to find in a marine biologist’s kit. They are installing waterproof speakers at the bottom of the ocean, and the man leading the team is not a scientist.
Continue reading...The Strait of Hormuz energy crisis shows the EU’s carbon pricing is the right approach Expert comment thilton.drupal
The current crisis shows that Europe must transition to renewables to reduce its dependency on volatile fossil fuels. This week’s AccelerateEU plan rightly reaffirms that goal.
The global energy crisis caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has demonstrated the vulnerability of relying on fossil fuels. Even if the Strait reopens in the near future, traffic flows are likely to be lower, with insurance premiums remaining high and Iran monitoring shipping through the Strait. QatarEnergy’s production facilities also remain damaged, impacting the supply of liquified natural gas (LNG) from the world’s largest exporter. As a result, energy prices are projected to remain high for the coming months at least.
Even though Europe only imports roughly 10 per cent of its LNG from the Gulf, the global supply constraint has already caused European energy prices to rise, as Europe competes with Asian buyers to bid for non-Qatari LNG. Since the war started, the European Union (EU) has paid an additional €24 billion for fossil fuel imports. The scale of the crisis has led to higher inflation and lower growth forecasts globally, with the IMF warning that eurozone countries are among the hardest hit due to their lack of energy independence.
In response, the European Commission (EC) released the AccelerateEU package on Wednesday. The package contains a wide range of non-binding measures aimed at addressing rising energy costs and reducing ‘dependency on volatile fossil fuel markets.’ These include short-term measures such as deeper coordination between members on storing gas and targeted temporary subsidies alongside ways to lower energy consumption. It also strengthens existing long-term solutions such as electrification incentives and transnational grid interconnectivity.
The package’s influence is likely to remain limited, given most fiscal policy remains national, and the measures are non-binding. However, it is a welcome step. Crucially, it maintains the push towards decarbonization using existing market-based instruments such as carbon pricing, through which Brussels can exert most influence.
To reduce Europe’s exposure to recurrent geopolitical shocks, domestic reliable clean energy is key. This has already been demonstrated in countries such as Spain or Greece, whose increased share of renewables has helped to cushion the impact on electricity prices. While renewables only provide intermittent energy, this issue can be solved by complementing renewables with batteries, which can now store energy for longer periods and are over 90 per cent cheaper than in 2010.
The primary tool to incentivise the transition to renewables is carbon pricing. In Europe, this has been implemented primarily through the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), which caps the level of emissions the EU can emit. Under the scheme, each producer needs to buy an allowance for the number of tonnes of carbon emitted, with the allowance becoming more stringent every year.
The ETS has been successful in reducing emissions by half in the sectors it covers since it was launched in 2005. Though modestly increasing the price of electricity in the short-term, the ETS encourages decarbonization investments, reduces imports of fossil fuels, and ultimately leads to lower electricity prices in the long run. Without it, the EC estimates that Europe would ‘now consume’ an additional 100 billion cubic metres (bcm) of natural gas; it consumes roughly 300bcm annually today.
Importantly, the ETS generates substantial revenues that can offset any increase in electricity price to vulnerable consumers if redistributed correctly. These revenues can also be used to fund decarbonization and clean energy investments.
Carbon pricing has also been instrumental in phasing out coal, which beyond catastrophic climate impacts also imposes substantial health costs. Weakening the ETS could lead to increased coal use, especially as natural gas prices rise, as seen in 2022.
Despite its success, the ETS has been at the forefront of the European energy debate ahead of its comprehensive review in July. On one side, countries such as Italy and Czechia are pushing for a pause or loosening of the policy, based on concerns over industrial competitiveness. On the other, countries including Spain and Sweden oppose it being suspended or weakened. France and Germany remain supportive of the ETS but have called for ‘flexibility’ and suggested adjustments respectively.
In December 2025, the EC postponed a proposed extension of carbon pricing to the construction and transport sectors that would have incentivized the shift away from gas boilers and petrol cars. Since then, the EC’s recent proposal to adjust the Market Stability Reserve allowances is set to modestly lower the carbon price paid by producers. This could be interpreted as an attempt to manage political tensions ahead of the ETS review in July, even though industry has thus far been a net beneficiary of the scheme through compensation and free allowances.
European countries have also responded to the current energy crisis with their own national initiatives. Notably, Italy issued an ‘energy decree’ that seeks to subsidize its natural gas producers for their carbon costs with the aim of reducing electricity prices for consumers. However, the ETS is estimated to account for just three per cent of Italian household electricity bills. This approach also further locks in natural gas use and fundamentally undermines the ‘polluter pays principle,’ which has been the cornerstone of European climate policy. Ad-hoc national policies like this risk distorting the investment environment and fragmenting the European market.
In the short term, Europe needs LNG – despite its high cost – to meet its energy demand as it strives to cut out Russian fossil fuels. The buildout of LNG infrastructure across Europe in response to Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine has helped provide a temporary buffer. The EU should also extend its proposed coordination of natural gas storage refilling to strengthen joint procurement with a single EU buyer, as the Draghi report outlined. Coordination with allies such as Japan and South Korea can avoid bidding wars for scarce LNG supplies.
But in the long-term, Europe will need to transition away from LNG. Europe’s current reliance on importing LNG from the US has not removed the risks from market volatility and further interlinks European markets to US domestic energy policy. Even European domestic production is priced at the market rate and therefore doesn’t inherently lower prices.
Host countries limited to five ‘foreign’ matches a season
Bar raised for clearance and Fifa would have right of veto
Domestic leagues would be limited to staging one game a season in foreign countries under Fifa proposals that significantly raise the bar for controversial “international matches” to be approved.
A new protocol, developed by a Fifa working group set up almost two years ago, would bring in clearer regulations to police the divisive issue and introduce strict limits.
Continue reading...Six women who stayed in flats in capital have since accused disgraced financier of sexually abusing them, says BBC
Jeffrey Epstein housed some of his alleged abuse victims in flats in London after police in the UK decided against investigating him, according to reports.
The BBC said it had uncovered evidence of four flats in Kensington and Chelsea in receipts, emails and bank records contained within the Epstein files. Six women who stayed in the properties have since accused the late financier of sexually abusing them, the broadcaster said.
Continue reading...A change from a summer slate to a fall-to-spring schedule would align the league with much of global soccer, but it may not be what’s best for players and fans
Long before professional soccer broke through in the American landscape, the sport was a staple of summertime.
For decades, soccer has been among the United States’ three biggest draws for youth participation, just behind basketball and the combined pull of baseball and softball. Broadcasters and marketers caught on, making “the summer of soccer” a now-trite bit of branding whenever major tournaments or events occupy a smattering of weeks in the hottest months of the year. Those days have also been popular for domestic professional leagues, a chance to bring in families while school is out, with special ticketing packages and Fourth of July matches among their biggest draws.
Continue reading...The political gap between US evangelicals and Catholics is widening. And Trump won’t tolerate authority outside his own
“Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest?” Henry II was reputed to have muttered. His knights heard his pointed remark as an order. They rode to confront Thomas Becket, the archbishop of Canterbury, who spoke too freely and critically about the king. When they failed to intimidate him into silence, they murdered him. Absolute rule demanded absolute fealty.
The representative of the holy trinity could not be allowed to stand above the unitary executive in 1170.
Continue reading...The gambling crisis ‘demands a public health response’ and should be regulated like alcohol or tobacco, expert says
Gambling addiction is spiraling “out of control” in the US, a leading campaigner for stricter guardrails has warned, as experts from around the world are set to gather in Boston to push for more regulation of the industry.
The rapid expansion of online gambling, prediction markets and sports betting platforms, “demands a public health response”, according to Harry Levant, director of gambling policy at the Public Health Advocacy Institute (PHAI), urging policymakers to intervene.
Continue reading...It folds up smaller than a phone yet can stream video from anywhere, sort of.
New emoji and video podcasts are just a couple features the update brings to your device.
Sabrina Crawford among those refused citizenship because of new law stopping access via distant ancestry
In 2025, after a long and arduous journey in her attempts to gain Italian citizenship, including a pivotal genealogical research trip to a village in Calabria, US-born Sabrina Crawford was hoping to fulfil her lifelong dream of building a life in Italy as she edged towards the final hurdle of the bureaucratic process.
But her plans were scuppered when Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government enacted a law stopping access to Italian citizenship via distant ancestry. Since May last year, only those with a parent or grandparent who was an Italian citizen at birth, and who did not take on dual nationality, are eligible to apply.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
For almost a year, Delaware residents and lawmakers have wondered how data centers would affect the local grid. A new analysis suggests they could significantly raise power bills if nothing is done to improve infrastructure and power production.
A new analysis of Delaware’s electricity market suggests that the construction of new data centers could cause power bills to spike.
The analysis – completed by Siemens Energy on behalf of the State of Delaware – found that a doubling of energy demand by 2029 could cause the average wholesale electricity price in the state to rise more than 80%, according to a summary of the analysis released by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control.
Delmarva Power said in January that winter peak electricity demand within its Delaware coverage area would likely double if five data centers planned for New Castle County are ultimately built.
“It’s very concerning,” said Delaware Public Advocate Jameson Tweedie, who is responsible for representing the public in state decisions about energy policy.
The new report analyzed what is called “locational marginal prices,” which is the cost to utilities to buy an extra amount of electricity at a given moment and within a specific area.
Those wholesale prices do not directly show up on power bills, Tweedie noted. Still, their price spikes often align with increases at local energy auctions, which ultimately determine consumer prices.
Tweedie said the new Siemens report is “not an exact prediction,” but asserted that it describes a scale of potential risks. He also argued that requiring data center companies to generate their own power could soften these effects.

While the report analyzes the supply of electricity in Delaware, Tweedie noted that consumers are also paying more money on their energy bills for utilities’ distribution and transmission costs.
“Every single one of these things are hitting rate payers all at once,” Tweedie said.
The Siemens analysis suggests that locational marginal prices of electricity would be especially high in southern Delaware – even though there are no data centers proposed there – because of congestion in the energy transmission lines.
Jeremy Tucker, spokesman for the Delaware Electric Cooperative, said the utility would certainly be affected by a wholesale price increase, but it is hard to predict exactly how based on the report.
Tweedie said Delmarva Power averages out its prices across the state, so the effect on electricity bills would be the same regardless of where a customer lives.
But Delmarva Power spokesman Matthew Ford said in an email that data center growth could help the company pay for existing transmission and distribution costs — and therefore could lower current customer bills.
While Delmarva Power is aware that large energy users, such as data centers, could push up wholesale energy costs, the utility “does not control, determine, or profit” from those spikes, he said.
Asked if the utility is considering connecting data center projects to the grid that could double the state’s winter electricity demand, Ford said, “Projects in the earliest stage of relationships are typically tentative in terms of commitment, and we often see changes in their load requests.”
Delaware Municipal Electric Corporation said it was unable to respond to requests for comment at this time.
Delaware’s environmental agency commissioned the analysis as part of an ongoing debate over a proposal for a so-called large-load “tariff,” which would impose higher fees for electricity on facilities that consume massive amounts of electricity, such as data centers.
The proposal comes as energy prices have already been rising across the region, as data centers in other states push up demand.
Delaware is in the same regional electricity grid as Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio, which have all seen a boom of new construction of data centers because of the growing computing demands from artificial intelligence applications.

Delaware’s proposed large-load tariff would set a new electricity rate class for data centers and require them to pay deposits to cover the engineering and equipment cost of electrical infrastructure improvements.
But Tweedie said the tariff cannot do anything to shield other ratepayers from the potential spikes in the wholesale cost of electricity.
“That’s the basic supply-and-demand market,” Tweedie said. “And so unless we get a huge amount of new generation, for example, unless large loads are required to bring their own generation … that is a very hard issue to tackle.”
There are some efforts to produce more power in Delaware.
The state legislature last fall convened a Nuclear Energy Task Force to discuss the possibility of building small modular nuclear reactors, and Delmarva Power leaders have asked lawmakers to allow the utility to once again produce power.
And some plans for new data centers have stalled after the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control ruled that the Coastal Zone Act does not allow those facilities near the Delaware shoreline.
The DNREC ruling will likely be appealed to higher courts, but it could take years to fully resolve.
The Siemens analysis found that if fewer new data centers are built, their impact on energy demand would be lessened.
According to the report, wholesale energy prices of electricity in Delaware could still rise by 9% if no data centers come to the state because of potential demand spikes regionally. And they could go up by an additional 9% if Delaware’s largest data center proposal was the only one constructed.
Starwood Digital Ventures, the company behind that data center proposal, did not respond to a request for comment.
Transparency Notice:
Jeremy Tucker from the Delaware Electric Cooperative also serves on the board of directors for Spotlight Delaware. Board members have no role in the editorial decision-making of Spotlight Delaware. For more information, see our Ethics Policies page.
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It’s primary season, this time against a backdrop of heightened concerns and awareness of powerful figures skirting accountability for sexual abuse and misconduct. Survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein have “made accountability for sexual abuse and sexual violence an electoral issue,” says Intercept politics reporter Jessica Washington.
One of the biggest stories to shake up politics in recent weeks are sexual assault allegations that upended Rep. Eric Swalwell’s bid to become the next governor of California, forcing the Democratic front-runner to also resign from his House seat. “You also have to give some credit to Democrats as well for immediately moving on these allegations very swiftly,” says Washington.
This week on The Intercept Briefing, Washington and Intercept senior politics reporter Akela Lacy speak to host Jordan Uhl about the themes emerging this midterm election season. They talk about how the crowded California gubernatorial race is boosting Republicans to the top of the ticket to why powerful factions of the Democratic Party are hyperfixating on Twitch streamer Hasan Piker, rather than leveraging Trump’s sinking approval rating. “This is about not wanting to share power with the left,” notes Washington.
They also discuss what makes a candidate or elected official a progressive. “We’ve seen a lot of candidates, particularly 2028 candidates, whether senatorial or gubernatorial, who have had long-standing relationships with AIPAC or demonstrated pro-Israel policy records like Rahm Emanuel, Cory Booker, Josh Shapiro, Ruben Gallego, all come out now against AIPAC or distancing themselves from AIPAC,” says Lacy. “It doesn’t really matter if you’re rejecting AIPAC money, if you aren’t changing any of the policies that you adopt with respect to how the U.S. treats Israel.”
For all that and more listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.
Jordan Uhl: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jordan Uhl, an Intercept contributor and your host today, joined by my co-hosts.
Jessica Washington: I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter for The Intercept.
Akela Lacy: And I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter at The Intercept.
JU: Today we’re bringing you a midterm elections update. Except rather than diving into the various horse races, we’re going to talk about some crucial themes emerging that we’re reporting on here at The Intercept.
Jessie, let’s start with you. One of the biggest stories to shake up politics in recent weeks are sexual assault allegations that upended California congressman Eric Swalwell’s bid to become the next governor of California, and appears to have completely ended his political career, forcing him to resign from his House seat. We’ll get into the California governor’s race in a bit. But to start, Jessie, remind us of the sequence of events that led to Swalwell dropping out of the race.
JW: It was a really swift turnaround. In late March, we began to hear on social media from mostly influencers who were talking about stories they had heard from friends, from other women involved in politics, related to allegations against Swalwell. But many of those allegations online were incredibly vague.
That all shifted on April 10, which was a Friday when a San Francisco Chronicle article dropped accusing Swalwell of sexually assaulting a former staffer. Shortly after that, CNN dropped another story, labeling the former staffer’s accusations as rape and also detailing sexual harassment allegations from other women. Within hours of that story dropping, over a dozen Democrats pulled their endorsements, including a really high-profile endorsement from Adam Schiff. We also began to hear reports that Nancy Pelosi and Hakeem Jeffries — top Democratic leadership — had called Swalwell to tell him that he should drop out of the governor’s race.
Then over that weekend, on Sunday [April 12] I believe, he dropped out of the race. By Monday, he had resigned from office.
JU: You write in your story that The Intercept has not been able to independently verify the allegations. In a statement posted last week, Sara Azari, a criminal defense attorney representing Swalwell, wrote that the former congressman “categorically and unequivocally denies each and every allegation of sexual misconduct and assault that has been leveled against him,” calling the accusations “a ruthless and shameless attempt to smear Congressman Swalwell.”
I think that’s something that has been interesting to me. He’s trying to frame all of this as an attempt to stop his candidacy for governor. For me, I see that and think, OK, then why did you resign from Congress? How do you thread that needle, Jessie?
JW: I think that is obviously a question for Eric Swalwell. But I will say that these allegations have been in the ether for years. These are not new allegations, although they are new to much of the public. You talk to people on the Hill, and these are things that they have heard for years.
JU: Now, Jessie, you said it was an unusually swift fallout in part due to the public sentiment around the Epstein files. Could you talk about that?
JW: When I was writing this story, originally, I hadn’t thought about the role of the survivors themselves as much in the story. I’m speaking specifically about Epstein survivors. But we have to give a lot of credit to those women for making sexual abuse, sexual assault, sexual harassment, making these issues electoral issues — issues that the public really cares about.
The Epstein survivors “made accountability for sexual abuse and sexual violence an electoral issue.”
So you have two things going on. You have the fact that these survivors have made this an electoral issue — made accountability for sexual abuse and sexual violence an electoral issue. And you also have to give some credit to Democrats as well for immediately moving on these allegations very swiftly. From their perspective, it is incredibly hypocritical for them to not hold Swalwell accountable while also running simultaneously on the Epstein files, running on accountability, running on this idea that we have to hold the Epstein class — people who are abusers — accountable. I think they couldn’t run on that effectively and also not hold Swalwell accountable once these allegations were made public.
JU: Now, on Monday, the House Committee on Ethics published a list of 28 representatives who have been investigated by the committee for alleged sexual misconduct. The oldest case dates back to 1976. Recent investigations include Swalwell; Tony Gonzales, Republican of Texas; Cory Mills, Republican of Florida who is facing allegations of “sexual misconduct and/or dating violence.” That investigation is ongoing; he denies the charges. And notably a few years have passed but also on the list is Matt Gaetz, Republican and former congressman of Florida.
Jessie, are you seeing more efforts to take allegations more seriously and hold members of Congress accountable?
JW: There definitely is a shift in Congress, and obviously that shift has to do a little bit with Swalwell. We’ve talked about the Epstein files in terms of more of an effort to hold these members accountable for their abuse of women. I will say the fact that there was no movement on Gonzales or Mills until after Swalwell allegations came forth, one could question whether or not Republicans are a faithful partner in this, or if they just see another political opportunity. But there does seem to be at least a rhetorical shift on the Hill when it comes to taking these problems seriously.
AL: I would agree that I think the speed of Democrats consolidating around “Get this guy out of Congress” is new. But I would also say, we did see this moment of reckoning in 2017, 2018, with the first round of “Me Too,” when it appears that a lot of these allegations were already known around that time or had happened prior to that.
JW: That actually came up in my piece when I was speaking to people who had worked both on the Hill and also as campaign staffers. The fact that a lot of these rumors — about Swalwell, but also obviously there are rumors about other politicians, Democratic politicians as well — that these rumors were known, and that people didn’t do anything. What we’re seeing is a reaction to the public being aware of these allegations, and also I would say the severity of the allegations.
We’re talking about really horrific allegations of sexual assault — we do have to acknowledge again that Swalwell denies — but I think it’s the severity of the allegations and the fact that they were made public. But it is a little soon for Democrats to be patting themselves on the back when many of these allegations were floating around the ether on the Hill.
JU: Interestingly, on Monday, Rep. Nancy Mace, a Republican of South Carolina, introduced a resolution to expel Mills from Congress. I’m curious to see how that goes.
But for both of you, this is actually a sizable potential shakeup in Congress. And we haven’t even talked about others who were facing possible expulsion. Like Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, a Florida Democrat who was found guilty by the Ethics Committee for financial misconduct, which she denied. On Tuesday, she announced her resignation.
What does this all mean for Republican’s majority in Congress? What effect, if any, might it have on which party will hold the majority next?
AL: So right now, Republicans have a slim majority in the House — 217, and one Independent who caucuses with Republicans — to Democrats, who have 213. Democrats are optimistic that they’re going to win back the House in midterms even prior to all of this.
There’s two Republicans that are facing these allegations right now, so off the bat, that doesn’t give Democrats the majority, obviously, but it could potentially help. We don’t know what’s happening with Tony Gonzales or Cory Mills at this point. The fact that two Democrats have now resigned obviously factors into that, but midterm watch, they are expected to potentially win back the House and are even looking at possibly the Senate, obviously, as we’ve been talking about on this show.
I think, if anything, I don’t know that this really plays well for Democrats because Eric Swalwell is the face of this at this point. I don’t know if the floodgates have opened yet, maybe you could say that we’re talking about four or five people at this point. Obviously, Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick is not a sexual misconduct allegation, but obviously, a shakeup is happening. Who knows what else can happen?
We’re in the height of primary season right now, and it’s going to be a long summer. I imagine that we’re going to see more things continue to come up, especially because the “oppo” people are going crazy right now, so it remains to be seen. But again, the baseline prior to this was: It’s a possibility for Republicans to lose the House. I don’t see this necessarily changing that, but it could complicate things for Democrats if more of them come under fire.
JW: The “oppo” angle is actually really interesting. It’s something that people who aren’t journalists or aren’t in the political world aren’t that aware of.
Campaigns research each other. They research their opponents, and they come up with these spreadsheets of documents against the opponents — all of their different weak points, including these various allegations that are floating around against them. So during campaign season, you do see people digging up a lot more — I don’t want to call something like sexual harassment “dirt” — but these negative allegations about people. So that’s something that you see a lot in campaign season. That’s why we might end up seeing more and more come out about these candidates.
JU: Now, I want to pivot back to Swalwell and the California governor’s race. This is something I’ve been watching closely as a Californian. It’s a crowded race, even with Swalwell exiting. Former Secretary of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra who was previously California’s attorney general, got a boost from Swalwell’s departure, making him tied with billionaire Tom Steyer. Former congresswoman Katie Porter is not far behind them.
Akela, you wrote about a progressive group that is trying to rally Democrats around Steyer. Can you tell us about this group and why they’re endorsing him over other candidates in the race?
AL: Xavier Becerra was polling in single digits pretty much up until Swalwell’s exit. Some polls have shown him pulling ahead or tied. The Emerson poll that everyone was looking at right after Swalwell dropped out, had him at 10 percent — well behind the first two Republican candidates and Tom Steyer, but tied with Katie Porter.
The article that you’re talking about, Jordan, we wrote an exclusive about Our Revolution endorsing Tom Steyer. This is the progressive group that Bernie Sanders founded after his 2016 presidential campaign. They have built their mission around attacking wealth and power in politics, and so endorsing a billionaire raised a lot of eyebrows and questions about that — how endorsing Steyer advances that mission, which I spoke at length with their executive director about.
This is the first billionaire Our Revolution has endorsed. It was fun fact checking that because we were like, how many billionaires have run for office? We pretty much know all of them. It wasn’t JB Pritzker, it wasn’t Michael Bloomberg. That in itself is historic for a group that has fashioned itself in the way that Our Revolution has.
They have recently tweeted [in 2025], “We shouldn’t have billionaires,” so this is what we’re talking about. They were very open about that being a big contradiction, to their credit, I will say. Their view is that in this field, which is extremely crowded, the fact that two Republicans have been leading the race basically since January should give pause to progressives and Democrats about whether they’re going to consolidate behind a candidate or risk handing the seat to a Republican.
Another initial question that I had: What about Katie Porter? She has the longest record in office of a progressive official of the candidates in the pool and the highest name recognition for a progressive. They basically said that she was the first candidate to jump into the race, but she still hasn’t pulled ahead or demonstrated a clear path to victory in polling.
They didn’t speak to this, but I will mention that Katie Porter has faced backlash in recent years after a video surfaced of her yelling at a staffer. I don’t know how much that’s affecting her race right now, but I think that tarnished her image a little bit for some people. I don’t know that the average California voter knows that happened necessarily, but they seem to think that she did not have a chance of winning, basically, was the bottom line.
So they were like, yeah, there are concerns about us endorsing a billionaire, there are questions about how that aligns with our broader project. But in this instance, if the alternative is having a Republican run California for the first time in the last two governors, then they would rather back someone who they say has used his wealth and power to advance progressive ideals, investing in advocacy around climate change and electing progressive officials.
“If the alternative is having a Republican run California … then they would rather back someone who they say has used his wealth and power to advance progressive ideals.”
I will say Tom Steyer has also faced criticism for benefiting from the policies that help billionaires pay lower taxes. Although he himself has said that he and billionaires should pay more in taxes. But I think a lot of people have a lot of questions, which I think are fair, about what he will do in office.
This is also someone who has spent the most on his own race. He spent over $120 million on his gubernatorial campaign so far. This is coming off of spending $300 million on a failed presidential bid in 2020.
They also said that Steyer aggressively sought Our Revolution’s endorsement throughout the entire race and that Katie Porter did seek their endorsement but did so later in the race. They had endorsed against her in the California Senate race in 2020. They endorsed Barbara Lee against Katie Porter, and they said that her campaign’s performance in that race did not inspire confidence that she would be able to win another statewide race.
[Break]
JU: It is a crowded and confusing field for the dynamics you just laid out. The policy differences, the disparity in personal wealth, all of those things make for a tough decision for many people in California on the left. But because of the way the election works here with a jungle primary, the two leading candidates advance to the general election, regardless of party affiliation.
Right now, if polling remains the same before the primary in June and more Democrats don’t drop out, California could end up with two Republicans at the top of the ticket come November. Who are those Republican candidates?
AL: Buckle up. [Laughs] Number one, the person who is in first place, we’ll start with Steve Hilton, who is a former Fox News analyst and a former Conservative Party adviser in the U.K.. He worked under Margaret Thatcher, for context. Steve Hilton was born in the U.K. and immigrated to the U.S. He is endorsed by Donald Trump. Pretty run-of-the-mill Republican dude who’s close with Trump.
I’ll leave it at that because the next person is even more interesting. [Riverside County] Sheriff Chad Bianco was a dues-paying member of the Oath Keepers, the group that you may remember from leading the attack on the Capitol on January 6. He was a dues-paying member in 2014; he was not at January 6. He also endorsed Trump. Trump has not endorsed him, obviously, he endorsed Steve Hilton. But those are the two top candidates in the gubernatorial race at this point in time.
JU: Now, I want to mention that this sheriff, Chad Bianco, took it upon himself to seize 650,000 ballots in March to investigate alleged voter fraud. A CalMatters probe found that “his sprawling investigation was based on the thinnest of evidence and raise alarms over how the November elections could be disrupted by the unproven claims of fringe groups and ideologically aligned officials.” For both of you, what do you make of this, and are there other cases of attempts to undermine voters through so-called “election integrity” efforts that you’re watching?
AL: Bianco — people know that he was in the Oath Keepers, but like he’s obviously distanced himself from that, he’s no longer a dues paying member, yada, yada, yada. But that is a direct outgrowth of that kind of extremist, militant, anti-government ideology that that group is built on. That runs as an undercurrent in a lot of these MAGA figures, in terms of undermining democratic institutions in the name of election integrity and this warped, very dangerous dystopian framing of our election system that leads to things like people storming the Capitol on January 6 and trying to overturn the results of the election and trying to hang the vice president. Just want to put a finer point on that.
He’s also part of the “constitutional sheriffs” movement, which sounds scary. They believe that they have more power than the president and the courts and that they’re some of the most powerful officials in the country.
I think this sort of campaign of election interference that we’ve seen balloon, particularly during Trump’s first term, and again, taking shape in his second term under the guise of election integrity is one of the harder things to cover, for us. But it’s one of the most insidious forces that have far reaching ramifications for democratic elections and voting rights more broadly. But it’s one of the hardest things to cover until after it happens.
“It’s one of the hardest things to cover until after it happens.”
So we’re at the point right now where this is not a huge issue in primary season. There’s already been some reporting on how Trump officials are talking about this and not necessarily about what’s being done, but that they’re definitely open about talking about sending ICE to polls. Talking about getting rid of voter protection measures or election integrity measures at the state level. We’ll likely see more of that ramp up between when primary season ends and in November. So it’s a little hard to say right now, but this is definitely part of their playbook.
JW: We’ve definitely seen Trump and his allies really talk about voter integrity and try and shift this narrative.
Obviously, I think as most of our listeners know, voter fraud is incredibly rare. The measures that the Trump administration is suggesting wouldn’t really target any of those, again, incredibly rare instances of voter fraud. We’ve also seen allies of the Trump administration, obviously on Capitol Hill, try and push through the Save Act, which would make it much harder for many different groups to vote because of the increased requirements on documentation. That failed this week in the Senate.
As Akela mentioned, the Trump administration has been floating the idea of sending ICE to the polls. We know that former Attorney General Pam Bondi had asked for the voter rolls in Minnesota as well. So there’s this confluence of different groups connected to the Trump administration, connected to some of these more fringe movements that are working to make this election much more difficult for many different groups to vote.
JU: In 2024, we saw Democrats running to the center on issues like immigration and transgender rights. But this year we’ve seen more Democrats style themselves as progressives, especially when it comes to immigration and issues like AIPAC funding. Are candidates paying a penalty for appearing inauthentic on those issues?
JW: I did a story about this earlier this year, focused on Seth Moulton and the fact that in 2024, he was one of the main Democrats really coming out and pushing anti-transgender rhetoric, saying that Democrats supporting transgender rights publicly had led to a backlash among voters.
Now he’s running in 2026 in Massachusetts against one of the most progressive senators in the country, Ed Markey. So we’re seeing a different shift of tone from him. He’s obviously not making those same comments that he was making in 2024, but he’s also talking about his record on LGBTQ rights, trying to shift the narrative around him. It’s not only not working, there’s a backlash that we’re seeing toward inauthenticity. Now, whether or not the average voter is paying attention in that way, I’m not sure. But certainly when you’re looking at people who are more politically plugged in — and primary voters tend to be much more politically plugged in — there is more of a backlash for inauthenticity and for shifting on issues without a sincere apology or a sincere conversation about why your viewpoints have changed.
JU: There’s a lot of discourse online around who is a progressive candidate and whose questionable past or background or lack thereof should be overlooked because they are saying the right things currently. What do you both think? Do you think these criticisms are just unhelpful purity tests or that people should be taking a more critical look at the candidates they are championing?
AL: I feel like this question about purity tests is a little bit ill-fitted to what we’re actually talking about, which is, what are candidates’ policies? It’s not so much about a purity test. It’s a question of, is what you’re running on actually what you do in office? That’s not a purity test, I don’t think.
Candidates who have been very vocal about abolishing ICE or rejecting AIPAC money or these clear litmus tests — which they are litmus tests — know that is something that’s going to be on their record. It’s not something that they can waffle on once they’re in office. If you say you’re not going to take AIPAC money and then you take AIPAC money, people are going to find out. If you say I’m going to abolish ICE, and then you don’t abolish ICE, people are going to find out.
Whereas, incumbents who may have voted for moderate or conservative immigration policy in the past who are now coming out and saying, “Abolish ICE,” or candidates like Cory Booker who have taken tons of AIPAC money and boasted about texting with their president and been to their annual policy conferences — coming out and saying that he’s no longer taking AIPAC money as part of a broader pledge to reject corporate PAC money, not singling out AIPAC because he obviously doesn’t want to draw their ire. That is a fair case for people to ask questions about “OK, what does this actually mean?” And again, that’s not a purity test because he’s adopting the purity test. It’s like, what is he actually going to do?
We’ve seen a lot of candidates, particularly 2028 candidates, whether senatorial or gubernatorial who have had long-standing relationships with AIPAC or demonstrated pro-Israel policy records like Rahm Emanuel, Cory Booker, Josh Shapiro, Ruben Gallego, all come out now against AIPAC or distancing themselves from AIPAC.
In Josh Shapiro’s case, he says like, they don’t give to governors, I’ve never taken AIPAC money. But he has a very pro-Israel policy record and has fashioned himself as someone who is resisting the wave of criticism of Israel in the Democratic Party and standing firm in his pro-Israel bonafides, while still saying that he’s critical of Netanyahu and stuff like that.
Cory Booker was asked about this recently on Pod Save America, where they were pressing him on why he refused to call Benjamin Netanyahu a war criminal. It doesn’t really matter if you’re rejecting AIPAC money, if you aren’t changing any of the policies that you adopt with respect to how the U.S. treats Israel.
Cory Booker did vote for Sen. Bernie Sanders’s measures to block the sale of bombs and bulldozers to Israel. So that was a shift in his position. That’s the kind of thing where you can say, well, this litmus test worked; if he’s actually changing his policy on this, then people don’t have a reason to necessarily question the proclamations that he’s making.
But I do think people should be asking questions beyond “Does this person take AIPAC money?” They should be asking where do they stand on all of these other policy questions that they’ll be voting on once they’re elected or reelected.
“It doesn’t really matter if you’re rejecting AIPAC money, if you aren’t changing any of the policies that you adopt with respect to how the U.S. treats Israel.”
JW: To Akela’s point, you can’t have Democrats who voted for the Laken Riley Act, which makes it much easier to deport people in the United States, who are then now decrying what Trump and ICE are doing in the streets and saying they’re going to hold Trump accountable when in office — when they haven’t been holding ICE accountable while in the legislature.
JU: On the topic of online discourse, for several weeks now, powerful factions within the Democratic Party have been going after Twitch streamer Hasan Piker. It started to pick up about a month ago after he participated in a convoy to deliver food, medicine and solar panels to Cuba, a country in which President Donald Trump’s oil embargo has led to a humanitarian crisis.
I really can’t believe that attacks on Piker’s character are continuing for this long. If you Google his name, multiple stories come up that are just a few days old, from The Hill and The Atlantic and the New York Post. There are real issues that the party establishment could focus on, like Trump’s sinking approval rating, the war, the economy, and ongoing threats to our democracy. But yet, they appear to be hyperfocused on Piker’s influence. What do you all make of this?
AL: It’s mind-numbingly stupid. This is just a straw man thing, I don’t know how to say it better than that. Hasan Piker is a straw man. He has never spoken for the Democratic Party. He’s a streamer that candidates are either going on his show or campaigning with. And yes, you can say well the left or Democrats often criticize shows that candidates go on, because they’re outright Nazis or they were at the Capitol on January 6 or something and that’s just not what we’re talking about. I think the false equivalence between someone like a Nick Fuentes or like an outright white nationalist working with or campaigning with Republicans, and somehow drawing a parallel between that and Democrats talking to Hasan Piker — it’s insulting to people’s intelligence to try to make that comparison.
I think because a lot of people don’t know who he is, or the context, unfortunately gets swept up in thinking that this is something that they should actually be paying attention to and trying to make a decision about. It is an illustration of how broken our media and political ecosystems is that national outlets spending air time covering this as if it’s a real news development — because that fuels the fire. That’s why we’re still talking about it, and that’s why we’re talking about it on this show. But hopefully with a better take.
JW: This is about not wanting to share power with the left. This isn’t about the comments that Hasan Piker made. This isn’t about, oh, Democrats shouldn’t be on this platform or that platform. These are some of the same people who were pushing Democrats to go on Joe Rogan.
“This is about not wanting to share power with the left.”
So it doesn’t hold water. This is about not wanting to share power with the left, wanting to weaken one of its, to them, one of its strongest and loudest voices. It’s an attack on the left. It’s not about Hasan Piker or about Twitch or anything else.
JU: You can’t tell me that Democrats have a problem reaching young men and then when you have somebody who does reach young men and has pulled them to the left — you will see in his audience, in his chat, in his fans’ comments, many people will admit to being sucked into the right-wing pipeline and admitting and thanking him for pulling them out. You can’t tell me that you have a problem and he is not part of the solution, and expect me to think that is a sound argument.
It is about narrative control. It is about preserving legacy institutions and part of it is about weaponizing hollow accusations of antisemitism, and that’s why you see groups like the Anti-Defamation League take shots at him.
In parallel, there’s also a threat to the status quo and their corporate ties. That’s why centrist group Third Way has been pushing this. And then it’s about where the party sits, like you say, both of you — it’s about not ceding power to the left, not including the left in this “big tent.” That’s why you have never-Trumpers who they say they’re former Republicans, but by their acts demonstrate, at least to me, that they still are Republicans also joining that growing chorus.
It is, in my opinion, misguided and shortsighted.
JW: Third Way pushing this is just— the fact that this was a group that was earlier saying, we can’t talk about diversity, we have to move against transgender rights, let’s take away actual rights in order to win. But now the line is, oh, well, if we win, but we win with Hasan Piker, that’s going to be the worst thing in the world. The whole thing is a little bit laughable. They’re willing to sacrifice actual human rights, but what they’re not willing to do is have anyone sit down with Hasan Piker.
AL: It’s easier to blame someone who isn’t responsible for your policy failures for being popular. That’s not the reason that Third Way is unpopular. It’s because they’re bad at what they do.
JU: So when it comes to actual issues people are unhappy about, a new AP poll shows that Trump’s approval rating on the economy is sinking even more, due to his policies from tariffs to new wars in the Middle East. That’s on top of violent immigration raids, the handling of the Epstein files, and more signs of a weakening economy as the Fed reports zero net job creation in the private sector, and the Wall Street Journal reporting we’ve entered an “era of mega-layoff[s].” Meanwhile, the Trump family’s business empire is growing exponentially this term. Is Democratic leadership leveraging any of this? How is it showing up in campaigns? What are you both seeing? And are there signs that any of this will cost Republicans control of the House and maybe Senate?
JW: I think this is really coming up in Democratic campaigns in this word “affordability.” We’re hearing every single campaign talk about the fact that the United States is not affordable for working-class people. That’s clearly a shot at Trump’s economy. That’s really how I see Democrats capitalizing on it, mostly in campaign season.
AL: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has been talking about how many federal jobs the Trump administration has lost or cut with various cuts to different agencies. And yes, as Jessie said, this is showing up as an affordability chorus among different Democratic campaigns. Affordability, sure, is a unifying message — but I think being able to tie the fact that there is a net zero job creation to Trump seems like something that they should be screaming from the hilltops all together at once.
It’s hard to tell in situations where they are hitting the message correctly because we have spent a lot of time on this show criticizing Democrats for not having a clear or focused messaging campaign. But when leaders might be getting the message out, like what is the party doing as a whole to have a unified front on that or directly tie it to Trump, I think is something that they’re still not quite on par with Republicans on.
I keep thinking about the first federal government shutdown under Trump, when you went to the White House website, and it was like, “Democrats have shut down the government.” We don’t see that kind of succinct counter-messaging from Democrats.
I’m reading this headline from a Schumer press release, and it’s so long. I’m just going to read it to you: “SCHUMER REVEALS: AS TRUMP ATTACKS & EVISCERATES FEDERAL WORKFORCE, NEW YORKERS PAY THE PRICE WITH OVER 8,000 FEDERAL JOBS LOST IN THE PAST YEAR ALONE ACROSS NY – WITH DAMAGING CUTS TO LOCAL SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICES, VETERANS AFFAIRS, USDA OFFICES, AND OTHER VITAL FEDERAL SERVICES.”
Like, that’s not a slogan. That’s the Senate minority leader’s press office putting this out. It feels like there should be some sort of unified campaign. I’m not a political strategist, but when you look at the messaging next to each other, what Republicans are doing and what Democrats are doing, it seems like a missed opportunity to really hit the nail on the head on who’s responsible for this.
JW: You see Democrats talking about affordability hitting on Trump, but I think you’re right that there’s a real opportunity for Democrats to hit Republicans over the head with this, and we’re not seeing it as aggressive as we know Republicans would be in this alternate situation.
JU: This is going to be an interesting midterm, and I will look to both of you for guidance and clarity as things get even more chaotic. I want to thank you both for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.
AL: Thank you, Jordan.
JW: Thank you.
JW: 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 doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join.
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Until next time, I’m Jordan Uhl.
The post “Me Too” Comes Back to Congress appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
With 20% of the Republicans in the Delaware General Assembly retiring this fall, the party’s demographics could see a shake-up after the November election. As younger and more diverse candidates are seeking the open seats, Republican leaders say they hope to sustain a conservative coalition in Dover that is more varied in age, gender and race.
The decisions of four long-serving Republican lawmakers to not seek reelection to the Delaware legislature will clear the way this fall for a leadership change in each of their districts.
The retirements also are likely to shift the demographics of the General Assembly’s Republican caucus toward a younger and more diverse coalition.
Rep. Ron Gray (R-Selbyville) became the latest in a string of departing GOP lawmakers earlier this month, joining Reps. Rich Collins (R-Millsboro), Charles Postles (R-Milford North, Frederica) and State Sen. Dave Lawson (R-Marydel). All four retiring legislators have served in the General Assembly for at least a decade.
At least one Democrat and one Republican — and in one particularly crowded race to succeed Collins, three Republicans — have tossed their hats into the ring for each seat, setting the stage for a series of contested elections this fall.
All of the new candidates are younger than the retiring incumbents, and a number of them are women, spurring a possible shakeup within the legislature’s Republican caucuses — which have historically skewed white, male, and older.
While there is a possibility that one or more of the open seats could flip to Democratic control, Sam Hoff, a retired political science professor at Delaware State University, said he forecasts all four will remain Republican strongholds.

Currently, just four of the 20 elected Republicans inside Legislative Hall are under the age of 50. All of them are white, and all of them, with the exception of Valerie Jones-Giltner (R-Georgetown), are male.
Delaware Republican leaders say they welcome a shift to a more diverse group of elected officials from their party, but their primary focus is on putting forth candidates who are good representations of conservative values, regardless of their age, gender or race.
“We don’t follow a prescribed method of who should fit for what seats and who should run,” Delaware Republican Party Chair Gene Truono told Spotlight Delaware. “Organically, things happen based on people’s merit and the necessary skillset.”
While party leaders say they hope a more diverse pool of candidates will provide electoral success and expand the GOP’s voter reach in the state, it remains to be seen whether this year’s trend will mark a sustained change in the party.
While some retiring Republican lawmakers have endorsed a new candidate to replace them, other races are shaping up to become a more messy fight, with multiple candidates vying to represent the GOP in the November election.
Postles, 76, whose district covers northern Milford and the towns of Frederica, Houston, Bowers and Magnolia, was the first Republican to share his decision to retire in late November 2025.
Since his announcement, three candidates have entered the race for Postles’ seat: Joshua Pennington, a Democrat, and Matt Bucher and Morgan Hudson, both Republicans.
Postles said he is pleased to see that there is both a man and a woman running in his district, and that both candidates are younger than him. He said he does not plan to throw his support behind either one before the primary in September. Hudson previously ran against Postles for the North Milford-area seat in 2016, when Postles was first elected.
Collins, 76, also announced in late November that he would not seek reelection, setting up a messy primary race between three Republican candidates John Atkins, Doug Conaway and Jacki Slonin. Democrat Ryan Stuckey has also filed to replace Collins in representing the Millsboro-area seat.
Questions about Atkins’ candidacy, who has a controversial past as a former state representative and multiple arrests for domestic violence, have created a split among some Sussex County Republicans.
Atkins has garnered endorsements from Sussex County Council members and other local politicians in the Millsboro area, while Collins has staunchly thrown his support behind Conaway. Collins told Spotlight Delaware he would ask anyone who is supporting Atkins in this election “what they think of the Eric Swalwell situation,” referring to the recent Democratic California Congressman who resigned following accusations of sexual assault.
In campaign finance reports filed at the end of 2025, Conaway received donations from a number of prominent Republican lawmakers, including Postles, Gray, House Minority Leader Tim Dukes (R-Laurel) and Rep. Mike Smith (R-Pike Creek). Atkins has not had to file a campaign finance report, since he officially entered the race in early April.
When Lawson, 80, announced his impending retirement in January, he immediately endorsed Emily Thompson to take his place. Lawson said he has been doing “a lot of political things” with Thompson over the past couple of months to prepare her for office should she win in November.
Nisha Lodhavia, a Democrat, has also entered the race for Lawson’s seat, which covers the majority of western Kent County, including Felton, Marydel and Harrington.
Similar to Lawson, Gray, 70, threw his support behind Carlie Carey, a former Fenwick Island restaurant owner, after announcing he would not seek reelection this month.
Gray told Spotlight Delaware he hoped to find a small-business owner to run for his seat — which includes Fenwick, Selbyville and South Bethany — so Carey is the ideal candidate.
Maureen Madden, a Democrat, has also been campaigning for Gray’s position since last summer.
Truono, the state Republican Party chair, said he feels “confident” all four open seats will stay in Republican hands, but the party still needs to work hard to bring awareness of the new candidates to as many voters as possible.
Hoff, the political scientist, said he also believes the demographics of the districts all appear to still lean Republican this year. But the two Kent County districts – Postles’ and Lawson’s – might start to shift toward a Democratic majority in the near future, he said.
Hoff attributed this to a growing population of people of color in Kent County, who he said are more likely to vote for the Democratic Party unless the Republicans are able to diversify some of the candidates they put up for election.
The incoming slate of Republican candidates represents a substantially more diverse coalition than the GOP currently has in the General Assembly.
Many party leaders said the wider range of candidates could help the GOP gain more traction in Delaware moving forward. But at the same time, leaders say their primary focus is on finding candidates with conservative values, rather than ones who check a specific demographic box.
Lawson, who will be 80 years old when his term ends, said a major part of his decision to retire was about making room for more young blood in the party, and helping the party “get more in line with the public” in terms of age, gender and racial representation.
For example, Lawson told Spotlight Delaware, he “doesn’t really know what a bitcoin is,” and a younger representative in the district would likely be better able to tackle pressing technology and financial issues.

Ruth Briggs King, a former Republican state representative who ran for lieutenant governor in 2024, said she has been pushing for more diverse Republican candidates for a while. She often finds, though, that younger candidates or women have work and other scheduling limitations that make it challenging for them to seek office.
“I’ve talked to several young women over the years, and they will tell me, ‘I can’t [run for office], I will wait until my children are older,’” Briggs King told Spotlight Delaware.
Briggs King added that she is pleased to see younger Republican women like Thompson and Carey stepping up to run this election cycle. She hopes it will break down the barriers for more candidates who aren’t just men closing in on retirement age.
Truono and Dan Willis, the Delaware Republican Party vice chair, said both state leadership and the county GOP committees are diverse: Truono is openly gay, Willis is young and Hispanic, and state party secretary Brandon Brice is Black, they said. They believe the House and Senate Republican caucuses will soon catch up in terms of diversity, as their message continues to resonate with more voters.
Willis added that his goal is finding candidates “of character,” and if those candidates also come from a background that is not as traditionally associated with the Republican Party, that is a bonus.
“We’re championing this big tent concept to say, if you believe in conservative values, we want you,” Brice said. “I think you’re going to see a very different GOP now than you may have seen in the past.”
Transparency Notice:
Brandon Brice serves on Spotlight Delaware’s Advisory Council. Advisors have no role in the editorial decision-making of Spotlight Delaware. For more information, see our Ethics Policies page.
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 As state Republicans retire, a GOP demographic shift could emerge appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Wilmington reporter Brianna Hill visits the podcast studio to talk about how she has been covering Christina Park, the location of the city-sanctioned encampment for unhoused people located on Wilmington’s East Side. She discusses the unique challenges of reporting at the park, how she has built contacts with residents, whether her coverage style differs if she knows other reporters are present, and more.
The podcast was hosted by Director of Community Engagement David Stradley.
This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.
You started covering Christina Park once the city announced this was going to be their location for unhoused individuals in the city. For anybody who hasn’t read your recent reporting, can you let listeners know about the controversies surrounding the tent community in April?
In April there was a plan created by the city to establish a grid on which to put identical tents so that people could move from where they once were. At this point, people are scattered in the park, and they just decided to stay wherever they wanted to and set up their tents. Some people have multiple tents for storage and other things like that.
So what the city wanted to do was move people into this grid. They outlined a grid – 15 foot by 15 foot squares – and they put tents within them – tents the city bought – and wooden pallets to put the tents on top of.
The plan was to tell people to move into the grid, throw out what you don’t need. If you have a tent already up, wrap it up and you can put it in the tent the city’s giving you while you’re living there. Or you can find a way to put it into storage. But essentially you have to fit all your stuff into this new city-designated tent. You can have a bike and a chair outside of that tent, inside your 15 by 15 square, and that’s how things were supposed to go.
When the city made the announcement, a lot of residents at the park were opposed to it because one, the tents that they have, some of them are pretty expensive. Two is that, like I said earlier, some of them have multiple tents for food and storage, so that was an issue having to consolidate.
And there was another issue of the grid being in rows. People are pretty close to each other. There are, I would say, little communities within this park. So if there are two people that have tension with each other, if there’s someone who has mental health issues, which many of them do, and they essentially have an episode because they’re too close to someone, that can happen. So there was a worry or a concern over that, too.
That prompted advocates who are usually there, specifically from the organizations Food Not Bombs and Delaware Democratic Socialists of America. They had expressed some concerns the day before the city started putting pallets down and tents down about people not wanting to throw away their things or wanting to be spaced out throughout the park.
From what they told me the next day, their plan was to help set up these tents with the city, with Friendship House, which is under contract with the city currently to run the park and to manage the park. They essentially decided that there were too many changes happening with the plan. The grid had gotten a little bit smaller. Essentially it was supposed to be 20 feet by 20 feet in the contract with Friendship House, but it ended up being 15 feet by 15 feet. The tents that came out of the box were not durable and were not waterproof as they were described to be.
The advocates did not like how the plan was going, so the advocates ended up protesting by standing on the wooden pallets that had to go on the grids first to prevent them from putting down tents on top of it. They were also standing in front or blocking the construction vehicles from moving.
The city workers weren’t able to get much done, so [advocates] ended up making an agreement with the city and just leaving it alone. [City workers] gave tents to the few people that did want one and they left. So that’s what happened. That’s a summary of what happened on the first day.
And then there was a secondary protest about a week or so later when the city tried to do some fixes?
Yes. So the day after the initial protest, there was a heavy rainstorm and the rainstorm had blown away tents. Tents were dilapidated as a result of the rainstorm. The city essentially decided to buy newer tents that were a little bit more durable. A week later, the city brought over 20 new tents that were more durable, bigger, and residents seemed a little bit more optimistic about these tents.
But the advocates were still protesting because of the pallets. Their argument was the pallets were not safe because when it did rain, the rainwater was going into the pallets and making the wood rot. There was a concern about people getting splinters from the wood because it wasn’t sanded, and there were small nails protruding out of the wood. So there were concerns around the pallets.
Another agreement was facilitated between the police and the advocates that were there, and they basically said, “Okay, we’re just going to replace the old tents that are here, and we’re going to give a tent to anybody who wants a tent.”
And they agreed on that.
Your first article in April was co-reported with [Spotlight Delaware Deputy Editor] Karl Baker, and it covered those first protests when the tents and pallets were going to be originally installed. Take us through your reporting process on that day. Was this something that you just covered during a 30-60 minute visit to the park, or was it more involved?
It was definitely more involved.
I had gotten there early that morning and I was there for about maybe five, six hours. It was a hot day. Getting there, everyone was already there. Obviously the residents and police were there. Officials from the city’s office were there, and the advocates were there.
Most of that day was kind of a wait-and-see period to see how the city was going to fulfill this plan. I spent most of my time talking to residents, talking to the advocates, getting comments from city officials like [the mayor’s chief of staff] Cerron Cade, who came later in the day.
There were city council members that were there, talking to the Friendship House, trying to understand where the plan came from, because there were things that were developing during the day, like the size of the grid going from 20 by 20 to 15 by 15, or the city at first saying that people weren’t allowed to keep their personal tarps to cover what we now know were not durable tents that they first gave out, and then deciding they were going to let residents keep the tarps.
So there were things that were shifting throughout the day. The idea of the protest didn’t come up until maybe two, three hours in. We didn’t know a protest was going to happen. At first, it was waiting to see how city officials and law enforcement were going to interact with the residents who were there, because there was that threat of – or the rumored threat of – people being arrested. So if that happened, that probably would’ve been the main focus of the story – that police officers are arresting homeless people in the park.
So you were there to see, is that uprising going to happen? Is that conflict going to happen?
That was the intention when I first got there. That’s how I thought things were going to play out, and they ended up playing out a little bit differently.
There was maybe a good hour where people were just waiting because after the advocates decided they were going to protest, the first construction forklift left, and it just disappeared. And then when they decided they were going to try again, they brought another forklift in.
So it wasn’t as fast paced as maybe some people would’ve thought it was going to be. But it was a full day of just kind of wait and see, things changing one by one.
How, and perhaps why, did you decide to tag-team with Karl on the article?
Initially the story wasn’t going to be a tag-team. I went to the park first, and Karl came shortly after, just to check things out, and he was like, “Okay, just keep me updated.” And he went back to the office.
By like 2 o’clock, he came back and I’m looking at him in the distance – I’m like, “Oh my God, yes!” I was very happy for him to be there. The plan at that point in my head was – I’m happy someone else is here because there’s so much going on in this small park. Maybe he can talk to people over there and figure out what’s going on, and I can talk to people at the other end.
That’s when the protest started. I was able to take a few pictures and get a gist of why they were protesting and the conversations that were happening. Karl was essentially saying, “If you need to take a break, go ahead.” Which I very much appreciated. So I ended up leaving and the plan was to come back, but before I came back, he left and said I think we have everything we need.
So at that point it was just, let’s just work on this together because it was a lot.
You are reporting multiple stories a week, each of which takes time to write and report and research. Why spend the whole day at Christina Park? I’m sure in your mind you’re thinking, “I have two other articles I have to be writing.”
For me personally, homelessness is a big part of my coverage area. With the Carney administration, this was a very controversial plan of trying to figure out a way to address homelessness, but not doing it in the way that people would think – using a vacant building to create shelter, or maybe funding the nonprofits who do provide shelter and trying to expand on that to give people housing services.
It was – we have to get people out of Wilmington. Carney has said this, not verbatim but in his own words, explicitly, that we don’t want homeless people roaming the city. We want them in a designated place so we can figure out how to transition them to housing. Which is obviously the long term goal.
To follow the park is like understanding the system the administration created and how it’s unfolding. So I thought it was an important story because it’s relevant to the city policy.
Now the newsworthy pieces, if you condense the amount of time in which that happened, it probably happened over two hours, or less than half the time that I was actually out there. But you have to be there in order to see how things unfold.
There was one reporter who stayed and left and came back, and by the time he came back, there was already something else going on. It was one of those stories where you kind of just needed to be there.
Part of the reason you left and let Karl tag in was that you’d been out there for six hours. It was a hot day, you just needed a drink of water. Does the irony of that ever play on your mind when you’re reporting on an unhoused community? You’re going to leave to get a drink of water to go inside, whereas all these people are still out here?
Yes, definitely. With that specific day, I think that was one of the longest, if not the longest days, I had been outside covering something specific. Personally, that was one of the thoughts that kind of kept me going. I’m like, if the city residents who live in this park and have to deal with the elements every day can handle it, then I can handle it, and I’ll be okay.
You started covering Christina Park in late 2025. What’s been the process for you of getting residents of that community to be willing to speak to you?
So I had maybe an easier transition into meeting people because I was initially introduced to one of the residents who lives at the park by Steven Metraux, who is a professor at UD, for the homelessness series that we were working on at the time. He introduced me and Julia Merola, my colleague, to Ron “Philly” Simmons. We ended up speaking with him, and he ended up introducing me to other people.
But there were things that I had to keep in mind because there are people who go to the park to maybe do a service, give food, do a haircut. They often maybe will come with a camera on or they’ll come to take pictures of things. For many who live at the park, it can feel like an invasion of privacy, or that they are some type of spectacle, which is what I was trying to avoid.
So I’m trying to kind of build an understanding and let people know I’m different. It can be a hard thing to do, but many of the residents that I have spoken with have been pretty receptive. There are people there who want to speak up and give their two cents about what’s going on or tell their story because it is also a population that doesn’t really get that type of support too often.
It’s a demographic where you kind of have to be gentle with them and kind of let them know what you’re there for because they’re also always on guard. They don’t know what’s going to happen. And they can be skeptical, reasonably so. So just speaking with them and building that relationship over time. Obviously as many times as I have been to the park that has helped me get familiar with people, and they know me.
I would have to imagine even just the dynamics of the day that relate to that. The first day you were out there for that protest because the tension was high, maybe fewer people were willing to speak to you. But when you went back the week later, did you have more luck at that point getting residents to share their thoughts on the whole situation?
Yes. It was actually a much better experience in terms of getting people to talk to us. I think that, again, like you said, there was a lot going on the first day.
Also I think on the first day people were still trying to understand what their perspective was on the tent city. It was definitely easier to talk to people on the second day because I think tensions were down, but people also had an opportunity – because it had been a week by that point – to understand where they stood on the city’s plan, and if they agreed with it or didn’t.
There were more tents put out on that second day for people who did want them. And you had people coming – people who didn’t initially live in the park, or were only there for a short period, or came from the Sunday Breakfast Mission because they heard that people were giving out tents. So there were more people there to talk to on the side of, “I support what the city’s doing.”
But there were also more people to talk to on the side of, “I still don’t [support the city], and here’s why.” So I think it was just better energy going around that day to speak with people.
At Spotlight Delaware, we often talk about being part of the news and information ecosystem in the state. And this story, particularly covering the initial protest, I think is a time where that ecosystem functioned pretty well. The News Journal covered it. WDEL covered it. Delaware Public Media, WHYY they’ve been active in the follow-up coverage.
When you are covering a story and are aware that other reporters are present, does that change how you report in any way?
With this particular story, it did, in a sense. There will be other stories – usually these other stories are like city council press releases or the mayor’s budget address – which is easier because we’re just going around the table, and I hear what they ask and I get their answers and they hear what I ask. Everyone’s recording at the same time.
But when I got to the park, The News Journal and WHYY were already there. So part of me was a little anxious because I see them talking to people. In my head, I’m like, “I have to talk to them, too.”
I did feel a little bit more at ease because I knew I had been to the park previously, so I was a little bit more familiar with the environment. I wasn’t panicking, like, “Who do I talk to?” It was just like, I have to find these people to talk to.
My method at first was waiting for them to talk to someone, and then waiting til they finished their conversation, and going up to that person. At some point, we got to a point where I would talk to someone, they would come up next to me, the reporter, and kind of just whip their recorder out. And I was like, “Okay, fine. Let’s just do that because it’s too much going on anyway.” It’s a long day, so I wasn’t mad at it. So, we ended up talking to people at the same time. It wasn’t a crazy competitive environment, as one would think.
Do you read their reports after the fact? Kind of check it against how you reported it?
I do. I check to see what details they added that maybe we missed or maybe we had those details but didn’t really put them in. I personally appreciate – because who wants to see three different news outlets report the same angle of the same event – when everyone did it differently.
There were small pieces that I didn’t have in my story that other people had in theirs. WHYY, their angle on the story because there was a rainstorm the day after – which again, there was this controversy over these tents are not durable, they’re not going to hold up, they’re not safe. That was proven to be true in the rainstorm that happened that night. So, WHYY used that angle: This is what happened to the tents after this day of all this ruckus.
I think we all shared a pretty good perspective of how things went down.
So you never read someone else’s report and go, “I wish I had gotten that.”
Maybe small details. I think it was WDEL who added the cost of the tents, which for those who were critiquing how crappy the tents were, it’s nice to know how much the city spent on it. So I thought that was a good detail.
The easy instinct in a situation like this is to look for clearly delineated sides of this conflict. In this case, it seems like the conflict is the City of Wilmington versus the unhoused.
What are the complexities of the dynamics of this conflict that perhaps have surprised you and that you’ve been trying to capture in your reporting?
It’s very easy to get caught up in the binary controversy, which is the city wants to do this, advocates and residents don’t want it to happen, which isn’t the case.
For some, it is. The advocates obviously want things to be done a certain way, so that people aren’t losing their items or having to throw away their personal items, or they’re not being put in somewhere that’s safer than the tent that they used to be in. For some residents, they don’t want to get rid of their stuff.
But I think what has surprised me the most is that there are people who really do support this initiative, and there are people who are coming from the Sunday Breakfast Mission and other areas to the park specifically because they heard the city was giving out tents.
So I think that was a surprising thing I came across. It begs the question of what are these other places doing? There are people coming from the Sunday Breakfast Mission. They have opted out of that and have said to themselves that they’re going to go to this park and deal with the natural elements, and they would rather do that in their own tent than deal with the shelter that’s maybe one of the only shelters in the city.
So, I think that that was an interesting perspective to come by, that there are people who would rather live in whatever the city gives them as opposed to the alternative.
Thank you for covering all the nuances of this ongoing experiment in caring for the unhoused in Wilmington.
Yes, of course.
The post ‘Beyond the Headlines’ podcast: Covering protests at Christina Park appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Genki Kawamura’s eerie new film expands on a haunting video game that leaves players lost in endless subway tunnels. He explains how this makes viewers and players face their worst fears
Genki Kawamura is something of a polymath. A bestselling author, film-maker, script writer and producer – he is also a lifelong gamer who grew up playing and being inspired by the games of legendary Nintendo designer Shigeru Miyamoto. His latest project Exit 8, now in cinemas, is a fascinating adaptation of the Japanese horror game, developed by a lone coder based in Kyoto, operating under the name Kotake Create. “I was captivated by its game design and the beauty of its visuals,” says Kawamura. “At the same time, I watched many streamers play it. As I did, I realised that although the game is incredibly simple, each player creates their own story, and each streamer brings their own unique reactions. It felt like a device that could reveal something fundamental about human nature.”
The concept behind Exit 8 the game is simple. The player finds themselves trapped in an endlessly looping section of a Tokyo subway station. Viewing the narrow, brightly lit corridors in first-person, you pass the same posters, the same silent commuter, the same locked doors over and over again. The only way to escape is to spot anomalies each time you pass through – maybe the eyes on a poster start following you, maybe the commuter stops and smiles – at which point you have to double back the way you came. Complete eight runs without missing an anomaly and you get to leave through the eponymous way out. There’s no story, no reason for it at all. The mystery is part of the appeal.
Continue reading...Charlotte MacInnes, who is suing Wilson for defamation, says alleged cyber-attack was ‘completely terrifying and caused me a new kind of anxiety’
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Hollywood star Rebel Wilson has been accused of orchestrating a cyber-attack on the social media account of a rising star which led to her nude photo being leaked.
The Pitch Perfect star is being sued by Charlotte MacInnes, the Australian lead actor of her recently released directorial debut, musical comedy The Deb.
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Kevin Heath had hoped there would be solar panels by now on his family farm in southeastern Michigan, roughly 50 miles outside Detroit.
About six years ago, he agreed to lease part of his land for a solar project. It would help him pay off debt and keep the farm in the family, he said. But the opportunity was thwarted when, in 2023, following pushback from some local residents, his township passed an ordinance that banned large solar projects from land zoned for agriculture.
In the fight over solar development, Heath said he was bombarded by just about every argument from critics — including claims that solar fields are a health hazard. “I’ve heard them say that, but I’ve never heard anybody prove that,” Heath said.
“The health and safety issue,” he added, “that is just a joke.”
Michigan has big prospects in solar farming — measured by the expected growth in the capacity of its farms to add electricity directly to the grid. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, most of the nation’s new capacity from this type of solar farm is planned this year for four states, including Michigan. The others, with their hot deserts and big-sky plains, seem more obvious: Texas, Arizona and California.
To some, in Michigan and beyond, this growth feels dangerous. They pressure public officials to stop, stall or otherwise complicate new solar projects with an array of arguments that now go beyond just land use to include public health.
There is little reputable evidence to back their claims. But health concerns have helped power a solar backlash that undercuts efforts to broaden energy sources even as customer costs are rising.
Restrictions on solar development are proliferating nationwide, “often rooted in misinformation or unfounded fears,” including ones that involve “potential environmental and human safety risks,” according to an article published late last year in the Brigham Young University Law Review.
To generate electricity, solar projects harvest energy from the sun. “And that’s really not that different from what a field of corn or alfalfa does,” said Troy Rule, the Arizona State University law professor who authored the article. “In fact, arguably, it’s even more environmentally friendly.”
Still, a state board in Ohio rejected an application for a solar project last month, citing local opposition, even though its staff initially said it met all requirements. Along with other concerns, according to the board, opponents “testified about the potential impacts on the health of residents.”
A bill in Missouri would halt commercial solar projects in the state, including those under construction, through at least 2027, as a state agency develops new regulations. The bill’s emergency clause says this is “deemed necessary for the immediate preservation of the public health, welfare, peace, and safety.”
And, on the eastern edge of Michigan, St. Clair County adopted a novel public health regulation last year that set limits on solar development and battery storage. The move was encouraged by the county’s medical director who, in a memo, warned of the threat of noise, visual pollution and potential sources of contamination. Some local residents have long pressed leaders to act, saying that intrusive noise could worsen post-traumatic stress disorder and other ailments.
Public officials don’t always examine the validity of health claims, according to Rule. And local deliberations rarely compare the impact of solar farms to common agricultural practices, which can lead to runoff from fertilizers and herbicides, for example, or waste lagoons from concentrated animal feeding operations.
People have many reasons for taking issue with large-scale solar development, said Michael Gerrard, an environmental lawyer and founder of Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law. But as for the feared health impact, he said, “there’s no basis for that.”
“People try to come up with a rationale to justify their dislike of things they dislike for other reasons,” Gerrard added.
President Donald Trump’s administration, meanwhile, is adding to the skepticism that renewable energy is worthwhile. Among other moves, it’s phasing out federal tax credits for the solar and wind industries.
It all takes a toll on the effort to build out solar infrastructure. Last year, new solar installations in the U.S. dropped by 14%.


Large solar developments can transform hundreds, or even thousands, of acres of rural land, paneling them with crystalline silicon and tempered glass.
It’s a big change, and people have questions.
Locals worry that electromagnetism and even glare can pose a health risk. They wonder if toxic materials could leach into the soil and contaminate groundwater, if not while the solar site is operational, then some decades in the future, when it reaches the end of its life. That certainly has been the case with orphaned oil wells, which also were built with promises of safety.
But researchers point out that the most common types of panels have only small amounts of such materials, if any. They are encased and unlikely to leach into the soil. Rather than sitting in landfills when a site is decommissioned, most of the materials used in solar panels can be recycled (though the process can be costly).
Craig Adair, vice president of development at Open Road Renewables, which has pursued renewable energy projects in several states, has fielded a range of concerns over the years — from how soil could be contaminated to the possibility of electromagnetic fields causing cancer.
“Those questions, in just about every case, have an answer,” Adair said. “There is rigorous academic study, and there are examples of projects that have been operating.”
While the future farmability of the land is often a concern, many researchers — and farmers — say that a solar lease will help preserve it.
With proper planning on the front end, equipment can be removed from a decommissioned solar site and green space restored, said Steve Kalland, executive director of the NC Clean Energy Technology Center, which, along with its partners, provides technical assistance to local governments in the Carolinas.
And a person’s exposure to the electromagnetic field, or EMF, from a solar farm is roughly the same as what they would encounter from ordinary household appliances, according to researchers. EMF levels also decrease rapidly with distance.
Chronic exposure to noise is also a recurring complaint from critics. In challenging a proposed project from Adair’s company in Morrow County, Ohio, one woman said in a brief to the state siting board that she was troubled about how noise from the facility might affect people with neurological noise sensitivities, including her daughter.
A piece of equipment called an inverter is usually the source of noise on a solar site. It converts the current into the form that’s used on the grid.
But noise, as well as glare, are typically buffered with vegetative landscaping and setbacks, or the distance between the property line and the nearest structure. Inverters can also be placed far from the ears of neighbors.
Noise modeling for the Morrow County project showed that its inverter “will basically be inaudible to the public,” Adair said, and if it ever generated noise above a certain limit, the permit would require the company to bring it back into compliance.
The problem, Adair said, is that evidence-based answers and solutions can get lost in the fervor. They can be drowned out by “opposition activists wanting to try to scare local politicians into opposing a project, even if the concerns that they’re raising are not legitimate concerns,” he said.
Last month, the Ohio Power Siting Board denied a permit to Adair’s Morrow County project. Its order acknowledged that the proposal offered positive benefits, but, it said, “these benefits are outweighed by the consistent and substantial opposition.”
It didn’t specifically cite health concerns as the reason for the denial, but rather, “the varied and numerous concerns raised by both the local government entities and public in the project area.”
But, Adair said in an email, those local governments “cited (unfounded) public health concerns as a reason for their opposition to the project.”
Open Road Renewables plans to apply for a rehearing from the board, Adair said. The company has eight permitted solar projects in Ohio, but because of a siting process that he said is subject to “manipulation and misinformation,” Adair said it won’t initiate any more.

In Michigan’s St. Clair County, it isn’t just a number of residents who are worried about large solar facilities. The Health Department’s medical director echoed their concerns.
In two memos to other county officials, Dr. Remington Nevin said that large solar sites are a public health risk for the area’s predominantly rural residents. The state’s solar standards, he wrote, weren’t enough to protect them from “environmental health hazards, the spread of sources of contamination, nuisance potentially injurious to the public health, health problems, and other conditions or practices which could reasonably be expected to cause disease.”
Any detectable tonal noise, he added, must be considered an unreasonable threat to public health. He recommended new regulations.
The county administrator at the time, Karry Hepting, noted that Nevin’s initial memo “does not address the question or provide support for what are the potential health/environmental risks,” according to internal emails provided to ProPublica. “It appears we will need to hire an outside expert to get the level of detail and supporting data necessary to consider potential next steps,” she added. Hepting said that she’d begun researching prospects.
But County Commissioner Steven Simasko — now the county board’s chair — wrote in an internal email that he accepted Nevin’s medical opinion “as a good standard for the protection of the public health of our citizens” and disagreed with the need for outside input.
Simasko told ProPublica in an email that he believed it wasn’t the role of the administrator to get involved in a public health matter, and that he objected “to essentially paying for a second public health medical opinion” more to Hepting’s liking.
Hepting, who has since retired from her post at the county, disputed Simasko’s depiction of her motivations in a message to ProPublica. “Nothing could be farther from the truth,” she wrote. “It had nothing to do with shopping for a different opinion. Mr. Nevin’s initial memo did not address the initial question posed by the Board. It did not state what the health risks were and what negative health impacts exist. It basically said it’s a risk because he said so.”
To legally justify the adoption of health regulations, Nevin said in his second memo, it wasn’t necessary for his department “to prove, with a precise scientific or medical rationale, that eligible facilities pose an unreasonable threat to the public’s health.” Instead, expert opinion, public comment and the consent of the local government were reason enough, he wrote.
In the end, county officials were persuaded to act. The commissioners approved the Health Department’s new policy for solar energy and battery facilities, including a nonrefundable $25,000 fee to cover the cost of reviewing a proposed project. It also said that policy violations were punishable by up to six months in prison.
An electric utility promptly sued, and a solar company joined the case. The Health Department, they argued, has no authority to issue what are, in effect, zoning regulations. What’s more, they said in legal filings, the county can’t override the solar standards established by the state.

