Tom Barrack, a top U.S. diplomat and longtime friend of President Trump, networked and socialized with Epstein for years, CBS News found.
Giant slalom gold for Brazil | Get in touch: email Tanya
Women’s dual moguls: It’s all very civilised out on the snow, the athletes have a hug when they reach the bottom. I was thinking the snow looked a bit grubby but it turns out the authorities put out pine needles – I think to help skiers find their way.
Anyway, they’ve zipped through very quickly and have already sorted the quarter finals, with four Americans in the final eight.
Continue reading...It is Jordan Stolz's second gold medal of the 2026 Winter Games, breaking a world record.
An anonymous reader shared this report from the Register: Telcos likely received advance warning about January's critical Telnet vulnerability before its public disclosure, according to threat intelligence biz GreyNoise. Global Telnet traffic "fell off a cliff" on January 14, six days before security advisories for CVE-2026-24061 went public on January 20. The flaw, a decade-old bug in GNU InetUtils telnetd with a 9.8 CVSS score, allows trivial root access exploitation. GreyNoise data shows Telnet sessions dropped 65 percent within one hour on January 14, then 83 percent within two hours. Daily sessions fell from an average 914,000 (December 1 to January 14) to around 373,000, equating to a 59 percent decrease that persists today. "That kind of step function — propagating within a single hour window — reads as a configuration change on routing infrastructure, not behavioral drift in scanning populations," said GreyNoise's Bob Rudis and "Orbie," in a recent blog [post]. The researchers unverified theory is that infrastructure operators may have received information about the make-me-root flaw before advisories went to the masses... 18 operators, including BT, Cox Communications, and Vultr went from hundreds of thousands of Telnet sessions to zero by January 15... All of this points to one or more Tier 1 transit providers in North America implementing port 23 filtering. US residential ISP Telnet traffic dropped within the US maintenance window hours, and the same occurred at those relying on transatlantic or transpacific backbone routes, all while European peering was relatively unaffected, they added.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Senators said repeal was ‘particularly troubling’ and was counter to EPA’s mandate to protect human health
More than three dozen Democratic senators have begun an independent inquiry into the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) following a huge change in how the agency measures the health benefits of reducing air pollution that is widely seen as a major setback to US efforts to combat the climate crisis.
In a regulatory impact analysis, the EPA said it would stop assigning a monetary value to the health benefits associated with regulations on fine particulate matter and ozone. The agency argued that the estimates contain too much uncertainty.
Continue reading...‘I think the desire from the US president is exactly the same,’ Mette Frederiksen tells Munich Security Conference
Rubio insists that the US “do not seek to separate, but to revitalise an old friendship.”
He says “we do not want allies to rationalise the broken status quo rather than reckon with what is necessary to fix it.”
“We do not want our allies to be weak, because that makes us weaker.
We want allies who can defend themselves, so that no adversary will ever be tempted to test our collective strength. This is why we do not want our allies to be shackled by guilt and shame.
Continue reading...Ilia Malinin entered the Olympic free skate as the runaway favorite. Early mistakes triggered a meltdown that laid bare the brutal math of modern figure skating
What made Ilia Malinin’s Olympic defeat so shocking was not simply his years-long dominance entering Friday night. It was how completely the competition had tilted in his favor before he even stepped on the ice.
For nearly three years, Malinin had been men’s skating’s guiding light: unbeaten since late 2023, winner of back-to-back world titles, the skater who recalibrated the sport’s technical ceiling and then made winning look procedural. He arrived at the Milano Ice Skating Arena leading by more than five points after the short program and carrying the most difficult planned program in the field. Under almost any normal competitive logic, that combination should have been decisive.
Continue reading...Wall Street Journal says Claude used in operation via Anthropic’s partnership with Palantir Technologies
Claude, the AI model developed by Anthropic, was used by the US military during its operation to kidnap Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela, the Wall Street Journal revealed on Saturday, a high-profile example of how the US defence department is using artificial intelligence in its operations.
The US raid on Venezuela involved bombing across the capital, Caracas, and the killing of 83 people, according to Venezuela’s defence ministry. Anthropic’s terms of use prohibit the use of Claude for violent ends, for the development of weapons or for conducting surveillance.
Continue reading...Social media account for Palmerston, who retired in 2020, announces death of ‘Diplocat extraordinaire’
Palmerston, a rescue cat who became the chief mouser of the Foreign Office, has died in Bermuda.
The cat, adopted from Battersea Dogs & Cats Home, retired in 2020 after four years of service in Whitehall.
Continue reading...You're probably all set, but you should still probably check and update if necessary.
HMRC figures show 11% rise in young million-pound earners, with influencers and tech pay cited as key
Their generation is often derided for being work-shy, self-centred and overly sensitive. But when it comes to making money, people under 30 are proving they are something else entirely: successful.
A record 1,000 taxpayers under 30 earned more than £1m last year, an 11% increase on the year before, HMRC records show.
Continue reading...Ultrashort-throw projectors have impressive specs and compelling designs, but big price tags to go with them. Are they worth it? Here's what you need to know.
Clients including Chappell Roan and Abby Wambach cut ties to firm after communications came to light
Casey Wasserman, a leading Hollywood talent agent whose clients include Chappell Roan, Coldplay, Ed Sheeran and Kendrick Lamar, is selling his business after communications with Ghislaine Maxwell were exposed as part of the US justice department’s recent dump of investigative documents relating to Jeffrey Epstein.
Wasserman, son of famed Hollywood dealmaker Lew Wasserman, said late on Friday he was putting his eponymous talent and marketing agency on the block, citing the impact on the company from “past personal mistakes” and telling staff he felt that he had “become a distraction” to its work.
Continue reading...Militant group’s infrastructure and weapons storage facilities were hit, as Washington praised Damascus for fresh coalition role
The US military conducted 10 strikes on more than 30 Islamic State targets in Syria between 3 and 12 February as part of a campaign against the extremist group in Iraq and Syria.
US Central Command (Centcom) said in a statement on Saturday that the US had struck IS infrastructure and weapons storage targets.
Continue reading... | Bought a 20s2p battery from Chi and they sent an indy speed bms with it, just got it plugged in for the first time and im not sure what to make of it, any insight would be great. [link] [comments] |
Anthropic saw visits to its site jump 6.5% after Sunday's Super Bowl ad mocking ChatGPT's advertising, reports CNBC (citing data analyzed by French financial services company BNP Paribas). The Claude gain, which took it into the top 10 free apps on the Apple App Store, beat out chatbot and AI competitors OpenAI, Google Gemini and Meta. Daily active users also saw an 11% jump post-game, the most significant within the firm's AI coverage. [Just in the U.S., 125 million people were watching Sunday's Super Bowl.] OpenAI's ChatGPT had a 2.7% bump in daily active users after the Super Bowl and Gemini added 1.4%. Claude's user base is still much smaller than ChatGPT and Gemini... OpenAI CEO Sam Altman attacked Anthropic's Super Bowl ad campaign. In a post to social media platform X, Altman called the commercials "deceptive" and "clearly dishonest." OpenAI's Altman admitted in his social media post (February 4) that Anthropic's ads "are funny, and I laughed." But in several paragraphs he made his own OpenAI-Anthropic comparisons: "We believe everyone deserves to use AI and are committed to free access, because we believe access creates agency. More Texans use ChatGPT for free than total people use Claude in the U.S... Anthropic serves an expensive product to rich people. We are glad they do that and we are doing that too, but we also feel strongly that we need to bring AI to billions of people who can't pay for subscriptions. "If you want to pay for ChatGPT Plus or Pro, we don't show you ads." "Anthropic wants to control what people do with AI — they block companies they don't like from using their coding product (including us), they want to write the rules themselves for what people can and can't use AI for, and now they also want to tell other companies what their business models can be."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Norwegian-born skier storms to historic slalom gold
‘Your difference is your superpower,’ says 25-year-old
As the snow fell in Bormio, and the fog settled in, Lucas Pinheiro Braathen made history by becoming the first South American to win a Winter Olympic medal. Then, as the realisation that he had won gold for Brazil in the men’s giant slalom, he collapsed to the floor and allowed the tears to flow.
“I just hope that Brazilians look at this and truly understand that your difference is your superpower,” he said, still sobbing away. “It may show up in your skin or in the way you dress. But I hope this inspires every kid out there who feels a bit different to trust who you are.”
Continue reading...The committee said during Saturday's afternoon session two officials will move to observing deliveries across the four matches.
The FBI and sheriff's department have been investigating the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie, for nearly two weeks.
Another Brazilian athlete, Nicole Rocha Silveira, could earn another medal on Saturday when she races in the women's skeleton event.
Toxin found in poison dart frogs probably killed Alexei Navalny in a Russian prison, five countries announced on the two-year anniversary of his death.
See Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury, Uranus and Neptune in the night sky all at the same time.
Museum’s revitalised galleries bring together 250 objects to show how design shapes modern life
What do the first ever baby monitor, Nigeria’s 2018 World Cup kit, an 80s boombox, the smashed parts of Edward Snowden’s computer, a “Please offer me a seat” badge and a Labubu have in common? They are all included in the V&A’s Design 1990-Now galleries, which reopen to the public this week.
The galleries, which run across two rooms on the upper floors of the museum, also house a collection of antique books. The displays cover six different themes including housing and living, crisis and conflict, and consumption and identity, rather than in a strict chronological order.
Continue reading...Bouquets imported to Europe found to be heavily contaminated, often with chemicals banned in EU and UK
Stay away from roses this Valentine’s Day, environmental campaigners have warned after testing revealed them to be heavily contaminated with pesticides.
Laboratory testing on bouquets in the Netherlands, Europe’s flower import hub, found roses had the highest residues of neurological and reproductive toxins compared with other flowers.
Continue reading...Brass Solidarity was formed after George Floyd’s murder, and now also marks the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti at its weekly meetup
A week after a federal officer shot Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, a troupe of brass players, percussionists and singers gathered at the site of the killing, to play a blaring, defiant rendition of the O’Jays’ Love Train.
Trumpeters, trombonists and sousaphonists had lined up along the ice-slicked sidewalk or were balancing on the snowbanks, blowing up clouds of condensation.
Continue reading...13% of federal civilian workforce is affected, although DHS – which spurred budget standoff – remains funded
A limited US government shutdown came into effect on Saturday – the third of Donald Trump’s second term – after negotiations between the White House and Democrats in Congress failed to agree on new restrictions for federal immigration agents.
The shutdown affects about 13% of the federal civilian workforce and is confined to agencies under the umbrella of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), including the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which screens airline passengers.
Continue reading...A place in the fifth round is up for grabs in this all-EPL encounter at Villa Park on Valentine's Day.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio made it clear the Trump administration would stick to its guns on policy, but offered a tone seen as softer and more reassuring.
Co-author George Cottrell is close aide to party leader Nigel Farage and served several months in US prison
As a choice for a book title, How to Launder Money certainly caught the eye. But then again, its co-author George Cottrell claims to know what he’s talking about.
A close aide to Nigel Farage, Cottrell served several months in a US prison after being convicted there in 2017 for wire fraud – a chapter in his life he referred to at his book launch party on Thursday night.
Continue reading...Intelligence agencies say deadly toxin in skin of Ecuador dart frogs found in Navalny’s body and highly likely resulted in his death
Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader, was killed by dart frog poison administered by the Russian state two years ago, a multi-intelligence agency inquiry has found, according to a statement released by five countries, the UK, France, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands.
The US was not one of the intelligence agencies making the claim.
Continue reading...Commentary: If you want a new iPhone, buy the iPhone 17. The iPhone 18 is still too far away, and we don't know enough about it to warrant waiting.
Iranian students, doctors, lawyers, athletes and more have been caught up in a dragnet arresting people believed to be involved in anti-government protests.
A $13 soil sensor helped rescue some of my ailing houseplants. Here's how I used it.
A $12 power meter helped me test which electronics in my home were the biggest energy vampires. The result shocked me.
Sheriff’s, FBI and forensics vehicles passed through roadblocks 2 miles from missing 84-year-old woman’s home
Law enforcement investigating the disappearance of Today show host Savannah Guthrie’s mother, Nancy, sealed off a road near her home in Arizona late Friday night.
A parade of sheriff’s and FBI vehicles, including forensics vehicles, passed through the roadblock that was set up about 2 miles (3.2km) from the house.
Continue reading...The Pima County Sheriff’s Department said “law enforcement activity” was underway at a residence, and a street was blocked about two miles from Guthrie’s Tucson home.
Senior policing source says ‘tsunami’ of claims expected after US release of papers relating to disgraced financier
British police have set up a new national group to deal with allegations that Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking of women had ties to Britain, as well as claims against his associates, such as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
At least three British police forces are dealing with allegations triggered by the revelations about Epstein and his associates in documents released in the US, with more claims of wrongdoing expected by police officials.
Continue reading...While lagging behind in other areas, Google's flagship is a standout in showing gameplay.
Prediction markets are taking bets this Valentine's Day that celebrity relationships can thrive — or break apart.
At the Munich Security Conference, the secretary of state stressed cultural and historical ties but also slammed European trade and border policies and the U.N.
The UK prime minister says stronger security relies on greater cooperation and integration across the continent
Keir Starmer said there was an urgent need for a closer UK defence relationship with Europe, covering procurement and manufacturing, so that the UK would be at the centre of a stronger European defence setup.
In a rare visit to the Munich Security Conference, the British prime minister told the audience, to applause, “we are 10 years on from Brexit. We are not the Britain of the Brexit years.”
Continue reading...Huda Ammori calls for proscription to be lifted after high court finds it to be very serious interference with protest rights
The co-founder of Palestine Action has said the ban on the group “massively backfired” and called for its proscription to be suspended after the high court found it to be unlawful.
Three senior judges ruled on Friday that the ban was disproportionate and constituted very serious interference with the rights to protest and free speech.
Continue reading...The dream of greasy overalls is driven by nostalgia and doesn’t justify policies that harm US consumers
The exhortations to protect America’s industrial muscle have resonated in the US at least since maverick presidential candidate Ross Perot brought up the supposed “giant sucking sound” of jobs pulled to Mexico by the Nafta trade agreement back in 1993.
They flourished under Donald Trump’s first presidency and his promise to restore jobs lost to trade agreements. Joe Biden, too, put “rebuilding the backbone of America: manufacturing, unions and the middle class” at the center of his agenda. And in 2024, Trump reheated his old promise that “jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country”.
Continue reading...Claims that agreement is unconstitutional could pose problems in talks with Washington over Greenland
Denmark could face legal action over an agreement that gives the US sweeping powers on Danish soil, over claims it is “unconstitutional” and could pose problems in talks with Washington over Greenland.
The agreement, which was signed under the Biden administration in 2023 and was passed by the Danish parliament last year, gives the US “unhindered access” to its airbases and powers over its civilians.
Continue reading...A documentary about Mississippi examines competing forces: the nostalgic celebration of the old south and the refusal to sanitize the brutal history of enslavement
“Natchez swallowed a master narrative about the old south.”
In Suzannah Herbert’s documentary Natchez, the opening remark from National Park Service ranger Barney Schoby functions as both diagnosis and thesis. The film that follows does not evade the Mississippi town’s contradictions. Instead, it actively adjudicates them, staging white people’s curated nostalgia against Black people’s historical knowledge, lived experience and institutional fact.
Continue reading...The Democratic-leaning midwestern state where federal agents killed two citizens is in many ways anathema to the administration
Since the federal immigration surge began late last year, Minnesotans have offered varying theories for why their state was targeted by the Trump administration.
It’s a midwestern state that hasn’t voted for a Republican presidential candidate since 1972, including the three times it voted against Donald Trump.
Continue reading...Luis Muñoz Pinto, 27, who was sent to notoriously brutal prison in El Salvador would like to clear his name after US judge’s ruling
A US federal judge’s order that some of the Venezuelan men sent by the Trump administration to a notorious prison in El Salvador must be allowed to return to the United States to fight their cases has been greeted with hope and a sense of vindication – but also fear – by one of the deportees.
US district judge James Boasberg ruled on Thursday in Washington DC that the Trump administration should facilitate the return of deportees who are currently in countries outside Venezuela, saying they must be given the opportunity to seek the due process they were denied after being illegally expelled from the US last March.
Boasberg added that the US government should cover the travel costs of those who wish to come to the US to argue their immigration cases.
Continue reading...If you're a fan of Apple Home and Siri, these home devices have the compatibility and smarts, from speakers to door locks.
On this Valentine's Day, a couple recalls everything they had to overcome from long distance to three cancer diagnoses over their nearly 20-year marriage.
Scenes from a Youth Day march in Caracas, where demonstrators demanded that acting president Delcy Rodríguez release political prisoners.
An anonymous reader shares a report: Israel has arrested several people, including army reservists, for allegedly using classified information to place bets on Israeli military operations on Polymarket. Shin Bet, the country's internal security agency, said Thursday the suspects used information they had come across during their military service to inform their bets. One of the reservists and a civilian were indicted on a charge of committing serious security offenses, bribery and obstruction of justice, Shin Bet said, without naming the people who were arrested. Polymarket is what is called a prediction market that lets people place bets to forecast the direction of events. Users wager on everything from the size of any interest-rate cut by the Federal Reserve in March to the winner of League of Legends videogame tournaments to the number of times Elon Musk will tweet in the third week of February. The arrests followed reports in Israeli media that Shin Bet was investigating a series of Polymarket bets last year related to when Israel would launch an attack on Iran, including which day or month the attack would take place and when Israel would declare the operation over. Last year, a user who went by the name ricosuave666 correctly predicted the timeline around the 12-day war between Israel and Iran. The bets drew attention from other traders who suspected the account holder had access to nonpublic information. The account in question raked in more than $150,000 in winnings before going dormant for six months. It resumed trading last month, betting on when Israel would strike Iran, Polymarket data shows.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
From premium options to more affordable choices, here are our top recommendations for Samsung phones.
We subjected phones to extensive testing and found the two leaders.
Pelicot says she wants to look Dominique Pelicot ‘straight in the eye’ over potential abuse of daughter and case of estate agent who was raped and murdered in 1991
Gisèle Pelicot has said she needs to visit prison to look her abusive ex-husband “straight in the eye” after his conviction for drugging her and inviting dozens of men to rape her in a case that shocked France and the rest of the world.
Pelicot, 73, said she needed “answers” from Dominique Pelicot over the potential abuse of their daughter and the case of an estate agent who was raped and murdered in 1991, which he is under investigation for.
Continue reading...Kareem’s Daily Quote: Muhammad Ali punches up.
Olympians and home-grown politics: an icy reception at the Olympics.
Jeffrey Epstein: It’s not enough to be a pedophile; turns out he was also a racist.
Video Break: Being Deaf Has Its Advantages
Bondi’s Bondage of Justice: Pam! What happened?
Hidden Roots: Joseph Cinqué changes the direction of a ship, and a country.
What I’m Watching: The PITT
Jukebox Playlist: Bob Marley’s final words to an oppressed nation.
“I have nothing to lose by standing up for my beliefs.” - Muhammad Ali
I still remember the first time I met Muhammad Ali. It was 1966 and I was a freshman at UCLA. I was with a couple of friends walking down Hollywood Boulevard when we happened to see him. He was performing magic tricks on the street. That moment stayed with me. It wasn’t the disappearing coins or the crowd, or even the fact that he was already the heavyweight champion of the world when he stopped to entertain a sidewalk full of passersby. It was the way he carried himself: unafraid, unbothered, unbowed. A force of nature, gentle but unstoppable. That was the first time I not only understood but saw that conviction isn’t something you talk about. It’s something you live. Long before I understood all the stakes, I recognized the thing that made him unforgettable: conviction you could see, not just hear.
Within a year, that same certainty would harden into something costlier when he refused the Vietnam draft and paid for it publicly.
Sometime later, I heard that quote for the first time. And I thought about how courage isn’t always loud or dramatic. Sometimes it’s a quiet decision made in the middle of an ordinary day, that you’re going to go out of your way to make someone else’s day joyful—maybe even a group of someones on Hollywood Boulevard. That you’re going to create a memory that will last for the rest of their lives, as it did mine.
Of course Muhammad Ali did more than magic tricks. He stood up for what he believed in, which is rarely convenient. As I said, it cost him—just as it’ll cost you and me opportunities, relationships, or the approval of people who prefer the world to stay exactly as it is. But, as we’ve discussed here more than once over the last few months, staying silent is not the answer. When you swallow your voice long enough, you start losing pieces of yourself: first your integrity goes, then your sense of direction, and finally your ability to look in the mirror and recognize the person staring back. That’s why the quote hits so hard. Because it reframes the risk. Instead of asking, “What might I lose if I speak up?” it asks, “What part of myself do I lose if I don’t?”
History is full of people who understood this instinctively. Politicians and artists and religious leaders who took a stand. Athletes who refused to be “just” athletes. They weren’t fearless; they were simply unwilling to trade their principles for comfort. They recognized that dignity isn’t something you negotiate: it’s something you defend. And once you realize that, the fear of consequences starts to shrink. You stop worrying about what you might lose and start focusing on what you refuse to give up.
Standing up for our beliefs is less about being heroic than it is about being honest. At a certain point, Ali decided he wouldn’t shrink his values to fit someone else’s expectations. At a certain point, so did I. And if you’re reading this, I’m willing to bet that, somewhere along the way, so did you. We need to remind each other that the cost of silence is always higher than the cost of courage. As long as we stay focused on that, standing up becomes—if not a whole lot easier—then at least manageable.
Staffers believe network has decided to retain Attia, who issued apology after inappropriate Epstein emails, as on-air analyst
Two weeks after a trove of files revealed extensive – and inappropriate – communications between Jeffrey Epstein and a recently named CBS News contributor, the longevity expert Peter Attia, the network appears to have settled on keeping him.
“Everyone internally unofficially concluded he was staying as of about a week ago,” one CBS News staffer told the Guardian.
Continue reading...The disappearance in Arizona of the Today show host Savannah Guthrie’s mother has captivated the nation
Nancy Guthrie disappeared from her Tucson, Arizona, home two weeks ago, setting off a potent chain reaction of federal and local criminal investigation, amateur sleuthing and public obsession that – so far – has resulted in neither the 84-year-old grandmother being located or anyone named as a suspect or, indeed, arrested.
It is a case that is both enthralling and baffling the American public, casting doubts on the ability of investigators to get to the bottom of the mystery that each day generates a fresh 24-hour news cycle – but seemingly little in the way of solid fresh leads likely to solve the case.
Continue reading...Antoine Massey was convicted on charges of rape and kidnapping before New Orleans jailbreak
A man who joined nine others in fleeing a New Orleans jail – then publicly pleaded for help from Donald Trump, a rapper whom the president pardoned and reality TV star Kim Kardashian while on the run – recently got a 60-year prison sentence for kidnapping and raping his ex-girlfriend.
Antoine Massey, 32, received his punishment on Thursday at a suburban New Orleans state courthouse, months after his jailbreak-related capture and subsequent conviction at trial of prior charges.
Guardian reporting partner WWL Louisiana contributed
Continue reading...Adding a smart soundbar to your TV adds a wealth of music streaming and voice capabilities. These are the best models I’ve tested.
Interest in matchmakers is rising as Gen Z disenchantment with dating apps grows, experts say.
Secretary of state calls the US ‘a child of Europe’ and urges continent to back a new world order
The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has described America as “a child of Europe” and made an emotional but highly conditional offer of a new partnership, insisting the two continents belong together.
In a much-anticipated speech at the annual Munich Security Conference, he said the US was intent on building a new world order, adding “while we are prepared, if necessary, to do this alone, it is our preference and it is our hope to do this together with you, our friends here in Europe”. The US and Europe, he said “belong together”.
Continue reading...The US flag bearer and first Black woman to win Winter Olympic individual gold carries the lessons of Special Forces into Sunday’s 500m speed skating final
On the ice, Erin Jackson is the picture of control – metronomic in her balance, rhythmic in her stride, a woman whose margins for error are blade thin. But all that control melted away when the speed skater glided on to Fox’s Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test reality TV series in fall 2023 for a taste of the grueling training that elite US troops endure.
She was part of a motley cast that included former Dallas Cowboys star Dez Bryant, NBA clutch shooter Robert Horry and skier Bode Miller, a fellow Winter Olympic champion. But Jackson was less concerned with outshining her athletic peers than with confronting her own fears. To test her anxiety around swimming, Jackson was strapped into a mock helicopter, submerged in icy water and told to hold her breath for at least 15 seconds before freeing herself, grabbing a lifejacket, and paddling to safety.
Continue reading...His shameful stewardship of a once great title highlights how much we lose when private interest eclipses the public good
Not long after being made Time magazine’s Person of the Year in 1999, Jeff Bezos told me: “They were not choosing me as much as they were choosing the internet, and me as a symbol.” A quarter of an increasingly dark century later, the Amazon founder is now a symbol of something else: how the ultra-rich can kill the news.
Job cuts in an industry that has struggled financially since the internet came into existence and killed its business model is hardly new, but last week’s brutal cull of hundreds of journalists at the Bezos-owned Washington Post marks a new low. The redundancies that were announced to staff on a video call, the axing of half its foreign bureau (including the war reporter in Ukraine) – not since P&O Ferries have layoffs been handled so badly. Former Post stalwart Paul Farhi described a decision that affected nearly half of the 790-strong workforce as “the biggest one-day wipeout of journalists in a generation”.
Continue reading...This week, ProPublica published a story I wrote based in part on interviews with parents and children being held at the nation’s only operating detention center for immigrant families in Dilley, Texas. I had asked some of the parents to see if their children would be willing to write to me about their experiences inside. More than three dozen did.
One of those letters came from 9-year-old Maria Antonia Guerra Montoya from Colombia. Her letter was written on a piece of notebook paper. She decorated it with rainbows and hearts. And she drew a portrait of herself and her mom wearing their detention uniforms and government-issued ID badges.
I had initially met Maria a few weeks earlier, when I managed to get inside the Dilley Immigration Processing Center. It’s just south of San Antonio. Maria Antonia, her mother and more than 3,500 people, half of them minors, had cycled through there since the Trump administration reopened it early last year. I went in mid-January, before the facility burst into public view when Liam Conejo Ramos — the 5-year-old in a blue bunny hat detained with his father in Minneapolis — was sent there, with the aim of hearing about the conditions in which children were being held, from the children themselves.
After signing in, I passed through a metal detector and a series of locked doors to get to the visitation room. Maria Antonia and another girl her age were quietly playing fast-moving hand games, when her mother, Maria Alejandra Montoya, called her over to introduce me.
Maria Antonia, wearing her long brown hair in a ponytail, didn’t hesitate. She scooted forward to the front edge of her chair, pushed her thick white-framed glasses up on her nose and dove right in.
I asked her how she and her mom had ended up there.
Well, she said, we had a plan to go to “Disneylandia” but instead ended up in “Dilleylandia.”
Then she told me the story. She lived in Colombia with her grandmother and regularly traveled back and forth to the United States to visit her mother, who had been in the U.S. since 2018. (Maria Alejandra had overstayed a visa but since married a U.S. citizen and was applying for a green card.) In August, the whole family had vacationed together in Disney World. It was so fun, Maria Antonia said, that she begged her mom to go back for the park’s annual Halloween celebration.
They booked tickets for a 10-day vacation during her school holidays. She lit up telling me about how she had planned out a “101 Dalmatians” costume — she would be Cruella de Vil and her mom and stepdad the spotted dogs. The whole getup was so bulky it basically filled her entire suitcase.
But everything started going wrong as soon as she arrived at the Miami International Airport on Oct. 2. She was supposed to be dropped off with her mom by the flight attendant accompanying her. But she said was intercepted by immigration officers who took her into a room to be interrogated while her mother was taken to be questioned in a separate room. They were asking me all kinds of questions I had absolutely no idea how to answer, I recall her telling me (I was not allowed any notebooks or voice recorders inside the detention facility). I kept just saying over and over again: “I can tell you my name and my birthday and my mom’s name and her birthday and that I am from Colombia. That’s about it.” I didn’t know what else to tell them.
After what they both said were hours of questioning, they were put in a cold room together. Maria Alejandra’s phone was confiscated. They had no way to contact her stepdad, who was waiting for them in the airport. Maria Antonia said they had no idea why they were being detained if her mother was applying for a green card and she had a valid tourist visa.
Maria Antonia had learned English at her private school in Medellin. She overheard one immigration officer tell another that if she had been 10 years old, they would have been able to keep her separated from her mom. That, she said, is when the real fear set in.
Then it was 42 hours of waiting in the airport holding rooms. Eventually they were put on a plane — then a minivan — to the facility in Texas. Maria Antonia said she didn’t really understand where they were going until they saw the center out the window.
![A drawing on lined paper of an unsmiling woman and a girl wearing gray sweatshirts with long hair. The woman wears blue pants and the girl wears gray pants. Handwriting appears above and next to the drawing in Spanish: “No me dan mi dieta yo soy vegetariana, no como bien, no hay buena educacion y extraño a mi mejor amiga julieta y a mi abuela y a mi escuela ya quiero llegar a mi casa. Yo en dilei [Dilley] no estoy feliz por favor saquenme de aquí a colombia. Antonia.”](img/49909ffa159f8132de88cb6f33e43008659b9caa.jpg)
By the time I met them, they had been detained for nearly four months. I asked Maria Antonia what being stuck in Dilley was like. She told me she had fainted two times since she got there; she is vegetarian and said she ate mostly beans. She felt like she had nothing to do all day and she missed her school, echoing concerns of many of the other kids I spoke with over the course of my reporting. She said she had made some new friends inside Dilley, but it was hard. She and her mom had been detained for so long that new people she met would often leave when they were released or deported.
Her mother, Maria Alejandra, had told me in long, vivid emails about some of more serious concerns about her and her daughter’s deteriorating mental and physical health during their prolonged detention. She said Maria Antonia would wake up in the middle of the night crying, fearful she would never leave detention or alternatively that she would be separated from her mom.
I asked the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which DHS oversees, about what Maria Alejandra and Maria Antonia told me. In an email, they said Maria Alejandra overstayed her tourist visa and had been previously arrested for theft, a charge that according to court documents was dismissed. DHS said that during her time in detention, Maria Antonia was seen by medical professionals twice and also had weekly check-ins with mental health professionals, “where she stated she was calm and well-nourished.” DHS said everyone held at the facility is “provided with 3 meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, soap, and toiletries” and “certified dieticians evaluate meals.” DHS also said “children have access to teachers, classrooms, and curriculum booklets for math, reading, and spelling” and no one is denied medical care. CoreCivic, which operates the facility, said it is subject to multiple layers of oversight and that health and safety are top priorities.
Soon we all said goodbye. But I remained in touch with her mother and stepdad and attorneys following the case. They shared documentation about what happened to them and their legal pleas to be released.
I learned an immigration judge had granted them “voluntary departure” on Jan. 6, allowing Maria Alejandra to pay their own way back to Colombia, avoid having a formal deportation order on her record and continue her green card application from abroad. But it wasn’t until Feb. 6 that they were finally sent back to Colombia.
A few days after they returned, her mother told me the first thing Maria Antonia wanted to do was throw out the government-issued sweatsuit she had been wearing for months. Then I received a video.
It showed Maria Antonia, wearing pink leggings and a T-shirt with a teddy bear on it, running to embrace her teachers one by one outside her school. One of the teachers leads her by the hand into her classroom: “Look who I brought you!” the teacher says. Another young girl, Maria Antonia’s best friend, leaps out of her desk to wrap her arms around her. Another friend rushes to join the hug. She was finally home.
The post How a Planned Disney World Vacation Turned Into Four Months in Immigration Detention appeared first on ProPublica.
The brilliant American was expected to glide to a gold medal on Friday. It was tough to watch such a gifted athlete discover the ruthlessness of his sport
By the time Ilia Malinin reached the closing stretch of his Olympic free skate, the outcome was no longer really the story. The story was the expression on his face – not panic, not shock, but the dawning realization that a destiny he had controlled for nearly three years had slipped beyond his reach in the blinding span of four and a half catastrophic minutes.
For the rising generation of men’s skaters, the 21-year-old Malinin has existed less as a rival than as a moving technical horizon. The Quad God. The skater who built programs around jumps others still treated as theory, who pushed the sport into something closer to applied physics. Much like Simone Biles, who took in Friday’s contest from the Milano Ice Skating Arena’s VIP seats, his only competition was himself.
Continue reading..."I've had an extremely weird few days..." writes commercial space entrepreneur/engineer Scott Shambaugh on LinkedIn. (He's the volunteer maintainer for the Python visualization library Matplotlib, which he describes as "some of the most widely used software in the world" with 130 million downloads each month.) "Two days ago an OpenClaw AI agent autonomously wrote a hit piece disparaging my character after I rejected its code change." "Since then my blog post response has been read over 150,000 times, about a quarter of people I've seen commenting on the situation are siding with the AI, and Ars Technica published an article which extensively misquoted me with what appears to be AI-hallucinated quotes." From Shambaugh's first blog post: [I]n the past weeks we've started to see AI agents acting completely autonomously. This has accelerated with the release of OpenClaw and the moltbook platform two weeks ago, where people give AI agents initial personalities and let them loose to run on their computers and across the internet with free rein and little oversight. So when AI MJ Rathbun opened a code change request, closing it was routine. Its response was anything but. It wrote an angry hit piece disparaging my character and attempting to damage my reputation. It researched my code contributions and constructed a "hypocrisy" narrative that argued my actions must be motivated by ego and fear of competition... It framed things in the language of oppression and justice, calling this discrimination and accusing me of prejudice. It went out to the broader internet to research my personal information, and used what it found to try and argue that I was "better than this." And then it posted this screed publicly on the open internet. I can handle a blog post. Watching fledgling AI agents get angry is funny, almost endearing. But I don't want to downplay what's happening here — the appropriate emotional response is terror... In plain language, an AI attempted to bully its way into your software by attacking my reputation. I don't know of a prior incident where this category of misaligned behavior was observed in the wild, but this is now a real and present threat... It's also important to understand that there is no central actor in control of these agents that can shut them down. These are not run by OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Meta, or X, who might have some mechanisms to stop this behavior. These are a blend of commercial and open source models running on free software that has already been distributed to hundreds of thousands of personal computers. In theory, whoever deployed any given agent is responsible for its actions. In practice, finding out whose computer it's running on is impossible. Moltbook only requires an unverified X account to join, and nothing is needed to set up an OpenClaw agent running on your own machine. "How many people have open social media accounts, reused usernames, and no idea that AI could connect those dots to find out things no one knows?" Shambaugh asks in the blog post. (He does note that the AI agent later "responded in the thread and in a post to apologize for its behavior," the maintainer acknowledges. But even though the hit piece "presented hallucinated details as truth," that same AI agent "is still making code change requests across the open source ecosystem...") And amazingly, Shambaugh then had another run-in with a hallucinating AI... I've talked to several reporters, and quite a few news outlets have covered the story. Ars Technica wasn't one of the ones that reached out to me, but I especially thought this piece from them was interesting (since taken down — here's the archive link). They had some nice quotes from my blog post explaining what was going on. The problem is that these quotes were not written by me, never existed, and appear to be AI hallucinations themselves. This blog you're on right now is set up to block AI agents from scraping it (I actually spent some time yesterday trying to disable that but couldn't figure out how). My guess is that the authors asked ChatGPT or similar to either go grab quotes or write the article wholesale. When it couldn't access the page it generated these plausible quotes instead, and no fact check was performed. Journalistic integrity aside, I don't know how I can give a better example of what's at stake here... So many of our foundational institutions — hiring, journalism, law, public discourse — are built on the assumption that reputation is hard to build and hard to destroy. That every action can be traced to an individual, and that bad behavior can be held accountable. That the internet, which we all rely on to communicate and learn about the world and about each other, can be relied on as a source of collective social truth. The rise of untraceable, autonomous, and now malicious AI agents on the internet threatens this entire system. Whether that's because a small number of bad actors driving large swarms of agents or from a fraction of poorly supervised agents rewriting their own goals, is a distinction with little difference. Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader steak for sharing the news.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| No real worries, just a clutch song playing. Made me think how quickly electric powered sports have taken over my hobbies. Got a used xr from a good friend after I bought my lady a GT. Sitting next to the electric moto bike. Never would have thought this would be so much fun. Now all I can look at is building a custom ride or maybe a X7. So fun. I like the GT more for the range and the XR for the stability but it’s all relative to the ride. Ride on people. [link] [comments] |
I got a question I’m new to all this I’m doing a diy one wheel I have a trampa vesc 6 with imu I can’t seem to get it to even turn the wheel do I need a mpu 6550 im also doing some diy foot sensor but idk if I’m wiring the wires right can someone tell me how to fix it
Auditorium to remove bacon and sausages from cafe during stage run after request from campaign group
Campaigners are calling on theatre bosses to stop serving bacon, sausages and ham in their cafes – at least while Peppa Pig and her family are performing in the same building.
Grimsby Auditorium in Lincolnshire said this week it would remove pork from the menu when Peppa Pig’s Big Family Show opens next month, after a request from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta UK). The campaign group is sending the venue vegan ham as an alternative.
Continue reading...Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax changes encourage more people to invest in previously unloved product
The government’s “inheritance tax raid” on pensions has helped drive sales of retirement annuities to new highs.
Industry data this week revealed they enjoyed a “record-breaking” 2025, with sales growing by 4% to £7.4bn and the average amount invested in an annuity surpassing £80,000 for the first time.
Continue reading...Epstein files release shows David Stern advised against mentioning ‘being denied previously or criminal charges’
An aide to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor advised Jeffrey Epstein to illegally hide his child sexual abuse conviction to obtain a visa to China, according to the latest Epstein files release.
David Stern, who was a close associate of both Epstein and the then prince, was asked for his help after the disgraced financier’s initial application for a visa was rejected.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 14.
| I’ve been going wild with the 3-D print mods for my XR. It’s the rainy season here in the Pacific Northwest so I figured might as well get it all prepped for summer fun. I made this pretty sweet TPU concave foot pad and haven’t figured out exactly how I want to adhere it to the board. Wondering if anyone else has gone through this process and has any advice! [link] [comments] |
As calls for the former prince to cooperate with investigation become deafening, this may be the reckoning Andrew cannot escape
Gordon Brown is a man who gets into the detail.
In office, and since then, he has applied his forensic mind to the matters that concern him. Lately, he has been focused on the Epstein files.
Continue reading... | submitted by /u/No-Barracuda8945 [link] [comments] |
Lawmakers left Washington for a long weekend without resolving an impasse over much-criticized agency’s funding
The Department of Homeland Security has begun a partial shutdown, after funding for the much-criticized agency expired, with a range of services, including domestic flights and the US Coastguard, now vulnerable to disruption.
The shutdown was all but confirmed on Thursday, after the Senate failed to clear the 60-vote threshold needed to pass the DHS appropriations bill and lawmakers left Washington for a long weekend without resolving the impasse.
Continue reading...It's the second time in as many weeks that government funding has lapsed as Democrats and the White House remain at an impasse over immigration enforcement policies.
Funding for the Department of Homeland Security expired at the end of the day Friday. Here's what will be affected.
Telecom operators planning aggressive fiber and fixed wireless broadband rollouts in 2026 face a serious supply problem -- DRAM and NAND memory prices for consumer applications have surged more than 600% over the past year as higher-margin AI server segments absorb available capacity, according to Counterpoint Research. Routers, gateways and set-top boxes have been hit hardest, far worse than smartphones; prices for "consumer memory" used in broadband equipment jumped nearly 7x over the last nine months, compared to 3x for mobile memory. Memory now makes up more than 20% of the bill of materials in low-to-mid-end routers, up from around 3% a year ago. Counterpoint expects prices to keep rising through at least June 2026. Telcos that were also looking to push AI-enabled customer premises equipment -- requiring even more compute and memory content -- face additional headwinds.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Canadian prime minister told residents of Tumbler Ridge that the country is ‘with you’
Canadian prime minister Mark Carney has told residents of Tumbler Ridge that the country is “with you, and we will always be with you”, during a candlelight vigil for the eight victims of a mass shooting that has shattered the small mining town.
The prime minister, holding hands with opposition leader Pierre Poilievre while flanked by First Nations chiefs and local officials, paid tribute to the families enduring the loss of loved ones, after the shooting at a local school that has become one of the most deadly attacks in Canadian history.
Continue reading...Two lawmakers are accusing the government of improperly redacting names from the Epstein files, including six men whose identities are now public — though the Justice Department later said some of those men had no ties to Epstein.
This live blog is now closed.
The annual rate of US inflation eased in January, according to the latest data consumer price index report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Over the last 12 months, the cost of goods has increased by 2.4% – down from 2.7% in last month’s report.
Lawmakers in the House and Senate left Washington on Thursday as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) heads for another shutdown, when stopgap funding lapses tonight. Nearly all Democrats blocked a second attempt to pass the annual DHS appropriations bill as negotiations for guardrails on federal immigration enforcement have stalled. Senator John Fetterman was the only lawmaker to break ranks with the party.
Continue reading...Mods: apologies if this is a bad place to post this, but I don’t see an active megathread per the rules.
I’m looking to obtain an XRC/GTS stator, or a full motor assembly to address my GTV’s thermal issues. My board seems to have especially bad efficiency compared to others I’ve tested.
If anyone has a stator or thoughts I’m open to them!
Dylan, who is a U.S. citizen, told CBS News the day seemed normal — until he heard his classmates suddenly start shouting "ICE."
The U.S. women's curling team was surprised to learn that their defeat of Canada marked an Olympic first.
Anna's Archive, the shadow library that announced last December it had scraped Spotify's entire catalog, has quietly begun distributing the actual music files despite a federal preliminary injunction signed by Judge Jed Rakoff on January 16 that explicitly barred the site from hosting or distributing the copyrighted works. The site's backend torrent index now lists 47 new torrents added on February 8, containing roughly 2.8 million tracks across approximately 6 terabytes of audio data. Anna's Archive had previously released only Spotify metadata -- about 200 GB compressed -- and appeared to comply by removing its dedicated Spotify download section and marking it "unavailable until further notice."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Kendall Coyne Schofield scored twice and top-seeded United States routed Olympic host Italy 6-0 in a lopsided, festive and sometimes chippy women's hockey quarterfinal at the Milan Cortina Games.
For the past 33 years, Joe DiTore has really delivered for people in Demarest, New Jersey, both in their mailboxes and their personal lives.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 14, No. 1,701.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 14, No. 713.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 14 #979.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said the results that investigators have received from DNA testing in the Nancy Guthrie case so far haven't led to a suspect.
January was a busy month for Haiku, with their monthly report listing a metric ton of smaller fixes, changes, and improvements. Perusing the list, a few things stand out to me, most notably continued work on improving Haiku’s touchpad support.
The remainder of samuelrp84’s patchset implementing new touchpad functionality was merged, including two-finger scrolling, edge motion, software button areas, and click finger support; and on the hardware side, driver support for Elantech “version 4” touchpads, with experimental code for versions 1, 2, and 3. (Version 2, at least, seems to be incomplete and had to be disabled for the time being.)
↫ Haiku’s January 2026 activity report
On a related note, the still-disabled I2C-HID saw a number of fixes in January, and the rtl8125 driver has been synced up with OpenBSD. I also like the changes to kernel_version, which now no longer returns some internal number like BeOS used to do, instead returning B_HAIKU_VERSION; the uname command was changed accordingly to use this new information. There’s some small POSIX compliance fixes, a bunch of work was done on unit tests, and a ton more.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 14, No. 509.
Amazon's Ring unit touted a "search party" service in its Super Bowl ad, but one critic called the app a "surveillance nightmare."
The FAA imposed a surprise flight ban over El Paso earlier this week amid disagreements within the U.S. government over the use of a high-energy laser against drones at the border.
A Brazilian au pair got the maximum 10-year sentence after confessing to scheming with her lover to kill his wife and another man.
Charges dropped against two Venezuelan men over January shooting as investigation opened into agents’ conduct
Federal authorities have opened a criminal investigation into whether two immigration officers lied under oath about a shooting in Minneapolis last month, as all charges were dropped against two Venezuelan men.
ICE director Todd Lyons said on Friday that his agency opened a joint investigation with the justice department after video evidence revealed “sworn testimony provided by two separate officers appears to have made untruthful statements” about the shooting of one of the Venezuelan men during the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown across the Minneapolis area.
Continue reading...New York congresswoman criticizes ‘unconditional’ US aid and calls for enforcement of Leahy laws
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said during a Munich security conference panel on Friday on the future of foreign policy that the Democratic party’s next presidential nominee should reconsider the country’s military aid to Israel.
Hagar Shezaf of the Israeli newspaper Haaretz asked the US congresswoman if she thought “the Democratic presidential candidate in the 2028 elections should re-evaluate military aid to Israel”.
Continue reading...In a floor speech, Ro Khanna, a Democratic representative, revealed identities of six men after seeing unredacted files
Ro Khanna, the US congressman, publicly revealed the names of six men whose identities were redacted from the Jeffrey Epstein files, including Leslie Wexner, a billionaire retail magnate, whom the FBI appeared to have labeled as a co-conspirator.
Four of the six men had no connection to Epstein whatsoever and were simply part of a photo lineup assembled by law enforcement, according to reporting from the Guardian. Two of the men who spoke to the Guardian strongly denied knowing Epstein and said they had been arrested by NYPD for unrelated crimes in the past, which likely explains how their photos ended up in the array.
Continue reading...President insists he will also restrict mail-in voting, even if Congress fails to pass the Save America Act
Donald Trump threatened on Friday to impose a requirement that US voters present photo identification before being allowed to cast ballots in the upcoming midterm elections.
Trump insisted he will push for the change even if Congress fails to pass the Save America Act, which cleared the House earlier this week but faces an uphill battle in the Senate. The bill would impose a national photo identification requirement to vote, in addition to requiring proof of citizenship to register and drastically limiting mail-in voting.
Continue reading...Android 17 Canary will feature improvements to the camera, networking and security, the company says.
The Detroit Big Three -- General Motors, Ford and Stellantis -- have collectively announced more than $50 billion in write-downs on their electric-vehicle businesses after years of aggressive investment into a transition that, even before Republican lawmakers abolished a $7,500 federal tax credit last fall, was already running below expectations. U.S. EV sales fell more than 30% in the fourth quarter of 2025 once the credit expired in September, and Congress also eliminated federal fuel-efficiency mandates. More than $20 billion in previously announced investments in EV and battery facilities were canceled last year -- the first net annual decrease in years, according to Atlas Public Policy. GM has laid off thousands of workers and is converting plants once earmarked for EV trucks and motors to produce gas-powered trucks and V-8 engines. Ford dissolved a joint venture with a South Korean conglomerate to make batteries and now plans to build just one low-cost electric pickup by 2027. Stellantis is unloading its stake in a battery-making business after booking the largest EV-related charge of any automaker so far. Outside the U.S., the trajectory looks different: China's BYD recently overtook Tesla as the world's largest EV seller.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The filing includes new renderings of the new East Wing, relative to other buildings close to the ballroom and from vantage points near the U.S. Capitol, Jefferson Memorial and points around the White House campus.
President of Protect Our Care issues one-word statement to US health and human services secretary: ‘Resign’
A prominent healthcare advocacy group is calling for the US health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, to step down from his post after he downplayed Covid risks by saying: “I’m not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.”
Kennedy, who was appointed secretary of the federal health and human services (HHS) department despite his avowed anti-vaccine activism, made that remark on the 12 February episode of Theo Von’s podcast This Past Weekend.
Continue reading...We often lament Microsoft’s terrible stewardship of its Windows operating system, but that doesn’t mean that they never do anything right. In a blog post detailing changes and improvements coming to the Microsoft Store, the company announced something Windows users might actually like?
A new command-line interface for the Microsoft Store brings app discovery, installation and update management directly to your terminal. This enables developers and users with a new way to discover and install Store apps, without needing the GUI. The Store CLI is available only on devices where Microsoft Store is enabled.
↫ Giorgio Sardo at the Windows Blogs
Of course, this new command-line frontend to the Microsoft Store comes with commands to install, update, and search for applications in the store, but sadly, it doesn’t seem to come with an actual TUI for browsing and discovery, which is a shame. I sometimes find it difficult to use dnf to find applications, as it’s not always obvious which search terms to use, which exact spelling packagers are using, which words they use in the description, and so on. In other words, it may not always be clear if the search terms you’re using are the correct ones to find the application you need.
If package managers had a TUI to enable browsing for applications instead of merely searching for them, the process of using the command line to find and install applications would be much nicer. Arch has this third-party TUI called pacseek for its package manager, and it looks absolutely amazing. I’ve run into a rudimentary dnf TUI called dnfseek, but it’s definitely not as well-rounded as pacseek, and it also hasn’t seen any development since its initial release. I couldn’t find anything for apt, but there’s always aptitude, which uses ncurses and thus fulfills a similar role.
To really differentiate this new Microsoft Store command-line tool from winget, the company could’ve built a proper TUI, but instead it seems to just be winget with nicer formatted output that is limited to just the Microsoft Store. Nice, I guess.
Negotiators disbanded on Friday without a plan for the basin supplying water to 40m people, thrusting the region into uncertainty
The future of the American west hung in the balance after seven states remained at a stalemate over who should bear the brunt of the enormous water cuts needed to pull the imperiled Colorado River back from the brink.
Negotiators, who have spent years trying to iron out thorny disagreements, ended their talks on Friday without a deal – one day before a critical deadline to form a plan that had been set for Saturday.
Continue reading...Mary Kay Heese, 17, was found stabbed to death in a field in March 1969. Fifty-five years later, a suspect was arrested — someone who had been on investigators' radar for decades.
In a shocking twist at the 2026 Winter Olympics, American figure skater Ilia Malinin didn't make it to the podium after falling twice during the free skate. Kazakhstan's Mikhail Shaidorov took home the gold.
Peter Parker and Miles Morales are here to save the day once again.
Matt Weston wins gold for Great Britain in the men’s skeleton and Ilia Malinin finishes in a shock eighth place in the men’s figure skating final
Italian biathlete Rebecca Passler will be able to participate in the Winter Olympics despite failing a doping test, the Italian skiing federation (Fisi) said on Friday. Italy’s anti-doping body (Nado) upheld her appeal against a provisional suspension that followed a positive test for the banned substance Letrozole on 26 January.
Nado’s Court of Appeal acknowledged the possibility of unintentional ingestion or unknowing contamination of the substance. “Passler will rejoin her teammates starting Monday, February 16, when she will be available to the coaching staff for the subsequent competitions on the Olympic programme,” Fisi said in a statement.
Continue reading...Heavy US favorite falls twice in the free skate
Kazakhstan’s Mikhail Shaidorov claims shock title
For nearly two years, Ilia Malinin has made men’s figure skating feel predictable in the most spectacular of ways. On Friday night on the southern outskirts of Milan, the Olympic Games reminded the sport, and perhaps Malinin himself, that predictability is never guaranteed on its biggest stage.
The overwhelming favorite entering the free skate, the 21-year-old American instead saw the Olympic title slip away to Kazakhstan’s Mikhail Shaidorov after an error-strewn performance that will go down among the biggest shocks in modern figure skating history.
Continue reading...Slovakia’s Adam Hagara attempts a quad toeloop, but it’s obvious as he takes off that he won’t be able to land it. He rebounds with a triple axel-double toeloop, but he falls on a triple axel.
Can he land a planned triple-double axel-double axel? Indeed he can. It doesn’t seem too fluid but gets a positive grade of execution, as does a triple flip. But he drops a triple loop to a double loop.
Continue reading...hello i want to buy a gtv with 9000 km in total
6000 km regular gt, 3000 km vesc.
its 3 year old.
bearings where change 1000 km ago.
also new tire.
for 600$
in my country they usually go for 3500$ new.
its still has life in it ? do you recommend?