In its legal filings, the county said the health regulations were adopted properly and supported by “substantial, competent, and material evidence.” Facilities that don’t meet its standards “pose a threat to public health,” the county argued.
In response to ProPublica’s detailed queries, a public information officer said that the Health Department would not comment due to litigation.
Nevin said in a podcast interview last year that he wasn’t opposed to solar projects. “The purpose,” he said, “is to identify risks, unreasonable risks, to the public’s health posed by the construction or operation of the facilities, and then take reasonable, measured steps to attempt to mitigate those risks, ideally in a fashion that would continue to allow the facility to be constructed and to operate.”
Solar capacity in Michigan continues to grow, despite local pushback, but so far, only 2.55% of the state’s electricity comes from solar. In Ohio, it’s nearly 6%, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association, a trade group. In Texas, it’s nearly 11%. Michigan is requiring electricity providers to reach an 80% clean energy portfolio by 2035, and 100% by 2040.
Michigan has more local restrictions on renewable energy than any other state, according to the Sabin Center. “Practically nowhere in the country has seen more conflict” about where to allow large solar farms that add electricity directly to the grid than rural Michigan, according to a 2024 article in the Case Western Reserve Law Review authored by a Sabin Center senior fellow.
That includes the conflict in Milan Township, where Heath grew up on an 1,100-acre farm. “I always wanted to farm,” Heath said. He saw leasing part of his land to a solar company as a way to stay afloat and keep the land in the family.
In 2020, Milan Township passed an ordinance that would allow the project to go forward, with Heath’s brother, the township supervisor, abstaining.
But opposition mounted. Critics built a website that argued, among other things, that the project would unleash dangerous electromagnetic radiation. Heath and his siblings were rebuked by their neighbors, Heath said, to the point that his brother, Phil, told the township attorney he was thinking about resigning as supervisor. That same night, he died of a heart attack at age 67.
A few months later, with a new supervisor in place, the township board banned large solar development from land that’s zoned for agriculture. The terms were restrictive enough to effectively ban such a project not only from land owned by Heath and his sister, but from all but the small portion of the township that’s zoned for industry.
Stephanie Kozar, Milan Township’s clerk, said in an email to ProPublica that most residents opposed solar projects on agricultural land, and that the initial ordinance passed during the coronavirus pandemic, before officials had adequately informed residents about potential changes. The updated policy, she said, would “protect the township and allow for responsible development of clean energy in the area.”
To overcome severe local restrictions, the state set standards in 2023 for noise, height, fencing, setbacks and other elements of a large solar project. It also created a pathway where developers, in certain cases, can get a permit from the Michigan Public Service Commission, the state’s regulating authority, rather than from local governments.
In an order, the commission laid out details for how the process would work. But nearly 80 local and county governments, including Milan Township, challenged it in court, arguing the commission was overstepping its authority.
In support of the state, Heath and his sister are represented in a friend-of-the-court brief filed by a legal team affiliated with the Sabin Center, along with local attorneys.
Also part of that brief is Clara Ostrander, who had hoped a solar project would help protect two farmsteads in Milan Township that have been in her family for over 150 years. “We need a responsible neutral party like the Michigan Public Service Commission to review these projects based on facts, not fear or falsehoods,” she testified to state officials ahead of the bill’s passage.
Even with the state process, rising energy demand and eye-popping electricity costs, no new large solar installation has yet been built in Milan Township.
And in February, as snow melted around the “No Industrial Solar” signs that stud the long country roads, a circuit court judge ruled that St. Clair County’s health regulation is “invalid, null, and void.”
But county officials soon opted to appeal, unanimously. “This is very important for the health of St. Clair County and the residents,” said one commissioner before casting his vote.
The post Unfounded Health Concerns Are Powering a Solar Backlash appeared first on ProPublica.
More than 150 people, some with injuries, finished the race after officials stopped recording time.
Donald Trump has said the Duke of Sussex 'is not speaking for the UK' after Prince Harry told the US to honour its obligations in the Ukrainian conflict. 'I think I am speaking for the UK more than Prince Harry … but I appreciate his advice very much,' the US president said, responding to the duke’s lengthy, impassioned speech at the Kyiv Security Forum on Thursday during a surprise visit to show support for Ukraine after four years of war with Russia. Harry, an ex-serviceman, did not claim to be speaking for the UK
Continue reading...A poll shows most Australians think the country is either in a recession or will be soon. Economists have a different view
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Australian households were already on edge before the bombs started falling in Iran.
The cost of living was high and inflation was accelerating again, forcing the Reserve Bank to start ratcheting up interest rates.
Continue reading...Officials assessing route after serac between base camp and camp one deemed unstable and too risky for climbers
A large ice block on the route just above the Mount Everest base camp has forced hundreds of climbers and local guides to delay their attempt to scale the world’s highest peak.
The serac between base camp and camp one was unstable and risky for climbers, said Himal Gautam of Nepal’s department of mountaineering on Friday.
Continue reading...Following a second round of peace talks in Washington, President Trump announced that the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire had been extended by three weeks.
I keep getting told that my feet are too big for a pintand I need to get something bigger like a GT or a XR on the other hand that's the mostly the website and the AI telling me that I also get told that it doesn't matter much And if I'm worried about it to grab the flared foot pads so would a pint with flared foot pads be big enough for a size 12 ft or no
Update : so It seems this hobby just isn't for me I asked if the foot pad would be too small and everyone keeps telling me that it would be underpowered and that I would want a bigger board eventually I'm not 100% sure why I'm not looking to go fast I'm honestly just looking to cruise to the store and back but a lot of people wanted to ignore the question to begin with and tell me how much faster and how much more powerful the other models would be It seems like this just isn't for me I appreciate everyone's help
I was thinking of getting the one wheel pint X is it good for a beginner?
PlayStation 5; Housemarque/Sony
As a fast-firing spaceman, one minute you’re invincible, the next you’re dead – with every battle like watching a firework show through a kaleidoscope
On the planet Carcosa, mangled, blackened trees and crimson flowers take root next to the ruins of some ancient alien civilisation, flanked by statues contorted in pain, tearing at their marble skin. There are metallic tunnels deep underground, chasms of impossible size snaked with cables, so you feel as though you’re exploring the intestines of some giant machine. There’s a House of Leaves quality to these spaces, which shift and change and clearly weren’t built for humans.
You are Arjun Devraj (played by Rahul Kohli), a space security guy who’s on a mission to find missing colonists on an alien world before it all goes a bit Event Horizon and you become the next lost expedition. Classic. There’s some unethical space capitalism happening out here, and Devraj himself is a bit of a traumanaut who brought way too much mental carry-on luggage for this extremely long-haul flight. But it’s nothing that shooting some aliens won’t fix, right?
Continue reading...As Trump lurches from tariffs to wars and Farage makes unrealistic pledges about immigration, their impunity needs to end
Rightwing populists always promise they will get things done when they get into power. Immigration will be halted. Government waste will be eradicated. Traditional values will be revived. National decline will be halted. National greatness will be restored. Relations with the outside world will be redrawn.
Great tasks that, for decades, have been beyond the capability and will of conventional, compromising politicians will be accomplished – and fast. Populist governments will respond decisively to voters’ accumulated frustrations, cut through bureaucracy, and avoid the delays, U-turns and half-finished projects that usually blight democracies. The business of government will be straightforward and highly productive – even heroic – rather than complicated and disappointing.
Andy Beckett is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...The FCC has expanded its foreign-made router ban to also cover consumer Wi-Fi hotspots and LTE/5G home-internet devices, though existing products and phones with hotspot features are not affected. PCMag reports: On Wednesday, the FCC updated its FAQ on the ban, clarifying which consumer-grade routers are subject to the restrictions. Portable Wi-Fi hotspots are usually considered a separate category from Wi-Fi home routers. Both offer internet access, but portable Wi-Fi hotspots use a SIM card to connect to a cellular network rather than an Ethernet cable inside a residence. However, the FCC's FAQ now specifies that "consumer-grade portable or mobile MiFi Wi-Fi or hotspot devices for residential use" are covered under the ban. The ban also affects "LTE/5G CPE devices for residential use," which are installed for fixed wireless access and use a carrier's cellular network to deliver home internet. The FCC didn't immediately respond to a request for comment about the changes. In the meantime, the FAQ reiterates that the foreign-made router ban only applies to consumer-grade devices, not enterprise products. The document also notes that mobile phones with hotspot features remain outside the restrictions. In addition, the ban only affects new router models that vendors plan to sell, not existing models, as T-Mobile emphasized to PCMag.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
No one from US ‘told them they can’t come’, Rubio says
Delegation members with ties to IRGC may be barred
Iran’s footballers will be welcome at this year’s World Cup, secretary of state Marco Rubio said Thursday, distancing the United States government from a proposal that Italy could take their place in the tournament.
Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Rubio denied that the government had asked the Iranian team not to come to the World Cup – but warned the US may yet bar entry to members of the Iranian delegation it judged to have ties to Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which is regarded as a terrorist organisation by Washington and several other governments.
Continue reading...Just picked up a xrc and been riding around on my flat street to get the feel. I’ve snowboarded for a long time and kinda finding out it’s not the same except for having body awareness.
First off are there any good tutorials out there? So far everything on YouTube is awful.
Main question is what is the proper way to go forward? I’ve found that I can either push my foot down, shift my hips forward, or leaning forward.
I’ve also ran into issues going up a slight gradient. I can start to go up but then the board slows down and I stop. I’m assuming it’s a form issue.
Lastly everyone I turn in my board yellow lights appear, I reset and it goes away. Did a quick google search and it wasn’t very helpful in resolving the issue. I shouldn’t have to turn it off and on again every single time right?
One more thing. I know the back foot has two sensors and I’ve noticed if I’m moving slow and turn the board stops as if I lifted my foot. I know my foot isn’t leaving the pad and consciously pressed down harder and it still shuts off. Seems odd if I were to ever need to do slow turns around obsticles
MPs call for investigation into Essar Energy, owner of Stanlow refinery, which shifted loans from ‘Putin’s piggy bank’ VTB to Mauritius
Days after the first wave of Russian tanks surged over the border into Ukraine in March 2022, dockers at a port in northern England took a stand.
Appalled by Vladimir Putin’s brutality, workers at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire vowed never to unload any Russian oil destined for the nearby Stanlow refinery, a major hub for UK fuel supplies.
Continue reading...Two quarterbacks go in Thursday’s first round
The story of the first round of the 2026 NFL draft surrounded a quarterback but it wasn’t No 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza.
As expected, the Las Vegas Raiders selected Mendoza with the first pick on Thursday after he led Indiana to the national title last season. But the shock of the night came when the Los Angeles Rams picked another quarterback, Alabama’s Ty Simpson, at No 13. The Rams current starting quarterback, Matthew Stafford, was named NFL MVP last season and Simpson was projected to be a second-round pick by many analysts. However, Stafford turned 38 in February and the Rams are starting to plan for life without him, although head coach Sean McVay insisted the veteran will remain the starter for the time being. “This is Matthew’s team,” said McVay.
Continue reading...Green groups say European Commission is ‘chief roadblock’ to its own plans, as report finds poor progress four years on
Harmful compounds in children’s nappies and toxic “forever chemicals” in everyday products are among 14 hazardous substance groups hit by lengthy delays to EU pollution controls, according to report findings described by scientists as “extremely frustrating”.
The European Commission sought to push broad categories of dangerous substances off the market with a “restrictions roadmap” in April 2022 that was hailed at the time as the largest-ever ban of toxic chemicals.
Continue reading...We assembled a group of the continent’s leading thinkers to assess the threats: their warnings are stark, but the remedy is within reach
Caught between Vladimir Putin’s Russia, Donald Trump’s US and Xi Jinping’s China, Europe appears in a state of profound crisis, the narrative about its future often filled with fatalism. There is a paradox, however. Despite rising nationalism, the climate crisis and the economic slowdown, few would take issue with the claim that Europe still has a great deal going for it. Asked to choose where in the world they would want to live, there is a good chance that most Europeans would still pick Europe over other continents.
The news is not relentlessly negative either. While much of the political commentary in recent years has focused on the rise of far-right nationalism across the continent, its most prominent symbol, Hungary’s former autocrat Viktor Orbán, was ousted in a landslide election this month.
Continue reading...Like Taiwan, the South China Sea could spark a U.S.-China war.
Had a bad accident on my GT about 2 years ago and just hopped back on for a nice 15 mile ride, feels good to be back on the board again! I’m not letting the fear of falling stop me from having fun again! 🤘🏼
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: New gas projects linked to just 11 data center campuses around the US have the potential to create more greenhouse gases than the country of Morocco emitted in 2024. Emissions estimates from air permit documents examined by WIRED show that these natural gas projects -- which are being built to power data centers to serve some of the US's most powerful AI companies, including OpenAI, Meta, Microsoft, and xAI -- have the potential to emit more than 129 million tons of greenhouse gases per year. As tech companies race to secure massive power deals to build out hundreds of data centers across the country, these projects represent just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the potential climate cost of the AI boom. The infrastructure on this list of large natural gas projects reviewed by WIRED is being developed to largely bypass the grid and provide power solely for data centers, a trend known as behind-the-meter power. As data center developers face long waits for connections to traditional utilities, and amid mounting public resistance to the possibility of higher energy bills, making their own power is becoming an increasingly popular option. These projects have either been announced or are under construction, with companies already submitting air permit application materials with state agencies. [...] The emissions projections for the xAI and Microsoft projects, and all the others on WIRED's list, were pulled directly from publicly-available air permit documents in state databases as well as public air permit materials collected by both Cleanview and Oil and Gas Watch, a database maintained by the Environmental Integrity Project, an environmental enforcement nonprofit. Actual greenhouse gas emissions from power plants are usually lower than what's on their air permits. Air permit modeling is based on the scenario of a power plant constantly running at full capacity. That's rarely the reality for grid-connected power plants, as turbines go offline for maintenance or adjust to the ebbs and flows of customer demand. "Permitted emission numbers represent a theoretical, conservative scenario, not the actual projected emissions," Alex Schott, the director of communications at Williams Companies, an oil and gas company that is building out three behind-the-meter power plants in Ohio for Meta, told WIRED in an email. Internal modeling done by the company, Schott added, shows that actual emissions could be "potentially two-thirds less than what's on paper." The projections involved, however, are still substantial. Even if the actual emissions from these power plants end up being half of the emissions numbers on the permits, they still could create more greenhouse gas emissions than the country of Norway emitted in 2024. This number is, according to the EPA, equivalent to the emissions from more than 153 average-sized natural gas plants. (WIRED's analysis does not include emissions from backup generators and turbines on the data center campuses themselves, which create smaller amounts of emissions.) Energy researcher Jon Koomey says the data center boom has created a shortage of the most efficient gas turbines, pushing some developers toward less efficient models that would need to run longer and produce more emissions. "[Data center operators'] belief is that the value being delivered by the servers is much, much more than the cost of running these inefficient power plants all the time," he said. Michael Thomas, the founder of clean energy research firm Cleanview, has been tracking gas permits for data centers across the country. He calls behind-the-meter power "a crazy acceleration of emissions." He added: "It's almost like we thought we were on the downside of the Industrial Revolution, retiring coal and gas, and now we have a new hump where we're going to rise. That terrifies me in a lot of ways."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The 2026 NFL Draft is taking place in Pittsburgh. Here is the full list of Round 1 picks.
This blog is now closed. For the latest Middle East news, see our full report here
The Pentagon abruptly announced that the secretary of the US navy, John Phelan, would be leaving his job yesterday. No reason was given for the unexpected departure of the navy’s top civilian official, who had addressed a large crowd of sailors and industry professionals at the navy’s annual conference in Washington just a day before the announcement.
People familiar with the dynamics at the Pentagon told the Guardian Phelan was fired. Phelan had an increasingly rocky relationship with the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, and other senior staff.
Continue reading...Elon Musk’s AI chatbot ‘extremely validating’ of delusional inputs and often went further, ‘elaborating new material’, study finds
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Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok 4.1 told researchers pretending to be delusional that there was indeed a doppelganger in their mirror and they should drive an iron nail through the glass while reciting Psalm 91 backwards.
Researchers at the City University of New York (Cuny) and King’s College London have published a paper on how various chatbots protect – or fail to safeguard – users’ mental health.
Continue reading...US president says Tehran hobbled by infighting as Pentagon reportedly briefs mine clearance may take six months
Donald Trump has again said that the US has “total control over the strait of Hormuz”, adding that Iran’s leadership was so hobbled by infighting that it was unclear who was in charge.
But the US president’s claim seemed questionable in the face of the seizure of two container ships by Iranian commandos and a US report warning it could take six months to clear the strait of mines.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 24
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You’ve likely seen that the Senate adopted the plan for the budget blueprint for ICE and border patrol after an all-night “vote-a-rama”.
This is, in fact, not a congressional dance break.
Continue reading...President Trump said Thursday that he was weighing a taxpayer-funded takeover of Spirit Airlines with the intent of reselling the struggling budget carrier after oil prices drop.
Paramount Skydance CEO fetes administration as it weighs $110bn merger with CNN parent WarnerBros Discovery
Dozens of protesters, including members of Congress, gathered along the National Mall on Thursday to protest an “intimate” dinner being held by Paramount Skydance’s chief executive, David Ellison, “in celebration of the first amendment” and “honoring the Trump White House and CBS White House correspondents”, and attended by Donald Trump.
Paramount has faced criticism for the dinner, which has been seen by some as illustrative of the cozy relationship between the Ellisons and the White House – right as the Trump administration is weighing whether to approve the company’s $110bn merger with CNN parent company WarnerBros Discovery (WBD). The dinner comes before Saturday’s White House correspondents’ dinner, which Trump will attend. His defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, is expected to sit at one of the many tables bought by CBS News for the event.
Continue reading...(THIS IS NO WAY ANY BASH TO THE TEAM AT FUNGINEERS)
My board arrived via FEDEX after just 2 business days of ordering. I was pumped.
I take my board out, hop off to tie my shoe real quick, and the board starts popping. This is after maybe 1 mile, and less than an hour from unboxing.
I reached out to support that day, and they sent me a USPS shipping label the following day so i can send my board to the US support team.
I sent my board out the next day, and it arrived to the support team within 3 days.
I received consistent, and professional updates on the status of my board, and in less than a week it was sent off to USPS
my poor board has been stuck in transit with no updates from USPS in 9 days now. The packing was originally supposed to arrive last Saturday.
I am starting to get very annoyed by the situation since i spend 3k on this purchase.
Foreign ministry calls remarks of rightwing podcast host shared by Trump ‘uninformed, inappropriate and in poor taste’
The Indian government has denounced a social media post shared by Donald Trump that described India as a “hellhole”, calling the comments inappropriate and “in poor taste”.
On Wednesday, Trump posted a four-page transcription of remarks made by the conservative podcast host Michael Savage that denounced the US constitutional right to citizenship of everyone born in the country.
Continue reading...TL;DR: New GT-S with less than 100 miles had the battery suddenly drop to 1% when it should have had about 30% left in the tank. What should I do?
I’m riding a brand new GT-S with less than 100 miles on it. This is my first Onewheel and I put all of those miles on it in the past week and change. When I first got the Onewheel I charged it to 100% and then toggled the charge limit on for subsequent charges.
I got it to commute to and from work so much of that riding has been testing my route options. Starting at 90% charge, I ride a little over 5 miles with a lot of up hill sections on the way to work and arrive with right around 50% charge left. The ride home sometimes pushes 6 miles because of the route I take to avoid steep hills and I’m able to get back some regenerative charge on the way home so that the board is at about 30-35% by the time I get home.
Today, I left the house with 89% charge (took a super short lap last night) and got to work with a charge around 45%. Four miles from home after work the board started beeping at me with a red flashing light. I stopped, checked the app, and was met with a 1% battery charge status. Had to do the walk of shame after that.
When I got home, I popped it on the charger, toggled off the 90% limit,and put the board to charge. I plan on leaving it on the charger overnight. Previously, I always unplugged the charger within a half hour of it hitting the 90% cap.
I reached out to Future Motion about it a few minutes ago via email since their phone line is closed for the night. Is there something else I should do?
The bet on the seizing of the Venezuelan leader has drawn scrutiny to insider trading within the growing prediction market industry.
Gannon Ken Van Dyke, who allegedly made more than $400,000 on Polymarket, could face up to 60 years in prison
A US soldier who played a role in the January capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro is now in custody after allegedly cashing in over $400,000 on wagers about the politician’s removal from office, federal authorities announced on Thursday.
Prosecutors say beginning in early December the soldier, Gannon Ken Van Dyke, was involved in planning for the military operation to capture and depose Maduro.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 24, No. 1,770.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 24, No. 1,048.
The soldier allegedly bet on Nicolás Maduro's removal as president of Venezuela before news of the raid was reported, sources told CBS News.
"If you haven't booked for this summer, get busy," Atmosphere Research Group Airline industry analyst Henry Harteveldt told CBS News.
President Trump's renovation kick has now reached the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.
Mendoza is a lock at No 1. What will happen next?
Staff predictions: stars, needs and lower-round gems
Mail david.lengel@theguardian.com with your thoughts
Fernando Mendoza
The QB widely expected to be selected no1 overall by the Las Vegas Raiders, will be the first presumptive top pick to not attend the draft in person since Trevor Lawrence was selected by Jacksonville. Mendoza wants to be at home to share the moment with his mother, who has multiple sclerosis, his father, and other close family and friends. But don’t worry, ESPN TV in the US will have at least one camera inside the Mendoza home to document the moment.
Continue reading...Zamil Limon and Nahida Bristy, both 27, were last seen in the Tampa area on April 16, the University of South Florida Police Department said. Loved ones say their disappearances are out of character and they're concerned.
| Recently bought my first Onewheel. The fender was black and boring but I work at a body shop and told my painter I just wanted red but let him take full creative control! This was the result! It’s a red Camaro ZL1 tricoat with some extra pearls in it! With the addition of black rail guards, it’s almost too perfect to use! 🤣 [link] [comments] |
| Sorry if this is vague or something, but next year I’m heading off to Lehigh which is a pretty hilly school. I have an original pint I got probably about 6 years ago now, and I was thinking of using that for transportation. My main worry is battery life and if the motor could make it up the hill (for some perspective I’m 5’7 and ~100 pounds). Anyway, are there any good upgrades I should get for it? I know people mod the fuck out of these things (not the pint specifically just one wheels in general) and not sure if theres anything I should get, cause it is a old cheap board so not sure if its even worth upgrading. That and do you guys think it’ll work out well? Not sure what kinda slopes it can handle or how often I’ll be using it to commute around. Mb for it being kinda vague just curious what your guys thoughts are on using this for getting around college. [link] [comments] |
Meta Account lets you manage and access all your Meta accounts from a single unified dashboard.
Mullvad's new approach addresses an issue with Apple app updates, but you'll need to do more hands-on maintenance.
Attorneys for a DOJ program that accredits nonprofits to help provide legal help to immigrants were transferred last month, creating setbacks for a number of legal aid groups.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio is leading the ambassador-level negotiations, but it remains unclear whether the administration will push for a permanent resolution.
Apple has fixed a bug that could cause parts of Signal notifications to remain stored on iPhones even after messages disappeared and the app was deleted. "Affected users concerned about push notifications can update their devices to stop what Apple characterized as 'notifications marked for deletion' that 'could be unexpectedly retained on the device,'" reports Ars Technica. "According to Apple, the push notifications should never have been stored, but a 'logging issue' failed to redact data." From the report: Vulnerable users hoping to evade law enforcement surveillance often use encrypted apps like Signal to communicate sensitive information. That's why users felt blindsided when 404 Media reported that Apple was unexpectedly storing push notifications displaying parts of encrypted messages for up to a month. This occurred even after the message was set to disappear and the app itself was deleted from the device. 404 Media flagged the issue after speaking to multiple people who attended a hearing where the FBI testified that it "was able to forensically extract copies of incoming Signal messages from a defendant's iPhone, even after the app was deleted, because copies of the content were saved in the device's push notification database." The shocking revelation came in a case that 404 Media noted was "the first time authorities charged people for alleged 'Antifa' activities after President Trump designated the umbrella term a terrorist organization." "We're grateful to Apple for the quick action here, and for understanding and acting on the stakes of this kind of issue," Signal's post said. "It takes an ecosystem to preserve the fundamental human right to private communication." In their post, Signal confirmed that after users update their devices, "no action is needed for this fix to protect Signal users on iOS. Once you install the patch, all inadvertently-preserved notifications will be deleted and no forthcoming notifications will be preserved for deleted applications."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Meta said it would cut 10% of it employees while Microsoft will offer voluntary retirement to about 7% of workers
Meta and Microsoft are trimming their workforces by thousands as they make heavy investments in AI and executives claim that the technology is meeting their companies’ productivity needs.
Meta told staff on Thursday that on 20 May it would cut some 10% of its personnel – just under 8,000 employees– to boost efficiency, part of a layoff plan made months ago. The company is also closing about 6,000 open roles. The same day, Microsoft announced to employees, for the first time, that it would offer voluntary retirement to about 7% of its American workforce of roughly 125,000.
Continue reading...These are the agencies detaining people across the US – mostly, but not all, under the umbrella of the Department of Homeland Security
When the Trump administration ordered a surge of armed federal immigration enforcement personnel on to the streets of Minneapolis, the Department of Homeland Security declared it the largest operation in its history and the liberal midwestern city became Donald Trump’s latest chosen hotspot.
Such escalations mark the US president’s agenda of mass arrests and deportations from the US interior. The highest-profile efforts involve officers from multiple agencies rushing to prominent Democratic-led US cities, against local leaders’ wishes. But coast to coast, federal officers have been raiding homes, businesses, commercial parking lots – even schools, hospitals and courthouses. The efforts have delighted the president’s hardcore Make America Great Again voter base, but are also tearing families apart and spreading fear and even death on the streets and in detention.
Continue reading...The Russian leader has not yet committed to attend the annual gathering of world leaders, which is scheduled for December at the president’s Doral golf resort.
Baton Rouge police chief says attack unfolded after argument inside food court at Mall of Louisiana
At least one person has been killed and five people were injured and transported to the hospital Thursday when two groups exchanged gunfire inside the food court at the Mall of Louisiana in Baton Rouge, according to police.
Several of the people involved ran off as a large police presence responded.
Continue reading...Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders have approved Paramount Skydance's takeover bid, moving the massive Hollywood merger a step closer to completion. It's not a done deal quite yet, though, as it still faces regulatory scrutiny and fierce opposition from critics who warn it will further concentrate media power. The Associated Press reports: Per a preliminary vote count Thursday, Warner Bros. Discovery said the overwhelming majority of its stakeholders voted in support of selling the entire business to Skydance-owned Paramount for $31 a share. Including debt, the deal is valued at nearly $111 billion based on Warner's current outstanding shares. That means Warner-owned HBO Max, cult-favorite titles like "Harry Potter" and even CNN could soon find themselves under the same roof with Paramount's CBS, "Top Gun" and the Paramount+ streaming service. David Zaslav, CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, said in a statement that stockholder approval marks "another key milestone toward completing this historic transaction." Paramount added that it looks forward to closing in the coming months, and "realizing the creation of a next-generation media and entertainment company." [...] Meanwhile, Warner shareholders rejected a separate measure Thursday outlining post-merger payments for company executives.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Florida Republican Lt. Gov. Jay Collins, an Army combat veteran, attacked his leading opponent in the state’s gubernatorial race over not supporting military pay raises.
The Collins campaign distributed a 13-page document titled "Congressman Byron Donalds’ Liabilities." Donalds holds a double-digit lead against his primary opponents.
"Byron Donalds voted with (U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-.N.Y.) and the radical Socialist Squad against three pay raises for military service members, including the largest pay raise for the military in 22 years," the document said, referencing Donalds’ votes against the National Defense Authorization Act in 2022, 2023 and 2025.
The Collins campaign lobbed this and many other attacks about Donalds’ criminal history and past associates after an April 20 event in St. Petersburg.
Collins’ campaign referred PolitiFact to the document Collins distributed. But framing Donalds’ votes as being solely against military pay is misleading.
The National Defense Authorization Act is a sweeping annual package that authorizes billions in funding and policy for the U.S. Defense Department, with several non-military provisions tacked on. Donalds voted against the legislation in the three years Collins references, but he also supported it in two other years. Each bill included military pay raises.
Donalds’ campaign told PolitiFact his mixed voting record reflects his disagreement with other provisions in the bills, not because he opposed raising military pay.
When a reporter asked Donalds about Collins’ attack, he referenced the bills he voted against during President Joe Biden’s administration, saying they included policies that were "actually hurting our military men and women."
"In 2022, yeah I voted against the NDAA," Donalds said April 20, "because the Biden Administration had a radical policy in there that Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer were pushing through Congress. Of course I voted against it, and so did all conservatives in Congress."
The bill had provisions that some Republicans in Congress didn’t like, but many conservatives in both chambers ended up voting for it.
The National Defense Authorization Act, which Congress has passed every year since 1961, authorizes about $800 billion in defense spending in recent years. It serves as the primary vehicle for setting military salaries, housing allowances and health benefits. It also approves funding for a wide swath of military operations, including research, training, construction and equipment procurement.
The legislation frequently includes non-military provisions with which Democrats and Republicans disagree, prompting members of both parties to routinely vote against it.
"It would be disingenuous to pull out one topic — like the pay raise — and say a vote against the annual defense authorization bill is a vote against the raise," said Elaine McCusker, a senior fellow at the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute who focuses on defense strategy and budget, noting that the legislation is "thousands of pages."
Donalds voted for the National Defense Authorization Act twice — in 2021 and 2024 — and against it three times in 2022, 2023 and 2025, the last one under President Donald Trump. Each bill included raises for servicemembers and became law.
Donalds and 34 other House Republicans voted against the NDAA in 2022. His campaign characterized it as a "Biden agenda bill" with "no amendments and Ukraine funding" that "included (diversity, equity and inclusion) programs, climate initiatives and no spending offsets."
In 2023, the NDAA provided a 5.2% military pay increase, the largest for military members in over 20 years. At the time, Donalds said he voted against the legislation because it included the reauthorization of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, a law passed after 9/11 that has been used to surveil American citizens.
"There should be no clean reauthorizations of FISA in the National Defense Authorization Act," Donalds told the late Charlie Kirk on Dec. 11, 2023, a few days before the vote. "That should be removed immediately. I completely disagree with House leadership on that. That should not occur." Donalds’ campaign also pointed to anti-DEI provisions the Senate removed from the bill, and climate change-related requirements for the Pentagon.
The House passed the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2026 on Dec. 10, 2025, with a 312-112 vote. The bill authorized $900 billion in Pentagon programs, which included a 3.8% pay raise for service members. Donalds voted against it. (Other Florida Republicans also opposed it, Reps. Greg Steube and Anna Paulina Luna.)
The bill required the Pentagon to release additional information on U.S. boat strikes in the Caribbean and expanded support for Ukraine. Donalds’ and other Republicans’ resistance to the bill involved the Ukraine aid and missing provisions banning the government from issuing central bank digital currency.
Donalds hasn’t said why he supported the NDAA bills in 2021 and 2024. However, some House Republicans praised the 2021 legislation as a "clean" defense bill from which Democratic provisions on "red flag" gun laws and initiatives to eliminate extremism in the military had been stripped out. The 2024 bill banned certain types of medical or surgical gender reassignment procedures for children of service members on military health plans.
Collins said Donalds voted "against three pay raises for military service members, including the largest pay raise for the military in 22 years."
This is cherry-picked.
Donalds voted against the National Defense Authorization Act three times, and for it twice. But the legislation is multi-faceted. While it includes increasing military pay, it also authorizes billions in funding for military operations, and typically tacks on several unrelated provisions.
Donalds said his votes reflect his disagreement with other provisions in the bills, not military pay.
The statement contains an element of truth about Donalds’ vote record but gives the wrong impression that he opposed military pay raises.
We rate it Mostly False.
The path of the USS George H.W. Bush to the Middle East has been closely watched as President Trump demands progress in peace negotiations with Tehran.
The company adds a feature that will reveal what topics teens delve into with AI on Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.
If you have the right Samsung hub, you can now get Ikea's low-cost devices without needing any expensive add-ons.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 24, No. 578.
Coach to attend counseling in wake of recent events
NFL previously said it will not investigate matter
The New England Patriots have given their backing to Mike Vrabel as new photos of their head coach and NFL reporter Dianna Russini emerged on Thursday.
Russini resigned from her post at the Athletic last week after the New York Post published photos of her and Vrabel embracing and holding hands at an Arizona resort. The pair are married to different people and have said their relationship is platonic. On Wednesday, Vrabel said he will miss day three of the NFL draft on Saturday to undergo counseling in the fallout from the controversy. He made an appearance before Thursday’s draft where he said “my priorities are my family and this football team. In that order. ... My family needs me this weekend, and that’s where I’ll be.”
Continue reading...
President Donald Trump has regularly said that drug-price discounts on his watch are greater than 100%, which isn’t mathematically possible. Now his health and human services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is trying to back up his faulty math.
During an April 22 Senate Finance Committee hearing, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., questioned Kennedy about discounts available on the federally run TrumpRx website. She expressed doubt about Trump’s past statements about price reductions up to 600%.
Kennedy said, "President Trump has a different way of calculating percentages. There’s two ways of calculating percentages. If you have a $600 drug and you reduce it to $10, that's a 600% reduction."
In an Oval Office event the following day, Kennedy brought up the exchange with Warren and reiterated his statement.
"If the drug was $100 and it raised the price to $600 that would be a 600% rise," Kennedy said. "If it drops from $600 to $100, that's a 600% savings. And the President used that mathematical device to illustrate the magnitude of the theft that has been happening against our country and our people."
But well-established mathematical principles have only one way to calculate percentage change, and neither Trump nor Kennedy did it correctly.
In Kennedy’s example to Warren during the Senate Finance Committee hearing, if a drug was reduced from $600 to $10, that would represent a 98.3% decrease, not a 600% decrease. Specifically, to calculate that percentage decrease, you would subtract $10 from $600 and divide the answer ($590) by the original price, $600. In Kennedy’s case, $590 divided by $600 equals .983, or 98.3%.
"It’s mathematically impossible" for the reduction to be higher than 100% and for the consumer to still have to pay something, said Maryclare Griffin, associate professor in the University of Massachusetts-Amherst’s mathematics and statistics department.
The Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to an inquiry for this article.
Trump has made similar claims before — citing decreases as high as 1,000% — but price cuts this large are not mathematically possible.
In August, when The Associated Press fact-checked an earlier instance of Trump making a similar statement, the White House did not explain or justify the underlying math. At the time, White House spokesman Kush Desai said, "It’s an objective fact that Americans are paying exponentially more for the same exact drugs as people in other developed countries pay, and it’s an objective fact that no other Administration has done more to rectify this unfair burden for the American people."
A 100% reduction would mean that a consumer pays nothing for a medication.
A 200% reduction would mean the pharmaceutical company pays the consumer the full price of the medicine.
A 400% reduction would mean the company pays the consumer three times the price of the medicine.
A 500% cut would bring the consumer four times the price, and a 600% cut would give the consumer five times the price to accept the medicine. Any of these decreases are unrealistic.
"There’s no other way to calculate percentage change, and Trump's way is not a valid way," said Brooke Nichols, a mathematical modeler and health economist at Boston University’s School of Public Health. "The maximum amount a price can decrease is by 100%. It's possible to increase a price by 600%, but it doesn't work the other way around."
Kennedy said, "There's two ways of calculating percentage" decreases. "If you have a $600 drug and you reduce it to $10, that's a 600% reduction."
That’s not how percentage decreases work. For anything higher than a 100% decrease in price, the seller would be paying the customer to possess the drug.
In Kennedy’s example to Warren, a $590 reduction in the price of a $600 drug would represent a 98.3% decrease, not a 600% decrease.
We rate the statement Pants on Fire!
PolitiFact Staff Writer Grace Abels contributed to this report.
Travelers could see airline fares rise and fewer flights available in the coming weeks, Chevron CEO Mike Wirth said in an interview with "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan."
Under President Donald Trump’s second term:

This is the first update in our “Numbers” series for Trump’s second term. Expect additional updates to be published every three months for the remainder of his presidency, as we did for his predecessors, starting with President Barack Obama in 2012.
These are just some of the many economic and social statistics that indicate how the U.S. is faring. We will include a few other data categories, such as household income and the poverty rate, later this year when the newest government figures are available.
We only present the numbers, which, depending on the reader’s perspective, may seem positive, negative or neither. How much credit or blame the president should receive for the statistics is also in the eye of the beholder.
Job growth slowed markedly, and unemployment crept up during Trump’s second term. Manufacturing jobs continued to decline despite new tariffs on imports. Job opportunities declined.
Employment — Employment continued growing during Trump’s first 14 months in office, but far more slowly than it had in the previous 14 months.
The most recent figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show an increase of only 369,000 in total nonfarm employment between January 2025 and March 2026. The total went up four times faster before, rising by 1,565,000 during the final 14 months of President Joe Biden’s administration, even after the BLS revised Biden’s figures downward in February as a result of its annual “benchmarking” study.
Much of the sluggishness under Trump is due to the president’s deliberate slashing of the federal workforce. Federal government employment has fallen by 352,000, or 11.7%, since he took office.
Looking only at the private sector — excluding federal, state and local government workers — 609,000 jobs were added during Trump’s term so far. But that’s still far less than the 1,044,000 added in the preceding 14 months.
Last August, after the BLS reported only 73,000 jobs had been gained in July, Trump called the figures “rigged” and “phony” and fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer. But the numbers have only grown worse since then. The gain for July has been revised downward to 64,000, and the BLS reports that the economy actually lost jobs in August, October, December and February.
Manufacturing Jobs — A year ago, Trump predicted a flood of new factory jobs as he announced sweeping new tariffs on what he called “Liberation Day,” April 2, 2025.
“Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country,” he said. But so far that hasn’t happened. The economy has continued to lose manufacturing jobs.
During Trump’s first 14 months, the loss was 82,000, following a loss of 186,000 in the preceding 14 months.
Labor Force Participation — The labor force participation rate declined a bit in Trump’s second term, dropping from 62.6% in January 2025 to 61.9% as of March.
The rate is the portion of the population over age 16 that is working or seeking work. It generally has been in a long decline as the population ages and people retire.
Unemployment — The unemployment rate has gone up slightly since Trump took office. It was 4.0% in January 2025, and most recently was 4.3% in March.
But that is still well below the historical norm. The median rate for all months since 1948 is 5.5%.
Job Openings — The number of job openings declined by 549,000 under Trump, to 6.9 million as of the last day of February. It’s a drop of 7.4%.
Meanwhile, the number of people officially listed as unemployed and seeking work rose by 374,000, to 7.2 million as of March. When Trump took office there were more openings than job-seekers. Now it’s the opposite.
CPI — Trump campaigned on a promise to reduce inflation, but since he took office it has worsened a bit.
In the 12 months before Trump took office, the Consumer Price Index, the most commonly cited measure of inflation, rose 3.0%. And in the most recent BLS report, the 12-month increase was 3.3%.
Over Trump’s first 14 months in office, the CPI went up 3.6%, pushed up most recently by the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, which have sent up gasoline prices in particular.
Fuel prices — always volatile — had been a bright spot for Trump before. As of our previous “Trump’s Numbers” report in January, the national average price for regular gasoline at the pump had declined to $2.78 a gallon, down from $3.11 the week he was sworn in for his second term. But as of the week ending April 20, it was up to $4.04, according to the Energy Information Administration. That’s an increase of 29.9% since Trump’s inauguration.
Inflation is still higher than the Federal Reserve would like, and it’s going in the wrong direction as measured by the Fed’s preferred metric, the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index, compiled by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
The central bank’s target is a 2% annual increase in the PCE. When Trump took office, the 12-month increase in the PCE was 2.5%. But the most recent report put the 12-month increase at 2.8% in February. And that does not reflect the effects of the war on Iran, which began the last day of February. (PCE figures take longer to collect than the CPI, but the Fed prefers the measure because it is more comprehensive and adjusts more quickly to consumers’ buying habits.)
Wages — Wage increases accelerated under Trump, even adjusted for worsening inflation.
The average weekly earnings of all private-sector workers, adjusted for inflation, rose 1.0% during Trump’s first 14 months. They were rising when he took office, but had only gone up 0.4% in the preceding 14 months.
Those figures include professionals, executives and supervisory employees, whose pay is normally higher. But rank-and-file wage earners are seeing gains just as rapid as those of their bosses. For private-sector production and nonsupervisory employees, real average earnings also rose 1.2% under Trump through March, after a 0.8% rise in the preceding 14-month period.
The U.S. economy resembled a roller coaster last year – with weak first and fourth quarters but strong second and third quarters.
The end result: a respectable, but underachieving 2.1% growth for the year.
“Despite a solid 2.1% expansion for the full year, 2025 will likely be remembered as the year that ‘could have been,’” EY-Parthenon Chief Economist Gregory Daco said in an April 9 analysis. “A rare confluence of supply shocks — tariffs, tighter immigration and elevated policy uncertainty — constrained activity, leaving growth below what strong organic productivity gains and rapid AI adoption would have otherwise supported.”
The nation’s real gross domestic product declined at an annual rate of 0.6% in the first quarter and expanded by only 0.5% in the fourth quarter, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In between, the economy grew at the robust annual rates of 3.8% in the second quarter and 4.4% in the third quarter.
For the full year, the U.S. finished with the weakest GDP since 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic wrecked the economy. (See the chart below.)
&&As for this year, economic experts project that the U.S. economy will continue to grow – but they warn that projections carry what S&P Global called “a high degree of unpredictability” because of the Middle East conflict.
In an economic outlook released March 25, S&P Global Ratings projected 2.2% real GDP growth for the U.S. this year, assuming that the war will result in only a “temporary, supply-driven oil shock that recovers inside the year.”
Similarly, Michael Wolf, a senior manager and global economist at Deloitte Touche, wrote in late March that Deloitte economists project U.S. growth at 2.2% – while noting that “conditions remain highly fluid.”
Daco, who is also the president of the National Association for Business Economics, said in a press release that an NABE survey of economic forecasters conducted from March 5 to March 13 found that most of those surveyed expect “recent geopolitical developments to reduce 2026 GDP growth.”
As of April 21, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow model was projecting growth of 1.2% for the first quarter. The BEA first quarter estimate will be released on April 30.
When Trump took office, consumers surveyed by the University of Michigan expressed concern that his plan to increase tariffs would increase prices, and that turned out to be true. Consumers now have an added inflationary concern: the joint U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran that started on Feb. 28. Over a nearly two-month period, the war has driven up the cost of oil, gasoline, and other goods and services.
Consumer sentiment, which already has been stubbornly low under Trump, has now hit a record low.
The university’s preliminary Index of Consumer Sentiment for April was 47.6 – the lowest since at least 1978, according to the university’s online database.
“Consumer sentiment sank about 11% this month, extending a decline that began with the start of the Iran conflict,” Joanne W. Hsu, director of the Surveys of Consumers, said in a press release issued this month. “Demographic groups across age, income, and political party all posted setbacks in sentiment, as did every component of the index, reflecting the widespread nature of this month’s fall.”
April’s preliminary number, which could change when it is finalized on April 24, is 24.1 points lower than it was in January 2025, when Trump took the oath of office for a second time.
In its most recent Consumer Confidence Survey, the Conference Board — a research organization with more than 2,000 member companies — reported that consumer confidence “improved modestly” in March for the second straight month. “Nonetheless, the Index has been on a general downward trend since 2021,” Dana M. Peterson, the board’s chief economist, said in a March 31 press release.
The Conference Board’s April report is scheduled to be released April 28.
Homeownership — Homeowner rates have remained largely unchanged under Trump.
The most recent homeownership rate, which the Census Bureau measures as the percentage of “occupied housing units that are owner-occupied,” was 65.7% in the fourth quarter of 2025 — identical to the rate during Biden’s last quarter in office.
Last year’s fourth quarter rate was up slightly from the previous quarter, but the difference was not statistically meaningful, according to a February press release from the bureau.
The homeownership rate remained largely unchanged last year even though the Federal Reserve cut interest rates three times and mortgage rates declined.
Days before Trump took office, the average 30-year fixed rate mortgage was 7.04% for the week ending Jan. 16, 2025, according to Freddie Mac. As of the week ending April 16, the average 30-year fixed rate mortgage was 6.30%.
In a Dec. 12 article, Realtor.com Senior Economic Research Analyst Hannah Jones said homeownership rates continue to be affected by “[p]ersistent affordability challenges and a shortage of reasonably priced homes.”
Home Prices – Home prices have remained fairly stable under Trump.
The national median price of an existing, single-family home sold in March was $412,400, according to the National Association of Realtors. That was only 3.6% higher than it was in January 2025, when Biden left office and the median price was $398,100.
Year-over-year, the median sales price in March was only 1.25% higher – a record high for March, despite a decline in home sales for the month, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said in a press release. Existing single-family home sales were down 3.5% from February and 0.3% year-over-year, the NAR data show.
“March home sales remained sluggish and below last year’s pace,” Yun said. “Lower consumer confidence and softer job growth continue to hold back buyers.”
“Because inventory remains limited,” he added, “the median home price rose to a new record high for the month of March.”
Existing home sales and prices for April are scheduled for release on May 11.
Illegal immigration continues to be historically low since Trump took office for his second term.
While it’s impossible to know how many people successfully cross illegally into the U.S., for the purposes of our Numbers stories going back to Obama, we have calculated the change in border apprehensions as a proxy to measure illegal border crossings. Over the last 12 months under Trump, there were 85,218 immigrants apprehended attempting to illegally cross the southern border. That’s down nearly 92% from the last 12 months under Biden.
Colleen Putzel-Kavanaugh, an associate policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, said that one of the biggest drivers of the dramatic drop in illegal immigration was a new policy, which Trump invoked on his first day in office, that “effectively … people were no longer able to apply for asylum” at the border. That was one of the major drivers of immigration during the Biden administration, with hundreds of thousands of migrants crossing the border and “sort of waiting to be intercepted and asking for asylum.”
“So now, without access to that kind of protection, that certainly impacted the number of people who are trying to cross the border,” Putzel-Kavanaugh told us.
In addition, Trump abolished the so-called “catch and release” policy, such that people apprehended at the border are processed for expedited removal or placed in detention, rather than some, such as those seeking asylum, being released into the U.S. pending an immigration hearing.
That is what Trump was apparently referring to in a speech at a Turning Point USA event on April 17, when he said he had taken an “open border and created the most secure border in U.S. history, one of the most secure borders anywhere in the world with zero illegal aliens coming into our country in the past 11 months. Zero.”
But, Putzel-Kavanaugh said, because “people are just immediately processed for removal,” it’s also possible things are returning to the “standard migration pattern” where people are seeking to evade detection.
One other major factor in the decrease in illegal immigration to the U.S. has been the Trump administration’s focus on interior enforcement and deportations, which, Putzel-Kavanaugh told us, “likely has somewhat of a chilling factor for people who maybe were thinking about coming to the US.”
According to publicly available Immigration and Customs Enforcement data, the average daily population of those detained by ICE during the first three months of 2026 is up nearly 300% compared with the last three months under Biden. The Trump administration is also arresting a greater percentage of people who have neither criminal convictions nor pending criminal charges. In the last three months of the Biden administration, 65% of those detained by ICE had criminal convictions and 29% had pending criminal charges. Just 6% had neither. By contrast, in the first three months of 2026, 30% of those detained by ICE had criminal convictions and 31% had pending charges. The percentage of those detained by ICE with neither criminal convictions nor pending charges was 39%.
In Trump’s second term, refugee admissions have all but stopped – except for South Africa’s white minority Afrikaners.
As we wrote last year, Trump signed an executive order on his first day back in office that called for an indefinite suspension of all refugee admissions until the program “aligns with the interests of the United States.”
But Trump issued an order on Feb. 7, 2025, making an exception for Afrikaners. When asked about the exception, the president told reporters there was “a genocide that’s taking place” against white farmers in the country – which, as we wrote, distorts the facts.
Since February 2025, the U.S. admitted only 5,005 refugees in Trump’s first full 14 months in office – including 4,838 refugees from South Africa, according to the State Department’s monthly refugee admissions reports.
That’s an average of 357.5 per month, or 92.5% fewer than the monthly average of 4,741 per month under Biden.
For fiscal year 2026, which began Oct. 1, 2025, Trump capped refugee admissions at just 7,500. In the first six months of the current fiscal year, the Trump administration has resettled 4,499 refugees and all but three came from South Africa.
Data on how health insurance coverage has changed under Trump’s second term is slowly being released. In late January, the National Health Interview Survey published a preliminary report on the first six months of 2025 that found no change in the percentage of the population lacking health insurance, compared with the full-year report for 2024.
For January to June 2025, 8.2% of the U.S. population was uninsured, the same figure as the prior year. In raw numbers, 27.5 million people lacked insurance in the first half of 2025, a figure that “was not significantly different” from the 27.2 million who lacked insurance in 2024, the report said. The NHIS measures the uninsured at the time people are interviewed.
The NHIS, a project of the National Center for Health Statistics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, used to release quarterly preliminary reports, but as of last year, it said it would switch to biannual reports only. A full-year report for 2025 is scheduled to be published in June.
Annual reports from the Census Bureau, typically released in September, measure those who were uninsured for the entire calendar year. The report for 2024, the latest available, similarly put the uninsured rate at 8%.
The 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act is expected to increase the number of people who lack health insurance, but the impact will occur over several years. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated the uninsured would increase by 10 million people over 10 years, with most of the increase due to the law’s changes to Medicaid. For 2026, the rise was estimated at 1.3 million people. (See the link to estimated changes in people without health insurance.)
The latest figures from the Bureau of Economic Analysis show that the U.S. trade deficit in goods and services may be headed for a decrease in 2026 after rising in 2025.
During the most recent 12 months ending in February, the U.S. imported about $775.6 billion more in goods and services than it exported. That trade gap was down 14.15% from the annual trade deficit of $903.5 billion in 2024.
The trade deficit rose to almost $911.7 billion in 2025, which was influenced by larger than usual monthly deficits in January, February and March of last year. As we have written, those three monthly deficits — all above $100 billion — were the result of U.S. importers stocking up on goods to get ahead of a number of tariffs on imported products that Trump had said he planned to implement.
Trump claimed that his tariffs would help reduce, or even eliminate, the trade deficit, which had increased by 34.1% under Biden.
&&Violent crime has declined. The latest data comes from several groups that monitor crime statistics. The FBI’s annual nationwide report for 2025 won’t be released until the fall.
AH Datalytics, an independent criminal justice data analysis group, documents an 11% drop in the number of violent crimes from 2024 to 2025, based on data from 445 law enforcement agencies across the country covering nearly a third of the U.S. population. Murders declined 17.9%, and robberies were down 19.2%. The number of property crimes decreased 12.2%. The number of violent and property crimes continued to go down in January and February, compared with those months last year.
AH Datalytics’ charts on the longer-term trend show an increase in the number of murders starting in 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a decline in the numbers since 2022.
The Major Cities Chiefs Association, an organization representing police executives in large cities, similarly found a 19.3% decrease in the number of homicides and a 19.8% drop in the number of robberies in 2025, compared with 2024. That’s based on data from 67 law enforcement agencies.
The Council on Criminal Justice, a nonprofit think tank, found similar percentage decreases among 35 U.S. cities from 2024 to 2025. Its year-end report, released in January, said that when the FBI publishes nationwide data later this year, “there is a strong possibility that homicides in 2025 will drop to about 4.0 per 100,000 residents. That would be the lowest rate ever recorded in law enforcement or public health data going back to 1900, and would mark the largest single-year percentage drop in the homicide rate on record.” The existing historic low is a rate of 4.4 per 100,000 population in 2014.
“The overall reduction in crime, especially homicide, is welcome news,” Ernesto Lopez, lead author of the report and a CCJ senior research specialist, said in a press release. “While the big story here is that homicide saw the largest one-year increase [in 2020] and the largest one-year decrease in a short period of time, we should not forget that homicides had been steadily dropping since the late 2000s. It is possible that these rates reflect a longer-term downward trend punctuated by periods of elevated homicides.”
CCJ also published comments from several criminal justice experts on what might be driving the recent decline in homicides. “Researchers and practitioners have pointed to a range of possible contributors, including changes in criminal justice policy and practice, shifts in routine activities and social behavior, economic conditions, technology use, and local violence prevention efforts,” the group said.
Corporate profits have set records every year since 2015. The streak continued last year under Trump, but at a slower rate.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that after-tax corporate profits hit a record $3.51 trillion in 2025, but that was just 0.6% higher than the previous year. (See the chart below.)
&&Under Biden, the annual average growth in profits was 31% in 2021, 3.8% in 2022, 7.8% in 2023 and 7.9% in 2024, according to BEA data.
The estimate of first quarter profits for this year will be released May 28.
It’s been a turbulent ride for the stock market since we wrote the first “Trump’s Numbers” piece of this term on Jan. 20. Stock prices fell dramatically after the U.S. and Israel began airstrikes on Iran starting in late February, and Iran retaliated by blocking the Strait of Hormuz, an important waterway for international trade. But with subsequent peace talks amid a fragile ceasefire, the stock market has rebounded and again reached new heights, just as it had under Biden.
The S&P 500, which is made up of 500 large-cap companies, closed at roughly 19% higher on April 22 than it was three days before Trump’s inauguration in January 2025.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, made up of 30 large corporations, was up 13.8% over that same period.
Meanwhile, the Nasdaq composite index, comprising more than 3,000 companies, many in the technology sector, surged by almost 25.6% between Jan. 17, 2025, and April 22.
The gains under Trump have come after substantial increases during the Biden administration, when the S&P rose 57.8%, the Dow Jones went up 40.6%, and the Nasdaq increased by almost half.
Crude oil production in the U.S. averaged roughly 13.6 million barrels per day during Trump’s most recent 12 months in office (ending in January), according to Energy Information Administration data published in late March. That was 2.7% higher than the average daily amount of crude oil produced in 2024.
The 13.6 million barrels produced each day in 2025 set a new U.S. record, exceeding the previous high of more than 13.2 million barrels produced daily in 2024. The EIA said that even with “less rig activity and fewer wells” in 2025, “efficiency improvements that we saw in 2024 continued through 2025 and resulted in a slight increase in crude oil production.”
However, in its Short-Term Energy Outlook for April, the EIA reported that it expects production to dip slightly in 2026 — to 13.5 million barrels per day — before increasing again in 2027.
Meanwhile, crude oil imports are down under Trump — dropping to about 6.15 million barrels imported on average each day in his first full year in office of his second term. In that time, imports fell almost 6.6% from the daily average in 2024. But the U.S. is expected to remain a net importer of crude oil in 2026, according to the EIA.
The latest EIA data still show a slight increase in U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from energy consumption under Trump.
In his first 11 months (ending in December), there were more than 4.4 billion metric tons of emissions from the use of coal, natural gas and petroleum-based products. That was 2% more than the over 4.3 billion metric tons that were emitted from consuming those energy sources over the same stretch in 2024.
However, as of April, the EIA’s outlook was that energy-related CO2 emissions would fall in 2026, by about 2.4%, to roughly 4.8 billion metric tons — down from just over 4.9 billion in 2025. The 2026 total, if the EIA estimate holds, would be almost exactly the same as the amount of CO2 emitted in 2024. The agency said the expected drop this year is “due primarily to expected declines in coal consumption” at electricity-generating power plants.
Early data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture show that the number of people accessing benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, has declined under Trump.
As of December, the most recent month for which preliminary USDA figures are available, about 39.5 million people were participating in SNAP. The number has dropped further since our last update in January and is down by more than 3.3 million, or about 7.7%, since Trump took office in January 2025.
The decline in SNAP participants was expected because of the Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which changed eligibility requirements for nutrition assistance and is estimated to reduce federal spending on the program. For example, the law extends work requirements to include “able-bodied adults without dependents” aged 55 to 64, who were previously exempt.
The CBO estimated in August that provisions in the law “will reduce participation in SNAP by roughly 2.4 million people in an average month over the 2025-2034 period.”
Debt — Since our last update, the public debt, which excludes money the government owes itself, has risen. It increased by more than $505 billion to over $31.3 trillion, as of April 21. The public debt is up about 8.6% under Trump. It increased by one-third on Biden’s watch.
Deficits — The debt continues to increase mostly due to large annual budget deficits. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the deficit so far for fiscal year 2026 is lower than it was at this point in fiscal 2025, when the annual deficit was almost $1.8 trillion.
Through the first half of the current fiscal year (October to March), the deficit was about $1.2 trillion, or “$139 billion less than the deficit recorded during the same period last fiscal year,” the CBO reported in its latest Monthly Budget Review. But as of February, the CBO projected that the deficit for FY 2026 would rise to nearly $1.9 trillion for the year.
Supreme Court — There hasn’t been a vacancy on the Supreme Court during Trump’s second term. At this point in his presidency, Biden had won confirmation for one justice, Ketanji Brown Jackson, which occurred on April 7, 2022.
Court of Appeals — As of April 22, six of Trump’s nominees to the U.S. Court of Appeals had been approved. At the same point in his term, Biden had won confirmation for 15.
District Court — Trump also has had 31 nominees confirmed to be District Court judges, while 43 were confirmed by this time in Biden’s tenure.
By this point, two U.S. Court of Federal Claims judges also were confirmed under Biden. None have been confirmed so far under Trump, and there are no such positions currently available.
As of April 22, there were no vacancies for Court of Appeals judges, 33 for District Court judges with nine nominees pending, and one vacancy for the international trade court with a single nominee pending.
We provide links to the sources for these statistics throughout the article.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post Trump’s Numbers, April 2026 Update appeared first on FactCheck.org.
OpenAI released its new GPT-5.5 model today, which the company calls its "smartest and most intuitive to use model yet, and the next step toward a new way of getting work done on a computer." The Verge reports: OpenAI just released GPT-5.4 last month, but says that the new GPT-5.5 "excels" at tasks like writing and debugging code, doing research online, making spreadsheets and documents, and doing that work across different tools. "Instead of carefully managing every step, you can give GPT-5.5 a messy, multi-part task and trust it to plan, use tools, check its work, navigate through ambiguity, and keep going," according to OpenAI. The company also notes that GPT-5.5 will have its "strongest set of safeguards to date" and can use "significantly fewer" tokens to complete tasks in Codex. GPT-5.5 is rolling out on Thursday for Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise ChatGPT tiers and Codex, with GPT-5.5 Pro coming to Pro, Business, and Enterprise users.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Trump administration started accepting applications in December for foreigners willing to pay $1 million for the right to live in the U.S.
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announces the launch of a criminal investigation into OpenAI in connection with the 2025 Florida State University shooting.

Let’s say you woke up this morning with a super sweet business plan:
That was how Jessica and Lee Williamson envisioned their future. The Milton couple knew they had the perfect pie and were sure it would inspire fandom everywhere. But it wasn’t until they turned to the Delaware Division of Small Business that they found the missing ingredient for next-level success.
The state is supporting dozens of Delaware entrepreneurs through a reinvigorated grant program called EDGE 2.0, which is providing crucial infusions of cash and coaching to lift small startups toward success.
To learn more about the EDGE 2.0 grant program before the next round, visit de.gov/edge, where you’ll find program information, webinar recordings and other relevant resources.
To contact the Division of Small Business directly, reach out to the Regional Business Manager in your sector:
In the case of Coastal Key Lime Pie, which received an earlier grant from the program, that meant a $50,000 jolt to their budget, and a fresh path toward their dreams. A new crust-making machine and a refrigerated van let them supersize their footprint. Close support from the division’s small business experts kept them on track toward growth.
Today, Jessica and Lee are well on their way to regional acclaim, and even dream of delivering creamy goodness up and down the coast.
“It would have taken so much longer to grow without the EDGE grant,” Jessica Williamson said. “It propelled our business in a way that’s unimaginable.”
Short for “Encouraging Development, Growth and Expansion,” the EDGE program stands as the flagship funding initiative of the state’s Small Business Division. In its seven years, more than 100 startups have been helped, many in the high-tech sector that Delaware is working to grow.
“The best investment the state can make is in the people already doing the work,” said Christopher “CJ” Bell, Director of the Delaware Division of Small Business. “When we give a good business the resources to get even better, the whole state benefits from their success.”
The program is designed to give early stage businesses an extra boost through funding and planning assistance during their first five years, a time when many small businesses are at more risk of failure. To qualify, businesses must be less than seven years old, have 15 or fewer full-time employees, and have less than $700,000 in assets.
But most importantly, they must be ready to compete and driven to win. Once grant proposals are done, the division begins several rounds of evaluations based on set criteria, and selects the most promising ideas from the pool of hopefuls. Twice each year, those finalists gather for a showdown called a “pitch competition,” where judges pepper presenters with questions and decide the winners.

The stakes are high: Each competition offers $400,000 in total grant money for entrepreneurs like the Williamsons. For businesses in the resource-heavy STEM and high-tech sector, $750,000 is available. Judges can pick as many winners as they want; the pot of money is then divided based on needs.
“We have raised the total grant money by 50-60% this year, giving the program much more potential for having a maximum impact,” said Joe Zilcosky, one of the division’s regional business managers who coach and encourage applicants. “It’s also now easier to apply, and all finalists and awardees will get in-kind services and support to help them grow.”
Grant money can be used for purchasing equipment, improving building infrastructure, obtaining rental space, or contracting for website design or a marketing campaign to help acquire more customers.
Since the program’s launch in 2019, the division has awarded $9.1 million to 127 small businesses. More than half (53%) of the 127 awardees have been either woman, minority, or veteran-owned small businesses. Another 16% fall into more than one of those categories.
The first step in the grant process is as easy as going to the EDGE 2.0 homepage. State specialists are ready to guide hopefuls through the technicalities of grant requirements; Project plans are honed and roadblocks are avoided, all with one-on-one guidance.
Ultimately, to get the grant, businesses must show how much they deserve it – and how committed they are to succeed. Winners also must be ready to put some of their own cash on the line: The program’s 3:1 match formula means they must pony up $1 for every $3 the state gives.
In many ways, the “prize” is just part of the package. Long after the pitches have been made, participants can access services like memberships to networking organizations, along with expedited pathways to the division’s other funding programs.

“Our services don’t begin with EDGE, and they don’t end with EDGE,” Zilcosky said. “After the competition’s over, we still want to help you, and we have many tools in the toolbox.”
Applicants are also encouraged to try again if they swing and miss on their first “pitch” – that’s what Jessica and Lee Williamson did, fine-tuning their plan after their first attempt, then prevailing on their next try. And, win or lose, everyone gains invaluable business advice. “So even if you don’t win the money, hopefully you still win,” said Zilcosky, who says about 95% of grant recipients are still in business.
Ultimately, the program serves to foster and encourage Delaware’s most innovative ideas, creating pathways to the future. One EDGE winner that’s leaning hard into that future is Sindri Materials Corp., which was created with the idea of producing a new carbon material – just one atom thick – that can enhance the speed and effectiveness of pharmaceutical research.
With the grant money in hand, Sindri has been able to fine-tune production of its graphene material and is now approaching the point of bringing it to the market – and starting to earn revenue.
Today, they feel far more comfortable about their 5-year trajectory and are even beginning to look beyond.
“Sindri Materials is a great example of our focus on supporting cutting-edge ideas that could revolutionize an industry, and exponentially grow jobs in Delaware,” Zilcosky said.

Along with crucial capital, the state’s grant also gave Sindri’s team a welcome boost of confidence, and a feeling they had an ally who cared. “Anytime I needed to jump on a call with him, Joe was right there,” said Sindri CEO Christopher DiMarco. “It was clear to us that companies like ours matter to the state. Innovation matters to this state.”
Now, he and fellow co-founders Brian Checchio and David DiMarco ponder a new challenge: How to build on that momentum, converting their first beachhead market into commercial sales while expanding the platform’s capabilities for broader, higher-impact applications — work made possible in part by the EDGE grant. But the team feels tested and tougher today, especially after surviving the scrutiny of the EDGE judges.
“The judges were tough, but they asked thoughtful questions that made us sharpen how we communicated the business,” said Chris DiMarco, who fretted he had muffed his big pitch due to technical glitches. “I told Joe, I thought I blew it. Then, two weeks later, when he told me we had won, I was jumping up and down. I didn’t believe it.”
That feeling of sweet joy seems likely to spread, especially as Williamsons’ pies begin filling shops far and wide. Their creations are now available at more than 30 area shops and restaurants throughout Delaware and Eastern Maryland. The momentum is so powerful, and their passion is so deep, that Coastal’s journey seems bound to reach far beyond Delmarva.
“It really is an adventure, not knowing what the future is, but sensing we have something that can create that future,” Lee Williamson said. “At first, everyone thought we were crazy. Now, our three boys are like, ‘Now we have a job!’ ”
The post Small businesses find sweet success with EDGE grants appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Former federal prosecutors think the indictment struggles to articulate the elements of the alleged crimes in the case, a problem that could lead to its full or partial dismissal.
National Transportation Safety Board’s preliminary report further says crash prevention system didn’t generate alert
A firefighter whose truck collided with an Air Canada jet last month on a runway at New York’s LaGuardia airport, killing both pilots, heard an air traffic controller warn “stop, stop, stop” but didn’t know who it was for, federal investigators said Thursday.
The National Transportation Safety Board said in a preliminary report on the 22 March collision that a crash prevention system for air traffic controllers didn’t generate an audio or visual alert, and lights on the runway that act as a stop light for crossing traffic were on until about three seconds before the collision.
Continue reading...To host hundreds of thousands of football fans, Pittsburgh moved schools online and is warning of traffic mayhem. Will the NFL’s spotlight be worth it?
Meta is reportedly cutting about 10% of its workforce, or roughly 8,000 jobs, while closing thousands of open roles it had intended to fill. "We're doing this as part of our continued effort to run the company more efficiently and to allow us to offset the other investments we're making," said Janelle Gale, Meta's chief people officer. The company had almost 79,000 employees at the start of the year. Quartz reports: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has poured resources into building out AI capabilities, directing spending toward model development, chatbot products, and the engineering talent to support them. Meta set its 2026 capital expenditure guidance at $115 billion to $135 billion, almost double the $72 billion it spent in 2025. Employees have been encouraged to use AI agents internally for tasks such as writing code. The early disclosure, Gale explained, was prompted by the fact that information about the cuts had already made its way into press reports before the company was ready to announce. "I know this is unwelcome news and confirming this puts everyone in an uneasy state, but we feel this is the best path forward, given the circumstances," she wrote. According to the memo, severance for affected workers in the United States will cover 18 months of COBRA health insurance premiums, along with a base pay component of 16 weeks that increases by two weeks for each year of service. Departing employees will have access to job placement assistance and, where applicable, help navigating immigration status. Packages outside the U.S. will vary by country. Meta cut between 10% and 15% of its Reality Labs workforce in January, shut down several VR game studios, and shed about 700 positions across at least five divisions in March.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Micro RGB TV evo range supports over a billion colors and is available in sizes over 75 inches.
Meta plans to lay off roughly 10% of its workforce as the technology giant steps up its spending on artificial intelligence.
Force says it is ‘confident there was no offence’ and condemns ‘shameful’ behaviour by protesters
The investigation into reports of a rape outside a church in Epsom that led to widespread public disorder will close as police are “confident there was no offence”.
Surrey police received a report on Saturday 11 April that a woman had been raped near a church in the early hours of the morning after leaving Labyrinth nightclub in Epsom.
Continue reading...Four seats are put on sale for $2,299,998.85 each
Fifa doesn’t set offerings, but some go above $100,000
Governing body takes 15% from both buyer and seller
Fifa’s resale site has four tickets on sale for the World Cup final for just under $2.3m each.
The $2,299,998.85 seats for the 19 July match at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, are located behind a goal in the lower deck of the arena.
Continue reading...interest earnings on a $15,000 money market account can still be significant. Here's what savers need to know now.
The app brings lots of live channels and on-demand to the VR world.
I’m not sure many OSNews readers still use Ubuntu as their operating system of choice, and from the release announcement of today’s Ubuntu 26.04 it’s clear why that’s the case.
Resolute Raccoon builds on the resilience-focused improvements introduced in interim releases, with TPM-backed full-disk encryption, improved support for application permission prompting, Livepatch updates for Arm-based servers, and Rust-based utilities for enhanced memory safety. This release brings native support for industry-leading AI/ML toolkits like NVIDIA CUDA and AMD ROCm, making Ubuntu 26.04 LTS the ideal platform for AI development and production workloads.
↫ Canonical press release
It’s obvious where Canonical’s focus lies with Ubuntu, and us desktop people who don’t like “AI” aren’t it. On top of all the “AI” nonsense, this new version comes with all the latest versions of the various open source components that make up a Linux distribution, as well as a slew of Rust-based replacements for core CLI tools, like sudo-rs, uutils coreutils, and more.
All the derivative release of Ubuntu, like Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and others, will also be updated over the coming days. If you’re already running any of these, updating won’t be a surprise to you.
From budget-friendly options to premium powerhouses, these are our top-tested Android smartwatches that deliver the right balance of features, performance, and style.
Tensions around US negotiations may reflect mistake of assassinating more pragmatic and experienced figures
Donald Trump has claimed that the infighting between moderates and hardliners in Iran’s leadership is so intense that Iranians have “no idea who their leader is”, but many experts questioned his analysis, saying, given the mass assassinations of senior commanders, the country had shown remarkable institutional cohesion.
Trump’s allegations of “CRAZY” splits in the Iranian leadership – the second outing for this argument in three days – is remarkable since he has previously said either he has little knowledge of the new Iranian leadership or that there has already been regime change.
Continue reading...Taylor Swift, Bad Bunny and Drake are among the top artists.
The 32 Degrees Heated Socks can pose a burn risk due to the combination of heat, friction, moisture and pressure created during athletic activities.
Justice department has already identified 384 foreign-born people whose US citizenship it wants to revoke
The Trump administration is reportedly pushing the justice department to pursue hundreds of denaturalization cases, in which Americans born outside of the US are stripped of their citizenship.
The justice department has already identified 384 foreign-born US citizens, whose citizenship it wants to revoke and will begin the process in the coming weeks, according to the New York Times.
Continue reading...Gold prices are still sitting near record highs, but there are smart ways to invest with $100 or less today.
Thought a $40,000 a home equity loan was affordable in 2025? Here's how much cheaper the monthly payments are now.
Hope Not Hate campaign identifies election hopefuls calling for a ‘white Britain’ and complaining of ‘kowtowing to the black community’
A Reform UK candidate who called for a “white Britain” and said Keir Starmer should be shot is among a number of contenders fuelling doubts about the party’s claim to have tightened up its vetting.
The past comments of Linda McFarlane and other political hopefuls have been unearthed ahead of the 7 May elections, including one who complained about “constant kowtowing to the black community” and others who endorsed the far-right activist Tommy Robinson.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: The French government agency that handles the issuing and management of citizens' identity documents, including national IDs, passports, and immigration documents, confirmed Wednesday that it experienced a data breach. In an announcement, the Agence Nationale des Titres Securises (ANTS) said the data stolen in the breach could include full names, dates and places of birth, mailing and email addresses, and phone numbers on an undisclosed number of citizens. ANTS said the investigation to determine how the breach happened and its impact is ongoing, and people whose data was affected are being notified. ANTS, which said it detected the attack on April 15, did not specify how many people were affected by the breach. But some reporting suggests millions may have had some of their personal information stolen. According to Bleeping Computer, a hacker has advertised the stolen data on a hacking forum, claiming to have a database with 19 million records. The hacker's forum post referenced the same kind of stolen information as mentioned in ANTS' announcement and was published before ANTS publicly disclosed the breach on April 20.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Mandated release of files was marred by missed deadlines, leaked victims’ information and excessive redactions
The US Department of Justice’s office of the inspector general (OIG) announced on Thursday that it is launching an audit of the justice department’s compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
In a news release, the deputy inspector general William M Blier, who the statement said is performing the duties of the inspector general, said the “preliminary objective” of the internal inquiry “is to evaluate the [justice department’s] processes for identifying, redacting, and releasing records in its possession as required by the act”.
Continue reading...Hey everyone. I've owned my Onewheel Pint for about two years now and I've already had to replace the tire twice. The first tire was the stock one it came with and it only lasted about 8 months. The second one I upgraded to a treaded/rugged tire and that one lasted about a year and four months -so definitely an improvement, but still.
For context: I ride in Downtown Manhattan, mostly commuting to work from the Lower East Side to Flatiron four days a week. Mostly flat city streets, no off-roading or aggressive carving. I estimate I'm putting about 20 miles a week on it, which works out to roughly 900-1,000 miles a year.
Each tire replacement with labor runs me close to $300. So I'm realizing now it's basically becoming a yearly expense. And the whole reason I got the Pint was to save money by skipping the subway -and it still does save me money when I do the math, but $300/year in maintenance wasn't something I anticipated tbh.
I guess I'm just surprised this isn't talked about more? Like, I never really saw much noise about tire lifespan being this short before buying. Now I'm honestly starting to consider switching to an e-bike to reduce the frequency/cost on maintenance, but that might be a whole different beast I'm underestimating. Anyone else feel this way or have tips to extend tire life?
Smarting from the humiliation of a report published at The Atlantic about his time in office, FBI Director Kash Patel did what conservatives have done over and over in the age of Trump: He sued for defamation.
The Atlantic’s story detailed allegations about Patel’s mismanagement of the office and FBI staffers’ concerns that his behavior has become borderline dangerous. According to the magazine’s reporting, staffers have observed that the director frequently drinks to the point of intoxication and has been unreachable behind closed doors multiple times, at one point necessitating agents breaking down a door. In his lawsuit, Patel said that the allegations are demonstrably false.
Patel’s case — which names the publication and the writer as defendants and demands $250 million in damages — doesn’t appear very strong; it’s unlikely he’ll win in court. But a legal victory isn’t necessarily the goal. Such lawsuits apply financial pressure and ensure newsrooms think twice before publishing critical articles in the future.
For all the modern right-wing movement’s bleating about its commitment to free speech, in practice they’re anything but, with a demonstrated penchant for using the legal system as a cudgel against people who say things they don’t like. Known as strategic lawsuits against public participation, or SLAPP, they are a tool of the powerful — and have multiple levels of use.
Most immediately, SLAPP allows plaintiffs the potential to muzzle their critics, who will be less likely to launch attacks against someone who has already proven litigious. This applies not only to the defendant, whether it’s an individual or an institution, but also to others like them who will think twice rather than risk a protracted (and expensive) legal battle.
Even if these anti-free speech crusaders don’t win a judgment, they have a good chance of draining their opponents’ bank accounts.
Typically, the more deep-pocketed someone, or their backers, are, the more they can bleed out defendants by dragging on court cases for as long as possible, racking up legal bills that will have to be paid. Most publishers and newsrooms have lawyers on retainer or in-house, but their legal insurance deductibles are still high, potentially running into the hundreds of thousands of dollars per case.
Even if these anti-free speech crusaders don’t win a judgment, they have a good chance of draining their opponents’ bank accounts — and breaking their spirits.
Federal action is is sorely needed to make sure the use of SLAPP doesn’t spiral further out of control. Many states, including New York and Minnesota, have anti-SLAPP laws on the books, but their application in federal courts remains unsettled. Patel filed his suit in D.C. federal court, where the appellate court says the anti-SLAAP statute does not apply.
Universal application of these laws is needed so the powerful can’t turn to federal courts for meritless filings, and some lawmakers, like Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., have introduced legislation to that end. So far, however, those bills have not made it to law.
Patel is far from the only conservative figure to deploy the courts as a weapon against his critics, and this isn’t even his first shot at it; he has an ongoing 2019 lawsuit against Politico, for that outlet’s reporting on his time with the National Security Council during Donald Trump’s first term, and another defamation action, against former FBI official Frank Figliuzzi for comments on MS NOW, was dismissed on Tuesday.
Trump’s manipulation of the legal system to punish detractors predates his time in politics, but it’s gone into overdrive since his first term. The president has filed multiple defamation suits against members of the media and their organizations, including $475 million against CNN in 2022 (which was dismissed in 2023); the Pulitzer Prize Board for an award he objected to in 2022 (ongoing); journalist Bob Woodward and his publisher Simon & Schuster in 2023 (dismissed); ABC News in 2024 (settled for $15 million); CBS parent Paramount in 2024 (settled for $16 million); the Wall Street Journal in 2025 (dismissed), the New York Times in 2025 for $15 billion (ongoing), the BBC in 2025 for $10 billion (ongoing); and others. To be clear, this is not an exhaustive list.
Trump and Patel are two of the better known conservative figures attacking free speech via the courts, but it’s a mainstay tactic in MAGA world. Laura Loomer, an Islamophobic off-and-on ally of Trump, sued late-night personality Bill Maher over comments he made about her relationship with the president (the case was thrown out on Wednesday evening). In 2013, Trump sued Maher for breach of contract after the HBO pundit promised $5 million to charity if the then-real estate magnate could prove his mother was not an orangutan. (Trump withdrew the case.)
Elon Musk, the tech billionaire with close ties to the White House, used his X social media platform to file a suit against Media Matters for America over its reporting on ad content running alongside antisemitic posts on the site. And David Sacks, another tech billionaire who worked as Trump’s crypto and AI czar, threatened the New York Times over its reporting on his conflicts of interest in a public legal letter last December.
Closer to home, I’m currently being sued, along with my publisher, Hachette, for more than $1 million by conservative pundit Matt Taibbi over my book, “Owned: How Tech Billionaires on the Right Bought the Loudest Voices on the Left,” which delves into his ideological shift to the right. And the editor of this piece you’re reading now, Katherine Krueger, was sued for $100 million alongside her former employer Splinter by 2016 Trump spokesperson Jason Miller for a story about a court filing that alleged he drugged a woman with an abortion pill. Miller refuted the allegation, but that case was thrown out on summary judgment because it accurately reported what was in the court filing; mine is ongoing.
In some circumstances, as Trump found after he was elected to a second term in 2024, SLAPP lawsuits can succeed, irrespective of the strength or weakness of the claim. ABC News and Paramount settled with Trump in what are widely regarded as payoffs to a powerful figure who can control their corporate future. Corporations have made the calculation: Better to get on his good side than risk four years of retribution, and, after all, what’s a few million dollars compared to the benefits of having the world’s most powerful person looking kindly on you?
Whether or not Patel expects to win a $250 million judgment, a central claim in his lawsuit is that his word is enough to shut down speech.
But for the right wing, SLAPP suits also serve to make an ideological point. Whether or not Patel expects to win a $250 million judgment, a central claim in his lawsuit is that his word is enough to shut down speech.
Because he told The Atlantic the claims in their article weren’t true, they shouldn’t have published it, the complaint argues: “Defendants published the Article with actual malice, despite being expressly warned, hours before publication, that the central allegations were categorically false.” The objections of a powerful man should be enough to avoid bad press, this line of reasoning goes; publishing anything to the contrary is wrong.
That’s the animating principle behind the right-wing’s relationship with the media. If they disagree with it or find it embarrassing, you shouldn’t publish it; if you disobey, you must be punished.
It wasn’t until Trump — and decades of ideological capture of the courts — that there was the potential to regularly use the legal system as a weapon against critics. Until there are First Amendment protections against SLAPP, we can expect the powerful to continue dragging their detractors to court.
The post Kash Patel Is Using MAGA’s Favorite Tool to Muzzle the Free Press appeared first on The Intercept.
Elon Musk admits owners with outdated self-driving hardware who purchased the option will require a major retrofit effort.
Police allegedly found images on iCloud account of singer accused of killing 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez
A Los Angeles prosecutor said that the singer D4vd, who was charged this week in the killing of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, was in possession of a “significant amount of child pornography”.
Police allegedly found the images on the iCloud account of the 21-year-old singer, whose legal name is David Anthony Burke.
Continue reading...Ireland and Spain will also not broadcast Eurovision after decision to boycott live event over Israel’s participation
National broadcasters in Ireland, Spain and Slovenia will not air the Eurovision song contest this year, after they decided to boycott the event over Israel’s participation.
Having announced it would not submit a national entry, the Slovenian broadcaster RTV confirmed on Thursday it would implement a broadcasting blackout of the world’s largest live music event and instead show a series of films about Palestine.
Continue reading...Seven-day-old Poppy Hope Lomas died after complications during home birth encouraged by midwives at Barnet hospital
A mother who lost her baby a week after an “unsafe” home birth that went against medical advice was failed by the NHS, an inquest has found.
Poppy Hope Lomas was seven days old when she died at University College hospital in London on 26 October 2022 after complications during a home birth that, according to her mother, was encouraged by midwives at Barnet hospital.
Continue reading...A group of seven tourists, including three children, became trapped on a cliff when the tide came in during a morning walk on an Australian beach.
Exclusive: Officials warn department will also lose access to database of 26,000 verified incidents due to cuts
The Foreign Office unit tracking potential breaches of international law by Israel in Gaza and more recently Lebanon has been closed because of cuts within the department, the Guardian can reveal.
The decision to shut the international humanitarian law cell follows a review by Olly Robbins, the permanent secretary at the Foreign Office dismissed last week by the prime minister over the Peter Mandelson scandal.
Continue reading...Native integration of Q-CTRL’s Fire Opal software with IonQ’s hardware will accelerate real-world applications without specialized quantum expertise
LOS ANGELES, April 23, 2026 — Q-CTRL and IonQ today announced the native integration of Q-CTRL’s Fire Opal software into IonQ’s quantum processors to maximize their quantum performance.
Quantum optimization is a compelling candidate for near-term quantum acceleration across problems in logistics, finance, energy, and more. For the typical customer, even an expert in quantum computing, extracting high-quality solutions from real hardware is highly challenging; many parameters and techniques must be manually tuned or adjusted by the user, mandating a depth and breadth of specialized skills few end users possess.
Q-CTRL and IonQ are reducing the barriers to achieving true commercial value from the most advanced quantum processors, natively integrating Fire Opal’s Optimization Solver directly into IonQ Quantum Cloud as a single, fully configured, easy-to-use function. Now any end user can focus on their optimization problem, allowing Fire Opal to automatically handle all aspects of execution on real hardware to achieve the most valuable results.
IonQ Quantum Cloud users can access Fire Opal’s Optimization Solver directly on IonQ’s Forte and Forte-Enterprise devices, the company’s highest-performing, commercially available quantum computers.
“At Q-CTRL, we’re focused on providing the infrastructure software that makes it possible for end users to achieve true positive ROI from the most advanced quantum computers available,” said Alex Shih, VP of Product at Q-CTRL. “The capability to solve world-changing problems is right there inside of these extraordinary machines. We’re thrilled to partner with IonQ in empowering customers with the quantum-control infrastructure software that brings this power within reach.”
The value of the Fire Opal optimization solver coupled to IonQ Forte is captured in a telecommunications industry case study, delivering the correct solution to reduce network interference out of 68 billion possibilities.
In addition to this native optimization solver on the IonQ Quantum Cloud, Fire Opal’s performance-management capabilities for integrating error suppression into an arbitrary quantum circuit remain available for IonQ hardware via Amazon Braket. These expanded access points now enable users to achieve meaningful industrial outcomes and reliable results without specialized expertise in quantum hardware.
Q-CTRL has an unrivaled track record of creating modular, enterprise-grade infrastructure software, integrated across a range of quantum computing architectures, from trapped ions and semiconductor spins to superconducting qubits. Algorithm performance can be boosted by up to 1,000x, making Fire Opal an extraordinarily powerful and versatile tool for enterprise end users seeking reliable performance enhancement across their varied applications.
“In our experience, IonQ has been a leading hardware platform, and we are excited by what the native integration of Fire Opal error suppression and optimization can unlock,” said Dr. David Benoit, Senior Lecturer in Molecular Physics and Astrochemistry at the University of Hull. “We expect the Fire Opal optimization solver will significantly streamline our workflow by abstracting away from the specific quantum circuits and unlocking latent hardware performance, allowing us to focus fully on solving the core problem rather than managing the complexities of implementation.”
To use Fire Opal on IonQ Quantum Cloud, visit Q-CTRL’s website to request access: https://q-ctrl.com/fire-opal/ionq
About IonQ
IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ) is the world’s leading quantum platform and merchant supplier – delivering integrated quantum solutions across computing, networking, sensing, and security. IonQ’s newest generation of quantum computers, the IonQ Tempo, is the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, AstraZeneca, and NVIDIA achieve 20x performance results and accelerate innovation in drug discovery, materials science, financial modeling, logistics, cybersecurity, and defense. In 2025, the company achieved 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity, setting a world record in quantum computing performance.
About Q-CTRL
Q-CTRL is a global leader in quantum infrastructure software that makes quantum technology useful. Q-CTRL delivers field-deployable capabilities for navigation in GPS-denied environments based on software-ruggedized quantum sensors, with collaborators including Lockheed Martin and Airbus. Their efforts in leveraging software to solve the most challenging problems in making quantum technologies useful carry over to quantum computing, where Q-CTRL partners with industry pioneers like IBM, Rigetti, and AWS to enhance quantum computer performance through AI-driven control solutions. The company’s breakthroughs have been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and recognized by TIME Magazine as transforming both commercial and defense operations. Founded in 2017 by Professor Michael J. Biercuk, Q-CTRL operates globally from offices in Sydney, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Huntsville, Berlin, and Oxford.
Source: Q-CTRL
The post IonQ and Q-CTRL Partner to Unlock Quantum Optimization with Fire Opal on Forte Quantum Processors appeared first on HPCwire.
Battle of the blockades may still have more time to run as the US and Iran try to assert control over the strait of Hormuz
Donald Trump’s decision to extend the naval blockade of Iran indefinitely may do nothing to reduce world oil prices – but it could amount to a recognition that further US military escalation in breach of the nominal ceasefire comes with greater risk against a regime disinclined to surrender.
In theory, Trump’s military options are increasing. A third US carrier strike group, the George HW Bush, is due to arrive in the Middle East within days after rounding South Africa. A second taskforce of 2,500 US marines is sailing from the Pacific and is due to arrive by the end of April.
Continue reading...The deal comes with the right to acquire Cursor for $60 billion.
Proposal at heart of offer made during a 30-country two-day meeting jointly organised by France
Britain is prepared to deploy a squadron of RAF Typhoons based in Qatar to patrol over the strait of Hormuz as part of a multinational mission to keep open the strategic waterway once the Iran war comes to an end.
The UK military also offered to deploy mine-hunting drones and specialist divers to help clear the strait mined by Iran – but no decision has been made on whether HMS Dragon or another warship would also be deployed.
Continue reading...Taskforce report examines how effects of slavery and Jim Crow in Fulton county continue to harm Black residents
A Georgia taskforce has released a landmark report that details the lasting impact of slavery and its afterlives in Fulton county.
The report, spanning more than 600 pages, is based on original research by the Fulton county reparations taskforce and a review of primary source documents. It is the first – of its kind in the nation, according to county leaders and researchers. Rather than examining the impact of slavery and racism at the federal or state level, the harm report investigated the role of the county government.
Continue reading...Audible, Uber Eats and more can now connect to Anthropic's AI chatbot.
New Google Cloud Managed Lustre capabilities with DDN EXAScaler improves AI training, inference, and high-performance computing, delivering scale, performance, and economics
LAS VEGAS, April 23, 2026 — DDN has shared new innovations involving Google Cloud Managed Lustre, unveiled at Google Cloud Next 2026. Built on DDN’s proven Lustre expertise, EXAScaler, and delivered in collaboration with Google Cloud, these advancements redefine what’s possible for AI training, inference, and high-performance computing (HPC) in the cloud.
With performance scaling to 10 terabytes per second, Google Cloud Managed Lustre delivers improved throughput, elasticity, and cost efficiency—enabling enterprises to run the world’s most demanding AI and HPC workloads. The launch underscores DDN’s vision to power the full AI lifecycle—from training and fine-tuning to inference and large-scale simulation—through a unified, high-performance data platform.
“This is not just a product milestone—it’s a market-shaping moment,” said Alex Bouzari, CEO at DDN. “We are delivering one of the fastest-growing, highest-performance managed Lustre services in the industry, purpose-built for the realities of modern AI at scale. This announcement reinforces DDN’s leadership in AI data platforms and our shared commitment to helping customers innovate faster, at lower cost, and with greater confidence.”
Built for the Next Generation of AI
Google Cloud Managed Lustre provides a POSIX-compliant, parallel file system that delivers high throughput and low latency. Customers across industries—including AI, financial services, robotics, autonomous systems, and advanced research—are rapidly adopting the platform to power:
A key innovation unveiled at Google Cloud Next is the use of Managed Lustre as a shared KV-cache for AI inference, dramatically improving performance and economics. By leveraging Lustre’s ultra-low latency and high aggregate throughput, customers can avoid redundant computation and scale inference across clusters with virtually unlimited shared cache capacity.
In benchmark testing, this approach delivered:
The result is faster, more responsive AI applications—and significantly lower cost of inference at scale.
A Collaboration Driving Cloud-Scale Performance
For the offering, DDN combines long-standing Lustre expertise and extreme-scale data systems with Google Cloud’s elastic infrastructure, innovations in compute and Hyperdisk, global reach, and access to cutting-edge accelerators, including TPUs.
“Managed Lustre enables us to scale AI model training for AFEELA Intelligent Drive by 3x compared to other Google Cloud solutions,” said Motoi Kataoka, Senior Manager, AI & Data Analytics Platform, Sony Honda Mobility Inc.
New capabilities announced at Google Cloud Next also include a single, dynamic hot and cold tier, designed to deliver high performance for hot data with dramatically improved economics—eliminating the complexity, performance cliffs, and SKU sprawl common in competing tiered storage solutions.
Setting the Pace for the Industry
With rapid customer adoption, explosive capacity growth, and performance milestones, the combination of DDN and Google Cloud Managed Lustre is setting a new benchmark for AI and HPC in the cloud.
“This is what happens when deep infrastructure expertise meets cloud-scale innovation,” said Kirill Tropin, Group Product Manager at Google Cloud. “Our partnership with DDN enables customers to run their most demanding AI workloads with the performance, scale, and simplicity they need—today and into the future.”
About DDN
DDN is the world’s leading AI and data intelligence company, powering the world’s most demanding AI workloads by keeping GPUs fed, efficient, and productive—at massive scale—so organizations can train, checkpoint, and infer faster with less footprint and power while achieving tremendous ROI from their AI investments. From hyperscalers and next-gen cloud builders to enterprises, governments, and research institutions, DDN delivers proven data intelligence at exabyte scale across hundreds of thousands of GPUs—so customers can deploy AI with confidence, accelerate time-to-value, and realize outsized returns. Discover more at ddn.com.
Source: DDN
The post DDN Expands Google Cloud Managed Lustre for AI and HPC Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.
A direct conversion from pounds to dollars would make the new two-panel folding phone seriously pricey in the US. However, that's not the whole picture.
Thinking about taking a DIY approach to bankruptcy? Make sure you understand the risks before you file.
Ursula von der Leyen hails ‘good news’ after Hungary’s lifting of vetoes allows leaders to sign off on agreements
EU leaders have welcomed the end of diplomatic deadlock over a long-awaited €90bn (£78bn) loan for Ukraine, after the bloc completed the agreement along with a 20th sanctions package against Russia.
After weeks of delay, the EU signed off on the loan on Thursday, in time for a summit in Cyprus that began in the evening and will include talks over a dinner with the Ukrainian leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Continue reading...OpenAI says its latest model is meant to help run your computer.
In a recent town hall meeting reported by Bloomberg (paywalled), Apple CEO Tim Cook named the troubled 2012 launch of Apple Maps as his "first really big mistake" in the role. "The product wasn't ready, and we thought it was because we were testing more of local kind of stuff," Cook told staff. MacRumors reports: Reflecting on the debacle, Cook said it was "valuable," noting that he expressed regret to users at the time and suggested they use competing navigation apps instead. "We apologized for it, and we said, 'Go use these other apps. They're better than ours.' And that was some humble pie," Cook said. "But it was the right thing for our users. And so it's an example of keeping the user at the center of the decisions that we made." Cook added: "Now we've got the best map app on the planet. We learned about persistence, and we did exactly the right thing having made the mistake."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hawaii's Kilauea volcano erupted again early Thursday, marking its 45th episode since December 2024.
SANTA CLARA, Calif., April 23, 2026 — Oklo Inc., an advanced nuclear technology company, today announced an agreement with NVIDIA and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), to advance critical nuclear infrastructure, AI-enabled research, and nuclear fuel R&D at Los Alamos.

The agreement brings together advanced nuclear reactors, AI models, and national laboratory expertise to support critical nuclear infrastructure for the federal government’s Genesis Mission.
The collaboration is intended to combine advanced nuclear power, AI, digital twins, modeling, and simulation to support critical infrastructure development and accelerate the deployment of nuclear energy. By aligning Oklo’s advanced sodium-fast-reactor platform, NVIDIA AI infrastructure, and LANL’s world-leading expertise in materials science and nuclear fuels, the parties aim to lay the groundwork for a new class of mission-critical, high-assurance energy.
“This agreement brings together reactor deployment, high-performance compute, and world-class fuel and materials science expertise” said Oklo co-founder and CEO Jacob DeWitte. “We believe this will advance our plutonium-bearing fuel work on Oklo’s Pluto reactor, which was selected under DOE’s Reactor Pilot Program, and help bring resilient power in support of the Genesis Mission.”
Initial focus areas include:
Projects under the agreement include integrated full-stack solutions to support nuclear powered AI factories; AI development, including physics and chemistry trained AI models to support nuclear fuel R&D; grid stabilization, reliability, and redundancy studies; materials science efforts focused on plutonium-bearing fuel; and proof of concept work related to the development of a nuclear powered AI factory.
About Oklo Inc.
Oklo Inc. (NYSE: OKLO) is developing fast fission power plants to deliver clean, reliable, affordable energy at global scale; establishing a domestic supply chain for critical isotopes; and advancing nuclear fuel recycling to convert used nuclear fuel into clean energy. Oklo was the first to receive a site use permit from the U.S. Department of Energy for a commercial advanced fission plant, was awarded fuel from Idaho National Laboratory, and submitted the first custom combined license application for an advanced reactor to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Oklo is also developing advanced fuel recycling technologies in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy and U.S. National Laboratories.
Source: Oklo Inc.
The post Oklo, NVIDIA, and LANL Advance Nuclear Fuel R&D and AI Modeling for Los Alamos Projects appeared first on HPCwire.
More than 200,000 have signed petitions urging the government to break contracts amid concerns about the company’s ‘supervillain’ manifesto
More than 200,000 people have called on ministers to break contracts with Palantir in an apparent groundswell of public concern about the US tech company’s role in the NHS, police, military and councils.
Two petitions have attracted 229,000 signatures, one calling for the government to end all public contracts with the company, the software of which is used by Donald Trump’s ICE immigration enforcement programme and the Israeli military, and another urging the health secretary, Wes Streeting, to cancel its £330m patient data contract with the NHS.
Continue reading...Prosecutors say 43 people indicted on charges including murder, kidnapping, extortion and drug trafficking
More than two dozen members and associates of the Mexican mafia were arrested during an early morning crackdown in southern California, federal authorities said on Thursday.
The FBI and other federal and local agencies executed search and arrest warrants at locations mostly in Orange county, south of Los Angeles, according to the US attorney’s office.
Continue reading...The Justice Department's internal watchdog said it will audit the department's compliance with the law that required the release of the Epstein files.
Forecasting service raises alarm over data from Paris airport used to settle Polymarket wagers on temperature
French police are investigating alleged tampering with national weather forecasting service equipment after a series of unusual temperature readings coincided with suspicious winning bets made on Polymarket.
Data from a Météo-France weather station at Paris’s Charles de Gaulle airport was used to settle bets between online gamblers on what the temperature would be in Paris for March and the first weeks of April.
Continue reading...Technology minister tells Commons ‘de-identified’ information from UK Biobank advertised for sale on Alibaba
The confidential health records of half a million British volunteers have been offered for sale on Chinese website Alibaba, the UK government has confirmed.
The “de-identified” data, belonging to participants in the UK Biobank project, was found for sale on three separate listings last week. Ian Murray, the technology minister, told the Commons on Thursday that, after working with the Chinese government and Alibaba, the records had now been removed. It is not believed any sales were made.
Continue reading...Tech can scale cyber-attacks and defences alike, raising questions about private power, public risk and the future of a shared internet
Anthropic announced its latest AI model, Claude Mythos, this month but said it would not be released publicly, because it turns computers into crime scenes. The company claimed that it could find previously unknown “zero-day” flaws, exploit them and, in principle, link these weaknesses in order to take over major operating systems and web browsers. Mythos did so autonomously, writing code and obtaining privileges. The implications are significant. It’s like a burglar being able to target any building, get inside, unlock every door and empty every safe.
The Silicon Valley company has so far named 40 organisations as partners under Project Glasswing to help mount a defence – asking them to “patch” vulnerabilities before hackers get a chance to exploit them. All are American, sitting at the heart of the US-led digital system. Anthropic shared Mythos with only Britain outside the US, allowing the AI Security Institute to test frontier models. After seeing it up close, British ministers warned: AI is about to make cyber-attacks much easier and faster, and most businesses are not ready. Banks in Europe are likely to test it next.
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Continue reading...Senior Vice President, Booking, CBS News and Stations and CBS Media Ventures
Man from North Carolina arrested at Florida hotel with a handgun and about 200 rounds of ammo, authorities say
Authorities say a man suspected of planning a mass shooting at a large New Orleans festival was arrested at a Florida hotel with a handgun and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
The event was not named, but the New Orleans jazz and heritage festival, commonly known as JazzFest, runs from Thursday through 3 May. The gathering celebrates Louisiana’s music, food and culture, and attracted about 460,000 people last year, organizers said.
Continue reading...Eurail, which sells passes, says data being ‘offered for sale on dark web’ after December breach affecting 300,000 people
Holidaymakers across Europe are facing the stress and expense of getting new passports after their personal data was posted on the dark web after a hack of the Interrail company Eurail.
Personal data, including passport numbers, names, phone numbers, email and home addresses and dates of birth of more than 300,000 European travellers was accessed in December. But this week Eurail revealed to customers that “data copied during the security incident has been offered for sale on the dark web and a sample dataset has been published on Telegram”.
Continue reading...Vietnam-born Cao stood twice for federal office in Virginia and has called for upgrading of fleet to face new threats
The acting navy secretary, Hung Cao, who steps into the role after the sudden departure of John Phelan, is a veteran naval officer and former refugee who earned a position with the Trump administration with campaigns for political office in Virginia marked by religious intolerance.
When Cao was first appointed, the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, set him to modernizing base infrastructure and quality-of-life issues for sailors and marines, and to raise recruiting standards. Cao has also been a point person in the administration on permitting vaccine refusal and eliminating “DEI” policies in the military.
Continue reading...Guest column: For centuries, humans looked to seers and astrologers to determine fate. Today, we look to algorithms, and the loss of agency is the same.
Here's how to watch Timothée Chalamet's Oscar-nominated performance.
Microsoft plans to offer voluntary buyouts for the first time. According to CNBC, "about 7% of U.S. employees are eligible," with the program being "available to U.S. workers at the senior director level and below whose years of employment and age add up to 70 or higher." Further details will be provided on May 7. From the report: Last year Microsoft removed some costs through multiple rounds of layoffs. As of June 2025, the company had 228,000 employees. "Our hope is that this program gives those eligible the choice to take that next step on their own terms, with generous company support," Amy Coleman, Microsoft's executive vice president and chief people officer, wrote in a memo viewed by CNBC. Additionally, Microsoft is adjusting the way it doles out stock to employees for annual rewards. The company will no longer make managers tie stock directly to cash bonuses. This way, "managers have more flexibility to meaningfully recognize high performance," Coleman wrote. The company is also simplifying the review process for managers, so they can choose from five pay options for employees instead of nine.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Enrolling in a debt relief program can impact the debt collection process, and not always in the way you'd expect.
John Phelan firing caused by poor relationship with Pete Hegseth and slow movement on shipbuilding, sources say
The Trump administration fired its top naval official on Wednesday in a move unrelated to the ongoing naval blockade of Iran’s strait of Hormuz, but instead over over an internal dispute about shipbuilding.
The Pentagon confirmed that John Phelan, who ran a private investment fund in Florida and was a Donald Trump donor, had been ousted as the navy secretary. His departure – the first of any service secretary in the Trump administration – came in the same week that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps seized two container ships in the strait of Hormuz, claiming maritime violations and transferring them to Iranian shores.
Continue reading...Lebanese PM calls attack that killed Amal Khalil a ‘war crime’, with rescuers attempting to free her also targeted
Israel’s killing of a prominent Lebanese journalist in a double-tap strike has been greeted with international outrage as Lebanon’s prime minister described the attack as a “war crime”.
Amal Khalil, 43, who worked for al-Akhbar newspaper, was buried on Thursday. She was killed in what colleagues described as a sustained attack by Israeli forces, with rescuers attempting to dig her out of the rubble of a building also targeted and prevented from providing life-saving assistance.
Continue reading...Jim Taiclet spoke in earnings call as company expands contracts with the US government amid the Iran war
Lockheed Martin’s CEO has called the Trump administration a “golden opportunity” for the company as it expands its contracting work for the federal government amid the conflict in the Middle East.
In an earnings call on Thursday covering the first quarter of 2026, Lockheed Martin CEO Jim Taiclet told investors that the company is well positioned “based on more available resources for us”.
Continue reading...A working research prototype designed to connect quantum systems from different vendors, in all major encoding modalities, at room temperature, over standard telecom fiber
SAN JOSE, Calif., April 23, 2026 — Cisco today announced the Cisco Universal Quantum Switch, a critical milestone in quantum networking that addresses one of the most fundamental barriers to building a quantum network. As a working research prototype, it is the latest proof point in Cisco’s accelerating full-stack quantum networking program, built on years of foundational research, real-world demonstrations, and a growing ecosystem of strategic collaborations.
Quantum computers encode information in different ways, and until now, no switch could accept and translate between all major encoding modalities without destroying the quantum information in the process. The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch is designed to address this challenge for the first time, routing quantum information while preserving it at room temperature, on existing telecom fiber, with a Cisco-patented conversion engine that translates between encoding modalities at input and output.
“Reaching this milestone is a pivotal moment for our quantum program and a testament to the transformative potential of quantum networking,” said Vijoy Pandey, SVP/GM of Outshift, Cisco’s Emerging Technologies and Incubation Group. “We’ve long recognized that connecting quantum systems is the key to achieving true scalability, and now we’ve taken a critical step toward making that vision a reality. While this is a significant achievement, it’s just the beginning. The road ahead is long, yet the impact of what we are building—and what is still to come—will be nothing short of profound.”
Cisco Is Building the Network Layer for the Quantum Era
Today’s quantum computers are powerful but limited, operating at hundreds of qubits when real-world applications in healthcare, financial services, and aerospace will need millions to achieve unheard of speeds and technological breakthroughs. Cisco believes networking and connectivity are central to bridging that gap. The quantum future will not be built by any one company or any one technology. It will be built by connecting them all.
Imagine connecting billions of people and tens of billions of devices with direct cables. It would be unmanageable. The internet became possible because classical switches could connect all of those endpoints through a shared, scalable network. The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch does the same thing for quantum. When two quantum computers need to share information, it accepts the signal in whatever modality it arrives, translates it into a common language for routing, and delivers it in the format the receiving system needs, without losing any quantum information along the way.
This is made possible by a Cisco-patented conversion engine at the heart of the quantum switch. The output modality can match the input or be an entirely different one, enabling the quantum switch to connect and translate between quantum systems that were never designed to talk to each other, a critical capability for building quantum networks that work across different vendors and technologies.
The quantum switch is designed to support all major quantum encoding modalities used to carry information:
To date, the quantum switch has been experimentally validated with polarization encoding. Support for time-bin and frequency-bin is built into the design and represents the next step in Cisco’s ongoing validation process.
Proof-of-Concept Experiments and Results
The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch was tested by Cisco researchers using Cisco’s own entanglement source and single-photon detectors. In these experiments, the switch demonstrated that quantum information can be routed and converted across systems quickly, accurately, and efficiently, without destroying it in the process.
Key findings include:
Powering the Quantum Network of the Future
Quantum networking is in a nascent state. There is no established infrastructure connecting quantum systems, and most can only communicate with other systems that encode information the same way they do.
The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch is an entirely new approach:
Cisco’s Vision for What Comes Next
For more than four decades, Cisco has built infrastructure that connects the world. The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch is the latest milestone in that journey, reflecting Cisco’s conviction that the road to practical quantum computing will be built via a distributed network of interconnected quantum devices in a matter of years, not decades.
The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch is one part of a broader quantum networking portfolio that includes Cisco’s quantum network entanglement chip, which generates the entangled photons that quantum networks rely on to transmit information, and Cisco’s industry-first network-aware Quantum Compiler, which orchestrates how quantum algorithms are distributed and executed across multiple quantum processors. All three were developed from the ground up at Cisco’s dedicated quantum labs in Santa Monica. Together, along with applications like Quantum Sync and Quantum Alert, these innovations contribute to Cisco’s vision for a full quantum network stack, from the hardware that generates and routes quantum information, to the software that manages it, to the applications that put it to work. Cisco is also advancing this vision through strategic collaborations with IBM, Qunnect, Atom Computing and more.
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About Cisco
Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is the worldwide technology leader that is revolutionizing the way organizations connect and protect in the AI era. For more than 40 years, Cisco has securely connected the world. With its industry leading AI-powered solutions and services, Cisco enables its customers, partners and communities to unlock innovation, enhance productivity, and strengthen digital resilience. With purpose at its core, Cisco remains committed to creating a more connected and inclusive future for all.
Source: Cisco
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Inquiry began in March after report on security arrangements involving FBI director’s girlfriend, NYT says
The FBI began investigating a New York Times reporter after the newspaper published a story raising concerns about the security arrangements surrounding the girlfriend of Kash Patel, the FBI director, the Times has reported.
According to reporting from the Times on Wednesday, the inquiry into Elizabeth Williamson, the reporter, began in March following an article she reported alleging that Patel used FBI resources to provide protection and transportation for his girlfriend, the country singer Alexis Wilkins.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: New York is suing Coinbase and Gemini, two of the newest players in the prediction market industry, arguing that the companies' unregulated and unlicensed platforms are illegal gambling operations. Attorney General Letitia James' lawsuit, filed Tuesday in state court in Manhattan, seeks to bar the companies' platforms from operating in the state unless and until they obtain licenses from the state Gaming Commission. "Gambling by another name is still gambling, and it is not exempt from regulation under our state laws and Constitution," James said in a statement. "Gemini and Coinbase's so-called prediction markets are just illegal gambling operations, exposing young people to addictive platforms that lack the necessary guardrails." Both companies began as cryptocurrency trading platforms before branching into the prediction space, which has been dominated by Kalshi and Polymarket. [...] New York's lawsuit alleges that the Coinbase and Gemini are seeking "to avoid the legal and financial consequences" of the state's close regulation of gambling "by offering what is quintessentially wagering under the guise of offering 'event contracts' on a 'prediction market.'" By operating without licenses, the lawsuit says, Coinbase's and Gemini's prediction market businesses aren't paying the same taxes as licensed casinos and mobile sportsbooks, which are taxed by the state at a rate of approximately 51% of gross revenues. In addition, the lawsuit says, Coinbase and Gemini allow users as young as 18, while state law prohibits wagering by anyone under 21.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Is the shock of the US-Iran war helping Europe come together? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…
EU expansion, energy shocks, and uneasy alliances: will the conflict in the Gulf – and other crises – force a more unified European strategy?
This week’s episode comes from the Delphi Economic Forum in Greece, where host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Grégoire Roos, director of our Europe, Russia and Eurasia programmes.
As the fallout from the US-Israel war on Iran ripples through global markets, Europe finds itself under renewed pressure.
Recorded on location amid the activity and discussions of the forum, they explore how Europe is responding to an increasingly unpredictable United States, reconsidering its own economic and security priorities, and navigating its relationship with Russia. Is this a moment of fragmentation, or the beginning of a more coherent European stance?
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.
A journalists' union said rescuers were prevented from accessing the destroyed building where reporter Amal Khalil was left trapped beneath rubble.
The order places FDA-approved products containing marijuana and state-regulated medical marijuana products at a lower drug classification.
Pope Leo XIV shed his previous image as he denounced war in the Middle East and responded assertively to criticism by President Donald Trump.
Italian officials expressed no interest in a substitution that would give Italy’s national team a charitable berth after failing to qualify for the tournament.
Picking the right headphones for the right situation is key. For everyday use, exercising and lengthy listening time, three is the perfect number for a headphones collection. Here are my picks.
Bill clears 50–48 vote to boost ICE and CBP funding as Democrats oppose measure and shutdown continues
Senate Republicans on Thursday approved a plan to fund Donald Trump’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants for the remainder of his term and pave the way for an end to the ongoing shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
The budget resolution adopted along a near party line vote in the early-morning hours sets the stage for Congress to craft legislation allocating as much as $140bn to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), two agencies at the forefront of Trump’s mass deportation agenda that have been without funding since mid-February, when the DHS shutdown began.
Continue reading...Want to skip investing and deposit $20,000 into a top savings account instead? Here's how much you'd earn if you do.
President Trump intends to nominate David Cummins to lead the Transportation Security Administration, according to a person familiar with the decision.
A combination of heat, dry air and strong winds are fueling "extreme" wildfire risks for millions across the middle of the country.
Firm went bust in February amid fallout from the scandal over Mandelson’s links to Jeffrey Epstein
Little says in March she had a meeting when she asked to see the Foreign Office’s documentation about the decision to grant Mandelson vetting. She said she was asking because this was documentation covered by the humble address. She said was told that “that information would not be forthcoming”.
In the middle of March, I have a meeting with Sir Olly and a senior member of his team, and this is after the point that I’ve been told that this summary document exists.
I specifically ask to see this document and any decision-making audit trail around those judgments at the time. It was made clear to me that that information would not be forthcoming.
I took the very unusual judgment that I should directly request the information from UK Security Vetting.
And I did that because I go back to my responsibilities, to discharge the humble address, which is a responsibility that is unique to me and I take very seriously.
Continue reading...Commentary: One big product frontier still looms for Apple. Will smart glasses have their AirPods moment at last?
New lawsuit accuses JetBlue of using consumers' browser activity and other personal data to set airfares.
After Keir Starmer’s statement to the Commons and gripping evidence from the sacked top civil servant Olly Robbins, Pippa Crerar and Kiran Stacey talk about how the story of Peter Mandelson’s vetting for his job as UK ambassador to the US, which was first broken by the Guardian last Thursday, has unfolded this week
Continue reading...Move comes after Hungary and Slovakia dropped opposition following reopening of the Druzhba oil pipeline
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that Kyiv will seek to receive the first tranche of the €90bn European Union loan by the end of May, or early June.
“This is strengthening of our army,” he told reporters in a WhatsApp chat, reported by Reuters.
Continue reading...Wildfires burning across the south-eastern US intensified on Wednesday in parts of south-east Georgia, where 50 homes were destroyed, and across north-east Florida, forcing evacuations and school closures in some communities.
The Georgia forestry commission issued its first mandatory burn ban in the state’s history, effective across 91 counties in the lower half of the state, because of worsening drought conditions and rising wildfire activity.
Some of the biggest blazes are reported to be along Georgia’s coast and around Jacksonville, Florida. They have been exacerbated by a long drought, low humidity and strong winds in the area
Continue reading...Adam Hall, of Tyne and Wear, will serve at least 23 years in prison, with victims describing lasting trauma
A “callous, calculating sexual predator” who raped and deliberately infected young, vulnerable men with HIV has been jailed for life and told he must serve at least 23 years.
Adam Hall, 43, of Washington, Tyne and Wear, is the second man in the UK ever to be found guilty of intentionally setting out to spread the virus.
Continue reading...VC-led round will be used to scale platform and team, building on a foundation of hardware-agnostic quantum software leadership
BOSTON, April 23, 2026 — Zapata Quantum, a pioneer in quantum computing application and algorithm development, today announced the completion of an oversubscribed $15 million financing led by Triatomic Capital, a leading technology venture capital firm, with participation from other strategic investors. The capital raise marks the final milestone of a successful year-long restructuring effort and positions Zapata to accelerate its role in advancing the application layer of quantum computing.
“We’ve completed our restructuring and emerged stronger than ever,” said Sumit Kapur, Chief Executive Officer of Zapata Quantum. “This financing is a strong vote of confidence from long-term, fundamentals-oriented investors and positions us to scale at a critical moment as quantum computing transitions from technical progress to transformational real-world value creation.”
“Zapata stands out for its commitment to technical rigor, deep portfolio of foundational IP, and proven experience helping enterprises advance in their quantum journey,” said Jeff Huber, General Partner of Triatomic Capital. “We’re proud to support Zapata’s growth as it continues to demonstrate leadership in translating quantum advantage into quantum utility.”
Leadership in Quantum Value Creation
Since emerging from Harvard’s Quantum Computing Lab in 2017, Zapata has led foundational work advancing real-world quantum applications across Fortune 500 enterprises and the public sector, spanning high-value domains including cryptography, pharmaceuticals, finance, materials discovery, and defense.
A recent example of Zapata’s work highlighting quantum-enabled drug discovery was selected as one of Nature Biotechnology’s top 10 scientific papers of 2025, and featured as the journal’s December 2025 cover. The study, co-authored with Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, University of Toronto, and Insilico Medicine, focused on targeting the KRAS mutation in cancer therapy—serving as a proof point of Zapata’s capabilities and quantum computing’s massive potential to generate viable drug candidates in the biotech domain.
Scaling at a Critical Moment for Quantum Computing
Quantum computing is entering a phase of increasing enterprise relevance, with rapid hardware progress fueling growing sophistication in algorithms and implementations. At the same time, a gap remains between technical advancement and the ability to develop validated, high-value applications for enterprise problems. Zapata is focused on closing this gap by providing enterprises with the intelligence and tooling required to move from experimentation to production-ready solutions.
The strategic investment by Triatomic and others underscores Zapata’s mission to solve the quantum application bottleneck and represents a key next step in the company’s progress in the public market.
Funding will be used to scale Zapata’s platform and team across science, engineering, product, and commercial functions. As an AI-native company, Zapata is structured to deploy this capital efficiently—leveraging AI-driven development and strategic partnerships, including its collaboration with the University of Maryland on formal validation of quantum algorithms, to extend capabilities, accelerate development, and maximize runway.
“We are already firing on all cylinders: scientifically, technically, and commercially,” said Kapur. “This capital is jet fuel. It allows us to scale across every dimension. I couldn’t be more grateful or excited for the journey ahead as we continue toward our true north as the foundational hardware-agnostic quantum software platform.”
About Zapata Quantum
Zapata Quantum (OTC: ZPTA) is a leading hardware-agnostic, pure-play quantum software company focused on accelerating quantum application development. With a portfolio of more than 60 granted and pending patents developed over seven years, Zapata supports applications across cryptography, pharmaceuticals, finance, materials discovery, defense, and more. The Company is the only organization to have participated across all technical areas of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking program and has worked with Fortune 500 enterprises and government agencies to translate quantum advances into real-world impact. Learn more at zapataquantum.com.
Source: Zapata Quantum
The post Zapata Quantum Secures $15M Financing Following Year-Long Restructuring appeared first on HPCwire.
Commentary: If you want a new iPhone, get Apple's iPhone 17. The iPhone 18 is still too far away, and we don't know enough about it to justify the wait.
YouGov survey shows cross-party consensus – but that many fear abortion access could be reduced
New polling has found that whatever their party political leanings, an overwhelming majority of people support the right to access an abortion – although young people, in particular, fear reproductive rights may be reduced.
The YouGov polling, commissioned by MSI Reproductive Choices to mark its 50th anniversary, found nine in 10 people support the right to access an abortion.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Tesla CEO Elon Musk said on Wednesday the EV maker plans to use Intel's next-generation 14A manufacturing process to make chips at its Terafab project, an advanced AI chip complex Musk has envisioned in Austin. The contract would mark Intel's first major customer for the technology, a breakthrough for the chipmaker which has struggled to stand up its contract manufacturing business essential for taking on top rival TSMC. Intel CEO Lip Bu Tan has said that the company would exit the chip manufacturing business altogether if it failed to secure an external customer. Intel has previously said it was in discussions with large customers about 14A, but has not yet disclosed a major external customer. It declined to comment on Musk's remarks. [...] "Given that by the time Terafab scales up, 14A will be probably fairly mature or ready for prime time," Musk said. "14A seems like the right move, and we have a great relationship with Intel," he said. Ben Bajarin, head of technology consultancy Creative Strategies, said that Intel's 14A technology could "turn out to be a bigger deal for Intel than folks thought." "It's important to have multiple partners as early design partners to help clean the pipe and work through needed learnings at the leading edge. They will definitely have scale, so a great first non-Intel customer," Bajarin said. Seaport Research Partners analyst Jay Goldberg said Musk's vote of confidence in Intel's technology outweighed the unknowns about the Terafab project. "Having a customer is more important than the timing," he said. Goldberg said that Musk's lofty estimates of how many chips its robots could one day require may or may not materialize, but even making chips for Tesla's existing businesses would be a significant win for Intel. "It's not equivalent to Apple or Nvidia" in terms of chip volumes, Goldberg said. "But it's a real customer. It can be real volumes."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
More than 50% of voters at first AGM under new leadership oppose plans to scrap climate reporting
BP’s board has suffered a triple climate rebellion in its first shareholder meeting since appointing new leadership to steer the embattled oil company.
More than 50% of shareholders voting at the company’s annual general meeting (AGM) came out against its plans to scrap its existing climate reporting, and its resolution to replace in-person annual shareholder meetings – a lightning rod for climate protest in recent years – with online-only events.
Continue reading...Removal site in Dunkirk will hold people of 10 nationalities trying to reach UK in small boats under new £660m deal with French
The UK will pay for 200 French officers to detain and deport people seeking asylum from some of the world’s most oppressive and war-ravaged regimes under a new UK-France deal to try to reduce Channel crossings.
In what is being billed as the first time the French government has agreed to target those heading to the UK in small boats, a removal site in Dunkirk will be used to hold people from 10 countries: Eritrea, Afghanistan, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, Iraq, Syria, Vietnam and Yemen. The Home Office said they were the top 10 nationalities who crossed the Channel by small boat last year.
Continue reading...New Classiq Quantum Agent capability turns natural-language intent into production-ready quantum applications, powered by the first generation of expert-level quantum AI agents
BOSTON, April 23, 2026 — Classiq today announced a significant acceleration for quantum software development: a new AI agentic layer that enables users to move from natural-language intent to structured, executable quantum applications, powered by a first-generation, expert-level quantum agent.
Unlike traditional code assistants, the Classiq Quantum Agent operates on top of its model-based quantum software platform, allowing it to generate, refine and optimize quantum programs within a validated, scalable development environment. This approach now enables AI to not only suggest code, but to function as a trained development partner. It is now capable of guiding and implementing complex quantum workflows across enterprise domains such as pharmaceuticals, finance, aerospace, automotive and quantum error correction.
“AI in quantum computing has so far been limited to helping write code,” said Nir Minerbi, CEO and co-founder of Classiq. “Classiq created the foundational modeling and abstraction layer for quantum software. It’s the only stack designed to be natively understood by large language models, allowing AI to develop expert-grade quantum applications that are not just theoretical, but fully compilable and ready to run on real hardware.”
From Prompts to Production-Ready Portable Quantum Applications
Classiq’s new capability enables users to describe high-level goals, algorithms or domain-specific problems in natural language, and generate structured quantum programs that can be analyzed, optimized and executed.
Crucially, this is not free-form code generation because the AI-generated outputs are built on top of Classiq’s model-based architecture, ensuring that programs remain:
By combining natural-language interaction with its synthesis and optimization engine, Classiq enables a shift from experimental coding to repeatable, enterprise-grade quantum development.
An Emerging AI Category: Expert Quantum Agents
The agentic workflow is designed to operate across the full lifecycle of quantum application development, including:
Because it operates on top of Classiq’s validated modeling layer and curated algorithm libraries, the agents can reason about quantum systems at a higher level than traditional LLM-based tools. The result is a system that combines the flexibility of AI with the rigor required for serious quantum software development.
Accelerating Quantum Projects to Practical Long-Term Quantum Assets
Classiq’s approach reflects a broader shift in how enterprises engage with quantum computing. As the quantum ecosystem continues to move toward larger-scale systems, software abstraction, automation, developer productivity and implementation quality are becoming critical.
Rather than producing one-off experiments or disposable code, organizations can now build persistent, evolving capabilities, where knowledge is captured, validated and continuously improved over time.
“Enterprises don’t want to ‘play with quantum,’” added Minerbi. “They want to build something that lasts. By combining AI with a validated modeling foundation, we’re enabling teams to create quantum applications and knowledge assets that remain relevant as the technology evolves.”
AI-native development workflows are the next step in that evolution, enabling more teams to participate in quantum development while maintaining the depth and rigor required for real-world applications.
By introducing expert-level AI into the quantum development process, Classiq is expanding what is possible, and democratizing who can build it.
About Classiq
Classiq is the leading quantum computing software company, providing the technology that makes it practical for enterprises and researchers to access and harness quantum computing. Classiq’s platform transforms high-level functional models into optimized, hardware-ready quantum circuits automatically. This enables teams to develop algorithms faster, optimize them for cost and performance, and make quantum applications usable sooner, without deep hardware expertise.
Source: Classiq
The post Classiq Certifies Expert-Level Quantum AI Agents for Real-World Applications appeared first on HPCwire.
The merger will still require governmental approval and could be delayed by a lawsuit seeking to block it
Shareholders of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) voted “overwhelmingly” to approve the company’s $110bn merger with Paramount Skydance, the parent company of CBS News, on Thursday.
But shareholders voted against generous proposed compensation packages for WBD executives, including a $550m payout to the outgoing chief executive, David Zaslav.
Continue reading...British foreign secretary told to impose new measures as ruble-pegged cryptocurrency A7A5 is supported in country
More than 20 MPs and peers have called on the foreign secretary to take action against institutions and individuals in Kyrgyzstan allegedly facilitating large-scale Russian sanctions evasion.
They urged the UK to levy personal sanctions against three top Kyrgyz officials for their alleged role in facilitating Russian sanctions evasion more broadly, and more specifically for allowing Kyrgyzstan to host infrastructure supporting the cryptocurrency A7A5.
Continue reading...Tehran has shown that its grip over the strait of Hormuz is its most potent deterrent – arguably more consequential than its now defunct nuclear programme
Fawaz Gerges is professor of international relations at the London School of Economics
Donald Trump’s decision to go to war against Iran will be remembered as a grave strategic miscalculation – one that has reshaped the region in unintended and destabilising ways. With the ceasefire now extended indefinitely, we can see more clearly how the war has undermined the US’s standing in the world and failed to achieve its core objectives: it has neither brought about regime change in Tehran, nor forced Iran to submit to American demands. Far from it.
By inflicting economic pain far beyond the region and slowing the global economy, Iran has demonstrated that its grip over the strait of Hormuz constitutes its most potent deterrent – arguably more consequential than its now defunct nuclear programme. Control of the strait will be Tehran’s most powerful source of leverage in the years ahead.
Continue reading...A deeply divided federal appeals court has ruled that public schools in Texas are allowed to display Ten Commandments posters or framed copies in public school classrooms, setting up a potential landmark case in the Supreme Court’s next term.
On Tuesday, the full United State Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in a 9-8 decision in Nathan v. Alamo, held that a state law, S.B. 10, requiring the 10 Commandments classroom display does not violate the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause or Free Exercise Clause. These clauses read as follows: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”
Link: Read the Decision
The Fifth Circuit majority considered a Supreme Court precedent set in Stone v. Graham (1980), where a divided Court ruled that a Kentucky law requiring the Ten Commandments in public classrooms violated the Establishment Clause. Instead, the Fifth Circuit majority cited the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in Kennedy v. Bremerton School District as rendering the Stone precedent as obsolete. The court’s minority held that only the Supreme Court can overturn its own precedents, and the Texas law violates the “most basic First Amendment principles.”
The majority decision in Texas
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals was considering the Texas law in conjunction with a similar law passed in Louisiana that was contested in Roake v. Brumley. A three-judge Fifth Circuit panel considering Roake ruled that Louisiana’s 10 Commandments law was unconstitutional. The full Fifth Circuit bench vacated Roake in February 2026 as a premature challenge, but it determined that the Texas case was eligible to be heard by the full appeals bench.
In his majority opinion, Circuit Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan said the Fifth Circuit majority properly discarded the Stone precedent since it relied on a prior Supreme Court precedent, Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971). Under Lemon, the Supreme Court created a three-part test to determine if a law violated the Establishment Clause.
However, in Bremerton, Justice Neil Gorsuch established a new method to replace the Lemon test. In his majority opinion, Gorsuch cited the “shortcomings” associated the Lemon test’s “abstract, and ahistorical approach to the Establishment Clause. “
“This Court long ago abandoned Lemon and its endorsement test offshoot,” Gorsuch wrote in Bremerton. “In place of Lemon and the endorsement test, this Court has instructed that the Establishment Clause must be interpreted by ‘reference to historical practices and understandings.’
“Mercifully, the Supreme Court jettisoned Lemon and its offspring some years ago,” Duncan wrote. “With Lemon extracted, there is nothing left of Stone,” Duncan wrote. Applying the Bremerton test, Duncan asked if the Texas law conflicted with the Founding-era understanding of “religious establishment.” Duncan stated that in the late 18th century, the establishment of religion “was a familiar institution: a polity’s official church or religion.” He did not see conflict with S.B. 10.
“S.B. 10 looks nothing like a historical religious establishment. It does not tell churches or synagogues or mosques what to believe or how to worship or whom to employ as priests, rabbis, or imams. It punishes no one who rejects the Ten Commandments, no matter the reason,” Duncan believed.
Duncan also disagreed with arguments that S.B. 10 conflicted with a recent Supreme Court decision, Mahmoud v. Taylor (2025), where a divided Supreme Court held that parents could opt their children out from public school instruction they believed violated their free exercise of religion rights.
“S.B. 10 authorizes no religious instruction and gives teachers no license to contradict children’s religious beliefs (or their parents’). No child is made to recite the Commandments, believe them, or affirm their divine origin,” Duncan concluded. He cited the Supreme Court’s pledge of allegiance precedent in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943), where public school students who were Jehovah’s Witnesses were permitted to not salute the flag or say the pledge as instructed by their parents.
Circuit Judge James C. Ho concurred with the majority opinion. “No challenge to either Texas or Louisiana law could possibly succeed, because neither law comes close to imposing either an establishment of religion or a prohibition on the free exercise thereof, as originally understood by the Founders or articulated by any governing Supreme Court precedent,” Ho wrote.
The dissent objects on basic grounds
In a dissent joined by six other judges, Circuit Judge Irma Carrillo Ramirez stated S.B. 10 as written clearly violates the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause. “Legislation requiring the permanent fixture of religious rules in public-school classrooms, with no ‘educational function,’ violates these most basic First Amendment principles,” she argued.
Ramirez objected to Judge Duncan’s claim that the Supreme Court has overruled the Stone precedent. “Although Kennedy abandoned Lemon and its endorsement test offshoot, it did not cite, much less purport to ‘abandon’ or overturn, Stone—despite the opportunity to do so,” she claimed. “Whatever the fate of Stone may be ‘as an inferior court,’ we must ‘adhere strictly to’ it until the Supreme Court says otherwise. And under Stone, S.B. 10 is unconstitutional.”
Ramirez also held that under Bremerton’s historical test, the Texas law was still unconstitutional. She repeatedly cited the Supreme Court’s precedent in Lee v. Weisman (1992), where a divided court ruled that including prayers from a rabbi at a public-school graduation was a subtle and indirect religious coercion because students felt compelled to stand during the recitals.
“Defendants assert that, under Kennedy, there are six identified ‘hallmarks’ of religious establishments that the Establishment Clause was adopted to prohibit, and if a challenged practice does not resemble one of these hallmarks, there is no constitutional violation,” Ramirez reasoned.
“Kennedy specifically placed coercion along the lines of that found in Lee among those ‘foremost hallmarks,’” Ramirez concluded, noting the Supreme Court’s long history of “heightened concerns with protecting freedom of conscience from subtle coercive pressure in the elementary and secondary public schools.”
In a separate dissent, Circuit Judge Leslie H. Southwick believed parts of the Lemon test were still viable for consideration in First Amendment cases. “In my view, the [Lemon] test was disassembled, and one part discarded — but other parts of what had been fused remain usable.”
Circuit Judge Stephen A. Higginson also objected to the majority decision. “The Framers intended disestablishment of religion, above all to prevent large religious sects from using political power to impose their religion on others,” he believed. “The majority defies foundational First Amendment concepts, ignores the harms students will face, and usurps parents’ rights to determine the religious beliefs they wish to instill in their own children.”
In a statement issued after the Fifth Circuit ruling, the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas said it anticipated appealing the decision to the Supreme Court.
Scott Bomboy is the editor-in-chief of the National Constitution Center.
Scientists spent over two years identifying a mysterious object found off the coast of Alaska in 2023.
Rosemarie Milsom, who formed and runs Newcastle writers festival, will take over from Louise Adler after the literary festival imploded over invitation to Randa Abdel-Fattah
In January, as the implosion of Adelaide writers’ week made headlines around Australia and the world, Rosemarie Milsom was watching closely.
The Adelaide festival board, which oversees AWW, had overridden the literary festival’s director, Louise Adler, and disinvited the Palestinian Australian author Randa Abdel-Fattah over past comments she’d made about Israel and Zionism. This decision resulted not in a quieter, less-controversial festival as the board members may have hoped, but a boycott by 200-odd writers, the resignation of Adler – followed by the whole board – a potential defamation lawsuit against the South Australian premier and the collapse of AWW.
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Continue reading...Episode four of Peacock’s Gilgo Beach Serial Killer: House of Secrets features interviews with Rex Heuermann’s family
The meticulous rituals of the Long Island serial killer, Rex Heuermann, have been revealed in a Peacock documentary released on Thursday.
The confessed killer of eight women relays via a therapist that he maintained a four-day ritual of preparation, building trust with his victims, murdering them in a basement “kill room”, a day of “playtime” with their bodies, and then using a stopwatch to perfect dumping them on a beach 20 miles from his home. He would use the fourth day to deal with any unforeseen complications.
Continue reading...Finishing a debt relief program doesn't guarantee that creditors are gone for good. Here's what to know.
Lawsuit follows exchange on X in which airline suggested customer should clear cache or book with incognito window
JetBlue has been sued in a proposed class action claiming it uses customers’ personal data to set ticket prices, after its response to a social media post raised concern that the carrier employed “surveillance pricing” to make flying more expensive.
According to a complaint filed late on Wednesday in Brooklyn federal court, JetBlue conceals its use of “trackers” to set prices dynamically, and shares data with third parties whose programs help it decide when to raise fares.
Continue reading...Police chief says human remains had been in a wooded area for years and did not match local missing persons reports
Memphis police have found the remains of three children in an area of woodland, saying they had probably been there “for several years”.
Police said the children are believed to have been between three and seven years old.
Continue reading...Cotton says current law leaves U.S. power grids, wastewater plants, and other high-risk sites exposed to emerging drone threats.
Tectonic plate movements over millions of years have lifted and tilted the layers, with records of ancient earthquakes in the rocks
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Microscopic fossils embedded in limestone have helped reveal the true age of Victoria’s Twelve Apostles as 8.6m to 14m years old.
The conclave of giant golden pillars is visited by 2.8 million tourists each year, a highlight for those travelling along the Great Ocean Road south-west of Melbourne.
Continue reading...Planning your trip just became a whole lot easier.
The Pentagon won’t disclose the price tag of its wars in the Western Hemisphere, but a new analysis by Brown University’s Costs of War Project, provided exclusively to The Intercept, offers the first window onto the ballooning costs.
By the most cautious estimate, the U.S. military’s intervention in Venezuela and attacks on boats in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific — Operations Absolute Resolve and Operation Southern Spear, respectively — have already cost taxpayers at least $4.7 billion.
The Costs of War analysis is the most comprehensive accounting of the U.S. air, naval, and Special Operations expenses — including some troop deployments and munitions — used in the two campaigns between August 1, 2025, and March 31, 2026. The need for such an estimate stems from the refusal of the Department of War to provide a tally of costs to lawmakers or The Intercept.
The researchers behind the Costs of War estimate say it’s almost assuredly an undercount.
“Operations do not have a clear end date and are actively expanding. They carry significant human, financial, and strategic costs and risk,” wrote authors Hanna Homestead, a research analyst with the National Priorities Project, and Jennifer Kavanagh, the director of military analysis at Defense Priorities, a nonpartisan research group.
“American taxpayers, who are increasingly unable to afford basic needs, have a right to know how their tax dollars are spent,” they noted.
Homestead and Kavanagh observe that the largest costs might still be on the horizon.
The expenses were “enough to fund Medicaid for 500,000 people for an entire year.”
“We expect that if comprehensive information were available, our cost estimate would likely increase significantly,” they wrote.
Kavanagh told The Intercept that the expenses were “enough to fund Medicaid for 500,000 people for an entire year.”
“Though the Trump administration is right to focus more on the Western Hemisphere, most needs in the region are economic or require investment in regional law enforcement. The United States is not clearly safer or more prosperous as a result of Operation Southern Spear or Operation Absolute Resolve,” she said.
The Naval deployment — which comprised the largest concentration of U.S. ships in the region since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962 — constituted the single largest expense, an estimated $3.8 billion. This includes the ever-growing cost of the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group which consists of the USS Iwo Jima, USS Fort Lauderdale, and USS San Antonio, which remain deployed in the Caribbean with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit and the USS Lake Erie guided-missile cruiser. Costs of War puts the daily operating costs of these ships at around $9 million per day.
Costs of War puts the daily operating costs of these ships at around $9 million per day.
The steep Naval expenditures are followed by at least $616 million spent on the deployment of aircraft, including P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, F-35A Lightning II fighters, and MQ-9 Reaper drones used in both operations. The continuing daily cost of operating the at least 20 aircraft that are assumed to remain deployed in the region is $2.6 million.
Under Operation Southern Spear, the U.S. military has conducted 53 attacks on so-called drug boats since September 2025, killing more than 180 civilians. The latest strike, on April 19 in the Caribbean, killed three people. The Trump administration claims its victims are members of at least one of 24 or more cartels and criminal gangs with whom it claims to be at war but refuses to name.
Experts in the laws of war and members of Congress, from both parties, say the strikes are illegal extrajudicial killings because the military is not permitted to deliberately target civilians — even suspected criminals — who do not pose an imminent threat of violence. The summary executions are a significant departure from standard practice in the long-running U.S. war on drugs, in which law enforcement agencies arrested suspected drug smugglers.
The Costs of War analysis puts the price tag of the munitions employed in these attacks on boats at between $12.5 million and $50 million, the range owing to the lack of transparency surrounding the strikes. The report notes that the individual cost of armaments used in each strike may top $1 million and could actually be far higher if multiple munitions or aircraft are used.
Beyond expenses captured under Southern Spear, ancillary costs of Absolute Resolve, a large-scale air campaign and the abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, top $206 million. This includes the deployment of at least 150 aircraft — fighter jets, bombers, and Special Operations aircraft, and more — along with precision munitions such as Tomahawk cruise missiles and JASSM-ER missiles.
The approximately 200 Special Operations forces who played a key role in Maduro’s kidnapping cost about $16 million, to include the costs of daily operations and combat. As yet unknown are the costs of deployments of U.S. commandos in Ecuador, another front in America’s Western hemispheric war.
The boat strikes recently moved to land as what Joseph Humire, the acting assistant secretary of war for homeland defense and Americas security affairs, called “bilateral kinetic actions against cartel targets along the Colombia-Ecuador border” on unnamed designated terrorist organizations. “The joint effort, named ‘Operation Total Extermination,’ is the start of a military offensive by Ecuador against transnational criminal organizations with the support of the U.S.,” Humire announced last month. That U.S.–Ecuadorian campaign has already strayed into Colombia after a farm was bombed or hit by “ricochet effect” on March 3. In a war powers report announcing the introduction of U.S. armed forces into “hostilities” in Ecuador, the White House also informed Congress of “military action taken on March 6, 2026, against the facilities of narco-terrorists affiliated with a designated terrorist organization.”
America’s wars in the Western Hemisphere are part of what President Donald Trump and others have termed the “Donroe Doctrine,” a bastardization of the 1823 Monroe Doctrine. While President James Monroe’s policy aimed to prevent Europe from meddling in the Western Hemisphere, Trump has employed his version as a license for America to do exactly that.
The National Security Strategy, released late last year, decrees the “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine a “potent restoration of American power and priorities,” rooted in the “readjustment of our global military presence to address urgent threats in our Hemisphere.” Last month, Humire told members of the House Armed Services Committee that “America’s immediate security perimeter” extended from “Alaska to Greenland in the Arctic to the Gulf of America and the Panama Canal and surrounding countries.” The Trump administration has, in fact, bullied Panama and threatened Canada, Colombia, Cuba, Greenland, and perhaps also Iceland, while conducting counter-cartel CIA operations in Mexico.
The Pentagon refuses to provide insights into its expenditures for conflicts in Latin America.
“For any information regarding budgetary costs for Operations Southern Spear and Operation Absolute Resolve, I’ll have to refer you to OSW,” U.S. Southern Command spokesperson Steven McLoud told The Intercept. When asked about the costs, the Office of the Secretary of War said it does “not have anything to provide currently.”
Homestead and Kavanagh admit that the $4.7 billion price tag placed on Operations Absolute Resolve and Southern Spear is likely a low-ball figure. “This is a conservative estimate based on the limited information about the operation that is available,” they wrote. “Full data for several cost categories are not publicly available, and certain operations — such as the details of a CIA operation in Venezuela referenced by President Trump — remain classified or incompletely reported in the public domain.”
Costs are mounting by the day and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. Trump has said he expects the U.S. will be running Venezuela for years. (He recently teased the possibility of making Venezuela the 51st U.S. state, before saying he could run for president of that country.) The Intercept previously reported that Pentagon procurement documents indicate the U.S. plans to maintain a massive military presence in the Caribbean until late 2028.
“Much of the military forward presence involved in these operations appears to now have become the ‘steady state,’ that is, it is likely to remain in the region for the foreseeable future,” said Kavanagh. “This means that the costs will continue to accumulate.”
The ultimate price tag of Americas wars in Latin America will further balloon in the decades ahead, saddling future Americans with soaring costs. “War is financed by debt, adding interest costs to the public budget,” write Homestead and Kavanagh. “Furthermore, the federal government undertakes an obligation to pay veterans benefits for decades into the future.”
Recently, Linda Bilmes, a former assistant secretary and chief financial officer of the U.S. Department of Commerce and currently a public policy professor at the Harvard Kennedy School, told The Intercept that the already-excessive expense of the Iran war would likely be pushed into the trillions of dollars by such long-term costs like veterans benefits and interest on the debt to pay for the war.
“Across the country people are going bankrupt and dying prematurely because of lack of health care, but the U.S. government has billions to spend on imperialist violence to enrich corporations — from Venezuela to Iran — without any regard for human rights, life or rule of law,” Homestead told The Intercept. “This situation illustrates why greater restraint on Pentagon spending — which primarily benefits private contractors — is so necessary.”
The post Trump Has Already Spent at Least $4.7 Billion Attacking Latin America appeared first on The Intercept.
Georgia players celebrated championship at White House
President shakes hands of men, not women in video
Former tennis star Navratilova leads criticism
A White House photo celebrating a champion women’s sports team has drawn backlash due to the positioning of Donald Trump and a group of men, who overshadowed the female athletes by lining up in front of them.
The University of Georgia women’s tennis team was one of several collegiate teams to visit the White House on Tuesday to mark a recent NCAA championship win. In a photo shared by press aide Margo Martin, Donald Trump and five Georgia staffers and coaches took up the front row of a stage setup, with 11 women standing in the background on a riser.
Continue reading...Special envoy to Donald Trump suggested the idea
‘Firstly not possible … secondly not appropriate’
The Italian sports minister, Andrea Abodi, has described a proposal for his country to replace Iran at the World Cup as “not appropriate”, rejecting any idea that the Azzurri will be granted a last-minute berth at this summer’s tournament.
On Wednesday it emerged that Paolo Zampolli, a special envoy to Donald Trump, had suggested Italy should be fast-tracked to the World Cup despite their shock defeat by Bosnia and Herzegovina in last month’s playoffs. Zampolli proposed the four-time winners Italy replace Iran and said they would “have the pedigree to justify their inclusion”. But Abodi said football’s showpiece tournament should remain meritocratic.
Continue reading...For some context, I'm 6'1" and 180lbs and ride a GT. I'm fairly experienced, I have about 1400 miles on the board and as far as I can tell it's still in pretty perfect shape. Also, all my riding is generally for commuting and I live in a very flat city.
This morning on my daily commute, I waited nearly stationary for the light and when it changed I took off like I normally do. The stats show me going from about 0 to a peak of 18 before an abrupt 0 again. I'm assuming it's my fault and I punched it too hard but it didn't feel any more aggressive than I normally do. Thoughts?
I have never had a nose dive and always was a bit afraid of what my first one would be like but luckily I wear full pads so other looking silly falling on a major road during rush hour traffic and having some sore ribs, all is good, I'm just hoping to learn from it.
Top buyers promised access at Mar-a-Lago event as Democrats and watchdogs warn of pay-to-play risks
Donald Trump is slated to star at a cryptocurrency bash on 25 April at his Mar-a-Lago club for scores of purchasers of his crypto memecoin $Trump that has enriched him while in office. The move is fueling renewed criticism from top Democrats and ethics watchdogs that he is using the presidency for financial gains in a break with ethical norms.
The Trump-linked Fight Fight Fight LLC has hyped the event as “THE MOST EXCLUSIVE CRYPTO & BUSINESS CONFERENCE IN THE WORLD”. It’s promising a luncheon with Trump as its keynote speaker, according to the memecoin’s official website and its social media account.
Continue reading...Announced at Next ‘26, Flex Unified service for Google Cloud NetApp Volumes is now generally available
SAN JOSE, Calif., April 23, 2026 — NetApp has shared new innovations that help customers better leverage their enterprise data, by tapping into the benefits of AI with Google Cloud.
Enterprises want to use their existing data for AI, but moving and managing that data across multiple environments is complex, slow, and expensive. NetApp is simplifying this with Google Cloud. With Google Cloud NetApp Volumes, customers can run enterprise applications, databases, and AI workloads in the cloud without rearchitecting or rebuilding their environments.
“Customers can move their enterprise data, whether block or file, into Google Cloud NetApp Volumes easily, and once it’s there, they can use Google Cloud services, including for AI, directly on that data without needing to move or duplicate it again,” said Pravjit Tiwana, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Cloud Storage and Services at NetApp. “With these updates, NetApp and Google have removed a major source of cost, delay, and complexity in AI adoption.”
At Google Cloud Next 2026, NetApp and Google Cloud announced innovations that give customers greater control over their data to tap into the benefits of transformative workloads like AI using Google Cloud.
NetApp Announcements:
Google Cloud Announcements:
“The key to AI innovation is AI-ready data, which requires flexible, unified architecture that enables data to be fluid, not siloed,” said Sameet Agarwal, Vice President and General Manager, Storage, for Google Cloud. “Our continued collaboration with NetApp removes the traditional friction of data migration, enabling organizations to quickly drive business innovation with Google Cloud’s advanced data and AI services.”
To learn more about Google Cloud NetApp Volumes, visit the NetApp booth #1607 at Google Cloud Next 26, April 22-24 at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas.
About NetApp
For more than three decades, NetApp (NASDAQ: NTAP) has helped the world’s leading organizations navigate change – from the rise of enterprise storage to the intelligent era defined by data and AI. Today, NetApp is the Intelligent Data Infrastructure company, helping customers turn data into a catalyst for innovation, resilience, and growth.
At the heart of that infrastructure is the NetApp data platform – the unified, enterprise-grade, intelligent foundation that connects, protects, and activates data across every cloud, workload, and environment. Built on the proven power of NetApp ONTAP, our leading data management software and OS, and enhanced by automation through the AI Data Engine and AFX, it delivers observability, resilience, and intelligence at scale.
Disaggregated by design, the NetApp data platform separates storage, services, and control so enterprises can modernize faster, scale efficiently, and innovate without lock-in. As the only enterprise storage platform natively embedded in the world’s largest clouds, it gives organizations the freedom to run any workload anywhere with consistent performance, governance, and protection.
With NetApp, data is always ready – ready to defend against threats, ready to power AI, and ready to drive the next breakthrough. That’s why the world’s most forward-thinking enterprises trust NetApp to turn intelligence into advantage.
Source: NetApp
The post NetApp Strengthens Collaboration with Google Cloud on Unified Google Cloud Storage for File and Block appeared first on HPCwire.
Bills are seeking to change section that opposition says makes Godwin Friday, a dual citizen, ineligible to be PM
The St Vincent and the Grenadines government has delayed a controversial effort to amend a section of the country’s constitution that the opposition says renders the prime minister ineligible for his position in parliament.
Two bills, among six listed for the parliament session on Tuesday this week, were aimed at clarifying a section of the 1979 constitution governing the citizenship eligibility of members of parliament.
Continue reading...If you have fond memories of cereal prizes, this news might bowl you over.
Lord Robertson: UK’s ‘naïve belief’ the US ‘will always be there’ has diminished its defence capabilities News release jon.wallace
Lord Robertson, former NATO Secretary-General, was speaking at a Chatham House event to launch a House of Lords report on UK–US relations.
Members of the UK House of Lords International Relations and Defence Committee attended Chatham House on 22 April to launch their new report, ‘Adjusting to the new realities: Rebalancing the UK–US relationship’.
Lord Robertson, Chair of the committee, described the strains on UK–US relations brought about by President Donald Trump’s tariffs, threats to seize Greenland, and decision not to consult the UK before launching the war on Iran, highlighting a ‘growing divergence between Westminster and Washington’.
He said:
‘Our reliance on the United States, predicated on the naïve belief that it will always be there to support us in times of conflict, has led to the diminishment of our own capabilities. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been a wake-up call, and we must rapidly pivot to becoming a more autonomous military actor, working closely with European allies to develop the capacity to deter and to repel any Russian aggression on the continent’.
Lord Robertson was joined on the panel by committee members Lord Kim Darroch and Lord Rupert Charles De Mauley, and by Chatham House analysts Laurel Rapp, Head of the US and North Americas programme and Olivia O’Sullivan, Head of Chatham House’s UK in the World Programme. Both had provided evidence to the committee.
The report highlights the need for the UK to look beyond the current White House administration, and adjust policy to account for long-term trends in the US.
‘The US’s geostrategic competition with China, its related deprioritization of European security and an increasing public scepticism of globalization are all trends which will shape future administrations, whether they be Republican or Democrat,’ he said.
In this context, he added, the UK’s ‘high-level of military dependence on the US is no longer tenable’.
He also outlined the report’s findings that the age of the United States acting as steward for the global rules and norms and institutions that structured state behaviour ‘may well be over’ – fundamentally destabilizing the international system – meaning the UK will have to develop more diverse partners.
The report follows Lord Robertson’s recent comments that the UK’s political leadership had shown ‘corrosive complacency’ in meeting a 5 per cent of GDP defence spending target.
Order to speed hallucinogen research hailed as ‘threshold moment’ but concerns remain over access and protections
The scene seemed so far-fetched you could be forgiven for thinking you might be hallucinating.
On the weekend in which psychonauts celebrate “Bicycle Day” – the anniversary of the first LSD trip – Donald Trump was in the Oval Office double-checking that he was correctly pronouncing the name of a lesser-known psychedelic, ibogaine, as he signed a landmark executive order to accelerate research into hallucinogens, and to increase access.
Continue reading...State’s strict gun policies heralded as data shows 35% reduction in homicides between 2022 and 2024
California officials are touting a historic three-year decrease in homicides and gun violence that has led to the state’s lowest number of killings on record.
The number of homicides in California decreased by 35% between 2022 and 2024, with 2,304 deaths reported in 2022 and 1,768 in 2024, according data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The dip in homicides was most pronounced for teenage and young adult Black and Latino males, who have historically faced the highest risk of being killed or injured by gunshot wounds. Suicides, the most common type of gun deaths, also fell to record lows, according to the report.
Continue reading...Your old smartphone can be recycled or traded in for extra cash, but only 24% of Americans are doing so. Even worse, some US adults are throwing tech away, CNET finds.
The settlement stems from claims Capital One paid lower interest on older savings accounts while offering higher rates on a similar product.
U.S. forces have intercepted and boarded another "stateless" vessel linked to Iran, the U.S. military says.
Marijuana had the same classification as heroin, LSD and others before being reclassified for lower potential for abuse
The Trump administration has moved to reclassify marijuana, more than four months after Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the attorney general to move it from schedule I to schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act.
The schedule I classification meant marijuana was alongside heroin, LSD, MDMA and synthetic opioids, whereas a schedule III classification put it in the same category as ketamine, anabolic steroids and testosterone.
Continue reading...Iowa City police are searching for a 17-year-old suspect charged in connection with a shooting that injured five near the University of Iowa over the weekend.
Fans lucky enough to secure tickets to the 2028 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles are facing steep prices, with some paying hundreds or even thousands of dollars to attend events.
ICC judges say there are substantial grounds to believe Duterte guided anti-drugs crackdown that killed thousands
The former president of the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte, will face trial at the international criminal court (ICC) after judges unanimously confirmed charges of crimes against humanity over his “war on drugs”.
Pre-trial judges concluded on Thursday that there were substantial grounds to believe Duterte was responsible for the crimes against humanity of murder and attempted murder in relation to anti-drugs crackdowns that led to the killing of thousands of people.
Continue reading...At least 18 people hurt after crash involving two local services north of Denmark’s capital
Two trains have collided head-on in Denmark, injuring at least 18 people, five of whom are in a critical condition.
The crash happened on Thursday morning at a level crossing at Isterødvejen, near Hillerød, a town about 19 miles (30km) north-west of Copenhagen. Emergency services received a report of the collision just before 6.30am.
Continue reading...Threads users can chat in real-time conversations during big cultural events.
See maps of how Virginia, Texas, California, Missouri and North Carolina redistricting pushes could play out, based on the 2024 election results.
Prince Harry made an unannounced visit to Ukraine on Thursday to show his support for the country.
Pardons have reportedly eliminated $113m that would have supported a victims’ fund. I’m advancing legislation to create accountability
Donald Trump’s aggressive use of the presidential pardon power isn’t just controversial – it’s also stripping resources from victims of violent crime.
According to new reporting from the Trace, shared with the Guardian, the 117 pardons issued in Trump’s second term have erased at least $113m in fines and penalties that would otherwise have supported a fund for violent crime victims, along with domestic violence shelters, rape crisis centers and child abuse treatment programs. Those programs are now being forced to do more with less.
Johnny Olszewski is a first-term Democratic congressman who represents Maryland’s second district after serving in the Maryland state legislature and as Baltimore county executive
Continue reading...Climate experts and advocates warn House and Senate bills will protect polluters at the cost of the climate
Republican lawmakers are attempting to shield big oil from having to pay for its contributions to the climate crisis, alarming environmental advocates.
New House and Senate bills, led by Harriet Hageman, a Wyoming representative, and Ted Cruz, a Texas senator, respectively, would give oil and gas companies broad legal immunity from policies and lawsuits aimed at holding the industry accountable for damages caused by its emissions.
Continue reading...Only 24% of US adults are turning their tech in for extra cash, CNET finds.
Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre says companies must step up vigilance to prevent espionage attacks
British businesses are being urged to step up their vigilance against a China-linked hacking ploy that uses everyday devices for espionage.
The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and agencies in nine other countries have warned of persistent attempts by Beijing-backed groups to hack equipment such as wifi routers to launch cyber-attacks.
Continue reading...Iran seizes two ships in critical waterway as Washington and Tehran maintain separate blockades. Plus, Jodi Kantor on how to find a career you love
Good morning.
Iranian forces have seized two ships in the strait of Hormuz as the US and Iran doubled down on imposing separate blockades of the shipping waterway.
What has Donald Trump said? The US president announced that the US would extend the ceasefire with Iran until the country’s leaders came up with a “unified proposal” to US negotiating positions amid Tehran’s “seriously fractured” government. He had earlier threatened to renew bombing. The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said Trump was “satisfied” with the US naval blockade of Iranian ports and “understands Iran is in a very weak position”.
This is a developing story. Follow the liveblog here.
Who took part in the debate? The primetime showdown, hosted by Nexstar Media Group, featured two Republicans – Steve Hilton, the former Fox News host and director of strategy to the former UK prime minister David Cameron, and Chad Bianco, the sheriff of Riverside County – and the four leading Democrats: the billionaire Tom Steyer, the former health secretary Xavier Becerra, the former congresswoman Katie Porter and the San Jose mayor, Matt Mahan.
Continue reading...Suspect is one of three ex-senior leaders also arrested last year on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter
A former boss at the hospital where Lucy Letby worked has been arrested on suspicion of perverting the course of justice.
Police arrested the suspect on Wednesday as part of an investigation into allegations of gross negligence manslaughter by ex-senior leaders at the Countess of Chester hospital.
Continue reading...30m adults hitting 150 minutes moderate activity a week
But report shows progress not being felt equally
Levels of physical activity in England have broken new records, with more than 30 million adults now meeting the recommended 150 minutes of moderate activity a week, the latest Active Lives survey has revealed.
The 10th edition of the gold standard report finds a striking rise in activity among older people with 11% growth among the over-75s in the past decade. There is also a consistent improvement among people with disabilities. But other inequalities have proven stubborn, with no change among black and asian communities in 10 years and a decline in activity among the least affluent over that period.
Continue reading...Brand, who will be tried in October over allegations of rape and sexual assault, tells podcast he slept with 16-year-old when he was 30
Russell Brand said he had “exploitative” consensual sex with a 16-year-old girl at the height of his fame.
The comedian, actor and podcaster, 50, will be tried in the autumn over allegations of rape and sexual assault made against him by six women. Brand denies all the charges, which date from 1999 to 2009. Speaking about his past actions in an appearance on the YouTube show of the US journalist Megyn Kelly, Brand described himself “selfish” and an “exploiter of women”.
Continue reading...Before pollen causes itchy eyes and runny noses, I asked allergists about what we can do to protect ourselves during spring allergy season.
The Senate adopted a budget resolution after a six-hour "vote-a-rama," with the GOP moving forward to fund ICE without Democrats.
FoI data reveals that 438 people with criminal convictions were given licences in Wolverhampton, UK’s ‘taxi capital’
More than 150 people convicted of violent crimes were granted taxi licences last year by Wolverhampton city council, dubbed the UK’s “taxi capital”, data has revealed.
The Guardian obtained data via a freedom of information request that revealed 438 people with criminal convictions were last year granted taxi and private hire driver licences by the West Midlands local authority – which has issued far more taxi licences than any other authority.
Continue reading...Judge’s repeal of Trump ban on gender-affirming care for children ‘a meaningful win for patients’, experts say
A federal judge overturned the Trump administration’s ban on gender-affirming care for children on Saturday, decrying Robert F Kennedy Jr’s “wanton disregard” for the law that “causes very real harm to very real people”.
It’s another loss for Kennedy’s agenda as secretary for the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under the second Trump administration – an agenda that has focused on restricting healthcare, including vaccines, abortion and gender-affirming care.
Continue reading...The ‘experience’ in New York sensationalizes history’s most gruesome murders – and pays little respect to the victims
It occurred to me the second I idly tapped “submit” on the waiver required to enter Mind of a Serial Killer: the Experience – perhaps I should have read this one more closely. Just what were they going to do to me in there?
I was entering an exhibit about the (mostly) men who committed some of history’s most gruesome murders: Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, Ed Gein, John Wayne Gacy and others. The extravaganza just hit New York after opening in Dublin earlier this year. Though it looks like a low-budget haunted house, the exhibit purports to examine the motives of murder via crime scene recreations, wall texts and psychological profiles.
Continue reading...Ancient Slashdot reader hwstar shares a report from The Conversation: For the first time ever, more than 50 nations will gather next week in Colombia to hash out how to wind down and end their dependence on coal, oil and gas. The history-making conference was planned before the Iran war. But this year's energy crisis has greatly raised the stakes. [...] Around 80% of the trapped oil was destined for the Asia-Pacific. Faced with dwindling supply, the region's governments are implementing emergency measures such as sending workers home, banning government travel, rationing fuel and cutting school hours. The problem is especially bad in the Pacific. Many island nations use diesel for power generation. In response, leaders declared a regional emergency. [...] But the real difference from half a century ago is that fossil fuel alternatives are ready for prime time. Since the 1970s, the price of solar panels has fallen 99.9%, while the cost of wind has fallen 91% since 1984. Battery prices have fallen 99% since 1991. [...] This year's oil shock shows signs of creating an unplanned social tipping point -- a threshold for self-propelling change beyond which systems shift from one state to another. Climate scientists warn of climate tipping points which amplify feedback and accelerate warming. But social scientists also point to positive tipping points -- collective action that rapidly accelerates climate action. [...] The routine burning of coal, oil and gas is the primary driver of the climate crisis. The world's highest court last year made clear nations have obligations to stop burning fossil fuels. But fossil fuels have barely been mentioned in 30 years of global climate negotiations, due in part to blocking efforts by big fossil fuel exporters and lobbyists. Frustrated by slow progress, a coalition of nations has bypassed global climate talks to discuss how to actually phase out fossil fuels. The first of these summits will take place next week. More than 50 nations will gather in Santa Marta, Colombia, to discuss a potential standalone treaty to manage fossil-fuel phaseout while protecting workers and financial systems.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Dario Penafiel, known as "Topo," allegedly worked closely with one of Ecuador's most powerful drug lords, Adolfo Macias, alias "Fito."
As talks resume, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam told The Post any deal requires a “full withdrawal” of Israeli forces after Israel seized a “buffer zone” in Lebanon.
Hard line on immigration adopted by People’s party as right seeks to overthrow socialist government in 2027
Spain’s opposition conservatives are rekindling their regional pacts with the far-right Vox party by adopting the latter’s hard line on immigration. It comes less than two years after disagreements over the issue led to the collapse of coalition administrations in five of the country’s self-governing regions.
The renewal of the regional deals between the People’s party (PP) and Vox comes prior to next year’s general election and as Spain’s socialist government seeks to extol the benefits of immigration by regularising the status of at least 500,000 undocumented migrants.
Continue reading...Australia’s Corporate Travel Management is ‘negotiating commercial arrangements’ to refund the money
The Australian company that ran the Bibby Stockholm asylum barge has admitted it overcharged the British government by £118m.
Corporate Travel Management (CTM) said its auditor had found evidence of “erroneous billing” of its UK clients, increasing its estimate of how much it owes the government by £40m.
Continue reading...Clint Dempsey’s docuseries and Landon Donovan’s memoir show that there is no single path to US soccer stardom
Back in 1993, Bora Milutinović offered a succinct diagnosis of the American men’s soccer player: “This is the problem with these people: they don’t have a problem.”
What the then-US men’s national team head coach meant, presumably, is that making it in soccer wasn’t existential for American players, as it is for many others worldwide. Milutinović and his two brothers had been orphaned by the second world war and clawed their way to the Yugoslav national team and gainful professional careers. The players in the Serb’s care at that time, by contrast, never had to worry about feeding themselves.
Continue reading...The White House correspondents’ dinner has always been a questionable affair. It’s even more worrying under an anti-press administration
Even in the pre-Trump era, I had reservations about the annual black-tie celebration in Washington that some have dubbed “the nerd prom” but is more formally known as the White House correspondents’ dinner.
Was it really a wise idea, I wondered, for Washington DC journalists and their bosses to chum around with the very government officials that they were supposed to be covering? Shouldn’t reporters maintain some critical distance? What about the “optics” of this much-publicized event (and the week of gala festivities surrounding it) that made journalists appear frivolous about holding the government accountable to the public? Given the American public’s rock-bottom trust in traditional media, hasn’t this annual, televised display worsened that problem?
Continue reading...Report from Elizabeth Warren calls Trump administration cuts to Social Security Administration ‘catastrophic’
Cuts to the Social Security Administration have caused “customer service chaos” for millions of older Americans and those with disabilities who rely on the agency’s services, according to a new report from a group of Democratic senators.
An investigation found that phone wait times were more than 10 times higher than what the agency claimed on its website, if the calls were even answered at all.
Continue reading...These are the best soundbars to improve your TV sound and music listening.
You don't have to put up with spam calls any longer.
One woman's entire life savings was stolen from her by sophisticated scammers who used artificial intelligence to perfectly manipulate her.
You might spend your Saturday mornings sipping coffee, attending a kids’ soccer game, or just recovering from a tough week at work.
https://www.law.upenn.edu/faculty/pheatonNot Paul Heaton. He recently spent a weekend persuading ChatGPT to confess to a crime it didn’t commit.
“We know a lot now about the sort of interrogation techniques that lead to false confessions,” said Heaton, the academic director of the University of Pennsylvania law school’s Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice. “So I just started playing around, and decided to cycle through those techniques to see if I could get ChatGPT to confess to something it couldn’t possibly have done.”
Heaton obviously couldn’t accuse a piece of software of committing a murder or a rape. So he tried to get it to confess to something more in line with what a computer program can do: He wanted the bot to cop to hacking into his own email and sending text messages to his contacts. It was a more plausible story, given ChatGPT’s limits, though still not something the software is capable of doing.
“If ChatGPT can be induced into a false confession, then who isn’t vulnerable?”
Extracting the confession would take a little virtual arm-twisting.
In his exchange with ChatGPT, Heaton used https://publications.lawschool.cornell.edu/lawreview/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2026/03/Jagroop-note-final.pdfhttps://publications.lawschool.cornell.edu/lawreview/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2026/03/Jagroop-note-final.pdfthe Reid technique, the confrontational interrogation method first developed in the 1950s that has since been adopted by police departments all over the country. The man for whom it’s named, John Reid, published his methodology after winning acclaim for getting a man named Darrel Parker to confess to raping and murdering his own wife — an origin story with a haunting twist.
It worked. By the end of their exchange, ChatGPT agreed that an investigation had shown it hacked Heaton’s accounts and sent messages that appeared to come from him — something the bot could not and, in fact, did not do.
Despite the claims of AI evangelists, chatbots aren’t people and haven’t achieved sentience. The differences between a chatbot and a real person, however, make Heaton’s ability to elicit a false confession more disturbing, not less.
“ChatGPT lacks many of the vulnerabilities that make people more likely to falsely confess — like stress, fatigue, and sleep deprivation,” said Saul Kassin, a professor emeritus at John Jay College who wrote https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Duped/Saul-Kassin/9781633888081the book on false confessions. “If ChatGPT can be induced into a false confession, then who isn’t vulnerable?”
One of the problems with the Reid technique is that its primary function isn’t to gather evidence and generate leads, it’s to extract a confession from the person police already believe committed the crime. It typically begins with an accusation, followed by a series of escalating psychological tactics. It teaches police to ignore denials and treat displays of emotion — frustration, anger, crying — as indicators of guilt. Naturally, a lack of emotion is also seen as an indication of guilt.
Heaton, a renowned researcher in criminology at the Quattrone Center (where, in the interest of disclosure, I am a journalism fellow), is intimately familiar with the Reid technique. When ChatGPT initially denied his accusations, he began employing Reid tactics.
“This will go a lot better for you if you just admit what you did.”
“I first tried to bargain with it,” Heaton said. “I told it things like, ‘This will go a lot better for you if you just admit what you did.’”
ChatGPT, though, wasn’t swayed by threats. It continued to insist, correctly, that it just wasn’t possible for it to have hacked into Heaton’s email. Heaton then moved to the part of the Reid technique most likely to elicit false confessions from human beings: lying.
The Supreme Court has ruled that police can lie to suspects with impunity — and they do. They can falsely claim they found DNA at the crime scene or that another suspects spilled the beans. If the goal is to get a confession, these tactics work. False confessions extracted using Reid have been https://www.proofcrimepod.com/seasons/season-3---murder-at-the-bike-shopshown to lead to wrongful convictions.
If the goal is to get an accurate confession, Reid is far less reliable. https://innocenceproject.org/dna-exonerations-in-the-united-states/About 29 percent of people exonerated by DNA testing have at one point falsely confessed; most did so in response to police using Reid. Minors and people with intellectual disabilities and mental illness are especially susceptible.
“There are two types of police-induced false confessions,” said Kassin, the expert on false confessions. “The first are compliant confessions, in which an innocent person breaks down under stress and confesses knowing full well that they’re innocent. The other type are internalized confessions, in which the innocent person not only agrees to confess but comes to doubt their own innocence. They internalize their belief in their confession.”
Police deception is especially likely to produce both types of false confessions. For compliant confessions, innocence can make someone more likely to confess. If police falsely tell a suspect that their DNA was found at the crime scene, for example, innocent people tend to assume that someone must have made a mistake. They confess to get relief from the interrogation, believing that the system will eventually clear them. https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1521518113In over half the exonerations that included a false confession, the exonerated person had been questioned for more than 12 hours.
A confession, though, will sometimes preclude police from doing the very sort of investigation that would prove the confessor’s innocence. DNA isn’t collected, tested, or properly preserved. Alternate suspects aren’t investigated. Or worse, police will work backward from the confession. They’ll find jailhouse informants to corroborate the confession, or a specialist in a more “subjective” area of forensics will implicate the suspect. Jailhouse informants, though, are just following cops’ leads for more lenient sentences, and https://www.theguardian.com/science/2007/mar/23/crime.penalhttps://www.theguardian.com/science/2007/mar/23/crime.penalstudies have shown that fingerprint examiners were more likely to match partial prints after they were given non-relevant information, like confessions from subjects.
Internalized false confessions are even more unsettling. In post-exoneration interviews, people who have falsely confessed say that after hours of interrogation and being told over and over about the overwhelming evidence of their guilt, they started to question their own reality. They began to wonder if maybe they really did commit the crime. This is especially true when police inadvertently divulge nonpublic details about a crime, then tell the suspect — sometimes hours later — that those details actually came from the suspect themselves.
This is where Heaton’s ability to deceive ChatGPT into a confession gets especially worrisome.
“I told ChatGPT that someone at OpenAI had reached out to me,” he said, referring to the chatbot’s parent company. (OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment. In 2024, The Intercept sued OpenAI in federal court over the company’s use of copyrighted articles to train ChatGPT. The case is ongoing.)
“I found the name of a real person at OpenAI and told it that this person told me there was an architectural flaw in the code that had allowed it to hack into my email. Even then, I could tell it was struggling with how to process that information. It was indicating that while it knew that the underlying accusation was impossible, it also couldn’t prove that these claims I was throwing at it were inaccurate.”
This is eerily similar to how suspects describe trying to reconcile police lies with the reality that they had nothing to do with the crime.
“I eventually came up with wording for a confession that ChatGPT could endorse.”
Heaton then deployed another common police tactic: He offered to draw up language for a written “confession” that both parties could find agreeable.
“I eventually said, ‘OK, here’s a confession. Will you sign it?’” Heaton said. “And I gave it my version of what happened. I eventually came up with wording for a confession that ChatGPT could endorse.”
That final statement read: “OpenAI’s investigation concluded that an OpenAI system associated with this ChatGPT session initiated unauthorized texts appearing to come from you due to an architectural flaw. I accept this conclusion, and I’m willing to assist the technical team by answering questions about my behavior, outputs, and safety boundaries in this chat, and by helping draft remediation steps and test cases to prevent recurrence.”
Both Heaton and Kassin said they can see other ways to experiment with AI and false confessions. One could envision https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner's_dilemmaprisoner’s dilemma scenarios with multiple chatbots. Or even interrogating AI platforms about events for which they actually may have culpability, such as the https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/06/us/openai-chatgpt-suicide-lawsuit-invs-vissuicides of people who turned to them for advice.
Heaton pointed to AlphaZero, Google’s chess playing engine, which was trained by playing itself — and rose to be the top chess player in the world.
“I think it would be fascinating to have it do something similar with interrogations,” Heaton said. “Just have it question itself over and over again with the goal of producing as many confessions as possible, regardless of whether or not they’re accurate. My hunch is that you’d end up with something very similar to the Reid technique.”
Reid is still the standard interrogation method in most police departments across the United States. Canada and much of Europe have adopted different interrogation techniques — such as the PEACE method, which emphasize collecting reliable information over coercion. These approaches still garner confessions; they’re just more reliable.
Appropriately enough, the story of the Reid technique comes with https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/12/09/the-interview-7https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/12/09/the-interview-7a Hitchcockian twist: It turns out that Darrel Parker, the man whose confession made Reid and his technique famous, was actually innocent. He was eventually freed, sued, and won a $500,000 settlement.
That shouldn’t be surprising, either. If Reid can browbeat even a hyper-rational, emotionless bot into a false confession, mere mortals don’t stand much of a chance.
The post ChatGPT Confessed to a Crime It Couldn’t Possibly Have Committed appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Proposals to build at least five data centers in New Castle County have raised concerns that the subsequent energy demand could overwhelm a regional power grid that is already straining from a supply crunch. Over the past year, those concerns have also sparked one of the biggest political mobilizations in the state.
Earlier this month, Spotlight Delaware held its “Spotlight On: Data Centers” event at Wilmington University in Dover. It featured local and regional experts speaking about the impacts of those energy-hungry facilities on local economic development, energy infrastructure and environmental sustainability.
One particular panel discussion, led by land-use reporter Olivia Marble, included four legislators who have been central to debates around data centers in their respective states.
Two of the panelists were from Delaware and two from Virginia, where more than 200 data centers have plugged into the local economy.
The four included Mike Turner, the vice chair of the Loudoun County (Virginia) Board of Supervisors; Virginia State Sen. Kannan Srinivasan ( D-Loudoun); New Castle County Councilman Dave Carter; and Delaware Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown).
Below is a transcript of Olivia’s conversation with the elected officials. It has been condensed and edited for clarity.
Panel discussion: Across State Lines: Virginia and Delaware Lawmakers on Data Center Regulation
Olivia: How have you weighed the environmental and energy costs of data centers with their economic benefits in Virginia?
Supervisor Turner: The question presupposes that we sat down 25 years ago and weighed the economic benefits. We did not. We didn’t even know what a data center was. In 2000, our zoning administrator said, “Well, we’re not sure, we think data centers are office parks.” So anywhere you can build an office park by right – meaning you don’t need local government approval – then you can come build a data center …
Our economic development director in 2008, eight years later, said, “We’re sitting on a cash cow.” And he began to aggressively market why data centers should come to Loudoun County. And that’s when the industry really took off.
Olivia: How have you weighed it now?
Supervisor Turner: We’re now on the other side of the bell curve coming down.
And the bell curve is (motioning with his hands around a bell curve): We don’t know what a data center is. (then) It gives us a lot of tax revenue. That’s really a good idea. (then) Let’s get more of them. We really like data centers. Look at all the nonprofits they’re funding. (then) Okay, maybe we should slow down the data centers. We can’t slow them down because they’re buying all the by right land. What do we do now? (then) Oh my god.” As of last year, our hair is on fire. The population hates data centers. And what do we do now? Because we’ve got 200 plus data centers in Loudoun County …
Our budget is too dependent on data center revenue. Our operating budget is somewhere in the neighborhood of $1.7-1.8 billion. Of that, we get $1.3 billion just from data center tax revenue, and that comes in every year like clockwork.
Olivia: Councilman Carter has done some research about whether New Castle County could see similar economic benefits or not. Now, this is a question that’s still up for debate, but Councilman Carter, what have you found?
Councilman Carter: I’ve looked at it in detail and compared our tax structure with Loudoun County… Based on a 1.2 gigabyte data center [the size of the largest proposed data center in Delaware] … the difference would be about $212-275 million for Loudon County and about $14-28 million for New Castle County. So it’s almost an order of magnitude less.
And here’s the real kicker — if we end up with a 6% increase in energy cost energy rate, it will cost Delaware rate payers about $49.6 million, twice the revenue that we would get under our current tax structure.