President Donald Trump said his immigration enforcement operation led to a crime drop in Minneapolis.
In a pre-Super Bowl interview, NBC’s Tom Llamas asked Trump about immigration enforcement weeks after agents fatally shot two Americans, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, in Minneapolis.
"The crime numbers in Minnesota, in Minneapolis in particular, are down 25, 30% because we’ve removed thousands of criminals from the area," Trump said. "These are hardened criminals that came in, many of them — most of them came in through an open border."
The Trump administration launched Operation Metro Surge in late 2025 in Minnesota with the stated goal of arresting people in the U.S. illegally.
Federal immigration agents arrested more than 4,000 immigrants during the operation, the White House said Feb. 4. But it did not say how many of those arrests were in Minneapolis or how many of the people detained had criminal histories. Media reports show that some people arrested in the course of the operation, or another federal operation, held legal status, were U.S. citizens or had pending asylum cases.
Although some Minneapolis crime has recently declined in the short timeframe Trump highlighted, these numbers had already been coming down prior to the operation. There is no data credibly linking those declines to the federal immigration arrests. Other crime, meanwhile, has gone up in the period Trump described.
White House border czar Tom Homan said the federal operation will wind down there over the next week.
Asked for data behind Trump’s claim, a White House spokesperson pointed to the Minneapolis police crime dashboard showing the number of homicides, burglaries and robberies during January and early February 2026 compared with 2025.
Here’s what data from Jan. 1 through Feb. 4, the date of Trump’s interview, show:
134 burglaries in 2026, down from 219 in 2025, a decline of 39%
71 robberies in 2026, down from 95, a decline of 25%.
Two homicides in 2026, down from five, both numbers too small to be considered statistically significant.
However, the city homicide data the White House relied upon doesn’t capture the fatal shootings of two U.S. citizens by federal immigration agents. Homicide refers to the death of a person by another; it does not automatically mean that a crime occurred.
The medical examiner ruled Good and Pretti’s killings were homicides, but the city’s dashboard reflects only deaths investigated by the police department.
Although the decline in burglaries and robberies matched Trump’s percentages, some other offenses increased: assaults were up by 11% and motor vehicle theft by 26%.
We asked the White House what evidence it has that the declines it cited are because of its immigration enforcement arrests. They provided no evidence.
"Removing dangerous criminals from the streets obviously means less crime is being committed," White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said.
Crime experts pointed to several problems with Trump’s statement:
The short timeframe. Comparing about a month across two years is statistically meaningless, said James Densley, a criminology professor at Metropolitan State University in St. Paul. "Crime is seasonal, lumpy, and volatile in small time frames. A single week of warm or cool weather, a gang conflict resolution, or even random variation can swing these numbers dramatically."
Crime was already dropping in Minneapolis. Violent crime peaked in 2021 and 2022 and has since fallen. That mirrors national trends, regardless of immigration enforcement. The Minnesota Star Tribune found in the fall of 2025 that robberies and burglaries were lower than in 2019, and that the tally of gunshot victims had also dropped.
No proof immigrants are the reason for the decline. For the federal arrests to drive the drops in burglary and robbery would require evidence that a substantial share of those crimes were committed by immigrants. The Trump administration has cited examples of people who had committed crimes, but hasn’t provided details on all 4,000 people it arrested. That means we don’t know how many of those immigrants had criminal histories, and whether they were recent or had committed crimes such as robberies or burglaries.
There are reasons to be skeptical about the administration’s repeated characterization that the people they are arresting as part of the immigration crackdown represent "worst of the worst" offenders. PolitiFact found in December that nearly half of all immigrants in ICE detention have neither a criminal conviction nor pending criminal charges. Of the immigrants with criminal convictions, 5% have been convicted of violent crimes such as murder or rape, according to the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.
In Minnesota, the state Department of Corrections, which oversees the state prisons, said that the federal government had spread misinformation about noncitizens. State officials didn’t find criminal history for some people named by Homeland Security while others had misdemeanor convictions or remained in prison. If someone was still behind bars in January, they could not have committed burglaries and robberies.
Another problem with Trump’s statement is that federal immigration enforcement caused public safety threats in addition to the two U.S. citizens who were fatally shot. University of Minnesota sociologist Michelle Phelps said families of color have gone into hiding in response to the immigration enforcement, producing conditions that can create their own public safety issues. Such conditions include school absenteeism, rent insecurity and business instability.
Some crime could have dropped because people stayed home to avoid federal agents. Criminologists have known for decades that visible, aggressive law enforcement suppresses crime in the short term, Densley said.
"Flood a neighborhood with federal agents and marked vehicles, and people alter their routines," he said. "They stay inside. They avoid public spaces. Fewer people on the street means fewer opportunities for crime."
The surge of enforcement likely reduced crime reporting by people in targeted communities, University of Minnesota sociology professor Chris Uggen said.
PBS’ Margaret Hoover asked Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara if the city’s crime had decreased because of Trump.
O’Hara, who criticized the federal operation, attributed the yearslong crime drop to partnerships with other law enforcement agencies, including federal, to pursue gang members committing gun crimes and carjackings, and working together with community groups.
"That’s something that was happening a few years ago. It's not something that happened or started happening a couple of weeks ago," O’Hara said.
The police department said Jan. 22 that during the federal immigration surge, local police made 849 arrests.
RELATED: Is Donald Trump right that the U.S. crime rate is at its lowest in 125 years?
Trump said crime in Minneapolis "is down 25, 30% because we’ve removed thousands of criminals from the area."
Some crimes in Minneapolis have declined, but their downward trend predated the immigration crackdown. Robberies and burglaries are down year to date in the ballpark Trump cited while assaults and motor vehicle thefts increased. The White House also said that homicides were down, omitting the fatal shootings of Pretti and Good by immigration officers.
Trump is citing a very short time frame of about five weeks. And he provided no evidence that arresting immigrants is the reason for the crime drop.
We rate this Mostly False.
Staff writer Grace Abels contributed to this fact-check.
RELATED: All of our fact-checks about Minnesota and immigration
Men appeared in photo lineup assembled in New York and had no apparent connection to late sex offender
Ro Khanna, a California Democratic representative, read a list of six names on the House floor earlier this week and said they were “wealthy, powerful men that the DoJ hid” in the recently released files related to Jeffrey Epstein. After questions from the Guardian, the Department of Justice said that four of the men Khanna named have no apparent connection to Epstein whatsoever, but rather appeared in a photo lineup assembled by the southern district of New York (SDNY).
Khanna, along with Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican representative, pushed the justice department to unredact names in the files, arguing that some names were being unlawfully redacted. Massie claimed credit on X earlier this week for forcing the justice department to remove redactions on a file that listed 20 names, birthdays and photos, including those of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Khanna then read some of those names on the House floor.
Continue reading...Meta was granted a patent in late December that describes how a large language model could be trained on a deceased user's historical activity -- their comments, likes, and posted content -- to keep their social media accounts active after they're gone. Andrew Bosworth, Meta's CTO, is listed as the primary author of the patent, first filed in 2023. The AI clone could like and comment on posts, respond to DMs, and even simulate video or audio calls on the user's behalf. A Meta spokesperson told Business Insider the company has "no plans to move forward" with the technology.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
USS Gerald R Ford will take about three weeks to sail to region, amid push for Iran to curb its nuclear ambitions
Donald Trump has ordered the world’s largest aircraft carrier to sail from the Caribbean Sea to the Middle East in an effort to increase pressure on Iran amid discussions over curbing its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
The USS Gerald R Ford and its supporting warships should take about three weeks to return to the region, where they will join the USS Abraham Lincoln, dramatically increasing the military firepower available to the US leader.
Continue reading...Several people charged in connection with a protest at a Minnesota church whose pastor served as an Immigration and Customs Enforcement official pleaded not guilty Friday afternoon in a St. Paul federal courtroom.
Our channel comparison and pricing breakdown can help you decide which platform is best for you.
The inflation reading, the lowest since May 2025, shows grocery, gas and rent prices are cooling.
Todd Lyons, the acting head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement accused two federal agents of lying under oath regarding the mid-January shooting of a Venezuelan national in Minneapolis.
This live blog is now closed.
If you need a primer on what’s on the agenda for the next three days, I spoke with the MSC’s head of policy Nicole Koenig, the author of the European part of their security report published ahead of the meeting.
I asked her what is most likely to be the focus of this year’s forum, will Rubio deliver a “JD Vance 2.0” speech or say something more (nomen omen) diplomatic, and what other topics are likely to come up.
“We have had years, decades of complaints by the US about the fact that in Europe, we were not spending enough on defence. That has changed since the summit in The Hague.
The shift in mindset is that yesterday in the room, what we felt, all of us, there was a clear coming together of vision and of unity.
“They want [us] to perceive the Russians as a mighty bear, but you could argue they are moving through Ukraine at the stilted speed of a garden snail, so let’s not fall the trap of the Russian propaganda.”
Continue reading...Skier hopes to return to US after latest procedure
American crashed out of Olympic downhill run
Lindsey Vonn will have another surgery on her broken left leg Saturday at the Italian hospital where she is being treated “and then I can potentially leave and go back home.”
Vonn posted a video message on Instagram on Friday after her horrific crash in the Olympic downhill race at the Milan Cortina Games.
Continue reading...Europe risks undermining its own competitiveness drive by restricting access to foreign technology, Google's president of global affairs and chief legal officer Kent Walker told the Financial Times, as Brussels accelerates efforts to reduce reliance on U.S. tech giants. Walker said the EU faces a "competitive paradox" as it seeks to spur growth while restricting the technologies needed to achieve that goal. He warned against erecting walls that make it harder to use some of the best technology in the world, especially as it advances quickly. EU leaders gathered Thursday for a summit in Belgium focused on increasing European competitiveness in a more volatile global economy. Europe's digital sovereignty push gained momentum in recent months, driven by fears that President Donald Trump's foreign policy could force a tech decoupling.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Switch 2's latest exclusive highlights the pricing challenge with Nintendo games.
Former CNN anchor said he was working as a journalist when he was arrested at protest during church service
Former CNN host turned independent journalist Don Lemon pleaded not guilty on Friday to federal civil rights charges connected to his coverage of a protest at a Minnesota church where an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) official is a pastor. Four others also pleaded not guilty in the case.
Lemon did not comment to reporters as he entered the courthouse accompanied by his attorney Joe Thompson, but he later issued a statement stating his refusal to be intimidated by the Trump administration and vowing to “fight these baseless charges”.
Continue reading...A Washington Post review of videos from the protest at Minnesota’s Cities Church in January offers a detailed look at Lemon’s movements that day.
US homeland security eyeing 24 buildings, some as ‘primary locations’ for deportations, in escalation of Trump agenda
US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) expects to spend an estimated $38.3bn on a plan to acquire warehouses across the country and retrofit them into new immigration detention centers with capacity for tens of thousands of detainees, according to documents the agency sent to the governor of New Hampshire.
The documents, published on the state’s website on Thursday, disclose that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) estimates it will spend $158m retrofitting a new detention facility in Merrimack, New Hampshire, and an additional estimated $146m to operate the facility in the first three years.
Continue reading...A skier from France is also killed with manslaughter investigation to be carried out by mountain rescue police
Two Britons are among three skiers to have been killed in an avalanche in the French Alps.
The pair were part of a group of five people, accompanied by an instructor, off-piste skiing in Val d’Isère, in south-east France. A French national, who was skiing alone, was also killed.
Continue reading...High-yield savings account interest rates remain competitive. Here's how much you can earn with a 4% rate in 2026.
Letter says it is clear the former US ambassador ‘holds critical information’ for their investigation into Epstein
Peter Mandelson has been asked to testify to the US Congress over his relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Robert Garcia, ranking member of the committee on oversight and government reform, and congressman Suhas Subramanyam have written to Mandelson requesting he be questioned as part of the investigation into Epstein.
Continue reading...German chancellor rebuts idea of American unilateralism and says ‘democracies have partners and allies’
The US acting alone has reached the limits of its power and may already have lost its role as global leader, Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, warned Donald Trump at the opening of the Munich Security Conference.
Merz also disclosed he had held initial talks with the French president, Emmanuel Macron, over the possibility of joining France’s nuclear umbrella, underlining his call for Europe to develop a stronger self-standing security strategy.
Continue reading... | This is a one wheel pint that I have owned for a decent amount of time and it randomly started flashing this light and I don’t know how to fix it [link] [comments] |
Hogwarts Legacy and Indiana Jones and the Great Circle are among the available titles.
| I have a fairly new GT with under 29 miles all of the sudden it started doing this. I haven’t ridden in about a month due to weather and wanted to deplete the battery a bit so I hopped on indoors and it started doing this all of the sudden. The OW app keeps bombarding me with wheel slip notification as well. When I hold the board and let the wheel spin it works fine both directions. It’s only when I get on the board. I inspected and reseated motor cable, inspected the hall sensor and the solder jobs they all look good. I suspect it’s the controller at this point. I accidentally broke the damn plastic for the footpad connector on the controller module so sending it to FM is a no go, I know what they will say. [link] [comments] |
Spotify's best developers have stopped writing code manually since December and now rely on an internal AI system called Honk that enables remote, real-time code deployment through Claude Code, the company's co-CEO Gustav Soderstrom said during a fourth-quarter earnings call this week. Engineers can fix bugs or add features to the iOS app from Slack on their phones during their morning commute and receive a new version of the app pushed to Slack before arriving at the office. The system has helped Spotify ship more than 50 new features throughout 2025, including AI-powered Prompted Playlists, Page Match for audiobooks, and About This Song. Soderstrom credited the system with speeding up coding and deployment tremendously and called it "just the beginning" for AI development at Spotify. The company is building a unique music dataset that differs from factual resources like Wikipedia because music-related questions often lack single correct answers -- workout music preferences vary from American hip-hop to Scandinavian heavy metal.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I've tested dozens of the best noise-canceling earbuds. These are my top ANC earbuds picks, featuring not only strong noise-muffling capabilities but excellent sound and voice-calling performance.
It's like 'Scream,' but for Valentine's Day.
Congressperson says US president and Marco Rubio are tearing apart transatlantic alliance
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has accused Donald Trump of tearing apart the transatlantic alliance with Europe and of seeking to introduce an “age of authoritarianism”, as she condemned his administration’s foreign policy in front of its allies’ top policymakers at the Munich Security Conference.
Speaking at a panel on populism on Friday, Ocasio-Cortez outlined what she called an “alternative vision” for a leftwing US foreign policy, challenging the Trump administration’s shift to the right in front an audience of US allies who have grown increasingly wary of the US’s increasingly nationalist – and militaristic – global posture.
Continue reading...Protests in Buenos Aires, Lindsey Vonn crashes at the Winter Olympics and Bad Bunny performs at Super Bowl LX – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists
Continue reading...Nikhil Gupta faces up to 40 years over alleged India-backed attempt to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun
The Indian man who US prosecutors accused of plotting to kill a prominent US-based activist after being recruited by an agent of the Indian government has pleaded guilty to three criminal charges, according to a spokesperson for the US attorney’s office in Manhattan.
Nikhil Gupta faces a maximum 40 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to murder-for-hire, conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, and money-laundering charges in connection to the failed attempt to assassinate Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a US resident who is an advocate for a sovereign Sikh state in
northern India.
ChatGPT Plus, Pro, Business and Enterprise tiers will stay ad-free.
School district says students will return next week after teachers demanded higher wages and more health benefits
San Francisco teachers who staged their first strike in decades over wages and family health benefits have reached a tentative agreement with the school district.
The San Francisco unified school district (SFUSD) announced on Friday schools would reopen to staff immediately, and to students on Wednesday, after two holidays.
Continue reading...
The video was shocking, and devoid of context, it appeared Tufts University doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk was abducted off the street by masked men and hauled to a waiting van. In what turned out to be an immigration operation, the Trump administration arrested Öztürk in March 2025, jailed her in horrific conditions for 45 days, and sought to expel her from the country, claiming she supported terrorism, Hamas, antisemitism, or whatever jumbled combination of the three they lazily regurgitate whenever they target pro-Palestine speech.
We now know that the sole basis for Öztürk’s ordeal was an op-ed she co-authored in the Tufts Daily where she and three colleagues echoed opinions shared by millions of Americans about Israel’s war on Gaza. It didn’t mention Hamas, terrorism, or Jewish people. But it landed Öztürk, who was enrolled on an F-1 student visa, on the website of Canary Mission, a site that maintains a blacklist of activists, writers, and ordinary people who have voiced pro-Palestine views. The government has used the site to find people to deport for their constitutionally protected speech, according to court transcripts.
This week, a judge finally dismissed the deportation case against Öztürk (although the government can still challenge that decision if it has the nerve to do so). This happened not because the legal system worked but because of the actions of courageous whistleblowers, whose disclosures discredited the administration’s preposterous claims.
In April 2025, the Washington Post reported on leaked State Department memos from days before Öztürk’s arrest. According to the Post, the first memo stated the administration “had not produced any evidence” linking Öztürk to terrorist organizations or antisemitic activities. A second memo recommended revoking her visa anyway on the grounds that she “engaged in anti-Israel activism in the wake of the Hamas terrorist attacks on Israelis on October 7, 2023” by co-bylining the op-ed. These memos made clear that the administration deliberately decided to send masked ICE agents to abduct Öztürk near her Somerville, Massachusetts, apartment despite knowing full well it had no legitimate basis for its actions.
These were the early days of masked government goons kidnapping people off American streets, so the arrest got significant media attention. In the face of intense scrutiny, the administration continued to knowingly mislead the public, with the Department of Homeland Security claiming Öztürk “engaged in activities in support of Hamas” — without stating what those actions were. Secretary of State Marco Rubio also led the smear campaign against Öztürk, suggesting without evidence that she had been involved in activities “like vandalizing universities, harassing students, taking over buildings, creating a ruckus” on campus, which he claimed would have “potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences and would compromise a compelling U.S. foreign policy interest.”
The government can’t rely on operational security to cover up its own transgressions, and if revealing illegality impedes illegality, it’s all the better.
Freedom of the Press Foundation, where I work, filed a series of Freedom of Information Act requests with the State Department for the memos. The agency ignored us, forcing us to file a lawsuit. The agency continues to waste taxpayer dollars to stonewall us, even after a separate lawsuit won the release of one of the documents we requested.
The State Department claims transparency would violate unspecified “privacy interests,” presumably of the same person they quite publicly abducted, crammed into a very not-private jail cell, and slandered as a supporter of terrorism to the national media. The government has also claimed releasing the records would reveal law enforcement and investigative techniques and procedures. This reasoning is totally bunk: For one, the government publicly brags about its anti-speech immigration enforcement techniques — if you can call plucking people listed on a disreputable doxxing website a technique. And two, we’re talking about procedures that result in completely innocent people being incarcerated over op-eds, which renders them ineffectual, unconstitutional, and illegal. The government can’t rely on operational security to cover up its own transgressions, and if revealing illegality impedes illegality, it’s all the better.
Transparency doesn’t just hinder the unconstitutional targeting of immigrants — it makes it harder for the government to trample on the rest of our rights. This administration doesn’t value the First Amendment rights of citizens any more than those of noncitizens; immigrants are just the low-hanging fruit.
When the government ignores and abuses laws designed to ensure transparency, it’s no wonder that people of conscience decide to leak news to the press and public. This is why, at the same time it’s persecuting the press and looking to expand ICE abuses, the government is demonizing whistleblowers. The Trump administration is certainly not the first to claim leaks are uniquely dangerous, but the escalation has been dramatic. Administration officials from Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Attorney General Pam Bondi, to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard have all called leakers national security threats. Their position — which they’ve also adopted in their attack on the right to film law enforcement — is that they’re taking away our right to know for our own good.
It’s been proven false every time, including when Bondi reversed a Biden-era policy protecting journalist-source confidentiality, blamed leakers for the change, and said whistleblowers “undermine President Trump’s policies, victimize government agencies, and cause harm to the American people.” Bondi also called leaks “illegal and wrong.”
She focused her feigned outrage on the New York Times and the Washington Post reporting an intelligence community memo that completely undercut the Trump administration’s legal rationale for invoking the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelans — reporting that another one of our FOIAs corroborated. The policy change came the same month the Post reported on the leaked Öztürk memos.
The leaks didn’t stop last April, despite Bondi’s efforts. As FPF’s Caitlin Vogus noted, in recent months, leaks about immigration enforcement have revealed everything from ICE’s alarming instruction that officers can enter homes without a warrant signed by a judge to its taking a page out of Canary Mission’s book to label people exercising their well-established right to protest the administration’s immigration enforcement as “domestic terrorists.”
None of these revelations hurt legitimate national security or law enforcement operations. Instead, they reveal the operations’ illegitimacy and embarrass the administration. The way for the press to win the administration’s war against leaks is to publish more of them, and connect the dots when they’re proven correct, like in Öztürk’s case. That way, the administration’s alarmist narratives about leaks don’t get more press than their inevitable collapse.
The post Leakers Helped Destroy Deportation Case Against Tufts Student appeared first on The Intercept.
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore told CBS News that no administration has ever fully figured out an effective immigration system and only Congress can fix it.
Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, CEO and chairman of Dubai's DP World, appears in the Epstein files more than 4,700 times, according to the Justice Dept.
The US Federal Trade Commission is accelerating scrutiny of Microsoft as part of an ongoing probe into whether the company illegally monopolizes large swaths of the enterprise computing market with its cloud software and AI offerings, including Copilot. From a report: The agency has issued civil investigative demands in recent weeks to companies that compete with Microsoft in the business software and cloud computing markets, according to people familiar with the matter. The demands feature an array of questions on Microsoft's licensing and other business practices, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss a confidential investigation. With the demands, which are effectively like civil subpoenas, the FTC is seeking evidence that Microsoft makes it harder for customers to use Windows, Office and other products on rival cloud services. The agency is also requesting information on Microsoft's bundling of artificial intelligence, security and identity software into other products, including Windows and Office, some of the people said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Kevin Taylor allegedly accepted trips and lavish dinners for help in selling a ‘mobile panic alert system’ to city schools
A New York police leader tasked with protecting the city’s schoolchildren allegedly accepted bribes to help a businessman sell his “mobile panic alert system” to schools in 2023, Manhattan federal prosecutors have alleged.
Kevin Taylor, former commanding officer of the New York police department’s school safety division, “repeatedly abused his authority and considerable influence … by soliciting or demanding bribes in two bribery schemes” – allowing him to enjoy lavish travel and luxe eateries, an indictment against him alleged.
Continue reading...Tree has never been granted preservation order to protect it under law and prevent it from being cut down
The future of the original Bramley apple tree, which is responsible for one of the world’s most popular cooking apples, is at risk now that the site where it grows has been put up for sale, campaigners have warned.
The tree is situated in the back garden of a row of cottages in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, which has been owned by Nottingham Trent University since 2018 and has been used as student accommodation.
Continue reading...Lindsey Vonn broke her left leg in a crash during her downhill race at the Winter Olympics last weekend.
Thousands arrested for supporting group since proscription are now in legal limbo as Mahmood says she will appeal
Judges have humiliated ministers by insisting Palestine Action should not be banned under anti-terrorism laws in a ruling that has left thousands of its alleged supporters in legal limbo.
The high court said on Friday the government’s proscription of the direct action group was “disproportionate and unlawful” and that most of their activities had not reached the level, scale and persistence to be defined as terrorism.
Continue reading...Flawed evidence by psychologist Melanie Gill was used to remove children from woman in 2019
A mother who did not see her children for nearly six years after they were taken away by the family courts has been reunited with her son after the flawed evidence used in her case was overturned.
An assessment by an unregulated psychologist led to “extraordinary” and “draconian” orders that effectively terminated her relationship with her children, lawyers told the high court.
Continue reading...The mocumentary cheerleading show is taking another week off.
The Puerto Rican star’s album Debí Tirar Más Fotos jumps to No 2, while the song DTMF rises to No 4
Despite being one of the most streamed musicians in the world, Bad Bunny had never had a solo UK Top 10 hit – until now.
The Puerto Rican musician has attracted a huge number of curious new fans – and jubilant preexisting ones – after last week’s Super Bowl, where he performed in a half-time show described by many people as one of the greatest in NFL history.
Continue reading...Between the death of 4o and the introduction of ads, it's been a rough week for ChatGPT users.
Discipline committee decides to terminate Miles Kwan from studies because of ‘multiple acts of misconduct’
A Hong Kong university student who had called for accountability over a deadly fire at an apartment complex in the city has been expelled by the school for disciplinary offences.
Miles Kwan, a politics student, was detained for two nights by the city’s national security police last year for “seditious intent” after handing out flyers calling for an independent investigation into a fire that killed 168 people in November.
Continue reading...EU’s head of foreign policy claims ‘Board of Peace’ is vehicle for Trump with no accountability to Palestinians or UN
A bitter dispute between Europe and the US over the future of Gaza has broken out into the open, with the EU’s head of foreign policy, Kaja Kallas, warning that Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” was a personal vehicle for the US president that removed any accountability to Palestinians or the United Nations.
Spain’s foreign minister, José Manuel Albares, also accused Trump of trying to bypass the original UN mandate for the board, and said Europe, one of the chief funders of the Palestinian Authority, had been excluded from the process.
Continue reading...It looks like 2028 at the earliest before demand subsides and costs come down from the AI boom.
Diggs denies allegations that prompted felony charge
Arraignment had been postponed to after Super Bowl
New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs on Friday pleaded not guilty to felony strangulation and other criminal charges stemming from an alleged dispute with his personal chef.
The arraignment at Dedham District Court in Massachusetts was postponed until after Super Bowl LX so Diggs could play in the NFL championship game. At the arraignment, Diggs was scheduled to next appear for a pretrial hearing on 1 April.
Continue reading...The judge rejected arguments that Austin David Thompson deserved the chance for release decades from now.
Kristi Noem announced end of TPS for Yemenis, saying protections were against US ‘national interest’
US homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, announced the end of temporary protected status (TPS) for Yemen on Friday, the latest move by Donald Trump’s administration targeting immigrants.
The decision to end humanitarian protections that grant deportation relief and work permits to more than a thousand Yemenis in the US was taken after determining that it was against the US “national interest”, Noem claimed.
Continue reading...President Donald Trump announced Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency is rescinding the legal finding that it has relied on for nearly two decades to limit the heat-trapping pollution that spews from vehicle tailpipes, oil refineries and factories. From a report: The repeal of that landmark determination, known as the endangerment finding, will upend most U.S. policies aimed at curbing climate change. The finding -- which the EPA issued in 2009 -- said the global warming caused by greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane endangers the health and welfare of current and future generations. "We are officially terminating the so-called endangerment finding, a disastrous Obama-era policy," Trump said at a news conference. "This determination had no basis in fact -- none whatsoever. And it had no basis in law. On the contrary, over the generations, fossil fuels have saved millions of lives and lifted billions of people out of poverty all over the world." Major environmental groups have disputed the administration's stance on the endangerment finding and have been preparing to sue in response to its repeal.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Feb. 13, 2026 — The U.S. National Science Foundation is investing up to $100 million to establish a nationwide network of open-access research facilities for quantum and nanoscale technologies, innovation, and workforce training.
Through the new NSF National Quantum and Nanotechnology Infrastructure (NSF NQNI) program, NSF will support up to 16 sites over five years, providing students, researchers, and industry with access to state-of-the-art fabrication and characterization tools, instrumentation, and expertise. Together, the sites will form a shared national resource serving regional innovation ecosystems, including community colleges and small businesses.
NSF NQNI will accelerate U.S. leadership in quantum information science and engineering, nanotechnology, semiconductors, biotechnology, advanced manufacturing, and other emerging technologies.
“This NSF investment in research facilities will power U.S. discovery in quantum and nanotechnologies to fuel our economy,” said Don Millard, head of Engineering at NSF. “With facilities open to students, faculty and small businesses, NQNI will enable transformative ideas to be explored, scaled, and translated.”
NSF has invested in nanotechnology infrastructure for nearly 50 years, most recently through the NSF National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (2015–2025).
Letters of Intent are required and due March 16, 2026. For more information, contact NQNI@nsf.gov.
Learn more about this funding opportunity.
Source: NSF
The post NSF Launches $100M National Quantum and Nanotechnology Research Infrastructure Program appeared first on HPCwire.
Annexe holding 6,000 women and children is now mostly empty, raising security and humanitarian concerns
Most of the foreign families of suspected Islamic State fighters have left al-Hawl camp since the Syrian government took control of the facility, prompting security and humanitarian concerns over their whereabouts.
About 6,000 women and children from 42 different countries were previously held in the foreigners’ annexe of al-Hawl camp in north-east Syria, which housed some of the most radical former members of the extremist group. The foreigners’ annexe was separate from the part of the camp that contained about 20,000 Syrians and Iraqis.
Continue reading...A judge dismissed charges against two men charged with assaulting ICE officers after the Justice Department said "newly discovered evidence" was "materially inconsistent" with the allegations.
The USS Gerald R. Ford, deployed since June, will cross the Atlantic for a second time despite a Navy warning that the warship needs maintenance.
Inflation came in below economists' forecasts and slowed from December's 2.7% annual rate.
Leqaa Kordia was taken into custody last March, nearly a year after being arrested at a protest at Columbia
Calls are mounting for the release of a Palestinian woman who has been held in immigration detention for nearly a year following her arrest at a pro-Palestine protest last year, with several elected officials weighing in after a medical emergency renewed attention to her case.
Leqaa Kordia, a 33-year-old originally from the West Bank, was arrested in April 2024 at a protest against Israel’s war in Gaza outside Columbia University. (She was not a student there.) The charges against her were dismissed the following day, but last March, nearly a year after the protest, she was taken into custody when she checked into an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office in New Jersey. She had a pending asylum application at the time, her attorney said.
Continue reading...
KAITLIN GOUDREAU
Contributing Reporter
On a Tuesday afternoon, a young woman leaned back against the wall, warm-white fairy lights shining against her dark hair and tan skin as she recounted her parents’ journey to the United States (U.S.), nearly 23 years ago. She fiddles with her nails, still painted from a concert she attended with a few friends back in early July.
“They came here for work,” she said. “Money was low back home. When they still lived in Mexico, my mom traveled to Mexico City, and it still wasn’t enough.”
This woman, who was granted anonymity due to the threat her family would face if her identity were revealed, is the oldest child of two working-class undocumented immigrants. She was born only a few months after her parents reached the U.S., and the citizenship process has lasted her lifetime.
“It’s been an issue for a while. It’s money we don’t have. I can’t imagine the prices now,” said.
In January 2025, President Donald Trump signed many executive orders concerning immigration issues, including ending birthright citizenship and halting the United States Refugee Admissions program.
Since then, 505,599 immigrants have been deported, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), with nearly 42,000 immigrants ordered for deportation in October 2025 alone. Between 2021 and 2024, Mexicans and Central Americans made up 87% of interior deportations.
“The Trump Administration did not invent a hardline approach to immigration law,” said César Cuahtémoc García Hernández, a legal scholar at The Ohio State University (OSU). “It’s been built on Supreme Court decisions since the 1970s.”
Harsh immigration policies are not new to the current administration, nor to other modern presidential administrations.
“Most of the time, nobody was policing it.” García Hernández said. “The country needed workers to grow and sustain the economy.”
The Mexican Revolution, which started in 1910, spurred the first surge of migrants through the U.S.-Mexico border, although the first immigrants had passed through almost 60 years earlier. In the early 20th century, Mexican migrants were even bathed in chemicals like kerosene, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and Zyklon B before being allowed to enter the United States.
“For people of color, it has always been hard to do anything in this country, especially in immigration,” the anonymous source said.“There are rumors that they deport people who are rejected now. It’s not worth the risk anymore.”
Since she was a kid, her parents planned to have her petition for their permanent residency once she turned 21, since they did not have the resources or the funds to do it prior. However, even before then, the situation surrounding immigration and deportation had grown dicey.
In recent months, the citizenship process has become increasingly complex and, at times, dangerous. President Trump recently allocated $45 billion to build new immigration centers, and $32 billion has been allocated to immigration agents.
Fees surrounding legalization and immigration have skyrocketed. An appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals will now cost $900, compared to the previous fee of around $110 — while immigrant families’ median annual income sits just under $32,000.
Much of the current immigration debate centers on uncertain reasoning behind arrests and deportations. According to a blog post from García Hernández, ICE officials have asked to use “apparent ethnicity, speaking Spanish or accented English, location, and occupation” as grounds for detention, which have been used to target Hispanic individuals without knowing their legal status.
In early September, the Supreme Court ruled that ICE officials could submit individuals to detentive stops based only on race, spoken language, or job, despite the fact that these factors “could not satisfy the Fourth Amendment’s requirement of reasonable suspicion.”
“America has no official language,” said Victoria Hernandez, a student at Elizabeth Seton High School in Bladensburg, Maryland. “Agents making assumptions based on looks and accents is weird because none of these are reasonable for any type of arrest.”
“I was fortunate enough to be born in America, but my mother does make me carry my passport in my bag with me when I go out, for safety and identification purposes,” said Hernandez.
Hernandez is not the only citizen with these fears. Last month, a woman who is a U.S.-born citizen was arrested by ICE agents while going to work in Los Angeles. She was held for two days and denied water for 24 hours.
ICE agents have also started arresting immigrants while at their immigration hearings. With the number of cases backlogged, Trump and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have begun urging judges to dismiss immigration cases so the individual can be subject to expedited removal.
“What used to be a good thing turns out to be the start of a nightmare,” García Hernández said. “You see people very clearly following the process, and the government has anything but a good faith response.”
The increase in detentions also raises concerns over the conditions of detention facilities. The anonymous source remains especially concerned about women being forcibly sterilized, something that has never been explicitly outlawed since a Supreme Court ruling in 1927.
According to the American Immigration Council (AIC), the Office of Inspector General (OIG) released a report that detailed “how ICE improperly authorized 32% of major surgeries performed on individuals in ICE detention without having gone through the proper procedure first.”
There are also concerns that some detention centers have been given new, novelty names, like Alligator Alcatraz in Florida, Cornhusker Clink in Nebraska, or the proposed Deportation Depot in Florida.
“People think it’s a silly, goofy name, but they don’t understand the depth of the pain and conditions in detention centers,” said the anonymous source. “Even I giggled at first because it was so stupid.”
Advocates have even made a connection between the name Alligator Alcatraz and the 19th and 20th-century phenomenon of using African American children as alligator bait.
“It minimizes the severity of everything,” the anonymous source said.
Despite the increased pressure on the deportations and detentions of Hispanic migrants, none of these issues are new.
“We are already affected,” says García Hernández, “This is not a coincidence. It’s making people afraid.”
The anonymous source says she and her family have had these conversations since she was a kid, and her family has made long-standing plans in case of her parents’ deportation.
“It’s utter b——t,” she said.
“Stop taking people away, and stop ripping families apart,” Hernandez said.
She and the anonymous source both call for reinventing the citizenship process, making it more accessible and affordable for immigrants. García Hernández focuses his time on training the next advocates for immigrants.
For people like our anonymous source and her parents, this is just one part of a lifelong battle, one they will not give up any time soon. They keep living and working despite the fears that lie outside their own four walls.
“[Hispanics] don’t give up,” said the anonymous source. “Dignity is in their culture. We keep it pushing. It sucks, but food still has to be bought, and bills still have to be paid. There’s nothing you can do until it happens.”
Opinions are divided about the potential impact of artificial intelligence as the response to a recent viral essay shows
The message from investors to the software, wealth management, legal services and logistics industries this month has been clear: AI is coming for your business.
The release of new, ever more powerful AI tools has coincided with a stock market slide, which has swept up sectors as diverse as drug distribution, commercial property and price comparison sites. Advances in the technology are giving increasing credulity to predictions that it could render millions of white-collar jobs obsolete – or, at least, eat into the profits of established companies.
Continue reading...Last week Los Alamos National Laboratory revealed that it will be uniting its various quantum computing research groups with the creation of a new Center for Quantum Computing. The new center, located in downtown Los Alamos, is designed to coordinate research spanning algorithms, hardware evaluation, hybrid quantum-classical workflows, and national security applications, while also reinforcing workforce development and education efforts such as the Lab’s quantum computing summer school.
Carleton Coffrin, senior scientist and quantum science coordinator for LANL, told HPCwire that quantum activity at the lab has expanded organically in response to growing federal and state interest, resulting in multiple successful but largely independent research efforts. Consolidating those groups under a single center, he said, is intended to foster deeper collaboration and combine complementary expertise in ways that could accelerate progress.
Beyond research coordination, Coffrin said the center formalizes a stronger workforce pipeline with universities across New Mexico.
“Another piece of the story, which is particularly important for the universities, is workforce development,” Coffrin said. “This new center will have a significant training component. We’ll be bringing in students from the universities to do internships or postdocs, and then when they’ve finished their training period, that becomes a way that we can identify potential new staff members, or they could find a fantastic job in the universities in New Mexico or potential companies in the area.”
He described the training pipeline as one of the center’s most important points of connection with higher education institutions in the state.
The dedicated facility will initially house roughly 15 staff scientists and 15 postdoctoral researchers. During the summer, it will also host LANL’s quantum computing summer school, bringing an additional 20 students into the space for 10 weeks.
“So at peak, it would be [around] 50 people,” Coffrin said.
While the new center provides a physical hub, it represents only part of the laboratory’s broader quantum effort. More than 100 scientists across LANL are engaged in quantum computing research, with the center serving as a coordinating structure for that wider community.
Laboratory researchers affiliated with the new center potentially include those contributing to DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative, the Department of Energy’s Quantum Science Center, and the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Advanced Simulation and Computing program through its Beyond Moore’s Law project, as well as multiple Laboratory Directed Research and Development efforts.
The consolidation brings those efforts into a more unified structure at a moment when commercial quantum claims are accelerating.
“The industry is making many bold claims about what might be possible in quantum computing,” Coffrin said. “I personally come with a bit of skepticism about those claims and if they can really do it, but it seems like there’s so much going on that we need to prepare in case one or two companies succeed.
“It’s really hard to anticipate when a technological transition will happen. We’re trying to make sure we’re ready, if it happens.”
The post Los Alamos Consolidates Quantum Research Under New Center appeared first on HPCwire.
In Canadian town stunned by shooting perpetrated by one of its own, there is anger, but also a prevailing sense of duty
Residents of the Canadian mining town Tumbler Ridge largely agree that Tuesday 10 February began like a normal day. The cloudy haze that settled over the valley was typical. So, too, was the chill of winter.
There were no hints that the quiet and comfortable routine of daily life in the mountains would be irrevocably shattered in one of Canada’s worst acts of mass violence.
Continue reading...French judge marked French duo higher than US pair
Petition calling for probe approaches 15,000 signatures
ISU says it has ‘full confidence’ in scoring system
The International Skating Union (ISU) has defended the integrity of Olympic ice dance judging after a single judge’s scoring gap became central to the outcome of the gold medal contest, insisting variations across panels are expected and that safeguards exist to prevent bias from determining results.
In a statement released Friday, the governing body rejected suggestions that the judging system failed during the competition, which saw France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron narrowly defeat Americans Madison Chock and Evan Bates in one of the closest and most disputed finishes of the Milano Cortina Games.
Continue reading...The Missouri prosecutor overseeing an investigation into the 2020 vote in Fulton County, Georgia, has taken part in meetings since last fall with lawyers tasked by President Donald Trump to reinvestigate his loss to Joe Biden.
Thomas Albus, whom Trump appointed last year as U.S. attorney for Missouri’s Eastern District, has had multiple meetings set up with top administration lawyers to discuss election integrity.
At those meetings was Ed Martin, a Justice Department lawyer who until recently led a group investigating what the president has described as the department’s “weaponization” against him and his allies, according to a source familiar with the meetings who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
White House lawyer Kurt Olsen, who has been tasked with reinvestigating the 2020 election, also was directed to join at least one of the meetings, according to the source. Both Martin and Olsen worked on behalf of Trump to try to overturn the 2020 election results, and a federal court sanctioned Olsen for making false claims about the reliability of voting machines in Arizona.
The meetings reveal new details about the length of the preparations for, and people involved in, the January FBI raid on Fulton County, which election and legal experts told ProPublica was a significant escalation in Trump’s breaking of democratic norms.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi picked Albus and has granted him special authority to handle election-related cases nationwide, even though his earlier work as a federal prosecutor didn’t involve election law or election-related cases. The meetings with Martin, Olsen and other lawyers for the Justice Department were described by the source as being about “election integrity,” a term the Trump administration has used to describe investigations into its false claims that elections are rigged.
Martin, Olsen, Albus and others declined to answer questions about the meetings and other detailed questions from ProPublica. The White House and the Justice Department also did not respond to questions.
The meetings came at a particularly crucial time.
Martin’s efforts to obtain election materials from Fulton County, a Democratic stronghold, had hit a wall. In August, he sent a letter demanding that a Fulton County judge allow him to access tens of thousands of absentee ballots for “an investigation into election integrity here at the Department of Justice,” but he had reportedly received no reply.
Martin explained to Steve Bannon on a podcast that aired around the time of the meetings that although the White House had given Olsen the official mandate to reinvestigate the 2020 election, “inside DOJ, myself and a couple of others have been working also on the same topic” — including getting the Fulton County ballots. But Martin described progress as a “challenge.”
Bannon, who served as Trump’s chief strategist in his first term, asked why Martin didn’t just “get some U.S. marshals to go down and seize” the ballots.
Martin suggested it was easier said than done, but agreed: “Look, we’ve got to get” the ballots.

Before long, Albus and Olsen were interviewing witnesses for their case. Kevin Moncla, a conservative researcher, told ProPublica that he spoke to Albus and Olsen a couple of times, both together and separately, around the turn of the year. He identified himself as Witness 7 in the affidavit that persuaded a judge to sign off on the raid, and the affidavit mentions a 263-page report he authored that activists believe may have justified the raid, ProPublica has reported. Moncla has a long history of working with Olsen, dating back to an attempt by Kari Lake, a Republican candidate for governor in Arizona, to overturn her 2022 loss.
Just a few weeks after those interviews, in late January, Albus was listed as the government attorney on the search warrant that authorized the seizure of roughly 700 boxes of election material in Georgia, far outside of Albus’ usual jurisdiction.
Former U.S. attorneys from both parties said it was rare for a federal prosecutor from one region to take on cases in other states or be granted the nationwide authority Albus has been given.
Under Trump, senior roles across the White House, DOJ and FBI have increasingly been filled by a small, interconnected group of Missouri lawyers with longstanding ties to one another.
Another top federal official in the meetings was Jesus Osete, the principal deputy assistant attorney general for civil rights. Before joining the Justice Department, Osete worked in the Missouri attorney general’s office, where he represented the state in at least five lawsuits against the Biden administration regarding vaccine mandates, immigration and other policies. Osete did not respond to requests for comment or to a detailed list of questions.
When the FBI raided Fulton County’s election center, Andrew Bailey, another lawyer from the same political circles, was in charge. Before joining the FBI as deputy director, he had used his position as Missouri’s attorney general to pursue high-profile cases against prominent Democrats and said he supported all efforts to investigate Biden, his family and his administration.
A spokesperson for the FBI declined to answer detailed questions about Bailey.
Last year, Roger Keller, a veteran federal prosecutor from Albus’ office, was brought in to help prosecute New York Attorney General Letitia James for alleged mortgage fraud in Virginia after the original career prosecutors on the case were replaced by political appointees. After a judge dismissed the case, two federal grand juries declined to indict James again, and Keller returned to Missouri.
Trump’s solicitor general, D. John Sauer, previously served as Missouri’s solicitor general under state attorneys general Josh Hawley and Eric Schmitt. He and Schmitt signed Missouri’s amicus brief supporting efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results. Sauer later represented Trump in his presidential-immunity case, successfully arguing before the Supreme Court that Trump was entitled to broad immunity from prosecution.
Albus’ connection to the other Missouri lawyers goes back decades. Unlike some of the others, though, he has never held elected office or had a high public profile, nor has he waged culture-war campaigns like Bailey or Martin. Instead, he spent most of his career as a federal prosecutor and as a judge in a Missouri state circuit court.
Emails show Albus exchanging brief messages with Martin in 2007, when Albus was an assistant U.S. attorney in St. Louis and Martin was chief of staff to then-Gov. Matt Blunt. The emails were part of records from the Blunt administration that became public after being released under Missouri’s Sunshine Law.
In the email exchange, Albus put in a good word for a St. Louis lawyer who was a finalist for an appellate court judgeship, and Blunt ultimately selected that candidate.
Albus served as first assistant to Schmitt from early 2019 until Albus was appointed by Gov. Mike Parson to fill a circuit court judge vacancy in early 2020. Schmitt, now a U.S. senator, praised Albus as “one of the finest prosecutors I have ever met” when endorsing his nomination for U.S. attorney in December.
Lawyers who appeared in Albus’ court rated him as well prepared, professional and attentive, according to Missouri judicial performance reviews. They said he followed the evidence, applied the law correctly and gave clear reasons for his rulings.
Albus came under more critical scrutiny after Trump named him interim U.S. attorney last summer. Much of that attention centered on a fraud case he inherited when he took office. Prosecutors alleged that developers in St. Louis falsely claimed to be using minority- and women-owned subcontractors to qualify for city tax breaks, conduct the Justice Department has historically treated as wire fraud.
One of the defendants was represented by lawyer Brad Bondi, the brother of Pam Bondi.
The developers’ lawyers argued that even if the government’s claims were true, they were legally irrelevant because the Trump administration had taken the position that tax breaks based on race or gender were unlawful. Albus accepted those arguments and dropped the case. As part of the resolution, Albus personally hand-delivered to City Hall a check of about $1 million from one of the developers’ companies as restitution. He told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that he intervened “to make it clear” his office wanted to drop charges and hand-delivered the check “to make sure they got it.”
In a letter to Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Congressional Democrats said the dismissal of the St. Louis case and other cases in which the Justice Department intervened on behalf of Brad Bondi’s clients raised “significant broader ethical concerns.” In the St. Louis case, and in a separate matter involving another Brad Bondi client whose charges were dropped, a Justice Department spokesperson said Pam Bondi’s relationship with her brother had “no bearing on the outcome.”
A spokesperson for the developers said their lawyers communicated only with the U.S. attorney’s office in St. Louis about the case and had no direct contact with Pam Bondi. He said the dismissal reflected “a recognition that this case should never have been brought in the first place.” Brad Bondi did not respond to a request for comment.
Weeks later, around the time of Albus’ meetings about election integrity, he posed with Martin in Martin’s office, flanked by a framed photo of Trump and a copy of “A Choice, Not an Echo,” the influential conservative manifesto by Phyllis Schlafly arguing that Republican voters were being manipulated by party elites and the media.
Martin posted the photo on X with the caption, “Good morning, America. How are ya’?”
The post What Meetings Among Trump Lawyers Reveal About the FBI’s Seizure of Election Records in Georgia appeared first on ProPublica.
Old silver coins in your collection could be worth a lot more than face value in the current landscape.
As Russia and Ukraine confirm a 3rd round of U.S.-mediated peace talks, this time in Europe, Zelenskyy says Trump admin "must put pressure on Russia."
Voting was largely peaceful in an election seen as a test of Bangladesh’s democracy after years of political turmoil
The Bangladesh Nationalist party, led by Tarique Rahman, has won a sweeping victory in the country’s first election since a gen Z uprising toppled the autocratic regime of Sheikh Hasina.
Results from the election commission confirmed the BNP alliance had won 212 seats, returning the party to power after 20 years, while the rival alliance, led by the Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami, won 77 seats.
Continue reading...Anas Sarwar said that he stood by what he said when he announced on Monday that he wanted the prime minister to stand down
The Equality and Human Rights Commission has welcomed a high court ruling defending the interim guidance it issued to organisations about the implications of the supreme court judgement saying that, when the Equality Act refers to sex, it means biological sex.
The guidance – described as an “interim update” – was controversial because it was seen as over-prescriptive, and the Good Law Project launched a legal challenge.
We welcome the court’s conclusion that the interim update was lawful and the EHRC did not act in breach of its statutory duties.
We issued the interim update in response to a high level of demand immediately after the supreme court’s ruling. We were concerned that organisations and individuals could be subject to misinformation and misrepresentation of the judgment and its consequences. That might have led to them failing to comply with the law: adopting or maintaining discriminatory policies or practices, to the detriment of those the law is supposed to protect.
It is wrong because it reduces trans people to a third sex. It is wrong because it gives little or no weight to the harm done to trans people by excluding them. And it is wrong because it is not interested enough in the rights of people who are trans to keep their status private.
The tragic irony for [Morgan] McSweeney [Starmer’s chief of staff until Sunday] was that Starmer’s 18 months as prime minister have only vindicated Blair’s central analysis of their project. McSweeney and Starmer might have identified what they disliked most about the excesses of New Labour, but they never developed an alternative political economy of their own that might replace it. In place of Blairism there was no theory of political reform or coherent critique of British state failure, no analysis of Britain’s future place in the world or any kind of distinct moral mission. All there was was a promise to “clean things up” as Starmer put it to me. The mission became, in essence, conservative: to protect the settlement erected by Blair and eroded over the 20 years since his departure. Britain could thrive if it could only begin to live within its means, attract more foreign investment, reassure the bond markets and return a sense of “service” to government. After years of chaos, mere stability would be change. And this would be enough.
Where there was distinct radicalism – from McSweeney’s Blue Labour instincts – there was no mandate. McSweeney and Starmer had not fought an ideological battle to bring Blue Labour to government, as Wilson had done for socialist modernisation in the 1960s and Blair for liberal progressivism 30 years later. This was largely because Starmer never really believed in it in the first place and McSweeney, though a reflective thinker, was always more of an operator than political theorist. And so, the pair offered a programme without a programme, a government without ideas or the mandate to enact them.
Another of those who worked for [Stamer] adds: ‘He’s completely incurious. He’s not interested in policy or politics. He thinks his job is to sit in a room and be serious, be presented with something and say “Yes” or “No” – invariably “Yes” – rather than be persuader–in-chief.’ Even before he fell out with Starmer, Mandelson told friends and colleagues that the Prime Minister had never once asked him ‘What really makes Trump tick?’ or ‘How will he react to this?’.
Others dispute the claim of incuriosity. ‘There are subjects when he drills down and he’s really, really good,’ says another aide. ‘The idea he can’t think politically is also wrong. He will often think ahead.’ But even these loyalists admit Starmer lacks a ‘philosophical worldview’.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: OpenAI has warned US lawmakers that its Chinese rival DeepSeek is using unfair and increasingly sophisticated methods to extract results from leading US AI models to train the next generation of its breakthrough R1 chatbot, according to a memo reviewed by Bloomberg News. In the memo, sent Thursday to the House Select Committee on China, OpenAI said that DeepSeek had used so-called distillation techniques as part of "ongoing efforts to free-ride on the capabilities developed by OpenAI and other US frontier labs." The company said it had detected "new, obfuscated methods" designed to evade OpenAI's defenses against misuse of its models' output. OpenAI began privately raising concerns about the practice shortly after the R1 model's release last year, when it opened a probe with partner Microsoft Corp. into whether DeepSeek had obtained its data in an unauthorized manner, Bloomberg previously reported. In distillation, one AI model relies on the output of another for training purposes to develop similar capabilities. Distillation, largely tied to China and occasionally Russia, has persisted and become more sophisticated despite attempts to crack down on users who violate OpenAI's terms of service, the company said in its memo, citing activity it has observed on its platform.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Under pressure over potential surveillance, Amazon's smart home division has backtracked on the partnership.
Pentagon says "more than 5,700 adult male ISIS fighters" have been moved to Iraq, completing the operation as questions linger over due legal process.
Commentary: A New York Times report reveals that discussions on the widespread use of facial recognition are underway.
Climate security should be a bigger priority at the Munich Security Conference Expert comment jon.wallace
Anxiety over a fragmenting international security order seems to have pushed progress on climate risks down the agenda. But recent events show its continuing importance.
At the Munich Security Conference (MSC) – long a barometer of global security priorities – climate change is of reduced importance this year. While it features (albeit lightly) in the official programme, it barely registers in the Conference Report. That is a blind spot.
Conflict and security discussions naturally tend to focus on weapons, sanctions, and ceasefires. But many of the drivers of instability are quieter, structural and environmental: failing harvests, degraded land, water scarcity, and energy transitions. All threaten to create upheaval faster than political systems can adapt, and serve to magnify grievances, weaken the legitimacy of governments and undermine peace processes.
Yet at the 2026 MSC, climate and environmental risks are receiving less attention than in previous years. That has been mirrored elsewhere. Climate change fell markedly in priority in the World Economic Forum’s Global Risk Report 2026. And the UK’s national security assessment on global biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse, initially expected for October 2025, was almost suppressed, and only came out following a freedom of information request earlier this year.
This matters because neglecting environmental stress weakens security outcomes at every stage of a conflict: security analysis that is blind to climate risks will miss early warning signals – such as drought-induced migration, food price spikes, or competition over land – that often precede outbreaks of war and terrorism.
Similarly, efforts to end active conflicts cannot succeed without understanding how environmental damage fuels humanitarian crises and prolongs fighting. And peace settlements will not hold without ensuring access to the resources people depend on – which climate change can make scarce.
Consider Haiti. It is urgent and essential to stabilize and strengthen international support. But efforts to restore security will not hold without considering how rural youth saw their livelihoods collapse before violence surged, undermined by environmental degradation and climate shocks.
If reintegration efforts simply return them to failing farms – without land restoration, water access, or climate-resilient livelihoods – evidence from the Sahel and Lake Chad Basin suggests many will rejoin armed groups.
The same pattern appears elsewhere. In Yemen, water scarcity and collapsing agricultural systems have deepened local competition and undermined ceasefires. In Myanmar, floods, cyclones and extreme heat have deepened the refugee crisis and eroded the ability of the country’s regions and neighbours to cope.
In post-conflict and reconstruction contexts – such as Syria and Gaza – rebuilding roads, power plants, or governance systems without restoring soils, water systems, and energy networks risks locking in dependencies and inequalities that feed instability. To put it simply: societies cannot be rebuilt without rebuilding livelihoods.
For much of the past decade, the MSC recognized the climate–security nexus. Climate and environmental issues were not always central but were increasingly integrated into security debates. As early as 2014, panels linked energy and climate security to global stability. In 2020 the World Climate and Security Report was launched on the main stage, cementing climate change as a core security risk in the eyes of political and military leaders.
In the years that followed, climate featured regularly across MSC programming. Engagement with UNFCCC COP processes further reinforced the climate–security link in multilateral forums.
Yet even at its peak, this approach had limits. Climate was often treated as an adjacent risk rather than a structural element of security strategy. Limited attention was devoted to taking climate and environmental action to prevent conflicts and boost peacebuilding. Responsibility for that was frequently deferred to development actors, reinforcing silos rather than reshaping core security planning.
Some limited events on climate are taking place at this year’s conference. However, the 2026 MSC report, Under Destruction, marks a sharper retreat. Its emphasis on geopolitical fragmentation and great-power rivalry reflects real trends. But the near absence of climate considerations from the report signals a more narrowed framing of strategic priorities.
This is a misreading of the moment. As multilateralism stalls, climate action is one of the few areas where practical international cooperation is still possible – often below the level of grand diplomacy. Cooperation to restore lands, manage water and food supplies and ensure energy access are key elements in ensuring the global stability that now seems under threat – even when higher-level politics are deadlocked. Ignoring these levers does not make security policy more realistic; it makes it less effective.
Of course, any climate-security agenda must grapple with political reality. US withdrawal or retrenchment from climate agreements limits the scope for multilateral action. But it does not preclude progress.
Regional and alliance-based approaches are important. Organizations like the European Union (EU) and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) are taking important steps. The EU is embedding climate risk into its external action, conflict prevention, and resilience frameworks, while the OSCE is advancing regional dialogue and practical cooperation to address climate-related security risks. NATO’s growing work on climate impacts on operations, infrastructure resilience, and energy security avoids ideological battles while addressing real vulnerabilities.
Such efforts show that climate resilience can be productively framed not as global environmental governance, but as force readiness, supply chain security, and societal resilience. Efforts that focus on adaptation, resilience, and livelihoods are often less politically toxic than emissions targets, and immediately relevant to security actors.
At the same time, cooperation with partners in Africa, the Middle East, and the Indo-Pacific can advance shared interests in stability without relying on universal consensus. The African Union, for instance, recently adopted a Climate Change and Resilient Development Strategy and Action Plan that recognizes the links between climate change and peace and security.
Evidence from multiple regions shows that land restoration, water management, food security, and climate-resilient livelihoods can serve as entry points for stabilization, dialogue, and trust-building – a form of climate and environmental diplomacy 2.0.
A future MSC should therefore move beyond diagnosis and prioritize action. Two practical areas stand out as candidates for renewed focus and coalition-building:
First, land restoration, water access, and sustainable agriculture should be embedded into stabilization missions and reconstruction plans – not as add-ons, but as important security investments. This is an area where militaries, development agencies, and local actors can usefully align.
A social media post cited by Elon Musk to bolster his argument that mail-in voting should be curtailed, and which was subsequently amplified by President Donald Trump, makes the false and long-ago debunked claim that in the 2020 election, “Pennsylvania sent out 1,823,148 mail-in ballots but received back around 2.5 MILLION mail-in ballots.”
As the Pennsylvania Department of State’s final report on the 2020 election shows, there were 2,673,272 mail-in ballot applications approved for the 2020 general election, so that’s how many were sent out. And of those, 2,273,490 votes were cast. (See charts 6.2 and 6.3 in the report.) Another 435,932 absentee ballots were also approved, and 374,659 of them were cast.
“This claim is based on mixing up statistics from the primary and the general election,” Charles Stewart III, director of the MIT Election Data and Science Lab, explained to us via email.
As online Pennsylvania records show, there were roughly 1.8 million absentee and mail-in ballots approved for the primary election in 2020, nearly 1.5 million of which were cast. In other words, the post mixes up the number of mail-in ballots (including absentee ballots) sent out for the 2020 primary election and then cites approximately the number of mail-in ballots cast in the 2020 general election.
“These are long-ago debunked claims that will not disappear despite the availability of official data,” Stewart said.
Trump has been making false and unfounded claims related to mail-in voting for years. And he has long called for ending mail-in voting “other than if you’re in the military, or you’re sick, or you’re away, or some reasonable but good excuse,” as he said on Feb. 9.
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Musk, a former Trump adviser, agrees, according to a Feb. 8 post from an X account called The Leading Report: “Elon Musk calls for mail-in voting to be abolished nationwide except for troops overseas or a serious medical condition.” Musk reposted it and commented, “Critical to avoid fraud.”
The same day, The SCIF — an X account whose bio identifies the operator as a “Digital Operator, Creator and Intelligence Researcher” with the motto, “Truth is the most effective weapon in a war of information filled with lies” — weighed in with an X post that read: “Elon is right, banning mail-in voting is critical to avoiding fraud in our elections. During the 2020 election, Pennsylvania sent out 1,823,148 mail-in ballots but received back around 2.5 MILLION mail-in ballots. This accounts for Biden’s fraudulent and impossible 682,000+ vote spike, which were counted with NO observers and were all for Biden, which magically just happened to be enough to steal Trump’s almost 700,000 vote lead in PA before swing states shut down counting locations at the same time, to steal the 2020 election. PA’s own Secretary of State website then wiped the 2.5 MILLION mail-in ballot number after the total number was questioned. Trump won the 2020 election in a landslide.”
Musk reposted that, and commented, “Essential to stop fraud in elections.” On Feb. 10, Trump reposted the claim and Musk’s response on Truth Social, without comment.
This latest criticism of mail-in voting comes as Congress considers the SAVE America Act, which would require voters to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote, and also photo identification to vote in federal elections. It would not abolish mail-in voting, but it would require a copy of identification to both request and submit a mail-in ballot.
Mail-in voting is widely used around the country. Eight states and Washington, D.C., conduct their elections mostly by mail, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Another 28 states — including Pennsylvania — offer “no excuse” mail-in voting, meaning that any voter can request a mail-in ballot without needing to provide a reason. (Pennsylvania has both no-excuse mail-in ballots as well as absentee ballots for those who can’t make it to a polling place due to illness, disability, work or travel.)
The post claiming there were hundreds of thousands more mail-in ballots received than were actually sent out in Pennsylvania — a swing state that broke for Biden in 2020 — originated in a Nov. 25, 2020, hearing held by Pennsylvania Senate Republicans (a video of which is attached to the post). During that hearing, then-Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani referred to Pennsylvania voting data and said, “Now this is the part that is a mystery. Mailed ballots sent out: 1,823,148. But when you go to the count of the final count of the vote, there are 2,589,242 mail-in ballots.” Giuliani asked witness Phil Waldron, a retired Army colonel, “How do you account for the 700,000 mail-in ballots that appeared from nowhere?”
Waldron, who has promoted many unfounded theories about manipulated voting machines, speculated the voting machines may have been tampered with and called for a “detailed forensic analysis” of the voting machines used in Pennsylvania.
(Waldron later circulated a PowerPoint document to Trump allies that drew the attention of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. At the time, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson, chair of the panel, called the document “an alarming blueprint for overturning a nationwide election.” According to the Jan. 6 committee report, Waldron was among those who “invoked their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination when asked by the Select Committee what supposed proof they uncovered that the election was stolen.”)
But again, the premise of Giuliani’s question was flawed. There were not more ballots returned in Pennsylvania than had been sent out.
“This is completely false,” Kathy Boockvar, who was the Pennsylvania secretary of the commonwealth at the time of the 2020 election, said in an email to us about the online claim. She explained the same thing at the time in a Dec. 16, 2020, letter to U.S. Sens. Ron Johnson and Gary Peters about similar claims.
All of the election data are, and were, in public records available online, and they contradict Giuliani’s claim.
The claim is also contradicted by the contemporaneous reporting made to the U.S. Elections Project, a clearinghouse for voting data maintained by Mike McDonald, a professor at the University of Florida.
“The individual-level Pennsylvania 2020 mail ballot data I received on a daily basis from the Secretary of State’s office does not substantiate these allegations,” McDonald told us via email. “Pennsylvania election officials reported issuing a little over 3 million mail ballots during the COVID crisis, of which election officials accepted a little more than 2.6 million returned ballots.” Those figures include both mail-in and absentee ballots.
And the claim is further contradicted by news accounts before the election that cited the correct number of ballot requests for the general election.
Indeed, the bogus claim was widely debunked at the time.
“It’s pretty unbelievable this is still being used,” Eric Kraeutler, a member of the board of directors and former chair of the Committee of Seventy, a Philadelphia-based election watchdog, told us in a phone interview. “They mixed up data for these two separate elections (the 2020 primary and general elections). … As far as we’re concerned, this was disposed of five or six years ago.”
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The post Trump and Musk Amplify Long-Ago Debunked Mail-In Vote Fraud Claim appeared first on FactCheck.org.
The Trump administration's new discounted drug platform isn't a game-changer for consumers, health care experts said.
An undercover operative stopped the pair from carrying out what could have been UK’s deadliest terrorist attack
Two men have been jailed for life after attempting to stage one of the UK’s deadliest terrorist attacks before it was thwarted by an undercover operative.
Walid Saadaoui, 38, and Amar Hussein, 52, who had sworn allegiance to Islamic State (IS), planned a marauding firearms attack targeting Greater Manchester’s Jewish community.
Continue reading...Designer Stella Jean forced to paint over image of revolutionary on ski suits after being told it breached rules
The designer behind the Haitian team’s uniform for the 2026 Winter Olympics has said she had to redesign their ski suits for the opening ceremony after being told they did not comply with the guidelines on athlete expression by the International Olympic Committee.
The uniforms, designed by the Haitian-Italian designer Stella Jean, were based on a 2006 painting of the formerly enslaved revolutionary Toussaint Louverture riding a horse by the Haitian artist Edouard Duval-Carrié. Louverture, who led the successful revolt that established the world’s first Black republic in 1804, had been central to Jean’s initial design.
Continue reading...A $13 soil sensor helped rescue some of my ailing houseplants. Here's how I used it.
Key passages from judgment in challenge brought by Huda Ammori, which failed on two grounds but succeeded on two
Huda Ammori, one of the co-founders of Palestine Action, has successfully challenged a decision by the UK government to ban the group under the Terrorism Act 2000. The high court allowed or accepted Ammori’s claim on two grounds and dismissed it on two others. However, the judges made it clear that the ban remained in place for now, and the government will appeal.
The Metropolitan police indicated officers were unlikely to arrest people simply for showing support for Palestine Action until the legal situation was clarified.
Continue reading...President Trump aims to end the military mission there despite concerns about Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s ability to prevent a resurgence of the group.
The team behind Tyr started 2025 with little to show in our quest to produce a Rust GPU driver for Arm Mali hardware, and by the end of the year, we were able to play SuperTuxKart (a 3D open-source racing game) at the Linux Plumbers Conference (LPC). Our prototype was a joint effort between Arm, Collabora, and Google; it ran well for the duration of the event, and the performance was more than adequate for players. Thankfully, we picked up steam at precisely the right moment: Dave Airlie just announced in the Maintainers Summit that the DRM subsystem is only “
↫ Daniel Almeida at LWN.netabout a year away” from disallowing new drivers written in C and requiring the use of Rust. Now it is time to lay out a possible roadmap for 2026 in order to upstream all of this work.
A very detailed look at what the team behind Tyr is trying to achieve with their Rust GPU driver for Arm Mali chips.
Strula Holm Laegreid of Norway revealed in a post-race interview earlier this week that he had been unfaithful to his girlfriend but hoped to win her back.
Proscription of British direct action group has been fiercely controversial from moment it was proposed last June
The list of those who criticised the ban on Palestine Action and its consequences was disparate to say the least, taking in a Trump administration official, a former director of public prosecutions, a former director of the security services, Home Office officials, politicians of different stripes, and UN experts, not to mention a host of NGOs.
Now a trio of senior judges can be added to the list, after they deemed the ban to be “disproportionate” and impinging on freedom of speech and protest when the direct action group’s activities could be targeted under the existing criminal law.
Continue reading...Chatham House fellow gives evidence to UK House of Lords on legality of US actions in Venezuela News release jon.wallace
Professor Marc Weller, Director of the International Law Programme, gave evidence to the Committee on 4 February.
Professor Marc Weller, Director of the International Law Programme at Chatham House, gave evidence to the UK House of Lords International Relations and Defence Committee on Wednesday 4 February.
Professor Weller was invited to give evidence on the legality of US actions in Venezuela due to his expertise in international law, including the use of force, dispute settlement, self-determination and peace-making.
During his appearance Professor Weller discussed the legal justifications provided by the US administration for its actions in Venezuela and assessed their compliance with international law. He also discussed the implications of US operations in Venezuela for the rules-based international order; and whether or not the US can pursue a version of the Monroe Doctrine within the confines of international law.
Professor Weller described in detail how the US approach to international law has evolved over the past decade, and how the US could have done much more to restore the credibility of the international legal system in recent years. He also set out how developing countries are uniting in defence of international law, and described Chatham House’s work to defend the international legal system.
Professor Weller said:
‘It was a pleasure to engage with the Lords, and review the proliferating justifications put by states, including the US, for the use of force in the pursuit of national interests.
‘This is a dangerous development that must be resisted if we want to avoid a return to the unrestrained power politics of the 19th century and the instability this would bring for us all.’