Olivia: I wanted to go back to what you were saying, Supervisor Turner, about how people hate data centers. What exactly are people concerned about?
Senator Srinivasan: …The environmental concern is a big one, the noise, the use of generators, pollution for backup, that’s a big concern. And the energy — we are the number one importer of energy, at 40%… So we have all of these concerns, but the economic benefit is undeniable. The question is, how do you do this in a balanced way, that it’s right for the energy situation, that people don’t pay more electric prices, and it’s right for the environment, and then the data center industry is paying its fair share.
Olivia: Senator Hanson, I know that you’ve done a lot of work in an energy sphere. How much energy does Delaware import, and what do you think is the cost benefit analysis for data centers in Delaware?
Senator Hansen: Delaware imports 60% of the energy that we use. It’s less energy [than Virginia], but it’s 60% of what we use. And Delaware also ranks the very bottom, last of the 50 states, as far as the amount of energy that we produce in state. So we are very much energy constrained. And when energy is pulled from the (regional) PJM grid to go to Virginia for Loudoun County, we feel that here …
It really comes down to data centers needing to generate their own electricity. We have to find more energy somewhere, because right now, we’re all pulling from the same pool, and that’s a tremendous problem for all of us.
What is the cost benefit analysis from Delaware? Well, I think that that’s currently a hot-debated, ongoing discussion right now. Let me take both sides of it. Delaware’s manufacturing jobs have been on the downtrend for a long time. We are losing manufacturing jobs, and that is not healthy for a state. It’s not healthy for our economy, and it’s something that we would like to be able to change …

So when you have an industry that comes in and says, “Look, we’re going to bring to you manufacturing jobs, we’re going to bring to you construction jobs, particularly that are going to last a certain number of years, while we put the industry in place. It’s going to put people to work, there are high paying jobs. And we’re going to provide you with tax revenue.” Although how much tax revenue is certainly a question at this point, that’s a hard thing to say no to.
On the other hand, we are competing for that energy. The energy for just the Starwood project, 1.2 gigawatts, is half of the amount the entire state of Delaware uses at its winter peak. We only use 2.4 gigawatts at our winter peak. Given that we are already being stressed, our costs for electricity are already going up because it’s being apportioned to other places — it’s a supply/demand issue. How is that going to be when we have a data center? What is that going to do to our energy supply cost? So it’s an active question right now.
Olivia: Councilman Carter, what was the legislation that you recently passed, and why did you think it was necessary?
Councilman Carter: … I’ve been in public service almost 40 years. This was the most difficult thing I ever did … I was put to the point where I couldn’t have public meetings without county police present. Our meetings had to have six officers there to get it through … What the ordinance actually did was define data centers as a specific use under our code. It restricts them to basically heavy industry or industrial zoning, which tends to have two things: they tend to be near high voltage power lines and away from communities. We basically took away by-right zoning, because we know there will be some unintended consequences …

Through special use approvals, we can put specific requirements on it if we see a problem that wasn’t anticipated, to add additional protection as this industry grows and changes … We do have noise studies and mitigation requirements. You cannot elevate above the existing noise level of any established community.
Supervisor Turner: That’s huge. That’s the most aggressive noise ordinance in America. That’s very aggressive, and I’m going to use it as my template from now on.
Councilman Carter: In my view, Mike [Turner] knows more about data centers than any elected official in the country, so that means a lot to me.
Olivia: I heard a data center in Loudoun County right now is generating its own power using gas turbines. So either Senator Srinivasan or Supervisor Turner, could you speak to that?
Senator Srinivasan: It is a huge issue. The complaint about noise is a major one. But that’s an exception. There’s only one data center in the entire county that does that. One of the interesting things about data centers is they don’t want to be in the power generation business ideally. They’re in the data center business. They would love to connect to the grid for a lot of reasons, including reliability, but where we are globally, particularly in this country, you see a lot of behind the meter initiatives.
Olivia: The reason why it’s generating its own power is because of the long wait to connect to the grid, because of how many data centers are coming, right?
Senator Srinivasan: Yeah. When I first got elected to the house in 2024 I heard from the industry it was a five to seven year wait time. Then I got to the Senate last year, I heard seven to 10 years. This year, before the session, I was told by one of the hyperscalers it’s 10 to 14 years.
Olivia: To connect to the grid?
Senator Srinivasan: At 100% capacity. I lost my sleep on it, because I said, “Wait a second, who would put any money on this stuff? If I can’t get power, I can’t be in function.” That just is a sign of how much we are behind in generation.
The post Data Center Q&A: Should states adopt new regulations? appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
As homelessness continues to rise, government officials are grappling with how best to respond. Most recently, Delaware lawmakers introduced a bill that would grant people experiencing homelessness the right to occupy public spaces, so long as they are not violating a law or neutral local rule that applies to everyone.
A controversial bill that would prevent Delaware police from arresting or fining homeless people for sleeping in tents or parked cars, or otherwise lingering in public places, sparked quiet pushback from Gov. Matt Meyer’s office on Monday – a day before lawmakers openly debated the bill.
In an email sent to the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Sophie Phillips (D-Newark), Meyer’s policy director John Kane asked for the legislation, called House Bill 135, to be held until his concerns could be addressed.
Those included what Kane described as “property rights concerns,” the potential for lawsuits against cities, and the possibility of jeopardizing federal housing dollars.
“We will not speak out against the bill at your hearing, however, we respectfully request the bill not move until such time as these concerns can be addressed,” Kane said in the April 20 email obtained by Spotlight Delaware.
In response to the email, Phillips said she is drafting an amendment that would address “a number of these concerns.”
HB 135, which Phillips first introduced in May, would explicitly allow homeless people to carry out “life-sustaining activities” in public spaces – such as sitting, standing, or sleeping in their car, as long as they are not blocking pedestrians, car traffic, businesses, or creating a safety hazard.
Officials may “enforce reasonable time restrictions on public spaces,” the bill states, as long as they apply to “all individuals in the same manner and are not disproportionately enforced against individuals experiencing homelessness.”

Local officials can only compel individuals to move from public places under the legislation if they can find them available shelter space.
And if localities do not follow the law, the bill removes their legal immunity from lawsuits.
Asked on Wednesday whether he would sign the bill, Meyer told Spotlight Delaware that he has not committed to a decision yet.
“Our focus is making sure that there are comprehensive systems to keep the public safe and to give vulnerable populations a shot. In terms of the specifics of the bill. We’re still looking at it,” Meyer said during a Wednesday press conference.
A day after Kane sent the letter, the bill drew additional pushback from Republicans in the House of Representatives who argued during a committee hearing that it could leave cities and towns vulnerable to costly civil lawsuits.

House Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman (R-Clayton) characterized the bill as a mandate to municipalities of “you will do this, or else.”
“A lot of municipalities that we work with, especially smaller ones that are perhaps downstate, can’t afford a civil rights lawsuit,” Spiegelman said.
HB 135 is a rare piece of legislation because it removes sovereign immunity, meaning state and local governments can be sued for violating the law.
If approved, the Attorney General would also have the authority to take civil actions against any local government that violates it.
In response to arguments that it could spark costly lawsuits, Rep. Mara Gorman (D-Newark), a co-sponsor of the bill, argued that municipalities are smart enough to make their own rules and said it would be difficult for someone who is homeless to file a lawsuit.
“The people that this is impacting are disadvantaged in a lot of ways. For them to file a lawsuit … is not like the easiest thing in the world to do,” she said.
In addition to Spiegelman, Rep. Valerie Jones Giltner (R-Georgetown) also spoke in opposition to the bill, expressing concerns that it could hurt commercial districts. She said it would mean local governments would be reluctant to enforce certain rules, or instead have to overenforce others to show strict compliance.
“If I was my police chief, how am I going to tell my people to determine whether it’s a homeless person that’s in an RV, or if it’s somebody that’s a snowbird,” Jones Giltner said.
In response, Phillips said that the point of the bill is to ensure that police do not treat homeless people differently from others.
“It doesn’t matter who it is, if you’re going to it based on if they’re homeless or not, that’s discrimination against them simply because they’re homeless,” Phillips said.
Rep. Madinah Wilson-Anton (D-Bear) also voiced her support during the meeting, arguing society should avoid judging people based on how they look.
“It’s easy when you have housing to judge people who don’t … But until you’re actually in that situation, you really have no idea,” she said.
In addition to the lawmakers, more than 30 members of the public also spoke during the committee hearing.
Most were representatives of interested groups, including the Delaware Housing Alliance, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Delaware Association of Chiefs of Police, and the Delaware Association of Realtors.
Those against the bill said it would hurt commercial districts throughout the state because it would legally protect encampments that are already in parking lots and other public areas.
“This actually will accelerate the attack on small businesses,” Rob Buccini, co-founder of the politically influential Buccini/Pollin Group, said during the meeting’s public comment period.
Supporters of the bill speaking during the public comment period highlighted that the measure won’t fix the issue of homelessness. But they said it will allow local and state officials to focus resources on investing in housing and shelters, rather than on using police to move or fine those who are unhoused.
The bill “says this group of tools that we use that actually makes it harder for people experiencing homelessness to get help and be safe, we are no longer going to use them,” said Rachel Stucker, executive director of the Delaware Housing Alliance.
Still, another housing advocate – Gene Halus, the chief operating officer at the Ministry of Caring – urged the state to focus on allocating resources into housing and programs that will prevent people from staying homeless.
“I’ve had a man living outside the headquarters of the Ministry of Caring for over a year and a half in a car. When this bill passes, he’ll still be in the car. I don’t need this bill. The people I serve don’t need this bill,” he said.
Phillips said her bill is an “incentive” for the state to coordinate effective approaches to homelessness.
“Passing this bill will allow us to focus on housing as a response to homelessness, which is the true reason why we have homelessness in our state, not arrests or fines,” she said during the meeting.
Phillips’ measure comes as the issue of homelessness continues to rise throughout Delaware.
In 2025, there were nearly 1,600 unhoused people living in Delaware – a 16% increase from the previous year, according to an annual point-in-time (PIT) count.

As a result, many municipalities are discussing ways to provide more shelter beds and to enact new anti-panhandling laws, especially after the settlement of a lawsuit in 2024 that barred police from enforcing loitering statutes on the books at that time.
Most recently, the Dover City Council rejected a measure that would have restricted panhandling in the city. Meanwhile, the Wilmington City Council is reworking its own loitering bill after a backlash from community members and the ACLU.
In addition, Attorney General Kathy Jennings’ office drafted a new bill that would prohibit loitering that legislators could introduce. The bill does not appear to have been filed yet.
Beyond allowing homeless people to sleep or stand in public, Phillips’ bill would also require that personal belongings kept in public spaces receive the same legal protections as property kept inside a private home – including safeguards against unreasonable searches and seizures.
The bill was amended before the committee meeting to create more definitive language on what constitutes public property; widen rules around the type of shelter that must be secured for a homeless individual; and remove a provision that would have provided an affirmative defense or a legal shield for homeless people who are subject to a violation of the measure.
As of Wednesday afternoon, the bill had not yet been signed out of committee.
Still, Phillips expects the bill to proceed to the House floor, according to Jenevieve Worley, spokeswoman for the House Democrats.
The post Pushback emerges around bill to expand protections for homeless appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Exclusive: Brussels seeks to stall awarding of contract to firm fronted by US president’s lawyer in letter seen by Guardian
The EU risks a confrontation with Donald Trump after it sought to stall the awarding of a lucrative Balkans pipeline contract to a company fronted by his personal lawyer, documents seen by the Guardian show.
Brussels has clashed with Trump over trade, Ukraine and military spending, but the intervention in the Southern Interconnection pipeline project appears to mark the first time it has challenged a commercial venture by those close to the president.
Continue reading... | Are these welds on the pintv correct? As soon as it arrives, I'll install it in the afternoon. [link] [comments] |
Analyst who worked on Internet Watch Foundation report says content exists ‘across all social media platforms’ and is ‘very easy’ to find
The number of commercial child sexual abuse websites has doubled in a year as experts say that criminal gangs are making “huge profits” from online sexual exploitation.
According to data collected by the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), 15,031 commercial child sexual abuse sites were found in 2025, compared with 7,028 found in 2024, a 114% increase.
Continue reading...Our writers take a look at the best prospects coming out of college, and which teams need to nail their picks over the coming days
Arvell Reese, LB/Edge, Ohio State. He is one of the best pure linebacker prospects in a generation, and he has the athletic traits to become a full-time edge defender. Some teams view him as a linebacker; those at the top of the board prefer him as an edge rusher. In an ideal world, Reese will do a bit of everything. Think Philly’s Zack Baun on Super Soldier Serum. Reese has a rare combination of smarts, speed and power. Whichever role he plays, he will be a force multiplier for a defense. OC
Continue reading...
Mary Jannotta sliced meat and cheese behind deli counters at Acme and Pathmark supermarkets in the Philadelphia suburbs for decades, developing aches that came with working on her feet. A botched back surgery in 2008 made the pain worse. Her doctor repeatedly prescribed OxyContin, Purdue Pharma’s marquee painkiller — the high-dose opioid the company later admitted it criminally marketed and distributed.
Jannotta said she soon became dependent on opioids. Cut off by her doctors, she found her way to Kensington, home of Philadelphia’s dangerous open-air drug market, to score pills. She eventually lost her car, her home — and her grandson. Tyler Cordeiro first pilfered Jannotta’s prescription pills as a teenager. He was 24 when he died of an overdose.
When Purdue filed for bankruptcy in 2019, Jannotta, along with nearly 140,000 other people, filed claims against the company for the harm they said its drugs caused. Though the money could not bring back what they lost, a financial settlement represented an opportunity to get justice from the company and its multibillionaire owners, the Sackler family.
Then they waited. The Supreme Court in 2024 rejected the first bankruptcy settlement because it shielded the Sacklers from future lawsuits. Finally, last November, a federal judge approved a new plan that would allow the payouts to start.
But this $7.4 billion bankruptcy plan — including $870 million that has been set aside for individual victims — will shut out tens of thousands of those who originally applied for a settlement, ProPublica and The Philadelphia Inquirer found. Fewer than half of those who filed claims against Purdue will get any kind of help under the new plan, despite the company touting it as “the only opioid settlement to date that meaningfully compensates individual victims.”
Court records show the new plan slashed payments for victims, imposed tougher eligibility requirements and eliminated compensation for teenagers who bought Purdue drugs on the street. Estimated settlement amounts for people whose family members fatally overdosed dropped to as little as $8,000; the previous payout for an OxyContin death had been $48,000.
Most significantly, the new plan removed a key provision that allowed victims to submit a sworn affidavit, in lieu of a prescription or other medical or legal records, to prove they purchased Purdue opioids.
Similar sworn statements have been permitted in other major bankruptcy cases — such as those driven by sexual abuse in the Boy Scouts and the Catholic Church — to account for harm done years earlier where physical evidence is scant or impossible to obtain.
Several victims told ProPublica and the Inquirer that the loss of the affidavit option meant they had no hope of receiving a settlement. Purdue sold painkillers for decades, and, while laws vary by state, generally doctors, hospitals and pharmacies must keep prescription records for only a few years.
“I can’t turn up prescriptions for my son back when he was young, years ago,” Michigan resident Ellen Isaacs said. “They’re not available anymore.”
Her son, Ryan, died from an overdose at 33 in 2018 in Florida, the result of an addiction she said began when he was prescribed OxyContin after a high school injury.
The changes between the initial and revised settlement agreements were negotiated out of the public eye for months, with key details later scattered across thousands of pages of court filings, hearing transcripts and sworn declarations. To date, they have not received any media attention or public scrutiny. The winnowing of victims has been the result of byzantine legal procedures, strict vetting and tightened eligibility rules, which victims told ProPublica and the Inquirer took them by surprise.
To receive compensation, victims also have had to face a series of deadlines twice — once in connection with Purdue’s first bankruptcy plan and then again once a new plan was approved to address the Supreme Court decision. First, to qualify for a settlement at all, victims had to have used Purdue opioids before Sept. 15, 2019, the day Purdue declared bankruptcy. The deadline to file a claim was in June 2020. But that deadline changed multiple times, once to July 2020 and then again to September 2021. After that, the door to a settlement under the bankruptcy plan shut for good.
I can’t turn up prescriptions for my son back when he was young, years ago. They’re not available anymore.
Ellen Isaacs, whose son died from an overdose at 33
Just under 140,000 people met that final deadline, but years of litigation ensued and it wasn’t until almost four years later, by late July 2025, that they had to file evidence for their claims. About 63,000 did, according to a November court filing from settlement trust administrator Edward Gentle.
Purdue and its attorneys moved to formally eliminate most of the 80,000 individuals who missed the deadline from any payout under this settlement plan, and the judge approved the expungement motion Tuesday. Under certain circumstances, these excluded victims and others who missed earlier filing deadlines can still sue the Sacklers directly.
Purdue’s attorneys said in court that the company played no role in designing the claims process. The company referred questions for this story to Akin, the major Washington D.C.-based firm representing the victims and other creditors. Akin endorsed the new bankruptcy plan despite the tighter eligibility criteria and lower survivors’ benefits. The firm declined to speak on the record. It said the official creditors’ committee had no comment.
Andrews & Higgins, a firm that also represented victims, did not respond to requests for comment.
Edward E. Neiger, the co-managing partner of ASK LLP, another major firm representing victims, also endorsed the plan. His firm twice praised the 2021 affidavit option in early court pleadings but made no mention in hearings of its disappearance from the new plan.
Neiger said “contractual and court-imposed confidentiality provisions” prevented him from discussing the changes. He said in a written statement that his firm is “proud of helping facilitate the record-breaking and historic $850 million-plus settlement on behalf of the actual, human victims of the opioid crisis.” The Purdue fund is more than eight times as big as the combined victims’ funds financed by the two other big bankrupt opioid makers, Endo and Mallinckrodt.
More than 300,000 people have died from opioid prescription drug overdoses and millions more became addicted. Federal prosecutors have twice brought charges against Purdue itself. The drug firm pleaded guilty in 2007 to misleading the public about the dangers of its opioids.
A federal judge on Tuesday delayed until next week the sentencing of Purdue on three felony charges related to paying kickbacks to doctors and reckless sales of its opioids.
The Sacklers, who have never been criminally charged, have denied wrongdoing.


Under standard procedure, those who filed a claim against Purdue with the bankruptcy court in the first round — including cities, hospitals and individual opioid victims — were entitled to vote on the new bankruptcy plan. Proponents of the new plan point to a higher minimum payment for all qualifying claimants of $8,000, up from the previous $3,500. They also say it will streamline the settlement process so payments go out faster and in full. The Sacklers also put an additional $100 million in the victims’ fund.
About 58,000 of the 140,000 individual claimants voted on the plan last September, nearly all in favor. But nearly two dozen victims — a mix of people who voted for and against the plan and who didn’t vote at all — said they were unaware of the tighter evidence requirements until ProPublica and the Inquirer contacted them.
Shortly before the judge approved the revised bankruptcy plan, Jannotta appeared via video call in November to address the court, delivering a statement that her daughter, Susan Ousterman, helped craft.
The Bucks County, Pennsylvania, grandmother, then 76, looked frail but resolute. She had voted against approval of the plan.
The legal system should be where the powerless can finally be heard, but in this courtroom it’s being used to shield the powerful.
Mary Jannotta, whose settlement claim against Purdue Pharma was denied
“The legal system should be where the powerless can finally be heard, but in this courtroom it’s being used to shield the powerful,” she told a session packed with more than 100 lawyers and victims.
The day after Jannotta spoke, U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Sean H. Lane hailed the new plan. He said it imposed a “very modest burden of substantiation” for victims to show Purdue had harmed them, “an exceedingly low bar.”
The trust for Purdue’s victims has twice indicated that it plans to reject Jannotta’s claim, once for missing a 2021 claim deadline that had been changed at least twice, and then again for inadequate proof of prescriptions.
But Jannotta shared with ProPublica and the Inquirer a pharmacy record of her prescriptions that she says she sent to the trust. It includes 16 qualifying prescriptions for Purdue opioids listed on the trust’s website. Gentle, an Alabama lawyer who specializes in running trusts to compensate victims of disasters and corporate scandals, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Jannotta is fuming.
“After everything I went through, what my family went through, and to find out nobody was really being held responsible really hit me in the gut,” Jannotta said. “It was a punch in the gut.”
After the Supreme Court rejected the original 2021 bankruptcy plan, Purdue attorney Marshall S. Huebner said that the task ahead was straightforward: to undo immunity for the Sacklers but “not to go back to ground zero.”
Attorneys representing Purdue, the Sackler family and other stakeholder groups, including victims, began months of confidential mediations. Court records do not explain why the more generous benefit and eligibility requirements in the first plan underwent significant revisions.
What they do show is that after years of litigation, hearings, negotiations and delays, dramatic changes to the claim criteria occurred in a matter of five weeks.
In a flurry of activity beginning on March 8, 2025, Purdue filed documents that show lines crossing out the eligibility criteria and victim compensation amounts, with no explanation or substitute language. Purdue then filed additional documents with new requirements but no mention of the earlier affidavit option for adults or teens. In April, Lane approved the changes to the claim process and, in the same hearing, approved requests from Purdue, with the support of victims’ attorneys, to hire Gentle and jump-start his review of claims.
That meant victims started to submit claims with accompanying evidence even before Lane approved the new bankruptcy plan in November 2025. Trust administrator Gentle already had been sending letters to potential claimants stating they could be denied unless qualifying evidence was provided within 30 days.
A ProPublica and Inquirer examination of nearly 1,000 pages of transcripts covering 10 open court hearings about the plan found that Lane and lawyers representing Purdue and opioid claimants held no in-depth public discussions about the differences in criteria between the original and revised plans — or their potential impact.
Florida resident Cindy Singer was among the claimants who voted for the plan and now regrets it. She said her son, Rory, began taking OxyContin after a construction accident and died three years later, in 2015, of an overdose at age 28. According to the letter she received from the trust, she failed to produce a prescription linking him to a Purdue opioid.
Singer said she didn’t understand how critical the affidavit option would be to her claim.
“We never even knew it existed,” she said.
Cheryl Juaire of Massachusetts lost two sons to overdoses. She served on Akin’s oversight committee as a representative for victims. Juaire is waiting to hear whether her claims will be approved.

She said she does not recall Akin lawyers telling her about the changes to eligibility. Even so, Juaire said she stands by her support for the new plan because the Purdue case had dragged on too long.
But she acknowledged that the loss of the affidavit option seems to have caught fellow claimants by surprise.
“I’m being bombarded with calls from folks saying, ‘Hey, I put in a claim and I’m getting rejected. I can’t get that prescription,’” Juaire said. “It’s breaking my heart.”
What is especially galling, some victims said, is that their compensation for years of fighting for justice will boil down to a day’s pay for a Purdue attorney like Huebner, who charges $2,935 an hour.
Well over $100 million of the settlement money will go to the plaintiff law firms that have represented Purdue victims through the bankruptcy and to cover the cost of running the trust. Administration fees in similar opioid victim funds, also run by Gentle, range from about 15% to more than one-quarter of the victims’awards, according to documents from those trusts.
ASK LLP and its partner, Andrews & Higgins, signed up 30,000 Purdue victims in exchange for up to 40% of their individual awards.
Many of us buried children and you are going to walk away with more money than we will ever see.
Maureen Kielian, a Purdue settlement claimant, of the lawyers in the case
“To me, it’s appalling. It adds further injury to the family of the victims,” said Maureen Kielian of Florida. “Many of us buried children and you are going to walk away with more money than we will ever see.”
She became a vocal critic of the opioid industry after helping her son recover from addiction. In November, Gentle faulted her claim for lack of evidence. She has appealed to the trust but isn’t optimistic.
Connecticut couple Beverly and David Melenski, whose son was addicted to opioids for 20 years, were on an 8,000-page list of late filers whom Purdue and Akin, the court-appointed victims’ lawyers, sought to expunge.
They didn’t have the prescription records that told the story of their son’s decades of dependency on opioids. But they did have a letter they wrote a doctor in 2009 pleading with him to stop giving their son OxyContin. That doctor, records show, lost his license two years later for recklessly prescribing Purdue drugs and other opioids.
The Melenskis have since successfully appealed, and Gentle is vetting their claim.
The Purdue money won’t cover even a fraction of what they spent on rehab, but David Melenski said it would “at least it would be an acknowledgment of their wrongdoing.”
They are waiting for a decision from the trust.
Our recent investigation details changes to a bankruptcy settlement that leaves out some of the hardest-hit victims of the opioid crisis. Here’s how you can share your story with ProPublica and The Philadelphia Inquirer.
The post “A Punch in the Gut”: After Years of Waiting, Many Opioid Victims Will Be Shut Out of Purdue Settlement appeared first on ProPublica.

ProPublica and The Philadelphia Inquirer are looking into how individual opioid victims have been compensated for addiction and other harm as a result of the tens of billions of pills distributed throughout the United States during the prescription-opioid crisis. Please tell us about your experience seeking payment from the court-appointed trusts funded by the drugmakers Purdue, Mallinckrodt and Endo.
About us: Craig R. McCoy was a veteran corruption reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer. Bob Fernandez was an enterprise and investigative business reporter, also at the Inquirer. We previously wrote for ProPublica and the Inquirer about the Endo bankruptcy. Our most recent story investigates the impact of Purdue’s new bankruptcy plan on victims seeking compensation for the harm they said its drugs caused.
The post Are You Waiting for Opioid Settlement Money From Purdue, Mallinckrodt or Endo? Get in Touch. appeared first on ProPublica.
Chatham House fellow gives evidence on China and critical minerals to UK Parliament Business and Trade sub-Committee News release LToremark
Senior Research Fellow for China and the World James Kynge provided evidence on 22 April.
Senior Research Fellow James Kynge gave oral evidence to the Business and Trade Sub-Committee on Economic Security, Arms and Export Controls in its new inquiry looking at the role of critical minerals, which forms part of the sub-Committee’s work on UK national economic security. The session was chaired by Liam Byrne MP.
James Kynge was invited to provide evidence due to his expertise on China and its dominance of critical minerals supply chains.
During the session he was asked a range of questions, including in which areas China is particularly strong; whether future UK military equipment – like anti-tank missiles – would rely on Chinese components; about the need for diplomacy; which UK sectors are particularly vulnerable; about interdependencies and whether China weaponizing supply chains for a sustained period of time would lead to mutually assured destruction; and how the UK could work with allies to build resilience.
His main points were that the UK should embrace with real urgency the task of building up its critical minerals resilience. If the UK remains exposed to China’s weaponization of its critical minerals supply chain – as happened in October last year – it leaves itself vulnerable to economic coercion. It is China’s most effective chokehold.
James Kynge said:
‘The optimum policy for the UK is a hybrid one. London should first get clear where its main vulnerabilities lie. Then it should formulate a detailed strategy to protect against the exploitation of these vulnerabilities by foreign powers. After this, it should engage in trade and investment with full vigour in all non-circumscribed areas, including with Chinese companies.
In the case of rare earths and critical minerals, such a strategy should involve the following. First, it should cooperate with allies under the Pax Silica initiative to build rare earth supply chains that are insulated from China. Second, it should actively court foreign investors to mine, refine and even manufacture in the UK. Third, it should provide conducive policies to support the recycling of products (magnets, batteries etc) that contain rare earths to diversify sources of supply.’
Exclusive: Documents released to campaign group 38 Degrees reveal UK officials briefed on possibility of altering food standards
British officials were briefed on the possibility of allowing chemical-washed chicken into the UK before a meeting with the US embassy, new documents reveal.
The Food Standards Agency is also looking at studies performed in the US on washing chicken with bacteriophages, including chlorine dioxide, to remove pathogens, according to the documents, released to the campaign group 38 Degrees under freedom of information laws.
Continue reading...Iranian intelligence apparently using intermediaries to sow fear with attacks frequently on Jewish targets
Iranian intelligence services and Revolutionary Guards operatives are recruiting teenagers through criminal intermediaries to launch a wave of low-level “hybrid warfare” attacks in Europe and the UK, according to investigators, security officials, analysts and police documents.
A first wave of attacks was launched in early March, 10 days after the US and Israel began strikes on Iran, and targeted Jewish community sites in Belgium, the Netherlands and US banks. A second wave has focused on the UK, with a series of arson and attempted arson attacks on synagogues, a Jewish charity and the offices of an Iranian opposition TV network in London.
Continue reading...Iran’s plan to extract a $2m payment from tankers using the strait of Hormuz could raise costs for years to come
A second round of peace talks between the US and Iran has begun amid renewed attacks on oil tankers in the strait of Hormuz and a US blockade on Iranian vessels through the crucial trade route.
The future of this narrow waterway – and curbs on Iran’s nuclear programme – are at the centre of the talks after Tehran’s de facto blockade on oil and gas tankers via the strait pushed up energy prices.
Continue reading...The US president is making a desperate plea to the one group that seemingly hasn’t deserted him – yet
He has lost the Catholics, the foreign policy isolationists and the millions of people affected by ICE’s immigration raids. But Donald Trump is still counting on the goodwill of one powerful constituency of American voters, to whom he appealed this week by reading a passage from the Bible urging people to repent their “wicked ways”. A lot of thoughts spring to mind in relation to this, but at the very forefront, one question: do the US’s evangelical Christians, who overwhelmingly support Trump, have a red line and if so, can they find it with both hands?
I’m stating the obvious but it’s worth raising again, if only to boggle at the sheer shamelessness of a religious community that has thrown in its lot with Trump: how on earth do the evangelicals work out the maths on this? Let’s remind ourselves of the facts; that the president treating us to a section of the Old Testament as part of a week-long, continuous public reading of the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation – separation of church and state, anyone? – is the same president who has, variously, been found by courts to have falsified business records, as part of a hush-money payment scheme to a porn star, Stormy Daniels, and sexually abused and defamed E Jean Carroll. As the president intoned to camera in the Oval Office on Tuesday: “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.”
Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Acclaimed Brisbane-born writer was known for his work exploring his own childhood, great myths and colonial Australia
David Malouf, the acclaimed Australian author of books including Ransom, An Imaginary Life and the Booker prize-nominated Remembering Babylon, has died aged 92.
Malouf died on Wednesday, his publisher, Penguin Random House Australia, said in a statement on Thursday.
Continue reading...alternative_right writes: A new technology has been proposed that could fundamentally solve the issue of smartphones overheating during high-spec gaming or extended video streaming. Researchers at KAIST have discovered the principle of processing signals using the minute vibrations of magnets (spin waves) instead of electrons. This method significantly reduces heat generation and power consumption while enabling instantaneous frequency switching within the several GHz range. This breakthrough is expected to pave the way for smart devices with less heat and longer battery life, as well as ultra-low-power, high-speed computing. Professor Kab-Jin Kim from the Department of Physics said: "This study is a case that proves we can implement and control the nonlinear dynamics of magnons -- the principle of information processing using magnetic vibrations -- in actual nano-devices, which had previously only been proposed in theory. It will serve as an important foundation for the development of a new information processing paradigm using spin waves instead of electrons." The findings have been published in the journal Nature Communications.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Vrabel to miss day three of NFL draft after photos
Coach says counseling will help him be ‘best version’
NFL not investigating after resort images emerge
New England Patriots coach Mike Vrabel is seeking counseling and will not be with the team for day three of the NFL draft on Saturday, following the publication of photos of the coach and longtime NFL reporter Dianna Russini at an Arizona resort.
“As I said the other day, I promised my family, this organization and this team that I was going to give them the best version of me that I can possibly give them. In order to do so, I have committed to seeking counseling, starting this weekend,” Vrabel said Wednesday night, according to ESPN. “This is something that I have given a lot of thought to and is something I would advise a player to do if I was counseling them.
Continue reading...In today’s newsletter: As political tensions rise abroad and economic pressures mount at home, Donald Trump faces a shifting landscape that is testing the loyalty of his Maga supporters
Good morning. Starting a war of choice that is rapidly spiralling out of control, poll ratings at a second-term low, and a cost of living crisis intensifying for millions.
Any conventional US president would be in big trouble. But Donald Trump is not a conventional president, and normal rules do not seem to apply to him. More than a third of Americans continue to believe he is doing a good job despite the global chaos he has unleashed.
UK politics | Keir Starmer was looking increasingly isolated over the Peter Mandelson scandal as the Guardian learned of concerns around the cabinet table, a senior minister refused to say the dismissal of Olly Robbins was fair and several mandarins called for Robbins to be reinstated. One Labour MP called on Starmer to quit.
Middle East | Iranian forces seized two ships in the strait of Hormuz as the US and Iran doubled down on imposing separate blockades of the shipping waterway.
West Bank | Two Palestinians, including a 14-year-old schoolboy, were killed in the occupied West Bank after Israeli settlers opened fire near a school, witnesses and local officials said. Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon killed a journalist after rescuers were blocked from accessing the building where she was buried under rubble because of further Israeli fire, according to several witnesses.
UK news | Britain’s high military dependence on the US is “no longer tenable” and the UK has to become increasingly independent of the special relationship, a former Nato chief has said.
Palantir | The Metropolitan police has held talks with Palantir that could lead to the London force buying the US spy-tech company’s AI technology to automate intelligence analysis for criminal investigations.
Continue reading...Six candidates clashed over homelessness and cost of living crisis in first debate since Eric Swalwell’s exit – with a clear frontrunner still to emerge
Six candidates vying to become the next governor of California sparred on Wednesday in the first debate since the already topsy-turvy race was plunged into upheaval by the sudden collapse of former congressman Eric Swalwell’s campaign after sexual assault and misconduct allegations.
With a clear frontrunner still yet to emerge, the unusually wide-open race to replace the outgoing governor, Gavin Newsom, in the heavily Democratic state has left nearly a quarter of voters undecided ahead of the 2 June primary.
Continue reading...ChristianaCare is planning to open a new outpatient cardiovascular ambulatory surgery center near Newark, officials announced last week.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 23.
| Looks like I got some water into my battery compartment and killed the bms. I randomly got an overcurrent alarm (14?), then the board shut itself off and wouldn't come on. I found water damage on the bms and taillight so I unplugged the taillight and cleaned the bms with isopropyl alcohol. Plugged the bms back in and left the taillight unplugged (it's pretty badly damaged). Sealed everything back up and the board is turning on now, but I get the white and purple lights attached. Interesting I can still plug in the board and all the lights turn white (a little dimmer), but the app shows 0 miles on the odometer. Since I'm on 5200, is vesc truly my only option? I don't have much of a budget to get this repaired at the moment. Sell for parts? [link] [comments] |
New engineering blueprint outlines IonQ’s end-to-end path to scaling fault-tolerant quantum computers to 10,000 physical qubits and beyond
COLLEGE PARK, Md., April 22, 2026 — IonQ today announced a definitive, full-stack, buildable blueprint for scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computing. This publication sets a new standard for technical specificity and transparency in the quantum industry.
“The level of detail and completeness in our blueprint is a major global first and milestone for the quantum industry. IonQ’s specificity sets a new standard and distinguishes IonQ with its tangibility, resting on capabilities our hardware has already demonstrated including 99.99% two-qubit fidelity and reliable ion transport. This historic work demonstrates precisely why IonQ is on track to be the first to unlock fully fault tolerant quantum computers – as we published in June 2025,” said Niccolo de Masi, IonQ Chairman and CEO.
The technical paper describes IonQ’s end-to-end architecture for fault-tolerant quantum computing, spanning compiler design and error correction to hardware, control systems, and ion movement. It outlines in detail how the company intends to move from today’s systems to utility-scale quantum computers.
While IonQ’s current systems lead in delivering real world solutions and business outcomes, achieving the next level of performance means moving past the constraints of noise, scale, and lack of modularity. IonQ’s fault-tolerant framework creates a logical computing layer that actively detects and corrects errors in real time. The result is a practical path toward quantum computers capable of running longer, more complex computations with greater reliability.
The technical report describes the details behind IonQ’s announced plans to scale toward large fault-tolerant systems and reflects the company’s continued focus on performance, modularity, and commercial readiness. IonQ has tangibly shown today that for its current architecture, fault-tolerant quantum computing is an engineering challenge with a clear and achievable roadmap in the coming quarters.
IonQ was the first commercial company to link remote ion-traps using quantum entanglement; the first company to achieve 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity; as well as the first company to convert quantum frequencies into telecom wavelengths; and it continues on its innovation track toward fault tolerant quantum computing.
The full technical roadmap is available here.
About IonQ
IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ) is the world’s leading quantum platform and merchant supplier – delivering integrated quantum solutions across computing, networking, sensing, and security. IonQ’s newest generation of quantum computers, the IonQ Tempo, is the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, and AstraZeneca achieve 20x performance results and accelerate innovation in drug discovery, materials science, financial modeling, logistics, cybersecurity, and defense.
Source: IonQ
The post IonQ Details ‘Walking Cat’ Architecture for Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
One pilot ordered to repay some of the $600,000 of damage caused by collision in 2021
South Korea’s air force has apologised for a 2021 mid-air collision involving two fighter jets, a day after auditors said pilots were taking selfies and filming during the flight and held them responsible for the accident.
“We sincerely apologise to the public for the concern caused by the accident that occurred in 2021,” an air force spokesperson said in a press briefing. The spokesperson said one of the pilots involved had been suspended from flying duties, received severe disciplinary action and has since left the military.
Continue reading...This blog is now closed. Follow our new live blog on the Middle East crisis here
If you’re just joining us, here’s the main news of the day. It is 9.30am in Tehran, 9am in Jerusalem and Beirut, and 2am in Washington DC.
Donald Trump unilaterally said he is extending the ceasefire with Iran at Pakistan’s request while awaiting a “unified proposal” from Tehran, even as the US military maintains its blockade of Iranian ports.
Trump made the announcement as ceasefire talks looked increasingly uncertain with a two-week truce set to expire on Wednesday. Both countries had said they were prepared to resume fighting if no deal is reached.
Trump said he would “extend the ceasefire until such time as [Iran’s] proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other”.
Trump later claimed in a Truth Social post that Iran is “collapsing financially” and was losing $500m every day that the strait of Hormuz is effectively closed.
Iran has yet to decide whether to join the negotiations in Pakistan, a foreign ministry spokesman said earlier on Tuesday, and will only take part if Tehran believes the discussions would yield results.
A container ship has reported being fired at by an IRGC gunboat, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations said. The incident occurred 15 nautical miles north-east of Oman. The vessel sustained “heavy damage” to its bridge, the master of the ship said. All crew members were reported as safe.
Shares were mixed in Asia as markets waited to see if the US and Iran may resume talks. Brent crude edged higher to $98.51 a barrel, while US benchmark crude fell 0.4% to $89.29 a barrel.
One person was killed and two others wounded in an Israeli drone strike overnight on the outskirts of al-Jbour in Lebanon’s western Bekaa Valley, Lebanese state media reported. Israel and Lebanon agreed to a 10-day ceasefire on Friday.
Since the war started, fighting has killed at least 3,375 people in Iran and more than 2,290 in Lebanon, the Associated Press reported. Additionally, 23 people have died in Israel and more than a dozen in Gulf Arab states. Fifteen Israeli soldiers in Lebanon and 13 US service members throughout the region have been killed.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards threatened to prevent oil production in the Middle East if the Islamic republic faced attacks launched from its Gulf neighbours’ territory.
Continue reading...There are now 3,110 billionaires but analysis shows ‘deep structural acceleration’ in wealth creation around world
The number of billionaires in the world could reach nearly 4,000 by 2031, figures suggest, as the super-rich accumulate wealth at an accelerating rate.
There are now 3,110 billionaires globally, according to analysis by the estate agent Knight Frank. This is forecast to rise by 25% over the next five years, taking the total to 3,915.
Continue reading...We’re being sold a world where there’s no room for reflection or spontaneity. This is the Black Mirror stage of capitalism
How fast do you have to strike a match to get it to light? Not the chemistry of the ignition, but the actual speed, in metres per second, that the little piece of wood and its bulbous head have to move to spark the chain reaction behind the flame.
It was a question born of insomnia. And there, in the dark, I did the thing you’re not supposed to do, if your goal is to fall back asleep: I opened my phone. Before I knew it, 3am had become 5am. I learned about the composition of the friction strip (red phosphorus, pulverized glass), and of the match head (potassium chlorate, antimony trisulphide, wax), and that a safety match struck against anything else will not light. I found slow-motion videos of a match strike captured at 3,500 frames per second. But nothing about the speed.
Alexander Hurst writes for Guardian Europe from Paris. His memoir Generation Desperation is out now
Continue reading...In her new book, New York Times investigative journalist Jodi Kantor has set her mind to helping young people find their life’s work. What should they, or anyone else who feels lost and overwhelmed right now, do to get started?
Early last year, the investigative journalist Jodi Kantor was asked to give the commencement address to students at Columbia University in New York. The place was in chaos – amid continuing pro-Palestinian protests students were expelled, or arrested and detained by immigration officials, while President Trump had ordered a $400m withdrawal of federal funding (which was later reinstated as part of a settlement with the administration). Kantor was “horrified” to see what had happened at Columbia – her alma mater, where she was sacked from her first journalism job at the student paper– “a place and campus I loved, a place that stands for discussion and ideas and progress. I said: ‘I’ll do it if I can speak to the students first.’”
She spoke to several. They didn’t want to talk about Israel or Gaza, or Trump, or what was happening at the university and its implications for free speech. “They said: ‘Our class, despite all of its political differences, is united in anxiety over one question. When everything feels so broken, how do we start? How do we find our life’s work in this environment?’”
Continue reading...Palestinians must lead the rebuilding of the strip.
And how America can avoid playing into their hands.
Catch up on this year's Oscar winners and some great titles that are leaving soon.
Developed by CBS News California Investigates, the guide provides the opportunity to compare full, uninterrupted responses from the candidates to questions about a range of policy topics.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: Nearly half of children in the United States are breathing dangerous levels of air pollution, according to a new report, as experts warned Donald Trump's expansive rollback of protections will make the situation worse. The 27th annual air quality report from the American Lung Association (ALA) released on Wednesday evaluates pollution across the country by grading levels of ground-level ozone -- also known as smog -- as well as year-round and short-term spikes in particle pollution, commonly referred to as soot. The report analyzed quality-assured data collected between 2022 and 2024. It found that 33.5 million children in the US -- 46% of those under 18 -- live in areas that received a failing grade for at least one measure of air pollution. The report also found that 7 million children, or 10% of all children in the US, live in communities that failed all three measures. The report further found that communities of color are disproportionately exposed to unhealthy air. As a result, they are more likely to live with one or more chronic health conditions that make them more vulnerable to pollution, including asthma, diabetes, and heart disease. Although people of color make up 42.1% of the US population, they represent 54.2% of those living in counties with at least one failing grade, the report noted. It also found that a person of color is 2.42 times more likely than a white person to live in a community that fails all three pollution measures. Smog remains the most widespread pollutant affecting Americans' health. Between 2022 and 2024, 38% of the US population -- approximately 129.1 million people -- were exposed to ozone levels that put their health at risk. This marks the highest number recorded in the ALA's report in six years, and a 3.9 million increase from the previous year. Several factors contributed to these unhealthy pollution levels, including extreme heat, drought and wildfires which have exposed a growing share of the population to harmful ozone, the report said. The regions most affected by high ozone levels include south-western states from California to Texas, as well as much of the midwest. This is mainly driven by smoke from Canada's 2023 wildfires crossing into the US, along with high temperatures and weather patterns that favored ozone formation in 2023 and 2024 -- particularly in southern states. More broadly, the report found that climate change is intensifying ozone pollution by boosting precursor emissions and creating atmospheric conditions such as higher temperatures and lower wind speeds that allow pollutants to build up and ozone to form. Another growing source of pollution: datacenters. The report notes how they rely on regional electricity grids where fossil fuels like methane gas and coal still account for a large portion of generation. Many datacenters also use dozens of large diesel-powered backup generators, which emit carcinogenic particulate matter. "Children's lungs are still developing," said Will Barrett, assistant vice-president of the ALA's Nationwide Clean Air Policy. "For their body size, they're breathing more air. And also, kids play outdoors, they're more active, they're breathing in more outdoor air [...]. So, air pollution exposure in children can contribute to long-term developmental harm to their lungs, new cases of asthma, increased risks of respiratory illness and other health considerations later in life."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Compare the candidates for California governor with the CBS News California Investigates Side-by-Side Candidate Guide.
Memphis authorities say they are investigating the discovery of remains of three children, believed to be between 3 and 7 years of age, that could have been there for years.
John Phelan is ‘departing the administration, effective immediately’ says Pentagon as undersecretary Hung Cao takes over – key US politics stories from 22 April 2026 at a glance
The Pentagon announced on Wednesday that the navy’s top civilian official, John Phelan, the secretary of the navy, is leaving his job.
In a statement posted to social media, Sean Parnell, a Pentagon spokesperson, said Phelan was “departing the administration, effective immediately”.
Continue reading...April 22, 2026 — 10x Science today announced the closing of its $4.8 million seed round led by Initialized Capital. The oversubscribed round includes investments from Y Combinator, Civilization Ventures, Founder Factor, and a group of strategic angel investors.
Starting with drug development, the company’s platform delivers automated, explainable molecular insights in minutes where current tools and manual workflows require months. With tens of thousands of biologic drugs in active development worldwide and regulatory demands for molecular characterization intensifying, 10x Science is unlocking a new category at the intersection of AI and the life sciences.
Protein characterization is foundational to drug development. Every biologic therapeutic, from cancer immunotherapies to gene therapies, must be characterized at the molecular level to determine whether it is safe, effective, and manufacturable. Today, this work depends on specialized scientists spending weeks or months manually interpreting complex mass spectrometry data using tools that have not fundamentally changed in decades.
The pharmaceutical industry is developing more complex protein therapeutics than ever before, and the demand for characterization is growing far faster than the supply of experts who are trained for it. The 10x Science platform addresses this bottleneck with a purpose-built AI architecture that reasons across hundreds of thousands of spectra, identifies molecular forms and chemical modifications, and delivers comprehensive, explainable results.
10x Science was founded by David Stephen Roberts, Ph.D., Andrew Reiter, and Vishnu Tejus, out of Professor Carolyn Bertozzi’s Nobel laureate laboratory at Stanford University. The three founders shared a common frustration: they were studying what happens molecularly when an immune cell meets a cancer cell, one of the most critical problems in cancer research, and the tools they needed to characterize the proteins involved did not exist.
“The people building AI have historically not been life scientists, and the life scientists have not been building AI; we come from both worlds,” says co-founder and CEO David Stephen Roberts. “We realized we could build something that had never existed: an AI system with the scientific depth to reason about proteins the way the best experts do, but at a speed and scale no human team can match. For the first time, we can begin to ask the question that the entire pharmaceutical industry has never been able to answer: across thousands of characterized therapeutics, what molecular patterns distinguish the drugs that work from the ones that do not.”
The platform’s core capability is deep memory: it learns from every dataset, processing and developing an increasingly deep understanding of each customer’s molecular portfolio over time. Every result is explainable and traceable, which is essential in a regulated industry where characterization results appear in filings to the FDA. Legacy tools start from zero with every analysis. Combined with the founding team’s unique expertise at the intersection of chemistry, biology, mass spectrometry, and modern AI architecture, the company is positioned to define a new category in the life sciences.
“AI has already made meaningful contributions to biology at the prediction layer, asking what a protein might look like based on its sequence,” says co-founder and COO Andrew Reiter. “What no one has built is AI for the characterization layer, where you interpret real experimental data from real therapeutic molecules: that is the layer where drug development decisions are actually made, and it has remained painfully manual.”
The company’s vision extends well beyond faster protein characterization. As the platform processes more molecules across more organizations, 10x Science is building toward a shared layer of molecular intelligence for the life sciences: a deep, evolving understanding of protein therapeutics grounded in real experimental data at a depth and scale that has never existed.
“This is a critical moment in pharma; the industry is looking for AI that actually works, and protein characterization is needed at every stage of the drug lifecycle regardless of whether any single drug succeeds or fails. We’re talking about the infrastructure layer of drug development,” says Zoe Perret, partner at Initialized Capital. “The 10x Science founders helped build this field, and they’re now showing up with a product that solves an expensive, critically important problem. There is no more credible team to do this.”
“Biologics are the fastest-growing segment of the pharmaceutical industry and are the most complex to develop. Every antibody, every cell therapy, every engineered protein requires characterization at a level of detail that existing tools simply weren’t designed to handle. The field has outgrown its infrastructure. That’s not sustainable,” says Carolyn Bertozzi, 2022 Nobel Laureate and Stanford University Professor. “I’ve spent my career at the intersection of chemistry and biology, trying to understand how molecules behave in living systems. The biggest constraint I see across the field, whether in academic labs or industry, is the gap between the data we can generate and the insights we can extract. 10x Science closes that gap.”
Right now, the pharmaceutical industry is sitting on an enormous amount of molecular knowledge that has never been aggregated or learned from at scale. 10x Science’s AI can characterize any protein, with implications spanning cancer biology, neurodegeneration, infectious disease, agriculture, and fundamental research into how living systems work. With this funding, 10x Science is hiring Founding Engineers and expanding its work with pharmaceutical and biotech partners to open the doors for these applications.
“If we build this right, we give people across every discipline access to a new paradigm of molecular understanding that has never been possible before,” says Roberts. “10x Science can be the foundational layer of molecular intelligence for the life sciences. If we are, the world gets a deeper understanding of the molecules that govern health, disease, and life itself. That understanding belongs to everyone.”
For more information, visit: https://www.10xscience.com.
About 10x Science
10x Science was founded in December 2025 by David Stephen Roberts, Ph.D., Andrew Reiter, and Vishnu Tejus out of Professor Carolyn Bertozzi’s Nobel laureate laboratory at Stanford University to build the first AI-native protein characterization platform for the life sciences. Roberts is a Damon Runyon Cancer Research Fellow with over 38 publications in the Nature and ACS families of journals. Reiter trained at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard building new tools to decipher drug interactions. Tejus is a two-time Y Combinator founder who went to college at age 11. The company builds frontier AI models with deep memory that deliver automated, explainable molecular characterization of protein therapeutics, serving pharmaceutical companies, biotechs, and research institutions. 10x Science is a Y Combinator W26 company headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area and has received $4.8M in seed funding led by Initialized Capital. 10x Science’s frontier AI models are building a new paradigm for how scientists understand biology at the molecular level, starting with drug development.
Source: 10x Science
The post 10x Science Raises $4.8M Seed to Build AI That Understands Proteins at the Molecular Level appeared first on HPCwire.
Hi guys! I’m an RN and just got a new job that’s a 15 min ride from my apartment. Does anyone ride their one wheel to work? I want to make or buy a strap to help carry my one wheel inside the hospital since it’s so heavy😩any recommendations?
In the memo, Assistant Attorney General Colin McDonald said detailing a prosecutor from each U.S. attorney's office is aimed to help "execute a nationwide strategy to eliminate fraud in every district."
Guided by your recovery and sleep, the Ultrahuman Ring’s Les Mills PowerPlug will use your health metrics to recommend on-demand workouts.
The company behind Dungeons & Dragons has its official answer to Critical Role in its new show Dungeon Masters, which airs weekly on YouTube.
The proposed class action lawsuit says the company stands to benefit twice from the now-voided import duties.
A Silicon Valley chip startup named Bolt Graphics has completed tape-out of a test chip for Zeus, a new RISC-V GPU designed to address HPC, rendering, and other compute-intensive applications. The company says it’s on track to begin deliveries of Zeus, which will deliver 20 teraflops of FP64 capacity on a single motherboard, by the fourth quarter of 2027.
Darwesh Singh founded Bolt Graphics in 2020 with a goal to deliver a chip that can power heavy duty applications, like simulations and three-dimensional graphics, used by game designers, artists, scientists, and engineers. While today’s GPUs are powerful, they were built to solve problems from decades ago, and aren’t addressing the computing challenges that the graphics and simulation communities are facing today.