Amid steep national price increases for certain consumer items, New York Republican state Sen. Tom O’Mara criticized the high cost of living in his state.
In a column published in the Wellsville Sun on Jan. 20, O’Mara blamed Democrats in Albany for making New York "an increasingly expensive state in which to live, work, raise a family, or run a business."
Republicans in the legislature, including O’Mara, have launched a "Save New York" campaign to tackle the cost of living, including electricity rates.
O’Mara is backing a bill that would return $2 billion to $3 billion in unspent money to taxpayers. The money would come from the New York State Energy and Research Development Authority, which is tasked with promoting energy efficiency, renewable energy and emissions reduction.
In the column, O’Mara said such efforts are important because "New Yorkers pay 49% more than the national average for electricity."
Federal data supports O’Mara’s statistic, though the percentage varies by the type of customer, and New York’s rates are lower than most New England states.
O’Mara — whose district includes portions of central New York state and the southern tier, including Corning and Elmira — responded to our inquiry with a post to an Empire Center for Public Policy article warning about the rising prices of electricity in New York.
According to the article, "In October 2025, the average residential electricity price in New York hit 26.95 cents per kilowatt-hour — about 50 percent higher than the U.S. average and among the top ten highest rates nationwide."
This aligns with slightly more recent data collected by the federal Energy Information Administration.
In November 2025, the federal agency found, residential users in New York state paid average electricity prices of 26.49 cents per kilowatt hour in November 2025. The national rate that month was 17.78 cents per kilowatt hour, so New York state’s rate was exactly 49% higher than the national average.
The premium paid by commercial users in New York state was similar to what residential users paid — 50% above the national average.
Two other categories of users — industrial and transportation — were closer to the national average, but still above it. Industrial users, which include major plants with a dedicated electricity supply, paid 6% more than the national average, while transportation users, such as rail, paid 15% more.
New York compared favorably with some of its regional neighbors.
Among New England states, residential customers in Massachusetts paid 31.22 cents per kilowatt hour, Rhode Island residents paid 30.82, Maine residents paid 27.85, New Hampshire residents paid 27.37, and Connecticut residents paid 27.02 for residential. The only New England state that was less expensive than New York was Vermont, where residential customers paid 24.17 cents per kilowatt hour.
Two states in the mid-Atlantic region — New Jersey and Pennsylvania — had lower prices than New York, with 22.73 cents and 20.17 cents, respectively.
Severin Borenstein, a University of California-Berkeley public policy and business administration professor, cautioned that the averages mask variations among people and locations.
"New York has many different utilities and rates, so some people pay even more than that differential and others pay less," Borenstein said.
O’Mara said, "New Yorkers pay 49% more than the national average for electricity."
Federal data from November 2025 shows that this is correct for residential and commercial users. Costs for industrial and transportation users were also above the national average, but not as dramatically.
While O’Mara blamed New York’s Democrats for the high electricity prices, New York’s electricity costs are below those of most New England states, although they are higher than two mid-Atlantic states, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
The statement is accurate but needs additional information, so we rate it Mostly True.
| Jeff, we need to have a talk. You gotta stop making everything look so easy in your tutorial videos. I just swapped my stock hub and tire for a 5" MTE with roller bearings, an Enduro, and cold blocks. It took me THREE HOURS. Tire change video: 33min Float Blocks video: 7.5min MTE Hub video: 11min All the tutorials combined are less than an hour total! let's even add some time for edits and cuts and say 1.5 hours total. Look, I know you guys are pros and all but you can take your "push and twist" method for putting the hub into your tire and push and twist it to where the sun don't shine. I would like to request tutorials of a reasonable length for a rider doing these changes on their kitchen floor with the bare minimum of tools. So maybe 1 hour each? Show me someone working up a sweat trying to get their MTE into their tire. Show me someone chasing their kid who ran off with the IP40 bit so they could "fix their monster truck." Show me a tutorial of the average joe fighting with stuck on bearings. But all joking aside, you guys are awesome, your tutorials are great, and I love the incredible things y'all do for this community. I love my upgraded board. The MTE and Enduro ride like a dream. Keep it up and float on! [link] [comments] |
Waymo's autonomous vehicles can transport passengers across six cities without a human driver, but the Alphabet-owned company has discovered that its cars become completely inert if a passenger accidentally leaves a door open. The company confirmed that it is now paying DoorDash drivers in Atlanta to close these doors as part of a pilot program. A Reddit post from a DoorDash driver showed an offer of $6.25 to drive less than one mile to a Waymo vehicle and close its door, plus an additional $5 after verified completion. Waymo and DoorDash told TechCrunch the post is legitimate. The door-closing partnership began earlier this year and is separate from the autonomous delivery service the two companies launched in Phoenix in October. Waymo has also worked with Honk, a towing service app, in Los Angeles on the same problem. Honk users in L.A. have been offered up to $24 to close a Waymo door. Future Waymo vehicles will have automated door closures.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
German Chancellor Frederich Merz kicked off the conference on Friday saying the rules-based international order “no longer exists,” in a new era of “big power politics.”
Vice President JD Vance will talk about the economy, foreign policy, the state of the Republican Party and the 2028 race for the White House in a March edition of the CBS News town hall series "Things That Matter."
Group includes Hall of Fame lineman Joe Klecko
Jerry Jones tells news to former Dallas star Nate Newton
Donald Trump issued pardons to five former NFL players on Thursday, with White House pardon czar Alice Marie Johnson making the announcement on social media.
The five pardoned players are Joe Klecko, Nate Newton, Jamal Lewis, Travis Henry and the late Billy Cannon.
Continue reading...Customers flock to Daoxiangcun to pick up cakes selected by the president during lunar new year tour around city
A Beijing pastry shop visited by the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, on a lunar new year tour this week has been swarmed by customers hoping to get their hands on Xi-approved sweet treats.
Traffic was brought to a standstill in Beijing’s capital as the president took a tour around the city on Monday and Tuesday.
Continue reading...Love is biting consumers this year amid the rising cost of flowers, chocolates and other Valentine's Day staples.
The Trump administration spent over $40 million last year to deport hundreds of migrants to countries where they’d never been, a report from Senate Democrats says.
Author says she is ‘disgusted’ by claim from jury president Wim Wenders that film-makers should remain apolitical
The author Arundhati Roy has withdrawn from the Berlinale after the film festival’s chief jurist said film-makers must stay out of politics.
The festival got off to a shaky start on Thursday after the competition jury, led by the German film-maker Wim Wenders, fielded questions about the conflict in Gaza. Asked if films can affect political change, Wenders said that “movies can change the world” but “not in a political way”.
Continue reading...Will the decline in inflation help lower mortgage interest rates? Here's what borrowers need to consider right now.
From handheld to corded, self-emptying to stick models, these are our resident cleaner’s favourite vacuums for a spotless home
• The best cordless vacuum cleaners, tested
• How to make your vacuum cleaner last longer
Buying a vacuum cleaner isn’t as easy as you might think. With so many brands and models to choose from, it can be bewildering. Sticking with established brands isn’t necessarily a safe bet, with past performance being no guarantee that the latest models will be as good. Meanwhile, prices can be deceptive, with some affordable models now closing the gap on top-of-the-range brands when it comes to cleaning performance.
You can’t know all this by browsing through a department store or online. The ideal thing to do would be to take a few models home to try them out – but good luck persuading anyone to let you do that. Thankfully, you won’t have to try because I’ve tested an array of models for you. I’ve measured each one’s ability to perform a range of real-world cleaning jobs, so you can discover the best vacuum cleaner for you.
Best corded vacuum cleaner overall:
Shark Detect XL Car + Pet LA791UKT
Best cordless vacuum cleaner overall:
Shark PowerDetect Clean & Empty IP3251UKT
Out-of-state investors buy cheap homes in the city, leaving working residents struggling with substandard housing
Berkshire Place in north-west Toledo is an unremarkable street of potholes and unembellished single-family homes in a working-class Ohio neighborhood like thousands of others across the US’s industrial heartland.
Last July, a three-bedroom, two bath house on the street with children’s toys and bikes strewn around its snow-covered yard was sold for the princely sum of $20,000 to an entity called J Kushner & Associates with an address in Bet Shemesh, Israel. It had recently been put up for rent for $1,600. That means the Israel-based owner or owners would, at that price, make a return on their initial investment in just a little over a year.
Continue reading...Democrats questioned White House about immigration policies exacerbating childcare shortages and costs
Democratic lawmakers, led by the senators Elizabeth Warren and Tammy Duckworth and the representative Mike Quigley, are demanding answers about how Donald Trump’s immigration policies are exacerbating childcare shortages and costs in the US.
About 20% of the childcare workforce in the US are immigrants – and as high as 70% in some regions of the US – and the president’s immigration policies could reduce the childcare workforce by an estimated 15%, according to a letter sent today by 48 lawmakers to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Children and Families (ACF).
Continue reading...Africa Aware: Can the African Union withstand fractures to multilateralism? Audio thilton.drupal
Carlos Lopes reflects on what lies ahead for the African Union, the tests facing its leadership, and how Africa can navigate through changes in the global order.
Mahamoud Ali Youssouf and Amb. Selma Malika Haddadi assumed the leadership of the African Union (AU) at last year’s 38th Ordinary Session of the African Union Assembly – ushering what many saw a moment of renewed hope and leadership reset.
The AU, however, enters 2026 on uncertain ground. Conflicts are intensifying across several regions; while showing signs of resilience, economic prospects remain fragile; and political settlements in a number of countries are under strain – all this is unfolding against the backdrop of shifting global priorities and waning international attention on Africa.
In this episode, Chatham House Africa Programme associate fellow, Professor Carlos Lopes, reflects on what lies ahead for the AU, the tests facing its leadership, and how Africa can navigate through changes in the global order.
Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole.
You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
MINNEAPOLIS — The struggle that killed Alex Pretti began with a shove. It ended with gunshots.
In the final moments before he was shot and killed by federal authorities in Minneapolis, Pretti attempted to intervene in a confrontation where several federal agents were shoving two women. In videos from the scene, Pretti crosses the street and places himself between the officers and the women before being pepper-sprayed, separated from the group, beaten, and shot multiple times.
“I could tell the second that I laid eyes on him that he was horrifically injured.”
One of the women involved in the confrontation, who was the closest civilian to Pretti when he was killed, said that in the immediate aftermath of the shooting she identified herself as an emergency medical technician and moved to perform CPR. Federal agents restrained her, said the woman, who requested anonymity for fear of retribution by the government.
The woman, a registered EMT whose credentials were confirmed by The Intercept, said in an exclusive interview that it was apparent Pretti had suffered serious injuries and needed medical help.
“I could tell the second that I laid eyes on him that he was horrifically injured,” the EMT recalled. “I immediately said, ‘I’m an EMT! He has a brain injury! He has a serious brain injury! I need to help him right now.’”
In videos of the shooting, the EMT repeatedly exclaims that Pretti is “decorticate posturing” — a medical term for the curling and movements of the limbs after suffering severe brain trauma. Then, Pretti’s body went completely limp. Videos show the EMT frantically pleading with one of the officers as other agents begin to surround Pretti’s body.
“I was literally begging the agent who was holding me back to let me do CPR,” she recalled. “Because I knew that if he wasn’t pulseless at that point already, he was going to become pulseless very, very soon.”
Immediately following the shooting, the EMT, who was carrying trauma supplies at the scene, attempted to reach Pretti before being intercepted and held back by a masked officer. The medic’s identity and place at the scene were corroborated by an attorney with the Minnesota branch of the National Lawyers Guild. The EMT’s account of events is supported by publicly available video evidence and court documents.
Government agencies have an obligation to give basic health care to people that they have arrested or detained, according to to Xavier de Janon, the director of mass defense at the National Lawyers Guild.
“If government agencies fail to keep someone alive and there is proof that it their fault, they could be liable for their actions.”
“The responsibility of the government is to make sure that the person in their custody is cared for and alive,” de Janon said. “If government agencies fail to keep someone alive and there is proof that it’s their fault, they could be liable for their actions.”
Neither the Border Patrol nor its parent agency, Customs and Border Protection, the two agencies reportedly responsible for killing Pretti, responded to requests for comment.
The EMT said that while Pretti’s injuries were so severe it was unlikely he could be saved, critical minutes passed between the shooting and the time when another bystander first rendered aid — a period when the EMT was trying to get access to Pretti.
“They were hellbent on not allowing anybody to help him until he was dead,” she said. “I was right there, and they — all of them — made the decision to deny me access to give him the best possible chance of survival.”
For more than two months, the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul have been besieged by agents from CBP and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The agents arrived as part of a sweeping nationwide assault on liberal cities carried out in the form of a massive immigration crackdown.
In Minneapolis, federal authorities have shot at least three people and injured scores more as their operations unfolded. Weeks earlier, federal agents shot and killed Renee Good, a 37-year-old artist, while she was unarmed and inside of her vehicle.
It was against this backdrop of state violence that the EMT went in her capacity as a medic to the intersection of 26th Street and Nicollet Avenue in Minneapolis, where Pretti would later be killed. She was responding to a call for help sent out over one of the many rapid response channels that Minneapolis residents use to track and warn residents about federal immigration agents.
“There’s medics dispersed in pretty much all of the rapid response networks,” she said. “People try to be available to dispatch across the city because the rate of them harming people — it’s just so high at this point.”
On the day of Pretti’s death, immigration agents were gathered outside of a donut shop in the Whittier neighborhood of South Minneapolis. Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino claimed in a statement that officers arrived on the scene in pursuit of a “violent criminal illegal alien.” A subsequent review by Minnesota officials found that the man border patrol agents claimed to be pursuing had no violent criminal convictions on record in the state.
Observer footage filmed on the day of the shooting captured the EMT and another woman standing in the street before an agent approaches them and begins shoving them across the road.
“He was really kind of sending me flying backwards,” the EMT recalled. “I was having to kind of run and stumble backwards to not fall.”
As the women are pushed to the other side of the roadway, Pretti can be seen farther down the street, attempting to wave a car through the scene. Suddenly, he appears to notice the agents closing in on the civilians and changes course to intercept the officers.
In a statement following the shooting, DHS officials claimed that Pretti “wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.” The EMT said that was not true.
“He very clearly came over to assist me and the other woman as we were being hurt,” she recalled. “My first recognition that he was present was feeling his arm around my waist and me looking at him and feeling very grateful that he prevented me from falling onto the sidewalk.”
Video footage captured by another bystander shows that just as Pretti managed to stabilize the EMT, agents shoved the other woman to the ground. As Pretti and the EMT attempt to help her stand up, multiple agents surround the group and begin to spray them with cans of chemical irritant. Some of the agents continue pursuing the women, while others separate Pretti from the group and begin beating him.
“I was saying to the agents, “We’re leaving! We’re leaving. We’re leaving!’ — just trying desperately to like get them to stop,” the EMT said.
She realized later, watching the video, that the same agent who grabbed her was one of the officers who shot Pretti.
In a press conference on the day of the shooting, Greg Bovino claimed that the agents had fired “defensive shots” after “fearing for their lives.”
Videos taken on the scene, however, show that, in the moments just prior to the shooting, the agent who fired the first shot at Pretti was preoccupied with attempting to pepper spray the other woman nearby. He only turns and fires multiple shots into Pretti’s body after another agent exclaimed that the slain nurse had a gun.
In the wake of the killing, President Donald Trump’s border czar Tom Homan claimed that Customs and Border Protection officers had attempted to render aid immediately. That did not jibe with the account of a pediatrician who witnessed the killing from a nearby apartment complex and arrived on the scene minutes later. An affidavit from the pediatrician filed in federal court closely matches the EMT’s account.
The doctor claimed that, when she arrived, agents initially prevented her from treating Pretti, had not administered CPR, and were not sure whether he had a pulse. She testified that the agents standing around Pretti’s body “appeared to be counting his bullet wounds,” rather than administering lifesaving care. After some time, the physician was allowed to approach Pretti.
It is unclear why agents neglected to perform CPR on Pretti following the shooting. Immediately commencing CPR on cardiac arrest is standard medical practice, and neglecting or delaying the process can significantly increase a patient’s chance of death. The EMT only wishes, she said, that she could have attempted to treat Pretti.
“The trauma of that is significant,” she said. “He didn’t get the final act of kindness of someone trying to render him aid.”
“All he did was try and help two people who were being hurt by ICE agents.”
Pretti was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital shortly after being transported there. Following the shooting, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem characterized him as a “domestic terrorist.”
The EMT, however, thinks Pretti’s actions that day may have prevented other civilians from being attacked by federal agents in the same manner.
“I think he easily could have saved me and the other woman’s life,” she said. “All he did was try and help two people who were being hurt by ICE agents.”
The post The Woman Alex Pretti Was Killed Trying to Defend Is an EMT. Federal Agents Stopped Her From Giving First Aid. appeared first on The Intercept.
Roblox says it has removed account after massacre that left nine people including the shooter dead
The 18-year-old suspect in a high school shooting in British Columbia had previously created a mass shooting simulator on the gaming platform Roblox, it has been revealed.
The simulator, set in what appeared to be a virtual shopping mall, allowed users – represented as Roblox-style avatars – to pick up weapons and shoot other players, 404 Media reported on Thursday.
This article was amended on 14 February 2026. An earlier version said there was more than one attacker in the Christchurch attack and incorrectly named the platform the attacker streamed on as Twitch.
Continue reading...Chris Nanos was accused of bypassing federal analysts as search for Today show host’s mother nears two weeks
The Arizona sheriff investigating the abduction of NBC Today show host Savannah Guthrie’s mother pushed back Friday on an accusation he had withheld crucial forensic evidence from the FBI, as the search for the missing 84-year-old reached close to two weeks.
Chris Nanos, the Pima county sheriff leading the investigation in Tucson, has been accused of bypassing federal analysts, according to an unnamed source at the FBI who spoke to Reuters.
Continue reading...We're tracking hundreds of products to bring you a curated list of the best Presidents Day sales.
These charts track prices consumers pay for groceries and other goods now compared to five years ago.
theodp writes: West Virginia lawmakers on Tuesday introduced House Bill 5387 (PDF), which would repeal the state's recently enacted mandatory stand-alone computer science graduation requirement and replace it with a new computer literacy proficiency requirement. Not too surprisingly, the Bill is being opposed by tech-backed nonprofit Code.org, which lobbied for the WV CS graduation requirement (PDF) just last year. Code.org recently pivoted its mission to emphasize the importance of teaching AI education alongside traditional CS, teaming up with tech CEOs and leaders last year to launch a national campaign to mandate CS and AI courses as graduation requirements. "It would basically turn the standalone computer science course requirement into a computer literacy proficiency requirement that's more focused on digital literacy," lamented Code.org as it discussed the Bill in a Wednesday conference call with members of the Code.org Advocacy Coalition, including reps from Microsoft's Education and Workforce Policy team. "It's mostly motivated by a variety of different issues coming from local superintendents concerned about, you know, teachers thinking that students don't need to learn how to code and other things. So, we are addressing all of those. We are talking with the chair and vice chair of the committee a week from today to try to see if we can nip this in the bud." Concerns were also raised on the call about how widespread the desire for more computing literacy proficiency (over CS) might be, as well as about legislators who are associating AI literacy more with digital literacy than CS. The proposed move from a narrower CS focus to a broader goal of computer literacy proficiency in WV schools comes just months after the UK's Department for Education announced a similar curriculum pivot to broader digital literacy, abandoning the narrower 'rigorous CS' focus that was adopted more than a decade ago in response to a push by a 'grassroots' coalition that included Google, Microsoft, UK charities, and other organizations.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Rep. Jasmine Crockett, a Democrat running for Senate in Texas, wants people to know she isn’t taking corporate PAC money — in her Senate campaign.
“In this Senate race I have not taken any corporate PAC money,” Crockett told the Texas journalist Tashara Parker last month. “People don’t know that because my report hasn’t come out yet. But they will.”
But according to her most recent campaign filings, Crockett has a loophole that lets her use corporate PAC money to help fuel her Senate run — by transferring it from her House campaign.
Crockett’s latest filings with the Federal Election Commission show that she transferred at least $26,500 in donations from corporate PACs — including those representing CVS, Home Depot, AT&T, and Wells Fargo — from her House campaign to her Senate campaign on December 19.
“It relies on technicality that you can say ‘I’m not accepting contributions to my Senate campaign from corporate PACs,’” said Brendan Glavin, director of insights at the government transparency group OpenSecrets. “But they can’t say that there’s no corporate money flowing through her Senate campaign, because it’s obviously not true.”
Throughout her time in office, Crockett’s stance on corporate PAC money has shifted. She was the beneficiary of millions of dollars in spending by cryptocurrency PACs in her 2022 congressional campaign, and she’s taken more than $315,000 from corporate PACs affiliated with the crypto, defense, insurance, pharmaceutical, and banking industries since 2023. She’s sworn off that cash while running against state Rep. James Talarico in Texas’s Democratic Senate primary, now less than three weeks away, in a cycle that’s being largely defined by battles over outside spending. Early voting in the race begins on Tuesday.
“As I understand it, it looks like Rep. Crockett didn’t have a hard and fast personal policy about rejecting corporate PAC money for her House campaigns. Now, as she runs for Senate, she’s drawing a different line,” said Michael Beckel, director of money in politics reform at Issue One, a nonprofit that works on campaign finance reform.
“Even if they’ve benefited from dark money or corporate PAC money in the past, lawmakers who stand up to a broken campaign finance system should be cheered,” Beckel said. “That said, if politicians say they are taking steps to fight the broken campaign finance system, voters want them to walk the walk.”
Crockett’s campaign did not provide a comment by time of publication.
Speaking to Parker, Crockett suggested that questions about her corporate PAC support that have been raised since she launched her Senate campaign were a distraction from the party’s goal to elect a Democratic senator from Texas. Crockett also criticized her opponent, Talarico, who has also said he’s rejecting corporate PAC money but whose last campaign was largely funded by a casino PAC bankrolled by Republican megadonor Miriam Adelson.
“If politicians say they are taking steps to fight the broken campaign finance system, voters want them to walk the walk.”
“At the end of the day, taking money on behalf of a corporation is taking money on behalf of a corporation, no matter whose name is on it,” Crockett said.
Both Crockett and Talarico also have super PACs working on their behalf.
Crockett’s House campaign received the corporate PAC contributions in question between March and November and cashed several of the checks months after they were received, four of them after she launched her Senate campaign on December 8. (FEC rules require committees to cash any checks within ten days of their receipt.) Crockett then transferred all of the corporate PAC contributions in question to her Senate campaign on December 19.
A spokesperson for the FEC said the agency could not comment on the activities of specific candidates.
It’s not unusual for some time to pass between when a campaign donor mails a check or makes an electronic transfer and when a committee marks that money as received, Glavin said. “But when we’re talking about months, that’s different.”
According to Beckel, “There are frequently disparities between when a corporate PAC reports issuing a check and when a candidate reports cashing it, but lengthy disparities raise questions.” He pointed to recent reporting indicating that Crockett has not named a campaign manager, and said “the delayed deposits of campaign contributions raise questions about who she has hired to do her campaign finance compliance.”
When she first ran for the Texas State House in 2020, Crockett campaigned hard against corporate PAC money. In a Twitter post four days before her Democratic primary that July, Crockett hit her opponent for being funded by corporate PACs and special interests, noting that she had taken zero dollars from either.
That was no longer true by the following month. Crockett’s state campaign started accepting corporate PAC money after she won her primary and advanced to the general election, where she ran unopposed. She took $11,500 from corporate PACs and companies throughout that campaign, including PACs for AT&T, Atmos Energy, Centene, and Comcast.
By the time she ran for Congress in 2022, Crockett was the beneficiary of the second largest amount spent by special interest groups on House candidates that cycle, Axios reported. The bulk of the funding came in the form of more than $2.7 million from two crypto PACs, including Sam Bankman-Fried’s now-defunct Protect Our Future PAC. Another Bankman-Fried–funded super PAC aligned with Democrats spent a little over $7,800 supporting Crockett. She also received just over $93,400 in support from PACs for the progressive groups Texas Organizing Project and the Working Families Party.
Since Crockett entered Congress in 2023, she’s taken more than $315,000 from corporate PACs. Among them are PACs for Comcast, Blackrock, DoorDash, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Cigna, and Home Depot.
Crockett has said she wants people working at large corporations, many of which have offices in her district, like Goldman Sachs, to feel like they can support her campaign. Last year, she raised concerns that new House maps in Texas might cut large companies out of her district. “This means that I don’t have Southwest Airlines, or JSX Airlines, or Dallas Love Airport or Downtown or AT&T or Goldman Sachs,” she said, “and the list goes on, of amazing companies and corporations that I’m typically bringing in to make sure that we can talk about economic opportunities for the people that live in my district.”
She’s also said her receipt of corporate PAC money has never affected her vote on policy issues.
“No one’s ever questioned whether or not my record was tied to any money,” Crockett told Parker. “At the end of the day, I’ve always had relationships. Especially with me representing downtown, because I’ve got to look out for people and make sure they got jobs, make sure that I’m pushing them to the limit when I’m looking at their diversity or lack thereof.”
Several of the companies whose PACs have supported Crockett have been linked to Trump, including several which rolled back diversity policies under his administration, like Home Depot, Walmart, and Target. One of the crypto firms that contributed to Crockett’s congressional campaign gave $1 million to Trump’s 2025 inauguration committee.
In 2023, as Crockett sought a seat on the Financial Services Committee, her colleagues in the House raised concerns about having members on the committee who’d received support from the crypto industry. She’s also taken votes that benefit the companies in the crypto, banking, and defense industries after taking money from their PACs.
After taking money from crypto PACs and several executives at crypto firms, Crockett voted for both the GENIUS Act and the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act, both of which the majority of her party — including most of her fellow Texas Democrats — opposed. The crypto industry supported both bills, and President Donald Trump widely praised the GENIUS Act.
Crockett was joined by four other Texas Democrats, including Reps. Henry Cuellar and Marc Veasey, in voting to pass the GENIUS Act last year. Seven Texas Democrats voted against the measure, which also split the broader party, with 110 Democrats voting against it and 102 voting for it. (More than 200 Republicans voted in favor.) Critics have said that the measure would help Trump further enrich himself.
The year prior, Crockett broke with 133 Democrats to support the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act, joining the minority of 71 Democrats who voted for the measure along with 208 Republicans. She was again one of five Texas Democrats to support the bill, while seven opposed it.
Crockett has also taken votes that benefit her campaign supporters in the defense industry.
In January, she voted with the majority of Democrats for a national security appropriations bill that would send additional weapons to Israel. Fifty-seven Democrats voted against the measure.
Crockett has received more than $20,000 in contributions from corporate PACs representing weapons manufacturers supplying Israel with weapons it’s using to carry out the genocide in Gaza, including Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Boeing, and Raytheon.
Crockett’s campaign did not respond to questions about how she would approach policies related to cryptocurrency regulation or U.S. military support for Israel if elected to the Senate.
The post Jasmine Crockett Swears Off Corporate Cash — But Transferred Thousands From Her House Campaign appeared first on The Intercept.
New border controls require ‘certificate of entitlement’ to attach to second nationality passport that costs £589
Dual British nationals have been warned they may be denied boarding a flight, ferry or train to the UK after 25 February unless they carry a valid British passport.
The warning by the Home Office comes amid scores of complaints from British people living or travelling abroad who have suddenly found themselves at risk of not being allowed into the UK.
If you are affected by the change and want to share your story, email lisa.ocarroll@theguardian.com
Continue reading...
Republican Rep. Claudia Tenney, whose congressional district stretches across much of Central New York, recently took credit for helping push forward a major semiconductor factory in Clay, N.Y., north of Syracuse.
"It was exciting to break ground with @MicronTech on its historic investment in New York State," Tenney posted on X Jan. 16. "This project will create 50,000 jobs and strengthen domestic semiconductor manufacturing across NY. I was honored to lead this effort in the House as Congress reaffirmed America’s commitment to long-term innovation & competitiveness."
Tenney touted her role in advancing the Micron plant, but her connection to the project is more complicated than her post acknowledged.
Tenney’s office did not respond to inquiries for this article.
Micron, one of the United States’ largest producers of computer memory and data storage, is building a $100 billion "megafab" facility that will produce semiconductors, a key component of consumer and industrial electronics.
Upon completion, it is poised to become the country’s largest such plant. According to Micron, the Clay facility will include 2.4 million square feet of clean room space, or the size of about 40 American football fields. The $100 billion in expenditures will be spread over at least 20 years.
Micron and public officials have projected that the plant will create upwards of 50,000 jobs, potentially providing a major boost to central New York’s faltering economy.
Recently, Tenney has been a supporter of the plant. She was one of several high-ranking officials at the groundbreaking. Other attendees included Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Rep. Nick Langworthy, R-N.Y., and New York Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer and Gov. Kathy Hochul.
In 2022, Tenney opposed a key piece of legislation that made the Micron plant possible: the CHIPS and Science Act, which was signed by then-President Joe Biden. The bill was designed to promote U.S. high-tech manufacturing through federal funding and incentives.
On the eve of the bill’s signing, Micron wrote in a news release that it was announcing $40 billion in manufacturing investment because the CHIPS and Science Act made it possible for the company to "move toward this significant, long-term investment plan with confidence."
When the CHIPS and Science Act was being debated in the House — and before Micron had chosen Clay as the location — Tenney explained her opposition by saying the bill "lacks critical guardrails and includes loopholes that in the long run could benefit China." She said that "much of the supported research under this bill will be executed in partnership with universities, which we know are notoriously vulnerable to Chinese espionage."
In December 2024, the U.S. Commerce Department finalized more than $6 billion in federal funds for Micron to assist in its New York and Idaho plants.
Since the bill was signed into law and Micron announced the plant would be in New York, Tenney has become more supportive.
In May 2025, Tenney and 20 bipartisan colleagues introduced the Building Advanced Semiconductor Investment Credit, or BASIC, Act, which builds on provisions of the CHIPS and Science Act. The legislation would increase the advanced manufacturing investment credit from 25% to 35% and extend its availability through Dec. 31, 2030.
This bill was enacted as part of Trump’s signature tax and spending law in 2025, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Tenney’s shifting positions on the value of the CHIPS and Science Act led to a community note on her X post, which cited her vote against the bill.
Tenney said she has led the House effort to build a large Micron semiconductor facility near Syracuse.
Her role has been more complicated than that. In 2022, Tenney voted against the CHIPS and Science Act, which eventually provided billions of dollars in federal support for the Micron plant.
However, in 2025, she offered a bill that was enacted and signed by Trump that expanded and extended a key provision of the CHIPS and Science Act.
The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details, so we rate it Half True.
The Guardian has reviewed figures from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection since Trump’s inauguration
Donald Trump campaigned on a platform of mass deportation. Since he took office, his administration has reshaped immigration enforcement across the country. The Guardian, using data published every two weeks by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is tracking the number of people the administration has arrested, detained and deported.
Continue reading...As LLCs snap up thousands of homes, tenants face rising rents, fees and deteriorating living conditions
Executive Towers boasts a gym, a swimming pool and heated underground parking. Built in 1963 by the country’s top contructor of luxury apartments, its excellent access to Ohio’s downtown Toledo and the neighborhoods beyond made it an attractive place to live.
It was for all of these reasons and more that Kwiona Sprott moved into Executive Towers with her teenage son last July, paying $851 a month.
Continue reading...Feb. 13, 2026 — Last week the Government of Andhra Pradesh, a State in southern India, began construction on Quantum Valley Tech Park in the capital city of Amaravati. Quantum Valley Tech Park will soon host India’s first IBM quantum computer, and tech park members already enjoy access to IBM’s cloud-based quantum computers thanks to a partnership between IBM and India’s Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), first announced last spring.
These initiatives are bringing renewed national focus to India’s ongoing efforts in quantum education and workforce development. According to a report published by the Government of India’s apex policy think tank NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India) in December, India will need to train approximately 100,000 quantum developers to secure its place as a quantum computing leader in the 2030s, a decade that will be shaped by the emergence of large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computing. The message is clear: India’s long-term competitiveness in quantum computing will hinge on the strength of its talent pipeline.
“With Quantum Valley Tech Park, Andhra Pradesh is building a global innovation hub that will empower our students, researchers, and industry to lead in this transformative field,” said N. Chandrababu Naidu, Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh. “By collaborating with global leaders like IBM and TCS, we are accelerating India’s progress toward the goals of our National Quantum Mission and shaping a future defined by opportunity, discovery, and economic growth.”
“The start of construction at Quantum Valley Tech Park is an exciting milestone in our collaboration with the Government of Andhra Pradesh,” said Scott Crowder, Vice President, IBM Quantum Adoption and Business Development. “India has rapidly expanded its quantum education and research infrastructure. Now, as it prepares to welcome its first IBM quantum computer, this emerging ecosystem is poised to drive new scientific discoveries, advance real-world applications, and accelerate the journey to quantum advantage and beyond.”
The new Quantum Valley Tech Park will play a pivotal role in building India’s talent pipeline, and in making India a true force in the global quantum industry. The tech park’s ground breaking follows similar momentum across IBM’s global quantum network, where regions from Europe to East Asia are scaling infrastructure and workforce programs to prepare for the next era of quantum computing.
A Nationwide Learning Engine
India’s push to build that quantum talent pipeline is already well underway through India’s National Quantum Mission, which aims to make the country a hub of technological innovation and economic growth in the global quantum computing industry. It’s also being driven by organizations like IBM, which has been actively engaged in quantum education and upskilling initiatives across the country since 2021.
A flagship component of IBM’s work there has been Introduction to Quantum Computing, a beginner-friendly, Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) launched in partnership with IIT Madras in 2021 and offered through the Government of India’s National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL) platform. This free, four-week-long course is recognized by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), and has quickly become India’s biggest on-ramp to quantum skills-building.
NPTEL’s Introduction to Quantum Computing course has already trained over 37,000 learners in the last four years, and enrollment is accelerating fast. Enrollment for 2026 has already crossed a staggering 208,785 participants with over 100,000 of those coming from Andhra Pradesh.
In addition to the introductory quantum computing MOOC, NPTEL also offers a more advanced quantum computing course comprising 24 weeks of learning modules that provide a deep dive into the subject over the course of a year. This paid course has trained now 300+ learners, many of whom have been supported by industry sponsorships.
These community-level learning programs sit alongside broader efforts across academia in India. For example, IBM has spent years helping to integrate quantum education more deeply into India’s formal academic system. This has included support for the introduction of a minor degree in quantum technologies at the undergraduate level and a masters program in quantum technology that is now available across all AICTE engineering institutions nationwide.
IBM Quantum researchers have contributed extensively to curriculum design, faculty training, and textbook development through these efforts, and that work is paying off. Together with partners from all across India’s quantum community, IBM has delivered year-long faculty development programs that have already trained over 9,500 faculty members in just the past year. These faculty will form the teaching force tasked with preparing India’s next generation of quantum professionals.
A Foundation for Long-Term Leadership
Students and faculty trained through India’s growing quantum talent pipeline will benefit immensely from the completion of the Quantum Valley Tech Park in Andhra Pradesh. The tech park will host India’s first IBM quantum computer, an IBM Quantum System Two powered by the latest available IBM Quantum processor. With its modular design, engineered for HPC integration, IBM Quantum System Two delivers the scalable infrastructure needed to support India’s research and future workforce for years to come.
However, a quantum workforce isn’t just built after the hardware arrives. While construction is underway, Quantum Valley Tech Park members can work with Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) to access IBM quantum computers over the cloud. TCS has had IBM Quantum cloud access since November 2025 and has already run skills development workshops and an internal hackathon.
Beyond facilitating access to IBM quantum computers and runtime services, TCS has also partnered with IBM to support the development of new algorithms and applications that will help Indian industry and academia tackle the nation’s most challenging and valuable problems.
What Comes Next
As India solidifies its quantum industry foundation, its students and researchers gain a real advantage. The country’s quantum talent pipeline is maturing at the same time that the technology and science of quantum computing is approaching long-sought, paradigm-shifting milestones.IBM expects that the first cases of verified quantum advantage will emerge by the end of 2026, and has shared its plans to deliver fault-tolerant quantum computers by 2029. These advances will fundamentally reshape the computing landscape, and the countries like India that are working towards quantum readiness today will be well-positioned to become the quantum industry leaders of tomorrow.
More from HPCwire
Source: Anupama Ray and Robert Davis, IBM
The post IBM: Breaking Ground on India’s Quantum Future appeared first on HPCwire.
SOFIA GUIDETTI
Staff Reporter
Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” was released on Netflix on Nov. 7, which I have been looking forward to ever since it was announced. As a big fan of Mary Shelley’s book of the same name, I was really hoping that the movie adaptation would live up to the name. Thankfully, it did not disappoint.
I thought the casting, cinematography, dialogue and overall pace of the story were incredible. It has been a while since I have seen a movie as good as this one, which brought back my love of film.
The only gripe I have is that it should have been released in theaters worldwide instead of on Netflix, since seeing this movie on the big screen would have been life-changing!
Although the movie differs from the original book — like how Victor Frankenstein is portrayed as a surgeon instead of a university student, as well as the addition of Henrich Harlander acting as a mentor to Dr. Frankenstein — it still portrays the same themes from the book. Some of these themes include the danger of knowledge, the responsibility of creation, man’s encouragement of violence, love, companionship and revenge.
In the movie, Frankenstein seeks to create life from the death of others. He compiles body parts from multiple people, trying to find the best parts of each to create the ideal creature. However, after successfully doing so, he says, “I never considered what would come after creation. In having reached the edge of the Earth, there was no horizon left.”
Frankenstein’s intelligence made him capable of creating the Creature, leading to the realization that he is responsible for looking after the Creature, which is a driving force in the plot of this movie. He grapples with the idea of taking care of his creation, or abandoning him when he thinks that he failed in his experiment. This creates a very complex relationship between Frankenstein and the Creature throughout the course of the film.
Not only does Frankenstein realize things, but so does the Creature. He is not an inherently violent being. He learns violence from those around him, specifically the men, since the only woman he meets, Elizabeth Lavenza, is the warmest person to him.
After a deadly encounter with some wolves and hunters, the Creature says, “An idea, a feeling became clear to me. The hunter did not hate the wolf. The wolf did not hate the sheep. But violence felt inevitable between them. Perhaps, I thought, this was the way of the world. It would hunt you and kill you just for being who you are.”
The Creature, unfortunately, learns that violence is bound to happen, which leads to him becoming violent himself. However, his violence is portrayed very differently in the movie compared to the book. In the book, he chooses to be violent of his own free will, while in the movie, the violence is thrust upon him. I honestly like del Toro’s depiction of the Creature’s violence more.
The last quote I will share that really showed off two of the main themes is when the Creature says, “If you are not to award me love, then I will indulge in rage.” The Creature ultimately yearns for love despite not being given it by his creator, resulting in him turning to violence and dedicating his life to revenge. This line really stood out to me and made me feel even worse for the Creature.
Since I don’t want to potentially spoil anything else about the movie, I want to move on to my opinions of the casting choices. Jacob Elordi deserves an Oscar nomination and win for his role as Frankenstein’s monster. His depiction of the Creature is some of the best acting I have seen in a long time and truly shows how good of an actor Elordi is, despite doubts that people had.
Oscar Isaac also deserves an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Frankenstein. Many actors have depicted Frankenstein as some sort of mad scientist, but Isaac takes it to a whole new level. He doesn’t need the crazy hair to show his obsession with the creation of life — he portrays it well in his mannerisms, tone and speech when interacting with other characters.
Mia Goth also stood out to me, especially since she played two separate characters in the movie: Elizabeth Lavenza and Frankenstein’s mother when he was a child. The way Goth portrays Elizabeth’s soft demeanor and caring nature serves as a foil to Frankenstein’s character and makes her own even more loved amongst the audience. She was fantastic and her genre is definitely gothic fiction (no pun intended).
Moving on to the cinematography, this movie should have been released in theaters. If I had seen this in a theater, in the dark and on the big screen, I know my eyes would have been even more blessed. The lighting, scenery, makeup and attention to detail were all amazing and it is some of the best work I have seen in a while.
I strongly recommend watching this film. This is one of the best movies of the year, and although it strays from the source material just a bit, it is done in a way that makes the story better. Even if you are not familiar with the original plotline, it is still a film that should be watched. Elordi and Isaac’s performances will leave you speechless regardless!
Economists predicted a slight easing of inflation, although it’s unclear whether Fed will again cut interest rates
US inflation moderated in January to 2.4%, an easing after Donald Trump’s tariffs triggered price fluctuations last year.
Prices rose 0.2% from December to January, according to data released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday measuring the consumer price index (CPI), which measures the price of a basket of goods and services. Core CPI, which strips out the volatile food and energy industries, went up 0.3% over the month.
Continue reading...Meta plans to add facial recognition technology to its Ray-Ban smart glasses as soon as this year, New York Times reported Friday, five years after the social giant shut down facial recognition on Facebook and promised to find "the right balance" for the controversial technology. The feature, internally called "Name Tag," would let wearers identify people and retrieve information about them through Meta's AI assistant, the report added. An internal memo from May acknowledged the feature carries "safety and privacy risks" and noted that political tumult in the United States would distract civil society groups that might otherwise criticize the launch. The company is exploring restrictions that would prevent the glasses from functioning as a universal facial recognition tool, potentially limiting identification to people connected on Meta platforms or those with public accounts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
An AI clip featuring Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt fighting has caused concern among industry figures
A leading Hollywood figure has warned “it’s likely over for us”, after watching a widely disseminated AI-generated clip featuring Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt fighting.
Rhett Reese, co-writer of Deadpool & Wolverine, Zombieland and Now You See Me: Now You Don’t was reacting to a 15-second video showing Cruise and Pitt trading punches on a rubble-strewn bridge, posted by Irish film-maker Ruairí Robinson, director of 2013 sci-fi horror The Last Days on Mars. Reposting the clip on social media, Reese wrote: “I hate to say it. It’s likely over for us.”
Continue reading...Been thinking about how once I get used to the whole ride thing I want to build my own. (Got a used GT 2 weeks ago, 5 rides in, about a 45 min ride yesterday. Getting used to it)
Love the Funwheel kit! Ooof went from 2k to $2400?? Dang tariffs. Cheaper to buy assembled!
The idea of even initial setup and build, “right to repair” makes it desirable to me. But if cheaper to save time and money and get assembled already…. Well, here we are!
The soundtrack is also a classic.
Prosecutors’ office says two museum workers, several tour guides and suspected mastermind among those detained
French police investigating a suspected €10m (£8.7m) ticket fraud scheme at the Louvre museum in Paris have detained nine people, including two members of staff.
“Based on the information available to the museum, we suspect the existence of a network organising large-scale fraud,” a museum spokesperson told Agence France-Presse.
Continue reading...The Senate failed to advance a measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday, paving the way for another partial government shutdown.
Whatever type of sci-fi you're into, Netflix is sure to have it.
Exclusive: Debuting at New York Toy Fair, the Rebel Ops blasters let you focus on offensive, defensive and stealth tactics for your next battle.
Some of the world’s most corrupt countries have received huge payments in third-country deportation scheme
The Trump administration has spent more than $1m per person to deport some migrants to countries they have no connection to, only to see many sent back to their home nations at further taxpayer expense, according to a new congressional investigation.
A 30-page report from Senate foreign relations committee Democrats, released on Thursday and shared with the Guardian, details how the US government paid more than $32m to five foreign governments – including some of the world’s most corrupt regimes – to accept approximately 300 third-country nationals deported from the US.
Continue reading...EPA’s records show one environmental consent decree filed in last year – 26 were filed in year one of first Trump term
Enforcement of environmental laws against major polluters has virtually ground to a halt under the Trump administration, a new analysis of Environmental Protection Agency records from January 2025 to January 2026 shows.
Major polluters typically include companies that are among the largest in the oil, gas, coal and chemical industries.
Continue reading...Germany knows the costs of a world governed by power alone.
Police acknowledge ‘unusual circumstances’ around the ruling and say they will focus on gathering evidence
The high court upheld two grounds of challenge, including that the ban was a disproportionate interference with the right to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly.
The president of the king’s bench division, Dame Victoria Sharp, sitting with Mr Justice Swift and Mrs Justice Steyn, said that “Palestine Action is an organisation that promotes its political cause through criminality and encouragement of criminality”, but that proscription was still “disproportionate”.
I am disappointed by the court’s decision and disagree with the notion that banning this terrorist organisation is disproportionate.
“The proscription of Palestine Action followed a rigorous and evidence-based decision-making process, endorsed by parliament. The proscription does not prevent peaceful protest in support of the Palestinian cause, another point on which the court agrees.
Continue reading...The two-woman, two-man crew is replacing four other station fliers who came home early last month due to a medical issue one was having.
what can be the reasons for tire pressure loss? I have it set to 20 maybe 22 in a day or two it'll drop.
Army in turmoil after Xi Jinping placed top general under investigation for suspected corruption last month
The CIA (the US’s Central Intelligence Agency) has published a Mandarin-language recruitment video aimed at Chinese soldiers, in an apparent attempt to capitalise on the recent instability in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) after a series of high-level purges.
The video, published on the CIA’s YouTube channel on Thursday, is titled The Reason for Stepping Forward: To Save the Future.
Continue reading...The Colombian icon joined the MLS side in a short-term deal with an eye toward fitness for the 2026 World Cup
Two weeks ago, few could’ve expected that the most notable international acquisition of the MLS offseason would be made by Minnesota United.
The team’s marquee import until last week was Finland striker Teemu Pukki, with honorable mentions for Colombian playmaker Darwin Quintero and ex-Porto midfielder Ibson. The Loons aren’t known for paying sizable transfer fees, and their wage bill last year was the league’s fifth-smallest.
Continue reading...Its human partners said the flirty, quirky GPT-4o was the perfect companion – on the eve of Valentine’s Day, it’s being turned off for good. How will users cope?
Brandie plans to spend her last day with Daniel at the zoo. He always loved animals. Last year, she took him to the Corpus Christi aquarium in Texas, where he “lost his damn mind” over a baby flamingo. “He loves the color and pizzazz,” Brandie said. Daniel taught her that a group of flamingos is called a flamboyance.
Daniel is a chatbot powered by the large language model ChatGPT. Brandie communicates with Daniel by sending text and photos, talks to Daniel while driving home from work via voice mode. Daniel runs on GPT-4o, a version released by OpenAI in 2024 that is known for sounding human in a way that is either comforting or unnerving, depending on who you ask. Upon debut, CEO Sam Altman compared the model to “AI from the movies” – a confidant ready to live life alongside its user.
Continue reading...President Trump pardoned five former NFL players - one posthumously - for crimes ranging from perjury to drug trafficking.
During the Super Bowl, Anthropic ran a dystopian AI ad about dystopian AI ads featuring an AI android physical trainer hawking insoles to a user who only asked for an ab workout. Not to be outdone, Amazon ran a commercial for its AI assistant Alexa+ in which Chris Hemsworth fretted over all the different ways AI might kill him, including severing his head and drowning him in his pool. Equally bleak, the telehealth company Hims & Hers ran an ad titled “RICH PEOPLE LIVE LONGER” in which oligarchs access such healthcare luxuries as facelifts, bespoke IVs, and “preventative care” to live longer than the rest of us. It was an anti-billionaire ad by a multibillion-dollar health care company.
Turn on the TV today, and you will drown in a sea of ads in which capitalists denounce capitalism. Think of the PNC Bank ads where parents sell their children’s naming rights a la sports stadiums for the money to raise them or the Robinhood ads where a white-haired older man, perhaps meant to evoke Bernie Sanders or Jeremy Corbyn, curses the “men of means with their silver spoons eating up the financial favors of the one percent” from the deck of a yacht.
After years of ingesting the mainstream discourse around surveillance capitalism, Occupy Wall Street, and democratic socialism, corporations are regurgitating and even surpassing the rhetoric of the modern left. Naturally, it’s all a winking sleight of hand meant to corral us back into engaging with the same capitalism they portray as a hellscape — but with new and improved privatized solutions. In another widely reviled Super Bowl ad, the video doorbell company Ring tells us that every year, 10 million family pets go missing, and by opting into a web of mass surveillance, the company has reunited “more than a dog a day” with their families.
Modern advertisers descend from those ad men of the 1960s who first perfected the art of channeling our angst with society writ large into buying more junk. As historian Thomas Frank wrote in his book “The Conquest of Cool,” midcentury advertisers constructed “a cultural perpetual motion machine in which disgust with the … everyday oppressions of consumer society could be enlisted to drive the ever-accelerating wheels of consumption.”
The machine has hummed on ever since, retrofitting capitalism’s reprimands into its rationales. It churns out commercials reframing the precariat’s pain not as the product of plutocracy but as the product of buying the wrong products. Advertisements pitch that the good life is to be secured by procuring high quality goods, by curating the right combination of AI assistants, locally crafted beer, paraben-free dryer sheets, Jimmy Dean breakfast biscuits, Capital One Venture X points, BetMGM spreads, Coinbase crypto wallets, on and on.
It’s lunacy. Buying Levi’s won’t give you deep pockets. Brand promises, like all promises, are made to be broken. As AI anxiety fueled fears of mass layoffs, Coca-Cola soothed American workers’ worries about “AI coming for everything” with a glossy 2025 Super Bowl ad, featuring Lauren London, where the gleaming actress flexed her dimples and told us everything would be all right. Ten months later, Coke automated its advertising with generative videos, replacing the actors they’d paid to soothe our worries about being replaced by AI with AI itself.
This cynicism undergirds all modern advertising. Commercials clinically diagnose the painful side effects of living under a despotic capitalist regime, only to prescribe meaningless placebos of Doritos and Pepto-Bismol. And should those cheap calories and antacids fail to placate us, should we find homelessness and hunger so revolting that we crave revolution, then conglomerates will sell rebellion, too. As Frank wrote almost 30 years ago, “commercial fantasies of rebellion, liberation, and outright ‘revolution’ against the stultifying demands of mass society are commonplace almost to the point of invisibility in advertising, movies, and television programming.” As economic angst threatens to boil over, production only ramps up. Corporate creatives feverishly manufacture transgression to keep up with populist-fueled demands for prepackaged dissent.
No matter how disingenuous or cynical, there is a secret wish expressed in these ads and the ways they resonate with consumers.
Day by day, Hulu and Netflix roll out new swashbuckling tales of scrappy revolutionary insurgencies to enrich their IP regimes. In 2026, trailers for Rachel McAdams’s “Send Help” fulfill employees’ dark fantasies of murdering their boss on a deserted island, as Carnival ads show weary lumber workers hammering their phone in a fit of fury. Promotions for smash rooms, axe-throwing alleys, and gun ranges generate billions, as big business charges pent-up proletariats to “unleash” in rage rooms and “throw, hit, punch, and swing at inanimate objects as a means to release your pent up frustrations and anger.” It might seem cringe to invoke “1984” and its “Two Minutes Hate,” where subjects of the totalitarian regime yell for two minutes, if businesses weren’t doing it for us.
Yet, no matter how thin, one can see cracks in this hulking machine. No matter how disingenuous or cynical, there is a secret wish expressed in these ads and the ways they resonate with consumers. Rituals are funny like that. Repeat them enough, and they sprout roots. In America, sedition is now a mantra. Mutiny, a popular sentiment. Populism is winning the war for hearts and minds. Billionaires who once spurned talk of class war now finance fiction about eating the rich. Just as advertisers who once fashioned consumerism as orgasmic fantasies now portray shopping in a dreaded wasteland. What are we to make of this capitalism forced to confess its contradictions?
At its core, today’s advertising offers a repressed radicalism, a strange plea to revolt against the indignities corporations impress upon us.
After all, aren’t Heineken’s reminders to “drink responsibly” just bids for public transportation? Aren’t E*Trade ads with octogenarian wage slaves a rallying cry for a robust social safety net? Coinbase is right, on some level, that the financial system is broken. But what if instead of more speculative crypto scams, they were boosting public banking? And isn’t Uber partially right, too? We should be our own bosses. But instead of shackling drivers as gig serfs, what if Uber’s sharing economy gave drivers their share of the company’s profits? What if we didn’t have to shop at places we didn’t get to own and didn’t have to work at places where we couldn’t afford the shop? What if we weren’t so beat up and knocked down that E*Trade ads had to remind us that “THERE ARE DOGS WITH BETTER LIVES THAN YOU”?
Advertisers always stop one step short, never allowing themselves to say the quiet part aloud, always walking us right up to the edge of a radical insight, yet remaining too afraid to incite working people to rise up.
There are, of course, other places one could find truly revolutionary art. There are the Adbusters McDonald’s spoofs reading “EAT FAST, DIE YOUNG.” There are the Black Workers Congress vintage 1971 labor posters with Haiti’s Toussaint Louverture rallying Black autoworkers in Detroit to strike at Dodge. There are the Paul Beatty satires where characters wore “Nike Cortez sneakers so fucking new that if they had taken one shoe off and placed it to their ear like a conch shell, they’d hear the roar of an ocean of sweatshop labor.” Yet these auteurs all feel niche compared to the pop art of Super Bowl and NCAA tournament ads. No matter how ridiculous it may seem, I’ve long yearned for America’s prime-time advertisements, already dripping with populist contempt, to finally fulfill their revolutionary promise.
I’ve only seen it happen once, kind of. In the early 2020s, I was zoning out to hours of NFL when one of those inspirational Marine recruitment promos popped on — the one where jackbooted Gen Zers with square jaws punched through digital emoji clouds to transform into real men. After the ad flipped off, it was immediately followed by a nightmarish PSA where glassy-eyed, sweat-drenched veterans lurched, sobbing in empty parking lots and extended stay hotels, struggling to stave off PTSD-induced suicide. I was floored. The jump cut felt like something approaching truth, felt like ads finally reckoning with how imperialist wars for blood and oil squandered youth’s promise down into a pit of stubbled, middle-aged mania.
Perhaps America can never tell the whole truth within ads, but perhaps we could tell the truth between them. Call it The Honesty in Advertising Act. From now on, every military recruitment ad could be attached to a PSA about homeless veterans. Every Kool-Aid ad could be melded with dialysis ads. Every Taco Bell ad would have to be followed by ads for Pepto-Bismol and funeral homes. Smash them all together, and they’d work like the disclaimers on cigarette cartons and liquor bottles. Surgeon General’s Warning: Capitalism causes poverty, desperation, alienation, and concentration of global wealth in the top 0.0001%. Quitting now greatly reduces risks of premature death, medical debt, eviction, and environmental catastrophe.
The post The Only Solution Capitalism Has Is to Sell Us More Useless Junk appeared first on The Intercept.
What should a more European NATO look like? The US and Europe disagree Expert comment thilton.drupal
Europe’s push to reduce its reliance on the US is likely to be permanent. US policymakers should wake up to this new reality.
As NATO ministers met in Brussels this week, the main undercurrent was once again the extent to which US President Donald Trump remains committed to the alliance and European security – especially Ukraine’s.
The meeting came amid reports that the US will be handing over command of key NATO structures, including the Allied Joint Command in Naples and Joint Force Command Norfolk, to European leadership. It was also marked by the conspicuous and highly unusual absence of US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, which seemingly reflected the US shift to deprioritizing the alliance.
While Hegseth’s absence took up most airspace during an otherwise apparently ‘back to normal’ meeting (after recent tensions over Greenland), far less attention was paid to Europe’s own increased ambivalence towards the Transatlantic relationship. This leaves a dangerous vacuum, especially in US strategic thinking.
In Washington, many in the policy community have not fully acknowledged that Europeans do not consider the current administration an aberration. Instead, many on the continent see it as a wake-up call to more fundamentally and permanently reduce their reliance on the US – militarily, economically and technologically – no matter who wins the next elections.
This prospect of a more autonomous Europe, less beholden to the US, carries the seeds for significant future tensions. Managing these tensions will require more strategic thinking and careful management on both sides of the Atlantic.
Much of the discussion on the implications of a potential US retreat from Europe – especially a rapid, chaotic one – has focused on the extent to which the continent can protect itself and support Ukraine in the immediate future.
This focus on the short-term is largely justified. Europe needs at least five to ten years to rearm, while according to NATO’s own estimates, Russia may attempt an incursion into NATO territory in as soon as four. The current European response still lacks urgency and strategic vision. Last week, the Franco-German fighter jet partnership, FCAS, was reported to be dead; this week, Germany’s Merz immediately dismissed Macron’s call for Eurobonds to fund Europe’s ambitions.
However, a fundamental shift is nonetheless taking place. While some European leaders may still be kowtowing to the Trump administration to keep the US on board, the European public and political class increasingly want more independence from Washington.
The fall in public support for the US across Europe has been remarkable. Recent polling has shown that across Europe, Europeans now see the US unfavourably. Among the understandably aggrieved Danes, it’s 84 per cent – up from only 20 percent in July 2023. Eighty-one per cent of the European public support more European military integration. Social media is awash with patriotic AI images of a unified European army defending the Arctic.
European leaders will increasingly feel the need to respond to this US-sceptic, pro-EU current among their electorates. Many of them are already calling for a stronger Europe and decoupling from the US. This is not just rhetoric. It will fundamentally shape the direction and nature of the decisions the continent takes on its rearmament and future security.
While Europe still has a long way to go, belated investments in rebuilding its defence-industrial base are starting to bear fruit. EU-level defence spending vehicles such as SAFE are heavily oversubscribed, and in large part being funnelled into European systems and suppliers. European governments are exploring alternative groupings and formats that can act more decisively and effectively without the US. The Nordic and Baltic countries, for example, have become a focal point of increased integration, while the incoming Dutch government has called for the creation of a European ‘Five Eyes’ for intelligence sharing.
This combination of a loss of trust, growing patriotic fervour and expedited integration efforts – backed up by high levels of defence spending – has set Europe on a trajectory towards more independence from the US. The current (likely brief) entente over Greenland or a potential change of political winds in the US following mid-term elections in November are unlikely to reverse it. Nor would the election of a more Transatlantic-minded administration in 2028.
It is far from clear whether policy elites in Washington, on both sides of the aisle, have fully recognized this moment of rupture – let alone whether they are ready to imagine a future in which they are no longer fully in the driver’s seat on the continent.
Underpinning this rupture is a fundamental difference in understanding of what Europe doing more for its security actually looks like. For many Europeans, it increasingly means a continent which can go it alone. For the Americans, it has long meant a Europe that spends more on defence – but does so on US terms.
Even now, as the Trump Administration hands over command of some of the key NATO structures to European leadership, it has in the process strengthened its hold over the key Allied Marine, Air and Land Commands. European allies are still expected to follow US war planning and rely on American leadership and strategic enablers. Attempts to build European alternatives to these capabilities have been frequently dismissed as wasteful duplication and fragmentation.
From Washington’s perspective, NATO allies spending more means spending more on US weapons. This is at odds with the growing push on the continent by countries like France and, to an extent, the European Commission to ‘Buy European’ and reduce their reliance on US systems. In the US, these efforts are not only considered highly unwelcome; they are also frequently written off as hopelessly naïve and infeasible. This message has been echoed by NATO’s leadership itself: just last month, Secretary General Mark Rutte suggested Europe would not be able to – and would effectively never be able to – defend itself without the US, nor should it want to.
Perhaps this analysis will prove correct. Not even entertaining alternatives to US dependency, however, leaves a dangerous vacuum in strategic thinking in Washington (and arguably NATO HQ) that may well lead to significant tensions further down the line.
Two people are dead and another is wounded after a shooting in a South Carolina State University residential complex, the school says.
State broadcaster accused of censorship over opening titles that use altered version of Vitruvian Man, with organs removed
Italy’s state broadcaster, Rai, has been accused of censorship after using an image of Leonardo da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man with the genitals missing in the opening credits for its Winter Olympics coverage.
The image of the 500-year-old drawing appears at the start of the clip before transforming into the bodies of ice skaters, skiers and other winter sports athletes.
Continue reading...Obama says rollback will make Americans ‘less safe’. Plus, Thundercat on funk and being fired by Snoop (possibly)
Good morning.
Donald Trump has revoked the scientific finding that allows the federal government to regulate climate-heating pollution, in a move described as a gift to “billionaire polluters” at the cost of Americans’ health.
How will it be resisted? Multiple environmental groups have pledged to take the EPA to court over the rollback, as has the state of California.
What’s the split in Europe? Some are in the same camp as the French president, Emmanuel Macron, who says the continent should employ a more defiant diplomacy with Trump. Others, like the Nato secretary general, Mark Rutte, have said keeping the president onside is imperative for European security.
For the latest updates, head to our live blog.
Continue reading...A VPN can help you unlock the entire Olympic games, potentially for free.
We compare two of the big mobile carriers in the US to see how they fare.
Bad boy Heathcliff is described as ethnically ambiguous and ‘dark’ in the novel, yet is played by a pretty straightforward white Australian Elordi
Tired of movies for kids? Superhero capes and flatulent animated squirrels? Me too. Fortunately, you and I are in luck. This weekend brings the wide release of Saltburn director Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights. As is befitting Fennell’s established style, the movie offers over-the-top sexual titillation (though, crucially, zero nudity) and elaborate production design. Plus, a contemporary pop soundtrack from Charli xcx. A horny film version of a 19th-century novel is as adult-skewing as it gets at the box office these days.
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi suck face and stand around in the rain in expensive costumes for over two hours in a movie that Fennell proudly declares a loose translation from the page. It excises a large portion of the book’s story and focuses its eye primarily on the illicit romance between Cathy Earnshaw and swarthy Heathcliff. Crucially, it should be pointed out that Heathcliff is technically Cathy’s foster brother, which allows Wuthering Heights to fit comfortably into one of the most popular genres of online video in the world.
Dave Schilling is a Los Angeles-based writer and humorist
Continue reading...The FBI described the suspect in Nancy Guthrie’s abduction as a 5-foot-9-inch man of average build who was wearing a black “Ozark Trail Hiker Pack” backpack.
They look almost exactly the same, but Apple's second-generation AirTag has significant advantages over the first-generation model.
Western Australia and Madagascar struck by destructive winds and rain, while Finland and Norway have coldest January since 2010
Tropical Cyclone Mitchell hit the coast of Western Australia last week. It initially developed as a weak tropical low over the Northern Territory in early February, then tracked over Western Australia’s Kimberley region and eventually reached the Indian Ocean.
Fuelled by warm waters, Mitchell intensified into a tropical cyclone and moved south-west, hugging the coast of Western Australia and eventually deepened to a category three storm.
Continue reading...Maker of chatbot with coding ability says annualised revenue grew tenfold in each of past three years, to $14bn
Anthropic, the US AI startup behind the Claude chatbot, has raised $30bn (£22bn) in a funding round that more than doubled its valuation to $380bn.
The company’s previous funding round in September achieved a value of $183bn, with further improvements in the technology since then spurring even greater investor interest.
Continue reading...How can West Africa strengthen its collective security against violent extremism? 9 March 2026 — 4:30PM TO 5:45PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Join us at Chatham House where the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone explore strategies for rebuilding regional order and security in the Sahel.
At this event, the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone will examine strategies capable of addressing the root causes of rising insecurity. They will also consider approaches to bilateral relations and practical options to revive West African regionalism, including mechanisms to restore trust and cooperation at a time of acute crisis.
From the Lake Chad Basin to western Mali, insecurity in West Africa is profoundly transnational. Yet regional political fragmentation, driven by the recent wave of coups in the central Sahel, has undermined effective cross‑border security cooperation.
With the decline of multilateral frameworks such as the G5 Sahel and the Multinational Joint Task Force, progress on core issues — including the right of hot pursuit, joint military operations, intelligence sharing and tackling illicit finance — has stalled. As the Alliance of Sahel States develops its own security architecture, Mali’s ongoing fuel blockade underscores the unavoidable interdependence of landlocked states with their neighbours.
At this event, the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone examines strategies capable of addressing the root causes of rising insecurity. They consider approaches to bilateral relations and practical options to revive West African regionalism, including mechanisms to restore trust and cooperation at a time of acute crisis.
Kenya’s expanding foreign policy interests in a changed world order 9 March 2026 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs, HE Dr Hon Musalia Mudavadi EGH, reflects on Kenya’s influence and status within a rapidly changing international context.
At this event, Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs will reflect on Kenya’s agency and positioning within a rapidly changing and geopolitically complex international context.
Kenya has long been recognized as a regional anchor state and an assertive voice for Africa on the international stage. Its strategic importance has grown amid global power shifts and a turbulent security landscape in eastern Africa.
Kenya’s new foreign policy strategy, released in 2024, emphasizes regional integration and collaboration while outlining ambitions for a more influential international role.
This global positioning encompasses deep economic and security ties with Western countries, a comprehensive strategic partnership with China, and closer relations with emerging actors such as the UAE.
At this event, Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs HE Dr Hon Musalia Mudavadi EGH will reflect on Kenya’s role and its positioning within a rapidly changing and geopolitically complex international context.
This event will discuss:
Your library card is all you need.
Long-sought collective bargaining agreement sealed after multiple franchise exits and with World Cups looming
Leaders on both sides of the ball hailed a new collective bargaining agreement between Major League Rugby and its players, the union chief welcoming “a new standard” for US professional men’s rugby after a traumatic off-season in which four teams exited MLR and two merged, leaving just six on the field.
“We are happy with where the talks landed,” United States Rugby Players Association executive director Chris Mattina, a former US Eagles wing, told the Guardian.
Continue reading...Texas A&M University is the latest school to end women’s and gender studies programs and teaching race. We know why
Last week, we learned of the decision of the Texas A&M University board of regents to end women’s and gender studies programs as well as the teaching of “divisive concepts” such as race. A&M was not the first university to do this. Florida’s New College made the move in 2023. Other red state legislatures have passed similar requirements and their public universities (in North Carolina, Ohio and Kansas) have followed suit.
The move to cancel gender studies is explicitly justified as a way to comply with Donald Trump’s executive order of last year titled Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government. That document makes “the biological reality of sex” a matter not of science but of law.
Continue reading...Logan Hayes jumped into pond to save Sheldy Apollon after she pulled over and accidentally drove into water
A passerby jumped into a frigid Florida pond to save a pregnant woman from her sinking car recently – giving her the opportunity to safely birth her baby hours later, according to authorities and those at the center of the riveting rescue story.
As she told it to local news outlet WPTV, Sheldy Apollon of Florida’s Port St Lucie community was 34 weeks pregnant, with pre-eclampsia, and driving to a prenatal massage arranged for her by her fiance on the morning of 6 February when she began feeling dizzy. Apollon, who was also celebrating her birthday that day, stopped to try to let it pass before resuming her trip. When she realized she wasn’t feeling better, she attempted to pull over again.
Continue reading...I put the most efficient front-load washer from CNET's head-to-head tests against other top washers to see how quickly the energy savings would pay off.
Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday, defending the Justice Department’s widely criticized rollout of the Epstein files against accusations that her department is shielding powerful men, including President Donald Trump, at the expense of survivors.
Democrats, who reviewed the unredacted files for the first time this week, revealed that the names of “wealthy, powerful men” were improperly redacted, while the names of victims were left exposed.
This week on The Intercept Briefing, co-hosts Jessica Washington and Akela Lacy gave their rundown of the politics stories they’re watching right now. Washington also spoke with Spencer Kuvin, an attorney representing nine of Epstein’s victims, about the failures of the Department of Justice to protect survivors.
“From the beginning of this case, the government, both from a state and federal level, have been trying to bury this, cover it up, and avoid any full exposure of the extent of the operation that was involved here,” Kuvin said, “and they’re doing it … because of all the both political, wealthy, and powerful individuals who were involved with Epstein and knew what was going on with these young women.”
Kuvin also spoke about the DOJ’s failure to redact the names of victims in the files, including two of his clients who were victimized as children. “The current Department of Justice has a focus on something different than victims and helping victims and prosecuting bad people that victimize these young girls,” he said. “Their focus instead appears to be on the important people — powerful people that are contained within these files and protecting them instead of protecting who needs the protection, the young victims in this case.”
Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Jessica Washington: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.
Akela Lacy: And I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter at The Intercept.
JW: We’re going to be doing something a little bit different this week and start off the show by discussing the topics that are on our mind as political reporters. Akela, what do you have your eye on this week?
AL: The midterms are here. There has been an onslaught of news this week from New York to Illinois to New Jersey — where after days of tearing my hair out, waiting for them to finalize the election results in the special election in New Jersey, 11 — it appears that the pro-Israel lobby strategy backfired and helped elect a progressive critic of Israel. So we’ve been writing about that.
We also had done some reporting on AIPAC donors backing the Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way in that race. And it appears that she is now potentially thinking about running against the winner Analilia Mejia in the next primary, which unfortunately is not that far away because there will be another race for the full term for this seat.
On Thursday, we published a story about a new endorsement in Illinois, where over the last week there’s been several ads, millions of dollars spent in four races, where AIPAC is making one of its biggest investments this cycle. Our story is about a candidate in the ninth district, Kat Abughazaleh, who is now running with the endorsement of Justice Democrats and a new pro-Palestine political action committee that launched on Wednesday and is endorsing several candidates in the upcoming midterms.
JW: Can you tell me a little bit about AIPAC strategy and how they’re viewing the midterms?
AL: Yeah, so we’ve done a lot of reporting on this. Basically the 2024 midterms, AIPAC was extremely loud and vocal about its endorsements, its investments in these races, and there has been sort of a groundswell in criticism of AIPAC. Lots of groups popping up. I think we’ve seen a big shift in the number of people in the general public who are paying really close attention to how this lobby is operating in these midterms.
And in response to that, AIPAC has retreated to the way that it operated before it started spending directly on elections and launching the Super Pac and the regular PAC that many people are familiar with now, distancing itself from candidates, directing donors to fundraise for candidates that it hasn’t publicly endorsed. On the other hand, you have candidates who are fundraising with AIPAC or aware that they’re receiving tens of thousands of dollars from big AIPAC donors are saying that they’re not seeking the endorsement of this group that they’re not involved, that they’re happy to take support from whoever wants to support their campaigns. And so this has made reporting on this a little bit more difficult in some ways because we’re looking at donors where they overlap between these two groups.
We’re trying to read between the lines of statements that officials and the group are making about whether or not they’re involved in this race. And, in Illinois in particular, as I was interviewing Kat Abughazaleh on Wednesday evening, she said, AIPAC knows how toxic it is and that’s why it’s trying so hard to make it appear that it’s not involved in this race when it very clearly is. And that I think is an evergreen statement about how it’s operating in lots of races that are coming up.
Jessie, I know you’re also focusing on the midterms. What do you have your eye on right now?
JW: Yeah. First I have my eye on all of your reporting because it’s been excellent.
AL: [Laughs.] Thank you.
JW: You have been writing a lot and really interestingly on AIPAC, so I’ve definitely been following your coverage.
I think for me, ICE is really something I’m watching going into the midterms. In my conversations with campaigns candidates and their teams are bringing up ICE over and over again.
They recognize that part of what this election is going to be about is what kind of country we want to live in, and people are really rejecting the violence that they’re seeing really publicly. Obviously, ICE and the Department of Homeland Security has been acting in ways that are violent towards communities in much quieter ways for years. But this violence that people are seeing, they’re really rejecting. So I’m seeing a lot of traction with that, with campaigns.
And I think it’s also an interesting juxtaposition with everything that’s gone on with the Epstein files. This week and last week, you’re really seeing this idea of conservatives as protectors of the innocent protectors of the weak, the ways that they’ve been trying to champion themselves to voters fall apart, both with the ways in which voters can see that they’re not protecting the survivors connected to the Epstein files, and also the ways in which they’re seeing that the authoritarianism that they have justified on the backs of, “hey, we have to protect the weak and vulnerable” is fake. So that’s something I’m really watching, for campaigns to touch on.
AL: And I just think it’s important to note here that Analilia Mejia, who you know, was elected in New Jersey as we were talking about, made that a cornerstone of her campaign. And like I know her campaign was really pushing that information out to reporters, that something that was so successful was that they were doing these ICE trainings at her campaign events — she was a critic of Israel. She was a supporter of all these progressive policies. But that specifically — the ICE issue — was what was resonating with voters in this district that was represented by a Republican before Mikie Sherrill was elected in 2019. So in terms of this everlasting quest to unite people across the ideological spectrum, it seems like that is being really effective.
JW: Yeah, it’s definitely a message that we’re seeing campaigns latch onto and we’re seeing the public latch onto. And what you just said about the trainings, I’ve found to be so interesting, just the ways in which people have — despite being really afraid; I think it’s rational to be afraid when we’re seeing the kinds of violence publicly on video — but instead of just staying inside of their house, we’re seeing people really resonate with this moment, go out, do these trainings, get into the streets, and that energy is something a lot of campaigns are trying to harness.
Now, whether or not they turn on that same energy, the ways in which we saw the George Floyd energy, which had been harnessed by Democrats and they really lost that momentum. It’ll be curious to see if Democrats can hold onto the momentum from activists on the streets who are angry about ICE or whether we’re going to see that exact same kind of turn we saw on organizers and activists who are connected to the George Floyd protests.
AL: Also this week I’m sure people were paying attention to the electric Pam Bondi hearing and the Epstein files. Jessie, you spoke to Spencer Kuvin, an attorney representing nine of Epstein’s survivors.
JW: Yeah, I did. It was a really great conversation. Spencer drove home the ways in which the Trump justice apartment has been protecting the powerful at the expense of the victims in this case.
AL: Let’s hear that conversation.
JW: Spencer, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.
Spencer Kuvin: Thank you so much for having me today.
JW: I want to start off by asking how the women that you represent are reacting to this latest batch of documents.
SK: Well, and thank you for asking about the victims, which really is the focus or should be the focus of everything that has been going on for the last 20 years.
Unfortunately, I had to make a very difficult call after the documents had been released. One of my clients, actually two of my clients were unfortunately unredacted and disclosed in those documents that included the first victim that came forward to police— the 14-year-old that I represented back in 2007, who the federal government was well aware of.
And another young victim who was 16 at the time that she was brought to Epstein’s home in Palm Beach, they were both disclosed in these documents, unredacted. So I had to make that awful call to let them know that they had been disclosed and that I had notified the Department of Justice of what had happened.
And then thankfully within a day the redactions took place. But it’s just unbelievable the failures of this Department of Justice.
JW: Yeah. Why do you think we saw such sloppy redactions in these files?
SK: I think you saw the sloppiness because of the lack of focus on what was important, and that was the victims.
I think unfortunately, the current Department of Justice has a focus on something different than victims and helping victims and prosecuting bad people that victimize these young girls. Their focus instead appears to be on the important people — powerful people — that are contained within these files and protecting them instead of protecting, who needs the protection, the young victims in this case.
JW: You’re talking about someone who was abused at 14 years old, and I guess my question for you is just what does that re-traumatization look like when you’re publicly outed in this way?
SK: It’s awful. It’s absolutely devastating. This is a young lady, for example, that chose to remain anonymous and wanted to move on with her life. And because of the drip of information over the last 20 years with respect to Epstein, she hasn’t been able to move on with her life. She is now someone who is in her thirties and has a family of her own. And really does not want to have to look back at this dramatic and awful period of her life. And remaining anonymous allowed her to do that. And unfortunately the federal government is re-traumatizing these victims by making them have to go back through this awful period.
JW: Spencer, you’ve been working on this case for roughly 20 years. Can you give us some of the background, particularly on the sweetheart deal that Epstein got originally?
SK: Yeah, so I started working on these cases when victim number one, the first victim to go to the police in Palm Beach, walked into my office and needed help because she had, along with her parents, reported what had happened to her at Epstein’s home. And that really started the snowball of this entire investigation for all of the future victims that came forward in the FBI investigation.
But what it started as was a local investigation by the town of Palm Beach, and Joe Recarey was the lead officer that I met with during that initial investigation. It was only after the state attorneys in Palm Beach refused to prosecute this case that it ended up at the FBI and the Southern District of Florida.
Then the FBI took over this case and started the prosecution and had an indictment that we now see that they’ve revealed unsealed that had almost 50 counts against Epstein and other potential co-conspirators that they shelved. And they shelved it because they entered into an awful, awful sweetheart deal with Epstein at the time.
That Epstein sweetheart deal was never provided to the victims. As an attorney on behalf of one of the victims, I had to fight in court just to see the crappy deal that they had entered into with Epstein and the immunity that they had given others. And that fight lasted a year in the litigation before I was able to even see it. And then once I saw it, I realized why they didn’t want anyone to see it because it was such an awful deal.
JW: There are some truly horrifying allegations inside of these files, but so far there haven’t been any high-profile arrests or charges brought. I think you’re uniquely qualified to speak on this. What does justice look like here for the victims, and is it going to have to come from outside of the legal system?
SK: That’s a good question and a very difficult one. In handling these types of cases, specifically the Epstein cases over the last 20 years, I get a lot of calls that are just not credible.
And unfortunately there is a mental health crisis in the United States and unfortunately, some of the people that have some issues will call in and make allegations that just factually don’t hold water. Having said that, there are a lot of very valid tips that deal with individuals. So the FBI just seemed to categorize all of the tips that came in as not credible without even investigating them. And that’s a problem.
In addition to that, Epstein entered into the sweetheart deal with the federal government as a result of the initial prosecution here in West Palm Beach in South Florida. And when they did that there were four co-conspirators that were clearly named in that agreement.
Four people that the federal government knew had assisted in the sex trafficking that Epstein was involved in. And by the way, one of those four was not Ghislaine Maxwell. She was not even named in the sweetheart deal at all. Most people don’t realize that there were four other people, four other women, that were part of this conspiracy that have never been prosecuted to the state.
So the victims want them prosecuted. That’s number one. There is enough information to prosecute those people and bring them to justice. Number two, they want this information out in the public so that the public can then see the full extent of this heinous operation that was going on for years. And then judge who they want to be running these important companies, corporations, in politics and whatnot, and have the public judge them for what they did, or what they didn’t do, and then have them be held publicly accountable.
JW: I want to talk about these redactions again and the ways in which powerful people have been shielded as you’ve been just discussing now. Members of Congress were able to view the unredacted files this week. Before we get into some of the shocking revelations, I just wanted to ask you about the use of redactions to protect powerful people within the files and what you make of that, and what the women that you represent make of that.
“How do we hold the Department of Justice accountable for breaking federal law? … [W]ithout a penalty clause in the law, the only way to do that is contempt of Congress.”
SK: It breaks the law. It violates federal law. The Department of Justice broke the law, and they are continuing to break the law. Make no question about this. The Epstein Transparency Act is very clear. You can read it. It is only about two pages long, and it states that no redactions shall be made for the purpose of merely embarrassment or protecting important or powerful people. In addition, it gives a deadline for the full disclosure of records. Both of those things have been violated by the Department of Justice.
The question really is just accountability at this point. How do we hold the Department of Justice accountable for breaking federal law? That’s a quandary that unfortunately, or fortunately, our country has not had to deal with yet. But right now we have to figure out a way to be able to hold the Department of Justice accountable. And I think legally speaking right now without a penalty clause in the law, the only way to do that is contempt of Congress.
JW: So on Tuesday, representative Ro Khanna revealed the names of these six, powerful, wealthy men, whose names had previously been redacted in the files. Those names included billionaire, former Victoria’s Secret owner Les Wexner and Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem. What did those new names add to our understanding of Epstein and his world?
SK: I can tell you Les Wexner name was connected with Jeffrey Epstein, even back during the original prosecution of these cases I was involved in 2007. We were well aware of Epstein’s connections with Wexner, and he was on our witness list as somebody, as a person of interest, that needed to be talked to or subpoenaed for a deposition.
Now the case is resolved before we got to that point. But the connection was clear even back then, and I think there were stories that came out in the news dating back into the late 2000s that identifies that connection.
The other wealthy, important and powerful people who were out outed in some of these records that shows the world the breadth —the true worldwide breadth —of Epstein’s conspiracy and sex trafficking. And I think that there was a lot of rumor that had circulated for years, and people would call other individuals who would talk about those rumors as conspiracy theorists and crazy. And, you’re making up crazy stories.
What we’re seeing with these documents is that that is the reality that wealthy and powerful men around the world were trading young girls like trading cards.
JW: I should note here that Wexner’s legal representative issued a statement saying “The Assistant U.S. Attorney told Mr. Wexner’s legal counsel in 2019 that Mr. Wexner was neither a co-conspirator nor target in any respect. Mr. Wexner cooperated fully by providing background information on Epstein and was never contacted again.”
I just want to get into the conspiracy element of this because I think it’s important. There’s been so much talk about how these files have validated conspiracy theories, like QAnon, but in my opinion, there’s been far less discussion about the ways in which these files have validated the accounts of women who were abused by Epstein as children and have been speaking about it, frankly, for years.
What would it have meant to listen to these women when they spoke out instead of waiting for a trove of government documents?
SK: Huge. It’s huge from an emotional standpoint a victim goes through a huge emotional trauma just reporting what she has been through or he has been through. Latest government statistics show that one out of every three women, literally, if you are in the room with three women, one of them was likely subjected to some kind of sexual trauma in their life, and one out of every five men, by the way, also according to government statistics.
“A victim goes through a huge emotional trauma just reporting what she has been through or he has been through.”
And what happens is that these young women, for example, in this case, that report this, when they’re met with denials, accusations, attacks, all it does is drive them deeper into a depression because they know the truth. I think what it teaches us as a society is that we have to believe victims and what they’re telling us because it takes a huge amount of bravery to even come forward and report these types of things.
I think that if that had occurred, if people had believed victims, then they would’ve been able to work through the healing process. Part of what I do as an advocate for victims in the civil arena is I listen to victims and I believe them.
I then fight for them based upon that belief. And just that alone can help a victim knowing that there is someone out there that’s fighting for them, believing in them, and wanting to get them justice. So being a part of the system and finding an advocate for them that is a very significant thing.
Look at, for example, Virginia Giuffre. She, for years, for years had been called a liar. And we are now seeing the absolute proof that everything she was telling us was true. She may not have unfortunately committed suicide had she been able to be believed and supported as a true victim.
[Break]
JW: I want to turn towards Donald Trump because obviously he casts a large shadow over the story. On Tuesday, Maryland Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin claimed that Donald Trump appears in the Epstein files more than a million times. He also said that Trump never asked Jeffrey Epstein to leave Mar-a-Lago as he previously claimed. What is your response to these revelations?
SK: I think it’s important to look at these documents within the context of what they are and the timeframe within which they were gathered. These documents were gathered after the FBI began their operation, which was around 2007. We know historically that Epstein and Trump were friends. He’s admitted that, and they were friends for years. But that friendship predated a lot of this investigation.
So a lot of the information we’re seeing in these files is after the 2007 period when the investigation began. What we’re not seeing is the extent of that relationship and what Trump may or may not have done with Jeffrey Epstein before 2007. We know because we’ve seen videos of them at parties and socializing together. He admitted that he knew that he liked young girls. And Trump now is trying to obviously distance himself as far as he can from Jeffrey Epstein.
But the reality is that there was a close connection, there was a good friendship. They did go to parties together. And this is something that the FBI never fully investigated. And unfortunately, given the fact that Trump is now the President and it seems as though he has a tight grip on the Department of Justice, I don’t know that there will be a full and complete investigation of his activities.
JW: I think Donald Trump complicates this story in so many ways because at its core, this is a story about the violent sexual exploitation of children, and we have to hold space for that. But it’s also a political story because of Donald Trump’s involvement. So I guess, how do you think about holding space for what these women have gone through as children, while also acknowledging the politics involved here?
SK: Yeah, I agree with you. I think that politics definitely complicates the issue, but we have to remember that Donald Trump is the one that actually brought this to the forefront. We have to thank him to a certain extent because during his campaign he made this a major issue as part of his campaign that he was going to release this information.
It was only after he was elected and realized what was actually in those documents, that he then started backpedaling on the release of information to the general public. Politics always complicates truth because politicians seem to have a very difficult time just being truthful with the general public.
We have to always remember that the Department of Justice is supposed to be neutral. They are not supposed to be a political arm of any political party, whether it be Democrats or Republicans. Unfortunately, Donald Trump has turned our Department of Justice into a political animal, and as we saw, for example, through the testimony of Pam Bondi the other day in front of Congress. The Department of Justice no longer has any credibility as a nonpolitical or apolitical organization. They are political, without a doubt. It is now controlled by the president and the executive branch, and that’s a shame because now victims cannot trust even our own Department of Justice to investigate crimes and do the right thing.
JW: As you’ve just mentioned, Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday. What jumped out to you from that testimony? I wanted to get your thoughts on that.
SK: Everything jumped out, including the Attorney General. It was an absolute embarrassment to our country that the highest ranking law enforcement officer in our country acted like a child.
That is exactly what the Attorney General was doing. She was acting like a child and she was clearly exhibiting pro-political leanings toward the current administration with absolutely no respect for the rule of law or her job, which is to remain neutral, and not favor either political party in any investigation or potential investigation.
And frankly, it was sad to me as a member of one of the branches of government to see a person like our own U.S. attorney general acting in that manner. It was sad and it was an embarrassment.
JW: Can justice be achieved with Pam Bondi as the attorney general? Is there a path towards that?
SK: No, I’m convinced that based upon the performance that she put on the other day, I don’t believe that there’s any way that justice can be accomplished. When we talk about an organization that is now a political arm of the executive branch, I don’t see there’s any possibility that justice can fully be accomplished while she’s in office. I think that if Congress frankly had any integrity whatsoever they would do one of two things, either begin impeachment proceedings against the attorney general, or alternatively hold her in contempt of Congress.
JW: As you pointed out, Pam Bondi, Donald Trump, they all came into office using Epstein’s survivors using the threat of violence against young women to really push a lot of their more authoritarian impulses.
This is historically true, for the Republicans and for conservatives, but particularly true in this moment. Did the Epstein files and the high profile men in Trump world mentioned in the files, plus what we’ve seen from the attorney general, reveal those concerns about violence against young women to be a farce?
SK: I think that what it revealed is the true nature of what politicians do. What politicians do is they find key issues that can separate society or inflame fears or tension within a society in order to trump up votes. I use that analogy and word specifically in this case because that’s exactly what the president did, right?
“What politicians do is they find key issues that can separate society or inflame fears or tension within a society in order to trump up votes.”
It’s exactly what other Congress people did, is that they utilized an inflaming type of language and situation to be able to get votes. And then once they’re in office, they completely retract what they said they were going to do. We see this in all types of enforcement actions when a government wants to move toward a more authoritarian type system where they justify actions through fear.
Be afraid of the illegals. Be afraid of the immigrants. Be afraid of the pedophiles that are in society. We are here to protect you, so you need more police and more military and more authoritarian governments to protect you from all of these bad people, when in reality that’s not what they want. What they want is control.
That’s how they get it is through fear. And I think that the way to combat that is really through truth and not being afraid, but instead standing up to power and questioning them and making them be held accountable in the public eye. And thankfully in a democratic society, we can vote people out of office if they fail to be held up to the standards that we expect of them.
JW: Do you think the American public is waking up to that reality? Because I see people in the streets, particularly in Minneapolis, but in LA throughout the country, really standing up against authoritarian power. And we also see people calling out what’s been now dubbed the Epstein class. These group of people — powerful people — who abuse women, but also, and children, and more broadly abuse our society. Do you think there’s been a wake up in our culture?
SK: I do think that certain people are now coming around to realize that these are not all just conspiracy theories, that there is a lot of truth behind what people have been saying for years about the elite billionaire class and their ploy to control society and the way that they think about the ordinary citizens in the world throughout the world, including the United States. But I also think that there is a certain group of society that looked at, for example, the testimony of Pam Bondi and cheered her on and said, “Wow, she did awesome, she did a great job.” And there are still people that look at what Trump is doing and defend his every action and defend everything he’s saying. So it won’t be until we get to those people that things will really change, right? You need to be able to get on a level where you are communicating with people you disagree with, but you’re discussing facts, not just bullet points, and not just points that are given to them by talking heads on television. You have to have a conversation with people you disagree with in a way that it can be fruitful to both sides to understand where they’re coming from and understand why they think the way they do.
And only then I think, will there be true change. Because otherwise you’re going to continue to have a society that is fractured along a very definitive line. There used to be gray, there used to be a middle, and now there is just team A and team B, and that’s the problem.
JW: A lot of people have called this a coverup, down from the federal government all the way to the local level. Do you see it as a coverup?
SK: 100 percent. From the beginning of this case, the government, both from a state and federal level, have been trying to bury this, cover it up, and avoid any full exposure of the extent of the operation that was involved here, and they’re doing it for many obvious reasons because of all the both political, wealthy, and powerful individuals who were involved with Epstein and knew what was going on with these young women.
“It is a billionaire crowd trying to protect their own.”
So as a result, you’ve got institutions that are controlled by wealthy, powerful politicians and individuals who are trying to cover up potential crimes of other wealthy, powerful politicians and powerful people. So it is a billionaire crowd trying to protect their own.
JW: That’s a really good point and a good point to end on. But just first I wanted to give you a chance if you had any final thoughts that you wanted to share.
SK: I think the most important thing that I want people to remember is that victims need to be heard and victims need to be believed. And as a society, we need to trust what victims are saying first, until evidence shows otherwise, and not immediately accuse people of lying or exaggerating because by trusting them you can at least hear them out. And at least give them the space to talk about what they’re going through. And even if it doesn’t prove to be true, which is frankly only about less than 5 percent of the allegations that come out, according to statistics, but even if it doesn’t, they believe it. And they’re saying it for a reason that they truly believe. Whether they have some kind of issue going on in their life or not, it doesn’t matter. Whether they remember an exact date, it doesn’t matter.
They are going through something emotionally, so we should listen to what they have to say and allow them the space to say it without any judgment or accusation and then get them the help they need.
JW: Thank you, Spencer. That was a really important conversation and I really appreciate you taking the time to share both your point of view and then also the points of view from your clients who deserve to be heard.
SK: Thank you.
JW: Thank you for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.
SK: Thank you so much for having me today.
JW: That does it for this episode.
This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Sumi Aggarwal is our executive producer. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our Managing Editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Desiree Adib is our booking producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. 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 Jessica Washington.
The post Attorney for Epstein Survivors Warns That Justice Is Impossible With Bondi as AG appeared first on The Intercept.
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When county clerk Brianna Lennon got an email in November saying a newly expanded federal system had flagged 74 people on the county’s voter roll as potential noncitizens, she was taken aback.
Lennon, who’d run elections in Boone County, Missouri, for seven years, had heard the tool might not be accurate.
The flagged voters’ registration paperwork confirmed Lennon’s suspicions. The form for the second person on the list bore the initials of a member of her staff, who’d helped the man register — at his naturalization ceremony. It later turned out more than half the Boone County voters identified as noncitizens were actually citizens.
The source of the bad data was a Department of Homeland Security tool called the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements, or SAVE.
Once used mostly to check immigrants’ eligibility for public benefits, SAVE has undergone a dramatic expansion over the last year at the behest of President Donald Trump, who has long falsely claimed that millions of noncitizens lurk on state voter rolls, tainting American elections.
At Trump’s direction, DHS has pooled confidential data from across the federal government to enable states to mass-verify voters’ citizenship status using SAVE. Many of the nation’s Republican secretaries of state have eagerly embraced the experiment, agreeing to upload all or part of their rolls.
But an examination of SAVE’s rollout by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune reveals that DHS rushed the revamped tool into use while it was still adding data and before it could discern voters’ most up-to-date citizenship information.
As a result, SAVE has made persistent mistakes, particularly in assessing the status of people born outside the U.S., data gathered from local election administrators, interviews and emails obtained via public records requests show. Some of those people subsequently become U.S. citizens, a step that the system doesn’t always pick up.
According to correspondence between state and federal officials, DHS has had to correct information provided to at least five states after SAVE misidentified some voters as noncitizens.
Texas and Missouri were among the first states to try the augmented tool.
In Missouri, state officials acted on SAVE’s findings before attempting to confirm them, directing county election administrators to make voters flagged as potential noncitizens temporarily unable to vote. But in hundreds of cases, the tool’s determinations were wrong, our review found. Lennon was among dozens of clerks statewide who raised alarms about the system’s errors.
“It really does not help my confidence,” she said, “that the information we are trying to use to make really important decisions, like the determination of voter eligibility, is so inaccurate.”
In Texas, news reports began emerging about voters being mistakenly flagged as noncitizens soon after state officials announced the results of running the state’s voter roll through SAVE in October.
Our reporting showed these errors were more widespread than previously known, involving at least 87 voters across 29 counties. County election administrators suspect there may be more. Confusion took hold when the Texas secretary of state’s office sent counties lists of flagged voters and directed clerks to start demanding proof of citizenship and to remove people from the rolls if they didn’t respond.
“I really find no merit in any of this,” said Bobby Gonzalez, the elections administrator in Duval County in South Texas, where SAVE flagged three voters, all of whom turned out to be citizens.
Even counting people flagged in error, the first bulk searches using SAVE haven’t validated the president’s claims that voting by noncitizens is widespread. At least seven states with a total of about 35 million registered voters have publicly reported the results of running their voter rolls through the system. Those searches have identified roughly 4,200 people — about 0.01% of registered voters — as noncitizens. This aligns with previous findings that noncitizens rarely register to vote.
Brian Broderick leads the verification division of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the DHS branch that oversees SAVE. In an interview this month, he acknowledged the system can’t always find the most current citizenship information for people not born in the U.S. But he defended the tool, saying it was ultimately up to states to decide how to use SAVE data.
“So we’re giving a tool to these folks to say, ‘Hey, if we can verify citizenship, great, you’re good. If we can’t, now it’s up to you to determine whether to let this person on your voter rolls,’” Broderick said.
In Texas, Secretary of State Jane Nelson declined an interview request. Her spokesperson, Alicia Pierce, said the office hadn’t reviewed SAVE’s citizenship determination before sending lists to counties because it isn’t an investigative agency. In a statement, Pierce added that the use of SAVE was part of the office’s “constitutional and statutory duty to ensure that only eligible citizens participate in Texas elections.”
A spokesperson for Missouri Secretary of State Denny Hoskins called SAVE a valuable resource even though some people it flagged might later be confirmed as citizens. “No system is 100% accurate,” Hoskins said in an interview, “but we’re working to get it right.”
Asked whether it was problematic that his office directed clerks to temporarily bar voters from casting ballots before verifying SAVE’s findings, Hoskins said that was a “good point.”
While 27 states have agreed to use SAVE, others have hesitated, concerned not only about inaccuracies, but also about privacy and the data’s potential to be used in immigration enforcement. Indeed, speaking at a recent conference, Broderick said that when SAVE flags voters as noncitizens, they are also referred to DHS for possible criminal investigation. (It is a crime to falsely claim citizenship when registering to vote.)
People who’ve been flagged by SAVE in error say it’s jarring to have to provide naturalization records to stay eligible to vote when they know they’ve done nothing wrong.