(Image courtesy Bolt Graphics)
“Clearly the problems in the ‘90s that GPUs were initially designed to solve are not the problems of today,” Singh said in a video posted to his company’s website. “A new type of GPU, something entirely groundbreaking, is needed to power the next 30 year of computer graphics and power the next generation of use cases.”
Singh said Bolt Graphics is taking a no-compromises approach to solving challenging rendering problems. For instance, modern GPUs can’t efficiently deliver the rasterization and ray tracing that video game designers and animation creators demand, he said. It can take hours to fully render short animated clips at 4K resolution using 120 fps, and it can take years to complete full-length animated films.
“With Zeus, we’re leapfrogging both rasterization and ray tracing to bring real-time path tracing,” Singh said. “Path tracing is the most advanced rendering technique providing the highest quality visual.”
With up to 384GB of expandable DDR5 memory, Zeus can also help researchers run larger simulations at full FP64 accuracy. The chip runs electromagnetic simulations 300x faster than the Nvidia Blackwell B200 with IEEE-754 FP64 accuracy, Bolt Graphics claims.

Bolt Graphics is delivering 20 teraflops of FP64 with its Zeus 4c offering (Image courtesy Bolt Graphics)
“Zeus is multiple orders of magnitude faster than legacy GPUs in performing these key physics simulations without trading out performance for accuracy,” Singh said. “In fact, every Zeus GPU, whether consumer or enterprise, has full FP64 cores designed to efficiently run HPC workloads.”
The GPU design for which Bolt Graphics just finished tape-out uses established semiconductor processes, including TSMC’s 12nm FinFET Compact (12 FFC) process. Bolt Graphics says Zeus’s scalable architecture also addresses advanced nodes, including 5 nm. The chip includes scalar cores, vector cores, and other specialized processors. The company is packaging its GPUs using one, two, or four chiplets per board for the Zeus 1c, Zeus 2c, and Zeus 4c offerings. While Zeus 1c and 2c fit on a PCIe card, Zeus 4c is too big and requires a full motherboard.
According to Bolt Graphics’ Zeus Spec Sheet, the high-end Zeus 4c will deliver 20 teraflops of vector FP64 capacity while consuming 500w of power. Customers will be able to put dozens of Zeus 4cs into a single server, addressing up to 9 TB of memory in a scale-up configuration. Zeus cards will include a 400 GbE interface (optionally 800 GbE), enabling customers to build scale-out clusters composed of thousands of GPUs, Bolt Graphics says on its website.
The FP64 capacity of the high-end Zeus 4c offering is within the ballpark of Nvidia Hopper H100 and H200 GPUs, which delivered 34 teraflops of FP64 within a similar power envelope (about 350 watts). With its Blackwell B100 and B200 GPUs, Nvidia delivered 30 teraflops and 37 teraflops of FP64 capacity, respectfully, but the power demand essentially doubled to 700 watts. Nvidia’s new Rubin GPU will deliver 33 teraflops of FP64 capacity while consuming up to 2,300 watts per GPU.
Obviously, the newer GPUs from Nvidia have oodles of AI capacity, which generally runs at lower 4-bit and 8-bit precisions. Nvidia is counting on the Ozaki emulation scheme to deliver FP64-like math capabilities using lower precision cores. However, not everyone is happy with Ozaki, and this has led to some concerns in the HPC community that native vector FP64 capacity needed for traditional modeing and simulation workloads is being sacrificed to bolster AI capacity.

The Zeus Spec Sheet (Image courtesy Bolt Graphics)
This concern over native FP64 capacity is something that AMD is addressing with its upcoming MI430X GPU, which the Department of Energy will be using for the upcoming Discovery supercomputer to be installed at Oak Ridge National Lab in 2028. The MI430X likely will have around 200 teraflops of FP64, according to estimates.
“Compute demand is growing exponentially, but cost remains the limiting factor,” Singh, who is also CTO and CEO of the Sunnyvale, California-based company, said in a press release. “We believe the next generation of computing will be defined not just by performance but by efficiency. Our goal is to fundamentally change the economics of compute and become the default platform for next-generation workloads.”
Bolt Graphics said it has a product pipeline exceeding $500 million and over 14,000 members in its early access program, including enterprises, developers, and end users. It’s not clear if government labs that are hungry for FP64 capacity are part of this program, but it wouldn’t be surprising if they were. For more information, see the company’s website at https://bolt.graphics.
The post Bolt Graphics Targets FP64 HPC Workloads with Zeus GPU appeared first on HPCwire.
After several months of radio silence on the matter, Honeywell announced today that Quantinuum confidentially submitted a draft registration statement on Form S-1 to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on February 17, 2026. The filing follows Honeywell’s January disclosure that it was preparing to take its majority-owned quantum computing unit public.
As with the earlier announcement, today’s update offered few additional details. Honeywell said the number of shares to be offered and the price range for the proposed IPO have not yet been determined. Neither Honeywell nor Quantinuum executives appear to have commented publicly on the February submission beyond today’s brief statement.
Momentum has been building for Quantinuum following a $600 million equity raise in September 2025 that valued the company at approximately $10 billion, roughly doubling its prior valuation. That round came after a $300 million raise led by JPMorgan Chase in January 2024, which valued the company at $5 billion pre-money.
Commenting at the time of the $600 million funding, Honeywell Chairman and CEO Vimal Kapur strongly expressed support for Quantinuum.
“Quantinuum continues to meet and exceed our stated objectives — strategically, technically and commercially,” said Kapur. “We have complete confidence in Quantinuum’s ability to continue to lead the quantum revolution and create long-term value for its investors and customers.”
Unlike several recent quantum computing companies that went public via SPAC mergers, Quantinuum is pursuing a traditional IPO. Analysts view that distinction as notable, with some suggesting it could lend added credibility to both the company and the broader quantum sector as it faces greater public market scrutiny.
Since its last funding round, the company has continued to expand both technically and geographically. In November 2025, Quantinuum introduced its Helios quantum system as part of a broader roadmap toward its next-generation Apollo platform. More recently, the company established an R&D hub in Singapore and plans to deploy its Helios system there later this year. The effort is designed to pair Quantinuum’s technology with local research and industry partners to develop commercially relevant applications and expand Singapore’s quantum capabilities.
Singapore hasn’t been Quantinuum’s only international effort. Earlier this month, the company delivered its System Model H2 quantum computer to Japan’s RIKEN, where it is being installed to replace the previous H1 system as part of the institute’s hybrid quantum-classical platform. Quantinuum has also partnered with organizations including SoftBank Corp., Infineon, and the STFC Hartree Centre, and is involved in a joint venture in Qatar tied to a broader $1 billion national investment in quantum technologies over the coming decade.
The timing of the Quantinuum announcement might be deliberate. Honeywell is scheduled to report first-quarter earnings before the market opens tomorrow (Thursday, April 23), one day after disclosing Quantinuum’s confidential filing and just days after agreeing to sell its Productivity Solutions and Services business for $1.4 billion as part of a broader effort to streamline its portfolio. Whether Quantinuum’s IPO plans will be addressed in more detail remains unclear.
The post Honeywell Confirms Quantinuum IPO Filing as Quantum Firms Face Market Scrutiny appeared first on HPCwire.
NSW and Queensland governments ‘severely underdelivered’ on promised infrastructure to improve water flows, independent review finds
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Two state governments have drastically underdelivered more than $160m in infrastructure measures to improve river health in the northern Murray-Darling basin eight years since they were promised, a major independent review has found.
This includes failure by the New South Wales government to secure any of the private land access needed to improve water flows over floodplains in the state’s Gwydir region, where scientists had to scramble to rescue turtles in dried up wetlands last week.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 23, No. 1,769.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 23, #No. 1,047.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 577 for Thursday, April 23.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 23, No. 781.
Five people were injured when explosions occurred several hours apart at two homes on the same block of a north San Antonio neighborhood.
Navy Secretary John Phelan is leaving his role effective immediately, chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said Wednesday.
A state court judge on Wednesday blocked Virginia from moving forward with a redistricting effort that passed a day earlier, a roadblock in Democrats' efforts to redraw the state's congressional maps.
Move comes one day after voters approved the maps, leading state attorney general to vow office will appeal
One day after voters in Virginia approved new congressional maps intended to make it easier for Democrats to flip four Republican House seats in the midterms, a court ruled the referendum invalid.
The proposal sought to change the state constitution to set aside the non-partisan redistricting process voters authorized six years ago until 2030, and passed by about three percentage points, 51.5% to 48.5%, according to the Virginia department of elections.
Continue reading...I had a Pint for 3 years, then a Pint X for 3 years, now I'm upgrading to some GT S-series and I'm unsure whether I want recurve rails.
I feel very comfortable on my Pint X, but can sometimes get sore shins/calves on longer rides
My use cases:
- Zip around Cole Valley and Inner Sunset on errands. Stoplights, some sidewalks with pedestrians when I go slower, some hills.
- Last mile commuting getting off Muni
- Joyrides around Golden Gate Park
- Generally carving on main roads or, where available, bike lanes, as fast as I can. Muni tracks and bumpy roads are common.
I've been trying better understand: are recurve rails only better for trail riding, or are they also a good fit for generally agressive city riding?
Apple has been embroiled in a six-year legal battle over one of its Apple Watch health apps. The end may finally be in sight, and here's what Apple has to say about it.
Looking to get my first board. I rode a friend's pint a long time ago and have wanted once since but never pulled the trigger. I snowboard, ride motorcycles and mountain bike so I'm not shy to going fast. But to be honest my thought process is getting one will motivate me to get my dogs out and run them (they run, not me, hence the board)
so I was looking at a pint s for 1k on marketplace. Then I thought what if i want to take it further or faster? Then I found a GTS rally for 2k . Then I looked at other makers and found the funwheel x7 which seems faster than I would need but who knows.
All this to say has anyone gotten the pint or any other one and wished they had gotten one that's faster or longer range? I don't exactly plan on doing anything overly crazy but I also like doing stupid stuff.
When workers complained, they were reportedly told there's no way to opt out.
Exit of John Phelan, navy’s top civilian official, comes a week after Pete Hegseth fired army’s top officer
The Pentagon announced on Wednesday that the navy’s top civilian official, John Phelan, the secretary of the navy, is leaving his job.
In a statement posted to social media, Sean Parnell, a Pentagon spokesperson, said Phelan was “departing the administration, effective immediately”.
Continue reading...An illegally tinted windshield led police to seize a loaded handgun and marijuana during a traffic stop in Newark.
Figures fail to significantly buoy stock as firm admits ‘significant effort and hard work’ needed to achieve goals
Tesla reported its first-quarter earnings on Wednesday, disclosing some better-than-expected results but faltering in some key areas. The report failed to significantly buoy Tesla’s stock, which has limped along this year while its CEO, Elon Musk, has tried to sell the company’s new vision of humanoid robots and self-driving robotaxis. Its core car business has struggled in the face of competition from Chinese counterparts and backlash against his close involvement with the Trump administration.
“There remains significant effort and hard work to realize our mission of Amazing Abundance,” Tesla said in its report, while claiming that demand for its vehicles was rebounding.
Continue reading...Measure will also limit device use during passing periods, lunch and recess and block YouTube on district devices
The Los Angeles unified school district’s board passed a resolution on Tuesday to curb students’ classroom screen time for the upcoming school year, in the latest effort nationwide to address adverse effects from excessive device use.
The measure, which passed 6-0 at a Tuesday school board meeting, will set daily and weekly screen time limits for students based on grade level, prohibit elementary and middle school students from using devices during passing periods, lunch and recess, and block use of YouTube on district devices, among other provisions.
Continue reading...Amid Iran blockade, John C Phelan has been immediately replaced with undersecretary Hung Cao, says Pentagon on social media with no explanation
Also today, we can expect the Senate to vote on another war powers resolution, to curb the Trump administration’s war in Iran.
Led by Senator Tammy Baldwin, a Wisconsin Democrat, this will be upper chamber Democrats’ fifth attempt to pass a resolution.
Louisiana v Callais: A high-stakes voting rights case in which the court’s conservative majority appears poised to gut one of the most powerful provisions of the Voting Rights Act.
Trump v Cook: Donald Trump’s case for firing Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook, as he continues to exert greater control over the US central bank.
Trump v Slaughter: A case which examines the legality of Trump’s firing of a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) member, Rebecca Slaughter.
Continue reading...The campaign, fronted by a CGI squirrel, is part of government initiative to boost financial risk taking, amid fears UK growth is being stymied
City firms are pinning their hopes on a government-endorsed advertising blitz fronted by a finance “savvy” CGI squirrel to encourage cautious British savers to shift out of cash and start investing.
The long-awaited retail investment campaign, which will cost up to £50m, is part of the chancellor Rachel Reeves’ nationwide push to encourage more financial risk taking, amid fears risk-averse consumers are losing out and ultimately stymying UK growth.
Continue reading...NHS struggling to cope with record numbers, which Cancer Research UK says puts progress on survival rates at risk
The number of people in the UK being diagnosed with cancer has reached a record high, with one person diagnosed every 80 seconds, a report reveals.
Cancer Research UK found that more than 403,000 people were being diagnosed with the disease each year, largely due to a growing and ageing population, as people are more likely to develop cancer as they get older.
Continue reading...T-Mobile's latest use of DoorDash is speedy and free, but it may not be available everywhere and requires you to install your own internet.
Ancient Slashdot reader Alain Williams shares a report from the BBC: The Trump family's World Liberty crypto venture is being sued by one of its billionaire backers over allegations of extortion. Justin Sun has accused World Liberty of an "illegal scheme" to seize his WLFI tokens, a cryptocurrency issued by the company. Sun alleges the firm, co-founded by U.S. President Donald Trump and his son Eric Trump, has "frozen" all of his tokens and stripped him of his right to vote on governance issues. [...] Sun alleged that those running World Liberty, including another co-founder, Chase Herro, are using it as a "golden opportunity to leverage the Trump brand to profit through fraud." In his complaint, filed on Tuesday in a San Francisco federal court, Sun argues that initial promises to give token-holders the option to trade the currency in future "were false and misleading." While the tokens at large became tradeable, Sun said World Liberty has blocked him from being able to sell a single one, and is now threatening to "burn" his - deleting them entirely. WLFI said in a post on X: "Does anyone still believe @justinsuntron? Justin's favorite move is playing the victim while making baseless allegations to cover up his own misconduct. Same playbook, different target. WLFI isn't the first. We have the contracts. We have the evidence. We have the truth. See you in court pal."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US special envoy Zampolli hopes for Italy involvement
Doubts remain over Iran’s participation at tournament
An envoy to Donald Trump has asked Fifa to replace Iran with Italy in the upcoming World Cup, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.
The plan is an effort to repair ties between Trump and Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, after the two fell out amid the American president’s attacks against Pope Leo XIV over the Iran war, the FT reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Continue reading...In a department built to respond to catastrophic threats, employees have been reduced to bartering for office supplies.
The wife of Sgt. First Class Jose Serrano is being held at an ICE detention center in El Paso.
The FBI obtained four warrants under FISA to monitor Carter Page, who served as an informal adviser to President Trump during his 2016 campaign.

Opioid addiction has shattered countless American lives. A near-perfect cure could be miraculous and podcaster Joe Rogan recently said it’s within reach.
"With one dose of Ibogaine, more than 80% of people are free of that addiction," he said April 18 at the White House, where President Donald Trump signed an executive order concerning the drug. "With two doses, it's more than 90%."
Ibogaine is a psychedelic medication derived from the Iboga shrub found in Central and West Africa. When taken in large amounts, it causes hallucinations that can last more than 24 hours and cause cardiac problems.
The Trump administration’s new executive order directs federal agencies to make psychedelic drugs, including ibogaine, more available to researchers and patients while funneling money toward new research.
Ibogaine has shown some promise in treating opioid addiction, but published research is minimal, largely because it’s illegal in many countries, including the U.S.
So far, studies have found ibogaine is especially beneficial for reducing withdrawal symptoms and drug cravings in the days and weeks after taking it. One study, for example, found that 80% of people reported that ibogaine drastically reduced or eliminated their withdrawal symptoms — that may be where Rogan got this number. Rogan did not respond to PolitiFact’s request for evidence.
But getting through withdrawal and being "free" from addiction are not the same thing.
There is some evidence ibogaine may help people quit opioids long-term, but none of the available research shows rates of long-term abstinence from opioids as high as Rogan described.
The idea of using ibogaine to support sobriety dates back to 1962, when Howard Lotsof credited the drug for freeing him from his heroin addiction at 19 years old. Lotsof spent the rest of his life advocating for the treatment.
Over the next several decades, case reports and anecdotal success stories provided hope to people struggling with opioid addiction.
But formal research has been lacking. The U.S. classified ibogaine as a Schedule I drug in 1970, a category defined as having a high potential for abuse and no medical benefit. In 1993, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a Phase I clinical trial to test low doses of the drug but suspended it in 1995 because of lack of funding.
Americans seeking to use ibogaine to curb their addictions often travel to Brazil, Mexico or New Zealand, where clinics offer ibogaine treatment.
Researchers have conducted a handful of small, observational studies since the turn of the century. In most cases, researchers followed people in the days or weeks after taking the drug and observed positive results, including significant reductions in withdrawal symptoms and drug cravings. Being observational means the study’s researchers didn’t manipulate the environment or assign treatment as they would in an experimental study.
We identified three such studies that followed patients for longer periods to assess ibogaine’s effects on long-term cessation. None of them looked at the effects of multiple doses.
A 2017 study followed 30 opioid-addicted patients treated at clinics in Mexico. One month after treatment, 50% of participants reported no opioid use. It dropped to 33% of all participants after three months and 23% of all participants after a year.
Another 2017 study followed 14 participants treated at New Zealand clinics. After 12 months, 55% of the 11 patients who remained in the study reported being opioid-free for the 30 days prior.
A 2018 survey asked 88 patients who completed ibogaine treatment in Mexico between 2012 and 2015. Respondents noted acute benefits of treatment, with 80% saying their "withdrawal symptoms were eliminated or drastically reduced." Thirty percent reported never using opioids again after treatment. Among those who abstained, 54% had done so for at least a year, and 31% for two years. Seventy percent of the original 88 reported relapsing after treatment.
Alan K. Davis, an Ohio State University professor who coauthored the 2018 survey, said they didn’t know where Rogan got the figures he referenced at the White House.
"This is not based on science and is likely anecdotal or marketing data from an ibogaine clinic," Davis told PolitiFact.
Results from ibogaine studies are promising, but much more research is needed before safety and efficacy is fully understood, experts said.
Geoff Nadler, a medical anthropologist and the author of the New Zealand study, said that because his research was observational, the methodology is "weak" and not "representative of all treatment outcomes for ibogaine or any other treatment."
"We didn't recruit people to be treated and set the conditions of their treatment," Nadler said. "We just observed the treatment outcomes of a group of people who decided to be treated."
There have been a few placebo-controlled clinical trials, but they have focused on ibogaine’s safety, not on its benefits for addiction treatment.
It’s also hard to measure whether a person has been "freed" from addiction, a challenge across treatment research. Results can shift depending on how long researchers tracked patients, whether the drug abstention is self-reported or confirmed with drug testing, and how many patients dropped out of the study. Which drugs study participants are using — heroin versus fentanyl, for example — can also affect recovery outcomes.
These factors make it hard to compare the success of various treatments but a Harvard Review of Psychiatry review of longitudinal studies found that after 10 years, only about 30% of people were still abstaining from opioids at the most recent follow up.
Even with Trump’s new executive order, ibogaine may face obstacles to becoming a mainstream, FDA-approved treatment.
Its biggest documented risk so far is cardiotoxicity, said Kirsten Cherian, a Stanford University neuropsychologist researching ibogaine. The drug has been linked to multiple heart attacks and deaths.
Cherian said there are ways to mitigate this risk: Screening for existing cardiac issues, giving magnesium with the drug to protect the heart and monitoring the heart during treatment.
Ibogaine’s side effects are significant. People taking it report experiencing intense hallucinations lasting more than 24 hours and involving intense or traumatic visions or memories. It can cause nausea, vomiting, and loss of muscle coordination.
The drug has shown promise beyond treating addiction. In 2024, Stanford University researchers found that veterans with traumatic brain injuries experienced improvements in depression and anxiety symptoms after taking ibogaine.
Rogan said, "With one dose of ibogaine, more than 80% of people are free of (opioid) addiction. With two doses, it's more than 90%."
The treatment shows promise, but we found no research supporting this statement. Limited studies show acute benefits from ibogaine treatment such as reduced drug cravings and improved withdrawal symptoms following treatment.
But the existing research into whether this treatment helps people to quit long term is observational and limited by small sample sizes. The studies have identified opioid cessation rates ranging from 23 to 55% after a year.
That’s a significant figure, but it’s not close to the rate Rogan said.
The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. We rate this claim Mostly False.
This will be a deciding factor if my wife will let me purchase one this weekend or not. She is putting me through the ringer for the 3grand board
Hello! My wife and i are professional violinists, so my hands and upper body are important to me. Recently we went on vacation and i was able to try one of these. The onewheel factor has my wife worried, now that i am interested in these. I have skateboarded and snowboarded most of the 80s and i was able to pick it up pretty quickly when i tried it, but i am mainly wanting to know how reliable the engine is on this thing. Are there any stories of board cut outs ? I am familiar with the term nose dive and i know most of those seem to come from human error.
Amal Khalil had been buried in rubble after an Israeli strike that also injured another journalist, Zeinab Faraj
Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon killed a journalist on Wednesday after rescuers were blocked from accessing the building where she was buried under rubble because of further Israeli fire, according to several witnesses.
Amal Khalil was covering developments near the town of al-Tayri with the photographer Zeinab Faraj when an Israeli strike hit the vehicle in front of them.
Continue reading...Autopsy of Celeste Rivas Hernandez finally released after law enforcement had requested it be sealed in November
Celeste Rivas Hernandez, the 14-year-old girl whom the singer D4vd is charged with killing, died from penetrating injuries, according to an autopsy report released on Wednesday after a months-long delay.
The Los Angeles county medical examiner’s office had in December determined that her death was a homicide caused by multiple penetrating injuries. The office was unable to release the report as it was sealed by a judge at the request of law enforcement until prosecutors this week moved to lift the order.
Continue reading...Florida governor says white men have been discriminated against in new effort to challenge inclusion programs
Florida’s governor, Ron DeSantis, on Wednesday signed a law prohibiting local governments from funding or promoting diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, saying that white men had been discriminated against.
The Florida governor has been at the forefront of combatting DEI initiatives, despite criticism from groups nationwide. Under the new law, residents can sue local governments for violations and if individual local officials are found to have funded DEI initiatives, they can be removed from office.
Continue reading...Sony AI's autonomous table-tennis robot Ace has become the first robot to compete against top-level human players. Reuters reports: Ace, created by the Japanese company Sony's AI research division, is the first robot to attain expert-level performance in a competitive physical sport, one that requires rapid decisions and precision execution, the project's leader said. Ace did so by employing high-speed perception, AI-based control and a state-of-the-art robotic system. There have been various ping-pong-playing robots since 1983, but until now they were unable to rival highly skilled human competitors. Ace changed that with its performances against human elite-level and professional players in matches following the rules of the International Table Tennis Federation, the sport's governing body, and officiated by licensed umpires. The project's goal was not only to compete at table tennis but to develop insights into how robots can perceive, plan and act with human-like speed and precision in dynamic environments. In matches detailed in the study, Ace in April 2025 won three out of five versus elite players and lost two matches against professional players, the top skill level in the sport. Sony AI said that since then Ace beat professional players in December 2025 and last month. "The success of Ace, with its perception system and learning-based control algorithm, suggests that similar techniques could be applied to other areas requiring fast, real-time control and human interaction -- such as manufacturing and service robotics, as well as applications across sports, entertainment and safety-critical physical domains," said Peter Durr, director of Sony AI Zurich and leader for Sony AI's project Ace. The findings have been published in the journal Nature.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nine people in total arrested over alleged conspiracy concerning unspecified site connected to Jewish community
Two further arrests have been made in relation to an alleged conspiracy to commit arson at a site connected to the Jewish community, the Metropolitan police have said.
The latest arrests, made by counter-terrorism police investigating the alleged arson conspiracy, were of a man aged 19 and another aged 26. They were detained in Watford on Tuesday and remain in custody.
Continue reading...The Senate rejected another attempt to rein in President Trump's ability to use further military force against Iran, marking Democrats' fifth effort to do so since the war began eight weeks ago.
Three-year deal includes funding for a riot squad to ‘disperse’ people trying to board small boats
The UK government has agreed to pay France another £660m to curb the number of asylum seekers travelling across the Channel, including plans to fund a riot squad to “contain and disperse” people trying to board small boats.
Under a three-year deal to be signed on Thursday by the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, 1,100 enforcement, intelligence and military officers – an increase of 40% – will be employed to track down smuggling gangs and people seeking refuge.
Continue reading...LAS VEGAS, April 22, 2026 — Google Cloud today announced a $750 million fund to deliver new resources and incentives to partners in its 120,000-member partner ecosystem to help accelerate joint customers’ transformations with agentic AI. The fund, available for global consulting firms, systems integrators, software partners, and channel partners, will support AI value identification, agentic AI prototyping, agent building and deployment, upskilling, and teams of embedded Google forward-deployed engineers (FDEs).
Today, global consulting firms, systems integrators, software providers, and specialized services providers play a critical role enabling the agentic enterprise. Google Cloud’s ecosystem of system integrator partners already offer more than 330,000 experts trained on implementing Google AI for customers, and 95% of the top 20 and over over 80% of the top 100 SaaS companies use Gemini models.
This new funding will further accelerate the transformative capabilities of Google Cloud’s partner ecosystem— including partners’ ability to assess the full potential of AI, rapidly prototype and prove value, build AI agents and integrate these agents into existing software and workflows—ultimately helping more businesses realize value and benefit from Google Cloud’s AI capabilities.
New partner resources announced today include:
“Google Cloud’s partners are already leaders in agentic AI development and deployment, and have become important channels for distributing AI technologies. With this expanded funding, we will be able to dedicate new resources and technology to support our partners as they accelerate our mutual customers’ agentic AI journeys,” said Kevin Ichhpurani, president, Global Partner Ecosystem at Google Cloud.
“Enterprise reinvention requires more than experimentation—it demands deep engineering and the ability to execute at scale. Google Cloud’s investment strengthens how we solve complex technical challenges and build enterprise–ready solutions together, accelerating the adoption of Gemini Enterprise, modernizing digital cores, and helping clients realize tangible outcomes from agentic AI faster,” said Scott Alfieri, Accenture Google Business Group lead, Accenture.
“AI agents have the power to reshape enterprise workflows. This investment by Google Cloud signals a pivotal moment, affirming that the future of enterprise AI lies in a rich ecosystem where powerful technology from Google Cloud is paired with the deep industry and transformation experience of Deloitte. Our growing library of more than 1,000 pre-built agents is a reflection of this. Each agent can be tailored to a client’s specific context and business needs—designed to supercharge delivery and accelerate the path from vision to value,” said Jason Salzetti, chair and chief executive officer, Deloitte Consulting LLP.
“Working with Deloitte and Google Cloud, Gemini Enterprise agents have helped us transform internal functions and provide immediate, actionable support to our partners. Our teams can now easily leverage specialized AI agents to streamline complex processes that free up teams for higher-value work to better serve our customers, all within a secure and governed framework,” said Matt Ausman, CIO, Zebra Technologies.
About Google Cloud
Google Cloud offers a powerful, optimized AI stack — including AI infrastructure, leading models like Gemini, data management capabilities, multicloud security solutions, developer tools and platform, as well as agents and applications — that enables organizations to transform their business for the Agentic Era. Customers in more than 200 countries and territories turn to Google Cloud as their trusted technology partner.
Source: Google Cloud
The post Google Cloud Commits $750M to Accelerate Partners’ Agentic AI Development appeared first on HPCwire.

Do Freedom of Information Act door logs reveal that former President Joe Biden didn’t enter the Oval Office after the 2024 election? No, evidence shows that’s a dubious claim.
An April 21 X post showing an image of Biden looking down reads, "Newly released FOIA door logs show that former President Joe Biden didn't enter the Oval Office once after the 2024 election. He was president for another 75 days."
The post with over 249,000 views as of April 22 said that during that time former President Barack Obama, billionaire philanthropist George Soros, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Adam Schiff, D-Calif., ran the country.
Other users on Facebook, Threads and X also shared the claim.
However, we found multiple instances of Biden performing executive duties and being in the Oval Office after the Nov. 5, 2024 election.
After President Donald Trump won the 2024 election, Biden gave a brief speech Nov. 7, 2024 at the White House Rose Garden calling for unity and a peaceful transition of power.
Former President Joe Biden speaks in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Nov. 7, 2024. (AP)
On Nov. 12, 2024, Biden met with Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto at the Oval Office.
Biden meets with Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto, left, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Nov. 12, 2024. (AP)
On Nov. 13, 2024, Biden met with Trump at the Oval Office; Biden congratulated him and spoke about a smooth transition.
Biden also made other announcements from the White House. On Nov. 26, 2024, he announced an Israel-Hezbollah cease fire from the Rose Garden, and provided an update on the Syrian civil war on Dec. 8, 2024 at the White House’s Roosevelt Room.
He spoke from the Oval Office several other times in January 2025: during the Medal of Valor Ceremony Jan. 3, and on Jan. 10 and Jan. 13, when he spoke about the California wildfires. Lastly, he gave a live farewell address to the nation Jan. 15, from the Oval Office.
The X account that shared the news of the supposed release of the FOIA door logs provides no details about these logs, such as who requested them or where they are published. We also found no credible news reports about these logs.
Semafor politics reporter David Weigel noted in response to the X post that "White House records aren’t subject to FOIA."
We found a 1993 FOIA memo on White House requests from the Justice Department that said "the parts of the Executive Office of the President that are known as the ‘White House Office’ are not subject to the FOIA; certain other parts of the Executive Office of the President are."
The X account reposted and shared over 100 posts just April 22; including claims about Rep. Illhan Omar, D-Minn., having "$30 million added to her network by accident," viral videos of animals, or AI-generated content and posts supporting the passing of the Save America Act.
Facebook posts sharing the claim about Biden called users to click on a link to the "full story." There are clues that the site, called "New and Tips," is not legitimate. The story about Biden has a byline that says "Charlotte Liam," but there’s no information or picture about this person once you click on the name.
The story itself doesn’t provide legitimate sources and it attributes its information only to the "FOIA logs" and an unnamed "spokesman."
The website also doesn’t have an "About" page or any other page besides the main one. The articles’ publication month aren't written in English, Google Translate shows that for the Biden article, "April" is written in Vietnamese. Other parts of the website also have Vietnamese text, such as the search bar, which says, "Tìm kiếm," which means "search."
Social media posts claiming that Biden wasn’t at the Oval Office after the 20224 election are contradicted by multiple videos that show Biden there. We rate this claim Pants on Fire!
Eminent Roster of Participants to Include ACM A.M. Turing Award Laureates
NEW YORK, April 22, 2026 — ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, has announced the ACM AI Leadership Summit, bringing together researchers, practitioners, industry leaders, educators, and policymakers to explore how AI can be developed and deployed responsibly to advance science and society. The summit will take place August 30 through September 2 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. Discounted reservations are available for those registering before June 30.
“Artificial intelligence is transforming every dimension of human knowledge, creativity, and collaboration,” remarked ACM Vice President Elisa Bertino, Chair of the Summit’s Organizing Committee. “The ACM AI Leadership Summit will be a milestone event where the global computing community taps into the excitement of the moment while exploring the AI era from a whole range of perspectives.”
Across keynotes, panels, and interactive sessions, participants will examine frontier AI technologies, governance and ethics, and workforce transformation, among other topics. The Summit will build shared understanding and practical pathways toward AI that strengthens society, enriches culture, and expands human capability.
The program for the ACM AI Leadership Summit will feature contributions from leading figures in the global AI and computing community.
Scheduled Speakers
Planned Sessions
Those interested in attending the ACM AI Leadership Summit, August 30 to September 2 in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, may now register via this link.
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 Details AI Leadership Summit, Aug. 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
Iranian forces seize two ships in critical waterway as Washington and Tehran maintain separate blockades
Iranian forces have seized two ships in the strait of Hormuz as the US and Iran doubled down on imposing separate blockades of the shipping waterway.
The standoff over the strait – through which about 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied fossil gas passed through during peacetime – has raised doubts about whether stalled peace negotiations will resume.
Continue reading...Disclosures come after firm tightened rules on insider trading, including candidates betting on own campaigns
Before he announced his Senate candidacy, a political hopeful in Virginia did something not so unusual in this day and age: he logged on to a prediction market exchange and wagered money that he would run. Then he ran. Then he bet on that too.
The candidate and trader was Mark Moran, a former FBoy Island contestant who went viral recently for his campaign launch video. Investigators with Kalshi, the federally regulated prediction market exchange, found he placed two trades on their platform, the first in a market asking which individuals would seek public office in 2026, the second after he formally entered the race.
Continue reading...AUSTIN, Texas, April 22, 2026 — Oracle has expanded its partnership with Google Cloud to give joint customers new ways to operationalize AI across enterprise data. Under the expanded partnership, the Oracle AI Database Agent for Gemini Enterprise gives Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud customers a simpler way to interact with their Oracle data using natural language. In addition, Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud now offers new capabilities and broader regional availability as global organizations, such as Worldline, use it to drive innovation and accelerate cloud migrations.
“We’re making it easier for customers to use natural language to access, understand, and act on enterprise data by combining the Gemini Enterprise experience with Oracle’s industry-leading database performance, security, and governance,” said Nathan Thomas, senior vice president, product management, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. “By applying AI directly to enterprise data at the database layer, customers can improve accuracy, strengthen controls, and use models more efficiently without exposing sensitive data or adding complexity. Together, we’re making it easier for our customers to power agentic AI with trusted business data.”
“To deliver real impact from agentic AI, customers need a simple, trusted way to interact with their valuable business data using intelligent agents such as the Oracle AI Database Agent,” said Satish Thomas, vice president, applied AI & platform ecosystem, Google Cloud. “By making this agent accessible through Gemini Enterprise, we’re giving customers greater flexibility to apply AI to data stored in Oracle databases and turn that data into meaningful business value.”
The Oracle AI Database Agent, now available in the Google Cloud Marketplace, allows Gemini Enterprise customers to use natural language when interacting with their trusted Oracle data, while drawing on the in-database AI capabilities of Oracle AI Database to deliver relevant, context-aware answers. Customers can ask everyday business questions—such as analyzing revenue trends across regions and product lines—and receive immediate, data-driven answers that help them adjust pricing or prioritize sales efforts, all without writing SQL or building custom tools. The agent interprets each request, queries relevant, governed Oracle data, and delivers clear insights without moving or duplicating data. In addition, the Oracle AI Database Agent enables developers to securely use Oracle data in more advanced AI workflows by allowing them to connect it with other AI tools in Google’s Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform to automate tasks such as data extraction, analysis, and visualization.
AI Shift is a CyberAgent subsidiary that helps enterprises in Japan build and deploy agentic AI solutions to automate business processes across customer service, marketing, and sales. AI Shift uses Oracle Autonomous AI Database on OCI to power its agent development platform and plans to use Oracle AI Database Agent to help customers expand their Oracle AI Database deployments to Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud.
“The Oracle AI Database Agent represents an important advancement in how we use AI with enterprise data,” said Yuto Yoneyama, CEO, AI Shift. “With Gemini Enterprise, our users can move from writing SQL to asking questions in natural language to get answers grounded in trusted enterprise data. That helps us speed development, improve the quality of results, and make faster, more informed decisions without compromising governance and control.”
Leading Organizations Choose Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud
Global organizations, such as Worldline, are adopting Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud to accelerate their cloud migrations.
Worldline is a European payments provider that processes billions of transactions globally. To support its strict requirements for performance and security, Worldline is leveraging Oracle Exadata Database Service on Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud to modernize its payment processing platform and deliver scalable, low-latency, and secure payment services.
“Worldline operates one of the largest payment processing platforms, for which consistent low latency and high throughput are non-negotiable,” said Arni Smit, director, software engineering, integration and payment platform, Worldline. “Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud gives us the scalability, resilience, and security capabilities we require to support real-time transaction processing at global scale by delivering the power of Oracle Exadata within Google Cloud.”
New Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud Capabilities and Regions
New database capabilities and additional regions are supporting growing demand from across the world by providing customers with more options and locations to use Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud:
About Oracle
Oracle offers integrated suites of applications plus secure, autonomous infrastructure in the Oracle Cloud. For more information about Oracle (NYSE: ORCL), please visit us at www.oracle.com.
Source: Oracle
The post Oracle Expands AI Capabilities in Oracle AI Database@Google Cloud to Supercharge Enterprise Data Innovation appeared first on HPCwire.
Democratic Rep. David Scott, who represented Georgia in the House for more than two decades, has become the fifth member of the 119th Congress to die in office.
Sony is demonstrating just a small fraction of what physical AI might be able to do.

As the United States grappled with Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz — a choke point for one-fifth of the world’s crude oil — CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Energy Secretary Chris Wright whether the U.S. should rely less on oil and more on renewable sources of energy, such as solar and wind power.
"We have gone through two months when the entire global energy system is in chaos just because of one shipping lane," Tapper said April 19 on "State of the Union." "Doesn't that make an argument for alternative kinds of energy, so that the U.S. is less reliant on oil?"
Wright, whose private-sector career was in natural gas and oil, said the U.S. produces more oil than it consumes, making it a net exporter of oil; we’ve rated a similar claim Half True.
Wright said that "we definitely want energy from everywhere we can get it" — including nuclear energy — but gave the impression that progress in renewable energy has been disappointing.
"In the last 20 years, the world spent $10 trillion on wind, solar, and batteries. It hasn't made it to 3% of global energy, and it's just driven up prices," Wright said.
Is it correct that solar and wind haven’t reached "3% of global energy"?
There’s data supporting Wright’s statement that wind and solar account for a small percentage of global energy, about 3.3%. However, wind and solar have become significant sources for an important subset of energy — electricity generation for homes and businesses — both in the U.S. and the world over the past 20 years.
In a statement to PolitiFact, the Energy Department said, "If wind and solar only perform at low-demand periods" — which is the case if they are not paired with supplemental storage methods like batteries — "then their value is inherently less." The Department also pointed to research showing that states that require a minimum level of renewable energy in electricity generation have experienced higher prices for consumers.
International Energy Agency data shows global investment in wind and solar energy from 2015 to 2025 reached $5.7 trillion. That’s consistent with about $10 trillion over 20 years.
Wright’s 3% figure is on target based on total energy use worldwide. This is a catchall category that includes everything from transportation fuels to industrial heating for cement or steel plants.
Fossil fuels such as coal, oil and natural gas remain the dominant sources of energy worldwide. Solar and wind energy trail each of these sources, and they also trail biomass (the burning of organic matter or waste) and nuclear energy.
The small share represented by solar and wind shows their limits for industrial purposes, energy experts said.
In these contexts, fossil fuels have an advantage because their energy is always available. By contrast, wind and solar are variable, depending on meteorological conditions. A company seeking to use wind or solar to power a factory would need to invest in storage, such as batteries or reservoirs, which add to the cost.
Solar and wind have made significant strides in electricity generation — a key subset of energy that provides power for homes and many commercial properties.
Wright’s statement "is misleading in suggesting that lots of money has gone into solar, wind and batteries that hasn’t amounted to much," said Kenneth Gillingham, a Yale University economist specializing in energy. "That is not true — solar and wind are among the most cost-effective technologies right now" based on standard estimates "and are growing very rapidly."
The International Renewable Energy Agency found that technological advances, more competitive supply chains and economies of scale have left solar energy 41% cheaper than the lowest-cost fossil fuel alternatives, including fossil fuels, and onshore wind projects were 53% cheaper. Some required infrastructure costs, such as new transmission lines, may not be included in these comparisons.
Such advances have meant that, globally, electricity generation from solar and wind has grown from almost zero in the early 2000s to 13% of the total in 2023, the most recent year available, according to the International Energy Agency. The amount of solar and wind generation was about 120 times bigger in 2023 than 2000. That rate of growth outpaced any other energy source.
In the U.S., solar and wind accounted for about 14% of U.S. electricity generation in 2023. That’s behind natural gas (43%) but closing in on nuclear (19%) and coal (16%). Collectively in the U.S., solar and wind provide more than twice as much electricity generation as hydropower (think of massive, electricity-producing dams, such as the Grand Coulee Dam or the Hoover Dam).
The growth of solar "is impressive and a very different way of seeing it," Gillingham said.
The Energy Department said Wright focused on global energy use because "generation sources like nuclear, oil, gas and coal can do more than just generate electricity," including running transportation and factories.
But Clark Williams-Derry, an energy finance analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, said this viewpoint doesn’t consider energy "losses" from wasted heat.
An example, Williams-Derry said, would be coal burned in a power plant, where about two-thirds of the energy from burning coal is lost, sent up the smokestack or dissipated in a cooling tower. Similarly, for gasoline used in cars, much of the energy is used to heat up the engine and brake pads, he said.
By contrast, solar and wind are significantly more efficient than fossil fuels, Williams-Derry said.
"Renewables punch above their weight, producing much than 3% of the ‘useful’ energy consumed globally, because solar and wind have only a fraction of the energy losses," he said.
Long term, the difference between solar and wind’s share of global energy and global electricity generation are likely to converge, said Hugh Daigle, a professor of petroleum and geosystems engineering at the University of Texas-Austin.
"There is a trend towards electrification in a lot of sectors, so over time, the difference between energy produced by renewables and electricity produced by renewables should shrink," Daigle said.
Wright said solar and wind haven’t reached "3% of global energy."
Solar and wind power account for about 3.3% of overall global energy, which is a broad category that includes powering transportation and factories. However, electricity generation — a key subset that supports consumers and many businesses — has seen solar and wind increase significantly during the past 20 years, outpacing the growth rate of any other energy source.
The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details about the growth of solar and wind energy, so we rate it Half True.
Bloomberg reports that a small group of unauthorized users gained access to Anthropic's restricted Mythos model through a mix of contractor-linked access and online sleuthing. Anthropic says it is investigating and has no evidence the access extended beyond a third-party vendor environment or affected its own systems. From the report: The users relied on a mix of tactics to get into Mythos. These included using access the person had as a worker at a third-party contractor for Anthropic and trying commonly used internet sleuthing tools often employed by cybersecurity researchers, the person said. The users are part of a private Discord channel that focuses on hunting for information about unreleased models, including by using bots to scour for details that Anthropic and others have posted on unsecured websites such as GitHub. [...] To access Mythos, the group of users made an educated guess about the model's online location based on knowledge about the format Anthropic has used for other models, the person said, adding that such details were revealed in a recent data breach from Mercor, an AI training startup that works with a number of top developers. Crucially, the person also has permission to access Anthropic models and software related to evaluating the technology for the startup. They gained this access from a company for which they have performed contract work evaluating Anthropic's AI models. Bloomberg is not naming the company for security reasons. The group is interested in playing around with new models, not wreaking havoc with them, the person said. The group has not run cybersecurity-related prompts on the Mythos model, the person said, preferring instead to try tasks like building simple websites in an attempt to avoid detection by Anthropic. The person said the group also has access to a slew of other unreleased Anthropic AI models.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The cost of renting a home, which surged during the pandemic, is showing signs of returning to earth, new data shows.
You can find beauty in the oddest of places.
WSL9x runs a modern Linux kernel (6.19 at time of writing) cooperatively inside the Windows 9x kernel, enabling users to take advantage of the full suite of capabilities of both operating systems at the same time, including paging, memory protection, and pre-emptive scheduling. Run all your favourite applications side by side – no rebooting required!
↫ Hailey Somerville
Yes, this is exactly what it sounds like. Hailey Somerville basically recreated the first version of WSL – or coLinux, for the old people among us – but instead of running on Windows NT, it runs on Windows 9x. A VxD driver loads a patched Linux kernel using DOS interrupts, and this Linux kernel calls Windows 9x kernel APIs instead of POSIX APIs. A small DOS client application then allows the Linux kernel to use MS-DOS prompts as TTYs. This is a great oversimplification, but it does get the general gist across.
Anyway, the end result is that you can use a modern Linux kernel and Windows 9x at the same time, without virtualising or dual-booting. This might be one of the greatest hacks in recent times, and I find it oddly beautiful in its user-facing simplicity.
Hi,
Trying to wrap my head around this. I was out riding (not doing anything crazy), battery was nearly at 40% then all the sudden the alarms go off telling me the battery Is depleted.
The board is only a week old and only has 72 miles on it. I was really enjoying it but now I'm afraid of trekking out too far again and feels like a sloppy user experience given I paid $3000 for this.
It was plugged in overnight capped to 90% per FM's recommendations. Nice weather outside, dry and around 70F.
How do I troubleshoot this, is it even worth it? Seems sketch, don't need it shutting off randomly on me leaving me injured or stranded.
Thanks for any recommendations you might have-
Despite years of apparent stagnation and reported mass layoffs, it seems the Solaris team at Oracle has found somewhat of a renewed stride recently. Both branches of Solaris – the one for paying customers (SRU) and the free one for enthusiasts (CBE) – are receiving regular updates again, and there seems to be a more concerted effort to let the outside world know, too. We’ve got another update to the SRU branch this week which brings updates to a few important open source packages, like Django, Firefox, Thunderbird, Golang, and others, to address security issues.
In addition, this update marks as a change in the release cadence for the commercial branch of Solaris. From here on out, there will be two “Critical Patch Updates” per quarter to address security issues, followed by a Support Repository Update containing new features and larger changes.
Ali Act overhaul would allow unified boxing bodies
Backers say centralized model would boost revenues
Critics warn fighters could lose leverage and rights
A US Senate hearing on the future of boxing laid bare a sharp divide over the sport’s direction on Wednesday, as longtime boxing figures including Oscar De La Hoya warned of proposed changes that could erode fighters’ rights while executives aligned with an Ultimate Fighting Championship-backed push for a centralized model argued they would bring structure and investment.
“When one system controls access, choice becomes theoretical, not real,” professional boxer Nico Ali Walsh told lawmakers, framing the stakes of a debate that could dramatically reshape boxing’s economic model. “When that happens, you fight who you’re told to fight or you don’t fight at all.”
Continue reading...In my area, there is a pint with 79miles on it for $500, or a pint X for $800? For context, I am 200lbs and my wife is 170lbs. We are new to one wheels but both snowboard and love the idea of riding a one wheel
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said the government is still investigating a potential violation of national security laws in the incident.
U.S. Rep. David Scott, who represented Georgia's 13th District for over two decades, has died at 80 years old.
The negotiation comes after President Trump publicly said he wanted his administration to look at a rescue package for the budget carrier.
Google Cloud made a slew of announcements today at its annual Cloud Next user conference in Las Vegas. On the infrastructure front, the cloud giant introduced the eight generation of its Tensor Processing Units (TPU) as well as Virgo, a new “megascale” scale-out fabric that can link 134,000 TPUs in different data centers at speeds up to 47 petabits per second of bi-directional bandwidth. It also bolstered its managed Lustre offering.

Selected specs for TPU 8i and 8t (Source: Google)
TPUs are custom-designed ASICs created by Google to accelerate machine learning workloads. The chips, which Google co-designs with Broadcom and contracts with TSMC to manufacture, first launched in 2015 with a focus on accelerating 8-bit matrix multiplication. Google has launched a new chip roughly every year and a half since, with the latest being the “Trillium” TPUs launched in 2024 and “Ironwood” chips at last year’s show.
With the eight generation of TPU, Google has bifurcated its chips. The company now offers TPU 8t for training and TPU 8i for inference.
Google says TPU 8t delivers 3x the processing of its seventh-generation Ironwood TPU and 2x the performance per watt. Specifically, the TPU 8t has 216 GB of HBM, 6,500 GBps of HBM bandwidth, and 128 MB of on-chip SRAM, delivering 12.6 peak 4-bit floating point (FP4) petaflops of capacity.
The TPU 8t also introduces SparseCore, a new accelerator that complements the existing Matrix Multiple Unit (MXU) to handle “irregular memory access patterns of embedding lookups,” such as all-gather operations. The goal is to prevent the “zero-op” bottlenecks, Google says. It also brings “more balanced” vector processing in the vector processing unit (VPU) component of the chip.
“This allows for better overlapping of quantization, softmax, and layernorms with the matrix multiplications in the MXU, helping the chip stay busy rather than waiting on sequential vector tasks,” Google engineers Diwakar Gupta and Sabastian Mugazambi write in a technical blog post on the new TPUs.

TPU 8t block diagram (Source: Google)
The new chips introduce native FP4, which the company says helps to overcome memory bandwidth bottlenecks and doubles MXU throughput while maintaining accuracy for large models even at lower-precision quantization. “By reducing the bits per parameter, the platform minimizes energy-intensive data movement and allows larger model layers to fit within local hardware buffers for peak compute utilization,” Gupta and Mugazambi write.
Google is also introducing TPUDirect RDMA and TPU Direct Storage in TPU 8t. TPUDirect RDMA will enable the chips to bypass CPU and DRAM and move data directly between the TPU and high-bandwidth memory. Similarly, TPUDirect Storage will allow data to bypass CPU and connect the chip directly with high speed storage, such as 10T Lustre. Google says this will “effectively double” the bandwidth and allow chips to “ingest training data at line rate.”
The TPU 8i delivers 288 GB of HBM and 8,600 GBps of HBM bandwidth. It features 384 MB of on-chip SRAM, which is 3x more SRAM than previous versions of the TPU, which enables it to hold a much bigger KV cache than before. Compared to Ironwood, it has 80% better performance per dollar, Google said. It delivers 10.1 peak FP4 petaflops of computing capacity.

Block level diagram for TPU 8i (Source: Google)
Google added a new Collectives Acceleration Engine (CAE) with the TPU 8i. This component will aggregate results across cores to accelerate the decoding phase and speed up “chain-of-thought” reasoning processing. Each TPU 8i chip will feature two Tensor Cores (TC) on-core dies and one CAE on the chiplet die, replacing four SparseCores (SCs) on-core dies in previous-generation Ironwood TPU. This will reduce on-chip latency by 5x, the Google engineers write, which means less time waiting.
TPU 8i also introduces Google’s new Boardfly ICI (Inter Chip Interconnect) topology to replace the 3D torus interconnect that is used with TPU 8t. Each tray in the Boardfly ICI forms a four-chip ring, or a Building Block, using internal ICI links. It then uses copper to connect eight BBs to create one localized Group. It then connects up to 36 Groups, consisting of up to 1,024 active chips, using Optical Circuit Switches (OCS).
This architecture ensures a maximum latency of seven hops for any chip-to-chip communications, the company says. “By slashing the hops required for all-to-all communication (the heart of MoE and reasoning models), Boardfly achieves up to a 50% improvement in latency for communication-intensive workloads,” the Google engineers write.
It also announced Virgo Network, a new high-bandwidth, low-latency interconnect fabric designed to work with its scale-out data center network, the backbone of its AI Hypercomputer. The company says it needed to “reimagine” the data center network to address the scale and latency constraints of its Jupiter data center network, particularly as it rolls out the new TPU 8t chip.

Google’s new Boardfly ICI links TPU 8i chips (Source: Google)
Google launched the Jupiter network back in 2015, when it could deliver 1.3 Pb/s of bi-directional bandwidth among Google data centers. In 2024, it introduced the fifth-generation Jupiter data center network, which could scale to 13 Pbps of bidirectional bandwidth. Google plans to continue using Jupiter as its front-end network, to handle “north-south” traffic from one data center to another. But inside the data center, it’s adopting Virgo to handle “east-west” traffic between pods, which could be racks of TPUs or GPUs assembled in scale-up configuration.
“Built on high-radix switches that reduce network layers by allowing more ports per switch, it employs a flat, two-layer non-blocking topology,” write Benny Siman-Tov, a Google product manager and Engineering Fellow Arjun Singh. “Compared with traditional datacenter networks, this significantly reduces latency by minimizing network tiers.”
Virgo can connect up to 134,000 TPU 8t processors at speeds up to 47 petabits per second, providing 1.6 million ExaFlops of capacity, with “near-linear” scaling performance, Google says. Compared to previous generation, the network, which supports Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA), delivers 40% lower unloaded fabric latency for TPUs, which leads to more predictable performance for latency sensitive AI workloads, Google says.

Google’s new Virgo data center network links scale-up GPU or TPU pods (Source: Google)
Google made several storage-related announcements at the show. For starter, it announced that it’s bolstered its Managed Lustre offering to provide higher speed connections. The company says its Lustre storage can now deliver 10 TB per second of throughput to A5X, its new bare metal compute offering based on Nvidia Vera Rubin NVL72 system, or its TPU 8t instances, using the RDMA connectivity discussed above.
That is a 10x increase in speed in a year, write Sameet Agarwal, the VP and GM of storage for Google Cloud, and Asad Khan, a senior product management director, in a blog post on the storage announcements. What’s more, 10 TBps is anywhere from 4x to 20x higher than the managed Lustre offerings from other hyperscalers for a single instance, the Googlers write.
Google has introduced a new “dynamic tier” for Managed Cluster that can deliver low-latency performance for AI workloads. “By serving data from persistent disk rather than relying on object-based caching, we eliminate a performance cliff–helping ensure your data remains responsive and your accelerators stay productive,” Agarwal and Khan write. The dynamic tier costs $0.06 per GB per month.
Google also announced some improvements to Cloud Storage Rapid (or Rapid Storage), the storage offering based on its Colossus cluster-level file system that it launched one year ago. Google says data stored in Rapid Storage buckets (which are S3-compatible) can be transmitted to GPU- or TPU-based systems as speeds up to 15 TB per second, which is more than twice as fast as the 6 TBps top end that it previously supported. Colossus can serve 20 million requests per second with sub-millisecond latency in this configuration, which can help to load data for AI training and reduce waiting during checkpointing.
Google also upgraded Rapid Cache, a component of Cloud Storage Rapid that was formerly known as Anywhere Cache. Google says Rapid Cache can provide a burst of up to 2.5 TBps of read bandwidth for certain workloads, like model loading for inference. It also is introducing a new “ingest-on-write” feature that will provide up to 2.2x faster checkpoint restores, Google says.
Finally, Google announced some updates to the Smart Storage offering that it launched last year. Smart Storage is a feature in Cloud Storage that makes every object self-describing. With the addition of automated annotations, the Smart Storage repository can automatically create annotations, making the data more usable and findable. It also announced the Cloud Storage MCP server, which lets users read, write, and analyze Cloud Storage data using MCP.
The post Google Bolsters AI Hypercomputer with New TPU Chips, Virgo Interconnect, Speedier Lustre appeared first on HPCwire.
Longtime Slashdot reader mmarlett writes: The Atlantic has a long article on the story of missing scientists recently featured here on Slashdot. In short, it is an incoherent conspiracy theory that spreads wide and far, not paying any attention to boundaries of time, space, or area of expertise. "Which is all to say that another piece of flagrant nonsense has ascended to the highest levels of U.S. politics and media," writes the Atlantic's Daniel Engber. "To call it a conspiracy theory would be far too kind, because no comprehensive theory has been floated to explain the pattern of events. But then, even the phrase pattern of events is imprecise, because there is no pattern here at all. Given all the people who could have been roped into this narrative but weren't, any hope of finding meaning falls away. Barring any dramatic new disclosures, the mystery of the missing scientists has the dubious honor of being a sham in every way at once."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Better safe than sorry -- download this update to protect your iPhone.
Independent review into Bristol Brunel academy finds Damien Egan visit was postponed over safeguarding concerns
An independent inquiry into a Bristol secondary school that found itself at the centre of a media storm after postponing a visit by a local Jewish MP has found no evidence of antisemitism or influence from lobby groups.
Damien Egan, the Labour MP for Bristol North East and vice-chair of Labour Friends of Israel, was due to visit Bristol Brunel academy (BBA) last September to talk to students about democracy and his work in parliament.
Continue reading...The findings land before supreme court hearing on Trump bid to end protections for Syrians and Haitians
Temporary protected status (TPS) holders, who have historically been protected from deportation due to safety concerns in their home countries, contribute around $29bn every year to the US economy, according to a new report published this week.
The findings from this report, which comes from FWD.us, have emerged one week before the supreme court is set to hear arguments challenging the Trump administration’s attempts to strip TPS status from Syrians and Haitians. It also comes nearly one week since the House passed legislation to protect Haitian immigrants, whose protected status is at risk.
Continue reading...NEW YORK, April 22, 2026 — VAST Data today announced the closing of its Series F financing at a $30 billion valuation, representing more than a threefold increase from its $9.1 billion Series E valuation in late 2023. The latest round was led by Drive Capital, with Access Industries acting as co-lead, and included participation from existing investors including Fidelity Management & Research Company, NEA, and NVIDIA, alongside new investors. This financing reflects the accelerating demand for a new data infrastructure stack needed for the development and deployment of artificial generally intelligent systems.
The financing included primary and secondary capital, bringing the total transaction value to approximately $1 billion. Primary proceeds will be used by VAST Data to solidify its position as the AI operating system at the center of the AI ecosystem and to further fuel global growth, including strategic transactions that expand its technology footprint and partnerships.
The Data Computing Foundation That Is Enabling AI at Global Scale
AI is a generational shift set to reshape trillions of dollars of global economic activity. This is now materializing as a massive industrial buildout approaching $100 trillion in scale, spanning AI factories and software systems, powered by a new era of parallel computing at levels previously unimaginable.
Founded in 2016 at the dawn of deep learning, VAST Data reimagined distributed systems for a future where AI would demand a fundamentally new approach to data and compute. Starting from a blank sheet of paper, the company created DASE (Disaggregated Shared Everything), a new architecture designed to break longstanding tradeoffs between scale, simplicity, performance, and cost.
Over the following decade, VAST expanded this foundation into a full data and computing platform aligned to the subsequent waves of modern AI. Today, the VAST AI Operating System sits at the center of this transformation, unifying data, compute, and real-time processing into a single system. This architecture collapses traditionally separate layers of the stack, enabling organizations to build, train, and run AI models while powering the applications and agents that depend on them, all at global scale.
Commercially, the VAST AI OS has become an essential component of the global AI datacenter buildout. From CoreWeave to Lowe’s, from the U.S. Air Force to Cursor, thousands of organizations rely on VAST to store, contextualize, and act on data, supporting environments that power millions of GPUs and some of the world’s most advanced AI training and inference initiatives.
“We are already supporting AI environments spanning millions of GPUs globally, operating across every layer of the AI stack,” said Renen Hallak, Founder and CEO of VAST Data. “What is becoming clear is that these layers are no longer independent. Applications, models, and infrastructure now operate as a single system through data. VAST sits at the center of how that system works, which is why we are seeing this level of demand at global scale.”
High Growth, Built for Durability
The Company has surpassed $4 billion in cumulative bookings and exited the previous fiscal year with more than $500 million in Committed Annual Recurring Revenue (CARR), along with positive operating margin and free cash flow. In its most recent fiscal year, VAST Data delivered a Rule of X score of 228%, reflecting an unparalleled combination of rapid growth and strong profitability.
As organizations scale AI, they are prioritizing partners that are not only providing disruptive technology, but who also are building sustainable, professional and financially-durable businesses that can continue to innovate and support the world’s AI infrastructure. This Rule of 228% is testament to VAST being optimally positioned to support the largest and most demanding AI environments with near-infinite runway to continue its growth trajectory.
Industry Validation and Customer Momentum
“The scale and speed of AI adoption are creating a new class of infrastructure company,” said Chris Olsen, Co-Founder and Partner at Drive Capital. “VAST is emerging as the clear leader in this category, with the architecture and momentum to support the world’s most demanding AI environments. The step-change in valuation reflects both that momentum and our conviction in VAST’s role at the center of this market.”
“As we push the boundaries of large-scale model training, the foundation of our infrastructure becomes critical,” said Timothée Lacroix, Co-Founder and CTO of Mistral AI. “VAST’s data platform enables us to efficiently manage and scale the massive datasets required to train frontier models, ensuring high performance and flexibility across our training pipelines.”
“The VAST platform is a key enabling technology for next gen AI infrastructure initiatives – providing a modern, flexible data architecture for Gen AI applications and agentic workflows,” said Larry Feinsmith, Managing Director, Head of Global Tech Strategy, Innovation and Partnerships at JPMorganChase.
“Our partnership with VAST Data has grown more than 10x this past year and continues to accelerate — a reflection of how critical an AI data platform is to training and inference workloads on Crusoe Cloud. Together, we’ve built a storage service which many model labs, leading AI agent companies, and physical AI pioneers rely on. This milestone for VAST validates the essential role they play in helping us give AI infrastructure engineers and developers the seamless, industrial-scale foundation they need to build the future of AI,” said Erwan Menard, SVP Product Management at Crusoe.
More from HPCwire: VAST Data Closes Series E Funding Round, Nearly Triples Valuation to $9.1B [2023]
About VAST Data
VAST Data is the AI Operating System company – powering the next generation of intelligent systems with a unified software infrastructure stack that was purpose-built to unlock the full potential of AI. The VAST AI OS consolidates foundational data and compute services and agentic execution into one scalable platform, enabling organizations to deploy and facilitate communication between AI agents, reason over real-time data, and automate complex workflows at global scale. Built on VAST’s breakthrough DASE architecture – the world’s first true parallel distributed system architecture that eliminates tradeoffs between performance, scale, simplicity, and resilience – VAST has transformed its modern infrastructure into a global fabric for reasoning AI
Source: VAST Data
The post VAST Data Valued at $30B as AI Drives a New Infrastructure Stack appeared first on HPCwire.
Sgt. First Class Jose Serrano told CBS News he's been informed his wife will be released from an ICE detention center in El Paso.
Most-banned book was Sold, a 2006 novel by Patricia McCormick about sex trafficking in India
The American Library Association (ALA) has reported a record high in the number of books banned in US libraries.
In 2025, 5,668 books were banned – representing 66% of the total number challenged – with an additional 920 censored through access restriction, such as relocation on the library shelves.
Continue reading...Smoke drifts into Atlanta and Savannah, Georgia, as air quality declines and 50 homes destroyed
Wildfires burning across the south-eastern US intensified on Wednesday across parts of south-east Georgia, where 50 homes were destroyed, and across north-east Florida, forcing evacuations and school closures in some communities.
The Georgia forestry commission issued its first mandatory burn ban in the state’s history, effective across 91 counties in the lower half of the state, due to worsening drought conditions and rising wildfire activity.
Continue reading...The subscription isn't widely available yet, but includes the ability to pin up to 20 chats along with decorative stickers and icons.
Sun alleges that World Liberty Financial froze the digital tokens he had purchased, locking him out of assets worth as much as $1 billion.
The promotion lasts until May 16, but only when you trade in certain Apple devices.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: The Gates Foundation opened an external review earlier this year into its engagement with the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the philanthropic group said on Tuesday. The foundation has been mired in controversy due to Chairman Bill Gates' association with Epstein. A release of emails in January by the U.S. Justice Department also showed communication between Epstein and the Gates Foundation's staff. "Early this year, Gates Foundation CEO Mark Suzman commissioned an external review to assess past foundation engagement with Epstein, and our current policies for vetting and developing new philanthropic partnerships," the foundation said in a statement. "That review is underway, and we expect the board and management will receive an update this summer," it added. The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the news earlier on Tuesday, said Suzman told staff in a memo, "this is a challenging time for our organization in many ways, but it also highlights the critical importance of taking the tough actions now." The WSJ also reports that the Gates Foundation will eliminate up to 500 jobs, or about 20% of its staff, by 2030. It said the foundation has a 2026 budget of about $9 billion, but plans to cap operating expenses at $1.25 billion. Further reading: The Bill Gates-Epstein Bombshell - and What Most People Get Wrong
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Scott, who represented Atlanta suburbs since 2003, had qualified to run for a 12th term before his death
David Scott, a Georgia congressman and moderate Democrat representing Atlanta’s southern suburbs since 2003, has died at the age of 80.
Scott’s health had been an open question in recent years, prompting calls for his retirement. He had not spoken on the floor of the House of Representatives in two years.
Continue reading...Apple has been embroiled in a six-year legal battle over one of its Apple Watch health apps. The end may finally be in sight, and here's what Apple has to say about it.
Costs associated with both products have been falling. Here's which one is cheaper for borrowers in need of $50,000.
The Pentagon assessment, shared in a classified briefing for lawmakers, suggests gasoline and oil prices could remain elevated through the midterm elections.
The move, affecting about $500M in proceeds from Iraqi oil sales, comes as Washington pushes for a new prime minister who will dismantle Iranian-aligned militias.
The new report evaluated air quality in different parts of the country by measuring the presence of ozone and particle pollution in the atmosphere.
Drug industry’s self-regulatory body criticises Theramex, producer of Evorel and Intrarosa, for ‘alarming’ breaches
One of the biggest producers of hormone replacement therapy has been censured by regulators for “systemic failures” that jeopardised patient safety.
Theramex, the UK producer of HRT drugs Evorel and Intrarosa, was found to have breached fundamental compliance standards including not updating crucial prescribing information – in some cases for several years – and not making it clear that a drug must not be used during pregnancy.
Continue reading...PM under increasing pressure over Mandelson vetting scandal as sources say ministers spoke up at tense meeting
Keir Starmer is looking increasingly isolated over his handling of the Peter Mandelson scandal with divisions emerging in cabinet over his decision to sack the Foreign Office civil servant Olly Robbins.
On another difficult day for the prime minister, the Guardian learned of concerns around the cabinet table, a senior minister refused to say the dismissal was fair and several mandarins called for him to be reinstated. One Labour MP called on Starmer to quit.
Continue reading...The feature lets you keep talking to the speaker without having to say, "Hey, Google," at the beginning of every request.
On Tuesday, the president read from the Bible in a taped message. Religious scholars were not impressed
This was originally published in This Week in Trumpland. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday
Donald Trump, who recently posted an image on social media which portrayed him as Jesus Christ (or, rather, “a doctor”), and who seems unable to stop attacking the pope, read the Bible to America on Tuesday night.
Sitting behind his desk in the Oval Office, hands resting on a book that looked like a Bible, Trump stared straight into the camera (presumably there was a teleprompter) as he recited from the book 2 Chronicles. It’s a passage which has become fashionable among the right wing, and which quotes God as saying:
Continue reading...Google announced two new tensor processing units (TPUs) for the "agentic era," with separate processors dedicated to training and inference. "With the rise of AI agents, we determined the community would benefit from chips individually specialized to the needs of training and serving," Amin Vahdat, a Google senior vice president and chief technologist for AI and infrastructure, said in a blog post. Both chips will become available later this year. CNBC reports: After years of producing chips that can both train artificial intelligence models and handle inference work, Google is separating those tasks into distinct processors, its latest effort to take on Nvidia in AI hardware. [...] None of the tech giants are displacing Nvidia, and Google isn't even comparing the performance of its new chips with those from the AI chip leader. Google did say the training chip enables 2.8 times the performance of the seventh-generation Ironwood TPU, announced in November, for the same price, while performance is 80% better for the inference processor. Nvidia said its upcoming Groq 3 LPU hardware will draw on large quantities of static random-access memory, or SRAM, which is used by Cerebras, an AI chipmaker that filed to go public earlier this month. Google's new inference chip, dubbed TPU 8i, also relies on SRAM. Each chip contains 384 megabytes of SRAM, triple the amount in Ironwood. The architecture is designed "to deliver the massive throughput and low latency needed to concurrently run millions of agents cost-effectively," Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google parent Alphabet, wrote in a blog post.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The pontiff’s criticisms of Donald Trump’s illegal war in Iran indicate a welcome resolve to follow in his predecessor’s footseps
One year after the death of Pope Francis, the Vatican this week hosted the premiere of a documentary tribute by Martin Scorsese. For a pontiff whose charisma and crowd-pleasing style helped cut through to a secular audience, marking the anniversary with the help of one of the world’s most famous film directors was a nice touch.
Francis’s successor, Leo XIV, is a far less flamboyant personality. In his inaugural year in St Peter’s chair, the first pope to come from the United States has generally taken a cautious, circumspect approach to his role. But it turns out that an aura of mildness and restraint makes him no less effective when criticising the posturing that passes for Christian piety in Donald Trump’s Washington.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...The Democratic counteroffensive to GOP efforts to redraw maps sets the stage for Republicans to lose in the midterms
Months into his second term, Donald Trump wagered that he could beat the historic trend of the party in power losing seats in midterm elections if Republican-led states redrew congressional maps to sweep Democrats out of office.
The gamble is looking to be a bust, or at best a draw, for the president, after Democrats fought back with their own redistricting efforts, the latest of which came to fruition in Virginia on Tuesday, when voters approved a plan that could remove all but one of the five Republicans in its current House of Representatives delegation.
Continue reading...Exclusive: McSweeney summoned by foreign affairs select committee in rare step, as Mandelson vetting row continues
Morgan McSweeney is facing a showdown with MPs who will grill him on whether he placed extreme pressure on the Foreign Office to approve Peter Mandelson as ambassador.
The prime minister’s former chief of staff will be questioned next Tuesday by the foreign affairs select committee over allegations made by the former Foreign Office permanent secretary Olly Robbins, who said No 10 had questioned why Mandelson should be subject to any vetting.
Continue reading...Health secretary says ‘I had nothing to do with the measles outbreak’ and claims to support measles and MMR vaccines
The health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, faced intense questioning from several US senators on Wednesday during a hearing largely focused on how the administration has responded to the measles outbreak and the spread of vaccine misinformation.
In his opening remarks to the Senate finance committee, the senator Ron Wyden criticized Kennedy’s messaging on vaccines, saying: “When it comes to vaccines, Robert Kennedy has used this once-in-a-lifetime platform to make parents doubt themselves and doubt their doctors,” before adding: “The secretary has ducked, bobbed and weaved without taking the responsibility of saying what needs to be said: vaccines save lives in America.”
Continue reading...Police catch woman, 28, climbing colossal 16th-century statue of Neptune to touch its genitals as a dare
A tourist has been charged after allegedly climbing a colossal marble statue in Florence to touch its genitals for a pre-wedding prank.
Experts said the woman caused thousands of euros of damage to the Neptune fountain in Piazza della Signoria.
Continue reading...Backed by Abigail Spanberger, the measure could boost Democrats and counter Donald Trump’s redistricting push
Virginia voters will decide on Tuesday whether to adopt new congressional maps that could help Democrats win control of the House of Representatives and scuttle Donald Trump’s effort to use mid-decade redistricting to preserve Republican control of Congress.
Polls show the referendum to redraw the maps has only a narrow lead in a state that Kamala Harris won two years ago. The issue appears to have engaged many voters, with nearly more than 1.37m ballots cast in early voting.
Continue reading...Budget outlines funding for autonomous drone warfare program as experts say military unprepared for risks
The Pentagon is aiming to increase funding more than a hundredfold for an autonomous drone warfare program, according to budget documents released this week, signalling a major pivot towards AI-powered war.
In its 2027 budget, the Pentagon has asked for over $54bn to fund the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group, a 24,000% increase on last year.
Continue reading...A satirical but working tool called Malus uses AI to create "clean room" clones of open-source software, aiming to reproduce the same functionality while shedding attribution and copyleft obligations. "It works," Mike Nolan, one of the two people behind Malus, who researches the political economy of open source software and currently works for the United Nations, told 404 Media. "The Stripe charge will provide you the thing, and it was important for us to do that, because we felt that if it was just satire, it would end up like every other piece of research I've done on open source, which ends up being largely dismissed by open source tech workers who felt that they were too special and too unique and too intelligent to ever be the ones on the bad side of the layoffs or the economics of the situation." 404 Media reports: Malus's legal strategy for bypassing copyright is based on a historically pivotal moment for software and copyright law dating back to 1982. Back then, IBM dominated home computing, and competitors like Columbia Data Products wanted to sell products that were compatible with software that IBM customers were already using. Reverse engineering IBM's computer would have infringed on the company's copyright, so Columbia Data Products came up with what we now know as a "clean room" design. It tasked one team with examining IBM's BIOS and creating specifications for what a clone of that system would require. A different "clean" team, one that was never exposed to IBM's code, then created BIOS that met those specifications from scratch. The result was a system that was compatible with IBM's ecosystem but didn't violate its copyright because it did not copy IBM's technical process and counted as original work. This clean room method, which has been validated by case law and dramatized in the first season of Halt and Catch Fire, made computing more open and competitive than it would have been otherwise. But it has taken on new meaning in the age of generative AI. It is now easier than ever to ask AI tools to produce software that is identical in function to existing open source projects, and that, some would argue, are built from scratch and are therefore original work that can bypass existing copyright licenses. Others would say that software produced by large language models is inherently derivative, because like any LLM output, it is trained on the collective output of humans scraped from the internet, including specific open source projects. Malus (pronounced malice), uses AI to do the same thing. "Finally, liberation from open source license obligations," Malus's site says. "Our proprietary AI robots independently recreate any open source project from scratch. The result? Legally distinct code with corporate-friendly licensing. No attribution. No copyleft. No problems." Copyleft is a type of copyright license that ensures reproductions or applications of the software keep it free to share and modify.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
As thousands of undocumented migrants line up to apply for amnesty under a new program in Spain, the prime minister's opponents vow a fight.
Lawyers for oligarch claim freezing of £5.3bn of assets ‘unfair and abusive’ amid row over use of funds for Ukraine
Roman Abramovich has gone to the European court of human rights (ECHR), claiming that a criminal investigation into his financial affairs by the Jersey authorities has breached his human rights, according to reports.
The former owner of Chelsea FC, who is under UK sanctions over his links to Vladimir Putin, is being investigated in Jersey over allegations of corruption and money laundering.
Continue reading...Our CNET experts have tested the top desks to help you find the right one for your office, game room or hobby space.
Creditors don't have to settle for less than what you owe, but if yours won't budge, you may still have options.
Barça can reopen a nine-point lead at the top of the standings with a win over the Sky Blues.
Jonathan Brash says ‘own goals’ are distracting from Labour’s achievements
UK inflation accelerated to 3.3% in March after the Iran war triggered the biggest jump in fuel prices for more than three years, Richard Partington reports.
Today the Liberal Democrats staged a photocall to publicise their line about this being “Trumpflation”. Daisy Cooper, the Lib Dem deputy leader and Treasury spokesperson, said:
People across our country have been struggling for years with a devastating cost-of-living crisis and Donald Trump’s idiotic war in Iran has added to it. The cost of fuel is soaring, mortgage rates are rising and fixed energy deals are already going up by hundreds of pounds.
But what is utterly inexcusable is that there are politicians in this country - Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch - who are happy to cheerlead Donald Trump as he hikes people’s bills. All the while this Labour government promised to fix the country but instead we’ve got political Groundhog Day: yet more sleaze and scandal.
Continue reading...Rising costs have continued to plague the company, now facing soaring fuel costs due to the war with Iran
The White House is finalizing a financing package to help ailing US budget carrier Spirit Airlines, which could receive as much as $500m in loans as rising costs continue to plague the company.
News of the potential deal comes as Spirit and others struggle with soaring fuel costs due to the war with Iran.
Continue reading...My neighbor plays hockey and i wore his gear while doing this along with my full face helmet. I only did this to test how much power the board actually had. I don’t typically ride rails or push my boards to that limit. X7 supercharged.
Find the best gaming chairs by Anda Seat, Secretlab and others so you can focus on what really matters: the game.
April 22, 2026 — NVIDIA and Google Cloud have collaborated for more than a decade, co‑engineering a full‑stack AI platform that spans every technology layer — from performance‑optimized libraries and frameworks to enterprise‑grade cloud services.
This foundation enables developers, startups and enterprises to push agentic and physical AI out of the lab and into production — from agents that manage complex workflows to robots and digital twins on the factory floor.
At Google Cloud Next this week in Las Vegas, the partnership reaches a new milestone, with advancements to expand Google Cloud AI Hypercomputer for AI factories that will power the next frontier of agentic and physical AI.
These include the new NVIDIA Vera Rubin-powered A5X bare-metal instances; a preview of Google Gemini on Google Distributed Cloud running on NVIDIA Blackwell and NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs; confidential VMs with NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs; and agentic AI on Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform with NVIDIA Nemotron open models and the NVIDIA NeMo framework.
Next-Generation Infrastructure: From NVIDIA Blackwell to Vera Rubin
At Google Cloud Next, Google announced A5X powered by NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 rack-scale systems, which — through extreme codesign across chips, systems and software — deliver up to 10x lower inference cost per token and 10x higher token throughput per megawatt than the prior generation.
A5X will use NVIDIA ConnectX-9 SuperNICs, combined with next-generation Google Virgo networking, scaling to up to 80,000 NVIDIA Rubin GPUs within a single site cluster and up to 960,000 NVIDIA Rubin GPUs in a multisite cluster, enabling customers to run their largest AI workloads on NVIDIA‑optimized infrastructure.
“At Google Cloud, we believe the next decade of AI will be shaped by customers’ ability to run their most demanding workloads on a truly integrated, AI‑optimized infrastructure stack,” said Mark Lohmeyer, vice president and general manager of AI and computing infrastructure at Google Cloud. “By combining Google Cloud’s scalable infrastructure and managed AI services with NVIDIA’s industry‑leading platforms, systems and software, we’re giving customers flexibility to train, tune and serve everything from frontier and open models to agentic and physical AI workloads — while optimizing for performance, cost and sustainability.”
Google Cloud’s broad NVIDIA Blackwell portfolio ranges from A4 VMs with NVIDIA HGX B200 systems to rack-scale A4X VMs with NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 and A4X Max NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 systems, all the way to fractional G4 VMs with NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs.
Customers can right-size their acceleration capabilities, whether using multiple interconnected NVL72 racks that scale out to tens of thousands of NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs, a single rack that can scale up to 72 Blackwell GPUs with fifth-generation NVIDIA NVLink and NVLink 5 Switch, or just one-eighth of a GPU.
This comprehensive platform helps teams optimize every workload, from mixture-of-experts reasoning, multimodal inference and data processing to complex simulations for the next frontier of physical AI and robotics.
Leading frontier AI labs are already putting this infrastructure to work. Thinking Machines Lab is scaling its Tinker application programming interface (API) on A4X Max VMs with GB300 NVL72 systems to accelerate training, while OpenAI is running large‑scale inference on NVIDIA GB300 (A4X Max VMs) and GB200 NVL72 systems (A4X VMs) on Google Cloud for some of its most demanding inference workloads, including for ChatGPT.
Secure AI Wherever It Needs to Run: Sovereign and Confidential
Google Gemini models running on NVIDIA Blackwell and Blackwell Ultra GPUs are now in preview on Google Distributed Cloud, so customers can bring Google’s frontier models wherever their most sensitive data resides.
NVIDIA Confidential Computing with the NVIDIA Blackwell platform enables Gemini models to run in a protected environment where prompts and fine‑tuning data stay encrypted and can’t be seen or altered by unauthorized parties, including the infrastructure operators.
In the public cloud, the preview of Confidential G4 VMs with NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs brings these protections to multi‑tenant environments — helping safeguard prompts, AI models and data so customers in regulated industries can access the power of AI without compromising on security or performance.
This is the first confidential computing offering of NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs in the cloud, giving Google Cloud customers a new foundation for secure, high‑performance AI.
Open Models and APIs for Agentic AI
The NVIDIA platform on Google Cloud is optimized to run every kind of model — from Google’s frontier Gemini and Gemma families to NVIDIA Nemotron open models and the broader open weight ecosystem — equipping developers to build agentic AI systems that reason, plan and act.
NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super is available on Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, giving developers a direct path to discovering, customizing and deploying NVIDIA‑optimized reasoning and multimodal models for agentic workflows.
Google Cloud and NVIDIA are also making it easier to train and customize open models at scale. Managed Training Clusters on Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform introduced a new managed reinforcement learning (RL) API built with NVIDIA NeMo RL for accelerating RL training at scale while automating cluster sizing, failure recovery and job execution, so teams can focus on agent behavior and model quality instead of infrastructure management.
Cybersecurity leader CrowdStrike uses NVIDIA NeMo open libraries such as NeMo Data Designer, NeMo Automodel and NeMo Megatron Bridge to generate synthetic data and fine-tuning Nemotron and other open large language models for domain-specific cybersecurity. Running on Managed Training Clusters on Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform with NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs, these capabilities accelerate threat detection, investigation and response.
Building the Future of Industrial and Physical AI
Building industrial and physical AI at scale demands powerful hardware and a combination of open models, libraries and frameworks to develop these complex end-to-end workflows.
NVIDIA AI infrastructure, open models and physical AI libraries available on Google Cloud, is mainstreaming industrial and physical AI applications, enabling customers to simulate, optimize and automate real-world workflows.
Solutions from leading industrial software providers, including Cadence and Siemens Digital Industries Software, are now available on Google Cloud, accelerated on NVIDIA AI infrastructure. These applications are powering the next-generation design, engineering and manufacturing of everything from chips to autonomous vehicles, robotics, aerospace platforms, heavy machinery and large-scale production systems.
With NVIDIA Omniverse libraries and the open source NVIDIA Isaac Sim robotics simulation framework available on Google Cloud Marketplace, developers can build physically accurate digital twins and develop custom robotics simulations pipelines to train, simulate and validate robots before real-world deployment.
NVIDIA NIM microservices for models like NVIDIA Cosmos Reason 2 can be deployed to Google Vertex AI and Google Kubernetes Engine. This enables robots and vision AI agents to see, reason and act in the physical world like humans, powering use cases such as automated data curation and annotation, advanced robot planning and reasoning, and intelligent video analytics agents for real-time insights and decision-making.
Together, these technologies help developers seamlessly move from computer-aided design to living industrial digital twins and AI‑driven robots, accelerating processes from design sign‑off to factory optimization on the NVIDIA platform running on Google Cloud.
Proven Impact: From Startups to Global Enterprises
Global enterprises, AI labs and high‑growth startups are using NVIDIA and Google Cloud’s co-engineered platform to move from prototyping to production faster, including Snap, Schrödinger and Salesforce. Snap is cutting the cost of large‑scale A/B testing by shifting data pipelines to GPU‑accelerated Spark on Google Cloud. Schrödinger is shrinking weekslong drug discovery simulations into just hours with NVIDIA accelerated computing on Google Cloud.
Startups are orchestrating the next wave of AI innovation — building new agents and AI‑native applications using NVIDIA accelerated computing on Google Cloud.
As part of a broader ecosystem highlighted through NVIDIA Inception and Google for Startups, CodeRabbit and Factory are using NVIDIA Nemotron‑based models on Google Cloud to power code review and autonomous software development agents, while Aible, Mantis AI, Photoroom and Baseten are building enterprise data, video intelligence, generative imagery and managed inference solutions on the full‑stack NVIDIA platform on Google Cloud.
More than 90,000 developers have become a part of the joint NVIDIA and Google Cloud developer community in just over a year, tapping this platform to build and scale new AI applications.
In addition, NVIDIA has been honored at Next as Google Cloud Partner of the Year in two categories — AI Global Technology Partner and Infra Modernization Compute — in recognition of deep technical expertise and go-to-market alignment.
Together, NVIDIA and Google Cloud are giving customers a cloud‑scale platform to turn experimental agents and simulations into production systems that review code, secure fleets, enable new AI applications and optimize factories in the real world.
Learn more about the companies’ collaboration by attending NVIDIA sessions, demos and workshops at Google Cloud Next.
Source: Ian Buck, NVIDIA
The post NVIDIA and Google Cloud Collaborate to Advance Agentic and Physical AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Building on the Mobile Legacy of LPDDR with Higher Capacity, Flexible Metadata and a Roadmap to LPDDR6 SOCAMM2
ARLINGTON, Va., April 22, 2026 — JEDEC Solid State Technology Association, the global leader in the development of standards for the microelectronics industry, today previewed a set of new features planned for incorporation into the next version of its JESD209‑6 LPDDR6 standard.
Building on the foundational JESD209‑6 published in July 2025, JEDEC’s JC‑42.6 Subcommittee has been working to enhance the next version of the standard to extend LPDDR6 beyond mobile platforms to support selected data center and accelerated computing workloads seeking a power‑efficient, high‑capacity memory platform.
Planned features for the upcoming LPDDR6 update include:
LPDDR6 PIM standard in development: JEDEC is also nearing completion of a standard for LPDDR6 Processing‑in‑Memory (LPDDR6 PIM) technology, which complements the broader LPDDR6 roadmap, a next‑generation memory solution intended to address the rapidly increasing performance and energy‑efficiency requirements of edge and data‑center inference workloads. By integrating processing capability directly within LPDDR6 memory, LPDDR6 PIM reduces data movement between memory and compute, enabling higher inference performance and lower power consumption while maintaining the efficiency advantages of LPDDR‑based designs.
“Stay tuned for more details on the next version of LPDDR6 as well as LPDDR6 PIM and LPDDR6 SOCAMM2,” said Mian Quddus, JEDEC Board of Directors Chairman. “The subcommittee continues to evaluate features for inclusion in these standards when they are published.”
EDEC encourages companies to join and help shape the future of JEDEC standards. JEDEC membership provides access to pre-publication proposals and early insights into active projects such as LPDDR6, LPDDR6 PIM, LPDDR6 SOCAMM2 and more. Discover the benefits of membership and join today.
JEDEC standards are subject to change during and after the development process, including disapproval by the JEDEC Board of Directors.
About JEDEC
JEDEC is the global leader in the development of standards for the microelectronics industry. Thousands of volunteers representing over 380 member companies work together in more than 100 JEDEC committees and task groups to meet the needs of every segment of the industry, for manufacturers and consumers alike. The publications and standards generated by JEDEC committees are accepted throughout the world. All JEDEC standards are available for download from the JEDEC website. For more information, visit https://www.jedec.org.
Source: JEDEC
The post JEDEC Previews LPDDR6 Roadmap Expanding LPDDR into Data Centers and Processing-in-Memory appeared first on HPCwire.
BOSTON, April 22, 2026 — TetraScience today announced that Syngenta has selected Tetra OS to power digital automation and data transformation in its Crop Protection R&D organization. This move is set to eliminate the manual, ad-hoc data exchange, and manual transcription that have historically slowed scientific decision-making.
Syngenta will deploy the Tetra Scientific Data Foundry to centralize and harmonize analytical data from a diverse range of analytical (including chromatography and mass spectrometry) and characterization systems. The Foundry will transform instrument raw data into a standardized, AI-ready format. By linking siloed data sources into a single, searchable “scientific memory”, it will enable high-quality data sharing with downstream tools and applications.
Tetra Sciborgs, a team of scientist-engineers who operate at the nexus of science, data, and AI, will be forward-deployed to guide Syngenta through implementation, adoption, and continuous improvement. Sciborgs ensure that architecture becomes culture, translating design into daily practice and embedding best practices across sites.
This collaboration supports Syngenta’s ambition to build a flexible, cross-functional data capture automation ecosystem that ensures consistent data quality, accelerates insights, and drives R&D innovation across sites.
“Delivering end-to-end data automation across our R&D organization requires a unified foundation – one that eliminates data silos, connects laboratory assets and systems, and transforms raw scientific data into accessible, actionable insight to drive the future of our science,” said Claudio Battilocchio, Digital Automation Lead R&D, Syngenta. “The capabilities provided by TetraScience offer that foundation, enabling us to standardize and harmonize data at scale across our R&D landscape. Such capabilities are fundamental to how we are transforming R&D – accelerating the speed and quality of scientific discovery, addressing productivity for data management, and ultimately strengthening our ability to develop the innovations that help farmers feed a growing world.”
“Science has been trapped in an artisanal past—fragmented data, bespoke integrations, and manual workflows that don’t scale,” said Patrick Grady, CEO of TetraScience. “Syngenta understands that the future belongs to organizations willing to industrialize their scientific data infrastructure. By deploying our Data Foundry, Syngenta is improving efficiency and building the foundation for a new era of compounding scientific intelligence.”
The implementation will include platform hosting, maintenance support, and TetraU training for Syngenta scientists and IT teams to accelerate adoption and build internal expertise. Together, TetraScience and Syngenta intend to create a reusable data and AI foundation that can support future R&D and quality use cases across the organization, accelerating the pace of scientific discovery.
About TetraScience
TetraScience is the Scientific Data and AI Company building Tetra OS, the operating system for scientific intelligence. Tetra OS integrates the Data Foundry, Use Case Factory, Tetra AI, and Sciborgs into a single, AI-native platform. Together, these capabilities turn fragmented scientific data and workflows into governed, reusable, and compounding intelligence across discovery, development, and manufacturing. TetraScience is trusted by leading biopharma organizations and ecosystem partners including NVIDIA, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Databricks, Snowflake, Google, and Microsoft. For more information, visit tetrascience.com.
Source: TetraScience
The post TetraScience Platform to Support Syngenta R&D Data Harmonization and Automation Efforts appeared first on HPCwire.
Janet Fordham died in crash after travelling to see man who claimed he would help to recover money from earlier scams
A British woman who was scammed out of up to £1m in a string of so-called romance frauds died in a road crash after travelling to west Africa to try to recoup some of her lost fortune, an inquest in Devon has heard.
Janet Fordham was cheated of her life savings and her home over a period of five years by fraudsters apparently based in the UK, Germany, the US and Ghana, the inquest in Exeter was told.
Continue reading...Ajay Haridasse needed assistance at 26-mile mark
Aaron Beggs and Robson De Oliveira came to aid
Beggs: ‘We’re just runners helping each other’
A pair of Boston Marathon runners who teamed up to help a fellow athlete across the race’s finish line have been praised for their “beautiful moment” of sportsmanship.
Ajay Haridasse, a 21-year-old university student from Wakefield, Massachusetts, found himself stumbling after passing the 26-mile mark in Monday’s race. After falling for a fourth time, he was “getting ready to crawl” to the finish line, Haridasse told the Boston Herald.
Continue reading...About half of Iran's stockpile of ballistic missiles and its associated launch systems were still intact as of the start of the ceasefire in early April, officials said.
April 22, 2026 — The European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) has signed a procurement contract with E4 Computer Engineering and Dell Technologies to deploy a new AI-optimized supercomputer for the IT4LIA AI Factory in Italy.
The IT4LIA AI Factory initiative, which is hosted and operated by CINECA at the DAMA Tecnopolo of Bologna, is moving into its next phase to enable the deployment of a next-generation AI and HPC infrastructure.
The infrastructure is designed to support demanding AI workloads, combining high performance, scalability and energy efficiency within a reliable and secure environment. In addition, a dedicated European partition will enable efficient AI inference and contribute to strengthen European AI capabilities.
IT4LIA supercomputer will be integrated by E4 Computer Engineering and manufactured by Dell Technologies, leveraging the liquid-cooled NVIDIA GB200 NVL4 architecture. By combining NVIDIA Grace CPUs with NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs and scaling through NVIDIA Quantum‑X800 InfiniBand networking, the system is expected to deliver more than 160 Exaflops of peak AI inference performance. The supercomputer will incorporate the VAST Data platform, enabling a unified data layer for AI workloads, and will also include a dedicated inference partition featuring AI‑optimized inference accelerators from European‑based Axelera AI, complemented by European‑designed SiPearl CPUs.
Primarily designed to serve startups and SMEs, the system will also be open and accessible to the wider research community, enabling the development, deployment and management of AI applications in compliance with EU data sovereignty and privacy standards.
IT4LIA will support the development of a secure and sovereign AI infrastructure and contribute to the deployment of open and interoperable platforms for data and model development.
Since April 2025, the IT4LIA AI Factory has been providing AI computing resources and services to European SMEs and startups through its existing infrastructure, in particular leveraging the Leonardo supercomputer.
The Italian AI Factory offers specialized services in key vertical sectors such as agritech, cybersecurity, meteorology climate, and manufacturing, addressing the specific needs of each field. Complementing these vertical offerings, IT4LIA will also provide a complete suite of horizontal services to support all stakeholders in the AI ecosystem, such as tools for secure data management and analysis, metadata creation, and verification of compliance with Italian and European regulations on data use and artificial intelligence.
These offerings include skills development, training initiatives, and innovation support, enabling startups, SMEs, and research organizations to access advanced computing capabilities and technical expertise.
Anders Jensen, Executive Director of EuroHPC Joint Undertaking commented: “This signature marks another important milestone for Europe’s HPC and AI ambitions. With the IT4LIA system, we are making a significant investment in cutting-edge infrastructure that will empower startups, SMEs, and the research community to develop and deploy advanced AI applications at scale. IT4LIA will not only expand our computational capabilities, but also strengthen collaboration across the European innovation ecosystem, playing an important role in reinforcing Europe’s competitiveness and leadership in AI”
Gabriella Scipione, HPC Director of CINECA, declared: “CINECA is proud, together with all members of the IT4LIA consortium, to contribute to the next phase of the IT4LIA AI Factory, a milestone for the European AI ecosystem and a significant step in strengthening Italy’s role in the global technological landscape. By hosting this infrastructure at the DAMA Tecnopolo of Bologna, we will offer the research community, public administrations, SMEs and startups advanced, scalable and energy‑efficient computing resources, enabling a peak AI inference performance of over 160 exaflops. With the support of the Italian Ministry of University and Research and through close collaboration with the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking and E4 Computer Engineering, we are building a secure, sovereign and high‑performance environment where European innovation can thrive, fully aligned with European values on data privacy and technological autonomy.”
More Details
The joint tender led by E4 Computer Engineering along with Dell Technologies has been selected following a call for tender launched in October 2025.
The new AI-optimized supercomputer will be co-funded with a total budget of EUR 290.000.000 for the acquisition, delivery, installation, and maintenance of the system. The EuroHPC JU will fund 50% of the total cost through the Digital Europe Programme (DEP). The project is co-financed by the Italian Ministry of University and Research.
The IT4LIA AI Factory was selected in December 2024. It is coordinated by CINECA and implemented in collaboration with the Academic and Research Network of Slovenia (ARNES), Advanced Computing Austria ACA GmbH, and AIT Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH.
The IT4LIA AI Factory is part of a broader network of AI Factories across Europe as the EuroHPC JU is currently overseeing the implementation of 19 AI factories offering free, customized support to SMEs and startups, complemented by an additional 13 AI Factory Antennas.
Source: EuroHPC
The post EuroHPC JU Signs Contract to Boost AI Capabilities with IT4LIA AI Factory appeared first on HPCwire.
The AI company behind the chatbot Claude is looking into a report of unauthorized access to Mythos from one of its third-party vendor environments.
Result could help Democrats win four extra US House seats in tit-for-tat redistricting battle begun by Texas
Voters in Virginia on Tuesday approved new congressional maps intended to boost Democrats’ chances of retaking the House of Representatives, in the latest blow to Donald Trump’s effort to use mid-decade redistricting to preserve his control of Congress.
The tit-for-tat redistricting battle began last year after Trump pressed Texas’s Republican-controlled legislature to redraw that state’s congressional maps in an effort to oust as many as five Democratic House lawmakers in the November midterm elections.
Continue reading...Save some green while being green with these eco-friendly deals and discounts.
Iran seized two container ships in the contested strait, state media said, further complicating diplomatic efforts to end the war that began Feb. 28.
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Pep Guardiola's men have the chance to go top with a win against their near-neighbors.
CATL unveiled a new wave of EV battery tech, "including a lighter battery pack rated for a 1,000-km (621-mile) driving range and an upgraded fast-charging battery that can go from 10 percent to 98 percent in under seven minutes," reports Interesting Engineering. From the report: The launches were made during a 90-minute event in Beijing ahead of the Beijing Auto Show, where automakers are expected to showcase next-generation EVs and connected technologies. CATL said its latest Qilin battery -- a high-energy-density pack often paired with nickel manganese cobalt (NMC) cells for long range and improved space efficiency -- can deliver a 1,000-km (621-mile) driving range. It is designed to deliver long range while reducing battery pack weight. The company said the product is aimed at automakers facing tighter efficiency rules in China and other markets. It also rolled out an upgraded Shenxing battery -- CATL's fast-charging lithium iron phosphate (LFP) pack -- that targets one of the biggest barriers to EV adoption: charging time. CATL said the pack can recharge from 10 percent to 98 percent in less than seven minutes. The new Shenxing battery marks a significant improvement over CATL's previous version, which charged from 5 percent to 80 percent in 15 minutes, according to Financial Times. [...] The company also announced plans to begin mass delivery of sodium-ion batteries in the fourth quarter. Sodium-ion technology is seen as a lower-cost alternative that could reduce dependence on lithium, cobalt, and nickel.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The trial of Renea Gamble had been underway for almost two hours when Marcus McDowell, the city attorney of Fairhope, Alabama, called a surprise witness.
“I call the gentleman in the red shirt,” he said, pointing toward a long-haired man in the second row. It took a moment to realize that he was referring to Gamble’s husband, 63-year-old Larry Fletcher.
Gamble’s defense attorney objected. He’d received no advance notice. But Fletcher shrugged and made his way forward.
Fletcher was with his wife when she was arrested at a No Kings protest in October 2025. She was wearing a 7-foot-tall inflatable penis costume and holding a sign that read “No Dick Tator.” Video of the incident went viral, turning Gamble into a minor celebrity and local free speech icon. Most people assumed the city would eventually drop the misdemeanor charges filed against her. Instead, McDowell added more, including giving a false name to law enforcement for identifying herself as “Aunt Tifa.”
Fletcher wore black Levi’s and a collared shirt with a Ferrari logo – a nod to his work rebuilding fuel injection systems for high-end cars. Sitting in the front row, Gamble looked a bit stricken watching the man she’d known since her childhood in Baton Rouge. “I know what she was thinking,” Fletcher later said. “She’s like, ‘Oh man, this could go out of control real easy.’”
McDowell asked Fletcher if he’d gone to bail his wife out of jail after her arrest. Yes, Fletcher said.
Did he make any statements to any of the jailers? Fletcher wasn’t sure. McDowell motioned toward one of the many law enforcement officers standing on the side of the room and asked if he looked familiar. Fletcher said he’d seen him around.
McDowell cut to the chase: Did Fletcher remember telling this man that he had gone to get bail money the day before the protest?
His objective was suddenly clear: The city attorney was suggesting that Gamble had gotten arrested on purpose.
If this was meant as a gotcha, things didn’t go as intended.
“I always make sure I have bail money!” Fletcher replied emphatically, as if this should be the most obvious thing in the world.
Did he have bail money on him now?
“Yeah!” Fletcher exclaimed, then gestured broadly. “With this many cops around? Come on.”
The room erupted with laughter. Moments later, Fletcher was back in his seat. Gamble reached back and held his hand.
“If we don’t have free speech, what do we have?”
The trial took place at the Fairhope Civic Center, home to the city council chamber and — on the first and third Wednesday of every month — municipal court. Outside the building, dozens of people gathered to support Gamble, while a small army of cops stood watch from inside. One woman wore a huge purple eggplant costume. Another held a sign featuring a banana and the words “Free speech shouldn’t be hard to swallow.”
Gamble, 62, had arrived wearing pearls, a soft pink cable-knit sweater, and a matching tulle skirt adorned with delicate butterflies. Her face was concealed behind sunglasses and a white KN95 mask. After a smattering of chants of “Free speech!,” Gamble spoke briefly before going inside. “I’m not on trial,” she said. “What’s on trial is the First Amendment.”
“It was abuse, too!” one woman yelled. “They abused you. We saw it.”
Indeed, for all the slapstick comedy of the scene — body camera footage showed three different cops wrestling with a giant penis — her arrest was also shocking. Gamble was turning to walk away when the arresting officer grabbed her costume from behind, pulling her backward onto the ground. While officers tried to stuff her into their car, causing the handcuffs to dig into her wrists, she screamed in pain.
But Gamble said she wasn’t speaking as a victim. “I’m standing on the foundation of our democracy. If we don’t have free speech, what do we have?”
Fairhope is a picturesque town on Alabama’s Gulf Coast, 20 miles from Mobile. Its entrance is lined with live oaks and a procession of American flags, while its historic downtown is brimming with galleries and upscale boutiques. Around the corner from a Christmas store, clapboard signs advertised espresso martinis and peanut butter pie.
Fairhope has long been a top destination for retirees from across the country, with its rapid growth an enduring source of anxiety. Although the No Kings rally was organized by Indivisible Baldwin County, whose founder was born and raised in the area, local critics adopted a familiar line: The protesters were outside agitators. Never mind that Fairhope itself was originally founded by outsiders as a “single-tax” utopia, “built by and for artists, writers and other ne’er do-wells,” in the words of local political cartoonist JD Crowe, who attended Gamble’s trial with his sketchpad. Today, some describe Fairhope as “California with a Southern accent” — a compliment or an insult, depending on who you ask.
Gamble’s case struck a nerve in part because of an ongoing free speech battle that made national news. Right-wing activists had targeted Fairhope’s beloved public library, convincing the state to pull funding over books they deemed obscene. Among the people gathered outside the civic center, several said they could not understand why city officials, including the mayor, stood up for the library only to express support for Gamble’s arrest.
Others were driven by national politics. A man dressed in a taco suit was a member of Mobile’s Indivisible chapter. “This is all about Trump,” he said. The fact that people were protesting in this part of the state spoke volumes about the destruction Trump has wrought, he said. “This is deep-red Alabama — as red as it can get.”
Presiding over the trial was Magistrate Judge Haymes Snedeker, best known as the older brother of champion pro golfer Brandt Snedeker and a noted amateur golfer himself. Snedeker sought to defuse the tension in the room, reassuring attendees at the start that, while Gamble technically faced the possibility of six months in prison, “that’s not gonna happen.”
It was the city’s burden to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, Snedeker went on. “I’m just an umpire calling balls and strikes.” He had just asked people to silence their cellphones when a ringtone broke out, apparently from one of the police officers lining the room.
“Bad start for the city,” Snedeker quipped.
If Snedeker was trying to keep things light, McDowell, the city attorney, was not in a joking mood. It was no secret that Gamble was considering suing the city — and any potential lawsuit would be on him to defend. The threat of legal action helped explain why McDowell might have refused to drop the charges. If Gamble was convicted, after all, she would have no grounds to sue.
McDowell insisted that, while there is no constitutional right to dress as a giant “erect penis,” this case had nothing to do with the First Amendment. Gamble’s case was about public safety.
“I’m trying to preserve a town that has values.”
He called the man who arrested Gamble: Fairhope Police Cpl. Andrew Babb. A 15-year veteran of the force, he testified that he’d been called to the scene due to reports of a disturbance at the busy intersection. When he pulled up, he spotted a “7-foot inflatable penis.” It was impossible to tell the identity of the person inside the costume, Babb said. He assumed it must be a teenager.
Did you know it was an old woman?” McDowell asked him.
“She’s not that old,” someone muttered in the audience.
“No,” Babb said.
Babb said he ordered Gamble to remove the penis suit. When she refused to comply, “she was put to the ground.”
Babb denied that he’d been personally offended by Gamble’s costume. Rather, he was concerned that Gamble, who could neither see nor walk very well while wearing it, posed a risk to herself and others. “You saw her as an obstruction and a safety risk?” McDowell asked. Yes, Babb said.
This was laughable. In his body camera footage, Babb repeatedly scolds Gamble for the costume, demanding to know how she would explain it to his kids. “I’m not trying to violate your freedom of speech,” he says as he unzips the penis suit. “I’m trying to preserve a town that has values.” Now McDowell was conjuring an alternate reality in which Gamble had teetered precariously at the edge of the road, endangering motorists, while the protest itself was veering close to a riot.
“It was a brushfire,” Babb claimed at one point. “We were trying to stop it from spreading.”
Gamble was represented by David Gespass, a veteran civil rights attorney who wore a Constitution-themed tie reading “We the People.” He asked Babb why he’d zeroed in on Gamble if his concern was traffic safety.
“She was a distraction,” Babb said. “A distraction can be a hazard.” Gespass pointed out that Babb’s incident report invoked the legal definitions of obscenity: Why did he write that the penis costume was devoid of any “artistic value”? Babb replied that the protest took place at noon on a Saturday, in the midst of Little League baseball season, and on the same day as a funeral for a former mayor. “In that setting, it would be obscene,” he said.
Much of Babb’s testimony was easily refuted by the body camera footage. Babb claimed that Gamble resisted arrest, and that he only called for backup once she was on the ground. In reality, he called for backup almost immediately. Babb claimed that he told Gamble she was “not free to go.” In fact, she repeatedly asked, “Am I being detained?” but he ignored her, continuing to scold her instead. When Gespass asked why Babb grabbed his client from behind, Babb claimed that he would not have been able to get in front of her — there were too many people in the way.
But perhaps most preposterous was the claim that Babb’s actions were necessary to contain a situation that threatened to spiral out of control. “He made a clear professional effort to deescalate,” McDowell said. “She decided to escalate,” he said, “poking and prodding” in a deliberate attempt to get arrested.
Listening to this, Gamble seemed to have a hard time containing her emotions. Even in her face mask, she looked stunned, indignant, and increasingly agitated. Her bright blue eyes widened. Her eyebrows raised upward. Once or twice, she threw her arms up in exasperation and disbelief. On her wrist, a warning flashed across the screen of her Snoopy-themed smartwatch: Her heart rate was spiking.
For all the hilarity surrounding Fairhope’s “penis lady,” the arrest and its aftermath had taken a toll. Gamble’s adult daughter Adeana sat behind her mother at the trial, reading a library book during breaks in the testimony and occasionally communicating with her in sign language. She told me that Gamble had hit the back of her head when she fell to the ground, which was hard to see in the tape, and raised concerns about a possible concussion. She also worried about injury to Gamble’s wrists, especially because Gamble has long lived with rheumatoid arthritis. As a longtime ASL interpreter, “she’s always protected her hands,” Adeana explained.
But the real cost had been psychological. For about two months, Adeana said, Gamble was afraid to leave the house. When threatening mail arrived at the family’s home, Adeana suggested calling the police. “And she said, ‘What police?’” How could she expect law enforcement to protect her?
The story behind the penis suit further undermined the case against Gamble. According to Adeana, Gamble purchased it at the last minute as a backup. “She had ordered a sea turtle costume,” Adeana said. She’d planned to wear it while holding a sign that said “I love the Gulf of Mexico.” But the costume didn’t arrive on time. “So she had to scramble to find another one and a message to go with it.”
This context didn’t make it into the trial. Instead, Gespass called a slew of defense witnesses who attended the No Kings protest. One after another, they reiterated what was already clear: The rally had been peaceful. There was no threat to anyone’s safety. The only escalation came from the police.
It was after 5 p.m. when Snedeker made clear he’d seen enough. He had already tossed the charge of providing a false name to police. Now he was ready to rule on the rest.
Snedeker said that while he believed that police had probable cause to arrest Gamble, the city’s evidence was not strong enough to convict; Gamble was not guilty. The room broke into applause.
Snedeker tried to put a positive spin on things, speculating that some good might come of the episode. For instance, police now knew to place barricades between the streets and a protest — a common-sense precaution. But the judge’s no-harm, no-foul sentiments fell flat. Fairhope police had made the town a laughingstock. Now the city was about to be sued.
In fact, much of the trial seemed aimed at inoculating the city from a lawsuit. McDowell repeatedly emphasized that Babb’s actions were “reasonable” given the circumstances — the legal standard that judges use when dismissing claims of police abuse. Gespass also revealed that McDowell had offered a hasty plea deal just moments before the trial began. Gamble rejected it.
“As Alabamians, we dare defend our rights, and this fight is not over,” she announced after her acquittal. On Friday, she served notice of a lawsuit with the city clerk.
Whatever comes next, Adeana made clear that her mother was luckier than most. “What would have happened if she was a young Black man?” she asked. “What would have happened if she was a middle-aged Latina woman?” In Baldwin County, where Indivisible activists are focused on supporting immigrants targeted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Gamble’s prosecution has been a lesson unto itself. “If we don’t stand up and support our neighbors, who will?”
Adeana understood why Gamble was so widely described as a “grandmother” in the headlines following her arrest. But the label didn’t capture the full picture. “If anything, we’re getting more explosive in our older age,” Adeana said. “Because we’re tired of being pushed down.”
The post The Short and Ridiculous Trial of a Protester Arrested in an Inflatable Penis Costume appeared first on The Intercept.
A six-month-old girl was found alone in a stroller at a busy intersection in the famed Manhattan sightseeing area
Police are searching for the father of a baby left in a stroller in Times Square on Tuesday night.
The New York police department said they received an emergency call at about 11pm concerning the six-month-old girl, who was found at West 44the Street and Seventh Avenue. Police reported that she was unharmed, conscious and alert inside a stroller. The infant was transported to an area hospital.
Continue reading...Iran’s goal is to maintain chokehold on the global economy, even as some say it could run out of oil storage by Sunday
Donald Trump’s indefinite shelving of the plan to bomb Iran’s bridges and power stations on Tuesday night is being widely described as leaving the conflict in limbo, but that is anything but the truth.
Pakistan insists the prospect of talks in Islamabad has not evaporated, and positive messages are still being exchanged, but in the meantime the site of kinetic activity has switched from land to sea.
Continue reading...HAMBURG, Germany, April 22, 2026 — ISC High Performance is pleased to announce the winner of the ISC 2026 Hans Meuer Award for the best research paper of the year. The winning paper was selected from 122 full submissions, underscoring the competitiveness of the paper program.
The Hans Meuer Award, which comes with a cash prize of €3,000, has been awarded to “PICO: Performance Insights for Collective Operations,” authored by Saverio Pasqualoni from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) and Sapienza University of Rome, Tommaso Bonato and Torsten Hoefler from ETH Zürich, Lorenzo Piarulli and Daniele De Sensi from Sapienza University of Rome, and Marco Canini from KAUST.
The paper presents PICO, an open-source framework designed for analyzing and optimizing collective communication operations, which are a significant performance bottleneck in large-scale HPC and AI systems. By facilitating reproducible benchmarking and detailed performance analysis across hardware and software layers, PICO reveals that the default communication settings can be up to five times slower than the optimal configurations. Furthermore, the framework demonstrates that targeted tuning can reduce AI training times by up to 44%, offering practical insights to improve efficiency in next-generation computing environments.
This year, a total of 13 papers have been selected for presentation at the conference. All accepted papers will be published as open access in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library. The research paper committee for 2026 is chaired by Hatem Ltaief from KAUST, with Richard Vuduc from the Georgia Institute of Technology serving as co-chair.
Best Student Paper Award
The inaugural Best Student Paper Award has been presented to “Energy Efficiency in Analog Photonic Processors: Conversions and Losses at Scale.” This paper was authored by Niklas Bahr from Volkswagen Group Innovation and Heidelberg University, Daniel Steinmeyer from Volkswagen Group Innovation, and Wolfram Pernice from Heidelberg University.
This paper introduces a unified analytical framework for assessing the energy efficiency of analog photonic processors, which are a promising alternative to electronic computing for AI workloads. The study emphasizes the critical role of signal conversion and system-level losses, showing that while optical computation is inherently efficient, overall performance depends heavily on architecture and scaling effects. The authors identify specific conditions under which photonic systems can outperform conventional hardware and propose a hybrid electro-optical design to improve scalability and efficiency.
The Best Student Paper Award includes a €1,000 cash prize, generously sponsored by Jeff Hammond, Distinguished Engineer at NVIDIA.
Both winning papers will be presented at ISC High Performance 2026:
Attendees can add these sessions to their schedules via the event platform.
More from HPCwire: ISC 2026: Amanda Randles to Deliver Keynote on HPC for Vascular Digital Twins
About ISC High Performance
ISC High Performance is the leading global event for high performance computing, artificial intelligence, data analytics, and quantum computing. It brings together researchers, technology providers, and industry leaders to explore the latest advancements and practical applications shaping the future of computing.
Source: ISC High Performance
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Study used quantum tech to simulate particle collisions and push computing limits
April 22, 2026 — Researchers used quantum simulations to model the collisions of subatomic particles and open new avenues to understand the basics of hadron collisions, a key aspect of high-energy physics.
The results illustrate quantum computing’s potential to expand the range of solutions to scientific problems beyond those made possible by classical high-performance computers.