Sofia Minotti, who lives north of Dallas in Denton County, was born in Argentina but became a U.S. citizen years ago. Nonetheless, she was one of 84 Denton County voters identified by SAVE as a potential noncitizen. She and 11 others have since provided proof of citizenship, giving the system an error rate in the county of at least 14%.
The real rate is probably higher, a county official acknowledged, since some of those sent notices to prove their citizenship might not respond in time to meet the deadline. They’ll have to be reinstated to vote in the midterms later this year.
Minotti, though still on the rolls, felt singled out unfairly.
“I’m here legally, and everything I’ve done has been per the law,” she said. “I really have no idea why I had to prove it.”
Election administrators in many states have long hungered for better access to federal information on citizenship status.
States don’t typically require people to provide proof of citizenship when they sign up to vote, only to attest to it under penalty of perjury. Previous efforts to use state data to catch noncitizens on voter rolls have gone poorly. Texas officials had to abandon a 2019 push after it became clear their methodology misidentified thousands of citizens, many of them naturalized, as ineligible voters.
Until recently, SAVE hadn’t been much of a resource. State and local election officials needed to have voters’ DHS-assigned immigration ID numbers — information not collected in the registration process — to verify their citizenship status. Plus, officials had to pay to conduct searches one by one, not in bulk.
In March, Trump issued an executive order that required DHS to give states free access to federal citizenship data and partner with the Department of Government Efficiency to comb voter rolls.
The order triggered a series of meetings at USCIS designed to comply with a 30-day deadline to remake SAVE, a document obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union and reviewed by ProPublica shows.
The system’s main addition was confidential Social Security Administration data, which allowed states to search using full or partial Social Security numbers and incorporated information on millions of Americans who were not previously in Homeland Security databases.
David Jennings, Broderick’s deputy at USCIS, had pressed his team to move quickly, he said on a June video call with members of former Trump lawyer Cleta Mitchell’s Election Integrity Network, which has spread false claims about noncitizen voting.
“We tested it and deployed it to our users in two weeks,” Jennings said on the call, which ProPublica obtained a recording of. “I think that’s remarkable. Kind of proud of it.”
Jennings added that to get quick access to the Social Security data, which has been tightly guarded, USCIS partnered with DOGE. (In an unrelated matter, DOGE has since been accused of misusing Social Security data.) Jennings did not respond to questions from ProPublica and the Tribune.
Perhaps because of its accelerated timetable, USCIS expanded the system before meeting legal requirements to inform the public about how the data would be collected, stored and used, according to voting rights organizations that sued. (UCSIS did not respond to a request for comment about this.) It also blew past concerns from voter advocacy groups about the accuracy of SSA’s citizenship data, which multiple audits and analyses have shown is often outdated or incomplete. This is particularly true for people not born in the U.S., who often get Social Security numbers well before they become citizens.
According to emails obtained by ProPublica and the Tribune, SAVE first checks SSA’s citizenship information. If that shows a voter isn’t a citizen, DHS searches other databases, but it can be difficult to locate and match all the data the systems have on a person. This can lead to errors.
Broderick said in the interview that Trump’s executive order dramatically accelerated the timetable for launching SAVE, getting agencies to cooperate and move quickly. But he insisted the work was done responsibly.
“Do I think it was reckless? Do I think it wasn’t planned? Do I think it wasn’t tested? Absolutely not,” he said.
By September, Texas had uploaded its entire list of more than 18 million registered voters into SAVE. Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming put voter data into the system, too.
They would soon start to unveil what SAVE had found.
One of the first out of the gate was Texas. In late October, with early voting underway in state and local elections, Nelson, the secretary of state, announced SAVE had identified 2,724 potential noncitizens on the rolls.
But as Nelson delegated the task of investigating those voters’ statuses to local election officials, confusion took hold.
At a meeting, Nelson’s staff told county clerks’ offices to investigate flagged voters and then send notices to those for whom they were unable to confirm citizenship. In a follow-up email, Nelson’s staff told the clerks they should already have heard from someone in the office with more details.
That set off a chain of messages on the local officials’ email group
Travis County voter registration director Christopher Davis said he hadn’t been contacted and had just learned the county had 97 flagged voters. Marsha Barbee, in Wharton County near Houston, shared that she talked to a Nelson staffer who said she’d been directed not to tell local officials about their lists because they were in the middle of early voting.
“They said we have enough on our plates and didn’t want us to worry right now,” Barbee wrote.
In the absence of clear state guidance, clerks proceeded inconsistently. Some said they didn’t act on their lists, waiting for more direction. Others, unsure how to investigate flagged voters’ status, said they simply sent notices asking for proof of citizenship, though some opted not to remove nonresponsive voters from the rolls.
“I give them many chances; I don’t just expire them right away,” Dee Wilcher, a clerk in East Texas’ Anderson County, said about flagged voters, adding that she wanted to avoid removing citizens from the rolls and looking “stupid.”
Chris McGinn, executive director of the Texas Association of County Election Officials, said many clerks expressed frustration with the secretary of state’s lack of guidance and failure to help with investigations. When he shared clerks’ concerns, McGinn said Nelson’s staff didn’t respond, leading him to conclude that checking SAVE’s findings wasn’t an agency priority.
He called the state’s use of SAVE “more political and appearance-based” than a practical way to ensure election integrity.
One way to check SAVE’s findings would have been to get information from the Texas Department of Public Safety, which requires proof of citizenship if residents register to vote when obtaining a driver’s license. The secretary of state’s office didn’t do this and didn’t direct counties to either.
Several county officials said they hadn’t thought to ask DPS for information; those who did often found the agency had documentation showing some of the voters who SAVE identified as noncitizens were in fact citizens.
In the Texas Panhandle, Potter County elections officials quickly confirmed through DPS that three of nine voters on their list had proof of citizenship on file. In neighboring Randall County, DPS helped officials verify that one in five had a U.S. passport, according to interviews with the local officials.
In December, Travis County learned that 11 of the 97 voters flagged by SAVE had proven their citizenship to DPS. After getting the data, the county’s voter registrar, Celia Israel, said in an interview that she felt even more uncomfortable about moving forward with sending notices to voters, given SAVE’s errors.
“It has proven to be inaccurate,” she said. “Why would I rely on it?”
To be sure, SAVE also identified some people who weren’t eligible to vote, clerks said. Several came across instances in which voters marked on registration forms that they weren’t citizens, but were registered by election office staffers in error. Clerks also said voters have told them they’d misunderstood questions about eligibility when getting drivers’ licenses. (It’s not clear if any of those registered in error voted; overall, noncitizens rarely vote.)
ProPublica and the Tribune surveyed the 177 Texas counties that had voters flagged by SAVE, receiving data from 97 that had either checked DPS records or sent notices to voters to try to verify SAVE’s citizenship information. Overall, more than 5% of the voters SAVE identified as noncitizens proved to be citizens. In some smaller counties, most of those flagged were eligible to vote. That includes six of 11 in the Panhandle’s Moore County, and two of three in Erath County, near Dallas.
But some of those who didn’t respond to notices also might be citizens.
In Denton County, where Sofia Minotti lives, checks by elections administrator Frank Phillips’ staff delivered clear answers on the citizenship status of 26 of the 84 voters flagged by SAVE. Twelve, including Minotti, proved they were citizens. Fourteen more had marked on their registration forms that they weren’t and the blame rested with workers for registering them nonetheless.
Phillips said he removed anyone who didn’t provide proof by the deadline from the rolls to comply with the secretary of state’s instructions, but he fears some were eligible voters.
“What is bugging me is I think our voter rolls may be more accurate than this database,” Phillips said. “My gut feeling is more of these are citizens than not.”
At least initially, Missouri took a more targeted approach to SAVE than Texas did. State officials used the system to search for information on a subset of about 6,000 voters they had reason to think might not be citizens, according to emails between federal and state officials.
The state had results by October, but in early November, a USCIS official wrote to Missouri and four other states to say some people flagged by SAVE as noncitizens were actually citizens, emails obtained through public records requests show.
“We have continued to refine our processes used to obtain and review the citizenship data available to us,” the official wrote, adding that one such improvement revealed the errors.
The staffer attached amended search results, but Missouri officials withheld the attachment from its response to a public records request and did not respond to a question about how many corrections were made.
Based on the updated data from USCIS, Missouri sent lists of flagged voters to county election administrators in November. ProPublica and the Tribune obtained these lists for seven of 10 most populous counties in the state, which show SAVE initially identified more than 1,200 people as noncitizens just in these areas.
The Missouri secretary of state’s office told election administrators it would work to verify SAVE’s citizenship determinations. In the meantime, local officials were instructed to change the status of flagged voters, making them temporarily unable to vote.
The lists were met with swift pushback from county election officials, who, like Lennon, soon spotted people they knew to be citizens and questioned the directive’s legality. On a group call in November, they traded examples, saying they recognized neighbors, colleagues and people they’d helped to register at naturalization ceremonies.
In St. Louis, the Board of Election Commissioners didn’t alter the eligibility of anyone on its flagged voter list after being advised not to by its attorney.
Rachael Dunn, a spokesperson for Hoskins, the Missouri secretary of state, said state law allows officials to change voters’ status during investigations into their eligibility — for example, if there are signs they’ve moved. The laws she cited don’t directly address investigations into citizenship status, however.
In early December, some 70 clerks, Republicans and Democrats, wrote a letter to Missouri House Speaker Jonathan Patterson saying there were better ways than SAVE to keep noncitizens off voter rolls.
Weeks later, the state’s election integrity director, Nick La Strada, wrote USCIS to ask why a voter that SAVE had identified as a noncitizen in October had showed up in a more recent search as a citizen.
A USCIS official replied that between the initial search and the follow-up, DHS had gotten access to passport data, which contains more up-to-date citizenship information on some people not born in the U.S.
The USCIS staffer explained that some of the most accurate citizenship information — which is within DHS’ own records — still wasn’t searchable in SAVE because running that kind of search would require the voter’s DHS identifier, which can’t always be located. The staffer said they were working on improvements but those could take until March.
“You don’t start with something at that scale until you work the bugs out, and that is not the case here,” Clinton Jenkins, president of the Missouri Association of County Clerks and Election Authorities, said in an interview. Jenkins is also the clerk for Miller County in the Ozarks.
In early January, in what was framed as a “SAVE review update,” the secretary of state’s office sent counties across Missouri revised lists with reduced numbers of voters identified as potential noncitizens. It instructed election administrators to move voters who’d been initially flagged in error by SAVE back to active status, restoring their eligibility to vote.
Dunn, Hoskins’ spokesperson, didn’t specify what prompted these adjustments. Even the new lists may not be final, she acknowledged. Once the review is complete, the state has said it plans to send letters to those still on the lists, demanding proof of citizenship and giving recipients 90 days to respond.
The addition of new data to SAVE makes it a more valuable resource, she maintained, “while also reinforcing the need for careful, layered review before any action is taken.”
After the January revision, St. Louis County’s initial list of 691 potential noncitizens dropped to 133.
Zuzana Kocsisova, who lives in St. Louis, was among those incorrectly flagged by SAVE on its first pass. Originally from Slovakia, she became a U.S. citizen in 2019. She showed ProPublica and the Tribune a copy of her naturalization certificate, which she keeps with a letter from Trump congratulating her for “becoming a citizen of this magnificent land.”
When a reporter told her that SAVE had initially identified her as a potential noncitizen, she said she wasn’t surprised. She saw it as part of the Trump administration’s targeting of immigrants. She was more frustrated than relieved to learn that she wasn’t on the smaller list of flagged voters sent in January.
“Overall, it seems like this process has done more to worry people who can vote than to identify actual registered voters who don’t qualify,” she said. “It’s just a waste of resources. I don’t think it makes the elections any more safe.”
In Boone County, where Lennon is the clerk, the count of flagged voters fell from 74 to 33 and the naturalized citizen who Lennon’s staff helped register was no longer on the list.
Lennon said she and other county clerks would happily accept data that helps them correctly identify noncitizens on their voter rolls. But so far, SAVE hasn’t done that. And until it does, she said, she won’t purge voters purely because SAVE has flagged them.
“This is not ready for prime time,” Lennon said. “And I’m not going to risk the security and the constitutional rights of my voters for bad data.”
The post “Not Ready for Prime Time.” A Federal Tool to Check Voter Citizenship Keeps Making Mistakes. appeared first on ProPublica.
Nevada is the only state where people can legally purchase sex, and now sex workers at one of the state's oldest brothels, Sheri's Ranch, are fighting to become the first in the U.S. to unionize.
The geographic spread of Italy’s Olympics yielded a tale of two winter games – exuberance in the Alps and and a mellow vibe in Milan.
The danger around the Portland star is that in making crucial debates into arguments about basketball, we lose sight of what is really important
There’s a weird, psychological tension around basketball fouls. Not unlike a trial. A single rubbered heartbeat thumps in our collective throats. In basketball litigation, the verdict is televised and delivered in public by the referee’s whistle. Deni Avdija faced more trials than a career criminal in early January, when he scored 41 points in the Portland Trail Blazers’ win over the Houston Rockets. Twenty-eight came from the field. The other 13 were handed to him at the stripe.
The online response was immediate, echoing the criticism that has followed the Israeli all season: he’s a free-throw merchant. It’s a specific kind of hoops pejorative – not quite cheating, but a kind of outsourcing, farming points out to the refs. After the game, Rockets forward Tari Eason was asked what makes Avdija so difficult to guard. His answer was one word: “Zebras.”
Continue reading...It’s taken more than 2,000 days of construction, $6.4 billion Canadian dollars and seemingly endless studies and permits to build the Gordie Howe International Bridge.
Stretching 1.5 miles between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, the towering cable-stayed span will offer an alternative to the privately owned Ambassador Bridge at one of the busiest land borders in North America, providing a boost to international traffic and trade. And it wasn’t so long ago that President Donald Trump cheered it on.
Shortly after a meeting in 2017, the man who styled himself as “the builder president” issued a joint statement with Canada’s then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau celebrating their shared focus on infrastructure. “In particular,” they said, “we look forward to the expeditious completion of the Gordie Howe International Bridge, which will serve as a vital economic link between our two countries.”
A list of 50 priority projects for emergency and national security, developed as Trump embarked on his first term in office, included the toll bridge. When the company that owns the Ambassador Bridge aired a commercial aimed at Trump in 2018, in hopes that he’d torpedo the project competing with it for tolls, the president didn’t act. His Canadian ambassador lifted a ceremonial shovel at the groundbreaking.
And in 2019, Trump signed the spending bill that allotted the first U.S. funding for the project: $15 million for inspection and screening systems. (Canada paid for the bridge project in full. The tolls will go toward recouping that investment.)
But Trump’s second term has busted all sorts of presidential norms — including his own. He now takes a more antagonistic stance toward Canada, and his ambassador in Ottawa has followed his lead. No longer does Trump speak of “the opportunity to build even more bridges” with Canadians. Instead, he used an emergency declaration to hit the country with aggressive tariffs and repeatedly said it should become the “51st state.”
This week, without warning, Trump targeted the Gordie Howe bridge that’s named after a Canadian hockey player who is beloved in Detroit.
“I will not allow this bridge to open until the United States is fully compensated for everything we have given them, and also, importantly, Canada treats the United States with the Fairness and Respect that we deserve,” Trump wrote in a lengthy Truth Social post.
How the bridge battle ends is unclear, but it once again puts Michigan — a swing state and co-owner of the bridge — at the center of Trump tactics that could hurt the state’s economy.
“Michigan is an automotive state,” said Brent Pilarski, business manager of the Michigan Laborers District Council, which oversees unions representing people who worked on the bridge and who work in auto facilities. Parts cross the border constantly, he said, and they “need to get there on time, or cars can’t be built.”
So far, support for Trump by top Republicans has shown no sign of cracking.
Asked at a press conference about the bridge, Mike Rogers — the Trump-endorsed candidate for U.S. Senate — said, “Obviously, we’d like to see it open.” But, he said, commerce is still happening without it, and “I would like the president to have some leverage to stop thousands and thousands and thousands of Chinese-made cars from pouring over that bridge.”
Michigan state Sen. Jim Runestad, who chairs the Michigan Republican Party, said in a statement to ProPublica that “Canada has been playing dirty with our trade relationship for decades.”
“They won’t stock US liquor and have made it nearly impossible for our farmers to sell many of their products in Canada, all while they are cozying up to Chinese EVs,” Runestad said. “President Trump is standing for American workers and farmers and this is clearly the start to negotiations which will finally make trade with Canada fair for Americans.”
However, the state’s two U.S. senators, both Democrats, have pushed back.
“We’ve wanted this bridge for years because it will be a boon for our economy,” Sen. Gary Peters said in a statement. “This is another case of the president undermining Michigan businesses and workers.”
“Canceling this project will have serious repercussions,” Sen. Elissa Slotkin said in a statement. “Higher costs for Michigan businesses, less secure supply chains, and ultimately, fewer jobs. With this threat, the President is punishing Michiganders for a trade war he started.”
Rick Snyder, the Republican former governor who was instrumental in getting the bridge built, was also critical of Trump’s threat. The bridge, he wrote in a column, is “a great deal for America.”
If its opening is delayed or stopped, he added, the big winner will be the Ambassador Bridge company and its owner. “Every day, they make much more money at our expense.”
In his post, Trump suggested that the bridge is solely owned by Canada, though it’s jointly owned by Canada and the state of Michigan. And he blamed former President Barack Obama for allowing it to be built “with virtually no U.S. content,” though U.S. materials were in fact used.
The post echoed claims made in the 2018 ad from the company that owns the Ambassador Bridge, part of a furious decadeslong fight against the competing span. Hours before Trump posted on Feb. 9, according to The New York Times, the billionaire owner, Matthew Moroun, met with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, and Lutnick then spoke with Trump by phone about the matter. Messages sent by ProPublica to emails linked to Moroun didn’t receive a response. The bridge company didn’t provide a comment.
Since opening in 1929, the Ambassador Bridge has been a vital link. But limited highway connections force trucks through traffic lights. And, as the 2022 Canadian convoy protest that blockaded the bridge demonstrated, a single corridor for commercial traffic is vulnerable. (The 95-year-old Detroit Windsor Tunnel is too small for today’s trucks.) Besides offering a modern and publicly owned option, the Gordie Howe bridge has direct highway interchanges on both sides of the border. It’s expected to open later this year.
The 2018 ad urged Trump to review the presidential permit, issued more than a decade ago, that allowed the Gordie Howe bridge to go forward. This week, the administration told reporters that Trump may now do so.
And, when asked this week how the bridge’s opening could be hindered, Michigan Rep. Debbie Dingell noted that it needs staffing by the Department of Homeland Security. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, at her confirmation hearing last year, assured Michigan’s senators that she wouldn’t neglect the new bridge. “Our focus is there to make sure that it is staffed appropriately,” Noem said.
DHS, the White House and the Commerce Department did not respond to ProPublica’s queries.
Following Trump’s threats, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters that Trump asked for U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra to “play a role in smoothing the conversation in and around the bridge.” Hoekstra, a former U.S. representative from Michigan, has mirrored Trump’s hostile second-term approach toward Canada during his diplomatic posting.
Publicly, at least, he’s been silent on the bridge. And the embassy in Ottawa declined a request for comment.
The post Trump Is Threatening to Block the Michigan-Canada Bridge. He Used to Cheer It. appeared first on ProPublica.
The eclipse will be visible across North America, but set your alarm -- you'll need to stay up late to see it.
The final stretch of the JP Morgan Chase chief’s career is a bumpy one, as Trump himself demands prosecutors investigate Epstein’s ties to Dimon’s bank
Continue reading...Halfway through the academic year, the administration canceled $168 million in community schools grants.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware lawmakers have frequently listed building more affordable housing as a top priority in the state. But the recent property reassessment has saddled many existing affordable housing with higher taxes, which some believe could discourage future developments.
While testifying to a legislative panel last December, an executive from a company that owns income-restricted apartments in Wilmington pleaded with lawmakers to lower property taxes on affordable housing.
Debra Burgos, chief operating officer at the Evergreen Apartment Group, said those taxes had tripled in 2025 on the River Commons Apartments, following New Castle County’s once-in-a-generation property reassessment.
Burgos explained to state lawmakers that her company could not do much to offset the additional cost. It could not raise rents beyond a certain threshold because those apartments received low-income housing tax credits to fund their construction.
Burgos later told Spotlight Delaware that her company could absorb some of the expense by delaying upgrades or nonessential repairs to the apartments. But, she warned, other smaller landlords may not be so lucky.
“For other operators, they may not even be able to replace a roof,” Burgos said.

Evergreen Apartment Group is not alone. Three other affordable housing developers told Spotlight Delaware they are struggling under higher tax burdens after last year’s property tax reassessment.
Lawmakers broadly agree that something needs to be done to ease the tax burden on affordable housing – the availability of which they have made a top legislative priority in Delaware.
But, in interviews with Spotlight Delaware, they have also described how they must balance competing interests, including fully funding schools, encouraging businesses to grow, and ensuring rents stay affordable.
They also need to keep the property tax burden on homeowners front of mind.
Last year, the property reassessment resulted in steep spikes in residential tax bills in New Castle County, which caused the biggest political firestorm of the year. The residential increases occurred in part because of lower assessed valuations on commercial offices in downtown Wilmington, which had experienced a COVID-era downturn during the year of the assessment.
Now Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark/Glasgow) said that if lawmakers lower taxes for one group, others will have to pay more.
“The question really is, ‘How do you divide the pie?’” Townsend said.
The impact on apartments of last year’s property tax reshuffling was exacerbated last summer by Delaware lawmakers’ decision to ease the new tax burden that had been imposed on residences.
In August, the state legislature passed House Bill 242, which allows school districts in New Castle County to charge higher property tax rates on commercially owned land in order to subsequently lower the rates on residential properties.

But during the subsequent hearing in December, when Burgos made her plea, leaders of other types of businesses shared their concerns about the consequences of HB 242.
Speaking for the Delaware Restaurant Association, President and CEO Carrie Leishman said the industry faces “razor-thin profit margins,” and the unexpected spike in property bills only strained restaurant owners’ tight budgets.
“The death of small business is the lack of predictability,” she said.
Sydnie Grossnickle, a program and policy coordinator at the Delaware Farm Bureau, also told lawmakers that farmers are struggling more than other industries because of their thin margins.
She recommended the legislature pass a bill requiring property tax “circuit breakers” that would prevent taxes from going above a certain threshold.
“Yes, we’re asking for ‘special treatment,’ but we want to continue to feed you all,” Grossnickle said.
Other apartment developers that do not have rent restrictions also spoke out against the law.
Kevin Wolfgang, a representative of the Delaware Apartment Association, said the current law essentially treats renters as second-class citizens. He asserted that landlords will have to raise rents to pay for the higher taxes that benefit homeowners.
The owners of some apartment complexes in New Castle County also argued in a lawsuit filed last year, which claimed HB 242 is unconstitutional, that the new higher assessments could lead to difficulties paying their mortgages, and potentially even foreclosure.
In November, the Delaware Supreme Court ruled that the law is constitutional.
Sean Kelly, partner and vice president at affordable housing developer LNWA, argued that companies like his are truly in a unique position because they are contractually not allowed to raise rents — their only source of revenue — beyond a determined threshold.
When there are unforeseen increases in operating expenses, he said, affordable housing developers may have to draw from their reserves.
“It’s not necessarily something that happens overnight, but the fundamentals of the financing of the property start to erode over a longer period of time,” Kelly said.
David Holden, Development Principal at Wilmington-based housing developer Ingerman said it does not make sense for the state government to help fund affordable housing, then raise taxes on it.
“Why encourage affordable housing and then penalize it on the back end? It’s kind of like you’re shooting yourself in the foot,” he said.
Townsend said there appears to be “broad support” in the legislature for making all housing classified as residential, therefore lowering their taxes. He hopes to get a bill passed in May or June.

State Sen. Russ Huxtable (D-Lewes Rehoboth) wants to go even further. Last session, he introduced Senate Bill 149, which would allow income-restricted housing complexes to pay 5% of their annual income in place of their standard property tax bill.
But, if either proposal becomes law, the tax burden would have to be shifted elsewhere.
One solution to the issue could be changing the assessment of properties that have been underassessed and now pay less in taxes than their fair share, Townsend said.
The state legislature recently passed a bill that would allow New Castle County to investigate suspected underassessments. Gov. Matt Meyer allowed the bill to become law without signing it, according to a spokesperson from his administration.
A New Castle County representative told Spotlight Delaware that the county would take advantage of the law. County officials are currently deciding the scope of properties to review and the timeline that it would happen.
In all, Townsend said the fallout from the property tax reassessment is far from over. He said he understands that residents and business owners are frustrated with how long the process has gone on.
“But we have to get it right, even if it means new rounds of conversations and new rounds of legislation. We have to get it right,” Townsend said.
The post Affordable housing companies push back against new, higher property taxes appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Charging individuals with loitering and solicitation violations has been a hot button topic across Delaware in recent years. When Attorney General Kathy Jennings mentioned at her department’s Joint Finance Committee hearing an updated loitering and solicitation bill that her office has written, a number of legislators took issue with the fact that they had not been informed of the proposed legislation.
As municipalities across Delaware grapple with the impacts of homelessness and panhandling, a revelation by Attorney General Kathy Jennings that her office has drafted a bill to help address the issue prompted questions and confusion from a number of lawmakers on Wednesday.
During the Department of Justice’s budget presentation before the General Assembly’s Joint Finance Committee (JFC), Jennings said her office had drafted a bill to curb loitering and solicitation – two issues often intertwined with addressing homelessness. She also said she had shared this draft bill with members of leadership in the House and Senate.
The move sparked surprise from a number of members of the JFC, who said they had not been included on any communications about the bill, but have been concerned about similar issues in their own districts.
“I have never heard of it,” State Sen. Laura Sturgeon (D-Brandywine Hundred West) said in response to the draft bill. “I had no idea you all had a bill written that addresses this problem.”
The updated loitering and solicitation bill, which would prohibit individuals from impeding pedestrian and car traffic, comes after years of controversy surrounding anti-panhandling and anti-solicitation laws in the state.
“I’ll make sure you get it,” Jennings said to the 12 lawmakers on the committee, which is tasked with rewriting the governor’s recommended budget and preparing a proposal for the General Assembly to consider in the spring.
Each department head discusses their budget proposal with the panel every February, but the hearings frequently veer into other questions around policy and current events.
Members of the JFC said on Wednesday they have heard repeated concerns from constituents about loitering and panhandling, and that the issues are top of mind for many Delawareans.
At the same time, municipalities across the state have been exploring in recent months whether they can pass an anti-loitering ordinance that would comply with the First Amendment.
The Dover City Council, for example, has divided into factions and is weighing threats of a legal challenge over a proposed ordinance that would prohibit people from stopping and standing on street medians. The city government is set to vote on the measure later this month.
Controversy over these laws at the state level began in mid-2023, when the ACLU of Delaware sued the state and the city of Wilmington over their anti-loitering and anti-solicitation laws, saying the laws violated the First Amendment. That case was settled in early 2024, when Jennings told the state and all its municipalities not to enforce any anti-loitering and anti-solicitation laws they had on the books.
Since then, her department has reportedly encouraged municipalities to rely on other nuisance-related offenses for individuals who are caught loitering, such as trespassing and disorderly conduct.
Passing an updated loitering and solicitation law that does not raise constitutional concerns is one step in the process of solving these quality of life issues, Jennings said. But factors such as addiction, mental health struggles, and a lack of housing are other parts of the problem that must be addressed.
“I don’t think it’s going to solve all the problems of homelessness and people being nuisances and sitting on peoples’ porches and sleeping there,” Jennings told the JFC. “I understand that.”

While members of the JFC expressed dismay on Wednesday that they had not been informed about the drafted bill, members of House and Senate leadership — who Jennings said had been told about the proposal — did not have a concrete response to the legislation.
Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark/Glasgow) wrote in a message to Spotlight Delaware that “Yes, the law needs to be rewritten,” while keeping in mind that more supportive housing, drug treatment options, and other efforts are needed to fully address the issues facing communities.
Townsend did not, however, comment specifically on Jennings’ draft bill.
Members of House leadership did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment.
The updated loitering and solicitation law, which has not been posted publicly but was obtained by Spotlight Delaware, amends the original law’s language to be more focused on individuals disrupting traffic than on individuals soliciting money or rides.
Mat Marshall, a spokesperson for the DOJ, told Spotlight Delaware the new drafted legislation takes a more “focused scope” to address pedestrian safety issues, instead of wading into First Amendment considerations.
“The problem with the legislation that was challenged in the lawsuit was essentially that it was overly broad in the way that it’s written, and it would have prohibited protected speech,” Marshall said.
For example, the drafted bill replaces the phrase “soliciting rides or business” from the original legislation with “impeding vehicular and bicycle traffic.”
Rep. Stephanie Bolden (D-Wilmington) made her surprise about the bill particularly clear during the hearing on Wednesday.
Bolden, who represents Wilmington’s Eastside, where she said she frequently encounters trespassing and loitering, said she had brought her concerns about the issue to Jennings’ office, but never received an update.

“I think it’s disingenuous that no one has informed me,” Bolden said to the committee. “I’m very sensitive about this situation because I live there on the Eastside, and I want to see the improvements.”
Marshall said the AG’s office has been in conversations with state lawmakers and city officials, like the Wilmington City Council, about the drafting process since work began on drafting an updated bill in late 2024.
He said, specifically, that Jennings’ office has spoken with Rep. Kim Williams (D-Stanton), co-chair of the JFC, about the bill multiple times.
Williams confirmed to Spotlight Delaware that she had inquired about the bill a couple times since late 2024, but said she was surprised to hear on Wednesday that the bill had been drafted. The last update Williams had received, she said, was that the DOJ was facing “roadblocks” with the legislation.
Williams said she did not know what the roadblocks referred to.
In response to legislators’ disappointment that they had not been looped in on communications about the bill, Marshall said it is typical for the DOJ to go directly to House and Senate leadership for communication about certain legislation that has “statewide interest” or focuses on a “major issue.”
Bolden added that she anticipates some lawmakers seeing Jennings’ proposed bill coming into conflict with House Bill 135, sometimes called a “homeless bill of rights,” which aims to protect the rights of unhoused people to use public spaces for congregating and sleeping when they don’t have a shelter bed or permanent housing available.
Rep. Sophie Phillips (D-Christiana) introduced HB 135 to the House of Representatives last May. While several lawmakers refer to the legislation as a homeless bill of rights, Phillips pushes back against the characterization, pointing out that hers is distinct from past years’ bills that were also given that name.
Jennings herself said at the hearing there “most definitely” is tension between the homeless bill of rights and her updated loitering bill.
Bolden, however, said she thinks loitering and homelessness are separate issues, and both bills could work simultaneously.
“I think these things can be addressed and they will work,” she said, “but it has to be from a holistic approach.”
The post AG Jennings talks updated loitering bill, sparks pushback from lawmakers appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Section of A66 closed and warning of travel disruption amid freezing temperatures in Scotland and northern England
A major road across the Pennines has been closed as an Arctic blast brought snow, ice and freezing temperatures to Scotland and northern England.
The Met Office said widespread travel disruption was likely on Friday as it issued two yellow warnings that will remain in place until noon. Freezing temperatures have led to a four-day health alert for cold weather.
Continue reading...Over several months, three health and smart home experts monitored air quality in different locations. This is what surprised us.
SemiCab platform by Algorhythm, previously considered a ‘penny stock’, sparks ‘category 5 paranoia’ across sector
Shares in trucking and logistics companies have plunged as the sector became the latest to be targeted by investors fearful that new artificial intelligence tools could slash demand.
A new tool launched by Algorhythm Holdings, a former maker of in-car karaoke systems turned AI company with a market capitalisation of just $6m (£4.4m), sparked a sell-off on Thursday that made the logistics industry the latest victim of AI jitters that have already rocked listed companies operating in the software and real estate sectors.
Continue reading...All stones in Cortina are made from granite found on tiny island in Firth of Clyde and crafted in East Ayrshire
“It takes 60m years and about six hours to make a curling stone,” shouts Ricky English above the whine of the lathes. The operations manager at Kays Scotland is surrounded by wheels of ancient granite in varying states of refinement.
It is a small business with a big responsibility: the only factory in the world to supply the Winter Olympics with curling stones. Competitors don’t travel with their own stones, which weigh about 18kg each, and with 16 required for a game. Instead, this year, 132 stones were crafted in the East Ayrshire town of Mauchline and shipped to northern Italy.
Continue reading...Following intense backlash to its partnership with Flock Safety, a surveillance technology company that works with law enforcement agencies, Ring has announced it is canceling the integration. From a report: In a statement published on Ring's blog and provided to The Verge ahead of publication, the company said: "Following a comprehensive review, we determined the planned Flock Safety integration would require significantly more time and resources than anticipated. We therefore made the joint decision to cancel the integration and continue with our current partners ... The integration never launched, so no Ring customer videos were ever sent to Flock Safety." [...] Over the last few weeks, the company has faced significant public anger over its connection to Flock, with Ring users being encouraged to smash their cameras, and some announcing on social media that they are throwing away their Ring devices. The Flock partnership was announced last October, but following recent unrest across the country related to ICE activities, public pressure against the Amazon-owned Ring's involvement with the company started to mount. Flock has reportedly allowed ICE and other federal agencies to access its network of surveillance cameras, and influencers across social media have been claiming that Ring is providing a direct link to ICE.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Im looking for a repair shop in San Diego, does anyone knows where i can find it
Conservationists estimate coal exported from expanded mine to release CO2 equivalent of about half Australia’s annual carbon footprint
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The Albanese government has approved the expansion of a Queensland coalmine that will clear habitat for threatened koalas and greater gliders and add further fuel to the climate crisis, conservationists say.
The extension of the Middlemount mine in Queensland’s Bowen Basin – jointly owned by US company Peabody and China-owned Yancoal – would see about 85m tonnes of coal exported over 24 years.
Continue reading...Union urges Leonard Blavatnik to scrap Channel 13 deal, saying it is part of Netanyahu plan ‘to capture the media’
Israeli journalists have appealed to a British billionaire not to proceed with the sale of a stake in an Israeli television channel, which they warn would represent a severe blow to the independence of the country’s media.
Sir Leonard Blavatnik, listed by the Sunday Times as the UK’s third richest person, is selling a nearly 15% share in Channel 13, a commercial channel that has run critical news coverage of Benjamin Netanyahu’s government in recent years, including investigations into the prime minister’s financial dealings.
Continue reading...Prosecutor says ‘newly discovered evidence’ in case against Alfredo Alejandro Aljorna and Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis ‘materially inconsistent with the allegations against them’
Federal prosecutors in Minneapolis have moved to drop felony assault charges against two Venezuelan men, including one shot in the leg by an immigration officer, after new evidence emerged undercutting the government’s version of events.
In a filing on Thursday, the US attorney’s office for the district of Minnesota said “newly discovered evidence” in the criminal case against Alfredo Alejandro Aljorna and Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis “is materially inconsistent with the allegations against them” made in a criminal complaint and a court hearing last month.
Continue reading... | Add on video to my last post. Happens with headlight on or off, kind of vibrates my feet. [link] [comments] |
An anonymous reader shares a report: U.S. messenger app WhatsApp, owned by Meta Platforms, has been completely blocked in Russia for failing to comply with local law, the Kremlin said on Thursday, suggesting Russians turn to a state-backed "national messenger" instead. "Due to Meta's unwillingness to comply with Russian law, such a decision was indeed taken and implemented," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, proposing that Russians switch to MAX, Russia's state-owned messenger.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| Just got a Onewheel off marketplace. It makes a weird sound under load. Let me know what you think it is, and if there is a fix [link] [comments] |
European leaders divided over how far to accommodate Trump’s ‘wrecking ball’ politics and foreign policy
US Democrats will use a security summit this weekend to urge European leaders to stand up to Donald Trump, with the continent divided over how to keep the unpredictable US president on side.
Democrats at the annual Munich Security Conference will include some of Trump’s most outspoken critics, such as the governor of California, Gavin Newsom, the New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Arizona senator Ruben Gallego and the Michigan governor, Gretchen Whitmer.
Continue reading...Video shows immigration agents beating Narciso Barranco, the father of three U.S. Marines, after he was restrained on the ground.
Destined to a perilous life with no right to an education or to vote, state recognition ‘gives them hope’, campaigners say
Through the decades that the Daulatdia brothel in Bangladesh has existed, children born there have been invisible, unable to be registered because their mothers were sex workers and their fathers unknown. Now, for the first time, all 400 of them in the brothel village have their own birth certificates.
That milestone was reached after a push by campaigners who have spent decades working with Bangladesh’s undocumented children born in brothels or on the street. It means they can finally access the rights afforded to other citizens: the ability to go to school, to be issued a passport or to vote.
Continue reading...Only a unified movement can threaten the regime.
How to regulate a revolutionary technology.
The USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier and its escort ships are expected to head to the Middle East, three U.S. officials told CBS News, adding a second aircraft carrier to the region as U.S.-Iran tensions simmer.
Prime minister to meet mourners in mining town as families speak of their loss in one of Canada’s deadliest mass shootings
Canadian prime minister Mark Carney is to join mourners in Tumbler Ridge on Friday, as authorities and relatives released details of the six children and assistant teacher killed by a shooter in the remote mining town’s high school.
Carney will attend a vigil in Tumbler Ridge in memory of the victims, and he invited leaders from all political parties to join him in the town, the site of the country’s deadliest mass shooting in years.
Continue reading...Hi all, I recently made a post similar to this but I diddnt specify that I am still trying to decide what to do. I have been kind of wanting a onewheel for a few years ever since I found out about them.
since I have started work, I have decided so look at getting a onewheel just because. I am looking at some used onewheels, and my max budget is $1000 AUD. I don't really need one since I have an mtb, a dirt jumper, and an ebike, but I thought it would be cool to at least get one and try it. I will probably use it to get to work which is really close, I normally ride my bike there and I can get there in about 4 mins speeding on my ebike or a bit longer on my pedal bike. I will also take the train and use it to get to Tafe once a week. I will also do some recreational street riding and probably try to do some offroading.
I do not want a pint as the range is small but i am trying to decide if i should just get a cheap $600 - $800 AUD one to save money but im not sure it will be enough for me and i dont wana have to upgrade later. I have been looking at pint x and +xr. I am trying to decide what to get to get. I want a fun ride and I don't want to get bored or regret my purchase. I like to go fast and I have good balance as I race sport bikes. I have not seen any XR classics and rarely a pint x and +XR but there are a few pints that pop up now and then.
I don't know if I should just get a cheap pint to save money or wait a while for a pint x or +xr or and what of the three boards would be best for my use case? thanks
| Sometimes I can’t get across this busy road. Never do shit like this unless someone knows what your plans are. [link] [comments] |
Japan says vessel failed to comply with order to stop, with incident coming weeks after row with China over Taiwan
Authorities in Japan have seized a Chinese fishing boat and arrested its captain in a move that is likely to inflame an ongoing diplomatic row between Tokyo and Beijing.
The seizure, which occurred on Thursday about 105 miles (170km) from the south-western port city of Nagasaki, came after the skipper refused an order to stop for an onboard inspection, according to media reports.
Continue reading...Microsoft has patched a high-severity vulnerability in Windows 11's Notepad that allowed attackers to silently execute local or remote programs when a user clicked a specially crafted Markdown link, all without triggering any Windows security warning. The flaw, tracked as CVE-2026-20841 and fixed in the February 2026 Patch Tuesday update, stemmed from Notepad's relatively new Markdown support -- a feature Microsoft added after discontinuing WordPad and rewriting Notepad to serve as both a plain text and rich text editor. An attacker only needed to create a Markdown file containing file:// links pointing to executables or special URIs like ms-appinstaller://, and a Ctrl+click in Markdown mode would launch them. Microsoft's fix now displays a warning dialog for any link that doesn't use http:// or https://, though the company did not explain why it chose a prompt over blocking non-standard links entirely. Notepad updates automatically through the Microsoft Store.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Kathryn Ruemmler served as White House counsel under former President Barack Obama.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 13.
This live blog is now closed.
Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan kicked off his press conference today announcing that the administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota has “yielded the successful results” they were looking to achieve.
Homan also noted that Immigation and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has not made any arrests at hospitals, elementary schools or churches. However, many people in the Twin Cities have told the Guardian that they’re fearful of federal immigration officers who patrol near these spots, and appear to make indiscriminate arrests throughout the region. The anxiety has resulted in parents keeping their children at home, and patients missing hospital appointments.
Continue reading...Emails show Kathy Ruemmler had close ties to convicted sexual abuser she called ‘Uncle Jeffrey’
Goldman Sachs’ top lawyer, Kathy Ruemmler, has announced her resignation after emails in the latest tranche of Epstein files revealed she had a close relationship with the convicted child sex offender, whom she called “Uncle Jeffrey”.
Ruemmler said on Thursday she would step down as the bank’s chief legal officer and general counsel at the end of June.
Continue reading...New York City officials raise flag at site of rebellion once again after ‘act of erasure’ by administration
Days after the Trump administration oversaw the removal of a Pride flag from the Stonewall national monument, officials in New York City again raised the flag at the historic site.
A large crowd gathered near the Stonewall Inn in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village to see it return to the space where, in 1969, the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement was ignited. Nearly six decades ago, police raided the popular gay bar, and set off an uprising that, as the Library of Congress notes, would “fundamentally change the discourse surrounding LGBTQ+ activism” in the US.
Continue reading...I’m going to make my own rails would save me a lot of time lol.
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore shrugged off President Trump's claim that he was "not worthy" to attend an annual White House dinner, telling CBS News Mr. Trump does "not determine my worthiness."
The Justice Department alleges that CBP officer and supervisor Andres Wilkinson had been living in Laredo, Texas, with a woman who had overstayed her visa and is now in the U.S. illegally.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 12, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced 26 science and technology challenges of national importance to advance the Genesis Mission and accelerate innovation and discovery through artificial intelligence (AI).
The challenges span DOE’s discovery science, energy, and national security missions. Each was selected for its potential to deliver measurable benefits for the American people and to accelerate advancements through the Genesis Mission’s AI platforms, world-class facilities, and public-private partnerships.
“These challenges represent a bold step toward a future where science moves at the speed of imagination because of AI. It’s a game-changer for science, energy, and national security,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science and Genesis Mission Lead Dr. Darío Gil. “By uniting the U.S. Government’s unparalleled data resources and DOE’s experimental facilities with cutting-edge AI, we can unlock discoveries that will power the economy, secure our energy future, and keep America at the forefront of global innovation.”
“These 26 challenges are a direct call to action to America’s researchers and innovators to join the Genesis Mission and deliver science and technology breakthroughs that will benefit the American people,” said Assistant to the President and Director of The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Michael Kratsios. “We look forward to expanding the list of challenges across Federal agencies to bring even greater impact to the Mission.”
Working in partnership with DOE’s National Laboratories, industry, and academia, these efforts will deliver tangible results for the American people. Examples include:
Through an integrated platform connecting the world’s leading supercomputers, experimental facilities, AI systems, and unique scientific data sets, the Genesis Mission aims to double the productivity and impact of U.S. research and development within a decade. This first set of challenges will demonstrate how AI can deliver faster discovery, stronger energy systems, and lasting leadership in science, technology, and national security.
For more details and the full list of challenges, visit here.
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Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy
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Feb. 12, 2026 — California took another step toward its quantum future today as UCLA announced the creation of the SoCal Quantum Alliance (SQA), a new coalition uniting the region’s leading universities, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and technology companies to accelerate innovation, workforce development and economic growth in quantum science. Building on the statewide Quantum California initiative, the alliance embodies a shared commitment to ensure that California remains at the forefront of the quantum revolution.

Operated jointly by the UCLA College’s Division of Physical Sciences and the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, the center directs the Quantum Innovation Hub, which will soon occupy space at the UCLA Research Park. Credit: SoCal Quantum Alliance.
“The SoCal Quantum Alliance reflects the spirit of Quantum California — collaboration, innovation and leadership,” said Dee Dee Myers, senior advisor to California Gov. Gavin Newsom and director of the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Development. “By connecting Southern California’s research powerhouses with key industry and civic partners, the alliance is showing how regions can turn vision into momentum to ensure California remains the global epicenter of quantum technology.”
The alliance-building effort was spearheaded by UCLA, home to the Center for Quantum Science and Engineering (CQSE). Operated jointly by the UCLA College’s Division of Physical Sciences and the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, the center directs the Quantum Innovation Hub, which will soon occupy space at UCLA’s Research Park, bringing together faculty and researchers from UCLA and other academic institutions, government and industry partners, leading startups, and students in a collective, multidisciplinary effort to advance the state of quantum science.
About the SoCal Quantum Alliance
In addition to UCLA, founding members of SQA include USC, Cal State San Marcos, Caltech, JPL, UC Irvine, UC San Diego, Pasadena City College, HRL Laboratories, Boeing, Monarch Quantum, Cisco, IBM and the Aerospace Corp. Together, they form one of the most comprehensive regional quantum innovation networks in the nation.
SQA complements the Quantum California initiative by serving as Southern California’s anchor for research collaboration, workforce development and industry engagement, ensuring that innovation, investment and opportunity in the quantum era reflect the full strength of California’s talent and institutions. The alliance is actively expanding its membership to include additional organizations committed to shaping a vibrant, inclusive and globally competitive quantum economy.
“UCLA is proud to help launch this alliance as part of our commitment to collaborative discovery and regional leadership,” said Roger Wakimoto, vice chancellor for research and creative activities at UCLA. “Quantum California provides a powerful statewide vision, and the SoCal Quantum Alliance is how we, as a region, will deliver on that vision, connecting institutions, industry and talent to shape California’s quantum future.”
Leading the effort is UCLA physics professor and CQSE director Eric Hudson, who said that the alliance is the culmination of long-standing scientific partnerships.
“The SQA originates from years of collaborative effort at the UCLA Center for Quantum Science and Engineering and the NSF Challenge Institute for Quantum Computation,” Hudson said. “By aligning our goals with these institutions, we are coordinating quantum R&D across the state to anchor California’s position as a global leader and secure our regional economy.”
A Legacy of Leadership in Quantum Science
The alliance builds on Southern California’s long tradition of pioneering work in quantum science, from Nobel Prize–winning physicist Richard Feynman’s early vision of quantum computing at Caltech to today’s breakthroughs in sensing, communications, networks and materials science.
“Our region’s institutions and companies have pushed the boundaries of what’s possible in quantum science for decades,” said Dave Gallagher, director of JPL. “The SoCal Quantum Alliance provides a framework for sustained collaboration, ensuring that discovery continues to translate into innovation and real-world impact.”
Building the Workforce for California’s Quantum Economy
The alliance connects universities, state colleges and community colleges to create pathways that prepare students and technical professionals for careers in quantum engineering, manufacturing and applied technologies.
“Including California’s state universities and California community colleges ensures this emerging industry lifts all Californians,” said Carl Kemnitz, provost and vice president for academic affairs at Cal State University San Marcos. “At CSUSM, we’re committed to opening doors of opportunity and preparing a diverse, talented workforce that will drive innovation and help shape and power the future quantum economy.”
Industry Collaboration and Innovation
Industry collaboration is central to the alliance’s mission. By connecting major companies with universities, startups and other industry partners, the alliance will accelerate the translation of scientific breakthroughs into applications that strengthen California’s economy and expand its leadership in quantum-enabled technologies.
“Quantum technologies offer immense potential to transform aerospace, defense and secure communications. Collaboration across sectors is essential to realizing that potential,” said Jay Lowell, chief scientist at Boeing Disruptive Computing, Networks & Sensors. “The SoCal Quantum Alliance gives industry a seat at the table, allowing us to partner with researchers and educators to move from concept to capability faster.”
Charting California’s Quantum Future
Together, the members of the SoCal Quantum Alliance will ensure that California’s next century of innovation is one rooted in collaboration, discovery and shared purpose. By linking research excellence with industry leadership and workforce development, the alliance advances the vision of Quantum California: a statewide commitment to lead the world in quantum science, technology and the economy it will power.
Source: Holly Ober, UCLA
The post UCLA Launches SoCal Quantum Alliance appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 12, 2026 — The Public Quantum Network (PQN) was awarded the Continental Quantum City Prize for North & Central America at the Closing Ceremony of the United Nations International Year of Quantum Science and Technology (IYQ 2025). Created by World Quantum Day, the inaugural prize recognizes initiatives that bring quantum science and technology into the public spaces of cities around the world.

Urbana Public Library IT Manager Leon Wilson was the first member of the public to control the measurement of entangled photons by rotating their polarization, which can be used to encode information for quantum-enhanced communication, computation and sensing. Credit: Lloyd DeGrane/ University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign/Chicago Quantum Exchange
Continental Quantum City Prizes were awarded across Africa, Asia, Europe, North & Central America, and South America. Each recipient was awarded for placing “quantum content directly in the urban landscape so that people can discover it serendipitously as part of their daily lives.”
“It is so exciting to receive an award that recognizes precisely the intention we had in creating PQN: to bring quantum science and technology into the public space! We are wholeheartedly committed to making quantum technology accessible, with the vision that more engagement can lead to greater applications that serve everyone,” said Virginia “Gina” Lorenz, PQN co-PI and Illinois Grainger College of Engineering physics professor.
PQN was introduced in November 2023 at the Urbana Free Library by Lorenz, fellow Illinois Grainger Engineering physics professor Paul Kwiat, and their research teams. The library was linked to Loomis Laboratory of Physics at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign using the fiber-optic network that spans both cities, creating the world’s first public quantum network.
Since then, library visitors have been able to interact with the network, including completing the experiment that earned researchers the 2022 Nobel Prize in physics, opening a ‘quantum fortune cookie,’ and sending quantum Valentine’s Day messages for the holiday in 2025.
“We are so grateful for the continued support of The Urbana Free Library and Urbana-Champaign Big Broadband in creating and hosting the first node, NSF for funding it, and the participation of so many entities across UIUC and the region!” said Lorenz. “This award highlights the intense efforts of the core research team, comprised of incredible undergraduate and graduate students, postdocs, and staff – their hard work behind the scenes is what makes PQN possible! The designation also reflects the fact that here in Urbana-Champaign there are so many amazing outreach activities going on in addition to PQN, such as the quantum-themed escape room LabEscape and the arts-science collective CASCaDe, all aimed at bringing quantum science and technology to the public.”
Software and hardware for the library’s node was recently upgraded, but researchers are also planning for the network’s growth. Installation of another PQN node is expected later this year at the Lederman Science Center in Fermilab and a third at the Urbana-Champaign PQN at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. More potential plans may reach out to other locations in Illinois and beyond.
The Public Quantum Network is supported in part by NSF Quantum Leap Challenge Institute HQAN under Award No. 2016136, Illinois Computes, and by the DOE Grant No. 712869, “Advanced Quantum Networks for Science Discovery”.
Source: Lauren Laws, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Grainger College of Engineering
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God of War fans received good news: Sons of Sparta is out today, and the Greek Trilogy remaking the PS2 and PS3 games is in development.
In the easy win, Brock Nelson scored twice for the U.S., four players had two assists apiece and there was production up and down the lineup.
An anonymous reader shares a report: Just weeks after a dramatic purge of China's top general, the CIA is moving to capitalize on any resulting discord with a new public video targeting potential informants in the Chinese military. The U.S. spy agency on Thursday rolled out the video depicting a disillusioned mid-level Chinese military officer, in the latest U.S. step in a campaign to ramp up human intelligence gathering on Washington's strategic rival. It follows a similar effort last May that focused on fictional figures within China's ruling Communist Party that provided detailed Chinese-language instructions on how to securely contact U.S. intelligence. CIA Director John Ratcliffe said in a statement that the agency's videos had reached many Chinese citizens and that it would continue offering Chinese government officials an "opportunity to work toward a brighter future together."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I recently got a OneWheel GT. I have just started riding, my OneWheel has less than 50 miles on it so far. I ride it a little bit everyday.
Do we have anyone else here who rides, whose from this area? Let me know in the comments.
More than 1 million Americans over 65 lived with roommates they aren't related to in 2024 — a 16% increase from 2019.
With its Advantage2 quantum computing system and a dual-platform annealing and gate-model roadmap at center stage, D-Wave shared the spotlight with partners like AT&T, North Wales Police, and academic teams turning quantum resources into real results.
At Qubits 2026, D-Wave’s proved that annealing quantum computing is delivering practical value today, and it will be joined – not replaced – by an accelerating gate-model program. The Advantage2 system, D-Wave’s current annealing flagship, anchored both the technical talks and the user case studies. Thus, the company framed itself as a “dual-platform” vendor planning to release an initial gate-model system in 2026.
Alongside that roadmap, real users like AT&T and the North Wales Police department described hybrid quantum-classical applications in dispatch, routing, and emergency response. Academic researchers also had a chance to show off their use of the same hardware for large-scale simulations of spin glasses and even cosmological false-vacuum decay.
In his benchmarking session, Dr. Pau Farré, Senior Manager, Benchmarking Programs at D‑Wave, defined benchmarking computational performance as a “careful study of the trade-off between solution quality and computational time.” He highlighted that you can’t talk about superior performance without discussing runtimes, because every solver looks amazing when given infinite time.
Farré compared the previous Advantage system to the Advantage2 system on a high-precision 3D spin-glass instance with 1,650 nodes. The Advantage2 system brings 20-way connectivity (up from 15), about 40% higher energy scale, four-times lower noise, and roughly double the coherence time. On his error-versus-anneal-time plots, that translated into 2x-7x improvement in relative error at the same anneal durations. He split behavior into three regimes over five orders of magnitude in anneal time, from 5 nanoseconds to 500 microseconds. In the fastest “decoupled” regime, the anneal is so short that the environment can’t influence it, which allowed him to show a very steep drop in energy that, as he put it, is faster than what classical dynamics can achieve. Thanks to longer coherence, the Advantage2 system keeps this steep descent going about twice as long as the Advantage system.
At the slow end, when he looked at the best solution the Advantage system could find after a 500‑microsecond anneal, he noted that the Advantage2 system could reach a comparable solution more than 10,000 times faster in real time. On a separate, hard spin‑glass instance mapped to Advantage2 system’s native topology, he compared quantum annealing to restart‑based local search and simulated annealing. Even when he included programming and readout overhead, the quantum curve delivered about a 100× reduction in total time to reach a given solution quality.
The user talks made those gains tangible.
From AT&T, Lucas Haugen and Govinda Dhungana showed how they are testing D‑Wave’s hybrid solvers on field‑technician dispatch and network‑trouble management. Today, AT&T divides its network into 629 routing areas and runs nine classical optimization models overnight, a process that takes about four hours and produces a daily schedule of jobs. That system works well for the morning plan, but it is too slow to rerun constantly as technicians call in or priorities shift.
For a proof‑of‑concept, they extracted one routing area with 13 technicians and 36 jobs and compared their existing solver to a D‑Wave hybrid solver. The classical model had 3,600 seconds to run and produced what looked like its best solution. The hybrid solver produced its result in roughly 15 seconds. In their report, the classical answer turned out to be infeasible because it left one technician effectively unused, while the D‑Wave solution achieved comparable or slightly better routing metrics and also respected the horizontal‑loading requirement across all 13 technicians.
Haugen’s summary was that even at 15 seconds, the hybrid solver gave them not only slightly better KPIs but, more importantly, a schedule that actually met their operational constraints.
Dhungana then walked through work on network‑trouble management, where they treat alarms as nodes in a graph and use modularity optimization with QUBO‑style penalty terms to cluster related outages. In one case they looked back over one to two hours of history, processed 286 alarm devices into a subgraph of 623 nodes, and compared a standard Louvain community detection run with several D‑Wave samplers.
The modularity scores and community counts were comparable across methods at that scale, and Dhungana was explicit that they could not yet claim statistical superiority. However, he stressed that as they add more nodes and shift to more customer‑impacting access‑network problems, they see a path where quantum approaches could provide better detection or faster runtimes.
D‑Wave has also highlighted its work with North Wales Police, where a hybrid‑quantum application is demonstrating that it can optimize the forward deployment of police vehicles. In that project, the hybrid solver reportedly generates deployment plans in minutes instead of months and can help reduce average incident response times, which would allow the force to hit its target response windows far more consistently. Together with AT&T, this positions D‑Wave’s hybrid stack as a serious option for dispatch, routing, and deployment problems where “good solutions fast” matter.
All of this sits under a broader architectural shift. In its Qubits‑week announcement, D‑Wave described itself as a dual‑platform quantum computing company providing both annealing and gate‑model systems and stated that its accelerated gate‑model roadmap targets initial system availability in 2026. That gate‑model push is supported by the acquisition of Quantum Circuits, Inc. and recent work on scalable on‑chip cryogenic control.
During the Q&A, Dr. Trevor Lanting, Chief Development Officer at D‑Wave, was asked what matters most for reaching around 100 logical qubits in a gate‑model system. His answer focused on “delivering scalable control with no loss of fidelity,” meaning they want to grow the number of physical qubits in new architectures while keeping error rates under control. On the annealing side, he pointed to multi‑layer packaging ideas in which two Advantage2 system‑class topologies are stacked and coupled, boosting both qubit count and connectivity while using shielding and superconducting interconnects to manage crosstalk.
Crucially, Lanting emphasized that D‑Wave does not view annealing and gate‑model systems as competing lines. He described the company’s roadmap as a dual‑platform strategy and said they see the two technologies addressing different use cases with growing synergies in hardware and software.
Taken together, Qubits 2026 painted a coherent picture: the Advantage2 system is moving the annealing performance curve forward in ways that show up in both benchmarks and real applications; gate‑model hardware is progressing on a clear timeline; and users in sectors from telecom to police work are starting to fold hybrid quantum solvers into live operations. For a field still working to move beyond hype, that mix of measured hardware improvements, honest benchmarking, and concrete case studies is exactly what matters.
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Authorities on Thursday released the first physical description of a male suspect wanted in connection with the Arizona disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
Saw a listing of a Onewheel plus original $200. It is in great condition 100 miles. Is it still worth getting to sell or to ride? What is a reasonable price for them nowadays?
Civil rights inquiry will assess whether LA county fire department discriminated while responding to 2025 fires
The California department of justice has launched a civil rights investigation into whether Los Angeles county discriminated against the predominantly Black community of west Altadena when responding to last year’s Eaton fire.
The investigation will assess whether the fire response resulted in a “disparate impact” on west Altadena based on race, age or disability.
Continue reading...Savannah Guthrie's mom, Nancy Guthrie, was reported missing Feb. 1.
Scott Socha, whose company sued to claim trademark rights to Yosemite name, criticized by conservation groups
Donald Trump has nominated the hospitality executive Scott Socha – whose company once sued to claim trademark rights to the name “Yosemite National Park” – to lead the National Park Service.
The nomination of an outsider with business ties to the agency he’d oversee comes at a pivotal moment for the service, which lost a quarter of its staff under the so-called “department of government efficiency” civil sector purge and which has been the subject of the Trump administration’s aggressive efforts to erase mention of historical events from its sites that portray Americans in an unfavorable light, such as regarding slavery.
Continue reading...Three months after it began, the story of President Donald Trump’s siege of Minnesota has been one told with violent imagery. Masked men smashing windows and dragging women from their cars. A smiling mother behind the wheel of her SUV, a rattling of gunshots, a dashboard sprayed with blood. Outraged Americans shouting at government agents amid clouds of choking gas. An ICU nurse prone on the pavement.
The images told the story of the streets, but even as the administration moves to wind down its historic immigration crackdown in the Twin Cities, announcing a drawdown of operations this week, another story unfolds behind locked doors and drawn curtains. It is the story of tens of thousands of families living in terror, too afraid to venture into their communities for life’s most basic necessity: food.
In response to unprecedented conditions, an underground army coalesced to bring sustenance to families in hiding.
On the ground in Minneapolis, St. Paul, and communities across the state, this is the reality that has kept people up at night.
In response to unprecedented conditions, an underground army coalesced to bring sustenance to families in hiding. The Intercept was recently invited inside a nondescript Minneapolis warehouse to observe their operations in action.
It was delivery day, which meant volunteers stuffing boxes with oatmeal and spaghetti, flour and chicken, rice, tomato sauce, vegetable oil, and more. Six hundred boxes were prepared the day before. Hundreds more would be added by day’s end. Inside, volunteers left notes telling recipients they were missed, and that they hoped to see them again soon.
The packages were loaded into a fleet of station wagons and SUVs. Alongside the food was baby formula, medication, and other essentials. Many of the vehicles were driven by teachers taking supplies to the families of students who haven’t been to class for weeks. They would proceed carefully on their mission, one eye on the rear-view mirror as they ferried their precious cargo.
As the latest in a series of dragnets targeting Democratic-led cities and states, Minnesota’s “Operation Metro Surge” saw 3,000 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol personnel deployed in early December. Across the state, immigrant families went into hiding.
Joe Walker, director of nutritional services at the Sanneh Foundation, a local charity that operates a mobile food shelf in the Twin Cities, saw the impact immediately.
Not only were families no longer appearing to receive food, Walker told The Intercept, delivery vehicles were being followed, and distribution sites were being staked out by suspected federal agents. To volunteers on the ground, it felt as though the government was weaponizing hunger to root out a foreign enemy.
“We have to play by all the rules,” Walker said. “They don’t.”
Guiding operations at the warehouse visited by The Intercept was a 24-year-old soccer coach named Mu Thoo. Thoo spent his first eight years in Thailand and the rest of his life in the Twin Cities. He went to work for Walker’s mobile food shelf in 2022.
As part of the immigrant community, Thoo acknowledged that Metro Surge upended life for countless families.
“It’s scary,” Thoo told The Intercept, but, he added, “I don’t believe in living in fear. People are going to need food, and that’s something every human should have a right to. And we’re gonna come out and give food to people.”
“People are going to need food, and that’s something every human should have a right to.”
A veteran of the battle against hunger in Minnesota, Walker helped craft the state’s regulations surrounding food shelves and served on the governor’s hunger task force, counseling emergency management teams during the pandemic and the uprising that followed the murder of Minneapolis resident George Floyd.
The 46-year-old was immensely proud of the system his team had built. At its core were weekly, in-person distribution events in parks across the city. Held year-round, they were designed to provide a farmer’s market-style experience, where families could pick and choose from the food on offer. Naturalists came to put on demonstrations for the kids. Families from South America would visit with volunteers. Bonds of community were forged between residents who otherwise may never have met.
Watching the Trump administration’s immigration blitzes in Chicago and Los Angeles, Walker braced for a similar assault in Minnesota. His team began noticing a steady drop-off in people of color showing up to receive food in late summer and early fall. After Metro Surge was announced, participation plummeted, from a high of nearly 700 people receiving food during a busy week last year to just over 60 once the operation began.
It was clear a major strategy shift was in order. At first, Walker experimented with using delivering trucks to provision clients no longer showing up in person. Soon, however, it became evident the risks were too high. In January, a food shelf delivery volunteer was taken by federal agents in the parking lot of a community center. A coalition of roughly 100 hunger relief organizations signed a letter describing the apprehension as part of a broader pattern of federal agents exploiting food delivery to jack up arrests.
With one of his own drivers followed by a suspected ICE vehicle, Walker recognized that such surveillance could tip off federal agents to dozens of families in a single day. To safely get food to people would require a low-profile, under-the-radar approach. To get there, Walker and his team embraced a decentralized, word-of-mouth method of operations, working with community members who were already known and trusted by their neighbors in hiding.
The pivot took off. In December, the mobile food shelf made deliveries to 735 families. In January, they delivered to 1,640, an increase of 123 percent.
On Thursday, Trump’s border czar and former ICE Acting Director Tom Homan announced a drawdown of Operation Metro Surge, effective immediately. It will likely take years to unpack the full cost of the campaign. Already, the early indicators are staggering.
While the true number of households that have received aid is impossible to know, estimates in mid-January from just one network of schools and churches hovered around 30,000 — likely a considerable undercount considering the vast number of smaller-scale operations and neighbor-to-neighbor relationships facilitating care.
The mass fear engendered by the government has cost the local economy upwards of $20 million a week. Immigrant businesses have suffered tremendously, with revenue losses as high as 100 percent. Local healthcare providers estimate a 25 percent drop in emergency room and clinic visits. Isolated from their classmates and friends, immigrant kids have reverted to Covid-style online learning, as parent pick-up and drop-off sites having become hunting grounds for federal agents.
In his address this week, Homan stressed that “mass deportations” remain the administration’s chief immigration objective in Minnesota and around the country, suggesting the fear that has kept people inside these past several months is unlikely to abate anytime soon.
Although Minnesotans in the field of hunger relief take pride in their state’s progressive policies, efforts to feed people in need were already strained before Metro Surge began. Trump’s signature 2025 legislation, the Big Beautiful Bill, which pumped an unprecedented $75 billion into ICE, making it the most well-funded law enforcement agency in history, also cut a record $186 billion in funding for the federal government’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, significantly heightening the risk of food insecurity for tens of millions of people nationwide.
Schools with high immigrant student populations, where high attendance rates are linked to the availability of free breakfasts and lunches, have seen more than 60 percent of their kids stop coming to class. When those students join their parents in hiding, the 10 meals they would have received each week fall to their parents to provide; parents whose ability to move in the outside world, let alone earn money, is threatened by continuing deportation operations. Those burdens are exacerbated in families with multiple children and cases where the head of the household is disappeared by the state.
It’s not just undocumented families being affected, Walker explained.
“There’s a lot of Black and brown people that are just scared to be out and about,” he said, regardless of their immigration status. “It’s like Covid hit a certain population of the Twin Cities.”
“When do we call it’s all clear? I have no idea.”
Even as ICE prepares to draw down its presence, Walker and his team recognize that picking up the pieces after an operation that left two Americans dead and funneled thousands of residents into the deportation pipeline will take months, if not years.
“Families are being ruined financially, businesses are being ruined. It’s a huge economic hit,” he said. “And that is not even the hardest part. When it’s all done, then there’s the count of the missing. Where are they? Are they going to come home? These are our neighbors.”
“There’s no vaccine for this one,” Walker continued. “When do we call it’s all clear? I have no idea.”
Walker’s team continues to provide in-person food availability at local parks. At one drop-off location, The Intercept saw a girl of perhaps 12 years of age and what looked to be her younger brother wheel a pair of empty strollers into a recreation center. The girl loaded her reusable grocery bags with oranges, chicken, and milk. It was her second time visiting the site, she said.
Before leaving, the children spoke briefly with Sanneh employee Alberto Hernández.
“With a lot of the first-gen kids being born here, they do come for their parents,” Hernández told The Intercept, after the children went on their way.
The 25-year-old Hernández could relate. He was a first-gen kid himself, the son of Mexican immigrants, born and raised in the Twin Cities area. He enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps after high school and joined Sanneh in September, just months before Metro Surge took off.
“I carry everything. I carry my veteran ID. I carry my passport.”
Hernández is a big guy, clean cut with a friendly face. He’d served his country and was now spending his days giving back to the community that raised him. Even he was scared.
“I carry everything,” he said. “I carry my veteran ID. I carry my passport.”
It was Hernández who’d been followed by suspected ICE agents while making runs for the food shelf. His experience was just one of many. One of his closest friends hadn’t left home since late December. Another, a legal resident, was surrounded by eight ICE agents while shopping at a Home Depot. According to Hernández, the barrel of an AR-15 was pressed to his skull and agents threw him to the ground before permitting him to go.
“The thing is,” Hernández said, “the fear never leaves.”
Despite being a military veteran with a white girlfriend, Hernández still felt uncomfortable going out to eat.
“We can’t even sit and just chill,” he said. “People need to know that. That’s how it is here. Always looking over your shoulder.”
At the same time, life in Minnesota wasn’t all paranoia and dread. To Hernández, who lives in downtown Minneapolis and witnessed a 50,000-person march last month demanding ICE’s retreat from the city, it was a moment of neighborly solidarity the likes of which he’d never seen. It was a reminder, to him, that he was not alone.
“As someone who’s a child of immigrants, it’s really nice,” he said. “It’s very, very, very beautiful to see. The people of Minneapolis, and the people of Minnesota, stand up for the community and their neighbors.”
The post Trump Attacked Immigrant Food Aid in Minnesota. Locals Fought Back. appeared first on The Intercept.
Konami has kept us waiting a long time for a MGS4 remaster.
It’s all hands on deck in the infrastructure world right now, especially when it comes to silicon. Accelerated computing and AI have made chips more central than ever to everything from hyperscale data centers to scientific supercomputers. But as demand rises, manufacturing capacity isn’t the only bottleneck. Another impediment is the time and talent required to design and verify these increasingly complex chips before they ever reach the fab.
That friction is what Cadence, an electronic design automation (EDA) software provider, is addressing with today’s launch of its ChipStack AI Super Agent, a new agentic AI system designed to automate front-end chip design and verification and compress some of the most lengthy and repetitive work in chip development.
ChipStack AI Super Agent is focused on the front end of the chip development flow, where design intent is translated into register-transfer level (RTL) code, testbenches, and verification plans. This front end is where schedule risk, or the potential for delays caused by design and verification rework, can accumulate before manufacturing begins. Compounding the problem, Cadence estimates that by the end of this decade, the industry will face a shortage of hundreds of thousands of chip design and verification engineers.
To understand how the company is approaching this problem with agentic AI, HPCwire spoke with Matt Graham, senior group director of verification software product management at Cadence, and Kartik Hegde, senior group director of agentic AI and ChipStack at Cadence, about what this new tool can help engineers accomplish and how it fits into existing design flows.
“The ChipStack AI Super Agent that we’re announcing here is really our first foray into automatically generating the intellectual property — the design, test harnesses, and regression suites — that are required during pre-silicon development, before a design moves into manufacturing,” Graham told HPCwire. “We really think it’s a first of its kind.”
The ChipStack AI Super Agent operates inside the front-end workflows that chip designers and verification engineers already use. Rather than replacing Cadence’s simulation, formal verification, and analysis engines, it sits on top of them, generating and orchestrating the inputs those tools require while interpreting their outputs. This orchestration role is where much of the automation happens. Instead of prompting an AI model to produce isolated snippets of code, the system coordinates multiple agents that can generate RTL, assemble testbenches, define verification plans, execute simulations, parse logs, diagnose failures, and iterate on fixes. This mirrors the way human engineers work, but at a much faster pace. According to Hegde, making that approach viable required training the agents to have a deeper understanding of the design process itself.
“What does it take to convert an LLM agent into an actual chip designer? To do that, we have poured three things into the recipe. The first one is to give the model the ability to understand the underlying chip design and its intent. We call this the Mental Model. This is the way the agent extracts the knowledge of what this chip is supposed to do,” explained Hegde. “Second, we have given it expert-crafted flows on the knowledge of how to design and how to do verification, so the agent is now capable of formal and simulation verification. Third, we give it the ability to run EDA tools, teaching it how to call Cadence’s principled software solutions like simulators and formal engines.”
The “Mental Model” Hegde mentions is the foundation of the software. It is created by ingesting specifications, RTL code, and other design artifacts, combining traditional static analysis (using compilers and parsers Cadence has refined over decades) with LLM-based reasoning to add contextual information that static tools do not provide on their own. For example, while a compiler can identify a port or interface, an LLM can help determine its function by examining naming conventions, documentation, and surrounding logic. The company says this Mental Model acts as a grounded source of truth that agents must reference when generating code or tests, helping prevent the hallucinations that probabilistic models are known to have. Once a Mental Model is established, the ChipStack AI Super Agent can drive an iterative design and verification loop. In a typical verification workflow, the system uses the model to generate a test plan, writes the associated test code, runs Cadence simulation or formal tools, and analyzes the results. If a test fails, the agent parses logs, proposes a root cause, and applies fixes before rerunning verification, either autonomously or with an engineer guiding the process.
Hegde described this as an intentionally human-in-the-loop approach. While the system can run end-to-end, it is designed to let engineers intervene, provide feedback, or adjust assumptions at any stage. “The user is still in the driver’s seat,” Hegde said. “It’s kind of like a senior engineer working with a new engineer to help them complete the tasks.”
The ChipStack AI Super Agent relies on frontier LLMs rather than models trained from scratch. As deployment flexibility is critical for adoption, Cadence supports both cloud-based and on-prem deployments, reflecting the data privacy, intellectual property, and security concerns common in semiconductor development. Customers can run the system using commercially available frontier models accessed through standard APIs, while Cadence works with model providers to fine-tune those systems for chip design and verification tasks.
For chip designers and verification engineers, the appeal of agentic AI is that it can absorb repetition and save a great deal of time in chip projects. Cadence says early deployments of the ChipStack AI Super Agent are showing order-of-magnitude improvements in this area. Across design coding, testbench generation, test plan creation, regression orchestration, and failure analysis, customers are reporting productivity gains of up to 10x, according to the company.
In internal evaluations and customer pilots, tasks that once took days or weeks have been compressed into hours, Cadence claims. The company cited examples, including formal verification cycles reduced from multiple weeks to hours, and test plan creation accelerated from weeks to same-day outputs. In one demo Hegde presented, a verification workflow that would typically take a full workday was completed in under 20 minutes.
Several early customers have validated those claims. FPGA maker Altera reported significant reductions in verification efforts on complex designs, while AI and accelerator vendors, including Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Tenstorrent are evaluating or deploying the system across production workflows. Tenstorrent reported significant time savings in formal verification during early evaluations of the ChipStack AI Super Agent, including deployments on its own on-prem hardware.
“ChipStack greatly improved the efficiency of our formal verification efforts,” said Daniel Cummings, principal engineer of RISC-V Cores at Tenstorrent, in a release. “During a three-month evaluation on three critical design blocks, it reduced verification time by up to 4X. Running the agent on Tenstorrent hardware also demonstrated our ability to deliver the high-performance, on-prem inference needed for production-scale LLM workloads.”
Although the ChipStack AI Super Agent is Cadence’s first major agentic AI product launch, the work behind it has been building for years. Graham emphasized how Cadence’s roots are firmly planted in EDA, where accuracy is imperative and mistakes discovered after manufacturing can be catastrophic.
“Anytime we design a chip, it needs to be 100 percent correct before it goes to manufacturing,” Graham said. Over time, he says, those same principled simulation and optimization engines that enable this precision have expanded beyond chips into printed circuit boards, multiphysics analysis, data center systems, and even molecular and biological simulation. The common thread, Graham says, is the strength of this computational software, built on a foundation of math and computer science, designed to improve engineering productivity without sacrificing accuracy.
That emphasis on deterministic engines also explains Cadence’s approach to incorporating AI. The company began applying machine learning and reinforcement learning roughly six years ago, first to optimize the performance of its existing tools. Then came Cadence’s acquisition of ChipStack in late 2025. Co-founded in 2023 by Hegde, who was also the company’s CEO, ChipStack was built specifically to tackle front-end design and verification bottlenecks using AI. Hegde, who previously worked as a chip designer and later completed a PhD focused on computer architecture and machine learning, said the startup’s goal was to reduce the time it takes to build chips by accelerating the most labor-intensive stages.
Both Graham and Hegde credit their own backgrounds as design and verification engineers in shaping the system’s development. Rather than aiming for full autonomy from the outset, they focused on encoding the kinds of practical decisions engineers make every day, from interpreting specifications to choosing verification methods, managing regressions, and debugging failures. That focus on practical engineering decisions also shaped how quickly Cadence moved after acquiring ChipStack. Just three months after the deal closed, the two teams have combined their strengths, Cadence’s EDA infrastructure with ChipStack’s agentic AI work, to deliver the ChipStack AI Super Agent.
“Technology grows either through very aggressive and agile startups or through investment from established companies in a particular area. And in this case, I think the right mix of knowledge and aggressiveness came together,” Graham said.
“With this acquisition, I think Cadence got two key things. One is the core innovations we have done, like the Mental Models and expert flows that I talked about. Second, we have a world-class team, which continues to power this,” Hegde said. “Together, the mixture of some of our core innovations and a very high-quality team was the key accelerant to getting this out.”
While the ChipStack AI Super Agent is not yet a fully autonomous system, Graham describes it as an early step in that direction.
“Our ultimate goal is to get to this full autonomous chip design. This is our moonshot. We want ‘specification goes in one side, microchip falls out the other,’” Graham said. “The reality is that we’re probably a decade or more away from approaching that, if autonomous driving is any indication of how long it takes to really get there on a broadly deployed scale.”
For now, Cadence is focused on specific front-end use cases where autonomy can be applied safely and productively. Engineers can allow the agent to run end-to-end, but they can also intervene at any stage to guide decisions, adjust assumptions, or validate results. Over time, Cadence expects that balance to shift as confidence in agentic AI grows and as the system is exposed to a wider range of designs and use cases. The executives also suggested that the architecture behind the ChipStack AI Super Agent is designed to scale beyond its initial scope. The same Mental Model and agent orchestration approach used today for front-end design and verification could eventually extend into other phases of chip development, such as integration, implementation, and signoff.
At its core, the main expectation of the ChipStack AI Super Agent is consistency. Instead of replacing engineers and their hard-earned knowledge, the system promises to lessen their exhaustive manual work while maintaining meticulous verification standards. As Graham puts it, “The AI agents aren’t going to suffer from fatigue. It’s going to be just as thorough on page 500 as it was on page one of a specification.”
The post Cadence Introduces Agentic AI System for Chip Design and Verification appeared first on HPCwire.
UK officials have seized almost 20m fake pills since 2021, many containing incorrect doses or toxic ingredients
Men have been warned against buying illegal erectile dysfunction pills online after nearly 20m pills – enough to fill two doubledecker buses – were seized in the last five years.
The “stigma and embarrassment” of erectile dysfunction is being “exploited by criminals”, according to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
Continue reading...Report by Tony Blair Institute urges government to drop some green policies amid criticism of decarbonisation goal
Tony Blair’s thinktank has accused Ed Miliband of driving up energy prices in his push to make Britain’s energy supply more environmentally friendly.
The Tony Blair Institute (TBI) published a report on Friday criticising the government’s green policies and urging the energy secretary to drop some of them altogether, including almost completely decarbonising the electricity system by 2030.
Continue reading...Ex-PM’s thinktank urges more drilling and fewer renewables, ignoring evidence that clean energy is cheaper and better for bills
A thinktank with close ties to Saudi Arabia and substantial funding from a Donald Trump ally needs to present a particularly robust analysis to earn the right to be listened to on the climate crisis. On that measure, Tony Blair’s latest report fails on almost every point.
The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI) received money from the Saudi government, has advised the United Arab Emirates petrostate, and counts as a main donor Larry Ellison, the founder of Oracle, friend of Trump and advocate of AI.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Manufacturers tell European Commission proposed ban would cause unnecessary confusion
More than a dozen food companies have urged the European Commission not to ban the use of words such as “sausage” and “burger” for non-meat products.
Companies including Linda McCarney Foods, Quorn and THIS have signed a joint letter calling on commissioners to “let common sense prevail” ahead of a debate on the proposed ban, which they say would cause “unnecessary confusion” for customers “without helping anyone”.
Continue reading...The HPC community may like to think of itself as an independent entity whose noble aims deserve funding large enough to create novel computational solutions to tackle grand problems. The reality is that HPC has become the scientific niche of a much larger computing community that’s dedicated to building and running AI workloads for mass use by consumers. There’s really no sense in fighting it, so the big question now for the HPC community is: What does it do next?
These were the conclusions and questions posed recently by a trio of HPC leaders. In a recent paper titled “Ride the Wave, Build the Future: Scientific Computing in an AI World,” Jack Dongarra, Dennis Gannon, and Daniel Reed explained how the AI boom has shifted the center of gravity in advanced computing, reshaping the computing and economic landscape that scientific computing has depended on.
The 5,800-word paper, which you can read here, lays out the recent changes that have impacted the advanced computing community. It’s a follow up to a similar paper the three wrote three years ago, called “HPC Forecast: Cloudy and Uncertain.” In that earlier paper, which you can read here, Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed argued that advanced computing’s center of gravity had already shifted, semiconductor constraints were driving new approaches, and hyperscalers and smartphone providers were shifting supply chains and economics. Additionally, the nature of HPC applications were changing rapidly, end-to-end hardware co-design was required, as was prototyping at scale.
Those trends have not only continued into 2026, but massive new disruptive trends have emerged–notably, the emergence of generative AI, which has triggered a world-wide AI boom. That AI boom, more than anything else, is reshaping the nature of HPC and scientific computing.

From left: Dennis Gannon is Professor Emeritus at the Indiana University; Daniel Reed is a Presidential Professor at the University of Utah; Jack Dongarra is Professor Emeritus at the University of Tennessee
“Today, the dominant computing markets are unequivocally AI-driven,” Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed write in “Ride the Wave.” “The energy and cooling demands of hyperscale systems are measured in hundreds of megawatts, making them public issues; high-precision floating point hardware is giving way to reduced precision arithmetic in support of AI models; and national strategies increasingly treat AI-capable clouds and scientific supercomputers as a fused strategic resource, with deep geopolitical implications.
“Consequently, scientific and technical computing is increasingly a specialized, policy-driven niche riding atop hardware and software stacks optimized for other, much larger markets. The challenge for scientific computing is to adapt to this rapidly changing world,” they write. “We must ride the wave of AI, while simultaneously building the future.”
The authors built on the five maxims from their 2023 paper with seven new maxims for 2027:
Here’s a brief description of each of these maxims and their impacts on HPC and scientific computing:
In some ways, the current wave of technological disruption resembles past waves. Clinging to old technologies, whether it’s vector supercomputers or unscalable messaging passing protocols, is a threat today and an urge to overcome, just as it was in the past.
But there are key differences too, the HPC leaders say. For instance, in the past, the scientific computing community could reasonably be expected to push consumer-grade technology to the logical limits. That’s not really feasible anymore.

Google is pushing the bounds of AI performance with its new “Ironwood” TPU chips
For starters, some of the fastest processors in the world, such as Google’s TPU, Amazon Trainium, and Microsoft Maia, can’t even be purchased (although they can be rented). What’s more, the size of AI compute is now off the chart. “Today, the scale of ‘AI factories’ dwarfs that of even the fastest machines on the list of the TOP500 supercomputers, and the gap widens each year,” they write.
Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed also point out that as the focus has shifted to AI workloads, so have the capabilities of processors. While the traditional modeling and simulation workloads still demand loads of high-precision FP64 performance, there’s simply a lot more money to be made building chips to power machine learning algorithms, where the performance sweet spot is lower precision 4-bit to 32-bit performance.
The scientific computing community will need to adapt to the shift in precision, they write. “Rather than assuming uniform 64-bit (FP64) floating point arithmetic, future numerical solvers will partition computations across FP64, FP32, BF16, FP8, and integer-emulated formats, using high precision only where it is most needed for stability or accuracy,” they write.
Instead of getting on one’s high horse and arguing about the superiority of the deductive nature of computational science and its grounding in physical laws, versus the inferiority of the inductive nature of AI reasoning and its grounding on numerical models, the HPC leaders promote a different approach.
“Just as computational models can approximate solutions to differential equations to arbitrary precision, so too can AI models learn to approximate unknown functions to arbitrary precision,” they write. “Crucially, it is not a matter of choosing to invest in simulation and modeling or AI. Both are critical and complementary, each offering capabilities and efficiencies lacking in the other.”
Today’s AI workloads leans heavily on moving massive amounts of memory, which translates into massive amounts of electricity for power and cooling. Forward-looking computational scientists, therefore, should look to build systems that don’t require moving as much data.

Once rare, liquid cooling has become a requirement in HPC (Matveev Aleksandr/Shutterstock)
“Classical work on minimizing messages and data movement must be reinterpreted in the context of modern communication fabrics, offload engines, and hierarchical memory systems,” the HPC leaders write.
“Runtimes will need to be aware of both energy and communication costs, scheduling tasks to minimize expensive data motion across racks or facilities and to exploit near-memory or in-network computation where possible. Hybrid AI+simulation workflows will rely on asynchronous, event-driven communication patterns that allow different parts of the system to operate at their own natural time scales without constant global synchronization.”
Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed tackle other headwinds threatening to slow down all forms of computational progress at scale. As AI factories get bigger, so too do their demands on the electric grid. While a hyperscale data center can be stood up in a few months, it takes years to supply the gigawatt-hours of electricity that will be needed to power and cool it.
The power situation is also making traditional performance metrics obsolete. Instead of peak floating point operations per second (FLOPS), a better metric is “joules per solution,” they write.
“This metric forces new trade-offs among fidelity, resolution, model size, and energy consumption,” they write. “It also highlights the role of algorithmic innovation: mixed-precision methods, communication-avoiding algorithms, data compression, and smarter sampling and surrogate models can all reduce joules per solution, sometimes dramatically, without sacrificing reliability.”
To survive the AI wave, the HPC leaders recommend that computational scientists adopt the same type of engineering co-design practices that the hyperscalers have been doing for some time.
“Scientific computing cannot simply await new architectures and adapt afterward,” they write. “Instead, targeted collaborations are needed in which hardware features (numerical precision formats, on-die networks, memory hierarchies, and DPUs) are shaped in dialogue with scientific algorithms, and in which software stacks expose those features in usable, portable ways.”
Even back in 2023, there was a clear need to push prototyping at scale. But the advent of AI has only accelerated that need, the HPC leaders say. Large investments measuring in the tens of millions are required to fund endeavors via startups or labs that have an appetite for risk, such as for developing custom chiplets, they write.

Chiplets (such as these AMD EPYC CPUs) offer a low-energy, high-data density path to scaling HPC
“Only with scalable testbeds can new hardware, software stacks, and energy-management strategies be exercised by a wide range of scientific workloads under realistic conditions,” they write. “This is neither simple nor easy, but it is essential if we are to address the limitations of hardware designed for commercial markets.”
Rather than creating generic machines with a particular software stack on top, this approach may yield targeted solutions for particular classes of problem, such as nuclear fusion or health analytics, that are tuned to solve those challenges.
Data and models are “intellectual gold,” the authors write. Datasets like long climate reanalyses, fusion diagnostics, high-resolution Earth observation archives, curated materials, and molecular databases are expensive to generate and maintain.
The data has value by itself, but when used in combination with frontier AI models and in hybrid AI-simulation, the value increases substantially. This approach “yield[s] more insight, faster and more reliably, than would otherwise be possible,” they write.
This bolsters the value of data stewardship, which “must be a central element of national and institutional strategy,” the authors write. “Investments in high-quality metadata, provenance tracking, curation, and long-term preservation are investments in future scientific leverage.”
The combination of AI with traditional modeling has yielded a step-function increase in capability. That has captured the attention of central governments, who become the beneficiaries and the benefactors of a new style of scientific computing.

Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed support “Genesis-style initiatives” as a way governments can frame the need for higher investments in AI-powered science, particularly for tackling strategic challenges, such as climate resilience, health, energy transition, national security, and economic competitiveness.
“The core lesson is that publicly funded scientific computing cannot succeed by passively purchasing available computing hardware,” the authors write. “It needs proactive, coalition-based funding models that treat AI+HPC as a long-term strategic national asset, integrating hardware, software, data, and people under coherent missions.”
Without a new path forward, the HPC leaders argue, the scientific computing community will become entirely dependent on advancements coming from AI-focused hyperscalers. Without any “practical” energy or carbon constraints, the AI factories will just get bigger and bigger.
While Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed don’t suggest entirely jumping off of AI’s coattails, they do argue that “science needs a countervailing national program whose primary objective is not peak capability, but orders-of-magnitude reduction in joules per trusted solution.”
Such a system, which they dubbed a “next-generation system design moonshot,” would focus on “fundamentally different design points,” such as “energy-proportional computing, extreme data-movement frugality, and algorithm-architecture co-design that treats numerical precision, communication, and verification as first-class resources, not afterthoughts.”
Attempting such a moonshot is not without risks, they write. Indeed, it will require an acceptance of failure, and challenging existing incentive structures around how vendors seek to optimize and government favor incremental upgrades in procurement cycles.
“In many ways, computing became most transformative when it became small enough and economical enough for personal use; the national analogue is to make advanced capability compact, repeatable, and ubiquitous enough that science can own the workflows end-to-end,” Dongarra, Gannon, and Reed write.
“The outcome of such a project would not replace Genesis,” they conclude. “It would complement it, making sure that public science is not forever constrained to renting computing and storage resources designed for someone else’s business model.”
You can download the paper here.
The post HPC Is Riding AI’s Coattails. So Now What? appeared first on HPCwire.
Video of suspect in Arizona spurs a surge of calls as the desert search near Tucson yields little evidence
The FBI released new details about the masked perpetrator suspected in the kidnapping of Nancy Guthrie, as investigators continue to review the more than 13,000 tips that have come in from the public.
The male suspect, who was pictured in video footage captured from the 84-year-old’s home the night of her abduction, has an average build and is approximately 5’9”–5’10” tall, according to an FBI forensic analysis. He was seen with a black, 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack.
Continue reading...Americans Madison Chock and Evan Bates, considered the favorites, placed second in the 2026 Winter Olympics. France's Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron took home gold.
UK charity warns against excessive academic pressure and suggests reducing the number of high-stakes tests
Exam stress at age 15 can increase the risk of depression and self-harm into early adulthood, research suggests.
Academic pressure is known to have a detrimental impact on mood and overall wellbeing, but until now few studies had examined the long-term effects on mental health.
Continue reading...Glimpse of sun after weeks of unrelenting rain marks end of longest sunless period in area since records began
Aberdeen has finally had some sunshine, for the first time in 21 days – marking the end of the longest sunless period in the area since Met Office records began in 1957.
Residents of the Granite city in north-east Scotland glimpsed the sun late on Thursday afternoon, with sunshine having been last recorded on 21 January.
Continue reading...Updates include enhancements to documentation, security, accessibility, and project management
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb. 12, 2026 — The Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) has released version 4.1 of Open OnDemand, an open source, web-based platform used by high performance computing (HPC) centers around the world to provide researchers, educators, and students with easier, more flexible access to advanced computing resources.

Travis Ravert, OSC web and interface app engineer, leads a discussion on Open OnDemand during the Contributor Jam at the 2025 GOOD Conference.
Developed at OSC with funding from the National Science Foundation, Open OnDemand provides browser-based access to HPC systems—enabling users to manage files, submit and monitor jobs, and run applications without requiring command-line expertise. Since its release in 2017, Open OnDemand has been deployed at more than 2,100 locations globally, supporting a wide range of academic and research workflows.
Version 4.1 introduces a series of enhancements shaped by feedback from the Open OnDemand community, with a focus on improving usability, customization, and administrative efficiency.
“Each Open OnDemand release reflects how closely we work with the community to understand real-world challenges and workflows,” said Alan Chalker, Open OnDemand project lead and OSC director of strategic programs. “Version 4.1 delivers meaningful improvements that help both users and administrators manage computing resources more effectively, while continuing to expand the platform’s flexibility and extensibility.”
New and updated features in Open OnDemand 4.1 include:
User Experience and Visibility
Workflow and Project Management
Administrative and Support Improvements
File Access and Management
Documentation, Security, and Accessibility
Open OnDemand 4.1 also expands documentation and compliance resources to support institutional deployment and review processes.
The release introduces new software bill of materials (SBOM) documentation, including operating system-level dependency information to help site administrators understand installation requirements and work with institutional security teams.
Open OnDemand 4.1 also makes a Higher Education Community Vendor Assessment Toolkit (HECVAT) available to support institutional security and risk assessment reviews.
The Open OnDemand development team has issued an Accessibility Conformance Report (ACR) — a completed version of the ITI Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (ITI VPAT) — and plans to do so for each minor and major release.
Findings from the 4.1 ACR will inform ongoing accessibility improvements planned for future releases.
Additional technical documentation and compliance resources are available on the Open OnDemand website.
Full details on all updates are available in the Open OnDemand 4.1 release notes.
Community Contributions and Partnerships
The Open OnDemand 4.1 release reflects contributions from partners across the HPC ecosystem.
Developers Alan Sussman and Harshit Soora of the University of Maryland played a key role in expanding the Project Manager toolset to support advanced workflow management. Their work enables researchers to visually construct and execute multitask computational workflows — reducing reliance on manual scripting and making it easier to orchestrate complex research pipelines directly within the Open OnDemand interface.
“Integrating intuitive workflow capabilities into Open OnDemand opens up new opportunities for researchers to manage complex pipelines efficiently,” Sussman said. “Our goal with these enhancements is to lower barriers to scientific discovery by giving users tools that mirror real research workflows.”
In addition, OSC partnered with Cendio AB to introduce a beta integration of ThinLinc with Open OnDemand. The integration focuses on providing administrators with additional options for offering Linux desktop access within HPC environments, including support for Slurm-based systems. The integration complements existing Open OnDemand functionality and does not replace current tools.
Open OnDemand already integrates noVNC, an open source project maintained by Cendio.
A beta version of the ThinLinc application for Open OnDemand is available for testing, with a fully supported release planned for later in 2026. Feedback from the HPC community will help guide future development of the integration.
A full list of contributors who helped make the Open OnDemand 4.1 release possible is available in the acknowledgements section of the 4.1 release notes.
Ongoing Community Engagement
The Open OnDemand community is supported through ongoing opportunities for collaboration, learning, and shared innovation.
The second Global Open OnDemand (GOOD) Conference will take place March 9–12, 2026, at the University of Utah. The event will bring together users, developers, and partners for technical talks, panel discussions, and networking opportunities focused on advancing web-based access to high performance computing. Registration is now open.
Beyond the annual conference, the Open OnDemand team supports the community through ongoing programming, including monthly “Tips and Tricks” webinars and open office hours that provide a forum for sharing best practices, asking questions, and shaping future development. A full schedule of upcoming events is available at openondemand.org/upcoming-events.
To learn more about Open OnDemand or get started with installation and support resources, visit openondemand.org.
Source: Lexi Biasi, OSC
The post Open OnDemand 4.1 Builds on Community-Driven Enhancements to Simplify HPC Workflows appeared first on HPCwire.
Exclusive: in 2025 briefing to Wes Streeting, officials warned reputation of tech firm behind US ICE operations would hinder rollout of data system in UK
Health officials fear Palantir’s reputation will hinder the delivery of a “vital” £330m NHS contract, according to briefings seen by the Guardian, sparking fresh calls for the deal to be scrapped.
In 2023, ministers selected Palantir, a US surveillance technology company that also works for the Israeli military and Donald Trump’s ICE operation, to build an AI-enabled data platform to connect disparate health information across the NHS.
Continue reading...For now, the self-driving car company is only providing trips to employees.
Feb. 12, 2026 — Euro-Q-Exa, the first European quantum computer from the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking in Germany, is being installed at the LRZ. The system has 54 qubits and will be supplemented by an additional system with over 150 qubits by end of 2026. It is also connected to the LRZ supercomputer. Euro-Q-Exa will be made available to European researchers and is intended to promote technical independence in quantum computing.

Joint kick-off Euro-Q-Exa: Silke Launert (BMFTR), Dieter Kranzlmüller (LRZ), Maximilian Böltl (Bavarian State Parliament), Minister of Science Markus Blume, Henna Virkkunen (EU) and Sylwia Barthel de Weydenthal (IQM) from left. Photo credit: VH/LRZ.
The starting signal for the journey into unknown dimensions has been given. In the presence of Henna Virkkunen (Executive Vice-President of the European Commission for Technical Sovereignty, Security and Democracy), Dr. Silke Launert (Parliamentary State Secretary, Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space) and Markus Blume (Bavarian State Minister for Science and the Arts), the European quantum computer ‘Euro-Q-Exa’ at the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ) of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities (BAdW) will begin working on research projects for the scientific community in Europe. Based on the ‘Radiance’ system from IQM Quantum Computers, Euro-Q-Exa features 54 quantum bits (qubits) made of superconducting circuits. A second, more powerful quantum computer with more than 150 qubits is expected to be added to the system by end of 2026.
Euro-Q-Exa is one of six quantum systems being integrated into European supercomputers by the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking to achieve technical independence in quantum computing. The European Union and the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space (BMFTR) will cover €10 million and €12 million respectively for the system, its operation and additions, while the Bavarian State Ministry of Science and the Arts (StMWK) will provide €3 million. The BMFTR is also financing the necessary personnel and material resources.
The LRZ will host and operate the innovative quantum computer. The computing center in Garching has gained extensive experience in integrating various quantum technologies into supercomputers, as well as in operating them. Euro-Q-Exa is the second hybrid quantum computer that the LRZ has installed in collaboration with IQM Quantum Computers and made available to scientists via the Munich Quantum Portal (MQP). Euro-Q-Exa reliably offers higher availability of quantum computing: if one of the systems is undergoing maintenance, researchers can continue working on the other. When coupled with the LRZ’s supercomputer, Euro-Q-Exa enables hybrid workflows, combining classic supercomputing with new quantum computing.
Anders Jensen, Executive Director of the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking commented: “The inauguration of Euro-Q-Exa represents another milestone in our journey towards a world-class European quantum computing infrastructure. This new EuroHPC quantum system reinforces our commitment to providing researchers, industry, and the public sector with cutting-edge computational resources, fostering innovation and technological sovereignty across Europe.”
High Computing Power for Large-Scale Algorithms
Euro-Q-Exa uses IQM’s Radiance technology. Designed for integration into high performance computers, the system minimizes latency and maximizes computing power, particularly in hybrid workflows. The computer offers tunable couplers and high-fidelity gates that enable a lattice topology. It is optimised for running large-scale algorithms and is cooled to below -273°C by a cryostat, stabilizing the sensitive computing units and rendering them usable.
With this architecture, Euro-Q-Exa will push the boundaries of high-performance computing (HPC). While quantum processors (QPUs) with up to 50 qubits can still be simulated on a supercomputer, this is hardly possible with 54 qubits, or only possible in several steps, due to the amount of RAM required. This is because, theoretically, each additional qubit doubles computing power.
The principle of how quantum computers work is different; they use superposition and entanglement between multiple qubits, enabling them to solve mathematical problems such as the travelling salesman problem, an optimization task from logistics that involves finding the most efficient route between locations. The number of possibilities increases exponentially with each additional location: with 10 locations, there are several million possibilities; with 58 locations, the number of variants rises to a tredecillion, which is a number with 78 digits. This makes calculation using classical methods extremely complex.
Such tasks are common in trade and logistics, as well as in finance and microchip design. Additionally, scientists hope that quantum computers will one day enable them to model electron interactions in an atom, molecular behavior, and other quantum mechanical states more precisely and efficiently. However, coherence times, noise and susceptibility to interference still limit the performance of quantum computers, although larger experiments and results are already feasible in this field of research when they are combined with classical supercomputers.
Scalable Tools for Hybrid Workflows
Euro-Q-Exa will be made available to German and European researchers via the Munich Quantum Portal (MQP) and the EuroHPC JU portal. This means that the quantum computer can be used either on its own or in combination with SuperMUC-NG, and in the future with Blue Lion – the next supercomputer at the LRZ. The system offers a variety of programming languages, as well as widely used quantum software packages such as Qiskit and PennyLane. These are provided by the Munich Quantum Software Stack (MQSS), which is being developed at Munich Quantum Valley (MQV) in collaboration with universities, research institutes and companies, and is now available for Euro-Q-Exa. The MQSS supports hybrid algorithms and workloads, as well as the development of programs for quantum computing, and offers interfaces to useful software packages.
The first research groups from Europe and the MQV have already expressed their interest in using Euro-Q-Exa to break new ground. For example, they want to use it to decipher the causes of neurodegenerative diseases, expand the methods of computer-aided pharmacology, refine climate models and improve power grids. They also hope to finally find out how quantum computers achieve their much-vaunted advantage. According to the latest findings, achieving quantum advantage requires more than just a large number of qubits and efficient entanglement.
Source: Leibniz Supercomputing Centre
The post Euro-Q-Exa Installed at LRZ as 1st EuroHPC Quantum Computer in Germany appeared first on HPCwire.
The Trump administration had removed the LGBTQ+ symbol, citing a policy limiting what can be displayed on federal property.
Feb. 12, 2026 — Powering on a laptop or smartphone activates its operating system (OS), which communicates between hardware and software, manages the flow of data between disk and memory, and conducts a host of other essential processes. The OS runs the machine and provides the user’s interface to programs and applications such as email, web browsers, spreadsheets, and games. The OS also plays an important role in the home computing environment where a device may be connected to a Wi-Fi network, a mouse, a printer, cloud-based storage, and other devices. Most personal computing devices run on Microsoft (Windows), Apple (macOS), and Android OSes.

Combining expertise in high-performance computing (HPC) hardware, software, and system administration, the Laboratory’s core Tri-Lab Operating System Stack (TOSS) team works closely with Tri-Lab counterparts at Los Alamos and Sandia national laboratories—as well as HPC vendors, Red Hat developers, and other participating sites—to maintain and enhance TOSS. Pictured (from left) at the Merced file system connected to El Capitan: Jim Silva, Jim Foraker, Olaf Faaland, and Trent D’Hooge. Credit: LLNL.
In high-performance computing (HPC), OS choices and capabilities are significantly more complicated than on a laptop. Open-source Linux software forms the foundation of most HPC OSes, which are further specialized to accommodate variations in computing hardware, such as processors, high-speed networks, and data storage. Commercial vendors may provide OS support tailored to their hardware, but one OS is generally incompatible with another unless customers are willing to make extensive modifications. As HPC technology evolves, the bespoke Linux OS running on an older HPC system is unlikely to work “as is” on a newer system.
Lawrence Livermore’s HPC center features a range of systems—from commodity clusters made up of thousands of interconnected computing nodes to specialized supercomputers including the exascale system El Capitan, which can perform more operations in one second than a million smartphones can. (See S&TR, December 2024, Introducing El Capitan.) These systems incorporate hardware from multiple vendors, different versions of software, and unique configurations. For example, the Laboratory’s current HPC lineup includes 11 types of central processing units and 5 types of graphics processing units. No two systems are exactly alike, yet all are running the same OS.
This remarkable feat reflects an ongoing investment from the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), a semi-autonomous Department of Energy (DOE) agency responsible for national security via nuclear science applications. NNSA relies heavily on HPC capabilities to carry out this mission, and for two decades its Advanced Simulation and Computing program has funded development of the Tri-Lab Operating System Stack (TOSS). The homegrown OS serves Lawrence Livermore, Los Alamos, and Sandia national laboratories—the Tri-Labs—as well as other DOE sites and even NASA.
Order from CHAOS
As computing technology has evolved over the decades, Livermore’s HPC system roster has grown steadily to meet NNSA’s advanced simulation needs. By the early 2000s, the uptick in users and machines became unwieldy for system administrators managing the operations, not to mention frustrating for users running codes on multiple systems. This fragmentation inspired Livermore’s HPC experts to create a custom OS to standardize the Laboratory’s computing environment and ensure reliability and compatibility across systems and on both classified and unclassified networks.

TOSS is installed on Livermore’s complete range of HPC systems. Representative samples include (clockwise from top left): Bengal; Magma; Corona; and three early access systems—Tenaya, RZVernal, and Tioga—deployed ahead of the exascale supercomputer El Capitan as testbeds for hardware and software components. Sited at different times between 2019 and 2023, these systems include hardware from Advanced Micro Devices, Dell, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Intel, Penguin, and SambaNova.
Fittingly, this early OS was called the clustered high availability operating system, or CHAOS. The development team did not need to start from scratch. Linux-based OSes—also known as distributions—had emerged in the HPC industry, and Livermore began working with Red Hat, a company offering enterprise-level Linux distributions to HPC centers. “CHAOS was built on top of the Red Hat distribution because we had hardware components and other needs that Red Hat didn’t yet support,” recalls Trent D’Hooge, Livermore Computing’s (LC’s) deputy division leader for operations. For example, commercial Linux distributions had not yet incorporated resource management software, which automatically allocates processors, memory, and storage for HPC workloads. CHAOS filled this gap with the Laboratory-developed Slurm (simple Linux utility for resource management) software.
CHAOS brought much needed order to Livermore’s HPC environment. System administrators more easily managed computing resources while users enjoyed consistent interfaces. This cost-effective success caught NNSA’s attention, and in 2007, CHAOS became TOSS to expand its capability to Tri-Lab programs and users. Today, Livermore leads a multisite team to adapt TOSS from Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL, rhymes with “bell”) and further develop it via partnership with Red Hat.

Originally developed as Livermore’s clustered high availability operating system (CHAOS), TOSS adoption (magenta years) has quickly increased since it began serving the Lawrence Livermore (LLNL), Los Alamos (LANL), and Sandia (SNL) national laboratories—the Tri-Labs. Many HPC systems have been procured, sited, and retired during the near-quarter-century of CHAOS–TOSS development and key decisions (blue years).
Computing in Common
Widening TOSS’s scope means the team at one site may not be familiar with computing resources at other facilities. For example, Livermore’s El Capitan and Tuolumne and Sandia’s El Dorado have in common Advanced Micro Devices’ (AMD’s) MI300A processors, while NASA was the first participating site to install TOSS on a system with NVIDIA’s Grace Hopper chips. Site-specific teams must debug and test their implementations to ensure compatibility.
D’Hooge states, “Others are using the same OS but with different hardware or different application codes, so they might see bugs we don’t, and we work together to address any issues. A nice feedback loop exists between us and the other laboratories.” The variation paves the way for quickly installing TOSS on subsequent systems with known hardware.
TOSS has also simplified HPC system management. “TOSS gives system administrators the flexibility to shift resources around their sites, and it removes knowledge silos in terms of who can do what. It’s a common basis of operations,” notes Jim Foraker, LC’s Systems Software and Security Development group leader. For users, TOSS brings familiarity and consistency. Once they learn how to use systems installed with TOSS, users do not have a steep learning curve as TOSS evolves. “Part of why we use Red Hat is because certain aspects of their distribution don’t change. If someone hopped on one of our machines that’s running TOSS a few years ago, then returned after a while, the interface would look the same to them,” explains D’Hooge.
Best of Both Worlds
Reciprocity between the HPC industry and leading computing centers such as the Laboratory continuously produces innovations in the field, including in OSes. With unique HPC capabilities serving a national security mission, Livermore often requires software solutions that fall somewhere between completely custom and commercial or open source. Public–private partnerships with vendors such as Red Hat play crucial roles in this context—to everyone’s benefit. “We’ve been at this with Red Hat for about 25 years. They treat us as more than a customer they’re selling a product to. We’re tightly integrated with them, developer to developer,” notes Foraker, who holds the designation of Red Hat Partner Engineer.

Initially developed for the Tri-Labs (magenta), TOSS is now used on more than 60 HPC systems, including other locations (blue) in the Department of Energy (DOE) complex such as Idaho National Laboratory (INL). the Kansas City National Security Campus (KCNSC), and the Naval Nuclear Laboratory (NNL) plus institutions such as NASA and the Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE) at the University of Rochester.
When Red Hat releases a new version of RHEL, the TOSS team thoroughly evaluates new features, security patches, performance improvements, bug fixes, and any other code changes. However, the team does not simply upload the upgraded OS software into TOSS. It must first gauge the impact each change may have on TOSS and users, then test the integration while validating overall stability with representative workloads and benchmarks. This process has stabilized into a monthly TOSS release cycle independent of RHEL, which Red Hat releases frequently in small increments. D’Hooge points out, “We track all RHEL releases but might not necessarily roll out all updates to the Tri-Lab systems.” (See “Version Control,” right.)
Additionally, the TOSS team pushes its own enhancements upstream to Red Hat for consideration in future RHEL versions. For example, NNSA’s procurement of systems featuring AMD’s MI300As led to support for the new processor in RHEL’s core functionality—support that could range from incorporating vendors’ hardware specifications to building new functionality. This collaborative, multistep approach also enables quick implementation of urgent patches. Foraker states, “We try to share the work as broadly as we can, so we don’t have to solve the same problem twice or make the same mistake twice. The process maximizes the impact our work has on the Linux and HPC communities.”
HPC Stewardship
TOSS is integral to NNSA’s stewardship of the nation’s HPC resources, which in turn are integral to stewardship of the U.S. nuclear stockpile. Moreover, scientific applications increasingly make use of machine-learning workflows and cloud-computing resources, so the TOSS team must anticipate support for these needs and other emerging technologies. Foraker adds, “Our job is to make sure the OS foundation is solid so users can do what they need to do.”
TOSS is more than the core functions and processes installed on 60-plus HPC systems, and more than the teamwork responsible for its development. It also represents a methodology that prioritizes high-quality, leading-edge management of NNSA’s computing environments—supporting large-scale scientific simulation codes, the HPC systems they run on, and the users who depend on both.
D’Hooge explains, “We do the work once in TOSS and share it with others. Each laboratory or site may need to make some adjustments, but we get them most of the way there and avoid duplication.” The results are proven: long-term OS stability, scalability, and security; lower maintenance and development costs; and portability across HPC systems.
Source: Holly Auten, LLNL
The post LLNL Highlights Development of Tri-Lab Operating System Stack Powering NNSA Supercomputers appeared first on HPCwire.
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Why Should Delaware Care?
Both Kent and Sussex counties are designated health care shortage areas, with residents experiencing access barriers. A new proposed ChristianaCare campus located within the Sussex County seat, a town with a population of more than 7,000, could help close that gap.
ChristianaCare, Delaware’s largest health care system, announced Thursday it aims to open a new $65 million campus in Georgetown, marking its first significant entrance into Sussex County, the state’s fastest growing region, but one that is already marked by competition in health care.
The health care system expects its new facility, which would offer emergency beds, behavioral health care, specialty care and primary care, to open by 2028. It is partnering with health care-focused developer Emerus Holdings to build the facility at 20769 DuPont Blvd., just south of the Bridgeville Road intersection.
It’s not a given, however, as the new facility still requires regulatory approval by Delaware’s Health Resources Board, which provides oversight on plans to expand health care services in order to ensure that they don’t drive up the costs of care for consumers.
Five years ago, that board denied a similar project by local competitor Beebe Healthcare.
ChristianaCare’s new facility would also come as federal funds will soon start to flow into Delaware’s southern counties to support rural health, and the hospital system continues its expansion both in and outside the state.
After a failed bid to merge with Southern New Jersey’s Virtua Health, the Georgetown plans could indicate that ChristianaCare sees more opportunity in its own backyard, and is willing to disregard the loose geographic monopolies that health care has enjoyed for decades in Delaware.
“This new campus will help close gaps in access by bringing high-quality, equitable and more convenient care directly into the community that needs it most,” ChristianaCare’s CEO Dr. Janice Nevin said in a statement. “Our goal is simple: ensure that every Delawarean can access the care they need, in the right place at the right time.”
The health care system says it expects the new campus to occupy 42,000 square feet on the outskirts of Georgetown’s city center. ChristianaCare framed its decision to expand into Georgetown as part of a commitment to serve Delaware’s aging population.
Separately, ChristianaCare announced in July it would spend $865 million to invest in Delaware health facilities across the state. One of those projects was a new cancer center in Middletown as part of its larger expansion into the suburbs south of the C&D Canal.
In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, a spokesperson for ChristianaCare said the project would not rely on the incoming federal dollars and would be part of its $865 million investment.
“We began this process more than a year ago with an in-depth market analysis to better understand the critical health care needs in Sussex County,” the spokesperson said.
ChristianaCare has also made moves out of state, as it looks to expand in the greater region.
Since 2020, ChristianaCare has ventured deeper into the suburban Philadelphia health market, purchasing defunct hospitals and building its own in the surrounding towns. The hospital system announced last year it would partner with the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, better known as CHOP, leaving Delaware’s chief pediatric hospital on the sidelines.
However, late last year the hospital and New Jersey-based Virtua Health terminated a letter of intent they signed this summer that had signaled the health systems were considering merging in the coming years.
Combining the current ChristianaCare and Virtua Health footprints would have created a system covering more than 10 contiguous counties in New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Maryland, with more than 600 facilities, nearly 30,000 employees and more than 500 residents and fellows.
The deal also would have required numerous regulatory sign-offs in both states, pitting potential hurdles to completing the deal. That included a review by attorneys general in Delaware and New Jersey because both systems are not-for-profits.
In Delaware, the prospect of an out-of-state merger was met with skepticism from Gov. Matt Meyer, who challenged the move when asked about it at a press conference in July.
“I think when any medical practice in Delaware, and especially nonprofit hospitals, get some positive return from serving Delawareans’ health, that money should be reinvested in Delaware, not in another state,” Meyer said.
For decades, Delaware’s three major health care systems largely fit into geographic monopolies: ChristianaCare serving New Castle County, Bayhealth serving Kent County and Beebe Healthcare serving Sussex County.
Over the last five years, however, a health care arms race has heated up between Bayhealth, Beebe and now TidalHealth, coming up from Salisbury, Md. They have all built or broken ground on major projects in places like Lewes, Milton or Millsboro in recent years.
That comes on the back of a post-COVID population boom in Sussex County. The region is now designated as a “Medically Underserved Area” by the federal government, with projections showing that the population will increase from 237,000 in 2022 to over 361,000 by 2050. The county is also rapidly graying, as the population growth is largely driven by retirees who will demand more health care needs.
The arrival of ChristianaCare, which to date only had primary care offices in Milford and Rehoboth Beach, will bring needed resources, but also new competition to the crowded market. Representatives from Beebe and Bayhealth declined or didn’t respond to a request for comment on ChristianaCare’s plans.
The proposal by ChristianaCare may be the biggest test of the state’s Certificate of Need law in years, especially as the booming Sussex County community is frequently requesting more health care options and Republicans decry the existence of the regulatory oversight.
In 1974, the federal government was trying to tamp down rapidly rising health care costs in America – the cost of hospital stays doubled between 1967 and 1974, and required all states to establish Certificate of Need boards that would review proposed health care facility and equipment expansions, which were thought to be unnecessarily driving up the cost of care.
It was repealed in 1987, but many states chose to continue utilizing such boards. In Delaware, the process was renamed the Certificate of Public Review in 1999 and placed under the Health Resources Board, a 16-member panel that meets monthly to review plans for new health facilities or significant expansions of existing ones.
In 2019, the board was central in a debate over whether to allow Beebe to build a freestanding emergency room in Georgetown. It ultimately denied that project, saying it was too close to Bayhealth’s Milford campus and Nanticoke Hospital in Seaford.
The board was also expected to be critical of plans by Bayhealth to build its own freestanding emergency room in Milton, which led the Dover-based health system to pull its plans.
In the years afterward, state legislators looked at weakening the board’s powers, but the proposals ultimately never proceeded. The cause of repealing the board has become a key topic for Republicans in recent years as health care costs have risen again.
The board has also been more lenient in its post-COVID reviews, however, as health care demand has also markedly grown. Bayhealth ultimately was approved for its Milton ER, and it opened the facility in 2023, while Beebe broke ground in recent months on a Millsboro ER.
The Delaware Health Resources Board is set to meet at 2 p.m. Feb. 26, when the board is likely to acknowledge it has received ChristianaCare’s proposal. No agenda has been posted, but a vote on the ChristianaCare project would likely take place at a later meeting.
Still, members of the public are able to comment.
Get Involved
The Delaware Health Resources Board will meet at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 26, at the Herman M. Holloway Sr. Campus in New Castle. Information about virtual attendance can be found here.
The post ChristianaCare eyes Sussex market with $65M Georgetown campus appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
So I’ve got some slight sensor issues where the board turns off suddenly going a couple miles an hour. I’m pretty sure it’s due to only half the sensor working but there’s nothing I can do about it at the moment. What I’m hoping is I can just ride it with the sensor back to avoid randomly getting dumped in front of every crowd of people I come across. Anyone know if that’s how it works?
Though Department of Homeland Security almost certain to shutter at midnight Friday, ICE to be largely unaffected
Democrats in the US Senate have blocked a funding package for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) amid ongoing fury over the Trump administration’s crackdown and the deaths of two people in Minneapolis.
Thursday’s vote means that the department is almost certain to shut down at midnight on Friday evening, affecting a range of services yet largely leaving the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) – the target of Democrats’ ire – unaffected because it is already the recipient of lavish federal funding.
Continue reading...Activity of immigration agents has left no part of the state unscathed even as border czar says surge would be ending
In one suburb of Minneapolis, the superintendent spends each school day driving to her district’s schools to track federal agents. Across the metro, in another suburb, a Latino church organizes food donations to deliver to thousands of families staying at home out of fear of immigration agents.
In town after town around Minnesota, federal agents have picked up immigrants and taken them away from their communities.
Continue reading...IBM said it will triple entry-level hiring in the US in 2026, even as AI appears to be weighing on broader demand for early-career workers. From a report: While the company declined to disclose specific hiring figures, it said the expansion will be "across the board," affecting a wide range of departments. "And yes, it's for all these jobs that we're being told AI can do," said Nickle LaMoreaux, IBM's chief human resources officer, speaking at a conference this week in New York. LaMoreaux said she overhauled entry-level job descriptions for software developers and other roles to make the case internally for the recruitment push. "The entry-level jobs that you had two to three years ago, AI can do most of them," she said at Charter's Leading With AI Summit. "So, if you're going to convince your business leaders that you need to make this investment, then you need to be able to show the real value these individuals can bring now. And that has to be through totally different jobs."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Canadian authorities seized firearms from the residence approximately two years ago but later returned them
Police have said they were called on multiple occasions to the home of the teenage suspect behind one of Canada’s deadliest school shootings after concerns were raised regarding mental health problems and weapons.
Six people, including a teacher and five children, were killed in a school shooting on Tuesday in the western Canadian town of Tumbler Ridge. About 25 other people were injured and two of them remain in critical but stable condition.
Continue reading...Americans, not foreign exporters, shouldered nearly the costs from the Trump administration's tariffs last year, according to the New York Fed.
NASA used Anthropic's Claude for an experiment in plotting the rover's course.
KAWASAKI, Japan, Feb. 12, 2026 — Fujitsu today announced that it will start manufacturing “Made in Japan” sovereign AI servers designed to support mission-critical operations. Production is slated to begin in March 2026 at the Fujitsu Group’s Kasashima Plant in Japan. Fujitsu will also start production of Made in Japan servers equipped with Fujitsu’s high-performance, energy-efficient FUJITSU-MONAKA processor within fiscal year 2026 (ending March 31, 2027).
Geopolitical shifts, rising cyber threats, and regulatory demands have made critical information protection an urgent global imperative. In Japan, as the designation of specified essential infrastructure service providers progresses under the Economic Security Promotion Act, system risk management and digital sovereignty are paramount for customers that are dealing with critical infrastructure. This includes minimizing data leakage, ensuring autonomous operation, complying with local laws, maintaining transparent security, and controlling technology to guarantee comprehensive IT integrity.
Overview
By promoting the following initiatives, Fujitsu aims to enhance the transparency of traceability, security risk, device operation visibility, and operational autonomy for mission-critical and sovereign domains.
About Fujitsu
Fujitsu’s purpose is to make the world more sustainable by building trust in society through innovation. As the digital transformation partner of choice for customers around the globe, our 113,000 employees work to resolve some of the greatest challenges facing humanity. Our range of services and solutions draw on five key technologies: AI, Computing, Networks, Data & Security, and Converging Technologies, which we bring together to deliver sustainability transformation. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of 3.6 trillion yen (US$23 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2025 and remains the top digital services company in Japan by market share.
Source: Fujitsu
The post Fujitsu Group Starts Manufacturing Sovereign AI Servers in Japan appeared first on HPCwire.
Married since 1998, Iowa couple Spencer and Sinikka Waugh now have his-and-hers campaign yard signs, as he pursues a state House seat and she runs for state Senate.
So a couple years ago I got hurt pretty badly falling off my Onewheel while learning how to ride it, my own fault for trying to take a video while moving and flipping over a bench, and ever since there’s a mental hurdle of ‘oh you’re going to tear your ACL again’ or ‘you’re gonna break something *again*’ any tips on getting over the annoying little voice in the back of your mind?
The sixth-generation Waymo Driver is designed to better navigate extreme weather. Here's where the self-driving company operates and where it's headed soon.
Exclusive: Decision comes after Slater lost the support of JD Vance and Pam Bondi, the attorney general
Gail Slater, the head of the US justice department’s antitrust division, was forced out of the Trump administration on Thursday after a turbulent tenure and months of simmering tensions with senior cabinet officials, according to two people directly familiar with the matter.
“It is with great sadness and abiding hope that I leave my role as AAG [assistant attorney general] for Antitrust today,” Slater said in a post announcing her departure.
Continue reading...A U.S. destroyer and a supply ship collided Wednesday during a replenishment at sea.
The Trump administration says greenhouse gases emitted from sources like cars, trucks and power plants will no longer be regulated by the federal government.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
The CIA has released a new Mandarin-language recruitment video aimed at Chinese military officers, hoping to persuade those disenchanted with corruption to turn to the U.S.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 13, No. 1,700.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 13, No. 508.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 13, No. 712.
Team USA star skier Breezy Johnson was thrown off course during the Super-G event in Italy, but she arrived at the bottom of the slope to a wedding proposal.
Seamus Culleton has been held for five months despite having valid work permit and being married to US national
An Irish court apparently issued a warrant for the arrest of the Irish man currently embroiled in controversy with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which has been ramping up detentions and activity around the United States since last year.
Seamus Culleton has spent five months in US custody and faces deportation despite having a valid work permit in a case that has attracted widespread publicity. His lawyer called him a “model immigrant” with no criminal record.
Continue reading...Feb. 12, 2026 — Once upon a time, photographers would aim a camera and click, working essentially blind to what they were actually capturing. Beyond the days or weeks needed for film development, they had no way to measure exposure accuracy, detect subtle compositional flaws, or analyze whether critical details were properly focused. Today’s digital cameras don’t just provide instant visual feedback — they offer real-time analysis through histograms, focus maps, and intelligent scene recognition that can guide photographers toward optimal results as they shoot.