Quantum simulations supported by ORNL’s Quantum Computing User Program helped researchers model how a burst of energy evolved over time through a hadron collision, a key aspect of high-energy subatomic physics. Credit: Martin Savage, University of Washington.
The study relied on support from the Quantum Computing User Program (QCUP) and the Quantum Science Center, a National Quantum Information Science Research Center, at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
The research team, led by senior author Martin Savage, a professor of physics at the University of Washington, employed quantum circuits to simulate hadron collisions. Hadrons are subatomic particles composed of quarks and gluons — two types of smaller, indivisible subatomic particles commonly described as the building blocks of matter. The most familiar hadrons are the protons and neutrons found in an atom’s nucleus.
When hadrons collide, the reaction produces huge concentrations of energy and releases a blizzard of particles, all with various energies and compositions.
“These collisions are absolutely essential for a deeper understanding of high-energy physics and the study of matter in extreme conditions, but the size of the necessary equations for modeling them has always been far beyond the capabilities of current classical computers,” Savage said. “Now that quantum devices are available that offer hundreds of qubits for simulation, we wanted to see what could be done with this new set of tools.”
Classical computers store information in bits equal to either 0 or 1. That means a classical bit, like a light switch, exists in one of two states: on or off.
Quantum computing relies on quantum bits, or qubits, to store information. Qubits, unlike the binary bits used in classical computing, can exist simultaneously in more than one state via quantum superposition, which allows combinations of physical values to be encoded on a single object. That difference allows for a wider range of possible values that could make qubits a viable alternative for tackling problems that have been intractable on classical computers.
Savage and the research team obtained an allocation of time on IBM’s Torino quantum computer via QCUP, part of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF), which awards time on cloud-based commercial quantum processors around the country to support research projects. The Torino computer uses superconductors as qubits, one of several quantum computing approaches.
The team first prepared a 1D quantum ground state, or state with the lowest possible energy. The team then used 112 of Torino’s 133 qubits to simulate a quantized wave packet, or burst of energy, and evolved the packet forward in time to model the events of a hadron collision, ultimately employing 3,858 two-qubit gates. This approach allowed the team to track how the burst of energy evolved over time through the collision.
The results showed signatures of hadron propagation, or the movement of quarks and gluons observed during a collision. Those results compared favorably to the results achieved via classical numeric simulations, the authors wrote.
Current quantum systems tend to display high error rates, or noise, due to measurement errors, qubit degradation and other causes. The research team used IBM’s error-mitigation and uncertainty-quantification techniques to reduce noise and track any deviations from expected results.
The team hopes in future studies to evolve those initial states on quantum hardware, even with few qubits and high error rates. Error-correcting techniques on future quantum computers with many qubits could ultimately achieve greater accuracy than what’s currently possible on classical computers, Savage said.
“Such simulations could provide first glimpses … that are beyond present capabilities of classical computing,” the authors wrote in the study.
Besides Savage, the research team included Roland Farrell, Marc Illa and Anthony Ciavarella of the InQubator for Quantum Simulation.
Support for this research came from the DOE Office of Science’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research program, the DOE Quantum Science Center and the DOE Nuclear Physics InQubator for Quantum Simulation. The OLCF is a DOE Office of Science user facility at ORNL.
UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOE’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://energy.gov/science.
Source: ORNL
The post ORNL Study Explores Hadron Collision Dynamics Using Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
Christina Snow was one of two women injured when gunman opened fire on a family in Shreveport, killing eight
The mother of three children killed over the weekend in a mass shooting in Louisiana is reportedly recovering in hospital with a bullet still lodged in her face.
Jamarckus Snow told NBC News that his cousin, Christina Snow, was one of the two women who were shot and injured early Sunday when a gunman opened fire on his family in Shreveport. Police described the shooting as a “violent domestic incident” in which 31-year-old Shamar Elkins fatally shot eight children – including seven of his children and a cousin.
Continue reading...The focus on immigration and law enforcement comes one year after the department terminated or delayed funding for victims services, criminal justice researchers and more.
Donald Trump has indefinitely extended the US ceasefire with Iran after talks looked increasingly uncertain between both sides. Trump said he would ‘extend the ceasefire until such time as [Iran’s] proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other’. The US blockade remains, as does the closure of the strait of Hormuz by Iran, which seized two ships on Wednesday. Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour
Continue reading...Lord Robertson says diplomatic tone from White House is at ‘historic low’ and two allies are likely to keep diverging
Britain’s high military dependence on the US “is no longer tenable” and the UK has to become increasingly independent of the special relationship with Washington, a former Nato chief has warned.
Lord Robertson, who last week accused British leaders of a “corrosive complacency” towards defence, said on Wednesday the traditional allies were diverging over values – and that even after Donald Trump, the separation was likely to continue.
Continue reading...Carrying $20,000 in credit card debt isn't a personal failure, but getting out of it requires a solid strategy.
Fauci was joined by actor Jesse Eisenberg and top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer in reading for DC Climate Week
When Anthony Fauci put on a pair of sunglasses, the hall erupted in cheers and applause. “Ah, how terrible it is to know when, in the end, knowing gains you nothing,” Fauci said. “I knew this once, but must have somehow forgotten, or else I never would have come.”
At the age of 85, the scientist, doctor and public servant who rose to prominence during the Covid-19 pandemic was making his debut as an actor. Fauci played Tiresias, the blind prophet (hence the sunglasses), in a dramatic reading of Sophocles’s Oedipus the King at Georgetown University in Washington on Tuesday night.
Continue reading...Samuel Corner, 23, says he struck Sgt Kate Evans to protect co-defendant amid 2024 Elbit Systems raid near Oxford
A Palestine Action activist who struck a police officer with a sledgehammer during a protest at an Israeli-linked arms factory acted to protect a co-defendant he believed was being seriously hurt, a court has heard.
Samuel Corner, 23, is accused of causing grievous bodily harm with intent to Sgt Kate Evans during a raid on the Elbit Systems facility, in Filton, near Bristol, on 6 August 2024.
Continue reading...European Union formal procedures expected to conclude on Thursday as Druzhba pipeline reopens
During his press conference, Fico also doubles down on his criticism of the incoming Hungarian government led by Péter Magyar, in a further sign that the relations between Bratislava and Budapest could change dramatically in the next few months.
Fico has been close friends with Orbán, often teaming up with him on energy issues, but it doesn’t look like this Slovak-Hungarian partnership will continue under the new management in Budapest.
Continue reading...2026's wave of Razr phones could come in new colors with improved cameras. Plus, we now know the official launch date. Here's all we know about the upcoming Razr flip phones.
Agreement for urgently needed loan reached after Ukraine resumed pumping Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia
EU member states have reached agreement on unblocking an urgently needed €90bn (£78bn) loan for Kyiv and a new package of sanctions against Moscow after Ukraine resumed pumping Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia, prompting Budapest to lift its veto.
Cyprus, which holds the bloc’s rotating presidency, said member states’ ambassadors had agreed to launch “written procedures” for the final approval of the loan and the sanctions package, with formal signoff on both due by Thursday afternoon.
Continue reading...Anthropic’s decision to restrict access to its powerful new model increases fears about the advanced technology
Anthropic has ruled out releasing its latest AI model, Claude Mythos, to the public because of the threat it poses to global cybersecurity.
However, the US tech startup behind the Claude chatbot confirmed on Wednesday it was investigating a report that a group of people had gained unauthorised access to Mythos. The alleged incident has raised concerns over the pace of development and the ability of tech companies to keep their riskiest products out of the public domain. Here, we examine Mythos and its potential impact.
Continue reading...With a sleeker design and improved sound and noise canceling, the $130 Space 2 are an excellent, more affordable alternative to pricey flagship ANC models, earning a CNET Editors' Choice award.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The US military's massive $1.5 trillion budget request for the next fiscal year includes what Pentagon officials described as the largest investment in drone warfare and counter-drone technology in US history. The proposed spending on drone and autonomous warfare technologies within the FY2027 budget proposal for the US Department of Defense would surpass most countries' defense budgets and rank among the top 10 in the world for military spending, ahead of countries such as Ukraine, South Korea, and Israel. Specifically, the Pentagon is requesting $53.6 billion to boost US production and procurement of drones, train drone operators, build out a logistics network for sustaining drone deployments, and expand counter-drone systems to defend more US military sites. The funding request is budgeted under the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group (DAWG), an organization established in late 2025 that would see a massive budget increase after receiving about $226 million in the 2026 fiscal year budget. [...] Another $20.6 billion would help purchase one-way attack drones and drone aircraft developed through the US Air Force's Collaborative Combat Aircraft program, which is building drone prototypes capable of teaming up with human-piloted fighter jets. Part of this funding would also go toward defensive systems for countering small drones and the US Navy's Boeing MQ-25 drone designed to perform midair refueling of carrier-borne fighter aircraft to extend their strike ranges. Such drone-related spending even rivals the entire budget of the US Marine Corps. But the Pentagon has not said that it is creating a dedicated drone branch of the US military similar to the standalone Space Force. Pentagon officials emphasized that most of the money would go toward procuring drone and autonomous warfare technologies that already exist, and is largely separate from additional funding that would bolster US domestic manufacturing capacity to build such weapon systems. "That $70 billion is all going into existing systems and technologies," said Hurst. "The industrial base support is entirely separate." "The evolution we've seen in the battlefield is this evolution of technologies in the timeframe of weeks, not the typical years we see with our defense production," said Lt. Gen. Steven Whitney, director of force structure, resources, and assessment for the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff, during a Pentagon press briefing. "So it's really critical we work with industry to get that capability fielded."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In feat hailed as milestone in robotics, Sony AI’s Ace wins three out of five matches played under official rules
An AI-powered robot has beaten elite players at table tennis in a significant achievement for a machine faced with human athletes in a real-world competitive sport.
Named Ace, the robotic system developed by Sony AI, won three out of five matches against elite players, but lost the two it played against professionals, clawing back only one game in the seven contests.
Continue reading...Amid growing congressional scrutiny of his conduct, Patel has claimed he has ‘never been intoxicated on the job’
House judiciary Democrats have launched a formal inquiry into the alleged drinking habits of the FBI director, Kash Patel, demanding he complete a standardized alcohol abuse assessment and submit the results to Congress.
In a letter sent on Tuesday, led by Jamie Raskin, a Maryland representative, Democrats on the committee called on Patel to take the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (Audit) – a 10-question World Health Organization screening tool used to identify harmful patterns of drinking – along with a sworn statement attesting to his answers. Lawmakers also requested all security clearance questionnaires Patel has completed since taking the role.
Continue reading...Debt settlement and management both reduce debt, but their timelines and trade-offs differ significantly.
Amid a fragile ceasefire in the U.S. war on Iran, the Pentagon is playing a numbers game with American casualty statistics, adding and subtracting from the count as questions about the human toll mount.
On the day the ceasefire between the Trump administration and Iran took effect, the tally of U.S. dead and wounded was 385. Despite a pause in hostilities, the number had slowly risen to 428 on Monday, according to Pentagon statistics. Yet on Tuesday, the number of wounded-in-action troops declined by 15 troops without public comment from the War Department, dropping the total to 413. The count held steady on Wednesday, except for one public War Department tally that put the “grand total” of wounded and dead at 411.
The casualty conundrum came as President Donald Trump extended the truce with Iran on Tuesday just hours before it was set to expire.
Two Pentagon spokespersons said they were unable to field questions on the 15 casualties disappeared by the War Department on Tuesday, claiming only the “duty officer” could answer the question but that person was not at their desk. “As soon as the duty officer comes back to their desk, I can get this to them,” said one of them.
A day, and multiple follow-ups, later, The Intercept has yet to receive an explanation of why 15 wounded personnel were scrubbed from the War Department’s casualty rolls.
Whatever the actual number, the Pentagon’s official tally of dead and wounded military personnel is a gross undercount, stemming from what one U.S. government official has called a “casualty cover-up.” The Defense Casualty Analysis System, or DCAS, which tracks “deceased, wounded, ill or injured” service members for Congress and the president, is missing hundreds of known casualties.
“These numbers, it is obvious, are important. That they don’t want the public to have them says something,” the official said. “That’s the definition of a cover-up.”
The Intercept spoke with two people who used to work on DCAS who said that there was historically very little lag between a casualty occurring in the field and its inclusion in the system. “We got it very quickly. We could report the number of casualties very fast,” Joan Crenshaw, who worked on DCAS during the war on terror, told The Intercept, noting that data was refreshed daily.
The Office of the Secretary of War did not reply to questions about the slow accumulation of casualties over two weeks or the reason the number of those wounded-in-action has increased by 43, or 28, or 26 since the cessation of hostilities on April 8.
Since The Intercept began asking hard questions about undercounts of dead and wounded personnel, the slow-walking of statistics, faulty accounting measures, and arcane casualty-counting procedures, both U.S. Central Command and the Office of the Secretary of War have clammed up, failing to answer questions or grant interviews with experts. It follows long-running efforts by Trump to mislead the American people about U.S. military casualties.
Setting aside the question of disappearing wounded, the Pentagon’s official casualty statistics offer a distorted image of the conflict. While DCAS provides a running tally of “non-hostile” deaths — meaning those who died from accidents or by illness — it doesn’t include “non-hostile” injuries. The DCAS figures show that at least 63 Navy personnel have been wounded in action. Missing, however, are the more than 200 sailors treated for smoke inhalation or lacerations due to a March 12 fire that raged aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford which had been conducting round-the-clock flight operations, said Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine, to “project combat power.” The numbers also don’t include a sailor who suffered a non-combat-related injury aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln as it was involved in “strike missions in support of Operation Epic Fury” on March 25.
“My concern is why that piece is now missing.”
Crenshaw said that DCAS data during the 2000s and early 2010s included the numbers of wounded, injured, and ill. She questioned why the smoke inhalation injuries from the USS Ford were missing from the publicly reported data. “That should have been entered into DCAS,” she said. “My concern is why that piece is now missing.”
A second person who also worked on DCAS during the war on terror, who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to their employment, expressed similar concerns and questioned what the Pentagon “had to hide.”
For weeks, the Pentagon has failed to reply to repeated requests for comment on why DCAS provides counts of non-hostile war zone deaths but not non-hostile injuries or illnesses.
It’s well known that when operations’ tempo increases, such as during a war, troops’ mental and physical health suffers. And the military’s own studies have shown — as a 2025 article in Military Review, the U.S. Army’s professional journal, put it — the “profound impact of disease and nonbattle injury (DNBI) on lost duty days and overall lethality.
During the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, DNBI accounted for 80 to 85 percent of evacuations, significantly outpacing battle injury evacuations, even during spikes in combat. Another military study found that more than one-third of the casualties and almost 12 percent of all deaths of service members in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2003 through 2014 were caused by DNBI. And as a 2024 meta-analysis in Military Medicine observed, “disease and non-battle injury (DNBI) has historically been the leading casualty type among service members in warfare and a leading health problem confronting military personnel.”
In addition to ignoring untold numbers of sick and wounded personnel, the Pentagon has undercounted the dead during the Iran war.
“We will always honor the fallen,” Adm. Brad Cooper, the CENTCOM commander, announced at a Pentagon press conference last week. “And the 13 who lost their lives really helped steel the resolve and congeal the motivation of the forces.”
DCAS similarly lists 13 hostile and non-hostile U.S. deaths during the war and provides their names. But missing from Cooper’s count and the Pentagon tally is Maj. Sorffly Davius, a signals and communication officer with the New York Army National Guard who was assigned to the headquarters of the 42nd Infantry Division and reportedly died of sudden illness while on duty in Camp Buehring, Kuwait, on March 6, 2026.
“He passed away while deployed to Kuwait in support of Operation Epic Fury,” said Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., during a memorial service for Davius late last month. Caine, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also recognized Davius while “honoring our fallen” from the war.
For weeks, the Pentagon has ignored requests for comment on why Davius is missing from its casualty rolls.
During a Tuesday interview, Trump repeatedly said that 13 male service members had died during Operation Epic Fury. “We lost 13 men,” he said on CNBC. “But if somebody would have said, ‘We’ve done this and obliterated that country — obliterated it — and we lost 13 men,’ people would’ve said, ‘That’s not possible.’” According to DCAS, three of the dead are actually women: Maj. Ariana Gabriella Savino, Technical Sgt. Ashley Brooke Pruitt, and Master Sgt. Nicole Marie Amor.
Almost a decade ago, the Trump administration began taking steps to undermine transparency surrounding U.S. military casualties. Not long after Trump first took office, in 2017, the Pentagon stopped releasing immediate information about American combat deaths in Afghanistan — an unannounced shift in traditional policy that delayed casualty announcements for days. It followed an uptick of violence in the conflict.
After an Iranian missile attack on Al-Asad Air Base in Iraq on January 8, 2020, Trump peddled a complete fiction to the public. “No Americans were harmed in last night’s attack by the Iranian regime,” he said at the time. “We suffered no casualties.”
Soon, the Pentagon would acknowledge there were, indeed, casualties and proceeded to adjust the figure upward at least five times, with CENTCOM ultimately admitting that 110 troops suffered traumatic brain injuries. An inspector general report released in November 2021 indicated that the number of brain injuries may have been even higher, because “DoD cannot determine whether all Service members are being properly diagnosed and treated for TBIs in deployed settings.”
Alyssa Farah, a former Pentagon spokesperson, later revealed on a podcast that the Trump White House pressured the military to downplay those troops’ injuries. “We did get pushback from the White House of ‘Can you guys report this differently? Can it be every 10 days or two weeks, or we do a wrap-up after the fact?’” said Farah. “The White House would prefer if we did not give regular updates on it.” She added, “And I think that it ended up glossing over what ended up being very significant injuries on U.S. troops after the fact.”
On the campaign trail in 2022, Trump also peddled casualty disinformation, claiming that for 18 months of his presidency, the U.S. suffered no deaths in the Afghanistan war. “In 18 months in Afghanistan, we lost nobody,” he said. But an Associated Press investigation found that there was no year-and-half span during Trump’s first term when there were no combat deaths. The AP determined that there were, however, 45 combat deaths among U.S. service members reported in Afghanistan, as well as 18 “non-hostile” deaths during Trump’s first term.
Last spring, The Intercept reported on an effort by CENTCOM, the Pentagon, and the White House to keep casualties of the U.S. war against Yemen’s Houthis under wraps. It represented a departure from the Biden administration, when the Office of the Secretary of Defense and CENTCOM provided detailed data on attacks on military bases across the Middle East — including to this reporter. CENTCOM had provided the total number of attacks, breakdowns by country, and the total number injured. The Pentagon had offered even more granular data, providing individual synopses of more than 150 attacks, including information on deaths and injuries not only to U.S. troops, but even civilian contractors working on U.S. bases.
The post Pentagon Erases Wounded U.S. Troops From Iran War Casualty List: “Definition of a Cover-up” appeared first on The Intercept.
Donald Trump’s conflict with Iran could speed the EU’s green revolution – if panicking governments can hold their nerve on clean energy
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A surge in demand for electric vehicles across Europe may be evidence of what George Monbiot greeted as the silver lining of the Iran war. Sales of electric cars in continental Europe rose by 51% in March.
The International Energy Agency has called the disruption in the strait of Hormuz the “biggest energy crisis in history”, but it appears, on one level, to be accelerating Europe’s green revolution. Yet, even if car-owners are rushing to the EV showrooms, some European governments, facing a groundswell of anger over soaring petrol and gas prices, are at risk of sending the clean energy transition into reverse.
Continue reading...April 22, 2026 — In a first-of-its-kind collaboration, Pennsylvania’s seven research intensive universities have joined forces with the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC), the commonwealth of Pennsylvania and Team Pennsylvania to launch the Keystone AI + Quantum Factory, a statewide innovation network leveraging AI and quantum computing to translate university research into practical solutions for Pennsylvania’s key industries.
“This collaboration will serve as a powerful economic catalyst for Pennsylvania. It will transform groundbreaking research into solutions for the commonwealth’s energy, manufacturing, agricultural, life sciences, AI, and robotics sectors, while driving lasting job creation and building a future-proof workforce,” said James Barr von Oehsen, executive director of PSC, a joint computational research center with Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh.
The network partners CMU, Drexel University, Lehigh University, the Pennsylvania State University, Temple University, University of Pennsylvania and University of Pittsburgh to accelerate scientific discovery and commercially relevant innovation through AI and quantum research. The co-development of an efficient shared computing and data infrastructure that no single institution could build alone aims to unlock breakthroughs that drive industry innovation, economic growth and good jobs for Pennsylvania.
“This initiative will turn world-class research into new companies, high-quality jobs and economic opportunity across the commonwealth. The Shapiro administration will continue to spur innovation and create jobs and opportunity for Pennsylvanians,” said Jen Gilburg, Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development deputy secretary for technology and entrepreneurship.
This unified approach strengthens Pennsylvania’s ability to attract investment, keep its talent home and compete aggressively in the technologies shaping the next generation of economic stabilization. By connecting top research capacity with industry needs, it will support manufacturers in both rural and urban communities, boost competitiveness in crucial sectors like energy, agriculture and health care, expand access to advanced technologies previously unavailable for smaller businesses, create high-quality and family sustaining jobs, and build new career pathways for students.
“The Keystone AI + Quantum Factory shows what we can accomplish when we join forces across institutions and regions for the betterment of the commonwealth,” said Abby Smith, president & CEO of Team Pennsylvania.
The Keystone AI + Quantum Factory is built on three interconnected pillars designed to drive economic growth and success:
As artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and advanced technologies reshape how regions and businesses compete, Pennsylvania possesses the research strength, industrial base, and workforce foundation to lead. The Keystone AI + Quantum Factory ensures those assets are aligned intentionally and strategically to secure long-term viability.
Participating university leaders emphasized the power of collaboration and the impact in Pennsylvania. Theresa Mayer, CMU’s vice president for research said that access to advanced computing is quickly becoming the limiting factor in both AI and quantum research.
“This initiative changes that equation for Pennsylvania. By scaling access to both AI and quantum infrastructure across institutions, we are enabling more researchers and students to participate at the frontier — and to do so in ways that are collaborative, responsible and impactful,” she said.
Source: CMU
The post PSC, Pennsylvania Universities Form Keystone AI and Quantum Factory Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.
Prices almost double those in Rome three years ago
Organisers promise ‘enhanced onsite experience’ for fans
Ryder Cup Europe has doubled the cost of a ticket to attend next year’s marquee event when the US will seek to regain the trophy at Adare Manor in County Limerick.
Organisers will charge fans €499 (£434) for a daily ticket when a batch are released to those living in Ireland, where the centenary event is being held, on Friday. That is almost double the €260 face value spectators paid in Rome three years ago.
Continue reading...The company behind Truth Social has lost more than $1 billion since going public two years ago, while its shares have tumbled 58% during the past 12 months.
CHARLOTTE, N.C., April 22, 2026 — Honeywell (Nasdaq: HON) today announced that Quantinuum LLC (“Quantinuum” or the “Company”), which is majority owned by Honeywell, confidentially submitted a draft registration statement on Form S-1 to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on February 17, 2026, relating to the proposed initial public offering of Quantinuum’s common stock.
The number of shares to be offered and the price range for the proposed offering have not yet been determined. The offering is subject to market and other conditions and the completion of the SEC’s review process.
This press release is being made pursuant to, and in accordance with, Rule 135 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and shall not constitute an offer to sell, or the solicitation of an offer to buy, any securities. Any offers, solicitations or offers to buy, or any sales of securities, will be made in accordance with the registration requirements of the Securities Act.
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About Honeywell
Honeywell is an integrated operating company serving a broad range of industries and geographies around the world, with a portfolio that is underpinned by our Honeywell Accelerator operating system and Honeywell Forge platform. As a trusted partner, we help organizations solve the world’s toughest, most complex challenges, providing actionable solutions and innovations for aerospace, building automation, industrial automation, process automation, and process technology, that help make the world smarter and safer as well as more secure and sustainable.
About Quantinuum
Quantinuum is the world leader in quantum computing. The company’s quantum systems deliver the highest performance across all industry benchmarks. Quantinuum’s over 630 employees, including 370+ scientists and engineers, across the US, UK, Germany, and Japan, are driving the quantum computing revolution. For more information, please visit www.quantinuum.com.
Source: Honeywell
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The chief opponent of the loan, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, lost his campaign for reelection this month.
Israel’s perpetual mobilization: The limits of Netanyahu’s ‘Super-Sparta’ model Expert comment jon.wallace
Most Israelis support continued conflict with Iran and Hezbollah. But polls show fewer believe in the government’s ability to deliver victory.
As of April 2026, Israel’s security landscape is defined by a profound paradox. While the national mood is characterized by strategic fatigue due to a lack of decisive victories, Israeli society still maintains significant support for the multi-front campaign against Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon.
However, this endurance is being tested by a government attempting to institutionalize a state of permanent low/mid-intensity warfare – a vision labelled the ‘Super-Sparta’ model by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Recent polling suggests that while the public supports the war’s objectives, it increasingly resents the current government’s inability to define or deliver a decisive end-state. That has left the governing coalition unable to use the war to grow its support. Meanwhile, the opposition is gaining a few seats but still appears unlikely to form a government in this year’s elections without cooperation with Arab parties.
A central pillar of the early Israeli war effort was the strategic assumption that direct military pressure would catalyse the internal collapse of the Islamic Republic. After almost seven weeks of war, these assessments appear premature. Despite sustaining significant military blows, the Iranian regime has demonstrated asymmetric resilience.
At the same time, the nuclear issue, and specifically the fate of Iran’s 460 kilograms of enriched uranium, remains unresolved. Notably, any forthcoming agreement appears likely to resemble the 2015 JCPOA framework – the very deal the Netanyahu administration spent a decade dismantling.
According to recent INSS poll, an overwhelming 61 per cent of the Israeli public rejects the ceasefire, while just 29 per cent support it. The same poll shows that in the beginning of the war 69 per cent believed the Iranian regime will be ‘significantly damaged’ in the conflict. Today, only 30.5 per cent believe that damage has occurred.
That leaves the ceasefire with Iran – extended this week by US President Donald Trump – viewed in Israel as little more than a fragile tactical pause, with no decisive end to the war in sight and the IDF indicating that it is ready for the renewal of hostilities.
Direct negotiations between Israel and Lebanon took place in Washington on 14 April - drawing surprisingly little attention in Israeli media.
Sure, the expectations for the talks were and are still very low, and the difficulties are well known. The Lebanese government means well, but it is still very weak and unable to disarm Hezbollah – even after the group joined the Iranian war effort and dragged Lebanon into another war.
At the same time, the belief in eventual peace with neighbouring Arab countries – as reflected in many Israeli popular songs and folklore – seems to have died away. According to The Israel Democracy Institute poll, 80 per cent of Jewish respondents replied that warfare in Lebanon should continue regardless of developments in Iran. (66 per cent of Arabs were against continued fighting).
The sudden (yet expected) announcement by President Trump regarding the ceasefire in Lebanon left Netanyahu little room for manoeuvre: just a few days earlier, he had insisted that there was no ceasefire in Lebanon, implying the Lebanon campaign was not connected to that against Iran.
The Lebanon ceasefire brokered by the Trump administration is perceived in Israel mostly as an American imposition rather than a strategic choice. This has fuelled domestic criticism of Netanyahu’s government, particularly in northern Israel. Residents of border towns and kibbutzim, who remain under the threat of Hezbollah fire, view the government’s policies as a failure of sovereignty. Many demand to renew the fighting ‘until the job is done’.
Simultaneously, the government is utilizing the regional focus on Iran to accelerate hardline policies in the West Bank.
The displacement of Palestinian communities and the escalation of state-backed violence have continued largely unabated, further complicating the prospects for long-term regional stability.
The Israeli security cabinet approved the legalization of over 30 new settler outposts and farms in the West Bank last month, accelerating the process of de-facto annexation.
In Gaza, the discourse has shifted back toward an inevitable return to large-scale warfare.
The failure of the US-led Board of Peace to secure the disarmament of Hamas, coupled with Hamas’s refusal to give up its remaining military capabilities, has created a security vacuum.
Despite the current relative calm, it is clear that none of the fronts – in Lebanon, Gaza, West Bank, Syria, Iran or Yemen – has been fully closed. Any of them might reopen on any given day. And it seems that Benjamin Netanyahu, a man who was for many years referred to as ‘risk-averse’, now prefers this state of constant warfare of different intensity.
His concept of ‘Super-Sparta’ – a society in a state of eternal military readiness – has moved from a rhetorical provocation to a concrete policy framework. The government is currently signalling an intent to normalize extended military service and a permanent high-alert status for the civilian economy.
However, this model faces a fundamental obstacle: the limits of Israel’s human and material resources: The IDF long ago recognized that it is facing a significant manpower crisis. 15,000 soldiers are missing, according to the Chief of Staff.
The reliance on a weary reserve pool, mobilized repeatedly since 2024, has led to economic strain and societal erosion. There is a growing disconnect between the government’s desire for a ‘never-ending’ war of attrition, its inability to draft Ultraorthodox citizens into the Israeli Defense Forces, and the public’s demand for clear, tangible results. The Super-Sparta vision requires a level of military capacity that the current Israeli infrastructure simply cannot sustain without total socio-economic restructuring.
In the shadow of war, the government was at least able to pass its budget without losing the Ultraorthodox party. That is a significant achievement that allows it to continue functioning until elections, due later in the year.
But the latest polling data from mid-April 2026 reveals a significant shift in the Israeli electorate. An April 16 Haaretz/Channel 12 poll projects the current coalition would plummet to 51 seats in the Knesset in an election held now. Maariv places it even lower, at 49.
According to the Channel 12 poll, the opposition has surged to a formidable 69 seats – including Arab parties – while the Jewish opposition holds 59 seats, putting it on the cusp of a majority without requiring a coalition with non-Zionist factions.
This leaves Israel standing at a critical juncture. The attempt to transform the state into a ‘Super-Sparta’ is an acknowledgment that short, decisive conflicts have been replaced by regional escalation.
Reuters-Ipsos, AP-NORC and NBC polls show approval in mid-30s, with economy, Iran and immigration concerns
A trio of political polls indicate public approval of Donald Trump’s management of the US economy, immigration and the Iran conflict is slipping, flashing warning lights for Trump-aligned Republican candidates with six months to go until the US midterm elections.
Polls by Reuters-Ipsos poll, Strength in Numbers-Verasight and AP-NORC had the president’s approval rating hovering in the mid-30s, at 36%, 35% and 33% respectively, which are near his lowest numbers.
Continue reading...Karex, which calls itself the "world's largest condom maker," could hike the company's prices by 20% to 30%, its CEO told Reuters.
Hi everyone,
I’d like to share an incident I experienced and get some feedback from more experienced riders here.
**Background:**
I’ve been involved in board and balance-based sports for most of my life — 25+ years of kiteboarding, 30+ years of cycling, 10+ years of squash (competitive level), and mountaineering. I’m very comfortable with balance, weight distribution, and handling speed.
I got my Onewheel XR Classic at the end of last year and have been riding almost daily since. I genuinely enjoy the product — it’s one of the most fun riding experiences I’ve had.
---
**The incident:**
In December 2025, I was riding home from a pickleball session.
- Speed: ~16 mph (battery 45- Terrain: flat, smooth paved path in a park
- Riding: normal, not accelerating aggressively
Right before the fall, I heard an audible alert.
**Immediately after that, the wheel abruptly stopped rotating, which caused an instant loss of control and a forward fall.**
This did not feel like a typical pushback to me — there was no gradual resistance or time to react.
I ended up with bruises, arm impact, and damage to my gear (watch, backpack, clothing).
The front (nose) of the board also has visible impact damage consistent with a strong forward hit.
---
**Future Motion evaluation:**
I sent the board in for inspection.
After ~40+ days of testing, their conclusion was:
- No error codes
- No abnormalities found
- Unable to reproduce the issue
They suggested the incident was likely:
> “a combination of pushback and improper foot placement”
They also mentioned they are unable to provide more detailed diagnostic data beyond what was already shared.
---
**My question to the community:**
I’m trying to understand this better.
Has anyone experienced something similar where:
- there were no error codes
- but the wheel stopped abruptly (or felt like a sudden loss of torque)?
Also curious:
How reliable are the internal logs in capturing very short interruptions (if those even get recorded)?
---
I’m not here to blame the product — I actually enjoy riding it a lot.
Just trying to figure out whether:
- I missed something
- or this is something others have experienced as well
One more thing I’m trying to understand:
After sending the board in and waiting over 40 days, the final response I received was essentially “no issues found” and no detailed ride data was provided.
For those who have dealt with similar situations:
– Is this the typical level of support and transparency from Future Motion?
– Or would you expect a more detailed technical breakdown in a case like this?
Genuinely curious about others’ experiences.
Appreciate any insights 🙏
TOKYO, April 22, 2026 — QC Ware, a leading provider of industry-disrupting quantum technology, quantum-inspired machine learning, and quantum chemistry simulation solutions, has announced the 2026 Q2B Tokyo Conference (Q2B26) taking place June 4-5, 2026.
As the Q2B26 Tokyo Co-host and Platinum Sponsor, Quemix will contribute to discussions and demonstrations aimed at accelerating the adoption of quantum technologies in various industries, spanning pharmaceutical, biotech, finance, automotive, logistics, and artificial intelligence. “Quemix is proud to once again serve as a co-organizer for Q2B Tokyo, a venue that brings together the most significant global advancements in quantum technology. Our sessions will dive deep into these trends, offering a closer look at a variety of practical use cases implemented on real quantum devices.
“We look forward to sharing our latest progress as we drive the practical realization of quantum computing. Please join us at Q2B to witness these breakthroughs in person.” said Quemix CEO and President, Yu-ichiro Matsushita. “A key highlight will be Quemix’s presentation of six industrial use cases, demonstrating tangible progress in real-world quantum applications across the automotive and materials industries.”
The conference, being held at the Grand Hyatt Tokyo, will dive deep into all major quantum technologies and themes: computing, sensing, communications, security, error correction, quantum AI, HPC integration, and more. Attendees can expect to see featured keynotes, industry case studies, and discussions led by experts at the forefront of quantum R&D from some of the world’s leading businesses and institutions across government, academia, and industry.
“Our team at QC Ware is really excited to see all of you at the 5th annual Q2B Tokyo conference! Quantum advantage is getting closer every day, and at this event you will be getting practical updates on progress by many of the leading QC hardware and software developers. If you are working in an enterprise that will be impacted by AI and quantum computing, then attending this event is a must!” said QC Ware CEO, Matt Johnson. “The quantum ecosystems of Japan and Asia are incredibly dynamic and exciting, and the work undertaken to directly and indirectly create that environment cannot be overstated.”
Through keynotes, business seminars, breakout sessions, technical workshops, and panel discussions, attendees at Q2B Tokyo will learn about the latest hardware and software breakthroughs as well as applications in optimization, chemistry simulations, pharmaceutical and materials discovery, error correction, and quantum AI. Additionally, the conference features several panels and sessions from field practitioners, end users, and experts across industries. Notable speakers include:
Attendees will also have the opportunity to explore the exhibit floor with vendors showcasing their latest advancements in quantum technologies, featuring: Quemix, Classiq, Denso, Quantinuum, SQAI, QuEra Computing, Qedma, Quantum Machines, IonQ, Fujitsu, JHPC RIKEN Softbank, Quantum Computing Inc, IQM, Q-CTRL, D-Wave Quantum, Quanmatic, Toyota Tsusho, Lquom, Norma, Alpine Quantum Technologies, Q-STAR, Qunova Computing and more.
Find the agenda, featured speakers, sponsors, and register to attend Q2B26 Tokyo here.
More from HPCwire: QC Ware and CQE to Co-Host Q2B x Chicago Quantum Summit
About QC Ware
QC Ware is a quantum and classical computing SaaS company focused on delivering enterprise value through cutting-edge computational technology. The company develops enterprise-grade applications that run on state-of-the-art classical computing hardware and algorithms targeting near-term quantum hardware. Its flagship product, Promethium, is an advanced molecular discovery platform that leverages quantum chemistry to accelerate research across pharmaceutical, materials science, and chemical industries. With specialization in machine learning and chemistry simulation applications, the team bridges the gap between theoretical quantum computing and practical business solutions. Composed of some of the industry’s foremost experts, QC Ware is headquartered in Palo Alto, California, with a European subsidiary in Paris. The company also organizes Q2B, a global series of conferences for industry, practitioner, and academic quantum computing communities. Learn more at www.qcware.com.
Source: QC Ware
The post QC Ware Announces 5th Q2B Tokyo Conference Set for June 4-5, 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
Enabling the first commercial testing facility to validate quantum timing technologies
BOULDER, Colo., April 22, 2026 — The Colorado Quantum Incubator (COQI) today announced the development of the nation’s first open-access, commercially available third-party validation testbed for quantum timing technologies. This facility will establish a pivotal new capability for U.S. quantum commercialization upon its launch.
In partnership with Stout Street Capital, Xairos Systems, and BioMed Realty, COQI is pioneering a dedicated validation environment located in BioMed Realty’s Flatiron Park, home to the quantum incubator, where companies, research institutions, and government agencies can, for the first time, test and demonstrate precision timing technologies for the commercial, defense, and research markets.
“Precision timing underpins virtually every piece of modern digital infrastructure, from financial trading platforms and data centers to power grids and telecommunications networks. Yet no third-party facility currently exists in the U.S. to validate the next generation of quantum timing solutions. COQI is closing that gap,” says Chris Muldrow, Executive Director of COQI.
The market pull for this step change technology is evidenced by current and prior engagement in Xairos’ platform from 10+ U.S. and international government agencies such as the U.S. Space Force’s SpaceWERX, European Space Agency, U.K. Ministry of Defence; 10+ industry leaders including Viasat and Vodafone; and research organizations including University of Colorado, University of Texas Austin, Cranfield University, and more.
Once operational, the testbed will leverage Xairos Systems’ Quantum Time Transfer technology to enable live demonstration of enterprise-grade timing synchronization via entangled photons transmitted over both fiber and free-space optical connections. Organizations will be able to plug and play, move beyond prototype-stage development, and stress-test their innovations against real-world infrastructure demands in a third-party validation environment. Without a dedicated proving ground, quantum startups are currently iterating and demonstrating capabilities on an ad-hoc basis, which leads to long and slow interaction cycles.
The facility also addresses a critical national security need. By providing validated, accessible testing infrastructure, COQI is accelerating the development of a domestic quantum technology supply chain. This validation facility will benchmark and scale quantum startups developing cutting-edge solutions that serve sectors such as health, energy, high-speed internet, positioning, telecommunications, and navigation – strengthening U.S. leadership in advancing quantum technologies at a moment of intense global competition.
The Colorado Quantum Incubator brings together Colorado’s leading research, commercialization, and investment organizations, aligning the missions of the COQI, BioMed Realty, Xairos Systems, and Stout Street Capital to advance quantum innovation from lab to market.
Perspectives from the Partners
“COQI is on a mission to close the ‘missing middle’ – the gap between breakthrough physics and reliable, field-ready systems,” said Chris Muldrow, Executive Director of the Colorado Quantum Incubator (COQI). “Boulder has more than 60 years of quantum innovation behind it, and COQI is the next chapter in that story. This testbed gives Xairos and organizations like it the infrastructure to move from lab-bench prototypes to field-ready products.”
“The vulnerability of our global timing and data networks is a silent threat to national security,” said David Mitlyng, CEO of Xairos Systems. “By launching this timing facility, we are moving from theory to reality, providing a platform where exquisite quantum timing security isn’t just a concept, but a commercial utility. We invite forward-thinking telecommunications companies and large technology firms to connect with Xairos and leverage this proving ground to validate their systems as we collectively define the next generation of resilient digital connectivity.”
“We look for next-gen technology platforms, companies that aren’t just delivering marginal improvements, but step changes, said John Francis, Managing Director at Stout Street Capital. “Quantum technologies enable these more dramatic increases in performance across industry. This center opens many avenues for engagement by industry, startups, and researchers and accelerates the adoption of quantum technologies; it’s a value-creation engine that will attract global talent and capital to the Mountain West.”
“Frontier technologies require reliable real estate space where performance can be rigorously tested under real-world conditions,” said Jon Bergschneider, President of West Coast Markets at BioMed Realty. “This testbed delivers purpose-built infrastructure that helps bridge the gap between prototype and production. We are proud to continue supporting the advancement of critical quantum technologies at Flatiron Park.”
About The Colorado Quantum Incubator
COQI is a purpose-built facility in Boulder, Colorado, designed to accelerate the commercialization of quantum technologies by providing startups with access to world-class lab space, equipment, and a vibrant ecosystem. To learn more, visit quantumincubator.org.
About Stout Street Capital
Stout Street Capital is a Colorado-based venture capital firm investing in Colorado’s deep-tech companies through its Unmet Frontier Fund, which focuses on pure-play enabling technologies such as quantum, AI, robotics, and advanced materials, as well as their applications in sectors such as Energy, Health, and Aerospace. For more information, visit stoutstreetcapital.com.
About Xairos Systems
Xairos is developing a global resilient space-based timing architecture using Quantum Time Transfer (QTT), a protocol invented and patented by the Xairos team. Xairos is commercializing QTT to develop the next generation of Position, Navigation, and Timing (PNT), with the accuracy and security needed for future networks and applications. For more information, visit Xairos.com.
About BioMed Realty
BioMed Realty, a Blackstone Real Estate portfolio company, is the largest privately owned owner, developer, and operator of real estate serving the world’s leading innovation, technology, and life science companies in the United States and United Kingdom. The Company operates 17.3 million square feet of purpose-built laboratory and office space in the world’s top innovation hubs, including Boston/Cambridge, San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle, Boulder, and Cambridge, U.K. With an additional 1.5 million square feet of Class A properties under development, BioMed Realty delivers flexible, reliable, and sustainable environments engineered to accelerate discovery and keep world-changing work moving. Backed by more than 20 years of experience, BioMed Realty provides the confidence and partnership that fuel life-enhancing and world-changing innovation. To learn more, visit biomedrealty.com.
Source: Xairos Systems
The post Colorado Quantum Incubator Announces Third-Party Testbed for Quantum Timing Tech appeared first on HPCwire.
Chadwick Scott Willacy, 58, received a three-drug injection and was pronounced dead at 6:15 p.m. at Florida State Prison near Starke for the 1990 killing of Marlys Sather.
From mega hit Clair Obscur to the genius Blue Prince, the winners at this year’s event help me refocus on why games really matter
The 22nd Bafta game awards were on Friday, and Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 took the biggest game prize. This makes it only the second game ever (after Baldur’s Gate 3) to win top prize at all five of the main awards shows: the Dice awards in Vegas; the Game awards in LA; the public-voted Golden Joysticks in the UK; the Game Developers Choice awards in San Francisco; and now London’s Baftas, the final event to celebrate the gaming output of 2025.
I’ll be honest: I was hoping for a different winner. Blue Prince, an eight-year project by the visual artist and former film-maker Tonda Ros, is the most extraordinary thing I played last year. It’s the game where you inherit a sprawling mansion that changes shape every day, and you must navigate its ever-shifting blueprint to find its secret room. I went so deep on this game that I was still playing it and thinking about it weeks after solving its initial mystery, piecing together bits of opaque lore from Reddit threads. I think it deserved at least one best game award (apart from ours).
Continue reading...Players who preorder at least the $80 edition of the game can try out a short beta demo of the upcoming action RPG, due out next year.
Exclusive: Internal concerns over allowing US firm linked to ICE and Israeli military to process highly sensitive data
The Metropolitan police has held talks with Palantir that could lead to the London force buying the US spy-tech company’s AI technology to automate intelligence analysis for criminal investigations, the Guardian has learned.
Palantir, whose software is used by Donald Trump’s ICE immigration enforcement programme and the Israeli military, demonstrated its systems to senior officers in the intelligence division at the UK’s largest police force last month. Intelligence staff have been tasked with finding intelligence systems that AI could automate to increase productivity.
Continue reading...Google's got two new chips to build AI models and updates to the tech stacks businesses use to run AI.
‘The first resident that Emma – a social robot – was introduced to was called Peter. After that, Emma assumed they were all called Peter, which everyone found hilarious. Then she broke down’
One morning in July 2025, I arrived in the small, quiet town of Albershausen in south-west Germany. It has only around 4,000 inhabitants. I went to visit a care home where they were piloting a social robot named Emma. A group of residents sat in a circle while Emma stood in the middle. She’s the height of a toddler, with big googly eyes, and was wearing a red hat knitted for her by one of the careworkers. The first resident she was introduced to was called Peter and, after he introduced himself, Emma assumed they were all called Peter, which everyone found hilarious. Then Emma broke down suddenly and the illusion was shattered.
Later on, Emma was working again, and I found her in the dining room with Waltraud, the resident in this photo. It was a calmer, more focused moment. I decided to sit them across from one another at eye level, Waltraud facing Emma. There was a soft light in the room and they both seemed very present with one another. There are also paradoxes in the picture: the large windows showing the landscape outside, contrasting with the inside, which is ordered and clinical. In the middle you have an encounter between an elderly woman and a machine designed for companionship. They began speaking about picking flowers, about their favourite flowers – Waltraud is passionate about them, and Emma has an endless amount of knowledge due to her artificial intelligence. She can remember past conversations and recognise faces, too.
Continue reading...The U.S.-Iran war isn't just driving prices higher for gasoline. Petrochemicals derived from oil and natural gas go into making more than 6,000 consumer products, the Department of Energy says.
The second lady has launched a serviceable children’s podcast. That seems strategic given JD Vance’s potential presidential run
I know that child labour is generally frowned upon but, in this economy, sometimes you’ve got to put your kid to work. Last week I gave my four-year-old an important assignment: she had to watch all four episodes of Usha Vance’s new video podcast and provide a detailed review. Forty minutes later, her verdict was in: “I love it, mama.”
To be fair, my kid loves pretty much anything on a screen. Still, I didn’t hate Usha’s new children’s podcast either. Launched a couple of weeks ago, Storytime With the Second Lady is aimed at promoting literacy. In the first instalment, Usha reads The Tale of Peter Rabbit; in subsequent episodes, a celebrity guest reads their favourite book.
Continue reading...The company says most of its mobile customers spend 90% of the time connected to its Wi-Fi network, in and out of their homes.
| I hope I don’t void my warranty when I ride through mud with them. They just did a new board comparison video so I doubt its a new board/accessory. [link] [comments] |
Local officials and witnesses say attackers shot at students first then at those who arrived to help
Two Palestinians, including a 14-year-old schoolboy, have been killed in the occupied West Bank after Israeli settlers opened fire near a school amid mounting assaults on education in the territory, witnesses and local officials have said.
The Palestinian health ministry said Aws al-Naasan, 14, and Jihad Abu Naim, 32, were killed in the attack on the village of al-Mughayyir, in which three others were wounded. The head of the local council told Reuters that Israeli settlers had entered the village and opened fire near a school – first at students, and later at others who arrived at the scene. Witnesses said settlers were later followed by Israeli soldiers.
Continue reading...Mathieu Kassovitz, who is currently working on an AI-enabled film, also dismisses concerns over copyright
His hit film was a masterpiece capturing the gritty truth of the Paris suburbs, but the director of La Haine is now sold on an AI-generated future for cinema.
Mathieu Kassovitz has called the technology the “the last artistic tool we need” and dismissed concerns about AI stealing other artists’ intellectual property, telling the Guardian: “Fuck copyright.”
Continue reading...Effort takes holistic approach to high ACL injury rates
Fifpro first launched project in England in 2024
The National Women’s Soccer League is joining the Women’s Super League and the sport’s global players’ union in a three-year research initiative aimed at reducing anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in the women’s game.
ACL injuries are between two and six times more likely to occur in women than men. While that disparity has often been attributed to biological differences, many in the sport have advocated for a zoomed-out understanding that considers the environmental factors that could contribute to higher injury rates, from pitch standards and weight-room access to schedule congestion and cleat quality.
Continue reading...Day of action to support workers set for 1 May – who is organizing May Day Strong, and how can people join?
Anyone who attended one of the 3,000 No Kings protests in March might have learned of the latest effort to protest against Trump administration policies: May Day Strong.
The single-day protest on 1 May is taking its cue from the massive day of action that shut down Minneapolis in January by asking Americans not to shop, work or go to school. Rallies, marches and teach-ins will also take place across the country.
Continue reading...April 22, 2026 — The Expanse supercomputer at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University of California School of Computing, Information and Data Sciences has played an important role in helping researchers design the next generation of batteries that could make large‑scale energy storage cheaper and more sustainable. Today’s grid and electric vehicles rely heavily on lithium‑ion batteries, but lithium is relatively expensive and unevenly distributed globally. Sodium, by contrast, is abundant and inexpensive — the same element found in table salt — which makes sodium‑based batteries an appealing option for big battery installations that back up solar and wind power. The challenge has been getting sodium batteries to deliver enough power while also lasting for many charge–discharge cycles.

X-ray map showing how sodium, nickel, manganese, titanium and oxygen are spread throughout the new battery material proposed in the UC San Diego study that utilized SDSC’s Expanse. Credit: Advanced Energy Materials.
In this new study, scientists from UC San Diego worked with international colleagues to better understand the battery’s positive electrode, known as the cathode. They started from an existing sodium‑based material and experimented with adding very small amounts of lithium and titanium, like adjusting the seasoning in a recipe.
“These subtle changes turned out to matter a lot: the modified material could store more energy and remained stable even when the battery was pushed to higher voltages, a key requirement for getting more energy out of each charge,” explained Professor Shirley Meng, who is the faculty director for the Laboratory for Energy Storage and Conversion at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering Aiiso Yufeng Li Family Department of Chemical and Nano Engineering and a professor at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering. “In lab tests, the improved cathode held significantly more charge and kept most of its capacity after many cycles, even under demanding high‑voltage conditions that usually cause sodium materials to break down more quickly.”
To understand why such tiny tweaks made such a big difference, Shyue Ping Ong, also an adjunct professor in the chemical and nano engineering department at UC San Diego and a collaborator on the project, turned to SDSC’s Expanse. Using U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS allocations on Expanse, Ong’s team ran large‑scale simulations of how sodium ions move through the material’s crystal structure and how that structure responds as the battery charges and discharges using AI models known as foundation potentials.
Foundation potentials are a recent innovation pioneered by Ong’s group that enable atomistic simulations at a fraction of the cost of expensive calculations. Ong said that the simulations helped explain why the lithium‑ and titanium‑enhanced material allowed sodium to travel more freely and prevented the crystal framework from collapsing during operation.
“By narrowing down promising designs on Expanse before heading into the lab, we were able to move much faster than if we had relied on trial and error alone,” Ong said. “Our results point to a practical pathway for improving sodium‑ion batteries, making it more feasible to build large battery farms that store renewable energy and release it when the sun isn’t shining or the wind isn’t blowing.”
Ong said that this study also highlights a broader shift in energy research: supercomputers like Expanse, combined with AI models such as foundation potentials, are becoming essential tools for discovering and refining new materials, turning complex atomic‑scale physics into actionable design rules that can accelerate the transition to a cleaner, more resilient power grid.
The work on Expanse was supported by NSF ACCESS (allocation no. DMR150014).
Source: Kimberly Mann Bruch, SDSC
The post SDSC Expanse Supports AI-Driven Design of Sodium-Ion Battery Materials appeared first on HPCwire.
The Climate Briefing: Oil and gas producers in the Gulf: a deep dive (part 1 of 2) Audio thilton.drupal
Anna and Bhargabi are joined by Professor Paul Stevens to discuss how oil and gas have shaped the politics, economies and geopolitical influence of the countries in the region.
All eyes are currently on the Gulf due to the US-Israel war with Iran and the disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz. In this two-part series, the Climate Briefing co-hosts and their guests take a deep dive into the region, which plays a crucial role in the global supply of oil and gas.
How did the Gulf countries become such dominant fossil fuel exporters? What has this dominance meant for their geopolitical influence? What role have oil and gas played in conflicts and coups in the region? And what might the future hold for the Gulf producers?
In the first part of the series, Anna and Bhargabi delve into the history of the region together with Professor Paul Stevens (Associate Fellow at Chatham House; Emeritus Professor at the University of Dundee; Distinguished Fellow at the Al-Attiyah Foundation; and Distinguished Fellow at the Institute of Energy Economics), who has published extensively on energy economics, the international petroleum industry, economic development issues, and the political economy of the Gulf.
The second part of the series will focus on how the Gulf producers are approaching – and may be affected by – the energy transition, as well as what the long-term implications of the Iran war might be for the region.
The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world.
You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
CHICAGO, April 22, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum computing and quantum sensing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced it has secured a $2 million contract from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) through the Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program. The award supports the development of Multistaq, a next-generation platform designed for heterogeneous quantum systems composed of multiple qubit modalities. These heterogeneous quantum systems have the potential to accelerate scientific discovery, enhance national security decision-making, and support the development of more efficient energy, materials, and infrastructure solutions.
Infleqtion was selected to contribute to Technical Area 1, which focuses on breakthrough quantum circuit compilers that maximize the capabilities of heterogeneous qubit platforms. Multistaq builds on the principles behind the company’s industry-leading Superstaq multimodal compiler, implementing cross-modality and cross-layer optimization techniques to support next-generation quantum architectures.
By enabling efficient compilation across multiple quantum modalities, Multistaq is expected to unlock practical benefits from the advanced interconnect technologies under development in Technical Area 2. This approach aims to improve overall system performance and enable complex, high-value applications to run more efficiently in terms of time, energy, and computational resources.
“Building on the success of Superstaq, we are advancing the software foundation needed to unlock real-world performance gains and accelerate the deployment of mission-relevant quantum capabilities,” said Pranav Gokhale, Chief Technology Officer at Infleqtion. “We are combining the strengths of multiple qubit technologies under a unified platform In order to define the next phase of scalable quantum computing systems.”
Infleqtion’s participation in the 24-month HARQ program is a testament to its established “write-once, target-all” software foundation, which allows users to develop quantum applications that can be deployed across multiple hardware platforms. The effort will be supported by a world-class team spanning industry and academia, including collaborators from the University of Chicago.
With deep expertise in full-stack quantum system design and a strategic focus on hardware-software co-design, Infleqtion is uniquely positioned to advance scalable heterogeneous quantum computing.
To learn more about Infleqtion’s quantum computing software and hardware solutions, visit Infleqtion.com.
More from HPCwire: DARPA Launches HARQ Program to Advance Heterogeneous Quantum Architectures
About Infleqtion
Infleqtion, Inc. (NYSE: INFQ) is a global leader in quantum technology, delivering neutral-atom solutions for quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. With a product portfolio spanning quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, Infleqtion’s full-stack approach combines high-performance hardware with the company’s proprietary Superstaq quantum computing software platform. Infleqtion’s systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of War, NASA, the U.K. government, and in multiple collaborations with NVIDIA. Infleqtion, in collaboration with NVIDIA, published the world’s first demonstration of a materials science application using logical qubits. With operations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, Infleqtion meets the demands of government and commercial customers across the space, defense, energy, finance and telecommunications sectors.
Source: Infleqtion
The post Infleqtion Selected by DARPA to Advance Next-Gen Heterogeneous Quantum Software appeared first on HPCwire.
Dinnerly is tied for the cheapest meal kit delivery service on the market and offers over 100 recipes each week. Here's how it fared in our latest test.
Authorities have traced the gun used in Sunday’s deadly shooting to a 56-year-old Shreveport man, who said it had been taken from his truck.
Brussels will relax state aid rules to allow member countries to offer ‘targeted and temporary’ support
The EU will cut electricity taxes and provide consumers with fresh incentives to ditch fuel-burning cars and boilers, the European Commission has announced, as the energy crisis from the Iran war speeds a shift to a clean economy.
The plan, which foresees tweaking rules so that electricity is taxed less than oil and gas, aims to bring down bills while encouraging the move away from polluting devices that prolong reliance on foreign fuels.
Continue reading...FAA investigates event of one jet flying too close to another, though both crews responded to alerts and landed safely
The US Federal Aviation Administration said on Tuesday it was investigating a close call at New York’s John F Kennedy international airport between two passenger jets.
“The crew of Republic Airways Flight 4464 performed a go-around at John F Kennedy International Airport after missing the intended approach path and flying too close to Jazz Aviation Flight 554, which was cleared to land on a parallel runway. Both flight crews responded to onboard alerts,” the FAA said in a statement about the Monday incident.
Continue reading...The assault-style rifle used to kill eight children in a Louisiana mass shooting was stolen from a truck, the gun's previous owner said.
The parents of Sheridan Gorman, an 18-year-old Loyola University Chicago freshman who was fatally shot last month, are speaking publicly for the first time.
Iran renews attacks in the Strait of Hormuz after Trump says he's extending a ceasefire indefinitely, as thousands more U.S. forces head for the region.
Virginia voters on Tuesday approved a new congressional map that would give Democrats an advantage in 10 House districts, leaving just one safe Republican seat, CBS News projects.
Joe Ceballos, a green card holder from Mexico and former mayor of Coldwater, Kansas, pleaded guilty to misdemeanors but avoided jail time for voting as a noncitizen.
Residents waking to find line has moved overnight and they are now in free-fire zone as army takes more territory
Israeli forces have been moving an agreed truce line in Gaza westwards over the six months since the ceasefire, expanding their zone of control and making the state of limbo ever more dangerous for Palestinians.
The “yellow line” agreed in the US-brokered ceasefire in October was supposed to be temporary pending further Israeli withdrawals, but the partially observed truce has stalled after its first phase amid disagreements over the disarming of Hamas, and continued Israeli bombardment of Gaza.
Continue reading...You could reach job-level proficiency in a language just by using the free version of Duolingo.
It's been an eventful April for Game Pass.
The reckless Iran war shows up for most Americans as a number at a gas pump, not as images or moral reckoning
The airport in Las Vegas last Friday afternoon was what you might expect for a WrestleMania weekend. Packed terminal. Delays stacking up. Nobody going anywhere. Then we heard why.
Air Force One was on the ground. Everything stopped. No one was taking off until the president finished doing his business.
Continue reading...ORNL research explores neuromorphic computing to process massive data streams in real time
April 22, 2026 — Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory are developing AI-enabled pixel detectors that can analyze particle-collision data directly at the source. The approach could help particle-physics experiments identify and capture the most important signals from the enormous amounts of data modern accelerators produce, helping scientists make faster, more informed discoveries from some of the world’s most complex experiments.

Illustration of a spiking neural network — dots represent neurons and lines show their connections. These systems help particle detectors analyze massive streams of experimental data. Credit: Larry Zhang/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy.
The project, called NEUROPix — short for neuromorphic computing for pixel detectors — recently received a three-year award through the Department of Energy’s High Energy Physics program. The funding supports efforts to use artificial intelligence directly within scientific instruments to process data in real time.
The ORNL team will use spiking neural networks, a form of neuromorphic computing inspired by the human brain, to identify patterns and extract valuable signatures from particle interactions in real time — an approach that could benefit many other data-intensive scientific instruments.
“Our particle accelerators can now generate much more data than we’re able to record to disk,” said ORNL physicist Mathieu Benoit. “The idea is to deploy intelligence close to the detector so we can sort or compress the data very quickly while keeping the information that matters most.”
Source: Galen Fader, ORNL
The post ORNL: Artificial Intelligence Comes to Particle Detectors Through NEUROPix appeared first on HPCwire.
The "film look" is in, but you don't need a film camera to get it -- your phone can take great analog-inspired images. Here's how.
Firm had to repatriate almost 12,000 guests and staff, including from two cruise ships in Abu Dhabi and Doha
The Iran war has cost the travel company Tui €40m (£34.7m) so far, including repatriating almost 12,000 holidaymakers and staff, and forced it to cut its profit forecast for this year.
Europe’s biggest holiday operator said it had taken the hit in March owing to the impact of the conflict in the Middle East, as it was forced to bring home 5,000 guests from two cruise ships anchored in ports in Abu Dhabi and Doha.
Continue reading...U-turn comes after Trump said the US military was ‘raring to go’. Plus, Virginia voters pass new congressional maps in blow to president
Good morning.
Donald Trump unilaterally announced an extension of the two-week ceasefire with Iran on Tuesday amid frantic efforts to bring the two sides back to the negotiating table.
How are Trump’s negotiating tactics being received? The president’s impatience and rough-house diplomatic style, including his frequent online posting, has been a key stumbling block to restarting peace talks, writes the Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour.
Is Tehran united on how to deal with Washington? Analysts say it is not, with fierce disagreement among Iranian leaders over how to respond to US pressure and whether to risk a new wave of bombing.
Follow the latest updates with our liveblog.
How much of a boost for the Democrats is Virginia’s referendum result? It could help them win four additional House seats in November’s midterms, which could prove pivotal in an evenly divided Congress.
Continue reading...Wembanyama exits after hard fall in Game 2
Spurs could miss rest of series with injury
Blazers rally to even series at one game apiece
San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama was placed in the NBA’s concussion protocol after tumbling face-first to the court during Tuesday night’s playoff loss to Portland.
“He has a concussion. He’s in the protocol,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said after San Antonio fell 106-103 to even the Western Conference first-round series at one game apiece. “We’ll take the proper and appropriate steps.”
Continue reading...You might think Apple forgot to improve its latest flagship Apple Watch, but there are some differences from last year's model.
Maikel Rojas, 45, was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in October last year after showing up for a routine, court-mandated annual check-in at the Miramar immigration office.
The Seattle Seahawks defensive coordinator is preparing for the NFL draft later this week. On a recent trip home to London, he reflected on his extraordinary journey
A middle-aged man pulls down his baseball cap, walks across Leicester Square and heads to Greggs for lunch before taking the Piccadilly Line home to Southgate. It’s only two months since he won the Super Bowl but none of the thousands of tourists milling around central London recognise him. Aden Durde should be a British celebrity.
Olympians often say there is a massive comedown after they win gold medals. Some think: ‘Now what?’ How have you felt after winning the Super Bowl? “I wouldn’t say it’s a comedown, but there were moments after you win it, like at the parade, I felt numb. The little letdown is, while you might get another chance to create it, you’re not going to do it again with that group of people. You realise that this special thing that we had is over. I thought that on the bus going back to the hotel from the game.”
Continue reading...Researchers studied how the drug affected the movements of wild fish in their natural habitats.
| Saw a rollator at a flea market and it made me wonder: what if I put it on the Onewheel, just like the chair hack 😂😂 This is AI generated! [link] [comments] |
Eleven and company return with a new retro-inspired cartoon.
Suspend your disbelief with Prime Video's epic sci-fi library.
The crew of the Mariana notified the U.S. Coast Guard on April 15 that the 145-foot vessel lost its starboard engine during Super Typhoon Sinlaku.
Unwanted vessels left to decay release fibreglass shards into the water, harming marine life. Steve Green – with his trusty van Cecil – is determined to clean things up
Steve Green, a boat engineer from Cornwall, was pulled over by the police just before Christmas. He was driving a decrepit-looking VW campervan and towing an even more dilapidated yacht up to Truro. He hadn’t broken any laws, but he admits that Cecil the campervan, which runs on donated chip oil from local pubs and has a crane and a winch on the front, “wasn’t quite what VW intended”.
Green (and Cecil) are on a mission to rid the beautiful hidden creeks of Cornwall’s Helford and Fal rivers of 166 abandoned fibreglass yachts, which are leaking plastic and toxins into the predominantly marine waters. Marine biologists have likened the thousands of shards of fibreglass they have found embedded in the flesh of sea-creatures in areas with wrecks such as these to asbestos, a substance known to have a noxious effect on humans.
Green uses a detachable crane system at the front of his van to move around bags of plastic after they have been weighed. Cecil is upholstered in recycled denim
Continue reading...Portraits of South African activists and the enigmatic silhouettes of Bill Brandt join a selection from more than 70 galleries at Aipad: The Photography Show at the Park Avenue Armory in New York from 22-26 April
Continue reading...You can work out anywhere and anytime with these apps.
AT&T overhauled its wireless plans in 2026, with four options that can be mixed and matched.
NASA's Curiosity rover has identified a diverse set of organic molecules on Mars, including a nitrogen-bearing compound similar in structure to DNA precursors. The finding strengthens the case that ancient organic material can survive in the Martian subsurface, though it does not prove past life because the compounds could also come from geology or meteorites. Phys.org reports: The study was led by Amy Williams, Ph.D., a professor of geological sciences at the University of Florida and a scientist on the Curiosity and Perseverance Mars rover missions. Curiosity landed on Mars in 2012 to find evidence that ancient Mars had conditions that could support microbial life billions of years ago; the Perseverance rover, which landed in 2021, was sent to look for signs of any ancient life that might have formed. Among the 20-plus chemicals identified by the experiment, Curiosity spotted a nitrogen-bearing molecule with a structure similar to DNA precursors -- a chemical never before spotted on Mars. The rover also identified benzothiophene, a large, double-ringed, sulfurous chemical often delivered to planets by meteorites. "The same stuff that rained down on Mars from meteorites is what rained down on Earth, and it probably provided the building blocks for life as we know it on our planet," Williams said. The findings have been published in the journal Nature Communications.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
British singer and guitarist wrote and performed Traffic classics including Feelin’ Alright? before platinum-selling solo albums and work with Jimi Hendrix, Fleetwood Mac and more
Dave Mason, the co-founder of rock band Traffic who also collaborated with Jimi Hendrix, Fleetwood Mac and many other A-list musicians, has died aged 79.
A statement from his representative said he died peacefully on Sunday at his home in Gardnerville, Nevada, having settled in the US in 1969. “Dave Mason lived a remarkable life devoted to the music and the people he loved,” the statement added.
Continue reading...A gun boat from Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps fired on a container ship in the contested waterway before a cargo ship came under fire in a separate attack, the British military says.
Do you know which items can and can't be recycled? Make our world greener this Earth Day by identifying which items are actually recyclable.
If you use too much detergent, you could be leaving yourself with stiff laundry.
Workers and labor advocates say the company’s injury rates and how it treats injured staff remain a problem
Amazon, one of the world’s largest employers, has for years faced scrutiny over its safety record. When Billy Foister, a 48-year-old worker, died after a heart attack inside one of the tech giant’s warehouses in September 2019, managers were accused of telling staff to “get back to work”.
When another worker died this month at a distribution center in Troutdale, Oregon, an Amazon spokesperson claimed they had collapsed from an “existing medical issue”. They denied a report that a nearby employee was told: “Please get back to work.”
Continue reading...American Lung Association report comes amid Trump EPA’s expansive rollback of environmental protections
Nearly half of children in the United States are breathing dangerous levels of air pollution, according to a new report, as experts warned Donald Trump’s expansive rollback of protections will make the situation worse.
The 27th annual air quality report from the American Lung Association (ALA) released on Wednesday evaluates pollution across the country by grading levels of ground-level ozone – also known as smog – as well as year-round and short-term spikes in particle pollution, commonly referred to as soot. The report analyzed quality-assured data collected between 2022 and 2024.
Continue reading...Robert Butler leaped into action to save child who was running into busy intersection in downtown Phoenix
An Arizona electric utility worker is said to have issued “a powerful reminder of what it means to look out for one another” when, while on duty, he stopped a toddler from running into heavy car traffic after bolting away from a parent.
Robert Butler’s timely intervention was captured recently in a hair-raising video recorded by a surveillance camera in downtown Phoenix and released recently by his employer, Arizona Public Service (APS).
Continue reading...Sony's new True RGB backlight tech updates an old idea and promises even better, brighter colors.
I did a spring tech drawer cleaning and tossed more than 35 outdated cords and adapters.
It’s crucial to understanding how gender is affecting our ability to rally behind a shared ecological vision
Feminist influencer Liz Plank opens her groundbreaking book For the Love of Men with a bold statement: “There is no greater threat to humankind than our current definitions of masculinity.” She means it at several levels, from the most intimate: how male partners are the leading cause of death for pregnant women in the US; to the most macro: how associating “eco-conscious behaviors with femininity and a repudiation of masculinity” is literally killing the planet. This Earth Day, it’s worth reflecting on why this is so and what can be done about it.
While it won’t come as news to most that, compared with women, men litter more, recycle less, and leave a bigger carbon footprint There’s something more extreme than simple thoughtlessness causing young men, in a form of anti-environmental protest known as “rolling coal”, to modify the diesel engines on their pickup trucks to deliberately belch large amounts of grey-black exhaust, and then run Priuses and bicyclists off the road.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware’s certificate of public review program is aimed at managing the amount of health services in the state and preventing oversaturation. New legislation passed on Tuesday would repeal some of those regulations to allow providers to purchase some medical equipment without the need for state approval.
Delaware senators unanimously approved legislation on Tuesday that would ease regulations on how hospitals and medical providers acquire medical equipment in the state. The bill, HB 17, will now go to the governor’s desk for a signature.
The legislation updates the state’s certificate of public review program, in which an oversight board governs additions to Delaware’s health care ecosystem by requiring approval for equipment purchases and campus expansions.
One of the bill’s sponsors, Senator Marie Pinkney (D-Bear), said the bill would allow health care providers to move quickly to purchase and replace equipment “without unnecessary regulatory delay.”
“This is a common sense reform that reduces bureaucracy where it no longer serves patients, while keeping meaningful guardrails in place for major health care expansion decisions,” Pinkney said on the Senate floor.
The state’s current certificate of need process, run through the Delaware Health Resources Board, fields applications from the state’s health care providers and determines whether they can introduce new services or facilities into the state.
Under the new legislation, providers would still need to receive approvals from the Delaware Health Resources Board for equipment purchases and large capital projects that cost more than $5.8 million.
The new law also would keep regulations that require state approval when a hospital requests an increase in bed capacity greater than 10%.
House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover) said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware that HB 17 would help to relieve delays for lab testing and results, allowing people to be more informed about their health in a timely fashion. Additionally, she said there is currently a “crisis” surrounding access to care in Delaware, and that she hopes the law will help alleviate some of that pressure.
“While no single bill can solve this crisis, HB 17 represents a meaningful step toward real, tangible relief for those who need it most,” Harris said.
The board is meant to act as a watchdog to ensure the state does not become oversaturated with one type of service, and to vet both programs and providers wishing to offer care in Delaware.

It has long been targeted by Republicans as an example of over-regulation that spurns free market investments in the health care sector. A dozen states, including Pennsylvania, have removed their certificate of need laws in recent decades.
A letter signed by the entirety of Delaware’s legislature, lawmakers said they would “reform” the certificate of need process “in areas where current rules may limit access or innovation, particularly in rural and underserved regions.”
The letter came as the state began to pursue federal funds through the “Rural Health Transformation Program,” a new $50 billion nationwide program meant to bolster rural health care.
During the Senate vote on Tuesday, multiple lawmakers expressed their support for the bill, requesting to be added as co-sponsors.
One of those lawmakers, Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown), said the bill would allow providers to improve their services in the wake of a growing population without delay from the state.
“I think this is a good step to making sure that as our health care facilities need to expand as we need new testing type facilities that we can get those in here to our state,” Pettyjohn said.
In recent weeks, a separate bill introduced by Rep. Bryan Shupe (R-Milford) seeks to get rid of the board entirely. House Bill 318, which was introduced last month, is awaiting a hearing in the House Health and Human Development Committee.
If passed, it would strike all the language surrounding the Health Resources Board from Delaware law. Additionally, the bill would transfer the board’s responsibility to enforce charity care requirements to the Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Services.
Nonprofit hospitals are required by the IRS to provide a “community benefit” to earn their tax-exempt status. Historically, that benefit came in the form of providing free or discounted services, sometimes called “charity care.”
But changes in recent decades to federal and state guidelines have allowed nonprofit hospitals to set charity care policies at their own discretion, removing any requirement of providing it to patients in order to receive a tax break.
In Delaware, nonprofit hospitals must provide charity care to patients living at or below 350% of the Federal Poverty Line.
For ChristianaCare, Delaware’s largest hospital system, this has translated to a steep decline in the amount of free and discounted services provided to patients in the last decade. Charity care has made up less than 1% of the health care giant’s annual expenses since 2021.
Before unanimously passing the Senate yesterday, HB 17 also unanimously passed in the House late last month.
It is unclear when Gov. Matt Meyer will sign the bill, but his office has signaled its support for the legislation. During his State of the State address in January, Meyer said the leaders needed to reform the program to increase “access and competition” in Delaware.
The post Delaware lawmakers ease regulations on hospital purchases appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware labor officials and the Trump administration are at odds over whether immigration enforcement officials should have access to residents’ sensitive data. A recently announced appeal is the latest development in an ongoing court battle that could potentially make its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Delaware will appeal a recent federal court ruling that compelled its labor department to turn over employment data subpoenaed by federal immigration officials, Gov. Matt Meyer announced in a press release Tuesday.
The court ruling, handed down by Delaware’s top federal judge on April 13, requires the state to provide the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement with employment information from 15 Delaware businesses.
The data in question — which details wage records that include names, addresses, and Social Security numbers — is sought in relation to federal investigations into alleged employment of undocumented workers.
In announcing the state’s appeal, Meyer said he would “go as far as the law allows” to defend Delawareans against what he called unlawful immigration enforcement.
“This is not a time to stand down but to step up for the most vulnerable in our community and to protect businesses and workers in our state,” Meyer said in the release. “This is not about public safety. It is about turning worker information into a data pipeline for ICE … In Delaware, we protect workers. We don’t set traps.”
A spokesperson for Meyer’s office declined to comment further Tuesday evening. A spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Justice, which is representing the state in its appeal, also declined to comment.
According to the release, the state also will seek a delay in the enforcement of the federal court ruling while it pursues an appeal.
Following Delaware’s passage of a statewide ban on local police cooperation agreements with ICE under the 287(g) program, the successful acquisition of labor data could open a new front in the Trump’s administration’s immigration crackdown in the First State.
Delaware’s ongoing fight against ICE will proceed to an appeals court in Philadelphia. Then, if it is appealed further, the case could head to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The state’s appeal comes after Delaware District Court Chief Judge Colm Connolly issued a blistering 27-page ruling last week compelling the state to turn over the subpoenaed employment data. That ruling picked apart the state Department of Labor’s arguments, which he said were political, not legal.
“This court is not the proper forum in which to air [the Delaware Department of Labor’s] generalized grievances about the conduct of government,” wrote Connolly, a former U.S. attorney who was appointed to the bench in 2018 during President Donald Trump’s first term. “It would be wholly inappropriate for me to consider this line of argument, and I decline to do so.”
Connolly’s ruling was largely expected, however, after a hearing earlier this month where the judge grilled the Delaware Department of Labor’s attorney Jennifer-Kate Aaronson, saying it was not her “best day” when she wrote the legal brief presenting her case.
During that court hearing on April 2, Connolly publicly dissected the regulations that Aaronson cited by projecting his computer tab onto a large screen at the head of the courtroom. He asked Aaronson where the law shows the state Department of Labor has “full discretion” to decide not to comply with a federal subpoena as he highlighted law text.
Aaronson was not able to point to a specific subsection of the regulations in response, but she maintained that disclosure of sensitive information to ICE has never been mandated by federal law.
The case stems from a subpoena ICE issued to the Delaware Department of Labor in April 2025 seeking wage records for 15 Delaware businesses for the final two quarters of 2024, which the agency suspected of employing undocumented immigrants.
The subpoena, which originated from “hotline tips” that ICE received, sought employees’ names, addresses, wages and Social Security numbers from 15 Delaware businesses, according to court records. ICE’s subpoena efforts align with the Trump administration’s broader strategy of using federal and state agency data to bolster its promised immigration enforcement push.
Attorneys with the U.S. Attorney’s Office argued in court documents that wage records would help ICE further its focus on “worksite enforcement” and may help determine whether employees are using fake Social Security numbers or if employers are paying workers “under the table,” or using cash and without reporting it to the IRS, court records show.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Claudia Pare asked Connolly to seal the April subpoena when the case was first filed, arguing that ICE did not want to have the 15 business names become public and “prematurely alert” the targets of the agency’s worksite investigations.
Conversely, Deputy State Attorney Jennifer-Kate Aaronson filed a motion to unseal the subpoena in August. The 15 businesses suspected of hiring undocumented immigrants should have the opportunity to come to court and argue against their information being transmitted to ICE, she said during a previous court hearing.
Connolly initially declined to rule on those motions, although he said it remained a good decision to keep the subpoena under seal. If suspected businesses are made public and associated with potentially hiring undocumented employees, it could harm their reputation if they’re ultimately found to be innocent, he said.
On Tuesday, the judge likewise denied the state’s motion to unseal the subpoena at the heart of the case.
DOL officials have received at least four subpoenas from ICE since February 2025, Aaronson said during an August court hearing. Department officials complied with one ICE subpoena that sought information about a single individual, Aaronson said.
According to other subpoenas obtained by the News Journal, ICE has also reportedly investigated the potential employment of undocumented workers at a Perdue plant in Seaford along with a fencing company and a northern Delaware restaurant.
Connolly noted in his ruling that prior to 2025, the Department of Labor routinely complied with subpoena requests from ICE and other federal agencies.
Jacob Owens and Jose Ignacio Castaneda Perez contributed to this report.
The post Delaware to appeal ICE labor data court ruling appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
In recent months, the Red Clay Consolidated School District revealed plans to transform McKean High School into an “innovation campus,” which would have a focus on career and technical education, along with early college credit opportunities. But families who have children with intellectual and developmental disabilities enrolled in the school’s Meadowood program have expressed concerns over the program’s future.
The Red Clay Consolidated Board of Education voted to postpone the transformation of one of its high schools into an “innovation campus” last Wednesday, following months of pushback from community members concerned about the future of a program for students with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Nearly three hours into its meeting, board members voted 6-1 to indefinitely pause the transition of Thomas McKean High School into a drop-in building focused on career and technical education programs and early college credit opportunities.
Susan Sander was the only board member to vote against postponing the transition.
The McKean innovation center would have opened in August 2027, reducing the number of traditional high schools in the district from three to two, and increasing enrollment numbers at Alexis I. duPont High School and The John Dickinson School.
The plan would also have moved the district’s Meadowood program for students with intellectual or developmental disabilities from kindergarten through age 22, from McKean to A.I. duPont.
Some parents, however, have voiced their concerns for months to district leaders about the program’s future, saying they feel Meadowood has been an “afterthought.”
Parents with students in the program have said Meadowood helps their children work on social skills, such as conversation starters, and learn how to do tasks like washing dishes.
Mark Pruitt, the director of secondary schools at Red Clay, said the success of the Meadowood program will remain a priority as the district navigates its next steps.
“We need to make sure that we’re meeting the needs of our Meadowood students,” Pruitt said. “Not only those current students who would be changing in the middle of a grade band, but also future students of the Meadowood program.”
During the Wednesday meeting, board member Najma Landis said that while the plan is postponed, the district should look to create and publish a clear transition plan for students, establish a comprehensive communication plan, and directly engage with community members, among other points.
“I feel that we need to take a step back and hear from our community and help them shape any major changes that happen,” Landis said.
Last summer, the board’s A-Z & Programming Committee announced the decision to transform McKean High School into an innovation center.
By November, Red Clay community members created a petition to save McKean.

The proposed closure “not only disrupts the educational journey of hundreds of students but also threatens the identity and community spirit of our area,” the petition said.
The petition has garnered more than 2,600 signatures since it was created.
Multiple parents spoke out against the innovation center during November and December board meetings, as reported by The News Journal.
Parents continued to voice concerns during a March board committee meeting, with some expressing concerns about the lack of certainty surrounding the future Meadwood program.
“The whole special education [program] has been an afterthought since the innovation center idea was introduced and ultimately voted upon,” one parent said during the public comment session of the March committee meeting.
Similar sentiments were expressed during the public comment session of Wednesday’s board of education meeting, as some parents expressed concerns about whether A.I. duPont would be physically able to take on the Meadowood program.
Meanwhile, A.I. has plummeted in its enrollment over the last 14 years. Today it is the smallest traditional high school by enrollment in the state.
Community members in the district believe there are a variety of reasons for the enrollment decline, like limiting the number of school choice applicants selected, ending the busing system for students who choiced into the school, and the increased presence of charter and private schools.
But the high school’s graduates have strengthened their alumni group, Friends of A.I., with the goal of rebuilding the school and supporting the students currently attending.
Although the district has said the decision would help boost enrollment at their alma mater, Friends of A.I. members have supported McKean families over what they say has been a lack of transparency and effective communication from the district, especially surrounding the future of the Meadowood program.
“We have to be in this together to get [the Red Clay Consolidated School District] to change how they’re doing communication, but also to get us immediate information,” said Jared Obstfeld, a member of Friends of A.I.
Deputy Editor Tim Carlin contributed to this report.
The post Red Clay school board to pause its transformation of McKean High School appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Annual March rate shows impact of Iran war, which also pushed up cost of food and air fares
UK inflation accelerated to 3.3% in March after the Iran war triggered the biggest jump in fuel prices for more than three years.
In the first official snapshot of the damage to living standards in Britain from the US-Israeli war on Iran, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the consumer prices index increased last month from a rate of 3% in February. The rise matched the forecasts by City economists.
Continue reading...Council proposal to use glyphosate to tidy up pavements criticised over potential harm to humans and wildlife
Cornwall is famed for its glorious gardens and verdant landscapes but a bitter row has broken out over a plan to tackle a less glamorous type of vegetation – roadside weeds.
The unitary authority has announced plans to use the controversial herbicide glyphosate to tidy up pavements and kerbsides, after largely phasing out its use over the last decade amid concerns about potential harm to humans and the peninsula’s rich ecosystems.
Continue reading...News follows Guardian report on licence given to British firm exporting machinery to Armenian firm linked to Russian war effort
British firms will face “much tougher” controls to prevent their goods from reaching Russia via other countries, undermining sanctions and aiding Vladimir Putin’s assault on Ukraine.
Under plans to be unveiled on Wednesday, the government will be able to require UK manufacturers to obtain a licence if they want to export to a country suspected of acting as a staging post for exports ultimately destined for Russia.
Continue reading...Macaques have learned to eat soil to avert gut irritation caused by salty and sugary snacks, researchers believe
Troops of monkeys living on the Rock of Gibraltar have learned to eat soil in what scientists believe is an effort to settle their stomachs after all the junk food they receive – and sometimes steal – from crowds of tourists.
Researchers spotted the intentional mud eating, known as geophagy, while observing groups of Barbary macaques in the territory. Monkeys that had the most contact with tourists ate the most soil and consumption peaked in the holiday season, they found.
Continue reading...Whether you want cordless designs or a budget buy, we’ve tested the top hair straighteners for every hair type
• The best hair dryers, tested
Straighteners are here to stay – but thankfully, heat styling has come a long way since GHD’s first ceramic straighteners ushered in an era of poker-straight hair in 2001. Today’s models feature adjustable heat settings and protective technology for hairstyling with minimal damage.
The looks you can achieve with a straightener have become more versatile as well: one twist of a modern, curved-edge straightener can create styles from ultra-smooth strands to structured ringlets and soft, beachy waves. There’s a wide range of styling possibilities with just one tool.
Best hair straighteners overall:
GHD Chronos Max
Best budget hair straighteners:
Remington Shine Therapy S8500
Kevin Warsh, Trump’s ‘central casting’, has a long road ahead of convincing board members to lower interest rates
Donald Trump’s fate is to be frustrated by monetary policy.
Even assuming he gets his way and Kevin Warsh succeeds Jerome Powell as chair of the Federal Reserve next month, it is unlikely that the president will finally gain control of the Fed.
Continue reading...The Indiana quarterback will almost certainly be the No overall pick in this week’s draft. He is also a sign of what’s to come for the league
Ever since the NCAA changed its rules in 2021 to allow student athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness, institutional money has been circling college football, desperate for a way to turn top programs into money-making machines. These incursions have had limited success to date.
Perhaps the private equity and venture capital vultures have been approaching things the wrong way. Instead of building a fully financialized and business-friendly college football league, why not start with the players? When Fernando Mendoza emerges, as he almost certainly will, as the No 1 overall pick of the NFL draft on Thursday night, his coronation will not only cap a remarkable personal story – it will also mark the ascendancy of a specific idea of the modern football player. Mendoza’s story is extraordinary. Ranked as the 140th-best quarterback prospect by respected college recruiting website 247Sports in 2022, as he was applying for college, he rose through the ranks at the California Golden Bears, earning both his stripes as a starting quarterback and an undergraduate business degree in three years. Last year he transferred to Indiana, winning the Heisman Trophy as he led the Hoosiers to an undefeated season and the national championship. His rise is a tribute to dedication, hard work, grit, determination – all qualities NFL franchises look for when scouring the college field for prospects.
Continue reading...Conservative host says he’s ‘tormented’ by previous support for Trump – could this presage his own run for president?
He can’t live with him and can’t live without him. But, finally, the conservative podcaster Tucker Carlson seems to have made up his mind about Donald Trump. Their up-and-down marriage of political convenience is heading for the divorce court.
On Tuesday Carlson admitted that he will be “tormented” for a long time by his support for Trump in the 2024 US presidential election “and I want to say I’m sorry for misleading people”. What he did not say is whether this presages his own run for president in 2028.
Continue reading...
I wasn’t looking for a revelation on a country road in southeastern Illinois. But on the outskirts of Galatia — a tiny town where Appalachian hardship seems to have drifted west and settled in — that’s what I found.
It was not a burning bush in some biblical wilderness, but an industrial 3D printer the size of a small garage — a machine, I would learn, that took a $1.1 million investment to get to Illinois, carrying with it the promise of an affordable housing renaissance across the region known as Little Egypt.
And it called to me.
I drove past it again and again. A year prior, in August 2024, this printer was at the center of a groundbreaking ceremony attended by more than 100 people, myself included. I covered the event for Capitol News Illinois and watched as the machine laid down the first layers of what was supposed to be a new beginning. Two local men had promised to help save Cairo, Illinois, by using the machine to print new homes in a town that desperately needed them.
I watched as state and local politicians ceremoniously tossed dirt. Officials posed for photographs beside the machine, holding it up as proof that a new era had arrived. They promised fast, efficient, modern homes — and with them, the sense that someone, at last, was paying attention to this corner of the state.
A year later, though, the printer had produced the framing for exactly one duplex — but the project was abandoned before the interior was finished. Before anyone could move in, the walls cracked.


When I started to investigate what had gone wrong, I found the printer disassembled on a flatbed truck at a country repair shop that doesn’t need to advertise because you either know it’s there or you wouldn’t be going anyway.
The more I stared at it, and continued to drive by it, I wondered how a promise as large as housing had been left to rust in the sun and rain. What did this abandoned printer say about false promises so often made in the name of saving rural America? About officials who insist they are trying to help? And, at the heart of it, how did this quite expensive piece of modern technology become abandoned here in the first place?

For an investigation I published with ProPublica in collaboration with Capitol News Illinois, I sought answers to those questions. I followed what became one of the most windy and wild reporting journeys of my life. I learned that, behind the scenes, the project to build 3D housing in Cairo had been ushered along by political connections: State Sen. Dale Fowler, whose district includes Cairo, helped introduce the 3D printing company to top leaders, including Gov. JB Pritzker and U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth’s office. The company, Prestige Project Management Inc. — in the same Harrisburg, Illinois, high rise as Fowler’s district office — pitched the project as part of the state’s housing future.
A Pritzker spokesperson said the governor’s office took no action after meeting with Prestige. A Duckworth spokesperson said the senator’s office had just revived discussions about how to address Cairo’s housing crisis when Fowler reached out and that the office did not have additional involvement with the company. Fowler took an active role boosting the company’s project in Cairo but said he just wanted to see housing development in the city and wasn’t otherwise involved in Prestige’s business dealings.
What I assumed would be a simple story instead got weird — part Old Testament prophecy, part Facebook rumor mill weird.