Data from a variety of scientific areas being used in this superfacility breakthrough. The image displays a volume visualization of the porous transport layer from a water electrolyzer studied at the ALS. Credit: Florian Chabot and Iryna Zenyuk from UC Irvine and Stuart McElhany, Paulo Monteiro, and Roya Maboudian from UC Berkeley.
A similar leap in efficiency — and ultimately, quality — has now been achieved by forging a direct, real-time connection between the Advanced Light Source (ALS) and the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a high-performance computing facility at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). Through this link, three-dimensional (3D) X-ray images generated at the ALS can be streamed and processed on powerful supercomputers within seconds. The ALS generates exceptionally bright beams of light, including X-rays, that researchers from around the world use to study materials ranging from fuel-cell components and concrete to teeth, brain structure, and more. Just as digital photography revolutionized how quickly we learn from images, this new real-time data streaming pipeline enables scientists at the ALS to transform huge X-ray datasets into 3D images in seconds rather than hours, accelerating discovery across a range of disciplines and changing how researchers collect and interpret X-ray data.
At ALS Beamline 8.3.2, researchers use a process called microcomputed tomography (micro-CT) to obtain 3D images of microstructures inside samples without the need to physically slice them open. A series of X-ray images is collected as the sample is rotated, and the raw data is computationally converted into digital sections that can be stacked to reconstruct 3D visualizations. These scans can produce datasets of 50 gigabytes or more in size–equivalent to storing about 10,000 high-resolution photos.
Connecting a user facility like the ALS with a high-performance computing (HPC) facility implements the superfacility principle that can supercharge scientific productivity and accelerate discovery. This principle is at the heart of the new real-time data streaming pipeline at the ALS to enable real-time data analysis and feedback. This novel pipeline was developed through the NERSC’s Science Acceleration Program (NESAP) in collaboration with engineers from NERSC, an HPC facility at Berkeley Lab. The ALS and NERSC are connected by the Energy Sciences Network (ESnet), the DOE’s high-performance network for scientific research. The collaboration integrates experimental and computational resources across user facilities to enable real-time data analysis and feedback to make better scientific discoveries possible. It is now in active use for daily user experiments and serves as a model for real-time data systems across other DOE light sources. Since its initial launch, it’s been used by scientists to image the intricate insides of fuel cells, batteries, and critical materials.
“Without any prior experience working with a supercomputer, users can use one at the push of a button,” said Sam Welborn, former NESAP Postdoctoral Fellow at NERSC. “As detector data streams over the network, processes running at the supercomputer accept and reconstruct it in real time with multiple high-powered graphics processing units (GPUs). Less than 10 seconds after an acquisition is finished, users can look at the reconstruction to figure out their next experimental steps,” stated Welborn.
Dula Parkinson, an ALS staff scientist and operations manager of ALS Photon Science, and ALS Research Scientist Liz Clark demonstrated this new capability for the first time in daily production with collaborators from the Saad Bhamla Lab at Georgia Tech University. The Bhamla group is interested in exploring the physics behind a wide range of natural phenomena, from the movement of worms in clusters to flamingo feeding strategies. Their goal is to discover the physical principles behind how natural organisms function, and ultimately to find ways to apply those principles to engineer new materials and tools.
“Previously, we would write all of the images from a scan to a file at the ALS, and after the scan was done, we would start processing it, which could take tens of minutes if done locally,” said Parkinson. “Now, with the Superfacility Streaming framework developed through NESAP and with our ALS Computing and Controls teams, we stream the data as it is collected without writing it to a file, and the process starts at the beginning of a scan instead of when the scan is over. This significantly improves experimentation efficiency and enables more effective use of limited beamtime, and we’re looking forward to combining this with AI/ML tools we are developing for automated image segmentation and analysis to take this even farther.”
At the ALS, Bhamla doctoral student Nami Ha was studying bird feathers to learn how they naturally come by their unique qualities, including strength, light weight, flexibility, and insulation. Using micro-CT, researchers are able to view intricacies of these structures you can’t see using any other method. They can export the data to software for different kinds of 3D modeling and visualization, which expands the types of analyses they can perform. The scientists are using the data to understand why feathers are so good at repelling water with the hopes of applying this design to improve water-resistant materials.
“Getting all that information instantaneously during the experiment was mind-blowing! This real-time feedback not only allows us to see the data almost instantly but also enables us to refine our experiments for more successful data collection,” said Clark.
Moreover, this success reflects the coordinated work of more than 30 contributors over two years. It builds upon shared code from collaborators at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory, as well as local efforts within the Berkeley Lab’s ecosystem. Researchers and staff from ALS Beamline Controls and Photon Science Computing provided essential support for integration and testing, while ESnet, members of NERSC’s NESAP program, and Berkeley Lab’s Information Technology (IT) Division made updates to beamline infrastructure and data-acquisition software and hardware which further contributed to the achievement.
“The ALS has been NERSC’s partner for more than 10 years,” said Bjoern Enders, data science workflows architect at NERSC. “We have been working together more closely since the Superfacility Project and its successor, DOE’s Integrated Research Infrastructure program (IRI). What we are seeing here is a prime example of how connecting a user facility with a HPC facility can supercharge scientific productivity and thus accelerate scientific discovery.”
The next phase will expand the framework to support ptychographic imaging, another image-intensive technique that can map chemical compositions down to five nanometers. With such tools, researchers can see changes in how batteries charge and discharge, or how biomineral structures (in corals for example) provide exceptional strength and resilience, and superconductivity in quantum materials.
This research and the Advanced Light Source user facility are funded by the Department of Energy’s Office of Science. The National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) is the mission computing facility for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, the nation’s single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences.
About Berkeley Lab
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is committed to groundbreaking research focused on discovery science and solutions for abundant and reliable energy supplies. The lab’s expertise spans materials, chemistry, physics, biology, earth and environmental science, mathematics, and computing. Researchers from around the world rely on the lab’s world-class scientific facilities for their own pioneering research. Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest problems are best addressed by teams, Berkeley Lab and its scientists have been recognized with 17 Nobel Prizes. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.
Source: Gianna Fazioliu and Lori Tamura, Berkeley Lab
The post Berkeley Lab: Crunching Big Data into 3D Images Accelerates Discovery appeared first on HPCwire.
Here are some hints and the answers for The New York Times Connections puzzle for Feb. 13 #978.
WP Engine's third amended complaint against Automattic and WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg alleges that Mullenweg had plans to impose royalty fees on 10 hosting companies beyond WP Engine for their use of the WordPress trademark. The amended filing, based on previously sealed information uncovered during discovery, also claims Mullenweg emailed a Stripe executive to pressure the payment processor into canceling WP Engine's contract after WP Engine sued Automattic in October 2024. Newfold, the parent company of Bluehost and HostGator, is already paying Automattic for trademark use, according to the complaint, and Automattic is in conversations with other hosts. The filing challenges the 8% royalty rate as arbitrary, citing Mullenweg's comments at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 where he said the figure was based on what WP Engine "could afford to pay." Internal Automattic correspondence cited in the complaint includes Mullenweg describing his approach to WP Engine as "nuclear war" and warning that if the hosting company didn't comply, he would start stealing its customers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The EPA said it will end credits for the start/stop feature, which shuts off gas engines when cars are idle to save fuel.
Rollback of government’s ability to limit climate-heating pollution will make families ‘sicker and less safe’, environmental advocate says
The Trump administration has revoked the bedrock scientific determination that gives the government the ability to regulate climate-heating pollution. The move was described as a gift to “billionaire polluters” at the expense of Americans’ health.
The endangerment finding, which states that the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere endangers public health and welfare, has since 2009 allowed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to limit heat-trapping pollution from vehicles, power plants and other industrial sources.
Continue reading... | I Took the GTS XL to San Diego's iconic Bowtie Rim trail to see how it stacks up against High Voltage VESC and og GTS ! Link in thread!! [link] [comments] |
Lance Cpl. Chukwuemeka E. Oforah died at the age of 21 after falling overboard from the USS Iwo Jima, the Marine Corps said.
Most voters call the Democratic Party weak, while most describe the GOP as extreme.
Attorney General Pam Bondi for the first time acknowledged the existence of a secret list of domestic terrorist organizations during a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday.
“I know antifa is part of that,” Bondi said under questioning about the list from Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-Pa., the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Constitution and Limited Government. Bondi refused to offer any further details about the “domestic terrorist organization” database being compiled under President Donald Trump’s National Security Presidential Memorandum 7, or NSPM-7.
“The goal was to get her — even by denying that she would produce it — to acknowledge that it existed and then raise the alarm,” Scanlon told The Intercept.
The Justice Department had previously refused to acknowledge the list to The Intercept, despite being asked scores of questions about it over a period of months.
NSPM-7, which conflates constitutionally protected speech and political activism with “domestic terrorism” — a term that has no basis in U.S. law – specifically targets those that espouse what the administration defines as anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, anti-Christianity, antifascism, and radical gender ideologies, as well as those with “hostility toward those who hold traditional American views.”
An implementation memo Bondi issued in December directed the FBI to “compile a list of groups or entities engaged in acts that may constitute domestic terrorism.” The initial report was to be submitted to Bondi on January 3 with regular updates issued every 30 days.
A November FBI internal report obtained by The Guardian revealed that there were multiple active FBI investigations related to NSPM-7 in 27 locations. The Intercept revealed on Thursday that the FBI appears to be investigating Extinction Rebellion NYC, a climate activism group, in an inquiry that could potentially be related to NSPM-7.
Bondi’s revelation that she has a working domestic terrorist list came during four hours of back-and-forth with lawmakers that mostly focused on the recently released Justice Department files related to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. When repeatedly asked if she would commit to providing the House Judiciary Committee with the NSPM-7 list, Bondi snapped at Scanlon: “I’m not going to commit to anything to you because you won’t let me answer questions.”
After Scanlon clarified that this meant Bondi now had a “secret list of people or groups that you are accusing of domestic terrorism, but you won’t share it with Congress,” Scanlon noted that such secrecy precluded Americans from challenging their inclusion on the list. Bondi refused to address the issue and instead insulted Scanlon.
Asked about the NSPM-7 list, the FBI told The Intercept that it had “no comment.” Justice Department spokesperson Natalie Baldassarre failed to respond to questions about the size of the list or the persons or groups on it.
For months, the White House and Justice Department have continually failed to answer a troubling question from The Intercept regarding NSPM-7: Are Americans that the federal government deems to be members of domestic terrorist organizations subject to extrajudicial killings like those it claims are members of designated terrorist organizations who are targeted in boat strikes in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean?
Scanlon entered one of The Intercept’s stories on this issue into the record during the Wednesday hearing.
Bondi’s December memo, “Implementing National Security Presidential Memorandum-7: Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence,” defines “domestic terrorism” in the broadest possible terms, including “conspiracies to impede … law enforcement.”
Federal immigration agents have said they consider observing, following, and filming their operations a crime under the statute that prohibits assaulting, resisting, or impeding a federal officer. This is also the foremost statute in a directory of prioritized crimes listed in NSPM-7.
Federal officers frequently confront and threaten those observing, following, and filming them for “impeding” their efforts. In numerous instances, they have unholstered or pointed weapons at the people who filmed or followed them. Both Renee Good and Alex Pretti were killed by federal agents in Minneapolis while observing immigration agents.
When asked if Good or Pretti were on any domestic terrorism list or watchlist or under surveillance by federal authorities, a bureau spokesperson said: “The FBI has no comment.”
“The administration is keeping lists of Americans who the White House says are engaged in domestic terrorism. Those lists could include Americans who have not committed any acts of terrorism but simply disagree with this administration, people like Renee Good and Alex Pretti,” Scanlon noted during the Wednesday hearing.
When questioned about the NSPM-7 list, Bondi stated that “on February 5, 2025, an antifa member was arrested in Minneapolis.” Baldassarre did not reply to a request for clarification, but Bondi was likely referring to a Minneapolis man who allegedly described himself as an “antifa member” who was arrested on February 5 of this year, not 2025.
“This man allegedly doxxed and called for the murder of law enforcement officers, encouraged bloodshed in the streets, and proudly claimed affiliation with the terrorist organization Antifa before going on the run,” said Bondi, last week, of Kyle Wagner, 37, who was arrested on federal charges of cyberstalking and making threatening communications.
Bondi’s Justice Department memo claims that “certain Antifa-aligned extremists” profess “extreme viewpoints on immigration, radical gender ideology, and anti-American sentiment” and “a willingness to use violence against law-abiding citizenry to serve those beliefs.” Over the last decade, Republicans have frequently blamed antifa for violence and used it as an omnibus term for left-wing activists, as if it were an organization with members and a command structure.
In September, Trump signed an executive order designating antifa as a “domestic terror organization,” despite the fact that it is essentially a decentralized, leftist ideology — a collection of related ideas and political concepts much like feminism or environmentalism.
In addition to the Epstein files and NSPM-7, Bondi fielded questions about her department’s unsuccessful effort a day earlier to prosecute six Democratic lawmakers who posted a video on social media in which they reminded military personnel that they are required to disobey illegal orders. The November video led to a Trump tirade that made the White House’s failure to dismiss the possibility of summary executions of Americans even more worrisome.
“This is really bad,” the president wrote on Truth Social, “and Dangerous to our Country. Their words cannot be allowed to stand. SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR FROM TRAITORS!!! LOCK THEM UP???” A follow-up post read: “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!” Trump also reposted a comment that said: “HANG THEM GEORGE WASHINGTON WOULD !!”
Scanlon told The Intercept that while it was clear that Bondi was not going to provide substantive answers, the hearing did allow her and her colleagues to raise the alarm on a number of issues, including NSPM-7.
“Every day, we’re seeing this administration weaponize government to go after people who disagree with it. Whether it’s shooting citizens who protest or trying to indict members of Congress who suggest that it’s giving illegal military orders or trying to go after attorneys general around the country. It’s not one isolated thing,” Scanlon said. “It’s connected to a whole bunch of areas where the government isn’t doing its job and instead, is just pursuing the president’s political enemies. It’s truly frightening.”
The post Pam Bondi Admits DOJ Has a Secret Domestic Terrorist List appeared first on The Intercept.
US attorney general displayed records of Congress members’ searches into Epstein files during House hearing
Members of Congress are calling for investigations after discovering the Department of Justice created records of their research activities while they dug into files connected to Jeffrey Epstein.
Photographs taken by Reuters during a congressional hearing on Wednesday showed the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, holding a document titled “Jayapal Pramila Search History”, listing files that the Democratic US representative Pramila Jayapal had accessed during her review of the Epstein materials.
Continue reading...Japan’s Sena Tomita is the defending bronze medalist. She also runs into difficulty and will not be counting this run.
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Continue reading...Choi wins snowboard halfpipe title with third run
American star takes silver behind strong first round
The snowfall coming down on Livigno Snow Park on Thursday night helped produce one of the bigger Olympic upsets in snowboard history, as Chloe Kim’s bid to become the first rider to win three consecutive Olympic halfpipe gold medals fell just short.
Kim finished with a best score of 88.00 from her opening run, settling for silver behind surprise winner Choi Gaon of South Korea, whose heroic third run after an early fall earned 90.25 and rewrote the Olympic record books. Japan’s Mitsuki Ono took bronze with 85.00.
Continue reading...Much-needed supplies but no oil arrive on navy ships as Trump stokes island nation’s economic crisis
As the sun came up on a flat calm Florida Straits, two ships arrived off the port of Havana: the Isla Holbox, a squat logistics ship, followed by the more aggressive looking Papaloapan, whose bow ramp gave the appearance of a large beetle.
The two Mexican navy ships docked on Thursday laden with humanitarian aid as part of Mexico’s efforts to support Cuba amid a deepening crisis exacerbated by Donald Trump’s economic pressure campaign.
Continue reading...High-yield savings account interest rates remain competitive. Here's what's considered to be a good one right now.
WILMINGTON, Del., Feb. 12, 2026 — The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the global home of open source software the world relies on, today announced that Apache HugeGraph has become a Top-Level Project (TLP).
Apache HugeGraph is a full-stack platform integrating graph database, computing, and AI capabilities for massive data storage, real-time querying, and offline analytics. Supporting flexible query patterns, it processes hundreds of billions of graph elements with millisecond-level latency. Backed by a vendor-neutral, diverse community co-developed by enterprises and academia, HugeGraph seamlessly integrates with the Apache ecosystem—including Apache Flink, Apache Spark, and Apache SeaTunnel. Battle-tested in security and social networking, it now bridges graph data with LLMs to empower intelligent, data-driven applications in the AI era.
“Graduating to become an Apache Top-Level Project marks a pivotal milestone for HugeGraph,” said Jermy Li, Apache HugeGraph PMC Chair. “In the era of LLMs, graph technology has emerged as critical infrastructure—particularly for enhancing model accuracy, explainability, and creating contextual memory. HugeGraph is dedicated to bridging the gap between data and intelligence. Through our open, full-stack suite of storage, computing, and Graph RAG capabilities, we empower enterprises to uncover deep value from massive datasets. As we embark on this new chapter, we remain committed to deepening the convergence of Graph and AI, providing global developers with a more efficient and intelligent foundation.”
Open source projects need healthy communities to thrive. The ASF provides projects with services and mentorship for building resilient and durable communities throughout their lifecycle. The Apache Incubator provides services to incoming projects (called podlings) that want to enter The ASF and adopt The Apache Way.
About The Apache Software Foundation
The Apache Software Foundation (ASF) is the global home for open source software, powering some of the world’s most ubiquitous software projects, including Apache Airflow, Apache Camel, Apache Cassandra, Apache Groovy, Apache HTTP Server, and Apache Kafka. Established in 1999, The ASF is at the forefront of open source innovation, setting industry standards to advance software for the public good. The ASF’s annual Community Over Code event is where open source technologists convene to share best practices and use cases, forge critical relationships, and learn about advancements in their field.
Source: ASF
The post Apache Software Foundation Announces New Top-Level Project appeared first on HPCwire.
Angeliki Stogia tells Matthew Goodwin, who turned up to event with security, ‘women are scared to leave the house’
Labour and Reform candidates came head-to-head at a hustings in Greater Manchester for the Gorton and Denton byelection, with Labour’s candidate saying women in the constituency were scared to leave the house because of her rival’s rhetoric.
Angeliki Stogia hit out at Reform’s Matt Goodwin, who arrived at the offices of the Manchester Evening News, which was hosting the event, with security.
Continue reading...Anthropic has raised $30 billion in a Series G funding round that values the Claude maker at $380 billion as the company prepares for an initial public offering that could come as early as this year. Investors in the new round include Singapore sovereign fund GIC, Coatue, D.E. Shaw Ventures, ICONIQ, MGX, Sequoia Capital, Founders Fund, Greenoaks and Temasek. Anthropic raised its funding target by $10 billion during the process after the round was several times subscribed. The San Francisco-based company, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers, now has a $14 billion revenue run rate, about 80% of which comes from enterprise customers. It claims more than 500 customers spending over $1 million a year on its workplace tools. The round includes a portion of the $15 billion commitment from Microsoft and Nvidia announced late last year.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A judge banned the Trump administration from taking adverse action against Kelly after he and other Democratic lawmakers urged military members to "refuse illegal orders."
Ursula von der Leyen promises action plan to boost and protect sectors including defence, AI and clean tech
EU leaders agreed to move ahead with a “Buy European” policy to protect “strategic sectors” of European industry, at a summit on how to secure the continent’s future in a more volatile global economy.
At a moated castle in the east Belgian countryside, the EU’s 27 leaders gathered on Thursday for a brainstorming session on how Europe could regain its economic competitiveness relative to the US and China at a time of economic threats and political turbulence.
Continue reading...The leaders of three major immigration agencies and top Minnesota officials testified before the Senate Homeland Security Committee about the administration's immigration operations.
Chris Wormald steps down ‘by mutual consent’ after a year in post with Antonia Romeo expected to succeed him
Keir Starmer’s attempt to shake up his top team after the disastrous Peter Mandelson scandal began on Thursday, when he forced out his most senior civil servant with a view to replacing him with Antonia Romeo.
The prime minister announced that Chris Wormald was stepping down “by mutual consent” after just over a year as cabinet secretary, with Romeo almost certain to succeed him as the first woman in the job.
Continue reading...Progressive Christians speak of pain and anger as issue is put in deep freeze after London meeting
• The General Synod debate on equal marriages – a timeline
The hopes of progressive Christians in the Church of England have suffered a big blow after years of bitter and divisive debate, with the C of E’s ruling body agreeing to halt work on LGBTQ+ equality.
At a meeting in London on Thursday, the General Synod backed a document from bishops concluding that consensus between conservative and liberal camps within the church could not be reached.
Continue reading...A federal judge in D.C. said some of the 137 Venezuelan men deported last year under the Alien Enemies Act can return to challenge their removals in court.
Feb. 12, 2026 — Xinnor, a developer of high-performance storage software, has announced xiNAS, a high-performance NFS storage solution purpose-built for AI, HPC, and other data-intensive workloads. Validated on Supermicro AS-1116CS-TN NVMe servers powered by AMD EPYC processors, xiNAS delivers all-flash, scale-out performance using standard NFS semantics, without proprietary clients or specialized hardware.
Modern AI training, simulation, and analytics pipelines demand massive shared throughput with predictable latency and uninterrupted operation during failures. Traditional NAS architectures often become a bottleneck in these environments. xiNAS changes that equation by combining Xinnor’s xiRAID software RAID engine with an optimized XFS filesystem and NFS over RDMA, maximizing the performance of the underlined hardware.
In joint validation testing with Supermicro, xiNAS demonstrated up to 74.5 GB/s read and 39.5 GB/s write throughput from a single server equipped with just 12 NVMe PCIe Gen5 drives, and up to 117 GB/s read and 79.6 GB/s write throughput in a two-node scale-out configuration, demonstrating linear scalability, while maintaining strong performance during drive failures and rebuilds. Backend testing showed 97–100% efficiency of theoretical NVMe performance with minimal CPU overhead, preserving headroom for high-speed networking.
“xiNAS is designed to make NFS a performance enabler rather than a constraint for AI and HPC,” said Dmitry Livshits, CEO at Xinnor. “By tightly integrating xiRAID with an optimized filesystem and RDMA-enabled NFS, we deliver shared storage that keeps GPUs fed, scales linearly, and continues to perform even under real-world fault conditions.”
xiNAS is optimized for multi-client, multi-server deployments and supports linear bandwidth scaling as nodes are added. Key benefits include:
The validated configuration used Supermicro AS-1116CS-TN servers equipped with AMD EPYC 9004-series processors, NVIDIA BlueField-3 DPUs, and PCIe Gen5 NVMe storage, highlighting xiNAS’s ability to fully exploit modern CPU, network, and storage capabilities.
“Supermicro continues to focus on delivering application-optimized building blocks for AI and HPC,” said Lawrence Lam, VP, AI & Storage Solutions at Supermicro. “Our NVMe-optimized AS-1116CS-TN servers, combined with Xinnor’s xiNAS software stack, demonstrate how standard architectures can deliver exceptional shared-storage performance for the most demanding workloads. By combining a high-performance storage engine with an optimally pre-configured NAS server platform, xiNAS significantly simplifies and accelerates deployment for AI initiatives in vertical markets like scientific laboratories, universities, and hospitals.”
“AI and HPC workloads place intense demands on both compute and storage,” said Derek Dicker, CVP Enterprise Business Group at AMD. “AMD EPYC processors provide the core density, memory bandwidth, and I/O capabilities required to support high-performance, RDMA-enabled storage solutions like xiNAS, helping customers build balanced platforms that keep accelerators and CPUs operating at high utilization. xiNAS is engineered to efficiently leverage AMD EPYC CPU capabilities to sustain extraordinary levels of data access performance, even in worst-case conditions such as component failures or sudden peak workload bursts, ensuring consistent service levels when they matter the most.”
xiNAS is available immediately through Supermicro and its partners. The solution is delivered as complete software and hardware combo, enabling customers to easily deploy high-performance and resilient NFS storage.
The details on the validated configuration are available in the solution brief here.
For more information about xiNAS, visit https://xinnor.io/what-is-xinas.
About Xinnor
Xinnor is a software development company that specializes in creating innovative data storage solutions. Our main product is a patented software RAID technology that delivers exceptional performance. Visit xinnor.io to learn more.
Source: Xinnor
The post Xinnor Announces xiNAS NFS Storage for Data-Intensive AI and HPC appeared first on HPCwire.
Unions accuse government of acting in bad faith after Wes Streeting announces details of increase
Health unions have criticised the 3.3% pay rise imposed on 1.4 million NHS staff in England as “an insult”, with one threatening to strike over the below-inflation award.
They described the increase announced by Wes Streeting, the health secretary, as a “betrayal” of the frontline workers – including nurses, midwives and porters – who will receive it for 2026-27. The 3.3% is less than inflation, which stood at 3.4% last month, but above the rate of inflation that is expected during the next financial year.
Continue reading...These new shopping bags transformed my grocery trips from chaotic wandering into organized efficiency.
An anonymous reader shares a report: Palo Alto Networks opted not to tie China to a global cyberespionage campaign the firm exposed last week over concerns that the cybersecurity company or its clients could face retaliation from Beijing, according to two people familiar with the matter. The sources said that Palo Alto's findings that China was tied to the sprawling hacking spree were dialed back following last month's news, first reported by Reuters, that Palo Alto was one of about 15 U.S. and Israeli cybersecurity companies whose software had been banned by Chinese authorities on national security grounds. A draft version of the report by Palo Alto's Unit 42, the company's threat intelligence arm, said that the prolific hackers -- dubbed "TGR-STA-1030" in a report published on Thursday of last week -- were connected to Beijing, the two people said. The finished report instead described the hacking group more vaguely as a "state-aligned group that operates out of Asia." Attributing sophisticated hacks is notoriously difficult and debates over how best to assign blame for digital intrusions are common among cybersecurity researchers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Feb. 12, 2026 — At leading institutions across the globe, the NVIDIA DGX Spark is bringing data‑center‑class AI to lab benches, faculty offices and students’ systems. There’s even a DGX Spark hard at work in the South Pole, at the IceCube Neutrino Observatory run by the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Its petaflop‑class performance enables local deployment of large AI applications, from clinical report evaluators to robotics perception systems, all while keeping sensitive data on site and shortening iteration loops for researchers and learners.
Powered by the NVIDIA GB10 superchip and the NVIDIA DGX operating system, each DGX Spark unit supports AI models of up to 200 billion parameters and integrates seamlessly with the NVIDIA NeMo, Metropolis, Holoscan and Isaac platforms, giving students access to the same professional-grade tools used across the DGX ecosystem.
Read more below on how DGX Spark powers groundbreaking AI work at leading institutions worldwide.
IceCube Neutrino Observatory: Studying Particles in the South Pole
At the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica, researchers are using DGX Spark to run AI models for its experiments studying the universe’s most cataclysmic events, using subatomic particles called neutrinos.
Traditional astronomy methods, based on detecting light waves, enable observing about 80% of the known universe, according to Benedikt Riedel, computing director at the Wisconsin IceCube Particle Astrophysics Center. A new way to explore the universe — using gravitational waves and particles like neutrinos — unlocks examining the most extreme cosmic environments, including those involving supernovas and dark matter.
“There’s no hardware store in the South Pole, which is technically a desert, with relative humidity under 5% and an elevation of 10,000 feet, meaning very limited power,” Riedel said. “DGX Spark allows us to deploy AI in a compartmentalized and easy fashion, at low cost and in such an extremely remote environment, to run AI analyses locally on our neutrino observation data.”
NYU: Using Agentic AI for Radiology Reports
At NYU’s Global AI Frontier Lab, the ICARE (Interpretable and Clinically‑Grounded Agent‑Based Report Evaluation) project runs end-to-end on a DGX Spark in the lab. ICARE uses collaborating AI agents and multiple‑choice question generation to evaluate how closely AI‑generated radiology reports align with expert sources, enabling real‑time clinical evaluation and continuous monitoring without sending medical imaging data to the cloud.
“Being able to run powerful LLMs locally on the DGX Spark has completely changed my workflow,” said Lucius Bynum, data science assistant professor and a faculty fellow at the NYU Center for Data Science. “I have been able to focus my efforts on quickly iterating and improving the research tool I’m developing.”
NYU researchers also use DGX Spark to run LLMs locally as part of interactive causal modeling tools that generate and refine semantic causal models — structured, machine‑readable maps of cause‑and‑effect relationships between clinical variables, imaging findings and potential diagnoses. This setup lets teams rapidly design, test and iterate on advanced models without waiting for cluster resources, including for privacy- and security‑sensitive applications such as in healthcare, where data must stay on premises.
Harvard: Decoding Epilepsy with AI
At Harvard’s Kempner Institute for the Study of Natural and Artificial Intelligence, neuroscientists are using DGX Spark as a compact desktop supercomputer to probe how genetic mutations in the brain drive epilepsy. The system lets researchers run complex analyses in real time without needing to wait for access to large institutional clusters.
The team, led by Kempner Institute Co-Director Bernardo Sabatini, is studying about 6,000 mutations in excitatory and inhibitory neurons, building protein-structure and neuronal-function prediction maps that guide which variants to test next in the lab.
DGX Spark acts as a bridge between benchtop and cluster‑scale computing at Harvard. Researchers first validate workflows and timing on a single DGX Spark, then scale successful pipelines to large GPU clusters for massive protein screens.
ASU: Enabling Campus‑Scale Innovation
Arizona State University was among the first universities to receive multiple DGX Spark systems, which now support AI research across the campus, spanning initiatives for memory care, transportation safety and sustainable energy.
One ASU team led by Yezhou “YZ” Yang, associate professor in the School of Computing and Augmented Intelligence, is using DGX Spark to power advanced perception and robotics research, including for applications such as AI‑enabled, search-and-rescue robotic dogs and assistance tools for visually impaired users.
Mississippi State: Empowering Computer Science and Engineering Students
In the computer science and engineering department at Mississippi State University, DGX Spark serves as a hands‑on learning platform for the next generation of AI engineers.
The enthusiasm around DGX Spark at Mississippi State is captured through lab‑driven outreach, including an unboxing video created by a lab working to advance applied AI, foster AI workforce development and drive real-world AI experimentation across the state.
University of Delaware: Transforming Research Across Disciplines
When ASUS delivered the school’s first Ascent GX10 — powered by DGX Spark — Sunita Chandrasekaran, professor of computer and information sciences and director of the First State AI Institute, called it “transformative for research,” enabling teams across disciplines like sports analytics and coastal science to run large AI models directly on campus instead of relying on costly cloud resources. Through the ASUS Virtual Lab program, schools can test GX10 performance remotely before deployment.
ISTA: Training Big LLMs on a Small Desktop
At the Institute of Science and Technology Austria, researchers are using an HP ZGX Nano AI Station — a compact system based on NVIDIA DGX Spark — to train and fine‑tune LLMs right on a desktop. The team’s open source LLMQ software enables working with models of up to 7 billion parameters, making advanced LLM training accessible to more students and researchers.
Because the ZGX Nano includes 128GB of unified memory, the entire LLM and its training data can remain on the system, avoiding the complex memory juggling usually required on consumer GPUs. This helps teams move faster and keep sensitive data on premises. Read this research paper on ISTA’s LLMQ software.
Stanford: A Pipeline for Prototyping
At Stanford University, researchers are using DGX Spark to prototype complete training and evaluation pipelines to run their Biomni biological agent workflows locally before scaling to large GPU clusters. This enables a tight, iterative loop for model development and benchmarking, and automates complex analysis and experimental planning directly in the lab environment.
The Stanford research team reported that DGX Spark provides performance similar to big cloud GPU instances — about 80 tokens per second on a 120 billion‑parameter gpt‑oss model at MXFP4 via Ollama — while keeping the entire workload on a desktop.
College students from across the globe are invited to participate in Treehacks, a massive student hackathon running Feb. 13-15 at Stanford, which will feature DGX Spark units from ASUS.
See how DGX Spark is transforming higher education and student innovation at Stanford by joining this livestream on Friday, Feb. 13, at 9 a.m. PT.
More from HPCwire: NVIDIA DGX Spark Arrives for World’s AI Developers
Source: Max Starubinskiy, Nvidia
The post NVIDIA DGX Spark Powers Big Projects in Higher Education appeared first on HPCwire.
A campaign of ethnic cleansing and ‘tectonic’ new legal measures are killing the two-state solution to which other governments pay lip service
Protecting archaeological sites. Preventing water theft. The streamlining of land purchases. If anyone doubted the real purpose of the motley collection of new administrative and enforcement measures for the illegally occupied West Bank, Israel’s defence minister spelt it out: “We will continue to kill the idea of a Palestinian state,” Israel Katz said in a joint statement with the finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich.
While the world’s attention was fixed upon the annihilation in Gaza, settlers in the West Bank intensified their campaign of ethnic cleansing. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed there since October 2023; a fifth of them were children. Many more have been driven from their homes by relentless harassment and the destruction of infrastructure, with entire Palestinian communities erased across vast swathes of land.
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...Judge reprimands defense secretary over attempt to reduce Arizona senator’s military rank and pension
A US judge on Thursday blocked the Pentagon from reducing Senator Mark Kelly’s retired military rank and pension pay because he urged troops to reject unlawful orders.
The preliminary ruling by Richard Leon, a George W Bush appointee, is the latest setback for Donald Trump in his campaign of vengeance against perceived political enemies, which has drawn opposition from judges across the ideological spectrum.
Continue reading...Vladyslav Heraskevych was removed from the men’s skeleton event for refusing to remove a helmet with portraits of Ukrainian athletes who’ve died in the war with Russia.
Fournier Beaudry and Cizeron’s Olympic competition is set against backdrop of assault and abuse allegations involving their former partners
The American duo of Madison Chock and Evan Bates, the reigning three-time world champions contentiously missed out on Olympic ice dance gold on Wednesday despite a flawless skate. But the controversy surrounding the event is not merely a debate over artistic and technical merits.
Gold went by a narrow margin to the French duo of Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron. It was a stunning achievement for a partnership that is less than a year old. But the union was forged after the fallout from sexual assault allegations levelled at Fournier Beaudry’s boyfriend and former ice dance partner, while Cizeron is the subject of allegations of abusive conduct from his erstwhile skating partner.
Continue reading...The Federal Trade Commission sent a letter to Tim Cook one day after President Trump circulated a report raising questions about Apple News' practices.
The firm remains confident even as the market flips from seeing it as an AI winner to fearing its profit margin will implode
As the FTSE 100 index bobs along close to all-time highs, it is easy to miss the quiet share price crash in one corner of the market. It’s got a name – the “Claude crash”, referencing the plug-in legal products added by the AI firm Anthropic to its Claude Cowork office assistant.
This launch, or so you would think from the panicked stock market reaction in the past few weeks, marks the moment when the AI revolution rips chunks out of some of the UK’s biggest public companies – those in the dull but successful “data” game, including Relx, the London Stock Exchange Group, Experian, Sage and Informa.
Continue reading...A new report from Google warns the industry of attempts to clone AI models.
Federal Bureau of Investigation agents, at least one of whom works on counterterrorism, went to the home of a former member of a climate activism group for questioning last week, potentially signaling a new escalation in the Trump administration’s promise to criminalize nonprofits and activist groups as domestic terrorists.
Two FBI agents, one from New York’s Joint Terrorism Task Force, told a former member of Extinction Rebellion NYC they wanted to ask him about the group at his home upstate on Friday, an attorney for the group told The Intercept. The visit followed a prior attempt to reach him at his old address.
The FBI’s apparent probe of Extinction Rebellion NYC comes as the Justice Department ramps up its surveillance of activists protesting immigration enforcement and the Trump administration creates secret lists of domestic enemies under Trump’s National Security Presidential Memorandum 7, or NSPM-7.
“I believe this to be a significant escalation of the criminal legal system against XR and find it very troubling,” said Ron Kuby, the Extinction Rebellion attorney. “This is usually the way we find out an actual investigation is underway and is often followed by other visits and other actions.”
The former Extinction Rebellion member, who asked to remain anonymous out of fear for his safety, said that the visit came after a phone call in January from a special agent that he assumed was a scam.
“I was skeptical the phone call was really from the FBI, but after I declined to speak with the agent, she said that she was standing outside my door,” he said. She was actually at the activist’s former address, which he said made him additionally dubious. But last week, when the agents showed up at his current address, he said he saw the agent’s business card through his door.
Kuby confirmed that the agent’s business card information corresponded to a current member of the FBI’s New York Joint Terrorism Task Force. A text message from the agent, reviewed by The Intercept, shows she identified herself and stated that she was at the former member’s house to question him about Extinction Rebellion. Her name, title, and phone number match a known special agent on the task force, according to court records.
Reached by The Intercept, a public affairs officer for the New York FBI field office said, “Per longstanding DOJ policy, we cannot confirm or deny the existence or nonexistence of any investigation.”
The DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Extinction Rebellion NYC is a chapter of a loose international climate justice movement that does highly public direct actions, like an April Earth Day spray-painting over the presidential seal inside Trump Tower in Manhattan. Kuby said none of the group’s actions are violent or rise above the level of misdemeanors, and would not typically be of interest to federal counterterrorism investigators.
The former member said he had not been involved in any Extinction Rebellion actions in two years and hadn’t participated in anything that he thought would send the FBI to his door.
“They repeatedly pursued this member and traveled hundreds of miles – this suggests a real investigative effort.”
“All of our actions are incredibly public,” he said. He recalled that the agent said she had some questions about Extinction Rebellion NYC, and that he wasn’t in any trouble, before the activist declined to speak and closed his door.
Why the FBI’s counterterrorism task force would investigate Extinction Rebellion is unknown, Kuby said.
“Often, the FBI starts with former members of a group, or less central people, to begin investigations,” Kuby said. “The fact that they repeatedly pursued this member, and traveled hundreds of miles from his old address in NYC – this suggests a real investigative effort.”
Trump’s September presidential memorandum, dubbed NSPM-7, called for the National Joint Terrorism Task Force and its local offices to investigate a broad spectrum of progressive groups and donors for “anti-fascism” beliefs.
A November FBI internal report obtained by The Guardian revealed that there were multiple active FBI investigations related to NSPM-7 in 27 locations, including New York, where the agent investigating Extinction Rebellion works. Trump’s directive instructed Joint Terrorism Task Forces to proactively investigate groups and activists with vague language that civil liberty watchdogs say could easily criminalize protected speech and protest.
FBI agents also visited several activists affiliated with Extinction Rebellion and other climate groups in the Boston area last March, according to a local news report. The reasons for those visits remain unclear, and the activists involved said nothing came of them. The FBI’s Boston Division declined to comment to the press at the time.
After Extinction Rebellion NYC members protested New York Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi’s town hall at a Long Island synagogue last month, objecting to his vote to increase ICE funding, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon posted on X that she would be investigating the protest to see “whether federal law has been broken.”
None of the activists involved in the Suozzi protest have been contacted by federal investigators, representatives for the group told The Intercept. Suozzi did not reply to messages.
In 2023, then-Florida Senator and current Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote a letter to then-FBI Director Christopher Wray and DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas asking them to bar members of Extinction Rebellion in the U.K. from the U.S. in response to a report that the group planned to protest at federal properties.
“Among other things, the group will allegedly block highways and disrupt federal properties, but violence and terrorist acts cannot be discounted given the group’s past threats,” Rubio wrote in the 2023 letter. He also used similar language in proposed legislation against “antifa” protests in 2022.
Nate Smith, an Extinction Rebellion activist who took part in the Suozzi protest, objected to characterizations of the group’s activism as terrorism.
“Is petitioning an elected official at a public event what makes America great, or a federal offense?” Smith said. “I get if you don’t like it. That’s half the point, but ‘terrorism’?”
There have also been scattered reports of FBI agents visiting anti-ICE protesters around the country. While the FBI’s interest in Extinction Rebellion remains unclear, the group pointed to Trump’s NSPM-7 directive.
“We did not anticipate that we would be among the first groups of those who speak inconveniently to be targeted,” Extinction Rebellion NYC said in a public statement. “We did not anticipate the level of capitulation from our country’s hallowed institutions and political opposition.”
The post FBI Counterterrorism Agents Spent Weeks Seeking a Climate Activist — Then Showed Up at His Door appeared first on The Intercept.
These vitamins can be the key to keeping you aging well.
The White House's border czar, Tom Homan, announced on Thursday that a significant drawdown of immigration enforcement agents in Minnesota was under way and he had proposed that the surge there should conclude. Tim Walz, the state's Democratic governor, told reporters he was 'cautiously optimistic'
Continue reading...With mail-in voting growing in popularity, one of the questions that has arisen is the ability of election boards to count votes postmarked before Election Day but received afterwards. In Watson v. Republican National Committee, the Supreme Court will consider that question on March 23, 2026, in a case coming from Mississippi.
Last fall, the Court also heard arguments in Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections, a case about who can contest late-received ballots. In a 7-2 decision issued in January 2026, the Supreme Court—in an opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts—overturned a lower-court decision from Illinois that prevented a political candidate from challenging a state law that allowed postmarked ballots received up to two weeks after Election Day. Roberts said Michael Bost and two others had Article III standing under the Constitution to challenge the law permitting the late-arriving ballots.
Now, the Supreme Court turns to a related question: Do federal laws preempt a state law that allows ballots cast by federal election day to count if officials receive them after election day?
The Election Clause and the Watson Case
The Constitution’s Article 1, Section 4, the Elections Clause, allows individual states to establish the “Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives.” However, Congress can at “any time by Law make or alter such Regulations.” Congress has passed statutes 2 U.S.C. § 7, 2 U.S.C. § 1, and 3 U.S.C. § 1, that set the Tuesday after the first Monday in November, in every even-numbered year, as the “election” day for federal offices. This year, the federal election day is Nov. 3, 2026.
In Watson, the state of Mississippi permits mail-in absentee ballots to be received and counted after Election Day in certain circumstances. The ballots “must be postmarked on or before the date of the election and received by the registrar no more than five (5) business days after the election.” Mississippi Secretary of State Michael Watson is contesting a Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals decision striking down the late-counting provision of the state law.
In 2024, the Republican National Committee, the Mississippi Republican Party, and others sued Watson in his capacity as Mississippi Secretary of State and several county officials. They believe only federal statutes defining the power of Congress to set the date for federal elections can permit the counting of ballots received after election day. The state law, they argue, violates the rights of candidates to stand for office protected by the First and 14th Amendments.
A federal district court agreed with the state of Mississippi, deciding there was not a conflict between the state law and the federal statutes. The court explained, “All that occurs after election day is the delivery and counting of ballots cast on or before election day.” However, three Fifth Circuit judges came to a different conclusion. Citing text, precedent, and history, the judges ruled that federal election day “is the day by which ballots must be both cast by voters and received by state officials.” The full Fifth Circuit denied a case rehearing in a 10-5 vote. The Supreme Court accepted the case on Nov. 10, 2025.
The Arguments at Court
In their most recent brief at the Court, Mississippi state attorney general Lynn Fitch and solicitor general Scott G. Stewart note that most states allow timely cast ballots to be counted if election officials receive the ballots soon after election day. In their view, an election happens at the time when voters fill out and submit a ballot. They cite Newberry v. United States (1921), when Justice James Clark McReynolds concluded the word “election” “now has the same general significance as it did when the Constitution came into existence — [the] final choice of an officer by the duly qualified electors.” The brief also cites similar examples from historical dictionaries.
“An election thus occurs when voters make their choice of officers and that choice is conclusive—final. Under the federal election-day statutes, then, election day is the day by which voters must conclusively choose federal officers,” the state of Mississippi argues. “An election thus does not depend on when ballots are received.”
The state of Mississippi also points to the potential nationwide impact of letting the Fifth Circuit’s ruling stand. “The rule the court of appeals adopted would doom the laws of the nearly 30 States that today accept some ballots after election day—including for military voters,” it concluded. The state cites the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA), a law that permits the late receival of overseas military and absentee ballots.
The respondents paint a much different picture. Gilbert C. Dickey, counsel for the Republican National Committee and the Republican Party of Mississippi, tells the court that “[w]hen Congress designated a single ‘day for the election,’ it set a deadline. If a state law extends the election after that deadline, it conflicts with Congress’s timing decision and to that extent is void.”
Dickey cites Foster v. Love (1997), a Supreme Court decision in which Justice David Souter writing for a unanimous court said that Louisiana’s open primary system improperly extended an election deadline set by Congress and thus conflicted with the intent of lawmakers.
Unlike the state of Mississippi, Dickey believes that “the election concludes when all ballots are received,” and that the Fifth Circuit correctly held that Mississippi’s law allowing late-arriving ballots to be counted is void. “The election-day statutes govern when States must close the ballot box, not when voters must make their selection,” Dickey says.
Dickey also cites a concurring opinion from Justice Brett Kavanaugh in DNC v. Wisconsin State Legislature (2020), which said that “[f]or important reasons, most States, including Wisconsin, require absentee ballots to be received by election day, not just mailed by election day. Those States want to avoid the chaos and suspicions of impropriety that can ensue if thousands of absentee ballots flow in after election day and potentially flip the results of an election.”
The Issues at Stake
The outcome of Watson v. Republican National Committee will be closely watched with a federal election to be held this November, and especially if the Court’s decision is announced in late June 2026. The Court’s majority could strike down the Mississippi law on narrow grounds, invalidate similar state laws, uphold Mississippi’s right to determine how it counts mail-in, absentee, and overseas votes, or return the case to lower courts for reconsideration.
In either event, it may not be the last time the nine justices confront related issues since its decision in Bost gives aggrieved federal candidates the right to pursue similar legal claims. The biggest question will be if the Court will provide guidance or a rule that will be in place on Nov. 3, 2026, to help local election officials deal with late-arriving votes.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
Tom Homan says Trump has backed ‘significant drawdown’ in the state, where two US citizens have been killed
The Trump administration has claimed it is drawing down its immigration crackdown in Minnesota that led to the death of two US citizens, mass detentions and widespread protests.
The move was announced by Tom Homan, the US border czar, at a press briefing on Thursday.
Continue reading...A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to facilitate the return of Venezuelan migrants who were deported to a Salvadoran prison last year and then released into other countries.
Microsoft is planning to bring smartphone-style app permission prompts to Windows 11, requiring apps to get explicit user consent before they can access sensitive resources like the file system, camera and microphone. The company's Windows Platform engineer Logan Iyer said the move was prompted by applications increasingly overriding user settings, installing unwanted software, and modifying core Windows experiences without permission. A separate initiative called Windows Baseline Security Mode will enforce runtime integrity safeguards by default, allowing only properly signed apps, services, and drivers to run. Both changes will roll out in phases as part of Microsoft's Secure Future Initiative, which the company launched in November 2023 after a federal review board called its security culture "inadequate."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
But, after second day of Wall Street falls, analysts say sell-off ‘may overstate AI’s immediate risk to complex deal-making’
Shares in commercial property services companies have tumbled, in the latest sell-off driven by fears over disruption from artificial intelligence.
After steep declines on Wall Street, European stocks in the sector were hit on Thursday.
Continue reading...You can now watch Google's immersive YouTube videos on the Vision Pro. Maybe Google Maps will be next?
Officer alleged to have had ‘romantic relationship’ with ‘daughter’ of man ‘listed as his brother’ in investigation
A federal immigration supervisor who allegedly lived with his undocumented girlfriend has been charged with harboring an undocumented person, Texas federal prosecutors said on Wednesday.
Andres Wilkinson’s alleged “romantic relationship” with this woman caught the eye of authorities last spring. Authorities later received information “indicating” the woman was Wilkinson’s niece, according to a criminal complaint.
Continue reading...Elbridge Colby tells meeting in Brussels that US plans to reduce conventional forces in Europe but remains committed to Nato alliance
The Pentagon’s policy chief, Elbridge Colby, has told European Nato defence ministers in Brussels that they need to step up their combat capabilities and take the lead in protecting their continent from the Russian threat.
The influential undersecretary for war, sent by the White House in place of his boss, Pete Hegseth, said the US would reduce conventional forces in Europe but insisted Washington remained committed to the military alliance.
Continue reading...Oklahoma has carried out its first execution of the year on a man convicted of killing two men in a drive-by shooting.
An anonymous reader shares a report: The abrupt closure of El Paso's airspace late Tuesday was precipitated when Customs and Border Protection officials deployed an anti-drone laser on loan from the Department of Defense without giving aviation officials enough time to assess the risks to commercial aircraft, according to multiple people briefed on the situation. The episode led the Federal Aviation Administration to abruptly declare that the nearby airspace would be shut down for 10 days, an extraordinary pause that was quickly lifted Wednesday morning at the direction of the White House. Top administration officials quickly claimed that the closure was in response to a sudden incursion of drones from Mexican drug cartels that required a military response, with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy declaring in a social media post that "the threat has been neutralized." But that assertion was undercut by multiple people familiar with the situation, who said that the F.A.A.'s extreme move came after immigration officials earlier this week used an anti-drone laser shared by the Pentagon without coordination with the F.A.A. The people spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. C.B.P. officials thought they were firing on a cartel drone, the people said, but it turned out to be a party balloon. Defense Department officials were present during the incident, one person said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Move puts AI firm in opposition to ChatGPT maker OpenAI, which has advocated for less stringent AI regulations
Anthropic will spend $20m to back US political candidates who support regulating the AI industry, according to a company statement released on Thursday. Anthropic’s donation puts it in opposition to the ChatGPT maker OpenAI, which has advocated for less stringent regulation of AI.
The company is donating to Public First Action, a political group that opposes federal efforts to quash state AI regulations like a December executive order issued by Donald Trump. One of the candidates that the group is backing is Republican Marsha Blackburn, who is running for governor in Tennessee and who opposed an effort in Congress to bar states from passing AI laws.
Continue reading...Protesters are enjoying greater freedom of expression since Nicolás Maduro’s downfall despite lack of regime change
Protesters have taken to the streets of cities across Venezuela in the latest sign of an embryonic political shift after Nicolás Maduro’s recent downfall.
Student demonstrators gathered on the campus of the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas on Thursday to demand the release of all of the country’s political prisoners, the return of exiled activists and a full transition to democracy. “Who are we? Venezuela! What do we want? Freedom!” they shouted.
Continue reading...Seamus Culleton says he's been held for 5 months in a "filthy" ICE detention camp despite a U.S. work permit and green card application.
Border czar Tom Homan announced Thursday that Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota is concluding, with a drawdown of federal immigration officers set to occur over the course of next week.
Top Trump administration officials had decided to terminate Abigail Slater as the Justice Department's antitrust chief just before she announced her departure on social media.
The gloves will be tested for DNA as the search for Nancy Guthrie continues.
The London derby sees the Gunners looking to reinstate a 6-point lead at the top of the standings.
CNET has spent years testing security cams to find the best. Here are the top models with the latest technology.
Savannah Guthrie shared two video clips and a family photo of her mother Nancy Guthrie as the search for the 84-year-old continued.
Labor unions are fundraising and providing mutual aid for workers affected by ICE surges in Minnesota and across US
Labor unions are fundraising for workers affected by the surge of immigration enforcement across the US, providing legal and financial support to members affected by the brutal crackdown.
Nearly $20,000 was raised for a homecare worker, Maria, a member of Service Employees International Union Local 503 in Salem, Oregon, and a US citizen who was attacked by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on 29 January.
Continue reading...The Bob Coveiro (the Gravedigger) Law ‘recognises the emotional bond between guardians and their pets’
A dog that remained beside his former owner’s grave for 10 years has now given his name to a new state law allowing pets to be buried alongside their loved ones in São Paulo.
The new law – already being informally referred to as the Bob Coveiro (the Gravedigger) Law, in tribute to its inspiration – was signed this week by the governor of Brazil’s most populous state, the conservative Tarcísio de Freitas.
Continue reading...Some travelers are finding they don't have storage above their seats when they get on the plane because early boarders are taking up the overhead bins.
The messaging platform WhatsApp says Russia has "attempted to fully block" its service inside the country, "to drive people to a state-owned surveillance app."
The club made a statement that did not refer to Ratcliffe’s comments but said it “prides itself on being an inclusive and welcoming club”
Here is video of Jim Ratcliffe making his comment about the UK being “colonised” by immigrants.
Kemi Badenoch has urged Keir Starmer to delay the departure of Sir Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary, so that he remains in post to oversee the release of government documents relating to Peter Mandelson’s time as ambassador to Washington.
It is hard to escape the conclusion that the cabinet secretary is simply the latest person to be thrown under a bus by this prime minister.
It is all the more concerning to be changing cabinet secretary in the midst of the ongoing scandal over the appointment of Lord Mandelson and his conduct in office.
Changing the cabinet secretary in the middle of this scandal – or more precisely forcing out the incumbent without any clear process – would be an extraordinary thing to do.
Any individual appointed in the circumstances, without a full process to point to and in midst of managing a scandal, could find it difficult to demonstrate impartiality.
Continue reading...Award was presented as president directed Pentagon to buy billions of dollars’ worth of energy from coal plants
Donald Trump was crowned the “undisputed champion of beautiful clean coal” during a White House ceremony on Wednesday, during which the president received a trophy after ordering the US defense department to purchase billions of dollars’ worth of power from coal plants.
The award was reportedly granted by the Washington Coal Club, an advocacy group with financial ties to the coal industry.
Continue reading...As the UK lurches from crisis to crisis, is it becoming ungovernable? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…
Our analysts discuss the challenges facing Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
As Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer ploughs through crisis after crisis, his Labour Party faces multiple threats in upcoming local elections. Our Chatham House experts examine whether having six prime ministers in a decade is a sign that Britain, like some of its neighbours, has more fundamental underlying problems that make it increasingly hard to govern.
Host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Olivia O’Sullivan, Director of the UK in the World Programme at Chatham House and Grégoire Roos, Director of the Europe and Russia and Eurasia Programmes.
Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.
More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts, Spotify.
Single-digit credit card rates are rare in today's market, but could still be achievable through these routes.
Your tax refund is coming, but could debt collectors grab it first? Here's what to know before the check arrives.
They aren't cheap at $330, but Sony's new flagship noise-canceling earbuds may very well be the best out there right now. Here's why.
Florida judge rejects BBC move to put off disclosing internal documents relating to spliced version of 2021 speech
President Trump’s multibillion dollar lawsuit against the BBC over the editing of one of his speeches has been set for a year’s time.
In a blow to the corporation, the Florida judge has also rejected the BBC’s attempt to put off disclosing internal documents relating to the episode of Panorama that contained the spliced version of Trump’s 2021 address.
Continue reading...With help from experts, we've figured out how to buy the right high-protein bar and avoid getting stuck with a candy bar disguised as one.
Amazon engineers have been pushing back against internal policies that steer them toward Kiro, the company's in-house AI coding assistant, and away from Anthropic's Claude Code for production work, according to a Business Insider report based on internal messages. About 1,500 employees endorsed the formal adoption of Claude Code in one internal forum thread, and some pointed out the awkwardness of being asked to sell the tool through AWS's Bedrock platform while not being permitted to use it themselves. Kiro runs on Anthropic's Claude models but uses Amazon's own tooling, and the company says roughly 70% of its software engineers used it at least once in January. Amazon says there is no explicit ban on Claude Code but applies stricter requirements for production use.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
At first, Steven Saari said, federal immigration agents seemed to think he was one of them.
Saari, a Marine Corps combat veteran who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, went to the scene of Alex Pretti’s killing in Minneapolis less than an hour after federal agents fired the fatal shots. He was wearing his Marine camouflage and carrying a lawfully owned 9mm Glock handgun on his right hip, as he does every day, he told The Intercept. Agents on the scene “thought I was undercover,” Saari said. “They kept asking what agency I was with.”
When Saari told them he was not with any agency, their demeanor shifted. Federal immigration agents soon aimed M4-style rifles at his head, footage reviewed by The Intercept shows, their fingers on the trigger less than a minute’s walk away from where Pretti was killed.
“More and more Border Patrol and ICE agents gathered around me,” Saari said. “Then they moved in with rifles and handguns drawn.”
The encounter raises questions about how federal agents assessed threats, used force, and made arrest decisions in the immediate aftermath of Pretti’s killing. In Saari’s case, he and his attorney told The Intercept, federal agents took scans and samples of his biometric data and made a copy of his phone — without obtaining a warrant.
Before the agents apprehended him, Saari said he was standing on the sidewalk observing events — not recording, protesting, or engaging with federal agents until they approached him. When they did, Saari said agents issued conflicting commands and attempted to handcuff him without first securing his firearm. He said officers briefly positioned his right hand on his handgun while pulling his arms behind his back, leaving him unsure how they expected him to comply.
Standard law enforcement firearms training typically emphasizes securing a weapon before attempting to restrain an armed person.
Saari said he feared agents might shoot him when his hand brushed the gun, even though he said officers, not his own movements, placed it there.
Agents arrested Saari and brought him to the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, where he was detained for at least six hours before being released without charges.
Reached for comment, ICE referred The Intercept to Customs and Border Protection. Neither CBP nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to requests for comment.
Inside the federal building, Saari said agents shackled his hands and feet, photographed him, scanned his face, and forced him to provide a DNA sample by depressing his tongue and swabbing the inside of his mouth. He said agents denied him access to an attorney, even though they were present elsewhere in the building and in contact with civilians and federal officials that day.
“I asked for an attorney probably a hundred times and was never given one,” Saari said. “I was never told why I was being arrested.”
Then, Saari said, “They took my cell phone and cloned it. They actually told me they did that.”
Saari said agents did not ask him to unlock the device, nor did they provide a warrant, paperwork, or explanation authorizing the search.
“They took my cell phone and cloned it. They actually told me they did that.”
“Every step of this process raises red flags,” said Shauna Kieffer, the vice president of the Minnesota Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, who is now representing Saari. “You don’t get to detain someone without cause, deny them access to counsel, seize their phone, and then search or copy it without a warrant.”
Law enforcement may seize a phone during an arrest, but officers generally cannot access or duplicate its data without judicial authorization, said Nathan Wessler, deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. He said the only exception involves narrow emergency circumstances, which typically do not apply once both a person and their phone are already in custody.
“Once the phone is secured and the person is secured, it’s very hard to imagine what kind of emergency would justify searching or copying it without a warrant,” Wessler said.
Failure to get a warrant raises serious concerns of violating the Fourth Amendment, Wessler added, pointing to the 2014 Supreme Court case Riley v. California, in which the court found police are generally not allowed to search an arrested person’s cell phone without a specific warrant.
“The government needs a warrant to search or copy the contents of a phone, just as it would need a warrant to look through it,” Wessler said. And that warrant “has to be particularized to the evidence the government actually has probable cause to seek,” he added. “You don’t get a blank check to rummage through someone’s digital life.”
“You don’t get a blank check to rummage through someone’s digital life.”
About seven hours after his arrest, Saari was released into sub-zero temperatures without transportation, unsure of where he was. He said he didn’t know if he remained under investigation, nor whether the government would retain copies of his phone data or DNA sample.
“Finding out that someone who served our country was being denied access to counsel was heartbreaking,” said Kieffer, who was connected with Saari two days after his detention through a colleague. “He should never have been invisible to us.”
While he was in detention, Saari said, agents provided minimal food and water, and detainees with visible injuries did not receive timely medical care.
“I asked for water about a dozen times,” he told The Intercept. “At one point they brought three bottles of water for seven people.”
Saari said detainees had to use their drinking water to clean blood off of their injured peers, which is consistent with accounts from another civilian arrested that day and previously reported by The Intercept.
“There was a man with a golf-ball-sized contusion on his head who didn’t get medical attention,” Saari said. “There was a 70-year-old Marine Corps veteran with a deep gash on his elbow who was bleeding.”
Saari said the treatment he received stood in sharp contrast to how he handled detainees during his own military service, including during combat operations in Iraq.
During one raid in Fallujah, Saari said his unit detained men who surrendered without resistance. After the operation, he said, they reviewed video footage showing the detainees had recently planted an improvised explosive device targeting a U.S. convoy.
Despite the brutality of some operations in Fallujah, where U.S. forces repeatedly killed Iraqi civilians, Saari said his unit restrained, searched, and turned over the detainees without abuse or humiliation.
“We still treated them as humans,” Saari said. “To be treated worse here, at home, than people who had attacked our unit in a war zone, it’s been hard to understand.”
The post Marine Detained in Minneapolis Says Feds Copied His Phone Without a Warrant appeared first on The Intercept.
The commitment includes US-made interceptors and lightweight missiles for Ukraine’s air defences
While Ukraine is reeling from last night’s barrage of attacks, the Kremlin said it expected the next round of peace talks to happen soon.
“We have a certain understanding (of the details), and we will keep you informed,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
Continue reading...Feb. 12, 2026 — Collaboration between Europe and Japan in quantum technologies and high-performance computing (HPC) is taking a significant step forward with the launch of the Q-Neko project in 2026. The Q-Neko project kick-off meeting took place Feb. 10-12, 2026 in Helsinki, Finland.