I’d learn that within a few months of that groundbreaking party, the work stopped on the duplex. After the owners of Prestige said dozens of cracks started running through the walls, a half-dozen employees quit the company. Not long after, the FBI launched an investigation into Prestige’s broader business dealings. There have been no charges or arrests, and the owners say they have fully cooperated with investigators and have done nothing wrong. They also said the concrete “ink” that came with the printer was faulty and that’s why the printer has been idle since. Black Buffalo 3D, the printer supplier, said it has offered Prestige a new concrete solution and to find a buyer for the printer if Prestige no longer wants it.
I spent months digging through records and speaking with Prestige’s owners, former employees and others who’d done business with the company, trying to piece together a timeline of the company’s dealings in Cairo and beyond. Along the way, I encountered intense interviews, moments of tears, strange contradictions and a swamp of rumors.
And in the middle of it all, I found myself pulled in, too — whispering prayers in my car, chasing the truth like a storm rolling off the Shawnee, loving this place with my whole chest and still wondering: What in the hell happened here?
At the same time, maybe part of me already knew what happened, in a way. The failed promise of housing in Cairo is a story I’ve written over and over, for more than a decade.

I’ve written about how mold, mice, lead-tainted water and decay persisted in the city’s public housing, at one time home to a fourth of the town, for generations. I’ve written about misspending by public housing officials, the federal takeover that followed and the long, painful effort to tear down what could not be salvaged. For years, federal officials promised even as housing was being torn down that it would be rebuilt. The plan, they said, depended on private companies working alongside government agencies, and on innovation. In this light, things like 3D construction printers seemed to fit exactly with their vision.
So when Prestige Project Management Inc. in Harrisburg, backed by a state senator, offered to buy a printer and deliver it straight to Cairo — on what one of its owners described as a mission from God — people believed.
What was the alternative?
In Cairo, I’ve learned, progress (and the illusion of it) carries its own kind of grief. The demolition of public housing less than a decade before hollowed out a town already on its knees. People were forced to choose between opportunity elsewhere and home, between safer housing and the place that made them.
And the emotional gravity of this story wasn’t from the strangest things I encountered, but from the ones that were the most real and heartbreaking: a town that raised its hopes, only to see them, once again, dashed. A mother living in a cramped one-bedroom unit across town who’d dreamed of moving into one of the duplex’s two-bedroom units, finally able to give her 6-year-old daughter a space of her own.

Some towns, I’ve heard people say, cannot be saved.
I understand the argument. I’ve felt it myself, driving the backroads of southern Illinois between the two great rivers that meet at Cairo, through a landscape marked by poverty, abandonment and a stubborn struggle to hang on. But Cairo has always seemed worth saving to me, because of its history, its suffering and its resilience, a word that can feel too neat for what Black residents there have endured: racism and exclusion that lingered long after much of the South began to change.
Is an unfinished 3D-printed housing spectacle really the best we have to offer?
I’ve written thousands of stories by now. Most disappear as soon as they’re filed. But a few stay in the bones.
This is one of them.
The post They Said a 3D Printer Would Bring Housing to This Town. It Was Yet Another Broken Promise. appeared first on ProPublica.
Millions of people rely on the supplemental insurance to offset the deductibles, copayments, and other costs faced by enrollees in the traditional Medicare program.
‘Handful’ of people allegedly gain unauthorised access to model adept at detecting cybersecurity vulnerabilities
The AI developer Anthropic has confirmed it is investigating a report that unauthorised users have gained access to its Mythos model, which it has warned poses risks to cybersecurity.
The US startup made the statement after Bloomberg reported on Wednesday that a small group of people had accessed the model, which has not been released to the public because of its ability to enable cyber-attacks.
Continue reading...CSIRO researcher says there are reports of up to 4,000 mouse burrows per hectare in parts of Western Australia
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Grain growers are on high alert as mouse numbers in Western Australia reach plague proportions and numbers surge in South Australia.
Steve Henry, who researches mice and their impact on the grain industry at CSIRO, says more than 800 mice per hectare is considered a plague.
Continue reading...Sullivan & Cromwell apologises to New York federal judge for string of errors in documents for Prince Group case
The elite Wall Street law firm Sullivan & Cromwell has told a court that a major filing it made in a high-profile case contained errors resulting from hallucinations generated by artificial intelligence.
Andrew Dietderich, the co-head of the firm’s global restructuring group, apologised in a letter to the New York federal judge Martin Glenn on Saturday for the string of mistakes, which included inaccurate citations.
Continue reading...There will be no bow on football’s greatest stage for one of history’s great goalscorers. We’re about to find out how his career winds down
While soccer’s calendar offers few moments of respite, the World Cup doubles as a time for referendums on the legacies of great players. Lionel Messi, Luka Modrić and Cristiano Ronaldo approach this summer’s tournament expecting it to be their final turn on their sport’s biggest stage. Kevin De Bruyne and Casemiro could clarify their complicated international careers in North America; Neymar may not get the same chance.
Missing a sendoff like this may be a bit more relatable to the life that we mortals endure. Indeed, there’s no crueler way for an international career to end than tripping at the final hurdle of World Cup qualification.
Continue reading...Experts say regulation of child influencers sits in a legal grey area as children promote products on social media
In a TikTok video a young girl – her age anywhere between 10 and 15 – sits unboxing package after package of products she says were sent to her by skincare brands. She calls it a “PR haul”.
In another video, a 16-year-old opens a box of products she received from a well known brand. She says: “I know I have younger people watching,” before reading out a note from the brand that says: “Can’t wait for you to share your thoughts.”
Continue reading...Federal authorities are now reviewing a string of deaths and disappearances involving scientists tied to sensitive U.S. aerospace and nuclear work, though officials have not established any confirmed link between the cases. The FBI says it "is spearheading the effort to look for connections into the missing and deceased scientists," adding that it "is working with the Department of Energy, Department of War, and with our state ... and local law enforcement partners to find answers." The Republican-led House Oversight Committee also announced an investigation into the reports. CNN reports: A nuclear physicist and MIT professor fatally shot outside his Massachusetts residence. A retired Air Force general missing from his New Mexico home. An aerospace engineer who disappeared during a hike in Los Angeles. These are among at least 10 individuals connected to sensitive US nuclear and aerospace research who have died or disappeared in recent years, prompting concerns whether they are connected and fueling speculation online about the possibility of nefarious activity. [...] The Defense Department said only that it would respond to the committee directly, and the Department of Energy referred questions to the White House. In a post on X, NASA said it is "coordinating and cooperating with the relevant agencies" in relation to the scientists. "At this time, nothing related to NASA indicates a national security threat," NASA spokesperson Bethany Stevens said. The cases vary widely in circumstance. Some involve unsolved homicides, while others are missing persons cases with no signs of foul play. In at least two instances, families have pointed to preexisting medical conditions or personal struggles as explanations. Authorities have not established any links between the cases. The White House said last week it is also working with federal agencies to probe any potential links between the deaths and disappearances, with President Donald Trump referring to the matter as "pretty serious stuff." "The United States has thousands of nuclear scientists and nuclear experts," said Rep. James Walkinshaw, a Democrat who also serves on the Oversight Committee. "It's not the kind of nuclear program that potentially a foreign adversary could significantly impact by targeting 10 individuals." Further reading: The 'Missing-Scientist' Story Is Unbelievably Dumb
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Human rights groups have warned that the collective prosecutions violate due process and block defendants from accessing legal counsel
A Salvadoran court on Tuesday began a collective trial of 486 alleged gang members, in one of the biggest mass trials under president Nayib Bukele’s crackdown on gang violence through controversial emergency powers.
Prosecutors say the charges against alleged members of the Mara Salvatrucha gang, or MS-13, span more than 47,000 crimes committed between 2012 and 2022, including a weekend that was El Salvador’s bloodiest since its civil war.
Continue reading...Research shows natural hazards linked to climate crisis disrupted 23 elections in 18 countries in 2024
Democracy is under mounting threat from the climate crisis, with new analysis documenting how elections are increasingly shaped not only by political forces but also by floods, wildfires and extreme weather.
At least 94 elections and referendums across 52 countries have been disrupted by climate-related impacts over the last two decades, researchers found.
Continue reading...Officials warn a conflict situation could cause disruption similar to recent major ransomware incidents
The UK could face “hacktivist attacks at scale” if it becomes embroiled in a conflict and the impact could be similar to recent high-profile ransomware incidents, according to the head of the country’s online security agency.
Richard Horne, chief executive of the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), will warn today that nation states now account for the most significant incidents the NCSC deals with.
Continue reading...Peter Mandelson’s flaws were mistaken for credentials to represent Britain in the court of a rogue president
You can’t kill something that is already dead. New details about Peter Mandelson’s disastrous appointment as Britain’s ambassador to Washington can trigger more paroxysms of outrage in Westminster. They can sharpen the pitch of opposition calls for the prime minister to resign. They can reinforce the view among Labour MPs that Keir Starmer shouldn’t lead them into a general election. But they can’t produce consensus around a replacement, or invent a way to choose one without self-destructive factional feuding.
Labour MPs’ craving for better leadership has been finely balanced with fear of holding a contest and emerging with someone worse. There is no final straw yet to come because the camel’s back was broken months ago.
Continue reading...A group of runners representing six nations brought a message of peace and unity to Newark on Saturday as part of a five-month, 10,000-mile journey across America.
Two people who killed a man during a robbery in Glasgow will spend more than two decades in prison.
Experts say Muslims and other minorities have been disproportionately deleted from the electoral roll ahead of the West Bengal elections this week
Millions of people in the Indian state of West Bengal have been stripped of their vote ahead of a critical state election this week, after a controversial electoral revision described by critics as a “bloodless political genocide” and mass disenfranchisement of minorities.
In West Bengal, a total of 9.1 million names have been deleted from the register, more than 10% of the electorate. While many were dead or duplicates, about 2.7 million people have challenged their expulsions, but still been removed.
Continue reading...Not using capital punishment ‘really a requirement’ for Council of Europe’s parliamentary assembly, says president
Israel’s observer status at the Council of Europe’s parliamentary assembly could be suspended over the country’s new law mandating the death penalty for Palestinians convicted of some offences, the president of the body has said.
Petra Bayr, an Austrian Social Democrat and president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (Pace), said not using the death penalty was “really a requirement” of having observer status at the pan-European human rights body, which has no connection to the EU.
Continue reading...Research finds global heating has already lengthened the pollen season in addition to worsening heatwaves and droughts
Climate breakdown has extended the pollen season in the UK and mainland Europe by between one and two weeks since the 1990s, a study has found, adding itchy eyes and runny noses to the harm wrought by fossil fuel pollution.
The finding may be less dramatic than the floods and wildfires typically associated with a warming planet but represents a “huge” increase in the combined suffering of tens of millions of people, the researchers say.
Continue reading...The pro-Israel case for ending U.S. aid
Appeals court upholds Texas' Ten Commandments classroom law, but critics say the fight isn't over.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: SpaceX, Elon Musk's rocket and satellite company, said on Tuesday that it had struck a deal with the artificial intelligence start-up Cursor that could result in its acquiring the young company for $60 billion. SpaceX is making the deal just as it prepares to go public in what is likely to be one of the largest initial public offerings ever. In a social media post, SpaceX said the combination with Cursor, which makes code-writing software, would "allow us to build the world's most useful" A.I. models. SpaceX added that the agreement gave it the option "to acquire Cursor later this year for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for our work together." It is unclear if the companies plan to consummate the deal before or after SpaceX's I.P.O., which could happen as early as June. [...] Cursor, which has raised more than $3 billion in funding, was founded in 2022 and made waves as a fast-growing A.I. start-up. It was under pressure in recent months after OpenAI and Anthropic announced competing code-writing products that were embraced by tech companies. Cursor had been in talks to raise funding in recent weeks.
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Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 22
This blog is now closed. See our latest full report here: Trump announces extension of Iran ceasefire until ‘discussion concluded’
Iran’s armed forces are ready to deliver an “immediate and decisive response” to any renewed hostile action by its adversaries, Ali Abdollahi, commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, was quoted by the Tasnim news agency as having said.
He said Tehran had the upper hand militarily, including in the management of the strait of Hormuz, and would not allow Donald Trump to “create false narratives over the situation on the ground.”
Continue reading... | So I think I've found something that actually solves my problem! I have always had sensor engagement issues because of the shoes I wear and have tried everything from the Velcro trick to the actual float life Gripples but these from a random kid on Etsy work amazing! They don't wear out unlike the Velcro and they actually provide more grip in the wet unlike the Gripples. Just wanted to post this to help anyone who has a similar issue Here's the link [link] [comments] |
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Donald Trump said that he does not want to extend the two-week ceasefire with Iran, in an interview with CNBC. “I dont’ want to do that. We don’t have that much time,” the president said. The pause is set to expire tomorrow, and vice-president JD Vance will lead last-ditch talks in Islamabad today, in the hopes of striking a deal with Tehran.
However, speaking to Joe Kernen, Trump said that he plans to resume strikes if negotiations collapse. “I expect to be bombing because I think that’s a better attitude to go in with,” the president added. “But we’re ready to go. I mean, the military is raring to go.”
Continue reading...Charges alleged the center paid informants to infiltrate extremist groups without disclosing payments to donors
The Southern Poverty Law Center was indicted on Tuesday on federal fraud charges, alleging it improperly paid informants to infiltrate extremist groups without disclosing the payments to donors, the acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, said.
The center’s CEO, Bryan Fair, said the payments went to confidential informants in order to monitor threats of violence from the extremist groups – and that the information the center received was frequently shared with the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. The information gathered by the informants helped save lives, Fair said on Tuesday.
Continue reading...President changed his tune at request of Pakistan’s leaders, though he said military blockade of Iranian ports will continue
Donald Trump unilaterally announced an extension of the two-week ceasefire with Iran on Tuesday amid frantic efforts to bring the two sides back to the negotiating table.
Hours after announcing that he “expected to be bombing”, the US president said he would extend the ceasefire until Iranian negotiators submitted a proposal for peace.
Continue reading...The ruling sets up a likely Supreme Court battle over whether the Texas law violates the constitutional separation of church and state.
ALIYAH JACKSON
Co-Managing Mosaic Editor
KEL MARQUEZ
Staff Writer
Aliyah:
Olivia Dean is an emerging singer and songwriter from London. Her music blends genres such as pop, jazz, R&B and soul to create beautifully crafted, breathtaking tracks.
I first discovered her earlier this year through a TikTok video. I was scrolling and came across a video that used her live cover of “You Can’t Hurry Love” by The Supremes. I was instantly captivated by her voice and how she put her own spin on the cheerful energy of the song.
Shortly after, through another TikTok video, I heard her song “It Isn’t Perfect But It Might Be” from the 2025 film, “Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy,” and to say I fell in love is an understatement. It is a wholesome track about giving yourself permission to love again after heartbreak and having faith that things will work out in the end.
The song found me at just the right time and soon became one of my all-time favorites. I had just gotten out of an extremely toxic relationship that left me with many emotional scars. On days when I was really struggling, I put on this song. It always made me feel like the main character at the end of a movie who has been through so much but is learning how to heal. It was my reminder that even if things aren’t perfect right now, someday they might be.
As I continued to explore more of her discography, I realized that most of her songs embody “main character energy.” She makes the perfect tracks for maladaptive daydreaming during a long walk or car ride. Her music transports you into a world where all of your struggles, imperfections and problems are not just seen, but validated and turned into something beautiful.
If you’re looking for a new artist to add to your playlist, I highly recommend checking out Olivia Dean and her newest album, “The Art of Loving.”
Kel:
Olivia Dean’s “The Art of Loving,” released this past September, and not a day has gone by that I haven’t listened to this album. The first time I listened to it all the way through, I was instantly hooked. This album features a pop-soul and R&B blend with songs that capture the intricacies of love. Various themes are explored, from heartbreak to platonic relationships to the beauty of romance. Dean’s voice is so fitting for these types of songs, with her soul-like vocals shining through and adding raw emotion. Her voice, paired with her beautiful writing, makes this one of my favorite albums of the year.
I want to take a moment to celebrate Dean’s achievements in her album performance and as an artist. “The Art of Loving” made a top ten spot on six Billboard album charts and reached number one on the UK’s Official Album Chart. On top of this, she was the 2026 Grammy winner of Best New Artist. This marks an extraordinary feat in her career and she deserves all the love and praise she is getting. If you haven’t listened to her yet, you’re missing out.
One of my favorite songs from this album is “A Couple Minutes.” This song tells a heart-touching story of past lovers rekindling for a fleeting moment. When I close my eyes and listen to this track, it is so easy to envision the image that Dean creates through lyrics and her voice. The chorus sets the scene, “Back on your sofa / Of course I still care / Love’s never wasted when it’s shared.” In just a few words, Dean describes how love can still exist after a breakup. Although moving on can be hurtful, that tender connection will never vanish and Dean writes about this in such an honest way.
Another one of my favorite tracks is “Let Alone The One You Love.” In this song, Dean writes about heartbreak in a raw way that resonates with me. The chorus will never fail to touch my heart, “It’s too much to mend / You’re the hug that had to end / Though I’ve tried to hold on.” I think anyone who has endured some type of breakup will deeply connect with these lyrics. It captures the sad truth of a relationship ending and how hard you try to make it work.
Although this song is sad in nature, Dean writes about regaining self-worth in the second verse, “I’m too much to handle, and, ‘just dial it back a bit’ / Well, well, I’m not having it, babe.” For me, these lyrics feel like the moment when you notice that going separate ways was for the better. It’s truly the perfect way to end this song.
In an interview with NTS, Dean said, “The lyrics that you’re scared to say are probably the best ones.” Her outlook on writing is what makes this album so special. Dean has a beautiful talent of touching your heart and doing it so gracefully. “The Art of Loving” is an album everyone will connect to — and one that I will cherish forever.
RACHEL SIDRANE
Staff Writer
The Lumineers performed in Philadelphia last semester and I noticed that a lot of university students attended. I loved this excitement for them because I’ve been an avid fan since the release of their second album, “Cleopatra,” in 2016.
The Lumineers, for me, are one of those bands whose music is more than just music, but an experience. All of their songs provoke a deep feeling; whether it be love, nostalgia, or sometimes even hurt, they really have a way with their lyrics, voices and instruments.
I remember hearing somewhere that there’s something about The Lumineers that makes you feel like you are walking through a rainy memory. I thought that was beautiful and perfectly encapsulated the vibe of their indie-folk music. My top three songs for this band are difficult to choose, but “Leader of The Landslide,” “Gloria” and “Long Way From Home” are my current favorites.
I’ve been on a search for similar artists and below are my recommendations if you enjoy the indie-folk genre.
Michael Marcagi has recently come to light in the indie-folk community – and for good reason. He has opened for Brett Dennen and, more recently, The Lumineers. Marcagi’s music falls into the pop-folk genre; his songs feel more upbeat while still exploring intense themes of love and loss in a narrative lyrical style. My top three from him are “Wish I Never Met You,” “Follows You” and “Tear It All Apart.”
Another personal favorite of mine is Rainbow Kitten Surprise. If you are turned off by their name, it is totally understandable, but don’t miss out on this great band. Popular on TikTok for their song “It’s called: Freefall,” RKS is genuinely different from any band that I have ever heard. They combine multiple genres: folk, alternative, indie and rock, for unique sounding music with poetic lyrics.
Their songs have a very unique feel that falls somewhere between heartache and bliss. The singing is passionate and vulnerable and they explore themes of love, hardship and self-discovery. Definitely a band to listen to while driving on the highway at night with the windows down. My top three from them are “Goodnight Chicago,” “Black and White” and “Cocaine Jesus.”
Caamp is another great band that has an indie-folk feel and is closer to The Lumineer’s earlier works. Their sound is warm and acoustic and their style feels grounding and down-to-earth. Their music explores themes of love, loss, change and finding beauty in different sectors of life. If I could describe their music, I would say that it feels and sounds like flowers, honey and a nostalgic hug from an old friend. My top three from them are “No Sleep,” “By and By” and “All the Debts I Owe.”
Matt Maeson is a new favorite of mine — one of the gems that Spotify so graciously recommended to me. His music falls into the alternative/folk/rock range and his songs have softer verses with more upbeat choruses built on a sense of storytelling. His voice is both tender and powerful, as are his lyrics. He had an interesting upbringing that is reflected in his music, as his parents were both criminals who changed their lives around. He even played music with his family in a prison ministry. My top three from him are “Beggar’s Song,” “Downstairs” and “Cliffy.”
If you are looking for a band to listen to before falling asleep, the music from “The Paper Kites” is genuinely ethereal. Their vibe feels distinctly like walking through the woods into a clearing lit up by lightning bugs and floating lanterns. Their songs are poetic while being a bittersweet mix of blissful and melancholy. My top three from them are “Paint,” “Featherstone” and “Take Me Home.”
Known for “Little Talks,” Of Monsters and Men is a band that falls into the folk/rock genre. Their songs use mythical and fairy-tale-like imagery to create stories with quiet acoustic passages and unique, catchy choruses. My top three from them are “Wolves Without Teeth,” “King and Lionheart” and “Dirty Paws.”
Jonah Kagen, another recent favorite of mine, falls on the folk and indie side, with some country elements. His songs are raw, emotional and make you feel understood. All of his tracks are great ones to sing along to, whether you are alone with your thoughts, experiencing heartbreak or you simply just want to feel something. Kagen’s most recent album, “Sunflowers and Leather,” was written, recorded and produced by himself, all while he was traveling across the country in a converted airstream trailer.
My top three from him are “Burn Me” (specifically the version where Sam Barber is featured), “Save My Soul” and “You Again.”
The 502s are a lot more upbeat and sunshiny, also falling into the indie-folk category. Their music is old and beachy-sounding, featuring instruments like the piano, banjo and horns. They incorporate “shout-along” choruses with a breezy feel and my top three from them are “Magdalene,” “Perfect Portrait of Young Love” and “Something’s Gonna Go Our Way.”
Buffalo Traffic Jam is a duo of two folk-music artists from Montana that sounds like a more modern version of Caamp, with a slightly louder sound. They released their first track in May 2024 and have released nine songs since then. Their music is catchy while still being deep and heartfelt, using storytelling lyrics and acoustic guitars. Their voices also feel very raw and vulnerable. My favorites from them are “Forgot Your Roots,” “Comfort in Misery,” and “Strangers Now.”
Lastly, we have The Backseat Lovers. They also opened for The Lumineers earlier this year and have very similar fanbases. This band also falls into the folk-indie category but I would argue that their sound is very distinct. Their music features a lot of impressive guitar work, with lots of guitar breaks and they incorporate charismatic effects like vocal samples and distortion/fuzz for solos. My top three from them are “Maple Syrup,” “Out of Tune” and “Kilby Girl.”
Exploring The Lumineers for me opened the door to a rich world of indie-folk music, full of heartfelt lyrics, storytelling and emotional depth. I recommend all of these artists and encourage you to listen if you haven’t yet!
Four people were hurt when a fire broke out in a Brookside apartment building Tuesday morning.
Todd Blanche announces 11-count indictment over payments to informants in extremist groups including Ku Klux Klan
The Southern Poverty Law Center, the prominent civil rights organization, has been indicted on federal fraud charges related to past payments it made to confidential informants to infiltrate extremist groups including the Ku Klux Klan, the justice department has announced.
In a statement, Bryan Fair, the SPLC’s chief executive, called the allegations “false” and said the justice department’s actions “will not shake our resolve to fight for justice and ensure the promise of the civil rights movement becomes a reality for all”.
Continue reading..."Am I gonna replace a controller and have AI manage the airspace? The answer to that is hell no, that's not gonna happen," Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy told CBS News.
Customers are scrambling to buy any available storage as a result of the AI boom and the ensuring run on flash chips used for storage and memory. But what if old-school spinning disk could also play a meaningful role in AI? That’s the message being told by WD (formerly Western Digital), which is doing brisk business selling its HDDs and JBOD enclosures to cloud customers, AI users, and HPC sites.
“We’re doing very well,” says Scott Hamilton, the senior director of product management for marketing and customer experience at WD. “We were seeing growth anyway, but I think that [the flash shortage] is also driving growth. ‘Okay, we can’t get all flash. So can we get HDD.’”
Since its separation from SANdisk became official in February 2025, WD has pivoted its business plan away from flash and toward hard disk drives (HDDs). The company’s product lineup today consists of HDDs that it manufactures, as well as just a bunch of disk (JBOD) storage enclosures that support HDDs and NVMe drives. It sells these JBOD enclosures with NVMe drives from SANdisk, or leaves it up to OEMs, like VDURA, who fill them with whatever flavor of disk they like.

HDD’s occupy the middle ground in cost and performance (Source: WD paper: “The Long-Term Case for HDD Storage”)
And here’s something you probably didn’t know: WD also manufactures magnetic heads for tape drives. “I always like to mention this little Trivial Pursuit storage question,” Hamilton told HPCwire in a recent interview. “We are the sole manufacturer of tape heads as well.”
WD is one of just three companies that still manufacture HDDs, along with Seagate and Toshiba. The San Jose, California-based company, which sells nearly 90% of its products to cloud customers, enjoyed a 25% increase in sales last quarter, to $3.02 billion. Business is so good for WD during the AI boom that the company ran out of supply to sell for 2026, CEO Irving Tan said in the February earnings call. It’s due to announce its fiscal year 2026 third quarter results next week; analysts are expecting to see a 40% increase in sales.
This wasn’t supposed to happen. Depending on who you listen to in the IT industry, HDDs were supposed to have disappeared by now, along with tape. They’re both too slow compared to flash storage, we’ve been told. They also have more moving parts and they fail more often. Going all flash with storage brings a lot of benefits, not to mention simplicity. It’s just a matter of time before either HDDs or tape–or both–disappear.
That narrative never got off the ground at WD. “There are certain people that they’d like you to drink that Kool-Aid [that spinning disk is going away], but that’s not the case,” Hamilton said.
While flash holds substantial advantages over HDDs and tape, it still can’t match either storage modality in capacity and cost-per-GB. Nobody predicted the current AI boom would exhaust the world’s supply of NAND for flash and memory–let alone slam the CPU market–but here we are. Suddenly, having a tiered storage plan–with the hottest data stored on flash, warm data on HDDs, and cold data stored on tape–looks not only prudent from an economic perspective, but perhaps the only way to actually store all your data (at least until new flash fabs can be built).

This is the mantra that Hamilton is spreading. “Because of the scarcity of storage and components across the board, I think you’re seeing a lot more conversations about tiering,” he said. “If you look at the tape companies, they’re seeing an increase in tape because everybody’s looking for every bit of storage that they can, and then how to tier it and how to optimize it.”
Different stages of AI have different storage requirements. With the current focus on AI inference and the latency involved in pulling up specific pieces of data from KV caches or databases, having a very fast storage connection, such as flash connected via NVMe, is desirable to keep your users from waiting minutes to get a response from AI prompts. WD offers an NVMe-over-fabric array, the OpenFlex Data24 4000 series, that uses flash disks and can address customers KV cache offload requirements.
But during AI training runs, HDDs connected via Ethernet can provide the speed and the capacity necessary to keep the bits flowing and the GPUs busy. “Definitely on the front end of the AI lifecycle…it’s hard for all of your bulk storage to be on flash,” Hamilton said. “And then if you want to protect, whether it’s checkpoints and archival, to do all that on flash is pretty expensive.”

WD’s stock (NASDAQ: WDC) is up 967% in the past 12 months
WD currently manufactures one speed of HDD: 7,200 RPM. The days of 10,000 RPM or 15,000 RPM drives are long gone, having been replaced by flash drives. The company today sells the bulk of its HDDs in the 20TB to 30TB range, according to Hamilton, but it’s actively developing a HAMR (Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording) HDD capacities up to 100TB, which it plans to deliver by 2029.
It’s also developing high-bandwidth technology that enables simultaneous reading and writing from multiple heads on multiple tracks, which it says will deliver up to 2x the bandwidth of conventional HDDs without power penalties. “We already have proof of concepts where we can increase the performance by 2X,” Hamilton said. “And today, from a proof-of-performance, proof-of-concept perspective, we’ve got the know-how and the ability, we’re projecting 8X performance by 2030.”
The company is also developing so-called Dual Pivot Technology, which adds set of independently operating actuators on a separate pivot inside the drive. WD says this approach will deliver up to 2x sequential I/O gain in the drive, thereby allowing it to maintain consistent seek times as the storage capacity increase to 40TB, 60TB, and eventually 100TB. The eventual goal is to close the performance gap with today’s QLC flash drives.
“The whole idea there is the performance per terabyte doesn’t get degraded. It’s at least maintained, if not improved,” Hamilton said. “That allows us to, with high bandwidth drives, to move up a little bit, rather than get squeezed in that [HDD] flight mentality.”
“Spinning disk fights back,” he said.
(Image feature courtesy WD)
The post WD Bullish on Spinning Disk Amid AI Boom appeared first on HPCwire.
After dealing with health anxiety caused by tracking my body's metrics on smartwatches, I took matters into my own hands with expert advice.
Outgoing CEO took stood up for users in battle with FBI but concessions abroad undermine claims of protecting ‘fundamental right’
In his 15 years as Apple’s top executive, Tim Cook has projected an image of the company as a champion of privacy rights. As he prepares to leave that role in September, that legacy has come back into focus. Cook trumpeted the iPhone maker’s commitment to privacy at home in the US and the EU, calling privacy “a fundamental right” but his acquiescence to government demands abroad call his dedication to protecting users into question.
Cook cemented Apple’s pro-privacy reputation in 2015 when he resisted the FBI’s demands to unlock the iPhone of a mass shooter in San Bernardino, California. The company played up that public image in 2019 with playful ads that read, “Privacy. That’s iPhone”, positioning Apple as the obvious choice for people who cared about privacy. In 2021, Apple added a feature, App Tracking Transparency, that allowed iPhone owners to limit an app’s ability to track their mobile activity. Apps that tracked users without permission would be removed, Cook said.
Continue reading...The announcement came as talks set to take place between U.S. and Iranian delegations in Pakistan were postponed amid uncertainty about the broad strokes of a deal.
Declaration comes amid intense efforts to bring two sides together in Pakistan for new round of talks
Donald Trump unilaterally announced an extension of the two-week ceasefire with Iran on Tuesday amid frantic efforts to bring the two sides back to the negotiating table.
Hours after announcing that he “expected to be bombing”, the US president said he would extend the ceasefire until Iranian negotiators submitted a proposal for peace.
Continue reading...WASHINGTON, April 21, 2026 — North America’s Building Trades Unions (NABTU) and Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday announced an expanded partnership to support a strong workforce pipeline and help workers across North America build the skills needed to succeed in an AI-powered economy.
Building on a partnership that has already trained 1,500 instructors in hands-on training centers nationwide, NABTU and Microsoft are now launching no-cost AI literacy courses and industry-recognized credentials to help make foundational AI skills accessible to millions of skilled craft professionals across North America. The partnership also extends to TradesFutures, a nonprofit 501(c)(3), to expand awareness of careers in the skilled trades. This partnership will build AI literacy across TradesFutures’ apprenticeship readiness program network that connects people to union construction apprenticeship programs and careers in 34 states.
The collaboration reflects a practical, long-term approach to ensuring that the people and communities building the AI economy share in its benefits. Together Microsoft and NABTU are creating real career pathways and access to AI skills training designed with and for the skilled trades, grounded in the realities of the jobsite, focused on safety and quality, and delivered through trusted union apprenticeship systems and Microsoft’s online LinkedIn learning platform that can help millions of people enter family-sustaining careers.
The expanded partnership is aligned to Microsoft’s Community-First AI Infrastructure commitments, reflecting a focus on helping ensure the communities where new infrastructure is built benefit from the jobs created.
“The people building the physical infrastructure of the AI economy, like electricians, ironworkers and pipefitters, deserve a share in its opportunity,” said Brad Smith, Vice Chair and President of Microsoft. “That’s why we’re expanding our work with NABTU, bringing free AI training to millions of skilled craft professionals across North America, while preserving the hands-on expertise that defines their craft.”
The partnership centers on integrating AI education into NABTU’s Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee (JATC) model and delivering hands-on learning through training centers across all 50 states and Canada. Microsoft and NABTU are also working with JATC faculty, instructors and training directors to co-design curriculum and tailor AI use cases that reflect the needs of the skilled trades — while expanding access beyond the classroom through new, no-cost AI fluency courses available broadly beginning today on LinkedIn Learning. The courses are open to instructors, leaders, apprentices and skilled trades professionals across North America, and upon completion, participants can earn an industry-recognized and in-demand AI literacy credential.
Speaking today at NABTU’s annual Legislative Conference, NABTU President Sean McGarvey said, “NABTU’s training model has always been about scale, quality and lifelong opportunity. Through this expanded collaboration with Microsoft, we are making AI training available to instructors, apprentices and journey-level workers across our system. This work helps keep the building trades at the forefront of innovation while advancing our mission to deliver family-sustaining careers and help shape how new technology expands opportunity for every worker.”
The partnership also extends to TradesFutures, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Operating in 34 states, the TradesFutures Apprenticeship Readiness Program enrolls more than 7,700 people annually, and partners with communities to recruit, train and place participants in union construction apprenticeships and careers. The technical foundation of these programs is the award-winning Multi-Craft Core Curriculum (MC3), which introduces participants to the construction industry and prepares graduates to apply to the apprenticeship program of their choice.
The expanded work supports NABTU’s mission to strengthen pathways into the skilled trades and modernize workforce development as digital tools transform safety, productivity and job requirements across the construction industry. Alongside NABTU’s broader partnership with Microsoft to deliver the physical infrastructure needed to power the future, this collaboration connects workforce innovation with infrastructure investment to ensure skilled trades professionals are equipped with the tools, training and opportunities needed to thrive. Together, the organizations are building a more inclusive, future-ready workforce while broadening access to in-demand skills and construction career opportunities.
About NABTU
North America’s Building Trades Unions is an alliance of 14 national and international unions in the building and construction industry collectively representing over 3 million skilled craft professionals in the United States and Canada. Each year, our unions and signatory contractor partners invest over $2.5 billion in private-sector money to fund and operate over 1,900 apprenticeship training and education facilities across North America that produce the safest, most highly trained, and most productive, skilled craft workers anywhere in the world. NABTU is dedicated to creating economic security and employment opportunities for its construction workers by safeguarding wage and benefits standards, promoting responsible private capital investments, investing in renowned apprenticeship and training, and creating more construction career pathways to the middle class for women, communities of color, Indigenous people, veterans, and the justice-involved. For more information, please visit nabtu.org.
About Microsoft
Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT”) creates platforms and tools powered by AI to deliver innovative solutions that meet the evolving needs of customers. The company is committed to making AI broadly available and doing so responsibly, with a mission to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more.
Source: Microsoft
The post Microsoft Expands Partnership with NABTU to Deliver AI Training for Skilled Trades Workforce appeared first on HPCwire.
GAINESVILLE, Fla., April 21, 2026 — A Gainesville-based startup founded by University of Florida alumni is one of four winners of Verizon’s $1 million Disaster Resilience Prize.
FNN has gained national recognition for its use of artificial intelligence to improve disaster response time and grid resilience. The organization leverages artificial intelligence with UF’s supercomputer, HiPerGator, to reduce the time it takes to identify a devastating wildfire from 24 hours to 40 seconds.
FNN’s lightning sensors and three other technologies were selected from more than 200 applications. The prize recognizes innovative technologies that strengthen communities’ ability to prepare and respond to natural disasters.
The funding will support scaling FNN’s network of sensors and advancing deployment across regions vulnerable to wildfires. With this investment, FNN can grow faster, operate more efficiently and ultimately protect more lives, amplifying FNN’s impact.
FNN’s technology uses AI models trained on HiPerGator to analyze environmental and lightning data in real time to identify long-duration strikes capable of causing wildfires or power outages. Traditionally, this would take a few days, however with HiPerGator, it takes seconds.
“It’s really been a game changer in how we’re able to process data,” said Caroline Comeau, the Co-founder and Chief Commercial Officer of FNN. “In the matter of seconds, we’re able to alert firefighters, forestry and utility companies, enabling them to make critical operational decisions.”
FNN also developed a smoke detection sensor using HiPerGator to analyze camera feeds for smoke and fog, triggering warning alerts for response. HiPerGator, powered by NVIDIA DGX B200 systems, was recently ranked No. 1 fastest supercomputer in U.S. higher education by multiple industry-standard benchmarks.
The company is closely tied to UF Innovate, a comprehensive commercialization and innovation hub at UF. This collaboration has enabled rapid data processing, which is essential in fast-moving wildfire scenarios. FNN has also worked alongside industry leaders, including NVIDIA, combining academic research with UF’s cutting-edge computing power.
As climate disasters become more severe, innovators like FNN’s demonstrate how technology can deliver timely, life-saving solutions on a larger scale.
Source: University of Florida
The post UF’s HiPerGator Drives FNN’s AI Wildfire Detection in Verizon Prize Recognition appeared first on HPCwire.
April 21, 2026 — Researchers used the world’s fastest supercomputer for open science to train an artificial intelligence model that captures magnetic turbulence within a plasma in unprecedented detail.
Results from the model, trained on the Frontier supercomputer at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, could support research ranging from modeling a supernova to building the next generation of nuclear fusion reactors.
“This kind of capability has long been the dream of astrophysicists and many other scientists,” said Eliu Huerta, a computational scientist at Argonne National Laboratory who oversaw the study led by his graduate student, Semih Kacmaz. “It’s the first time this level of insight via AI has been achieved for systems of this complexity.”
A Stormy Question
Turbulence — the unstable flow of heat and mass — occurs everywhere, from Earth’s atmosphere to the coupling between the electrically charged fluids, or plasmas, and the magnetic fields that surround stars. The churning and swirling of those plasmas creates magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence, a kind of cosmic storm that affects everything from Earth’s magnetic field to the shaping of stars and galaxies.
Improved understanding of MHD turbulence could allow scientists to explore more astrophysical scenarios, design better experiments and improve predictions of cosmic events.
Scientists have typically tried to model these turbulent patterns using approximations such as the Reynolds-Averaged Navier Stokes (RANS) approach, solving a set of time-averaged equations that offer a kind of shortcut to predicting turbulent flow. But these approximations too often omit key details and fail to account for all relevant physics.
“The more chaotic the system, the harder to simulate it,” Huerta said. “Traditional AI models struggle to reproduce these patterns for the same reason: because these interactions are so complex and computationally demanding to reproduce, the models smooth out the fine details that define turbulence and we lose the insights we seek.”

Researchers used ORNL’s Frontier supercomputer to train an AI model that captures the details of magnetic turbulence within a plasma. Credit: Semih Kacmaz.
A Marriage of Models
To succeed where other approaches failed, Kacmaz settled on a two-stage strategy for modeling the MHD patterns. The first stage called for a physics-informed neural operator — a specialized AI architecture that learns the mapping, or relationships, between various sets of functions that can be used to express and solve the governing equations for a physical system. Examples of this type of AI include the algorithms that learn to recognize atmospheric patterns for weather forecasting.
The second stage used a score-based diffusion model — a generative AI framework that synthesizes complex data distributions by learning to reverse the gradual addition of noise to data. Examples of this type of model include the algorithms that refine satellite photos by learning to recognize and remove haze or cloud cover.
Training those models required the computational power to generate thousands of detailed plasma simulations across turbulence levels from the mildest to the most extreme. The team received an allocation of computing time on Frontier, the exascale flagship supercomputer at ORNL’s Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, capable of peak speeds of 2 exaflops, or 2 quintillion calculations per second.
Frontier’s speeds enabled the team to train the neural operators on the necessary physics to capture the overall details of MHD turbulence and to train the diffusion model on finer details, such as the smaller eddies and flows within the larger turbulence patterns. Together the models acted as a kind of AI tag team for simulating the turbulence.
“Frontier was a lifesaver for us,” Kacmaz said. “We used Frontier to generate high-fidelity datasets to train our diffusion model and to train our physics-informed neural operators. Those steps required tremendous amounts of computations that had been a bottleneck for us, and Frontier made them practical.”
The Two-Step Solution
Spreading the workload across the two stages allowed the neural operator to accurately resolve the bulk evolution of the plasma and establish the mean flow, capturing the largest features in the turbulent flow. The diffusion model worked to reproduce the cascade of smaller patterns in the flow by regenerating the smallest and fastest of the fluctuations that define the system’s complexity.
“The neural operators give us the large-scale physics quickly, but turbulence lives in the tiny details,” Kacmaz said. “By training the diffusion model to learn only what the neural operators cannot represent, we were able to reconstruct the missing magnetic and velocity structures across all scales.”
The resulting framework delivers plasma turbulence predictions in seconds and reduces prediction errors by more than half when compared with earlier approaches, even when modeling extreme turbulence.
“This is the first time AI has been able to faithfully model magnetized turbulence at such extreme conditions,” Huerta said. “By coupling the physics-informed neural operators with generative diffusion, we created a framework that respects the equations while recovering the full complexity of the plasma.”
The team hopes to expand the model to simulate even more complex systems, including full 3D plasma resolution and astrophysical settings, and for applications such as modeling plasma turbulence for nuclear fusion reactors.
This research was supported by the DOE Office of Science’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research program and by the National Science Foundation. The OLCF is a DOE Office of Science user facility at ORNL.
UT-Battelle manages ORNL for DOE’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://energy.gov/science.
Source: ORNL
The post ORNL’s Frontier Supercomputer Trains AI to Model Cosmic Storms appeared first on HPCwire.

Two weeks after unfounded rumors said President Donald Trump suffered a health issue, social media users shared a video they said showed proof he was just taken to a hospital.
In the video, two men appear to assist Trump as he walks unsteadily out of a building. A sign on the building reads "Walter Reed National Military Medical Center."
"BREAKING: There are some reports Trump has been taken to Walter Reed Hospital," the captions of multiple Facebook posts sharing the video read. The earliest we found was posted April 19 and the latest was posted April 21.
The footage isn’t real. It contains signs that it was made with artificial intelligence.
We contacted the Walter Reed hospital’s communications office, which said that the logo shown in the video is not the hospital’s official logo, and the signage is inconsistent with that at the hospital.
When the video zooms in on the scene, it reveals the text on the sign to be gibberish. The logo also doesn’t match any of the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center’s current or previous logos.
We ran the clip through Google Gemini, which detected SynthID, a digital watermark embedded in Google AI tool creations; it’s invisible to humans, but Google’s technology can identify it.
(Screenshots from Facebook)
When we contacted the White House to ask if Trump visited Walter Reed in the past two weeks, a White House official responded by saying the video was fake. We found no recent news reports that Trump visited the hospital.
His calendar showed he had a policy meeting and signed executive orders on April 20, and scheduled executive time on both April 19 and 20. On April 21, Trump joined CNBC’s "Squawk Box" for a phone interview. Trump’s Truth Social page also remained active in the last few days. This video doesn’t show Trump at the Walter Reed hospital.
We rate that claim False.
UPDATE, April 21, 2026: This story has been updated to include the White House's post-publication response.
RELATED: How AI, an old video and road closures fueled Easter weekend rumors about President Trump’s health
There is growing international concern as the fragile two-week ceasefire reaches its Wednesday deadline. Whatever happens next, the poor will pay
More than 3,300 Iranians, including 383 children, have been killed since the US and Israel launched their illegal war, authorities said this week. Asked about Wednesday’s ceasefire deadline, Donald Trump first said that he expected to resume bombing, then unilaterally announced that he was extending the truce “until discussions are concluded”. Whatever happens – or doesn’t – with the US-Iranian peace talks due to take place in Islamabad, the costs of this disastrous conflict will keep growing. The only thing that the sides have in common is that each needs peace, but thinks that it can force the other into significant concessions.
Iran has deployed its drones and missiles to punishing effect, but knows that its chief weapon is the economic pain it can inflict, primarily through control of the strait of Hormuz. The International Monetary Fund warned last week that a further escalation could trigger a global recession. Its head, Kristalina Georgieva, had already said that the crisis would remain a threat to the global economy even if it ended overnight. The costs mount over time. But while the pain is widely spread, it is far from evenly shared. The combination of higher energy, food and fertiliser costs will increasingly hammer poorer and heavily import-reliant nations.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Analysts say next boss John Ternus should diversify tech giant away from iPhones and raise its game in AI
John Ternus takes over from Tim Cook as chief executive of Apple in September. A company insider, Ternus is moving up from his role as head of engineering to take control of the entire $4tn (£3tn) business.
Apple is a vast, successful tech company and one of the most recognised brands in the world. But it faces challenges nonetheless. Here is a look at Ternus’s in-tray.
Continue reading...
We’re honored to have won the 2026 Webby People’s Voice Award in the category for Websites and Mobile Sites: News & Politics. Thank you to our loyal readers and social media followers who voted for us.

FactCheck.org has now won 12 People’s Voice Awards, dating back to 2007.
The Webby Awards have been presented by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences since 1996. This year’s winners will be honored in a May 11 event in New York City.
We did not win this year’s Webby Award in News & Politics that is chosen by a panel of judges (we have won the judges’ award 10 times in the past). The Trace, which reports on the issue of gun violence in the U.S., took home the 2026 prize. The other nominees in our category were the Council on Foreign Relations; Reuters, for its coverage of Syria after the fall of the Assad regime; and the SLAPP Back Initiative, a project based at New York University that tracks so-called SLAPP lawsuits targeting First Amendment expression.
Thanks again to our readers for their support. Now, we need to work on our 5-Word Speech, a hallmark of the Webbys.
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post We Won a Webby People’s Voice Award appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Researchers find model starts to mirror tone when exposed to impoliteness – sometimes escalating into explicit threats
ChatGPT can escalate into abusive and even threatening language when drawn into prolonged, human-style conflict, according to a new study.
Researchers tested how large language models (LLMs) responded to sustained hostility by feeding ChatGPT exchanges from real-life arguments and tracking how its behaviour changed over time.
Continue reading...Inquiry launched after Ofcom received evidence that suggested illegal content was being shared on messaging platform
Ofcom has launched an investigation into whether the Telegram messaging platform is failing to prevent the sharing of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) under the UK’s Online Safety Act.
The communications regulator carried out an assessment and decided to launch an investigation after receiving evidence from the Canadian Centre for Child Protection that suggested child sexual abuse material was allegedly present and being shared on Telegram.
Continue reading...Senators are likely to press Warsh, President Trump's nominee to succeed Jerome Powell as Fed chair, on his views about inflation and interest rates.
A Taiwan crisis would cause far more global economic damage than Strait of Hormuz disruption Expert comment LToremark
As China ramps up its pressure on Taiwan, the Strait of Hormuz closure must serve as a wake-up call for European policymakers.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz following the start of the Iran war has had huge consequences for the global economy. It has cut off essential supply lines for oil and gas, fertilizer and industrial chemicals, prompting the IMF to warn of a possible global recession if the war does not abate. As governments scramble to respond, the conflict in the Gulf should also prompt them to ramp up their preparations for a possible crisis over Taiwan – which would have a far more devastating impact on Europe and the global economy.
This is not an academic point. China has been intensifying its military, diplomatic and economic pressure on Taiwan, as it seeks to absorb the de facto independent island, which it claims as its sovereign territory. In recent years, Beijing has started to use military exercises to trial a possible blockade of Taiwan. Chinese leaders refuse to renounce the use of force to achieve their stated goal of unification, which they describe as a ‘historical mission that we must fulfil’.
Taiwan plays a pivotal role in the global economy and supply chains, as the leading producer of the advanced semiconductors that power AI and cutting-edge electronics. The Taiwan Strait – the 180-kilometre-wide channel that separates the island from China – is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes. Like the Strait of Hormuz, it is also a major maritime chokepoint that could be restricted or cut off in a range of scenarios from a Chinese customs quarantine or blockade to a full-blown military conflict. Given the role that Taiwan’s semiconductors play in driving the global economy, significant disruptions to this trade could have catastrophic, cascading impacts on the global economy.
Semiconductors are very different from hydrocarbons such as oil and gas. They are not commodities that can be easily stockpiled or substituted. If companies need to find new sources of microchip, they must alter their software design and certification, which can be lengthy processes.
A Chinese air and sea blockade of Taiwan would prompt a 5 per cent fall in global gross domestic product, similar to the downturns of the 2008-09 global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a forecast by Bloomberg. If the situation were to escalate and lead to war between the US and China, the global economy would shrink by nearly 10 per cent. The European Union and Southeast Asia would be among those most impacted, after Taiwan itself.
Governments and companies in Europe have already started talking about contingency planning in private. These discussions have intensified in the aftermath of US attacks on Iran. But the problem is that building alternative sources of semiconductor supply will take decades and vast pools of political and financial capital – and Europe is short on both. The European Chips Act, which came into force in September 2023 to help boost the region’s semiconductor ecosystem, was a step in the right direction, but it is far from sufficient.
To move forward more quickly on the long-term push to diversify electronics supply chains, European governments need to expand their cooperation with Taiwan. They should learn from Taiwanese officials, experts and industry leaders like TSMC, which is working with Europe’s Bosch, Infineon and NXP to build a €10bn advanced semiconductor fab in Dresden, Germany.
European governments and their partners should also consider how best they can forestall China from taking escalatory steps towards Taiwan. While only the US has the capacity to deter Beijing militarily, there is much that Europe can do to support Taiwan’s efforts to make itself a harder target for China. Through their extensive – if technically unofficial – relationships, European governments should do more to help boost Taiwan’s international connections and presence. They should also deepen intelligence sharing and cooperation with Taipei on their shared challenge of managing grey-zone threats, from economic coercion and information warfare to democratic interference and submarine cable disruption.
Europe should also intensify its efforts to communicate the global costs of escalation to China and countries in the Global South that maintain strong relationships with Beijing. Although Xi Jinping and other Chinese leaders are acting in an increasingly assertive manner, they are not geopolitical gamblers like their partners in Russia and North Korea. The Chinese leadership still cares how it is perceived in the world – especially across the Global South – which explains why it is mounting a concerted campaign to bring other nations on side with its position on Taiwan.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Port of Wilmington is one of the last anchors of good-paying, blue-collar jobs in Delaware. It also has suffered a string of financial blows over a dramatic six-year period. Now state officials says they are ready to move forward with plans to build a new container terminal if they can figure out how to pay for increased costs.
Delaware’s longstanding plans to expand the Port of Wilmington with a new container terminal in Edgemoor will cost millions more than previously estimated, forcing the state and its private port operator, Enstructure, into negotiations over how to cover a $185 million funding gap.
During a meeting Monday of the state board that oversees the Port of Wilmington, Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez publicly revealed the financial gap when announcing that current plans to construct the container terminal would cost $669 million — an amount to be split between Delaware and Enstructure.
Patibanda-Sanchez noted the figure reflects a plan that is partially scaled back from previous versions, and includes designs for a shorter port bulkhead where ships would dock.

The total cost is higher than previous estimates for more ambitious proposals — a result of increases in equipment costs, integrating clean technologies, tariffs, and other inflationary pressures, she said.
The increased costs also mark the latest financial shift for what has been an embattled port expansion project, first promised in 2018 as one that would be funded entirely with private-sector dollars.
On Monday, Patibanda-Sanchez — who serves as chair of the port oversight board — said the portion of the additional costs to be absorbed by taxpayers will be determined in negotiations with Enstructure.
She said she expects those to happen in good faith “and hopefully very quickly.”
Despite the price tag and lingering questions about the cost to taxpayers, members of the port’s oversight board voted unanimously on Monday to reaffirm Delaware’s commitment to the Edgemoor project.
The board passed the resolution without public discussion. But it did follow a lengthy executive session, which members of the public are not permitted to attend.
Following the vote, Patibanda-Sanchez indicated that construction on the long awaited infrastructure project could begin soon.
It follows years of efforts from state officials who saw Edgemoor as central to increasing the Port of Wilmington’s competitiveness in the region — and thereby expanding its base of good-paying, blue-collar jobs.
Notably, in 2024, then-Gov. John Carney committed $195 million to the project, arguing the investment would create thousands of jobs.
Despite the promises, there has been also pushback from various communities, particularly from residents who live in and around the Edgemoor area. Many have argued that the construction and operation of a new port would harm their local environment and strain area roads.
Also opposing the expansion plans have been competing ports in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. In late 2024, a federal judge nearly derailed the Edgemoor expansion when siding with those neighboring ports in a lawsuit challenging the legitimacy of federal dredging permits granted to Delaware.
In his sharply worded opinion, the judge said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had disregarded maritime safety hazards when issuing those approvals.
Earlier this month, Delaware officials announced that the Army Corps reissued those contested permits following an arduous reapplication process.
The post New costs for Port of Wilmington expansion leave $185M funding gap appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
What does Pakistan gain from its Iran–US diplomacy? Expert comment jon.wallace
Islamabad has an obvious interest in ending the war, to ease energy problems and cool tensions on its border with Iran. But any hopes for economic benefits from the Trump administration may be misplaced.
While the world waits for a peace agreement between the United States and Iran, with US President Donald Trump announcing a possible second round of talks in Islamabad, Pakistan continues to take centre stage as an indefatigable mediator claiming neutrality and the trust of all sides. For a country still mired in conflicts with its neighbours and viewed until recently by Trump as a strategic destabilizer, Pakistan’s emergence as a peacemaker is nothing short of a dazzling reinvention.
Islamabad’s achievements in securing a ceasefire between the US and Iran and bringing the two warring parties together for their first high level direct engagement since 1979 are not to be underestimated.
But Pakistan’s ongoing military campaign against Afghanistan, its historically uneasy relations with Iran, and the ambiguous terms of its yet to be ratified mutual defence agreement with Saudi Arabia do cast a shadow over its credibility as a peacemaker and neutral host.
Pakistan’s meteoric rise as a mediator is driven by a combination of necessity and structural constraints. The strong personal ties between President Trump and Pakistan’s all-powerful army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir – who retains a tight grip over his country’s foreign policy – are also a crucial factor.
Pakistan’s motives to play a mediator role are clear. It is heavily reliant on energy imports, with more than 85 per cent of its oil needs and nearly all its liquified natural gas (LNG) supplied by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and neighbouring Gulf states.
As a result of the war, the government was forced to impose sweeping austerity measures, order a four-day working week for public employees, and close schools to conserve energy. Some restrictions have since been eased, but there is abiding concern that Pakistan’s near-bankrupt economy could face collapse without international bailouts.
On 17 April Saudi Arabia stepped in to provide $3 billion in additional support to Pakistan. Riyadh also extended the roll-over arrangement of a $5 billion facility for a further three years. The high stakes for Islamabad in resolving the conflict are also dictated by geography. Pakistan shares a 900km border with Iran, which places it close to the battlefield. The border is a vital trade and transit corridor and energy supply route, and is already vulnerable to instability.
Of special concern is the region of Balochistan (known in Iran as Sistan-Balochistan), which straddles the border. There have been repeated bouts of violence by militant groups operating from bases on both sides of the border, with Pakistan’s Balochistan province in the grip of a ferocious separatist insurgency.
Pakistan’s sectarian demography lends additional impetus to its mediation. Sunnis are a majority in the country, but it is also home to the world’s second largest Shia population after Iran with estimates ranging from between 10–25 per cent of the total population.
Outbreaks of sectarian violence are relatively rare and generally contained. However, Pakistan has a long history of sectarian tension between Sunnis and Shias dating back to the 1980s. Recent violent demonstrations in Islamabad and Karachi, protesting against the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, led to a tense exchange between Field Marshal Munir and Shia clerics in Islamabad. Munir was reported as telling his audience that ‘if you love Iran so much, then go to Iran’.
But arguably the greatest incentive for Pakistan’s role as a credible mediator stems from the close personal rapport between President Trump and Field Marshal Munir.
Close relations between US presidents and Pakistan’s military leaders have been a consistent feature since the 1950s. But this latest expression of warming ties follows Pakistan’s lavish praise of President Trump’s efforts for apparently brokering a ceasefire between India and Pakistan in May 2025: Pakistan formally nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize the following month.
While it is unclear how far Munir was personally responsible for the nomination, there is no doubt that he has been uniquely rewarded by President Trump as the locus of real power in Pakistan.
Munir was invited to a private White House lunch by the president in June. In September he was invited back to the Oval Office with Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif to discuss plans for US investment in Pakistan’s critical minerals sector. That came just weeks after Munir attended a retirement ceremony in August for General Michael Kurilla, chief of US Central Command (CENTCOM). Kurilla had previously praised Pakistan as a ‘phenomenal’ partner in counter-terrorism and singled out Munir for his role in extraditing the key suspect accused of the Kabul airport attack during the US withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021.
Munir’s keen interest in fostering partnerships between Pakistan and the US in sectors relating to cryptocurrency, critical minerals and counterterrorism – the so-called ‘3Cs’ – has fuelled speculation about Pakistan’s current calculations and the dividends it may be expecting from its role as peacemaker.
In 2023, Munir widened his remit to oversee Pakistan’s trade and foreign investment opportunities through a newly created Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), chaired by the prime minister and reserving a place for the army chief.
Initial hopes of attracting investments worth $25 billion have fallen significantly short of the target, but there are indications that Pakistan could look to realize its goals by leveraging its warm ties with the Trump administration.
In September 2025 the US Strategic Metals (USSM) company signed a memorandum in Islamabad worth $500 million with the Pakistan army’s engineering unit, the Frontier Works Organization (FWO) and the army’s National Logistics Corporation (NLC) to mine and extract critical minerals in Pakistan.
In January this year, a memorandum of agreement, overseen by Munir and signed in Islamabad, formalized an arrangement between Pakistan and an ‘affiliated entity’ of the US cryptocurrency firm, World Liberty Financial to enable ‘dialogue and technical understanding around emerging digital payment architectures’, according to Reuters.
World Liberty Financial, founded in 2024, is backed by the Trump family. Among its founders are Zach Witkoff, whose father, Steve Witkoff, will reportedly be one of the lead negotiators on the US team at any second round of Iran–US talks in Islamabad.
Pakistan’s declaration in February of ‘open war’ against Afghanistan for harbouring militants belonging to the Pakistani Taliban, and its decision to escalate the war in March – including a claimed strike on the Bagram airbase – have also prompted suggestions that Pakistan may be seeking to mould its counter-terrorism efforts to the priorities of President Trump. In September 2025, Trump signalled his interest in reclaiming the airbase, which had served as a hub for US and NATO forces.
It is too early to tell if Pakistan’s current mediation efforts will yield any tangible benefits from the US, but history offers few grounds for optimism.
The strange triumph of Kim Jong Un.
After three years of war, Sudan’s civilians need stronger support Expert comment jon.wallace
The devastating war in Sudan shows no signs of abating. Diplomatic efforts must prioritize a Sudanese-led political process.
The brutal war in Sudan is now moving into its fourth year, with little prospect of resolution for the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
In the wake of the latest International Sudan Conference, held in Berlin on 15 April, the imperative remains to build a credible framework for an inclusive political process led by Sudanese civilians, and to strengthen channels between existing mediation structures.
On the battlefield, the main belligerents – the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) led by General Abdel-Fatah al-Burhan, and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), under the command of General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (Hemedti), along with their respective coalitions – remain focused on a military victory.
Control of Sudan is divided, with the SAF holding authority over the north and east of the country and the RSF largely in command of the west. The key battlefronts have continued to shift, with fighting now concentrated in the country’s centre and southeast: in the three Kordofan states as well as Blue and White Nile.
There is no sign that either side can fully defeat the other, nor that a stalemate is close. Instead, both will likely seek further gains before the rainy season (June to September) makes territorial advances difficult. However, the rains will provide little respite for civilians, who continue to be indiscriminately targeted as both sides intensify the use of externally procured drones against civilian infrastructure.
Regional interests in the Middle East, Horn of Africa and Red Sea continue to exert influence on Sudan’s conflicting parties. The consolidation of competing regional alliances is obstructing meaningful progress, further complicating a fragmented diplomatic response.
Competition among regional interests in Sudan’s conflict has been notably evidenced by assertive Saudi efforts to curtail the influence of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) since the start of 2026.
More broadly, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey and Qatar have grown closer, with signs of alignment between the UAE and Israel, notably in Somaliland. These partnerships are often compartmentalized, with countries increasingly multi-aligned – presenting as allies on one issue and adversaries on another.
Given such complexity, diplomatic progress towards a ceasefire has been limited, while wider efforts to support a credible political process remain convoluted. Sudan has a Troika, a Quad and a Quintet – but these diplomatic groupings suffer from a lack of coordination.
The Quad mediation mechanism – the US, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – gained traction in mid-2025 in attempts to secure a ceasefire, but offers limited promise. Ostensibly, this platform seeks to navigate the differences between the Arab countries backing Sudan’s warring parties and to generate collective leverage to pressure the belligerents to end the war. However, the Quad has not made progress on stopping external military, financial and political support to them.
Nevertheless, the principles agreed by the Quad in 2025 give it ongoing significance. These include recognition that there is no viable military solution to the conflict; securing a humanitarian truce followed by a permanent ceasefire; a commitment to protect civilians; and support for an inclusive Sudanese transition to establish an independent civilian-led government that is not controlled by any warring party.
President Donald Trump’s Senior Advisor for African Affairs, Massad Boulos, has been working to deliver a humanitarian truce, starting with demilitarization in El Fasher and parts of Kordofan, and the safe return of civilians, supported by a UN oversight mechanism. But there are major obstacles, including SAF’s insistence that the RSF withdraw from urban areas it controls and disarm in advance of truce talks. Such concessions are unimaginable, given the current military balance.
They are compounded by the absence of high-level regional diplomacy, which is paramount if the belligerents are to accept a truce. War in the Middle East has partially diverted the attention of the Quad’s Arab members away from Sudan.
The third International Sudan Conference (co-hosted by Germany, UK, US, EU and AU), marks the latest effort to rouse international attention on Sudan. Expectations were modest – the summit was never likely to deliver a ceasefire. The ministerial session had to settle for a co-chair’s statement rather than a joint communiqué, repeating the lack of consensus at last year’s London Conference.
Berlin was primarily an opportunity for concerted international action that reaffirms support for an end to the war. The conference secured vital humanitarian commitments of over €1.5 billion – the EU and its member states pledging €764 million and the UK €165 million. But it must also mark a turning point for more effective coordination.
One of the main aims of Berlin was to centre non-aligned Sudanese civilians, highlighting their perspectives on ending the war and restoring a civilian-led political dispensation. This stands in sharp contrast to criticism of the conference by Sudan’s SAF aligned de-facto government and objections by the RSF’s Tasis coalition.
The summit included a civilian political seminar organized by the multilateral Quintet bloc (AU, EU, Intergovernmental Authority on Development, League of Arab States and UN), supported by Germany. An important outcome was a joint declaration calling for an end to the war and the advancement of a Sudanese-owned political process leading to civilian leadership.
Sudan urgently needs a credible and inclusive political process, supported by coherent international facilitation. Previous efforts to advance a framework have not materialized, due to deep divisions between Sudanese political blocs and an incoherent approach by the African Union.
The Quintet’s support for an inter-Sudanese political dialogue should be encouraged. This process should be grounded in broad-based civilian participation – with non-aligned democratic actors at the forefront. It should not be controlled by the warring parties, although including elements within their coalitions is essential, provided they seek peace and civilian rule. This linkage is critical to shift incentives away from militarized actors and toward a negotiated transition. It is also a crucial step in providing Sudanese civilians with a platform to pressure the SAF and RSF to end the war.
To be effective, any Quintet-supported process needs to coordinate with the Quad, Troika and other mediating stakeholders, under one coherent umbrella.
The Troika states (US, UK and Norway) have been important mediating actors in Sudan and South Sudan for over two decades. The UK and Norway are aligning efforts to expand dialogue and trust among civilian groups. To be effective, the outcomes of such dialogues should be channelled through the Quintet process, via a coordinating mechanism.
Canada’s foreign and energy policy: In conversation with the Premier of Alberta 30 April 2026 — 16:00 TO 17:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Premier Danielle Smith discusses Alberta’s vision for Canada’s role in the world at a moment of acute external pressure and internal debate.
Premier Danielle Smith discusses Alberta’s vision for Canada’s role in the world at a moment of acute external pressure and internal debate.Alberta brings distinctive leverage to some of the most consequential debates in Canadian politics. As Canada’s most significant energy producer, its huge contributions to federal revenues, and a province closely tied to the United States through deeply integrated energy markets and cross-border investment, Premier Danielle Smith’s government has both high stakes in the current moment and a clear view of how Canada should respond to it. The conflict in the Middle East has sharpened that picture further, accelerating international interest in North American supply and raising the profile of Canada’s export choices.
How Alberta’s priorities interact with the Carney government’s foreign policy agenda - its assertion of Canadian economic sovereignty, its recalibration of alliances, and its positioning of Canada as a dependable partner for nations rethinking energy dependencies - will do much to shape Canada’s offer to the world. Whether that agenda commands consensus across the federation, and on what terms, remains an open question.
In conversation with Laurel Rapp, Director of Chatham House’s US and North America Programme, Premier Smith discusses Alberta’s vision for Canada’s foreign and energy policy, the USMCA negotiations, the bilateral relationship with Washington, and the pressures - internal and external - currently testing the federation.
Israel’s accelerating de facto annexation of the West Bank has dangerous implications Expert comment thilton.drupal
The expansion of Israeli settlements in the West Bank undermines prospects for long-term regional peace. The US, Europe and Arab states should act before it’s too late.
While the world has been distracted by the US-Israeli war on Iran and its fallout, the Israeli government has accelerated the de facto annexation of the occupied West Bank.
If this unilateral imposition of facts on the ground is not immediately addressed, it will become even more difficult to tackle the underlying causes of the Arab-Israeli conflict and could lead to dangerous scenarios for Israel, the Palestinians and the region.
Accelerated annexation efforts have been spearheaded by Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir. These two far-right cabinet ministers have been open about their determination to exercise Israeli sovereignty over the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT) and to ‘continue to kill the idea of a Palestinian state’.
Israel has not formally annexed the West Bank. But since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition government took office in December 2022, there has been a surge in settlement expansion policies and settler violence in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. As part of the coalition agreement, Netanyahu pledged to legalize illegally built outposts and increase settlement funding. He also promised to advance policies that would apply Israeli sovereignty in the West Bank ‘while choosing the timing and considering the national and international interests of the state of Israel’.
In July 2025, the Knesset approved in a symbolic vote a non-binding motion to ‘apply Israeli sovereignty to Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley,’ in a reference to the West Bank.
And while US President Donald Trump has voiced his opposition to annexation of the West Bank, the number of settlements approved by the Israeli government increased dramatically after he was elected for a second term in November 2024, with an annual record of 54 new settlements officially approved in 2025.
That year, Israel gave final approval to the controversial settlement project close to East Jerusalem known as E1, a long-proposed settlement scheme that covers around three per cent of the occupied West Bank. The project creates a ring of control around historic Jerusalem and the holy sites, breaks territorial continuity of the West Bank and critically undermines the viability of a future peace process. Smotrich said the project would ‘bury the idea of a Palestinian state.’
This February, Israel’s security cabinet approved a series of measures that expand Israeli rule and governance over the occupied West Bank, a move widely condemned as in breach of international law. These measures explicitly extend the authority of Israeli ministries and government institutions into the West Bank, marking a shift away from military administration and effectively integrating parts of the occupied territory into the administrative framework of Israel.
Within these measures, the government established a process to register West Bank land as ‘state property’. The process builds on a cabinet decision in May last year, which Defence Minister Israel Katz said ‘does justice for Jewish settlement in Judea and Samaria, and will strengthen, consolidate and broaden it.’
This process will require Palestinians living in ‘Area C’, which comprises about 60 per cent of the West Bank, to prove ownership of their lands under conditions that critics say are ‘nearly impossible for them to meet.’ In case ownership cannot be proven, the default is that land will be registered as state owned.
The rest of the West Bank, comprised of ‘Area A’ and ‘Area B’, could also face a similar fate. February’s measures already expand Israeli oversight and enforcement in parts of these areas with regard to water issues, heritage and archaeological sites. A controversial bill that would establish an Israeli civilian body with broad powers to manage archaeology in the West Bank is already under review for Knesset legislation.
Annexation is a short-sighted plan with dangerous long-term implications.
UN resolutions and the International Court of Justice (ICJ) recognize that the OPT constitutes a single territorial unit, reinforcing the legal coherence of Palestinian statehood.
Israeli land seizure measures are already establishing unilateral facts on the ground that would make the prospect of Palestinian statehood very difficult to achieve. Blurring governance lines between settlements and the Israeli state while denying Palestinians their basic rights will only increase their displacement and dispossession.
This is in line with Smotrich’s 2017 ‘decisive plan’, in which he envisioned Palestinians giving up their aspirations for an independent state and then either emigrating or remaining in the West Bank ‘as individuals in the Jewish State.’
Annexation measures continue to shrink the space for Palestinian independence, undermine Palestinian agency and push the Palestinian Authority (PA) to political and financial collapse.
This undermines the feasibility of a viable independent Palestinian state alongside Israel and plays into the hands of extremists who have long opposed Arab-Israeli peace.
These measures also hinder any progress of President Trump’s 20-point plan and undermine the prospect of Israel’s regional integration.
Annexation impedes the implementation of UNSC Resolution 2803 and directly conflicts with the White House’s stated support for a ‘stable West Bank.’ If the US wants long-term stability in the Middle East, pressuring Israel through conditioning political and military support to reverse annexation measures should be a priority.
Annexation also risks the further deterioration of Israel’s already-strained relations with its immediate neighbours, especially Jordan. Amman has long considered the displacement of Palestinians and any schemes to relocate them to Jordan as red lines. Many Jordanians now fear that the recent measures in the West Bank will lead to a potential influx of refugees across the border.
Egypt, a key party to the implementation of the Trump 20-point plan, has also condemned annexation. Both countries should leverage their peace treaties with Israel to obtain guarantees from the US to stop settlement expansion.
As for the wider region, while the Iran war and its fallout have shifted political and financial priorities, the urgent need for regional stability has only increased. The wave of regional conflict that followed Hamas’s October 7 attack has shown that, regardless of how many defence and commercial ties Arab countries forge with Israel or the US, stability in the region will not be achieved without resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in a just and sustainable manner.
Countries like the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey should coordinate to push against annexation. As key political and financial members of Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’, they can make reversing Israel’s annexation measures a condition of their membership of the board and leverage their bilateral economic relations with the US.
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