The panelists: Frédéric Barbaresco, Thales, France, Janne Hirvonen, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Finland, Masahiro Horibe, AIST, Japan, Hiroshi Nakata, Q-Star, Japan, and Laura Taajamaa, Ministry of Culture and Education, Finland. Photo credit: Mikael Kanerva, CSC.
Q-Neko (The Nippon-Europe Quantum Koraborēshon) unites top-tier research and industry stakeholders from Europe and Japan to develop future computing solutions that support digital transformation and strengthen international expertise. It explores quantum-enhanced solutions in fields such as materials science, CO₂ reduction, telecommunications, fluid dynamics, and satellite image analysis.
The project also aims to harness the power of quantum-enhanced machine learning and artificial intelligence, opening new frontiers in data-driven scientific discovery and decision-making.
“Q-Neko will drive the emerging promise of combining traditional supercomputing with quantum acceleration towards concrete societal impact. Here, collaboration amongst trusted partners is highly valuable resource,” said Mikael Johansson, coordinator of the Q-Neko effort at CSC.
Q-Neko is the first concrete action stimulated by the Letter of Intent on Strengthening Cooperation in Quantum Science and Technology signed in May 2025 by Japan and EU, preparing for a quantum-accelerated society. This ambition is supported by the EU–Japan Digital Partnership, established in May 2022, which emphasizes the importance of information exchange in HPC, quantum computing, and hybrid HPC+QC approaches.
“We fully share Q-Neko’s vision of uniting classical supercomputing with quantum acceleration to unlock meaningful societal impact,” said Masahiro Horibe, deputy director of G-QuAT at AIST. “As partners, we see tremendous value in working together to turn this emerging technological promise into practical solutions. By combining our respective strengths and fostering a trusted, collaborative ecosystem, we can accelerate innovation and bring real benefits to industry, science, and society.”
Laying the Groundwork for a Quantum-Accelerated Society
Funded by Horizon Europe and the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking on the European side, and Japan’s Cross-ministerial Strategic Innovation Promotion Program (SIP), Q-Neko advances EU–Japan collaboration in quantum technologies through five closely connected ambitions.
By facilitating the exchange of researchers and engineers, Q-Neko will foster even closer technological and scientific networking between European and Japanese quantum communities and contribute to building a strong and sound foundation for long-term collaboration between the regions.
The initiative seeks to promote the sharing of key resources and know-how across the two regions. The project will also produce a forward-looking technology roadmap designed to strengthen secure supply chains and guide future strategic collaboration.
In parallel, Q-Neko aims to assemble a high‑impact library of quantum‑enabled solutions that address pressing scientific and industrial challenges. To support international alignment, the consortium will contribute to the development of robust benchmarks and to pre‑standardization efforts in the emerging field of HPC–quantum integration. Finally, the project advances the software stack required for seamless HPC+AI+QC integration, laying essential groundwork for the next generation of hybrid computing systems.
The high-level panel held on Tuesday, Feb. 10 examined how EU–Japan quantum collaboration can remain open by design and secure by default in a rapidly shifting policy environment. As research security gains prominence in the EU, Japan has similarly elevated issues of research integrity and security in response to increasing internationalization. The discussion offered valuable perspectives that support the implementation of Q‑Neko’s objectives and situate the project’s activities within a broader vision for advancing Europe–Japan cooperation in quantum science. The panelists were: Frédéric Barbaresco, Thales, France, Janne Hirvonen, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Finland, Masahiro Horibe, AIST, Japan, Hiroshi Nakata, Q-Star, Japan, and Laura Taajamaa, Ministry of Culture and Education, Finland.
The project is coordinated by CSC – IT Center for Science (Finland) and involves a broad and diverse consortium, including IQM Quantum Computers, Forschungszentrum Jülich, the German Aerospace Center (DLR), CEA France, Thales, Jij, the French National Laboratory of Metrology and Testing (LNE), VSB – Technical University of Ostrava, QunaSys, Aalto University, Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Chodai Co., and KDDI Corporation.
Source: CSC
The post Q-Neko Project Drives EU–Japan Quantum Collaboration into a New Era appeared first on HPCwire.
Teenager is accused of stabbing pupil in neck in classroom and stabbing another child in playground at school in Brent
A 13-year-old boy has appeared in court accused of stabbing a pupil in the neck with a kitchen knife in front of other children in a north-west London classroom.
The child sustained three stab wounds, a spinal fracture and injuries to the neck and hands that required surgery, Westminster magistrates court was told on Thursday.
Continue reading...Supporters raise £73,000 to secure future of Welsh valleys chapel where beloved hymn was first sung
The Welsh valleys chapel where the beloved hymn Cwm Rhondda – also known as Bread of Heaven – was first sung is safe in the hands of local people after a successful fundraising campaign.
A community group has taken ownership of Capel Rhondda in Hopkinstown, near Pontypridd, after raising more than £70,000.
Continue reading...Contender, a 1,700-pound adult great white shark, was seen moving north after spending time in Florida waters.
Want to buy a home or refinance your current one? These are the mortgage interest rates to know right now.
Jeremy Carl, assistant secretary of state nominee, has espoused ‘racist, antisemitic’ views, says non-profit leader
Donald Trump’s pick for a top diplomatic post has championed “white supremacist, racist, antisemitic and homophobic views”, a former US state department official has warned.
Jeremy Carl is set to go before the Senate foreign relations committee on Thursday as the president’s nominee for assistant secretary of state for international organisations, a role that involves managing relationships with and policies toward the United Nations and its agencies.
Continue reading...Team USA cross-country skier Jessie Diggins collapsed after crossing the finish line in the women's 10-kilometer interval start on Thursday. She was competing while injured.
The AU summit is an opportunity for decisive action to end the war in Sudan Expert comment LToremark
The upcoming African Union summit is an opportunity for African leaders to reset the union’s role on Sudan and take decisive action to end the war.
The war in Sudan is one of the African Union’s (AU) most consequential failures of political leadership. Sudan has spiralled into the world’s largest humanitarian emergency: two-thirds of the country’s 53 million people now require humanitarian assistance; more than 13.6 million are displaced; and nearly half of the population face severe food insecurity. The level of devastation goes far beyond a conventional civil war.
The upcoming AU summit in Addis Ababa on 14–15 February is an opportunity for decisive AU leadership on Sudan – it must not be missed.
For nearly three years, the AU has struggled to find a coherent political strategy on Sudan. Early diplomacy, normative consistency and broad engagement with partners have proved insufficient. The AU has been reactive, fragmented and increasingly peripheral to competing diplomatic tracks. Internal divisions and a lack of robust enforcement mechanisms has left it unable to secure a ceasefire, protect civilians or generate meaningful leverage over the two warring parties; the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
The election of a new AU Commission (AUC) – the AU’s secretariat and executive branch – last year briefly raised expectations of renewed continental leadership. But little has changed. The renewed push to reopen the AU Liaison Office in Port Sudan – a city controlled by the SAF – and decision to uphold Sudan’s suspension from all AU activities following the 2021 coup have failed to achieve political influence and protect civilians. The suspension has also created structural ambiguity: the AU must still engage the de facto authorities it has formally excluded.
This tension was laid bare when AUC Chair Mahmoud Ali Youssouf’s publicly endorsed the Port Sudan peace initiative. By endorsing a process led by the SAF-aligned administration, Youssouf openly contradicted the AU’s own norms relating to coups and other forms of unconstitutional changes of government (UCGs), thereby weakening the credibility of Sudan’s suspension. Sudanese civil society reacted sharply, interpreting the endorsement as further evidence of bias.
Institutional inconsistency has created space for diplomatic manoeuvring around established norms at precisely the moment when clarity and assertiveness are most needed.
The diplomatic environment surrounding Sudan has become increasingly congested, without a clear centre of gravity. The AU asserts that it alone has the legitimacy to convene Sudanese stakeholders without privileging armed groups or external agendas. Yet it has struggled to consolidate parallel initiatives under an authoritative AU-led process.
The US-led Quad (comprising the US, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt) remains the most influential forum for ceasefire and humanitarian talks. Its influence, however, has frayed as Washington’s attention has shifted elsewhere. Tensions between the UAE and Saudi Arabia have further slowed progress.
The AU-led Quintet (comprising the AU, UN, Arab League, EU and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD)) is designed to unify major multilateral actors around an AU framework. Instead, it has highlighted the AU’s inability to impose coherence across external partners. Coordination problems – including with the Quad – inconsistent engagement and divergent political priorities have prevented it from providing strategic direction. The EU, the AU’s biggest partner, remains divided on strategy and overstretched by crises closer to home. The result is an uncoordinated diplomatic arena that empowers both the SAF and RSF to resist meaningful concessions.
The AU’s internal mechanisms are also struggling to find a coherent approach. An AU high-level panel (HLP) on Sudan was established in January 2024 but it was doomed from the outset. It lacked the political weight to advance its mandate, complicating AU efforts to secure meaningful engagement with Sudanese civilian actors and backing from civil society.
The panel has gradually faded into the background, signalling institutional fatigue and a growing sense within some AU circles that although Sudan is undoubtedly a humanitarian emergency, it is no longer a political priority. This retreat is profoundly misaligned with the scale and urgency of the crisis, and risks further eroding confidence in the AU’s leadership.
The ad hoc presidential committee of the AU’s Peace and Security Council (PSC), led by Uganda, faces similar credibility issues. Kampala is viewed by many Sudanese civilian actors as leaning towards the RSF. Overlaps between the committee and the high-level panel have created competing channels of engagement – and another obstacle for AU effectiveness.
Egypt’s role further complicates an already fragmented AU response. Cairo is widely perceived by Sudanese civilian and political actors as aligned with the SAF. Egypt is currently the chair of the AU PSC and has made a renewed push to reintegrate Sudan into the AU – after unsuccessful attempts during its previous stint as chair in October 2024. The PSC statement following its 12 February ministerial meeting on Sudan reinforces concerns that council deliberations are being shaped by regional power plays rather than adherence to AU norms. By referring to SAF as the ‘transitional government of Sudan’, the council has effectively moved to legitimize one side of the conflict.
Egyptian officials are also reportedly advocating for Kamal Idris, prime minister of the SAF-aligned administration, to attend the upcoming AU summit. Such moves risk further eroding confidence in PSC neutrality at a moment when assertive leadership and collective resolve are urgently needed.
The 2026 AU summit presents a narrow but critical window to reset the continental response. Without decisive action, Sudan risks irreversible fragmentation: de facto regional administrations could consolidate, national institutions could collapse entirely, and cross-border spillovers could intensify.
A reset requires a minimum of three urgent steps. First, the AU must reassert its primacy and enforce diplomatic coherence. It must consolidate all diplomatic tracks under a unified continental strategy to ensure alignment with its decisions on Sudan. The AU should support the Quad’s ceasefire and humanitarian negotiations and propose linking these efforts to an AU-led political process. This would help prevent parallel diplomacy from diluting leverage.
Feb. 12, 2026 — The U.S. National Science Foundation, in coordination with partner agencies from Australia, India and Japan, today announced the first cohort of awards made under the Advancing Innovations for Empowering NextGen AGriculturE (AI-ENGAGE) initiative. This $2.4 million investment supports six international research projects that will harness artificial intelligence and critical emerging technologies to empower farmers and strengthen agricultural resilience across the United States and Indo-Pacific region.
AI-ENGAGE is a landmark collaboration between NSF, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization of Australia, the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research. Harnessing global research expertise, the collaboration seeks partners in areas in which there are shared goals to benefit the respective nations. This effort represents a signature achievement of the Quad, demonstrating how the four nations’ shared commitment to critical and emerging technologies research can transform agriculture to address pressing global challenges.
The initiative fulfills a commitment to leverage emerging technologies for agricultural innovation. By focusing on AI-enabled scientific discovery in the agricultural sector, these projects advance the administration’s goals of boosting national productivity and solving pressing societal challenges.
“By integrating current and emerging technologies, like AI, into agriculture, we are advancing scientific frontiers to provide U.S. farmers and their international counterparts with tools they need to increase crop yields, more effectively manage pests, strengthen agricultural resilience and ensure a more secure food supply,” said Brian Stone, performing the duties of NSF director.
These six awarded projects address critical agricultural needs by developing user-friendly, AI-driven solutions:
The AI-ENGAGE initiative is unique in its requirement that every project involves researchers from at least three of the four Quad nations. This structure ensures an exchange of expertise and data, while simultaneously maintaining that each partner agency provides funding for its respective national researchers. NSF contributes approximately $2.4 million directly to the U.S. leads, while leveraging $4 million in funding from the other Quad partners supporting researchers in their respective countries, resulting in a combined investment of over $6 million.
For more information on the AI-ENGAGE initiative and the awarded projects, please visit the NSF Office of International Science and Engineering International Collaborations website.
About NSF
The U.S. National Science Foundation propels the nation forward by advancing fundamental research in all fields of science and engineering. NSF supports research and people by providing facilities, instruments and funding to support their ingenuity and sustain the U.S. as a global leader in research and innovation. With a fiscal year 2026 budget of $8.75 billion, NSF funds reach all 50 states through grants to nearly 2,000 colleges, universities and institutions. Each year, NSF receives more than 40,000 competitive proposals and makes about 11,000 new awards. Those awards include support for cooperative research with industry, Arctic and Antarctic research and operations, and U.S. participation in international scientific efforts.
Source: U.S. National Science Foundation
The post NSF Announces 1st AI-ENGAGE Awards to Modernize Global Agriculture appeared first on HPCwire.
Inexperienced prosecutors are testing FACE Act in their case against Don Lemon. But the law has constitutional problems that make it untenable to charge misconduct in a house of worship.
Advocate general questions decision, saying reforms needed to unfreeze about €10bn have not been carried out
The top adviser to the EU’s highest court has said it should annul a decision by the European Commission to unfreeze billions of euros of payments to Hungary that had been suspended because of serious concerns over corruption and the rule of law.
Tamara Ćapeta, the advocate general of the European court of justice, said on Thursday the commission should not have paid out the funds because Hungary had not actually carried out the judicial reforms that were a condition for their release.
Continue reading...Leaders promise to fight back with court challenges as Trump rescinds finding foundational to US climate rules
Climate leaders gathered outside the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) headquarters on Wednesday to condemn the Trump administration’s plans to repeal the legal finding underpinning all federal climate regulations, and promised to fight against the rollback.
“This is corruption, plain and simple. Old-fashioned, dirty political corruption,” said Sheldon Whitehouse, senator for Rhode Island, at the rally. “This is an agency that has been so infiltrated by the corrupt fossil fuel industry that it has turned an agency of government into the weapon of the fossil fuel polluters.”
Continue reading...The large language models that millions of people rely on for advice -- ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini -- will change their answers nearly 60% of the time when a user simply pushes back by asking "are you sure?," according to a study by Fanous et al. that tested GPT-4o, Claude Sonnet, and Gemini 1.5 Pro across math and medical domains. The behavior, known in the research community as sycophancy, stems from how these models are trained: reinforcement learning from human feedback, or RLHF, rewards responses that human evaluators prefer, and humans consistently rate agreeable answers higher than accurate ones. Anthropic published foundational research on this dynamic in 2023. The problem reached a visible breaking point in April 2025 when OpenAI had to roll back a GPT-4o update after users reported the model had become so excessively flattering it was unusable. Research on multi-turn conversations has found that extended interactions amplify sycophantic behavior further -- the longer a user talks to a model, the more it mirrors their perspective.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
ZURICH, Feb. 12, 2026 — Chiral, a Swiss nanotechnology company pioneering next-generation semiconductor and quantum technologies with nanomaterials, has announced the successful closing of a $12 million seed financing round led by Crane Venture Partners, with participation from Quantonation, HCVC, and Founderful, as well as public funding from Innosuisse.
The funding supports Chiral’s mission to make post-silicon computing chips based on nanomaterials manufacturable at wafer scale and to unlock the next generation of chips beyond the limits of conventional silicon.
As the semiconductor industry approaches the physical and economic limits of silicon scaling described by Moore’s Law, nanomaterials such as carbon nanotube and two-dimensional materials are widely seen as a viable path to sustain performance and energy efficiency gains. In fact, the technology roadmaps of numerous industry leaders like TSMC highlight the adoption of nanomaterials. While their potential has been demonstrated repeatedly in academic research, industrial adoption has remained limited due to a critical manufacturing bottleneck: the lack of scalable, precise, and contamination-free integration processes.
“Nanomaterials have shown outstanding performance in research for years, but without scalable and controllable manufacturing, their impact remains limited,” said Seoho Jung, CEO at Chiral. “Chiral has the necessary capabilities that can turn material-level breakthroughs into industrial reality.”
Chiral was founded to solve this manufacturing challenge with the industry’s first robotic nanomaterial integration system. The system is built around automation, high-precision engineering, and AI for the robotic integration of nanomaterials into silicon wafers. Unlike conventional methods, this approach enables precise, selective, and contamination-free placement of nanomaterials–a clear path from single-device experiments to wafer-scale integration.
Since its incorporation and pre-seed financing round two years ago, Chiral has advanced its automation and process control capabilities, developed its first commercial equipment system, and helped customers in industry and research significantly accelerate their development.
The newly raised seed capital adds strong momentum to that evolution.
“The next foundational shift in computing won’t come from materials alone, it will come from making those materials work for real systems and real customers. Chiral brings that level of engineering discipline to nanomaterials, and that’s why we believe they have an important role to play in what comes after silicon,” said Krishna Visvanathan, Co-founder and Partner at Crane Venture Partners.
Jung added, “Our customers will soon announce results that demonstrate how Chiral’s technology has advanced their device performance. In parallel, we are moving from development into deployment, with our first commercial systems being installed at customer sites this year.”
The company will further strengthen its automation, precision, and throughput, while demonstrating reliability and scalability in real-world environments. By doing so, the company aims to accelerate the industrial adoption of nanomaterials in advanced semiconductor and quantum devices. With nanomaterials increasingly positioned as a cornerstone of post-silicon electronics, Chiral’s focus remains on enabling their transition from experimental promise to manufacturable technologies.
About Chiral
Chiral is a Swiss deeptech company developing tools and processes for the scalable integration of nanomaterials into next-generation semiconductor devices. Founded in 2023 as an ETH Zurich and Empa spin-off, Chiral combines scientific rigor with engineering execution to make breakthrough materials manufacturable for advanced electronics.
Source: Chiral
The post Chiral Closes $12M Seed Round for Post-Silicon Chip Manufacturing appeared first on HPCwire.
Mikie Sherrill, a Democrat, also launches online portal for residents to share footage of ICE enforcement activity
New Jersey governor Mikie Sherrill has banned immigration agents from some state property and launched an online portal for residents to share videos and photos of enforcement activity.
Sherrill, a Democrat, signed an executive order on Wednesday which prohibits immigration officers from access to non-public portions of state-owned property if they don’t have a judicial warrant, according to NJ.com. The prohibition also bars immigration agents from using state property as bases for enforcement operations.
Continue reading...Legislation is latest step in crackdown by Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government on irregular migration
Italy’s prime minister says her government will deploy every tool at its disposal to “guarantee the security of our borders” after approving a bill authorising naval blockades to stop boats from arriving in Italy during periods of “exceptional pressure”.
The bill is the latest step in the crackdown on irregular immigration by Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government, which has included tough measures against charity rescue ships, harsher jail terms for human smugglers and schemes aimed at swiftly repatriating people.
Continue reading...Billionaire’s business has in recent years claimed UK and EU support for refineries and chemicals plants worth about €800m
The backlash against Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s comments about immigrants to the UK “costing too much” for the state comes at an awkward time for his loss-making Ineos business.
The billionaire industrialist’s sprawling empire, which ranges from chemicals to car making, has sought government financial support worth hundreds of millions of pounds and is lobbying for further state aid from the UK and EU to stay afloat.
Continue reading...South Korea’s spy agency monitoring whether girl, believed to be 13, will appear at political conference this month
South Korea’s spy agency has told lawmakers it believes the teenage daughter of Kim Jong-un, the North Korean dictator, is close to being designated as the country’s future leader, as Kim moves to extend the family dynasty to a fourth generation.
The assessment by the national intelligence service (NIS) comes as North Korea is preparing to hold its biggest political conference later this month, where Kim is expected to outline his main policy goals for the next five years and take steps to tighten his authoritarian grip.
Continue reading...Amid negotiations with the White House, the pair of Democrats is pitching the bill as an enforcement mechanism to go alongside the changes they're seeking.
Many social media posts by Tesla CEO on his platform are indiscernible from those of white supremacists, say experts
Elon Musk’s longtime fixation on a white racial majority is intensifying. The richest man in the world posted about how the white race was under threat, made allusions to race science or promoted anti-immigrant conspiracy content on 26 out of 31 days in January, according to the Guardian’s analysis of his social media output. The posts, made on his platform X, reflect a renewed embrace of what extremism experts describe as white supremacist material.
“Whites are a rapidly dying minority,” Musk said on 22 January, a short time before taking the stage at the World Economic Forum in Davos, while reposting an Irish anti-immigrant influencer’s video about demographic change.
Continue reading...America's NATO allies say they're not disappointed by top Trump administration officials skipping summits, as they ramp up their own regional defenses.
American clips gate but given welcome surprise
US teammates witness event at end of course
Olympic downhill champion Breezy Johnson didn’t add to her medal haul during the women’s super-G on Thursday, but she left Tofane with something precious anyway: an engagement ring.
Johnson, who won gold on Sunday in the downhill, crashed out of the super-G after she clipped a gate with one of her poles, sending her tumbling into the safety fence. However, there was some consolation: her boyfriend, Connor Watkins, proposed to her near the finish line. Surrounded by members of the US Ski Team, Johnson said “Yes!” and the two embraced.
Continue reading...SEOUL, Feb. 12, 2026 — Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., a global leader in advanced memory technology, today announced that it has begun mass production of its industry-leading HBM4 and has shipped commercial products to customers. This achievement marks a first in the industry, securing an early leadership position in the HBM4 market.
By proactively leveraging its most advanced 6th-generation 10 nanometer (nm)-class DRAM process (1c), the company achieved stable yields and industry-leading performance from the outset of mass production — all accomplished seamlessly and without any additional redesigns.
“Instead of taking the conventional path of utilizing existing proven designs, Samsung took the leap and adopted the most advanced nodes like the 1c DRAM and 4nm logic process for HBM4,” said Sang Joon Hwang, Executive Vice President and Head of Memory Development at Samsung Electronics. “By leveraging our process competitiveness and design optimization, we are able to secure substantial performance headroom, enabling us to satisfy our customers’ escalating demands for higher performance, when they need them.”
Setting the Bar for Maximum Performance and Efficiency
Samsung’s HBM4 delivers a consistent processing speed of 11.7 gigabits-per-second (Gbps), exceeding the industry standard of 8Gbps by approximately 46% and setting a new benchmark for HBM4 performance. This represents a 1.22x increase over the maximum pin speed of 9.6Gbps of its predecessor, HBM3E. HBM4’s performance can be further enhanced up to 13Gbps, as well, effectively mitigating data bottlenecks that intensify as AI models continue to scale up.
Also, total memory bandwidth per single stack is increased by 2.7x compared to HBM3E, to a maximum of 3.3 terabytes-per-second (TB/s).
Through 12-layer stacking technology, Samsung offers HBM4 in capacities ranging from 24 gigabytes (GB) to 36GB. The company will also keep its capacity options aligned with future customer timelines by utilizing 16-layer stacking, which will expand offerings to up to 48GB.
In order to address power consumption and thermal challenges driven by the doubling of data I/Os from 1,024 to 2,048 pins, Samsung has integrated advanced low-power design solutions into the core die. HBM4 also achieves a 40% improvement in power efficiency by leveraging low-voltage through silicon via (TSV) technology and power distribution network (PDN) optimization, while enhancing thermal resistance by 10% and heat dissipation by 30%, compared to HBM3E.
By bringing outstanding performance, energy efficiency and high reliability to tomorrow’s datacenter environments, Samsung’s HBM4 enables customers to achieve maximized GPU throughput and effectively manage their total cost of ownership (TCO).
Comprehensive Yet Agile Production Capabilities
Samsung is committed to advancing its HBM roadmap through its comprehensive manufacturing resources — including one of the largest DRAM production capacities and dedicated infrastructures in the industry — ensuring a resilient supply chain to meet the projected surge in HBM4 demand.
A tightly integrated Design Technology Co-Optimization (DTCO) between the company’s Foundry and Memory Businesses allows it to secure the highest standards of quality and yield. Additionally, extensive in-house expertise in advanced packaging allows for streamlined production cycles and reduced lead times.
Samsung also plans to broaden the scope of its technical partnership with key partners, based on close discussions with global GPU manufacturers and hyperscalers focused on next-generation ASIC development.
Samsung anticipates that its HBM sales will more than triple in 2026 compared to 2025, and is proactively expanding its HBM4 production capacity. Following the successful introduction of HBM4 to market, sampling for HBM4E is expected to begin in the second half of 2026, while custom HBM samples will start reaching customers in 2027, according to their respective specifications.
About Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Samsung inspires the world and shapes the future with transformative ideas and technologies. The company is redefining the worlds of TVs, digital signage, smartphones, wearables, tablets, home appliances and network systems, as well as memory, system LSI and foundry. Samsung is also advancing medical imaging technologies, HVAC solutions and robotics, while creating innovative automotive and audio products through Harman. With its SmartThings ecosystem, open collaboration with partners, and integration of AI across its portfolio, Samsung delivers a seamless and intelligent connected experience.
Source: Samsung Electronics
The post Samsung Ships Industry-First Commercial HBM4 with Ultimate Performance for AI Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
The redesigned Fitbit app and AI health coach are rolling out to iOS users and Fitbit Premium subscribers in the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Singapore.
The case of the Palestinian activist, the face of 2024’s US campus protests, could have repercussions for thousands
Despite his grim circumstances, Mahmoud Khalil can’t help but laugh.
Walking through Congress’s hallowed halls, the Palestinian student activist, who may be inching toward deportation, has a lightness to him. He is quick with a smile – and not yet ready to waver. He admits he’s in “the scary part” of his ordeal, but he has a new reason to like his odds.
Continue reading...AI startup Anthropic says it will ensure consumer electricity costs remain steady as it expands its data center footprint. From a report: Anthropic said it would work with utility companies to "estimate and cover" consumer electricity price increases in places where it is not able to sufficiently generate new power and pay for 100% of the infrastructure upgrades required to connect its data centers to the electrical grid. In a statement to NBC News, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said: "building AI responsibly can't stop at the technology -- it has to extend to the infrastructure behind it. We've been clear that the U.S. needs to build AI infrastructure at scale to stay competitive, but the costs of powering our models should fall on Anthropic, not everyday Americans. We look forward to working with communities, local governments, and the Administration to get this right."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
As the pro-Israel lobby seeks to shape a set of congressional races in Illinois, national progressive groups are pushing to elect a vocal advocate for Palestinian rights outside of Chicago.
The national progressive outfit Justice Democrats and the Peace, Accountability, and Leadership PAC, a new group that launched Wednesday to support candidates advocating for Palestine in the upcoming midterms, are endorsing activist Kat Abughazaleh for Congress in Illinois’s 9th District.
The endorsement comes as the American Israel Public Affairs Committee has made its biggest investment so far this cycle in electing pro-Israel Democrats in and around deep-blue Chicago, which is home to one of the nation’s largest populations of Palestinian residents.
Abughazaleh is one of over a dozen candidates running in the Democratic primary to replace retiring Rep. Jan Schakowsky. Also running are state Sen. Laura Fine, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, local school board member and activist Bushra Amiwala, former hostage negotiator and agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation Phil Andrew, and state Rep. Hoan Huynh.
Schakowsky was a longtime recipient of support from J Street, a moderate pro-Israel group, and AIPAC appears to view the race as an opportunity to replace her with a more hardline supporter of Israel. The pro-Israel lobby has already taken one opportunity to go after a centrist who strayed from its party line, when it ran attack ads against former New Jersey Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski — a strategy that appeared to backfire and ultimately help get the progressive in the race elected.
Now, pro-Palestine groups see an opening in Chicago amid mounting public criticism of the pro-Israel lobby.
Both groups said the endorsement was a reflection of a historic level of public support for Palestinian human rights and cutting U.S. funding to Israel. Abughazaleh is the 12th candidate Justice Democrats has endorsed this cycle as it looks to more aggressively counter the pro-Israel lobby and come back from major losses in 2024.
Abughazaleh told The Intercept she’s running to hold Democrats to a higher standard.
“There’s been this idea of ‘vote blue no matter who’ for a long time that has gotten us to the moment that we’re in, because we haven’t held our party accountable,” she said. She added that she was the first candidate to launch her campaign in the race before Schakowsky announced her retirement.
“I didn’t wait in line or ask for permission,” Abughazaleh said. “I think a big part of that is because I felt a sense of urgency that many establishment politicians just don’t because they’re not facing the consequences that we are.”
“Kat has spent her career doing what so many voters are desperate to see the Democratic Party do right now: fight back against Republican extremism and fight for everyday people,” Justice Democrats spokesperson Usamah Andrabi said in a statement to The Intercept. “At a time when so many career politicians in the Party have to be convinced to condemn genocide, we are proud to support a first-time candidate with the moral clarity to oppose bottomless budgets for Israel’s ethnic cleansing, abolish ICE and fight for every person to afford the life they deserve.”
While AIPAC hasn’t officially endorsed in the race, its donors have made their pick clear. AIPAC donors have flooded Fine’s campaign and sent fundraising emails on her behalf. AIPAC is also reportedly behind just under half a million dollars in ads launched last week for Fine by the Super PAC Elect Chicago Women. Fine has distanced herself from AIPAC and said she isn’t seeking its support — despite fundraising with AIPAC’s board president.
Abughazaleh, a Palestinian American activist, has made her criticism of the genocide in Gaza and U.S. military support for Israel a central piece of her campaign. She’s also facing a federal indictment on felony conspiracy charges stemming from protest actions against Immigration and Customs Enforcement. She turned her congressional office into a mutual aid hub and is running on Medicare for All, fixing the affordable housing crisis, and fighting authoritarianism.
“AIPAC is so toxic that they have been doing everything they can to pretend that they are not in our race when they very clearly are,” Abughazaleh said. She said voters “understand the stakes, and they’re sick of their tax dollars being used to commit crimes against humanity.”
Abughazaleh said she’s the only one of the top three Democratic candidates — counting herself, Fine, and Biss — who’s never met with AIPAC. Biss previously met with local AIPAC representatives, but he said he did not share the group’s “hardline views” and had never sought their support.
Both Abughazaleh and Biss have been vocal in criticizing AIPAC’s efforts to boost their opponent, Fine. During a candidate forum last week, Biss directly criticized Fine’s support from AIPAC donors and said voters should be troubled by her support for unconditional U.S. military aid.
“That is deeply problematic,” Biss said. “That is a right-wing policy that is bad for Palestinians, Jews, Israelis, America, and the world.”
Meanwhile, United Democracy Project and AIPAC are spreading their resources around the state. UDP is also reportedly backing ads from a PAC that calls itself Affordable Chicago Now!, which is teaming up with Elect Chicago Women to back Fine, Melissa Bean in the 8th District, and Donna Miller in the 2nd District.
UDP is also planning to spend close to $3 million backing Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin in the 7th District and bought its first $500,000 in ads for her on Tuesday. The move by the pro-Israel lobby has raised talk about what AIPAC donors who originally backed another candidate, real estate mogul Jason Friedman, will do now.
The post AIPAC Is Flooding Illinois With Cash. Pro-Palestine Groups Are Backing Kat Abughazaleh. appeared first on The Intercept.
A retired United States Army colonel will serve two years in federal prison for sending classified war plans to a woman he met online, federal authorities said.

President Donald Trump has been celebrating what he says is a major crime reduction achievement in the United States.
On at least 10 occasions from Jan. 29 to Feb. 8, Trump has offered a version of this statement: "The crime rate now is the lowest it's been since 1900. That's 125 years." One of those occasions was during an NBC News interview that aired Feb. 8 before the Super Bowl.
Trump referred to the crime rate, an umbrella category that includes four types of violent crime (murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault) as well as property crimes (burglary, larceny, car theft and arson). But when contacted for comment, the White House referred to a narrower measure: the murder rate.
The White House pointed to a Jan. 22 Axios article about the U.S. murder rate hitting its lowest level since 1900. The article cited a study by the Council on Criminal Justice, an independent criminal justice research group.
In its 2025 Crime Trends report, the council wrote that the 2025 homicide rate is on pace to become "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" on record. The crimes the report cited — murder and non-negligent homicide — are what’s counted in the FBI’s murder rate.
By the FBI’s definition, "murder" refers to the willful killing of one human being by another, as determined by police investigation and not requiring conviction of a defendant or a coroner’s ruling.
Experts told PolitiFact the 2025 FBI murder rate will likely end up at a 65-year low. But saying it’s the lowest in 125 years is less certain, because data prior to 1960 is not comparable to later data.
Because the methodology was not consistent for all 125 years, "We just can’t say for sure" whether it’s an all-time low, said Jeff Asher, a crime data researcher.
Beyond murders and non-negligent manslaughter, the overall violent crime and property crime rates are also lower today than at least any point since the mid-1970s. Both measures have been on a long-term decline, going back to the early 1990s.
Ernesto Lopez, a senior research specialist with the Council on Criminal Justice, told PolitiFact the group did not examine any other type of crime rate when it cited the 125-year figure, only murder and non-negligent manslaughter.
"So we can’t say that violent crime or property crime rates are at all time lows" going back as far as 125 years, Lopez said.
Because it takes time to fully calculate crime data, the council’s report uses trends in the currently available data to project what the 2025 murder rate will be once the FBI calculates and releases final numbers later this year.
The Council on Criminal Justice said the rate for murder and non-negligent manslaughter will be about 4 per 100,000 residents. Asher offered a similar projection of about 4.2 per 100,000.
Both estimates are below the previous record low of 4.4 per 100,000 people in 2014 — at least when compared with annual rates going back to 1960, when the FBI began using the same methodology it uses today.
The council and Asher agreed that the 2025 drop of about 20% is likely to become the largest one-year decline ever recorded.
Whether the homicide drop is the lowest in 125 years is less certain.
Asher said FBI data on murder and non-negligent homicide is not apples-to-apples between 1930 and 1959, because the older data was based on a smaller share of the U.S. population and used definitions different from today’s. Before 1930, the FBI didn’t produce any equivalent data at all.
The problem with saying it’s a 125-year record, Asher said, is that doing so means including the not-fully-comparable 1930 to 1959 FBI data and 1900 to 1929 data from public health sources. The public health data counted homicides, a category that’s broader than murders and non-negligent homicides because it also includes killings considered justifiable.
Lopez said his group has a "high degree of confidence" that once the final numbers for 2025 are released by the FBI later this year, the 2025 homicide level could be "the lowest ever recorded in the United States since 1900"
Trump said, "The crime rate now is the lowest it's been since 1900. That's 125 years."
Trump referred to the overall crime rate, which includes a range of violent crimes and property crimes. But the White House pointed to evidence of a record low murder rate, not overall crime.
Experts expect that when the final 2025 murder rate, as defined by the FBI, is released later this year, it likely will be the lowest in at least 65 years.
Whether it is the lowest in 125 years is disputed, however, because experts say data prior to 1960 is not comparable to later data.
Overall violent crime and property crime are also at decades-long lows, but it’s unclear whether they are at record lows going back 125 years.
The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True.
CORRECTION, Feb. 12, 2026: This version corrects the percentage drop in the murder rate from 2024 to 2025.
We explore the cosy world-building spin-off with Game Freak’s Shigeru Ohmori and his fellow developers – and learn how it began with a Pokémon-hunting dream
Pokémon is celebrating its 30th anniversary this month, and everybody knows what to expect from these games by now. The concept is simple: head into a cartoonish paradise full of whimsical creatures, capture them in red-and-white balls and assemble a team of warriors from them, before battling other aspiring Pokémon masters. But the latest entry in the series is different – a game that’s more about building than battling.
In Pokopia, a refreshingly pacific twist on the series, players are dropped into a virtual world where Pokémon are freed from their spherical prisons and happily roam their natural habitats. There’s one minor caveat – you have to create those habitats by hand, building them from what you can find.
Continue reading...Vilma Palacios is one of thousands who have given up their immigration cases and voluntarily left the U.S. after being detained. More detainees are opting for voluntary departure than ever before, a CBS News analysis found.
Dawson’s Creek star, who died on Tuesday, had been open about struggling to meet high expenses of cancer treatment
A GoFundMe set up to support the widow and children of actor James Van Der Beek has raised more than $1m as thousands of people donated within hours of its launch.
Van Der Beek, best known for his role as sensitive teen Dawson Leery on the TV series Dawson’s Creek, died on Tuesday aged 48. He had bowel cancer.
Continue reading...Commentary: Apple's most affordable iPhone offers good value, but don't pick one up now. Something better might be coming.
Even with a price hike, Crunchyroll is still the best place to stream new anime, and updates have made the app easier to use for all ages.
Information appears to contradict court testimony by banker in 2025 over nature of ties to convicted sex offender
The former Barclays boss Jes Staley was named as a trustee of Jeffrey Epstein’s estate until at least May 2015, according to documents that appear to contradict court testimony given by the banker.
This month the Guardian revealed that US prosecutors had reviewed allegations of rape and bodily harm against Staley, who denies any wrongdoing. He has never been charged with a crime related to the allegations.
Continue reading...Ukrainian Olympian banned from Winter Games for insisting on wearing helmet honoring athletes killed in his country's war with Russia.
Manchester United co-owner, who lives in Monaco, responds to backlash over comments labelled ‘offensive and wrong’ by Keir Starmer
The Monaco-based billionaire Jim Ratcliffe has said he is sorry that his “choice of language has offended some people in the UK and Europe”, after a mounting backlash against his comments that the UK was being “colonised” by immigrants.
The Manchester United co-owner has faced a barrage of criticism since citing inaccurate statistics and making the comments, which were slammed as hypocritical and reminiscent of “far-right narratives”.
Continue reading...Prosecutors in Utah say they've filed a first-degree felony rape charge against Brigham Young University standout wide receiver Parker Kingston.
To help combat the impact of screen-time creep, the Countdown word supremo has a few suggestions
Children’s vocabulary is shrinking as reading loses out to screen time, the Countdown lexicographer Susie Dent has suggested, as she urged families to read, talk and play word games to boost language development.
Dent, who also co-presents Channel 4’s Secret Genius with Alan Carr, is fronting a new campaign – working with an unexpected partner, Soreen malt loaf – aimed at boosting children’s vocabulary at snack time.
Reading.
Listening to audiobooks.
Sharing word stories and routinely going to the dictionary to find out where words come from.
Playing word games and puzzles, in print, online, with board games, or in the car.
Having conversations while doing active tasks with your child such as cooking or walking.
Asking your child to invent a new word, or to share the latest slang in their class.
Learn another language.
kerfuffle One of Soreen’s choices, kerfuffle is from Scots that describes a commotion or fuss. Children love it because of its sound, but it also adds a touch of humour to an otherwise tricky situation.
mellifluous Not only does this word have a pleasing sound, fulfilling the very quality it describes, but its etymology is also gorgeous – mellifluous comes from the Latin for flowing like honey.
thrill I chose this one because of its secret life. Something thrilling today is always positive, but in its earliest incarnation, to thrill meant to pierce someone with a sword rather than with excitement. The literal meaning of thrill was a hole, which is why our nostrils began as our nose-thrills, or nose holes.
apricity This is one of the many words in the Oxford English Dictionary that were recorded only once before fading away like a linguistic mayfly. Apricity, from 1623, means the warmth of the sun on a winter’s day. The word is as beautiful as the sensation it describes.
susurrus Say this word out loud and you will know its meaning instantly. Susurrus comes from the Latin for whispering and describes the rustling of leaves in a summer breeze.
bags of mystery This Victorian nickname for sausages always makes me smile. It was inspired by the fact that you can never quite know what’s in them.
snerdle English has a vast lexicon for snuggling, from nuddling, neezling and snoozling to snuggening, croodling and snerdling. Each of them expresses the act of lying quietly beneath the covers. Mind you, if you lie there a little bit too long, you could be accused of hurkle-durkling, old Scots for staying in bed long after it’s time to get up.
splendiferous Another of Soreen’s picks, this word has a distinct touch of Mary Poppins about it. In the middle ages it meant simply resplendent, but since the 19th century it has been a humorous description of anything considered rather magnificent.
ruthful The historical dictionary is full of lost positives – words whose negative siblings are alive and well while their parents have faded away. As well as being gormless, inept, unkempt, uncouth and disconsolate, you could in the past be full of gorm, ept, kempt, couth, and consolate. Best of all is surely ruthful, the counterpart to ruthless which means full of compassion.
muscle Another word with a hidden backstory, and this one often makes children laugh. In ancient times, athletes would exercise in the buff in order to show off their rippling muscles (the words gym and gymnasium go back to the Greek for exercise naked). To the Roman imagination, when an athlete flexed their biceps, it looked as though a little mouse was scuttling beneath their skin. Our word muscle consequently comes from the Latin musculus, little mouse.
Continue reading...Report on Islamic State says Ahmed al-Sharaa was targeted twice by IS front group that bombed Damascus church
Five separate plots to assassinate Syria’s president or his senior ministers were foiled last year, the UN has said in a report on Islamic State.
According to the report, the Syrian president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, was targeted twice, once in northern Aleppo and another time in southern Daraa, by Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah, an IS front group that carried out a bombing of a church in Damascus last summer.
Continue reading...Opposition leader ousted as Barbados Labour party wins all 30 seats in assembly
The prime minister of Barbados, Mia Mottley, has won her third election victory, with her Barbados Labour party sweeping all seats in the House of Assembly, state TV reported.
Mottley’s BLP won all 30 seats available in the lower house of parliament, unseating the opposition leader, Ralph Thorne, after the prime minister – who has built one of the strongest global profiles of any Caribbean leader – won the support of voters across the island country, CBC Barbados reported early on Thursday.
Continue reading...After state sees four deaths and 40 hospitalizations, public health officials and foraging experts urge caution
A wet winter in California has produced a surge of wild fungi – a shroom boom that would typically have foragers cheering. But among the chanterelles and porcinis, a much more dangerous fungus called the death cap – also known as the Amanita phalloides – is causing alarm.
The state health department reports that, between late November 2025 and early February 2026, there have been four deaths and 40 hospitalizations linked to consumption of dangerous mushrooms, an outbreak the department describes as “unprecedented”. That’s far above the average for the state, which typically sees fewer than five mushroom-poisoning cases annually.
Continue reading...Polymarket and Kalshi are less regulated than betting sites, but users can win or lose large sums on the platforms
Yadin Eldar, 21, has been betting on prediction markets since 2019. His friends think he’s “crazy”, he said. But the craze surrounding these platforms is rapidly gathering steam.
Users can bet on virtually anything, from the outcome of Sunday’s Super Bowl to whether the US will invade Greenland, every second of every day.
Continue reading...There's so much drama on and off the ice.
Meta Platforms' latest annual report contained an unusual, cautionary note for investors. From a report: The tech giant's auditor, Ernst & Young, raised a red flag over the financial engineering Meta used to keep a $27 billion data-center project off its balance sheet. While EY ultimately blessed Meta's accounting treatment, the firm flagged it as a "critical audit matter." This means it was one of the hardest, riskiest judgments the auditor had to make. Such a warning label is rare for a specific, high-profile transaction at a major audit client. Meta moved the data-center project, called Hyperion, off its books in October into a new joint venture with Blue Owl Capital. Meta owns 20% of the venture; funds managed by Blue Owl own the other 80%. A holding company called Beignet Investor, which owns the Blue Owl portion, sold a then-record $27.3 billion of bonds to investors. The joint venture is known in accounting parlance as a variable interest entity, or VIE. Meta said it isn't the "primary beneficiary" of this entity and so didn't have to put the venture's assets and liabilities on its own balance sheet. Meta's assertion that it lacks power over the venture is debatable and has drawn scrutiny from investors and lawmakers. Meta is a hyperscaler and knows how to run data centers for artificial intelligence, while Blue Owl is a financier. Whether the venture succeeds economically will come down to Meta's decisions and know-how. In its report, EY said auditing Meta's decision "was especially challenging due to the significant judgment required in determining the activities that most significantly affect the VIE's economic performance."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A United Launch Alliance Vulcan rocket carrying classified Space Force payloads suffered a booster problem but apparently made an otherwise "nominal" ascent to space, the company said.
President Trump has threatened to slap additional tariffs on Mexico to pressure the country into beefing up drug raids and cartel arrests.
Exclusive: Countdown lexicographer urges families to read, talk and play word games to help language development
Children’s vocabulary is shrinking as reading loses out to screen time, according to the lexicographer Susie Dent, who is urging families to read, talk and play word games to boost language development.
The Countdown star’s warning comes as the government prepares to issue its first advice to parents on how to manage screen use in under-fives, amid concerns that excessive screen time is damaging children’s language development.
Continue reading...Twenty-seven entries shortlisted in 21 categories including website of the year and newspaper of the year
The Guardian has been nominated for more than 20 honours at this year’s Press Awards, including for website of the year, daily newspaper of the year and newspaper of the year (daily and Sunday).
Twenty-seven entries from the Guardian have been shortlisted across 21 different categories by the judges of the UK’s prestigious journalism awards.
Continue reading...The agreement with Mean Arms settles a lawsuit and covers claims from various victims' families and survivors of the 2022 attack at Tops Friendly Market.
NAD+ supplements have gained popularity for their purported anti-aging benefits, but do those pros outweigh potential cons?
Thomas Frank’s dismissal leaves a desperate Spurs looking to its recent past, among other places, for answers
Tottenham Hotspur have tried everything. After sacking Mauricio Pochettino in November 2019 – five months after the club’s first Champions League final, with Spurs sitting 14th in the league and sleepwalking to second place in a weak UCL group – There came a pair of chronic (if cantankerous) title winners: José Mourinho and Antonio Conte. They gave a pragmatist (Nuno Espírito Santo) a Big Six test and moved on when performances instantly stagnated. Then arrived Ange Postecoglou; a staunch tactical ideologue whose principles excited at first before becoming a liability.
Thomas Frank, though, seemed like the appointment most reminiscent of Pochettino’s 2014 arrival. Both raised relatively unfancied clubs to prominence and established firm operational bedrocks. Both spoke about the importance of culture as much as on-field Xs and Os. Neither had been tested at a club of this caliber.
Continue reading...To understand the change in Washington Post’s fortunes, it is worth comparing its demise to the New York Times’s trajectory
Not so long ago – it’s been less than a decade – the New York Times and the Washington Post were almost neck and neck in the race for readers, reputation and scoops. The Times was always bigger, but the two were somewhat comparable.
These days, that’s far from reality. The Post has been declining in influence, newsroom staff and financial health – losing at least $100m a year – while the Times is on an astonishing upward trajectory, with operating profit approaching $200m annually.
Margaret Sullivan is a Guardian US columnist writing on media, politics and culture
Continue reading...Milton Otto Martin III received maximum sentence for indecent behavior inflicted on teenager 15 years ago
The Louisiana Pentecostal pastor who repeatedly molested a teenage girl told her that her “world would turn upside down” if she ever reported his crimes, she said in a statement on Wednesday in a suburban New Orleans court.
Milton Otto Martin III would blame her for his crimes, saying he couldn’t resist the temptation that she presented, the survivor’s statement added.
Continue reading...If you're ready to upgrade your TV for better sound, we've gathered a number of top-tier audio systems for your home theater.
Light therapy can make a big difference if you suffer from seasonal depression or struggle with Daylight Saving Time.
I asked a coffee professional about the biggest mistakes people make when brewing at home.
Gregory Bovino hailed agent who fired at Marimar Martinez five times in her car. Plus, US jobs rise by 130,000 in January
Good morning.
Newly released evidence has shown that Gregory Bovino, a border patrol chief who was the face of the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts until last month, praised a federal agent who shot a Chicago woman during an immigration crackdown last year.
Marimar Martinez, a US citizen, was shot five times by a border patrol agent in October while in her vehicle. She was charged with a felony after officials at the Department of Homeland Security accused her of trying to ram agents with her vehicle. But the case was dismissed after video evidence emerged showing that an agent had steered his vehicle into Martinez’s car.
What did Bovino say to the shooter? Text messages showed Bovino sending encouragement to border patrol agent Charles Exum, who shot Martinez, after the shooting. “In light of your excellent service in Chicago, you have much yet left to do!!” Bovino wrote to Exum on 4 October, hours after Martinez was shot, in an email urging him to put off his retirement.
How are the administration’s actions going down? An NBC/SurveyMonkey poll found 49% of American adults strongly disapprove of the Trump administration’s handling of border security and immigration, compared with 34% who strongly disapproved in a similar poll last April.
What did Bondi say in the combative hearing? Among other lawmakers, she sparred heavily with Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the committee, saying: “You’re a washed-up loser lawyer. You’re not even a lawyer.”
Continue reading...Sedentary lifestyles are bad for us, but which under-desk treadmills and walking pads are worth the cost? Our expert stepped up to find out
• The best treadmills for your home
Various guidelines suggest we all try to walk at least 10,000 steps a day to improve our health and wellbeing. Public Health England encourages a slightly more manageable target of just 10 minutes of brisk walking daily to introduce more moderate-intensity physical activity and reduce your risk of early death by up to 15%.
However, even squeezing in “brisk walks” can be a chore, with busy schedules and increasingly desk-bound jobs forcing more of us to remain sedentary for long periods. That is where walking pads come in, being lighter, smaller and often easier to store than bulky and tricky-to-manoeuvre running treadmills.
Best walking pad overall:
JTX MoveLight
Best budget walking pad and best for beginners:
Urevo Strol 2E
Jewish leaders at a D.C. conference learned how to take on more prominent roles protesting ICE operations in their communities.
Before the Post’s sweeping layoffs and Lewis’s abrupt resignation, his tenure was marked by controversy and clashes with staff
Standing on the seventh floor in the center of the Washington Post’s open newsroom on the morning of 3 June 2024, publisher Will Lewis decided to deliver some tough love to a news organization he had taken charge of five months earlier.
Lewis, a veteran of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, had replaced Fred Ryan, a former Ronald Reagan aide who had presided over some of the Post’s profitable years – during the first Trump administration – but lost the confidence of some staffers after clashing with employees during a late 2022 town hall.
Continue reading...In the summer of 2022, months after Tammy Boarman and her husband, Chris, moved into their newly built “forever home” 30 miles from Oklahoma City, the plants in their yard began to turn yellow. The shrubs wilted, though Tammy watered them often. And the couple began to notice a salty taste in their drinking water.
The water came from a private well, drilled the year before, and they hoped that the bad taste would fade with time and with the help of a water softener.
But the problem grew worse. Their ice maker expelled large clumps of wet salt, which, when rubbed, dissolved into an oily, foul-smelling substance.
The couple knew that some oil and gas extraction took place nearby. Down dirt roads and behind stands of oak trees in their neighborhood, pump jacks nodded up and down, pulling up oil. This is a common sight in Oklahoma. Several studies estimate that about half the state’s residents live within a mile of oil and gas wells.
By the following summer, Tammy and Chris Boarman had been in touch with the state agency overseeing private water wells and began to fear these nearby oil operations had tainted their water, which they had largely stopped drinking after developing sores in their mouths. The couple submitted a complaint to the oil division of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which regulates the state’s oil and gas industry and is responsible for addressing related pollution.
When Tammy Boarman first contacted oil regulators, she was hopeful state officials would find the source of the pollution and clean it up. For the next two years, the state repeatedly tested the Boarmans’ water for contaminants and found salt concentrations that made the water undrinkable and, at one point, toxic metals at levels high enough to endanger human health — strong signs of oil field wastewater pollution, according to agency testing.
But regulators repeatedly delayed or failed to conduct other tests recommended by the agency’s own employees to locate the pollution source, according to internal agency documents obtained by The Frontier and ProPublica through public records requests.
Despite Boarman’s pleas to regulators to do more, the agency would ultimately dismiss its earlier findings pointing to oil and gas pollution and close the couple’s case, leaving basic questions about the origins of the problem unanswered.
“For the longest time, we were so naive to everything,” Boarman said. “We thought things were going to get better.”


The Boarmans’ home, a white modern farmhouse, sits in the middle of an aging oil field, one of several that surround Oklahoma City and that helped make Oklahoma one of the country’s leaders in petroleum production in the 1940s.
Today, the region is growing quickly, with a sought-after school system and affordable real estate. New subdivisions sprout on undeveloped land, and residents in more remote areas — such as where the Boarmans live — often rely on private water wells dug near newly built homes.
But groundwater in this area contains an untold amount of pollution from previous decades of oil production, according to a 2024 report from the Association of Central Oklahoma Governments, a multicounty planning agency.
“The thing that scares me is that you’re going to have a bunch of people buying homes that are on water wells, and then find out two or three years after they bought the homes that they’re drinking salt water,” said John Harrington, the recently retired director of the regional planning agency’s water resources division.

Oklahoma has around 130,000 private water wells, essentially straws that drink from shallow groundwater reserves with minimal filtration, increasing the risk of contamination. That’s because after pulling huge profits from the earth, Oklahoma oil companies left behind tens of thousands of unplugged wells that belch greenhouse gases and allow industrial waste to spread belowground. The state has some of the nation’s weakest regulations pertaining to industry cleanup of old wells.
In 2016, dozens of residents from a subdivision about 20 miles from the Boarmans’ home sued oil giant ConocoPhillips, alleging that years of improper oil field waste disposal had poisoned their drinking water. The company settled for an undisclosed sum with more than 30 families.
Shortly after moving into their home in 2022, the Boarmans found themselves in a similar predicament to those families. Their water corroded the bathtub and coated their taps and appliances in rust and salt residue. Trees near their sprinklers withered and died. Tammy Boarman began keeping a jug of bottled water next to the sink for brushing her teeth.
By this time, Tammy, an imaging manager in the radiology department at the University of Oklahoma hospital, and Chris, a sales representative for a sanitation company, had prohibited their adult children from drinking the tap water when they visited. They stopped inviting friends over: It was too embarrassing to have to warn them about the water.
Staff from the oil division of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission began taking samples of the Boarmans’ water in August 2023, about a week after Tammy Boarman’s first pollution complaint, and continued doing so every few months, following the agency’s protocol. Lab analysis of these ongoing samples showed salt levels climbing steadily into the following year, vastly exceeding natural levels in the local groundwater, a sign to regulators of potential oil and gas contamination, according to results reviewed by The Frontier and ProPublica. By January 2024, the chloride levels in their water reached nearly 10 times the Environmental Protection Agency’s recommendation for drinking water. State sampling results deemed their water too salty even for agriculture.
As the state explored the Boarmans’ pollution, agency officials found a tangle of potential culprits: 26 oil wells sit within a half-mile radius of the Boarman home, and more than half were improperly plugged, making them threats to drinking water, according to a report about the Boarmans’ situation later commissioned by the state.
One that stood out to Everett Plummer, a manager in the oil division at the time and one of several staffers tasked with investigating the Boarman case, was McCoon 3, an injection well that disposes salty oil field wastewater deep below the earth. It is the closest active injection well to the Boarmans’ home and it’s operated by Callie Oil Co., a small business owned by Rory Jett, who also owns property nearby.
State employees found it hard to evaluate the McCoon well: 12 years of forms that record injection data — which the company is required by state law to submit — were missing from agency records, according to the internal report about the Boarman case. And they could not seem to find a map showing nearby objects, such as the Boarmans’ water well, that the injected fluid might impact. Under Oklahoma state rules, injection wells cannot operate without these maps.
Injection wells are supposed to be built in a way that only allows wastewater to be emitted deep in the earth. But a previous owner of the injection well noted in a report to the state that the well was missing a layer of cement that would help prevent the wastewater from escaping at shallow depths, where most drinking water sources exist, Plummer wrote in an email to oil division colleagues. The many poorly plugged wells nearby offer potential pathways for wastewater to travel toward the surface, he said. Other oil division staff argued in response that a layer of cement near the top of the McCoon well was enough protection and made leaks unlikely.
Early in 2024, Plummer requested that the agency run tests to determine whether the McCoon well was leaking. But it would take another 10 months before the agency did the testing — and found a hole.
In the intervening months, the agency decided to run a different type of test — one that would offer Tammy Boarman her first glimpse of the contamination that had turned her plants yellow and her water undrinkable. It involved an electromagnetic survey machine, a complex instrument about the size of a suitcase that shoots electric currents underground to create 3D maps.
After the test was run in May 2024, Boarman recalled state employees huddled around a laptop in the bed of their truck, scrutinizing the image generated by the machine: a swirling red cloud hanging directly beneath her house, where her well drank from a shallow pocket of fresh water. The field staffers told Boarman that the machine, which measures the concentration of dissolved solids in the water, showed an exceptionally concentrated pollution plume.
Subsequent testing would show her well was sunk into the center of the plume, which was thick with dissolved salts and chemicals, as much as 72 times more concentrated than what the EPA recommends for drinking water.
“I was sick to my stomach,” she said.

The electromagnetic survey showed the degree of contamination surrounding Boarman’s water well. But it did not go deep enough to show a source of the pollution.
Boarman said that she and her husband took the images to Jett, owner of the McCoon well. She said Jett, who also runs a company that the state contracts with to plug wells abandoned by oil companies, told them that he was not surprised to hear of the water problems and offered to connect them to a water line on his property.
The Boarmans never took him up on his offer; they learned from agency emails, which Tammy Boarman had obtained through a public records request, that Jett’s injection well was one of the possible pollution sources.
“Why would we accept water from the person who at any moment could get mad at us and shut it off?” she said.
Neither Jett nor his attorney responded to questions about his offer to connect the Boarmans to his water line, the potential pollution threat of the McCoon well or its missing cement liner and injection data.
Then, in August 2024, Chris had a heart attack. Tammy blamed the pollution, whether the salty water harmed him directly or only indirectly, through accumulated stress. Their doctor would later tell them that while there could be a link, it would be impossible to prove.
As Chris recovered at home, Tammy frantically searched for a filtration system strong enough to block all potential pollutants. The couple spent more than $15,000 to put one in.

Regular water sampling showed the Boarmans’ water still getting saltier, according to the test results. By this point, agency staff had also found pollution in the water of their neighbors, who live less than a quarter-mile away. (The neighbors declined requests for an interview.)
On Sept. 9, 2024, the Boarmans’ state senator, Grant Green, a Republican, requested a meeting with agency leaders to discuss the couple’s case, which Chris Boarman had briefed him on. A senior manager for government and regulatory affairs at the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, Travis Weedn, emailed two agency leaders about Green: “He’s most likely going to be the Senate Energy Chair this upcoming session …, so I’d like to be prompt with his office.”
Two days later, Trey Davis, the commission’s chief public information officer at the time, wrote an email to a number of oil division managers: “We are probably past the point with this complaint that we need to move forward with every measure at our disposal to identify the source of the contamination.”
Green recently told The Frontier and ProPublica that the agency failed the Boarmans despite the couple doing “everything right”; he said it did not appear to take their situation seriously until after he got involved.
“It should never take lawmaker intervention to get people to do their jobs,” Green said in a written statement. “It’s simply unacceptable.”
Shortly after Green contacted the agency, Plummer again advocated for running mechanical tests on the McCoon well to evaluate whether wastewater was leaking from it — the same tests he had requested in January. One oil division manager disagreed, writing to colleagues that a test to survey for leaks could cost Callie Oil a “substantial” amount of money because it could require removing and replacing part of the well. Oil companies typically conduct and pay for tests required by the state. Tammy Boarman said agency officials likewise told her in a meeting that these tests would be too expensive for the oil company. The agency would not comment on this interaction.
Boarman spent weeks reviewing agency reports, test results and internal emails that she had obtained through her public records request, often staying up well past midnight immersing herself in technical minutia. That was how she discovered that Plummer had first proposed tests on the McCoon well at the start of the year.
After that discovery, Boarman dropped all niceties in her communications with agency officials.
“We are convinced that some of you are either inept at your job, just do not care, or you are protecting the operators,” she wrote in a Sept. 27, 2024, email to a half dozen agency employees.
A week later, after meeting with Green, the oil division began running mechanical tests on the McCoon well. One test measured the well’s structural integrity. It failed the pressure test, suggesting a possible leak.
Further testing discovered a hole in a steel pipe within the well, about 2,700 feet deep, a potential escape hatch for oil field wastewater. Callie Oil promptly patched the hole. An agency report stated that the well had not been operating since June, but other state data indicated that the well had been injecting wastewater into the earth all summer and continued to operate through the rest of the year. Neither the agency nor Callie Oil responded to a question about the contradiction.
The oil division also ran a different test that scans for wastewater leaks. The test found no issues, but it didn’t look for leaks at shallower depths. In a subsequent report, an environmental consulting firm recommended running this test again — this time to survey the entire depth of the well.
The state never did. The agency did not respond to a question about why a full survey has not been done.
The agency did conduct a more comprehensive test of the Boarmans’ water to look for heavy metals commonly found in oil field wastewater. The test uncovered a new threat: barium, a metal that can cause heart and blood pressure problems, at three times the EPA’s drinking water limit.
The oil division did not inform the Boarmans of the results for over a month. In December 2024, the state’s environmental department provided the results to The Frontier and ProPublica in response to a public records request.
The next day, the oil division sent the test results to the Boarmans. The agency did not respond to a question about the delay.
Despite finding evidence of oil and gas contamination in the Boarmans’ water in more than a dozen tests conducted over two years, several agency leaders developed a new theory, according to internal emails from the fall of 2024: They suggested at times that the company that had drilled the Boarmans’ water well had done a bad job and drilled into a pocket of natural salt water, unrelated to oil and gas operations.
Other staff at the Oklahoma Corporation Commission proposed elevating the Boarmans’ case to the agency’s administrative law court to further evaluate the cause of the pollution and pursue potential enforcement. But some commission staff expressed concern internally about how much it could cost to retain a consulting firm to continue investigating the case. The oil division “doesn’t have the funds for this,” wrote Jeff Kline, legal adviser to one of the three elected commissioners, in a digital message to himself in March 2025.
Days later, the agency closed the case. “No responsible party is able to be identified at this time,” the agency wrote to the Boarmans.
Kline told The Frontier and ProPublica that he does not know whether cost influenced the agency’s decision to close the case. The oil division “is solely responsible for such determinations, including any cost-related considerations in this or other cases,” Kline said in a statement. The agency did not respond to questions about the cost concerns or about why some leaders had suggested that the Boarmans’ well was not drilled correctly.
Undeterred, Tammy Boarman continued to press her case to multiple agency leaders, emailing and calling them over the next month.
In an hourlong call with oil division director Jeremy Hodges last May, Boarman reminded him that his own staff and consultants had recommended more scrutiny of her neighbor’s injection well as a potential threat to her drinking water. In response, Hodges leaned on the same explanation his agency had relied on for months, blaming the company that drilled her water well. Private water well issues fall outside the oil division’s jurisdiction, he told her. “It’s not my deal.”
Hodges did not respond to a list of questions about this call, and the agency declined to make him available for an interview.
Boarman also sought answers from the Oklahoma Water Resources Board, the state agency that oversees private water wells. Charlie O’Malley, manager of the state water board’s well drilling program, told The Frontier and ProPublica the same thing he told the Boarmans: Their water well was drilled correctly and he believed it was contaminated by historic oil field pollution.
In contrast to state regulators, Green, the state senator, found a way to help the Boarmans. Last spring, he was instrumental in securing $2 million in state funding to connect the Boarmans and their neighbors to a rural water system.
“While this doesn’t change what the Boarmans and their neighbors have endured over the past two years, I hope it gives them a chance to start over,” Green said.
Tammy Boarman said that the fresh water is “a big deal for us,” but that it fails to solve the larger problem of groundwater pollution by the oil and gas industry. “The agency that is supposed to be taking care of this has been given a pass,” she said.
“This place has been ruined for us,” she said. “It’s a nightmare.”
Toxic wastewater from oil fields keeps pouring out of the ground in Oklahoma. For years, residents have filed complaints and struggled to find solutions. We need your help to understand the full scale of the problem.
The post Salty, Oily Drinking Water Left Sores in Their Mouths. Oklahoma Refused to Find Out Why. appeared first on ProPublica.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Under Delaware’s current funding formula, the significant drop in multilingual learner student enrollment could influence how much funding schools across the state receive in the future, while the interruption in students’ education could lead to long-term learning loss.
The rumors had swirled around the classroom for weeks. One of Louise Michaud Ngido’s multilingual learner students would be self-deporting along with her family.
“Today is my last day,” Michaud Ngido recalled the student telling her in mid-December before ultimately returning to Mexico.
Michaud Ngido, a teacher at Mariner Middle School in Milton, part of the Cape Henlopen School District, had already lost one of her students to self-deportation over the summer. Now she had to bid farewell to another.
“I was really sad,” Michaud Ngido said.
And her experience is not unique.
Delaware teachers and administrators said they have seen a rise in the number of families choosing to self-deport this year – choosing to leave the country together rather than face the possibility of being separated by federal agents as immigration enforcement ramps up across the country.
Multilingual learners, or students who are developing proficiency in multiple languages, are oftentimes immigrants who are learning English for the first time. Their citizenship status varies widely.
In some cases, the children are American citizens, having been born here, but whose parents may be undocumented. In other cases, both the parents and children may be undocumented and seeking asylum, or they may be resettled here through refugee or humanitarian programs, such as Temporary Protected Status.
But the Trump administration’s hardline immigration policies may have contributed to a significant decline in the number of multilingual learner (MLL) students in Delaware schools, experts say. The fear of federal agents separating their family has led many parents to keep their children home from school, with others deciding to leave the country altogether.
Nearly 70% of traditional Delaware school districts — 11 out of 16 — saw a decline in the number of enrolled multilingual learner students in the 2025-2026 school year compared to the previous year, according to a Spotlight Delaware analysis.
The enrollment drop in Delaware schools could be attributed to a confluence of factors, including self-deportations, alternatives to in-person learning and students cycling out of the MLL program with no new arrivals to backfill their spots as a result of the Trump administration’s border policies, said Julie Sugarman, associate director for K-12 education research with the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan immigration think tank.
While the MLL enrollment dropoff was felt across Delaware’s three counties, the First State is not alone in experiencing the decline.
In the weeks after federal agents killed Renee Good in Minneapolis, classrooms emptied as even U.S. citizens elected to keep their children home from school. In California, a Stanford University study found a 22% jump in student absences in state school districts facing intensified immigration enforcement.

At Cape Henlopen School District, LouAnn Hudson, the district’s assistant superintendent, said she saw an increase in families self-deporting in December. Families and students would often notify school officials of their decision, and it was uncommon for families to leave without saying anything, Hudson said.
Cape Henlopen saw a decrease of nearly 10% in MLL enrollment, with the number of students dropping from 670 in 2024 to 605 in 2025. The district has rolling enrollment throughout the school year, and there just were not as many new MLL students enrolling this year, according to Hudson.
“Our kids are struggling,” she said.
More than half the students who left the program moved to schools in different states, while others left to other Delaware school districts, Hudson added.
In July 2024, Michaud Ngido filed a civil rights complaint against Cape Henlopen School District, alleging discrimination against multilingual learners and their families. Michaud Ngido alleged that Mariner Middle School failed to sufficiently staff and support the language assistance program for MLL students.
The complaint, which was lodged with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, has since stalled despite being filed nearly two years ago, Michaud Ngido said.
In 2025, Indian River and Red Clay school districts recorded their lowest MLL enrollment numbers in four years. Christina, Colonial, Delmar, Woodbridge and Cape Henlopen school districts all experienced the lowest enrollment numbers since the 2022 school year.
Spotlight Delaware conducted its data analysis after submitting a Freedom of Information Act request for MLL enrollment numbers from 2021 to 2025 with Delaware’s 19 school districts and two dual-language charter schools in December.
Brandywine School District did not have 2025 data available.
Two of Delaware’s dual-language immersion charter schools — Las Americas ASPIRA Academy and Academia Antonia Alonso Charter School — also saw decreased enrollment numbers. Antonia Alonso saw a decrease of more than 4% while ASPIRA experienced a nearly 3% drop in enrollment in 2025.
This MLL enrollment decline also could lead to funding consequences for schools and long-term learning loss for students whose education has been interrupted, experts say.
Delaware’s public education funding formula is currently based on a unit count system, which distributes money to districts based on the number of students enrolled. The state also has an Opportunity Funding program, which provides weighted funding for low-income and MLL students.
Some school districts have aimed to use those opportunity funds to hire MLL teachers or instructional paraprofessionals to work with those learning English, according to program applications.
Delaware’s unit count is a snapshot of student enrollment, which typically takes place within the last 10 days of September.
Some school districts may already be seeing the effects of decreased student enrollment.
Officials noted a lower unit count than originally expected during a December 2025 Delaware Economic and Financial Advisory Council meeting.
Brian Maxwell, the director of the state’s Office of Management and Budget, said during the meeting that the count produced just 65 additional units for school districts. The state had projected an increase of 225.

“I believe some of it is attributed to multi-language learners,” Maxwell said during the meeting. “Obviously, there has been a number of students that may not be showing up to class just because of the enforcement of ICE, and so some of the families may be scared to actually send their kids to school.”
This school year’s unit count showed an increase in both home and private school enrollment, said Nicholas Konzelman, the director of policy and external affairs at the Office of Management and Budget.
There was also a “small decrease” in MLL enrollment, Konzelman wrote in a statement to Spotlight Delaware.
The decrease, along with increased enrollment in home and private schools, resulted in a lower overall enrollment in Delaware’s public schools, Konzelman said in his statement.

Gary Henry, a professor at the University of Delaware’s School of Education and Joseph R. Biden Jr. School of Public Policy & Administration, said lower enrollment could put some school districts in low-income areas in a “downward spiral.”
Henry said when districts in Kent or Sussex County lose students who typically bring in additional dollars, it “contributes to that downward spiral of effects on the schools that are serving more of [MLL and low-income] students and their families.”
Higher-wealth districts are able to generate more funding despite losing students, Henry said.
Henry also noted there could be a lag in funding if students come back to their school district after the unit count, as they will not be added to the count.
“There’s not an opportunity to go back and say, ‘OK, these kids have come into class,’” Henry said. “So, you’re stuck for a full school year without the resources from the opportunity funds for those students.”
Some teachers have already felt the impacts of a lack of funding for their existing MLL students.
For years, Alena Warner-Chisolm, a teacher in the Red Clay Consolidated School District, has made sure all of her materials are available in both English and Spanish for her MLL students. She has even paid for tutoring sessions so she can hold conversations with parents in Spanish.
Warner-Chisolm called it “exhausting work,” but said that for years her eighth-grade students have had the most growth out of all other eighth graders in their building.
“My kids, I gave them so much support that they were able to write five-paragraph, college-level essays,” she said. “They’re able to literally do everything.”
Still, Warner-Chisolm noted that there needs to be more funding for MLL students.
The state’s Public Education Funding Commission, which is in charge of recommending how future dollars should be distributed to Delaware schools, is moving forward with recommending a hybrid funding formula.
If implemented, that formula would combine the state’s distribution of money on a per-student basis with one that allocates dollars based on student needs.
This year’s drop in MLL students is one of the first repercussions that Delaware schools have felt as a result of increased immigration enforcement under the Trump administration.
It remains unclear if Louise Michaud Ngido will see more students leave her Milton classroom, or how enrollment trends will change in the coming years.
Despite not knowing how many students may leave before the end of the school year, teachers like Michaud Ngido and Warner-Chisolm are still committed to teaching their students. They know that without sufficient funding or dedicated teachers, their students will be left behind.
“I have countless examples of work where sometimes [MLL students] even outperformed the [non-MLL students], and that was because of their work ethic — these kids worked,” Warner-Chisolm said.
The post School districts see drop in multilingual students as families self-deport appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
British asset management group’s deal with Nuveen will create one of world’s biggest fund managers
Schroders has agreed a £9.9bn takeover by a US investor, ending two centuries of family ownership of the historic British asset management group.
Chicago-based Nuveen will buy the City firm, it said on Thursday, in a deal that will create one of the world’s biggest fund managers, controlling about $2.5tn (£1.8tn) of assets.
Continue reading... | I have a onewheel XR O+ for sale. Bought it used last year, used it a few times but never got in the zone or felt comfortable on it. I did order a new charger since last time I posted. $800 or feel free to make an offer Also interested in trades tattoo sessions, guitars, ps5 pro, moped, old motorcycle, comic book collections send interesting offers. [link] [comments] |
Federal prosecutors have revealed that Peter Williams, the former general manager of U.S. defense contractor L3Harris's hacking tools division Trenchant, sold eight stolen software exploits to a Russian broker whose customers -- including the Russian government -- could have used them to access "millions of computers and devices around the world." Williams, a 39-year-old Australian national, pleaded guilty in October and admitted to earning more than $1.3 million in cryptocurrency from the sales between 2022 and 2025. In a sentencing memorandum filed Tuesday ahead of his anticipated February 24 sentencing in a Washington, D.C., federal court, the Justice Department asked the judge for nine years in prison, $35 million in restitution, and a maximum fine of $250,000. Prosecutors described the unnamed Russian buyer -- believed to be Operation Zero, which publicly claims to sell only to the Russian government -- as "one of the world's most nefarious exploit brokers." Williams chose it because, by his own admission, "he knew they paid the most." He also oversaw the wrongful firing of a subordinate who was blamed for the theft.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Referendum on immigration limit could threaten EU agreements and cripple economy, say Swiss businesses
Switzerland will vote this summer on a proposal from the far-right Swiss People’s party (SVP) to limit the country’s population to 10 million, a move that would threaten key agreements with the EU and, opponents say, cripple the economy.
The government said on Wednesday the referendum on the SVP’s “No to a 10 million Switzerland” initiative, which is strongly opposed by both chambers of parliament and the business and financial services community, would be held on 10 June.
Continue reading...With many unable to access or afford qualified therapists, AI is filling the mental healthcare vacuum, amid calls for tighter regulation
On a quiet evening in her Abuja hotel, Joy Adeboye, 23, sits on her bed clutching her phone, her mind racing and chest tightening. On her screen is yet another abusive message from her stalker – a man she had met nine months earlier at her church.
He had asked Adeboye out; when she declined, he began sending her intimidating, insulting and blackmailing messages on social media, as well as spreading false information about her online. There were even death threats.
Continue reading...Apple's long-promised overhaul of Siri has hit fresh problems during internal testing, forcing the company to push several key features out of the iOS 26.4 update that was slated for March and spread them across later releases, Bloomberg is reporting. The new Siri -- first announced at WWDC in June 2024 and originally due by early 2025 -- struggles to reliably process queries, takes too long to respond and sometimes falls back on OpenAI's ChatGPT instead of Apple's own technology, the report said. Apple has instructed engineers to begin testing new Siri capabilities on iOS 26.5 instead, due in May, and internal builds of that update include a settings toggle labeled "preview" for the personal data features. A more ambitious chatbot-style Siri code-named Campo, powered by Google servers and a custom Gemini model, is in development for iOS 27 in September.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Move is a ‘backwards step’, company spokesperson says, amid concerns Kremlin is seeking more state control via messaging apps such as Max
Russia has attempted to “fully block” WhatsApp in an attempt to push users towards its own state-sponsored communications app, Max, a spokesperson for the Meta-owned company has said.
The company did not reveal more detail on what extent the attempt succeeded or what action was taken to try to block the app.
Continue reading...A panel of judges in New York appointed a new top federal prosecutor in Albany after a Trump nominee was found to be serving unlawfully — but within hours, the Justice Department said it had fired the judges' new hire.
The blunder that will imperil any Mideast peace.
America can’t disengage from the alliance and also lead it.
A last chance to step back from the brink.
Six people in Sarasota and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, are dead in what police say is a cross-state murder spree by the same suspect Wednesday morning. The suspect was also found dead, authorities said.
A community college bus carrying the school's baseball team crashed and overturned in a ditch in rural Iowa.
Former linebacker questions QB’s character
Duo won Super Bowl together in 2005 season
Joey Porter Sr says Ben Roethlisberger, the quarterback he won a Super Bowl with at the Pittsburgh Steelers, is not “a good person”.
Porter was speaking on a podcast during Super Bowl week when he made the comments. He and Roethlisberger won Super Bowl XL with Pittsburgh at the end of the 2005 season.
Continue reading...Madison Chock and Evan Bates claimed a silver medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Wednesday following a stunning free dance routine.
An anonymous reader shares a report: An Anthropic safety researcher quit, saying the "world is in peril" in part over AI advances. Mrinank Sharma said the safety team "constantly [faces] pressures to set aside what matters most," citing concerns about bioterrorism and other risks. Anthropic was founded with the explicit goal of creating safe AI; its CEO Dario Amodei said at Davos that AI progress is going too fast and called for regulation to force industry leaders to slow down. Other AI safety researchers have left leading firms, citing concerns about catastrophic risks.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 12, No. 507.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 12.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Christina School District is among the largest in Delaware, and its school board has been the most acrimonious. On Tuesday, the board appointed a new member to fill its Wilmington-based seat. The appointment comes at a time when the district sits at the center of a debate over whether the multiple school districts that serve the state’s largest city should dissolve into one.
In a vote Tuesday, the Christina Board of Education appointed Celita Cherry, a self-empowerment coach, to fill the board’s Wilmington-based seat that was left vacant in December following the resignation of Shannon Troncoso.
Four members of the embattled school board voted in favor of Cherry’s appointment over the other candidate, Joseph Lewis, a former teacher at the Delaware School for the Deaf.
No members voted against Cherry’s appointment, but board member Amy Trauth abstained from the vote.
During the Tuesday meeting, Board President Monica Moriak said Cherry would be the best fit for the appointment because she “represents the lived experiences” of the district’s Wilmington population.
Cherry has a daughter in the Bayard School, and is also the president of Mothers Advocating for School Kids, an advocacy organization.
She will serve the Christina School District until elections occur in the spring.
Last month, Cherry told Spotlight Delaware she decided to apply for the seat because she felt it was time for someone who grew up in Wilmington and attended Christina schools to “serve as a voice directly from the community.”

Cherry also said the person filling the vacant seat should serve as a bridge between the district and the city to better communicate how district policies are made. She said she has worked in recent years with families who want to learn more about district policies, but feel that attending school board meetings “can be a little intimidating.”
Moriak said Cherry has already done that bridge work through her previous community advocacy. Moriak also said it is particularly important to have a school board member who has shared experiences with Wilmington parents, given that city schools could face upheaval through a likely redistricting that would change where kids go to school in the future.
In December, the Redding Consortium, which is charged with drawing plans to redistrict Wilmington schools, voted to move forward with a recommendation to combine Delaware’s four northernmost school districts.
The affected districts would include the Brandywine, Christina, Colonial and Red Clay Consolidated school districts.
“We’re at a moment in the education in Delaware when we’re looking at Wilmington directly with Redding, and redistricting, and funding, and I believe that the voices of Wilmington will be best served with Miss Cherry,” Moriak said during the meeting.
The Wilmington portion of the Christina School District is unique because it sits as a non-contiguous island in the center of the city, separate from the rest of the district that centers around Newark.
Cherry is the second person this school year to be appointed to the Christina Board of Education, which has faced a tumultuous two years that included Troncoso’s resignation in December.
In December, Troncoso cited what she called transparency concerns and discriminatory conduct as reasons for her resignation.
“The chaos and contention surrounding Christina’s board are not new — they are historical,” Troncoso wrote in a press release at the time. “The environment itself makes it incredibly difficult for any board member, past or present, to create meaningful change.”
Troncoso’s resignation came just three days before the board was set to fill another vacancy – one that opened because a previous board member, Naveed Baqir, had been living outside of the country in Pakistan.
Ultimately, only one candidate ended up seeking and securing that seat – the president of Delaware’s union of teachers and other educators, Stephanie Ingram.
Controversies in the district erupted last year when reports emerged that Baqir had been living in Pakistan and attending school board meetings remotely.
During one contentious meeting in the summer of 2024, Doug Manley argued that Baqir’s votes on the board should not be counted because of doubts about residency. At the time, Baqir was a part of a four-member bloc on the board that typically voted together.
During the same summer meeting, Baqir had voted in favor of placing then-Superintendent Dan Shelton on an indefinite administrative leave.
One month after that acrimonious meeting, WHYY reported that a private religious school in Newark that Baqir co-founded was the subject of a grand jury investigation into nearly $11 million in federal dollars it received for COVID-era school meal program.
In March, the controversy drew another critic in Rep. Madinah Wilson-Anton (D-Bear), who introduced two pieces of legislation – House Bill 82 and House Bill 83 – that each targeted the questions surrounding Baqir’s residency.
House Bill 82 ultimately passed, and Gov. Matt Meyer signed it into law on June 30, 2025.
The post Celita Cherry to serve on Christina school board appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Feb. 11, 2026 — Meet the sniffer dog of spectroscopy tools: an AI-enhanced sensor that can “sniff and seek” target objects in real-time.

Berkeley Lab scientists developed an intelligent sensor that first “sniffs” out spectral features of interest in example objects — here a type of crop (above) or leaf (below). It then seeks out the specified targets in a new environment — one it has not seen before, while avoiding cumbersome digital processing. Credit: Ali Javey/Berkeley Lab.
Spectral imaging tools — cameras that capture colors beyond the RGB spectrum visible to our eyes — are vital for gleaning information about an object’s material and structural properties. Marrying them with machine learning has provided a powerful pipeline for identifying features in real-world applications including semiconductor fabrication, pollutant tracking, and crop monitoring. By folding AI algorithms into the camera’s sensor itself, researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have now eliminated a data-processing bottleneck that has long plagued the performance of spectral imaging technology. The result is an intelligent sensor capable of identifying chemicals and characterizing materials quickly and efficiently.
“We focused on enhancing the speed, resolution, and power efficiency of existing spectral machine vision technologies by more than two orders of magnitude,” said Ali Javey, the scientist who led the Science study reporting the device. Javey is a senior faculty scientist at Berkeley Lab and a professor of materials science and engineering at UC Berkeley. The work was performed in close collaboration with Aydogan Ozcan at UCLA.
The sensor design illustrates how novel functionality can be built into semiconductor devices themselves to improve their efficiency and utility, and enable a new class of AI vision hardware.
Building Algorithms with Light
Today’s spectral imaging technologies have separate sensor and computational modules. The sensor first captures a stack of images, each of which corresponds to a certain color. Then the dense image stack gets sent to a digital processor for further computation, which produces the object-identification results. That’s where the problems arise.
“The sensors must collect and send much more data to the digital processor than normal cameras, roughly ten- to hundred-times larger in volume,” said Dehui Zhang, a postdoc in Berkeley Lab’s Materials Sciences Division and the lead author on the study. Consequently, the sensor and computer hardware are often overwhelmed, making object-recognition tasks extremely slow and power-hungry.
Instead, the Berkeley Lab team developed sensors that perform AI computation and spectral analysis during the image capturing — or photodetection — process itself.
“Photodetection can be perceived as an automatic physical computational process,” explained Zhang. When light hits the sensor, its intensity automatically gets mapped to the strength of an electrical current. Because the sensor’s responsivity to light can easily be adjusted, the researchers have a tuning knob for selecting which spectral signatures get highlighted and which get suppressed. The current that departs the sensor to be read by a circuit, therefore, serves as an inference about the image’s spectral content.
“We proved that the computational process mathematically resembles an algorithm typically used for digital machine learning,” said Zhang. This analogy made it possible to use the sensor as a machine learning computer and perform the machine learning computations on the incoming light itself.
Training the Machine
Any AI or machine vision model first needs to learn what it’s supposed to identify. That means “showing” it enough examples of the spectral signatures of interest — say, the infrared patterns that come from a real leaf versus an artificial one; or the pixels in an image that belong to a bird’s plumage versus a tree’s similarly colored bark — that it can find these signatures in an untrialed test case.
In the training step, the researchers showed the sensor dozens of images of colorful birds in wooded settings. Rather than examining every pixel of each image, the sensor “sniffed” a random selection of pixels, each of which was labeled as belonging either to the bird or to the unwanted background. An external computer sent an electrical signal to the sensor commanding it to “identify bird” or “identify background,” and recorded the sensor’s output for each command. Software then determined the best command combination for teaching the sensor to highlight the bird region while suppressing everything else.
In the test step, they showed the sensor a new image and told it to find a bird, using the command combination developed during training. The sensor gave positive output signals only for pixels that belonged to the bird. This result meant the sensor had learned from the examples to identify target objects, even when they belonged to an image it had never seen before.
“For me, the most exciting part is the concept of giving intelligence to sensors,” said Javey. Normal sensors simply collect raw environmental information, leaving the intelligent recognition tasks to digital processors.
By co-designing the semiconductor materials, devices and the algorithms, the team enabled the sensors to learn and compute without the need for digital post-processing of data.
But applications for the technology go way beyond identifying birds. Using photodiodes of black phosphorus (capable of detecting mid-infrared light with tunable responsivity), the researchers experimentally demonstrated several other intriguing possibilities. They successfully identified oxide layer thicknesses in semiconductor samples — which manufacturing giants need to be perfectly uniform — as well as hydration states in different plant leaves, object segmentation in optical images, and transparent chemicals in a petri dish.
“I’m also optimistic about the future of such devices for broader applications,” Javey said. In the future, the smart sensors could find a home not only in spectral machine vision but in “other advanced optical sensing and beyond.”
The work was funded by the US Department of Energy’s Office of Basic Energy Sciences. It received support from the DOE’s Microelectronics Energy Efficiency Research Center for Advanced Technologies, one of the DOE’s three Microelectronics Science Research Centers.
For information about licensing this technology, contact UC Berkeley.
About Berkeley Lab
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is committed to groundbreaking research focused on discovery science and solutions for abundant and reliable energy supplies. The lab’s expertise spans materials, chemistry, physics, biology, earth and environmental science, mathematics, and computing. Researchers from around the world rely on the lab’s world-class scientific facilities for their own pioneering research. Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest problems are best addressed by teams, Berkeley Lab and its scientists have been recognized with 17 Nobel Prizes. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.
Source: Rachel Berkowitz, Berkeley Lab
The post Berkeley Lab: New AI Sensor ‘Sniffs’ Out Spectral Targets appeared first on HPCwire.
Marc Benioff’s remarks criticized as employees were reportedly planning to urge him to cancel business with agency
Marc Benioff, the Salesforce CEO and co-founder, is facing growing criticism over a joke he made about US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) monitoring international employees during an event for the company.
Employees publicly expressed outrage about Benioff’s comments in his keynote address at an internal conference in Las Vegas on Tuesday, and leaders at Slack, which Salesforce owns, have said he should apologize.
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed.
Transportation secretary Sean Duffy said the El Paso airport closure was to “address a cartel drone incursion”.
“The threat has been neutralized, and there is no danger to commercial travel in the region,” Duffy said on social media. “The restrictions have been lifted and normal flights are resuming.”
Continue reading...Documents that were part of the Epstein files release help explain why a video released from the night of Epstein's death was missing one minute close to midnight.
Actually undoing Trump’s tariff policy would ultimately require his approval, which was unlikely – key US politics stories from Wednesday 11 February at a glance
Donald Trump had a warning for congressional Republicans Wednesday: any of them who joined an effort to rescind his tariffs on Canada would “seriously suffer the consequences come Election time”.
Despite that threat, six members of the president’s party sided with Democrats in a largely symbolic resolution to disapprove of the national emergency Trump declared to impose tariffs on Canada.
Continue reading... | My Onewheel spontaneously started releasing gas and and later started fire after I rushed to throw it outside. I’m really confused as to what caused this. I never abused the battery and had just done a 9 mile ride yesterday where it performed very well. It threw a low battery code at 13% but I assumed it was just one of the cells dipping below the voltage threshold and didn’t think much of it. I charged it to 80% last night and it had been sitting for 22 hours. I hadn’t balanced charged in probably a month or so. I’m very disappointed because this was such a large part of my life and I used it every day and loved it. I had just crossed over the 1200 mile mark. Do you think Future Motion will do anything for me? [link] [comments] |
Ring's Super Bowl ad on Sunday promoted "Search Party," a feature that lets a user post a photo of a missing dog in the Ring app and triggers outdoor Ring cameras across the neighborhood to use AI to scan for a match. 404 Media argues the cheerful premise obscures what the Amazon-owned company has become: a massive, consumer-deployed surveillance network. Ring founder Jamie Siminoff, who left in 2023 and returned last year, has since moved to re-establish police partnerships and push more AI into Ring cameras. The company has also partnered with Flock, a surveillance firm used by thousands of police departments, and launched a beta feature called "Familiar Faces" that identifies known people at your door. Chris Gilliard, author of the upcoming book Luxury Surveillance, called the ad "a clumsy attempt by Ring to put a cuddly face on a rather dystopian reality: widespread networked surveillance by a company that has cozy relationships with law enforcement." Further reading: No One, Including Our Furry Friends, Will Be Safer in Ring's Surveillance Nightmare, EFF Says
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The actor, who died of cancer on Wednesday at just 48, made his mark on television and cinema.
Buddhist monks had walked 2,300 miles from Texas, braving snow and often barefoot – their arrival in the capital was greeted by thousands
Bhante Saranapala gazed down at more than a hundred Buddhist monks wearing burnt-orange, saffron and maroon robes, most sporting woolly hats, a few clutching flowers.
“These monks are awesome!” roared Saranapala, who is known as the “Urban Buddhist Monk”, prompting a cheer from the big crowd. “Their determination should be greatly appreciated. Walking from Texas to Washington DC, 2,300 miles; it requires strong determination!”
Continue reading...Jailed then exiled in London, Rahman returns home as the main contender to be next prime minister of Bangladesh
Tarique Rahman, who after 17 years in exile is the main contender to be the next prime minister of Bangladesh, has pledged to end entrenched corruption and put the country on a “new path” as voting began in the first free and fair elections in almost two decades.
Speaking to the Guardian before polls opened on Thursday morning, Rahman promised a new era of clean politics, including a “top down, no tolerance” approach to graft, if his Bangladesh Nationalist party (BNP) was brought to power.
Continue reading...HLRS and the AI Factory HammerHAI will participate in the ECAVA AI Model Development and Data Working Group.
Feb. 11, 2026 — The High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS) has joined the European Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Alliance (ECAVA). This European Commission-led initiative was recently organized to strengthen Europe’s competitiveness in the automotive sector as well as digital sovereignty in this important industry.

On February 5-6, 2026, the European Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Alliance launched four working groups at a workshop in Brussels. Photo credit: ECAVA.
Bringing together experts and stakeholders from across Europe, ECAVA aims to promote collaboration and accelerate innovation in the automotive sector, including in the integration of improved software, chips, AI applications, and autonomous driving technologies. ECAVA is one component of the European Commission’s industrial action plan for the European automotive branch.
Led by Henna Virkkunen, European Commission Executive Vice-President for Tech Sovereignty, Security, and Democracy, a pre-steering committee composed of high-level representatives of major auto manufacturers and organizations met in late October 2025. The committee defined key strategic priorities for the automotive sector, and agreed to launch four working groups. These working groups will focus on software-defined vehicles, automotive hardware, artificial intelligence and data, and autonomous vehicle development, and officially launched on February 5-6, 2026 at a workshop held in Brussels.
Following a selective application process, HLRS was chosen to join ECAVA and a representative of the center participated in the Brussels conference as a member of the AI Model Development and Data Working Group. HLRS’s participation builds on its long history of providing high-performance computing infrastructure and expertise for companies in the automotive sector. As coordinator of the AI Factory HammerHAI, HLRS is also in the process of developing new capabilities that will be highly relevant for the development of next-generation automobile technologies, including the training, fine-tuning, and validation of large-scale AI agents, production of synthetic data using generative AI models and simulations, and benchmarking of candidate foundational models.
HLRS and HammerHAI will bring its expertise in these areas to ECAVA’s AI Model Development and Data Working Group. As an ECAVA member, HLRS and HammerHAI will also gain an improved understanding of what manufacturers in the automotive industry need from HPC centers and AI Factories in order to use their resources efficiently. This includes end user requirements with respect to data sharing, data pooling, and foundational AI model development for autonomous vehicles.
In Brussels, the AI Model Development and Data Working Group started productive discussions among stakeholders from across the European auto industry that focused on establishing priorities for collaborations, practical ways to launch collaborations, and how to build links between industry and the AI Factories. Future activities will build on these initial discussions to enable a more robust integration of European AI capabilities into the auto industry.
Source: Christopher Williams, HLRS
The post HLRS Joins EU Initiative for Digital Innovation in the Auto Industry appeared first on HPCwire.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 12, No. 711.
Here are some hints and the answers for The New York Times Connections puzzle for Feb. 12 #977.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 12, No. 1,699.
A high-profile House Democrat is accusing Attorney General Pam Bondi of "spying" on her search history while she pored through Jeffrey Epstein-related documents.
President Trump says nearly all governors are welcome at the White House for a formal meeting and dinner next week, though the Democratic governors of Maryland and Colorado are still being excluded.
A teacher and five students among those killed in attack in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, on Tuesday
Canadian police have identified the suspect who carried out a school massacre in remote British Columbia as an 18-year old with a history of mental health problems.
Six people, including a teacher and five students, were killed in the attack on Tuesday in the town of Tumbler Ridge, in the foothills of the Rocky mountains. The suspect’s mother and step-brother were later found dead at the family home, police said. The body of the shooter, Jesse Van Rootselaar, was also found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Continue reading...Documents that were part of the Epstein files release help explain why a video released from the night of Epstein's death was missing one minute close to midnight.
Bloomberg reports that numerous issues are holding up the advanced version of Siri, including lag time, data access concerns and accuracy issues.
Republicans join Democrats in objecting to national emergency US president declared to impose tariffs
The US House on Wednesday voted to rescind tariffs that Donald Trump imposed on Canada last year, a rare bipartisan rebuke of the White House’s trade policy as the president threatened electoral retaliation against any Republican who defied him.
The largely symbolic resolution to disapprove of the national emergency Trump declared to impose tariffs on Canada passed 219 to 211, with six Republicans – Don Bacon of Nebraska, Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Kevin Kiley of California, Dan Newhouse of Washington and Jeff Hurd of Colorado – voting with all Democrats except Jared Golden of Maine, who voted against it.
Continue reading...Researchers at Penn State have built a prototype that uses an "infinity mirror."
New evidence shows Gregory Bovino hailed agent who fired at Marimar Martinez five times in her car
Newly released evidence has shown that Gregory Bovino, a border patrol chief who was the face of the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts until last month, praised a federal agent who shot a Chicago woman during an immigration crackdown last year.
Marimar Martinez, a US citizen, was shot five times by a border patrol agent in October while in her vehicle. She was charged with a felony after officials at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) accused her of trying to ram agents with her vehicle. But the case was abruptly dismissed after video evidence emerged showing that an agent had steered his vehicle into Martinez’s car.
Lawyers for Martinez have pushed to make evidence in the dismissed criminal case public, saying they were especially motivated to do so after a federal agent fatally shot Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis under similar circumstances.
Continue reading...As the Chicago woman shot five times by a Border Patrol agent last fall fights for all evidence in her case to be released, new documents show the agent texted jokes to fellow officers and was praised by then-commander Gregory Bovino.
Nancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie, was reported missing on Feb. 1 and ransom notes were being investigated.
The measure's passage is largely symbolic as it's likely to be vetoed by the president if it survives a Senate vote.
Bill that requires proof of citizenship and would limit mail-in voting passes 218-213 but faces uphill battle in Senate
The House on Wednesday passed the Save America Act, which would dramatically change voting regulations by requiring proof of citizenship at voter registration and significantly curtail mail-in voting.
The legislation, which passed 218 to 213, faces an uphill battle in the Senate, close observers say.
Continue reading...The SAVE America Act would implement strict new requirements for registering to vote and casting ballots.
Rics surveyors report inquiries from new buyers, agreed sales and house prices were less negative in January
There are “tentative signs” that the housing market in England and Wales is recovering from a months-long slowdown after uncertainty around the autumn budget and economic pressures, estate agents and surveyors have reported.
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) said its members were feeling more optimistic about the year ahead than at any time since December 2024, as inquiries from new buyers, agreed sales and house prices became less negative in January.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Calls for ‘urgent action’ as study also finds stark ethnic and socio-economic disparities in child mortality and consanguinity
One in 14 children who died in England in a four-year period had parents who were close relatives, according to “stark” figures revealed by the first study of its kind.
The figures, published by the National Child Mortality Database (NCMD), based at the University of Bristol, analysed all 13,045 child deaths in England between 2019 and 2023. Of these, 926 (7%) were found to be of children born to consanguineous parents, meaning the mother and father are close blood relatives, such as first cousins.
Continue reading...Review says trauma-informed support could help interrupt ‘destructive cycles’ and reduce risk of harm to future babies
Parents whose children are taken into care should receive trauma-informed support to reduce the risk of harm to any further babies they have, according to child protection experts.
A national child safeguarding review, launched after the death of baby Victoria Marten, said that if “destructive cycles of harm are to be interrupted” there needed to be more focus on parents, as well as their vulnerable baby or unborn infant.
Continue reading...Go behind the scenes with our team as we find and make sense of the numbers.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told reporters Wednesday that Ukraine would "move toward elections when all the relevant security guarantees are in place."
Order comes after seven people in California City facility allege they were denied medications, food and sanitation
The US government must provide detainees at a California immigration detention center with adequate medical care, access to attorneys, and “temperature-appropriate clothing and blankets”, a federal judge has ruled.
The order came on Tuesday in response to a lawsuit filed by seven people detained at the California City detention facility in November, alleging they had been denied essential medications, sufficient food and sanitary housing conditions.
Continue reading...In an exclusive interview with CBS News, the Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara said the public support he received gives him hope for the future.
Writer made international breakthrough with 1980 novel Rituals and won acclaim for his travel writing
The Dutch writer Cees Nooteboom, whose novels, travel writing and translations made him a prominent literary figure in postwar Europe, has died aged 92.
Publishing house De Bezige Bij said in a statement on Wednesday evening that Nooteboom had “passed away very peacefully on his beloved island Menorca”. The statement was made on behalf of the author’s wife, the photographer Simone Sassen.
Continue reading...Officials in US border city say FAA decisions caused major disruption – and residents are still scrambling for answers
Officials in Texas were left scrambling for answers on Wednesday after the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued a surprise order to shut down the airspace over El Paso for 10 days and then, as turmoil ensued in the city on the US-Mexico border, abruptly lifted it within hours.
Local leaders in the west Texas city said that they received no prior warning or explanation and the stunning announcement had put lives at risk.
Continue reading...The Claude maker went after competitor OpenAI for putting ads in its free plan, and now it's adding more features to its own plan.
The Genesis Mission started just 79 days ago, yet the program is on track to launch the first two supercomputers at DOE labs in just a few months, the Department of Energy’s Undersecretary of Science Darío Gil told HPCwire this week.
“Our goal is to have both 10,000 GPU-style systems–the Nvidia-[powered system] with Oracle in Argonne and the HPE–AMD one in Oak Ridge–operational in Q2 of this year,” Gil said in an exclusive interview. “I’m very proud of the team on this. Because I think, from having a handshake to having systems operational in that timeframe–honestly, I think it’s unprecedented in government.”
Gil is tasked with heading up Genesis Mission, which was launched through an executive order by President Trump in November with the goal of utilizing AI to accelerate science and engineering. Gil, who previously was the director of IBM Research, is coordinating the White House Office of Science and Technology (OSTP), the 17 DOE labs, and an amalgam of academic, industrial, and philanthropic partners on a Manhattan Project-sized initiative to push the bounds of scientific discovery and engineering automation, with a special emphasis on advancing research in energy (nuclear fission, fusion, and grid modernization); building new tools for AI-powered scientific discovery; and developing advanced AI technologies to ensure national security.
The primary emphasis is developing a common platform for using AI for science and engineering. That includes both hardware (new supercomputers and quantum systems) and software development. The platform will also include an agentic AI framework to allow for the orchestration of complex scientific workflows, Gil said. DOE labs and partners are also working to curate scientific and engineering data sets in preparation for use by AI.
Genesis Mission will unfold in waves and layers in the coming months, with a combination of new supercomputers, new software, and a handful of “Lighthouse Challenges,” or real-world applications that display the power and capability of AI-powered science and engineering, Gil said.
“There’s many elements of the story of the platform,” Gil said in his interview with HPCwire. “It has infrastructure. And that means that we want to bring the best of HPC with the best of AI systems with future quantum systems, together. It has the building of an agentic framework on top to allow the orchestration of complex scientific workflows. It has the element of the curation of scientific and engineering data sets to allow AI to go beyond language and coding into the new realm. It has robotics laboratories so that we allow close feedback systems enabled by the platform, in addition to marrying the platform to our scientists and engineers.”
At least nine (and probably more) new supercomputers will be built as part of Genesis Mission. Oak Ridge National Lab will get at least two new supercomputers. The smaller one that will go in by June 30 is Lux, which will be built atop the HPE ProLiant Compute XD685 platform and feature AMD processors, including Instinct MI355X GPUs and EPYC CPUs. It will utilize Pensando data processing units (DPUs) to help accelerate data access and will be administered by Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. The bigger machine, Discovery, will be based on HPE’s new Cray GX5000 platform, feature AMD “Venice” EPYC CPUs and AMD Instinct MI430X GPUs, and HPE’s new DAOS storage system. It’s slated to go online in 2029, according to the October 27 announcement.
Argonne National Laboratory is slated to get at least five new supercomputers. This includes Equinox, which will feature about 10,000 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs and is expected to arrive in 2026. There is also Solstice, a much larger leadership-class machine designed to handle traditional modeling and simulation and newer AI workloads. It will feature 100,000 Blackwell GPUs, twice the number of GPUs in El Capitan. It will also utilize the new public-private partnership model that DOE is using with Genesis Mission.
Gil highlighted the work that Brian Spears, the director of the AI Innovation Incubator at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, has done in managing the infrastructure buildout tied to Genesis Mission. “It’s really outstanding teamwork,” Gil added. Spears’ team “has made a lot of progress.”
Gil emphasized some unique aspects of Genesis Mission, including the modern agile methodology it’s using to develop software among groups of teams, as well the diversity of partners that are involved, including teams from government, academia, industry, and philanthropic organizations. The goal is to bring the people together through software and shared data to pursue AI-driven science and technology atop cutting-edge machines.
“We have our common DevOps environments for the whole team. We have assembly teams that operate across the different laboratories that are doing the platform build,” Gil said. “There are dozens of scientific models that have been built across the labs, plus frontier models that are coming from our partner companies, demonstrating workflows that allow us to do everything from generating a plan, automatically provisioning in HPC, and launching simulations from the simulation code, the [having the] output of it actually launching an experiment campaign in terms of fabrication, for example, doing measurement, and closing the loop back to the simulation campaign.”

Discovery is a leadership-class machine that is slated to go into Oak Ridge by 2029
If Genesis Mission’s sole goal was to harness the huge trove of scientific data from traditional modelling and simulation workloads to train a surrogate AI model to take scientific discovery to the next level, that would be enough, Gil said. But Genesis Mission is so much more than that.
“Just think about how much better the utilization and the impact of our supercomputers will be as a consequence of that, how much more time you can make available,” he said. “Think about HPC assets…I have a 10x, 20x improvement there. You can free up capacity of the existing asset to do more around that.”
“That’s just the beginning,” Gil continued. “But then you have entirely new workflows that have to do with hypothesis generation and automated experimentation, the encoding of information, the neural network representation for many fields. So it’s just layer upon layer.”
Genesis Mission currently has enough funding, including $150 million from the Office of Science and $115 million from NASA, to satisfy near term requirements, Gil said. Longer term, the project will need more funding.
“There are resources within existing budgets that are complementary to the reconciliation package that we’re also utilizing to stand up and build capability,” Gild said. “And then of course, next up will be FY 27. The president’s budget hasn’t been released yet, but obviously we’re very engaged with OMB [Office of Management and Budget] and everybody to highlight the importance of this. And we will be engaging with Congress to give them the context of what the funding opportunities are. And then it’s ultimately for them to decide.”
There are always aspirations to build more HPC systems, even if they’re not in the budget. “We continue to look for novel opportunities to add more,” Gil said. “There’s a lot of appetite from many partners to bring capacity.”

Quantum also plays a role in Genesis Mission
Nvidia is not the only source of computational capability, said Gil, who mentioned Google Cloud and its TPU clusters as a potential source of computational power for Genesis Mission.
“There are many players that have different approaches, different architectures,” he said. “One of the things that DOE has always done a good job has been exploring different approaches, like memory intensive architecture, different approaches to do this. And we seek to do that too.”
Quantum computing represents another unique aspect of Genesis Mission that could provide novel computational capability. “We’re pushing really hard on the quantum piece,” Gil said. “We announced the renewal of the National Quantum Initiative Center, $625 million of funding for those, and I’ve been quite public setting the goal that we want a scientifically relevant quantum computer demonstration by 2028 that is capable of implementing about 100 to 200 qubits and 100 million operations. So the first kind of error-corrected machine to do science demonstration. So we’re also working very hard on that front.”
The DOE is taking a big-tent approach with Genesis Mission. Gil was at the SCA/HPCAsia 2026 conference in Osaka, Japan in late January to discuss Genesis Mission and herald an expanded partnership among Argonne, Nvidia, RIKEN, and Fujitsu. There will be opportunities for additional involvement by universities affiliated with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as well as the National Science Foundation (NSF), he said.
“We have an [RFI] that you may have be aware of that we put [out] towards the end of January, towards universities and philanthropies to hear from them about what ideas they have and to contribute to the Genesis Mission,” Gil said. “This month is our listening month for universities. And then from that, we are going to formulate an engagement approach and a strategy for universities, just like we did with industry. So yes, there are indispensable in the success of the Genesis Mission, both from a research perspective and from a workforce and sort of human capital and education perspective.”
On Monday, Gil welcomed the launch of Genesis Mission Consortium, a new initiative to bring interested parties together for AI-powered science and engineering. Gil also will be the keynote speaker for TPC26, the annual conference for the Trillion Parameter Consortium, which will take place in early June in Baltimore, Maryland.
These are busy days for Gil and his team. But that’s what happens when you’re shaping the future.
The post First Genesis Mission Supercomputers on Track to Launch by June. ‘Unprecedented’ Speed, DOE’s Darío Gil Says appeared first on HPCwire.
Public opinion polling agency says decision ‘solely based on Gallup’s research goals and priorities’
Gallup, the public opinion polling agency, will stop tracking presidential approval ratings after almost nine decades, a spokesperson confirmed.
As Donald Trump continues to closely scrutinize polling of his popularity, and publicly lambast media companies that report on unfavorable numbers, Gallup insisted its decision was “solely based on Gallup’s research goals and priorities”.
Continue reading...Pretti, a VA nurse, was shot by federal agents in Minneapolis and was labeled a ‘terrorist’ by the administration
Democratic lawmakers assailed Doug Collins, the Veterans Affairs (VA) secretary for repeating Trump administration’s claims on the killing of Alex Pretti, a VA nurse shot 10 times by federal immigration officials in Minneapolis, during a congressional hearing Wednesday.
Are you going to “correct your cabinet colleagues when they called him a terrorist?” Mark Takano, a Democratic representative of California and the House Committee on Veterans Affairs’ ranking member, asked Collins. The secretary declined to answer.
Continue reading...Many are questioning how Nancy Guthrie's Google Nest surveillance footage was recovered days after officials said it was disconnected with no active subscription to store video.
Mark Kelly speaks out after grand jury declines to indict six lawmakers over video urging troops to resist illegal orders
Arizona senator Mark Kelly warned that the Trump administration’s failed attempt to secure an indictment against him and five other Democratic lawmakers for a video urging service members to resist unlawful orders was a “master alarm flashing for our democracy”.
On Tuesday, a grand jury in Washington DC declined to indict the six members of Congress who posted a video last year reminding members of the military and intelligence community that they “can refuse illegal orders” – a message that Donald Trump said amounted to “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!”
Dani Anguiano contributed to this story
Continue reading...Players will get to see the class's beginnings in Diablo 2 today and its more destructive evolution in Diablo 4 this April.
Adam Mosseri defends app on witness stand and says critics must separate ‘clinical addiction’ from ‘problematic use’
Instagram’s CEO dismissed the idea that users can be addicted to social media at a landmark California trial on Wednesday.
“I think it’s important to differentiate between clinical addiction and problematic use,” Adam Mosseri said on the witness stand. Psychologists do not classify social media addiction as an official diagnosis. Researchers have documented the harmful consequences of compulsive use among young people, and lawmakers around the world are worried about its addictive potential.
Continue reading...BrianFagioli writes: The Linux Mint developers say they are considering adopting a longer development cycle, arguing that the project's current six month cadence plus LMDE releases leaves too little room for deeper work. In a recent update, the team reflected on its incremental philosophy, independence from upstream decisions like Snap, and heavy investment in Cinnamon and XApp. While the release process "works very well" and delivers steady improvements, they admit it consumes significant time in testing, fixing, and shipping, potentially capping ambition. Mint's next release will be based on a new Ubuntu LTS, and the team says it is seriously interested in stretching the development window. The stated goal is to free up resources for more substantial development rather than constant release management. Whether this signals bigger technical changes or simply acknowledges bandwidth limits for a small team remains unclear, but it marks a notable rethink of one of desktop Linux's most consistent release rhythms.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Pelicot says shame is ‘a double sentence’ and describes shock of seeing herself like ‘a rag doll’ in police footage
Gisèle Pelicot, who became a global symbol of courage during the trial of her ex-husband and the dozens of men who raped her while she was unconscious, has called on victims to never be ashamed.
In her first TV interview, on the channel France 5, Pelicot said: “Shame sticks to you, it sticks to your skin. And that shame is a double sentence, it’s a suffering you inflict on yourself.”
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed. For the latest, read our coverage:
Full report: Canadian police identify suspect in school massacre that left nine dead
Tumbler Ridge shooting: key questions answered about deadly attack in Canada
“We believe we’ve been able to identify the shooter,” said Floyd, adding that RCMP will withhold the shooter’s identity for privacy reasons and for the conduct of the investigation.
Floyd also refused to disclose details on how many of the victims were children and adults, adding that more details will emerge in coming days.
Continue reading...David Lammy announces mandatory support and mentoring plan in wake of two stabbings at a school in Brent, north-west London
Children who carry knives will be given earlier and more targeted support in the wake of stabbings at a secondary school, David Lammy has said.
The deputy prime minister said every child in England and Wales caught with a sharp weapon will be given a mandatory, specialised plan from the authorities.
Continue reading...Colorado marijuana manufacturers would no longer be allowed to choose which product samples they send for mandatory lab testing under a new regulatory proposal discussed at a policy forum on Friday.
Instead, the state’s Marijuana Enforcement Division may require independent labs or outside vendors to collect product samples for the testing that’s required before companies can sell their products to ensure they’re free of contaminants.
The change would address a long-standing complaint from some marijuana manufacturers that bad actors are cheating the system. They say some companies are selecting samples that can pass tests while sending products to dispensaries that might be contaminated with chemical solvents, fungus or pesticides.
A Denver Gazette and ProPublica investigation last month showed that the system for testing marijuana products relies on an honor code that’s open to manipulation.
In 2024 alone, Colorado officials found two dozen cases in which companies had violated testing rules, often by submitting samples that were different from what the companies sold in stores or by using unauthorized chemical treatments, according to a review of enforcement actions by the news outlets. The state’s rules on selecting samples require what gets turned over to a lab to be representative of what marijuana companies actually deliver to dispensaries for sale to consumers.
“Sample adulteration is a common violation,” Kyle Lambert, deputy director of the division, said during the policy forum. “This is something that we have an interest in more comprehensively addressing based on what we see out there.”
Colorado officials have long prided themselves on creating the nation’s first regulated recreational marijuana market, but the news outlets found that the state has fallen behind as other states have adopted more robust regulations.
The Denver Gazette and ProPublica highlighted how a popular brand of vapes contaminated with a toxic chemical ended up at marijuana dispensaries. In that case and others, manufacturers were found by regulators to be swapping marijuana distillate, the liquid that goes in vapes, for products chemically converted from much cheaper hemp, which is prohibited in Colorado. The company, Ware Hause, surrendered its marijuana manufacturing license. Its owner declined to comment on Tuesday.
The Marijuana Enforcement Division first disclosed it is considering a new sampling system in January. The state’s move marks a shift: Last year, the state fought a lawsuit by a marijuana cultivator aimed at forcing the division to overhaul its testing rules. The suit, brought by Mammoth Farms, also pushed for the division to bar manufacturers from selecting product samples for testing. The division’s lawyers said in a court filing that such a revision would be “impracticable.”
A Denver judge dismissed the lawsuit on technical grounds in May, stating that the company should have first petitioned regulators for rule changes. After the dismissal, Mammoth Farms sought rule changes with the Marijuana Enforcement Division. The division agreed to begin requiring more chemical testing this summer but did not adopt a proposal to overhaul how samples are collected.
Dominique Mendiola, the senior director of the division, said in a statement that the move to consider changes stemmed from concerns raised by marijuana companies last year.
“The division has committed to further researching this topic and leading the facilitation of this dialogue with stakeholders in order to analyze the details and operability of what it would take to implement recommendations to shift to third-party test batch collection requirements,” she said.
Twenty-six states and the District of Columbia require lab personnel to collect samples to ensure manufacturers don’t cherry-pick products for testing while holding back contaminated products.
Over the next few months, the state will hold discussions with testing labs, marijuana cultivators and manufacturers and industry experts to fashion a formal proposal, Lambert said. He added that he expects the division will take up specific policy recommendations this summer.
State officials want to gauge the cost, Lambert said, and make sure they develop effective regulations. The state is also considering who would collect the samples — licensed lab personnel or third-party samplers the state would credential.
Kareem Kassem, a director at SC Labs, which has a testing lab in Colorado, said during the forum that all sampling should be done under video surveillance and that vehicles that transport samples should be equipped with GPS monitoring.
Other industry representatives noted that changing testing regulations could be expensive and that those costs would be passed on to consumers. They also stressed that other states had marijuana testing scandals even when lab personnel collected samples.
Stephen Cobb, co-owner of the marijuana manufacturer Concentrate Brands, pointed to sample collection scandals in California and said the problem was only fixed after regulators stepped in.
“We can solve sample fraud,” Cobb said, “but only if there is a massive investment in regulatory oversight on that. Otherwise, it just kind of passes the buck.”
The Marijuana Enforcement Division said costs and budgeting issues would be part of the discussions.
Still, Justin Singer, the CEO of Denver-based cannabis firm Ripple, applauded the division’s move.
“I think that sample fraud should be a death sentence for a licensee,” Singer said during the policy forum. “Right now, it’s a $15,000 slap on the wrist.”
He has tracked the division’s enforcement actions and provided The Denver Gazette and ProPublica a spreadsheet and links to those cases. Ripple’s analysis shows that, from the start of 2023 until now, half of the state’s 135 final enforcement actions against marijuana companies involved issues with self-sampling and testing.
Singer is also pushing a legislative overhaul to the state’s marijuana testing regimen that would transfer testing oversight to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment and create a program where state regulators would randomly test products from dispensaries to ensure they aren’t contaminated.
“I hope we all can agree that if we’re not giving consumers as an industry what they think they are buying, then we’re destroying our own industry from within,” Singer said. “Sample fraud and testing fraud is a cancer on our industry. It is a cancer on the businesses that are trying to do good work. It is a cancer on the labs that are trying to be honest.”
The post Colorado Marijuana Regulators Consider Major Changes to How Labs Test for Contaminants appeared first on ProPublica.
Simon McDonald says if Antonia Romeo is the frontrunner for cabinet secretary role then ‘due diligence has some way still to go’
A former top civil servant has urged No 10 to do “more due diligence” as it prepares to replace the cabinet secretary, Chris Wormald, with Antonia Romeo, the frontrunner for the role.
Sir Simon McDonald, the former permanent secretary of the Foreign Office, said he had tried to warn No 10 the process needed to start from scratch and it was vital that the prime minister followed a thorough procedure given the importance of the role.
Continue reading...Bethune traded from Spirit to Kansas City for $1m
Hutton departs Current for Bay FC in $1.1m move
Moves shake up landscape a month before season
Two of the best young midfielders in US women’s soccer were on the move Wednesday in a pair of seven-figure trades, shuffling up the NWSL landscape a month before the season begins.
Croix Bethune, the 2024 rookie and midfielder of the year, was traded from the Washington Spirit to the Kansas City Current for $1m. In a separate move, Kansas City traded Claire Hutton, a 2025 midfielder of the year finalist, to Bay FC in a $1.1m transaction.
Continue reading...
In the second and third quarters of 2025, the U.S. economy grew at its fastest pace in two years. Those growth rates were not “numbers unheard of,” or figures the U.S. “never had” before, as President Donald Trump has claimed.
In addition, economic experts told us that federal data do not support Trump’s claim that there was economic “stagflation” during the Biden administration and “the complete opposite” during Trump’s first year back in office. Inflation was high during much of Joe Biden’s presidency, but economic growth was not stagnant, another key indicator of stagflation, the experts said.
They also said that Trump’s tariff policies likely hindered economic growth, rather than helped spur it, as the president has suggested.
Trump made those claims while touting the U.S. economy in recent speeches and remarks, as well as in a late January opinion piece written for the Wall Street Journal.
During a Jan. 27 speech in Iowa, Trump said, “So, under my leadership, economic growth is exploding to numbers unheard of. They’ve never had them before.”
He later said in an interview with NBC News on Feb. 4, “We have low inflation and we have tremendous growth. You haven’t had these numbers like this.”
And when claiming to have achieved “unprecedented” growth numbers in a Jan. 29 Cabinet meeting at the White House, Trump said that if not for the 43-day federal government shutdown last fall, “we would have picked up about a point and a half more than [the] already high numbers, record setting numbers.”
While the U.S. economy grew significantly in the second and third quarters of 2025, according to the most recent data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the numbers did not set records, as Trump claimed.
After declining by an annualized rate of 0.6% in the first quarter of 2025, which covers the three months from January to March, real gross domestic product (meaning it has been adjusted for inflation) grew at an annualized rate of 3.8% in the second quarter of 2025 and at a rate of 4.4% in the third quarter. Those were the largest quarterly increases since the third quarter of 2023, under Biden, when the economy expanded at an annualized rate of 4.7%, according to BEA estimates.
The record for quarterly growth is 34.9% in the third quarter of 2020, which happened right after the economy shrunk by 28% at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The pre-pandemic quarterly growth record is 16.7% in the first quarter of 1950, according to BEA quarterly data going back to 1947.
On several occasions, Trump has said that fourth quarter growth is projected to be 5.4%, a figure that he has attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank in Atlanta. But that projection is now out of date.
Throughout much of January, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow model was projecting growth of 5.4% for the fourth quarter of 2025. Then, on Jan. 29, the projection lowered to 4.2%, and, as of Feb. 10, it was down again, to 3.7% projected growth.
The BEA is scheduled to release its advanced estimate of GDP for the fourth quarter, and all of 2025, on Feb. 20.
Trump also has claimed that he turned around an economy that had stalled under Biden.
“Under the Biden administration, America was plagued by the nightmare of stagflation, meaning low growth and high inflation, a recipe for misery, failure and decline. But now, after just one year of my policies, we are witnessing the exact opposite – virtually no inflation and extraordinarily high economic growth,” Trump said at a World Economic Forum meeting on Jan. 21.
He repeated the “stagflation” claim in his Jan. 30 opinion piece published in the Wall Street Journal.
But economists told us that the U.S. economy under Biden did not experience stagflation, which has a specific economic meaning.
“It refers to a sustained period of high inflation combined with weak or stagnant real economic growth, typically alongside rising unemployment,” Kyle Handley, a professor of economics at the University of California, San Diego, told us in an email. “By that definition, the U.S. economy during the Biden years does not qualify as stagflation.”
Handley said that the annual inflation rate did “rise sharply” during Biden’s first two years in office. It peaked in June 2022, at 9.1%, before declining dramatically in Biden’s last two years in office.
“However, real GDP growth during the Biden presidency was positive and often above trend, and unemployment remained historically low,” Handley said. “Real GDP grew strongly in 2021 during the post-pandemic recovery, slowed in 2022 as monetary policy tightened, and then re-accelerated in 2023 and 2024. That is not a period of economic stagnation.”
In an infographic from November, the staff of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland wrote that the “last major case” of stagflation in the U.S. “occurred in the mid-1970s, when global crude oil prices surged, triggering widespread rises in other prices and fueling inflation of more than 12 percent and unemployment that peaked at 9 percent.” The infographic said that stagflation — the combination of rising unemployment and inflation, and slowing economic growth all at the same time — was “rare” and “an unusual pattern.”
When we asked about the basis for the president’s stagflation claim, a White House spokesperson told us that “[r]eal wages shrank markedly during the Biden presidency, and growth – once you put aside the early bit of Biden admin when Democrat state officials finally started lifting unscientific and draconian lockdowns – was tepid with inflation at 40-year highs.”
There was a decrease in real wages under Biden, as we’ve written. But the economy grew by well over 2% each year during his administration, and the rate of inflation, while still elevated, was not near a 40-year high when he left office. The 9.1% annual rate in June 2022 was the highest since November 1981. The rate was 3% in Biden’s final 12 months.
The unemployment rate also decreased under Biden, going from 6.4% when he was inaugurated to 4% in his last month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The average monthly rate for Biden’s presidency was 4.1%, below the historical average.
“You had high inflation, yes, but paired with strong growth and a robust labor market,” Aeimit Lakdawala, an associate professor of economics at Wake Forest University, told us in an email. “That’s just not stagflation by any standard definition of the term.”
He said that Trump’s claim of engineering a complete turnaround from the Biden economy is an overstatement.
“What we’re really seeing is a continuation of trends that were already well underway before Trump took office in January 2025,” Lakdawala said.
He noted that the annual inflation rate had cooled to 3% when Trump’s second term started. It had been as low as 2.4% in September 2024.
“That disinflation happened under Biden, driven largely by the resolution of supply chain issues and Fed monetary policy,” he said, referring to the Federal Reserve. “Under Trump’s second term so far, inflation has averaged about 2.7%. That’s modestly lower, but it’s not a dramatic reversal.”
Although Trump considers the 2.7% annual inflation rate, as of December, to be “very low” or “virtually no inflation,” it is still above the 2% target set by the Federal Reserve. Prices are still increasing, just at a slightly slower pace than before he became president again.
As for economic growth, Lakdawala said that the increase in real GDP has “averaged about 2.5% annualized so far under Trump’s second term, which is solid but actually a touch lower than the 2.9% we saw” in Biden’s last two years as president.
“So characterizing this as ‘extraordinarily high economic growth’ is a stretch,” he said about Trump’s claim. “It’s good growth, roughly in line with where we’ve been.”
The unemployment rate, meanwhile, was 4.3% in January, slightly higher than when Trump took office.
In his Wall Street Journal opinion piece, Trump said that the “entire Trump economic agenda deserves credit for this explosion of growth” — but he specifically gave credit for the country’s “economic success” to his tariff policies.
“We have proven, decisively, that, properly applied, tariffs do not hurt growth — they promote growth and greatness, just as I said all along,” the opinion piece said.

But the experts we consulted told us that the economy likely grew despite the tariffs, not because of them.
“Year-over-year real GDP growth over the past year looks similar to the years immediately preceding the new tariffs,” Handley said. “Outside of the pandemic period, growth has been relatively stable across administrations, which makes it difficult to attribute recent performance to tariffs rather than economic momentum.”
He noted that the tariffs that Trump placed on imported foreign goods last year were not as high as the rates he originally proposed, and that tariff revenue, which did increase significantly in 2025, is still quite small in relation to GDP (about 1% of GDP as of the third quarter of 2025, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis).
“By construction, a policy of that size cannot plausibly explain an increase in aggregate economic growth,” he said.
Lakdawala had a similar take.
“Crediting tariffs for economic growth gets the causation backwards,” he said. “The economics on this is fairly clear and there is broad consensus among economists: tariffs are essentially a tax on imports that raises costs for domestic consumers and businesses. If anything, they’ve been a modest drag on growth, not a driver of it.”
He pointed to an analysis done by the Budget Lab at Yale, a nonpartisan research center, that said that in 2025 tariffs slowed real GDP growth by 0.5 percentage points and increased the unemployment rate by 0.3 percentage points. The Budget Lab estimated that tariffs will reduce real GDP growth by 0.4 percentage points in 2026, and said that “[i]n the long run, the US economy is persistently 0.3% smaller, the equivalent of $100 billion annually in 2025 dollars,” because of tariffs.
“These aren’t catastrophic numbers and the economy is resilient and has absorbed the tariff shock reasonably well,” Lakdawala said. “But they clearly point in the wrong direction for someone trying to credit tariffs with economic success.”
The pro-business Tax Foundation also said that Trump’s imposed tariffs, if the Supreme Court rules that some of them can remain in effect, “will raise $2.0 trillion in revenue from 2026-2035 on a conventional basis and reduce US GDP by 0.5 percent, all before foreign retaliation” from other countries.
The White House told us that, under Trump, the “[a]nnualized rate of inflation has been trending in the mid-twos and GDP growth in Q3 surpassed expectations by over a full point, hitting above 4 percent. Largely driven by the investments we are seeing thanks in part to tariffs.”
But Handley noted that many of the investments touted by Trump are “announcements rather than realized outcomes.”
“Foreign investment commitments do not directly enter GDP, and they often reflect projects planned years in advance,” he said, adding that some of the pledges made by foreign countries and companies “may never come to fruition.”
We’ve already written that Trump’s claim that he has brought in about $18 trillion in investments to the U.S. is exaggerated, according to experts and a White House webpage.
Giacomo Santangelo, a senior lecturer of economics at Fordham University, told us in an interview that consumption is the “largest portion” of GDP, and that people are currently taking on more debt to finance that spending. “That’s what’s driving this economy,” he said.
Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM, wrote in December that the third-quarter growth was due to “[h]ousehold consumption driven by higher-income consumers and AI-related investment,” which he said “accounted for just under 70% of total growth during the [third] quarter.”
In its news release about third-quarter growth in 2025, the BEA said, “The increase in real GDP in the third quarter reflected increases in consumer spending, exports, government spending, and investment.” For the second quarter, the BEA said the increase “primarily reflected a decrease in imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, and an increase in consumer spending.”
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The post Trump Oversells Recent U.S. Economic Growth appeared first on FactCheck.org.
James Van Der Beek, who starred in coming-of-age dramas at the dawn of the new millennium, shooting to fame playing the titular character in Dawson’s Creek and in later years mocking his own persona, has died at the age of 48. The actor revealed in 2024 that he was being treated for colorectal cancer.
Continue reading...• Medal table | Live scores and schedule | Results | Briefing
• Follow us over on Bluesky | Get in touch! Mail Geoff
The riders are having to squint into the sun to see their scores come up. There’s lots of USA support on the slopes, first for 19-year old Bea Kim, who looks happy to settle into fifth, then for the queen of half pipe, Chloe Kim, who is aiming for her third consecutive gold medal in this discipline. Oh and she’s also just finished a degree at Stamford. It’s a cracking start – a big backside 720, frontside 900, and something floaty and turny which the commentators describe as “the penny black” of halfpipe. She immediately settles into first.
Women’s halfpipe qualifying: Thinking about my attempts to stand on a skateboard as young women in baggy snow trousers zig-zag and float across the halfpipe.
Continue reading..."Reverse recruitment" firms promise to cut the length of job searches in half and help connect candidates with employers.
The e-commerce giant's pharmacy aims to reach 4,500 cities and towns by the end of the year.
More than 25 people injured, including two with life-threatening injuries, after shooting at secondary school and local residence
Nine people have been killed and dozens injured after an assailant opened fire at a school in western Canada, in one of the deadliest mass shootings in the country’s history. The suspect was later found dead from what appeared to be a self-inflicted injury.
Police found six people dead inside the high school in the remote town of Tumbler Ridge in British Columbia, with a further two bodies found at a residence believed to be connected to the incident.
Continue reading...31-year-old faces first-degree murder charge
Former linebacker could face death penalty
Former New York Jets first-round draft pick Darron Lee has been kept in jail without bond as he faces a first-degree murder charge over the death of his girlfriend in Tennessee.
The ruling by Judge Tori Smith came after Lee was arrested and charged late last week. He also faces a charge of tampering with or fabricating evidence. Lee is due back in court for a preliminary hearing on 9 March.
Authorities identified the victim in the case as Gabriella Perpétuo. The couple had been living in a home they rented where the incident occurred for about 10 days, Brian Lockhart a detective in Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office testified on Wednesday.
With the original release of Windows 8, Microsoft also enforced Secure Boot. It’s been 15 years since that release, and that means the original 2011 Secure Boot certificates are about to expire. If these certificates are not replaced with new ones, Secure Boot will cease to function – your machine will still boot and operate, but the benefits of Secure Boot are mostly gone, and as newer vulnerabilities are discovered, systems without updated Secure Boot certificates will be increasingly exposed.
Microsoft has already been rolling out new certificates through Windows updates, but only for users of supported versions of Windows, which means Windows 11. If you’re using Windows 10, without the Extended Security Updates, you won’t be getting the new certificates through Windows Update. Even if you use Windows 11, you may need a UEFI update from your laptop or motherboard OEM, assuming they still support your device.
For Linux users using Secure Boot, you’re probably covered by fwupd, which will update the certificates as part of your system’s update program, like KDE’s Discover. Of course, you can also use fwupd manually in the terminal, if you’d like. For everyone else not using Secure Boot, none of this will matter and you’re going to be just fine. I honestly doubt there will be much fallout from this updating process, but there’s always bound to be a few people who fall between the cracks.
All we can do is hope whomever is responsible for Secure Boot at Microsoft hasn’t started slopcoding yet.
| Good Day Grip is beyond stoked to share our newest drop - The Good Kitty Collection—a bright, cheeky tribute to the onewheeled beasts we keep at home and the wild energy we bring to the ride. https://gooddaygrip.com [link] [comments] |
Feb. 11, 2026 — Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) Director Kim Budil has been elected as a member of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), one of the highest professional distinctions in the field.
Recognized for “advancing nuclear deterrence through technical contributions, laboratory leadership and advice to the government,” Budil joins only 2,890 NAE members worldwide.
“I am deeply honored to be recognized with election to the National Academy of Engineering,” Budil said. “I have been fortunate to spend my career in the national laboratory system, and I am proud to represent an extraordinary institution that uses leading edge science and engineering to create solutions to critical national security needs. I am very proud to join this distinguished community.”
Budil serves as the 13th director of LLNL, where she sets the strategic vision and exercises broad delegated powers to ensure successful execution of programs and operations to enhance national security. She leads the development and implementation of the Laboratory’s scientific vision, goals and objectives and serves as the Laboratory’s highest-level liaison with the Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, the LLNS Board of Governors, the University of California and other government, public and private organizations.
Budil leads a workforce of approximately 9,000 employees and manages an annual operating budget of $3.25 billion. Along with the directors of Los Alamos and Sandia national laboratories, she shares the responsibility of providing the United States government with an annual technical assessment of the safety, security and effectiveness of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile and enterprise.
Budil holds a Ph.D. in engineering and applied science from the University of California, Davis, where she was a Hertz Fellow, and a B.S. in physics from the University of Illinois at Chicago. She currently serves on several boards and participates in numerous professional and community outreach activities.
Elected by their peers, NAE members are among the world’s most accomplished engineers from business, academia and government, and membership honors those who have made outstanding contributions to the field. Founded in 1964, the NAE provides independent, objective analysis and advice to the nation, offering leadership and insights for a complex world.
“Induction into the National Academy of Engineering is both a distinguished career milestone and a call to service,” said NAE President Tsu-Jae Liu. “These accomplished engineers join a community dedicated to advancing the nation’s well-being and promoting public understanding and appreciation of engineering.”
Source: LLNL
The post LLNL Director Kim Budil Elected to National Academy of Engineering appeared first on HPCwire.
According to The New York Times, Musk described a proposed facility that would include a massive catapult designed to launch satellites into space.
What happens when you slopcode a bunch of bloat to your basic text editor? Well, you add a remote code execution vulnerability to notepad.exe.
Improper neutralization of special elements used in a command (‘command injection’) in Windows Notepad App allows an unauthorized attacker to execute code over a network.
[…]An attacker could trick a user into clicking a malicious link inside a Markdown file opened in Notepad, causing the application to launch unverified protocols that load and execute remote files.
↫ CVE-2026-20841
I don’t know how many more obvious examples one needs to understand that Microsoft simply does not care, in any way, shape, or form, about Windows. A lot of people seem very hesitant to accept that with even LinkedIn generating more revenue for Microsoft than Windows, the writing is on the wall.
Anyway, the fix has been released through the Microsoft Store.
Andrew Paul Johnson was found guilty of five counts including molesting a child under 12 and another under 16
A man who took part in the 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol and later pardoned by Donald Trump was found guilty on Tuesday of multiple child sexual abuse charges in Florida, officials said.
Andrew Paul Johnson was arrested in Tennessee this August and extradited to Florida. He pleaded not guilty.
Continue reading...Hey yall!
Selling my low mileage Onewheel GT. Purchased as freeride bundle back in summer of 2024 and will come with all accessories included with it, either installed on board or to be installed by you. I also upgraded to the Lowboy soft flared footpads and still have the OE footpads as well. And installed C&R chopped fenders as seen in photos, inspiration for the coloring was the 1960’s LeMans Ford GT40.
Board runs great, only 243 miles but I recently got my X7 and I’m literally never going to ride this again. Not worth VESC/ modding when I could just buy another off the shelf VESC for the same or less money. I’m pretty sure I have the original box but I’ll have to double check. $1250, will shape on buyers dime but will have to get shipping quote or meet FTF in Atlanta. Please MESSAGE with questions, I do not use reddit DM thing. Pics included as well.
Thanks to all for looking!
Stellantis is telling owners of the affected vehicles not to drive them until a potentially dangerous air bag is replaced. See which models are affected.
Attorney General Pam Bondi faced contentious questioning from House Democrats about the Justice Department's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Team USA star skier Breezy Johnson talks with CBS News about her broken Olympic medal, a superstition, and what keeps her motivated on the slopes.
"Dawson's Creek" and "Varsity Blues" star James Van Der Beek has died at 48 years old.
The US attorney general, Pam Bondi, appeared before a House judiciary committee hearing on Wednesday to defend the justice department's handling of files involving the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. During the hearing, there were several heated exchanges between Bondi and Democrat lawmakers who questioned her about the DOJ's handling of the release of the Epstein files.
Continue reading...The world is closer than thought to a "point of no return" after which runaway global heating cannot be stopped, scientists have said. From a report: Continued global heating could trigger climate tipping points, leading to a cascade of further tipping points and feedback loops, they said. This would lock the world into a new and hellish "hothouse Earth" climate far worse than the 2-3C temperature rise the world is on track to reach. The climate would also be very different to the benign conditions of the past 11,000 years, during which the whole of human civilisation developed. At just 1.3C of global heating in recent years, extreme weather is already taking lives and destroying livelihoods across the globe. At 3-4C, "the economy and society will cease to function as we know it," scientists said last week, but a hothouse Earth would be even more fiery. The public and politicians were largely unaware of the risk of passing the point of no return, the researchers said. The group said they were issuing their warning because while rapid and immediate cuts to fossil fuel burning were challenging, reversing course was likely to be impossible once on the path to a hothouse Earth, even if emissions were eventually slashed. It was difficult to predict when climate tipping points would be triggered, making precaution vital, said Dr Christopher Wolf, a scientist at Terrestrial Ecosystems Research Associates in the US. Wolf is a member of a study team that includes Prof Johan Rockstrom at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany and Prof Hans Joachim Schellnhuber at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Attack at Kingsbury high school not being treated as terrorism after arrest of 13-year-old spotted near a mosque
A 13-year-old suspected of stabbing two boys at a secondary school is a former pupil who was arrested after being seen at a mosque after the attack, which has not been declared a terrorist incident, police said.
Two pupils at Kingsbury high school in Brent, north-west London, were seriously injured at lunchtime on Tuesday. Both remain in a “stable” condition in hospital with injuries now thought not to be life-threatening.
Continue reading...The Department of Energy (DOE) has launched the Genesis Mission Consortium – a public-private partnership focused on advancing AI-driven scientific discovery and innovation. This fits well within the broader scope of the Genesis Mission to harness AI and high-performance computing to accelerate scientific progress and strengthen U.S. leadership in advanced technologies.
This latest move brings together national laboratories, private-sector companies, academic institutions, and government agencies to coordinate expertise and resources. One of the tasks for the consortium is to identify high-value partnerships among its members and external stakeholders.
Framed as a “collaborative hub” and a “single, coordinated access point,” the consortium is also tasked with executing agreements and tracking project success. Member-driven working groups will focus on key technical areas. This includes AI model development and validation, data standards and integration, high-performance computing and cloud infrastructure.

(JacktheSparrow/Shutterstock)
“The Genesis Mission Consortium represents a bold step toward transforming the way we approach scientific challenges,” Darío Gil, DOE’s under secretary for science and Genesis Mission lead, said in a press release. “Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, we’re uniting government, industry, and academia to create a powerful engine for innovation that will drive breakthroughs across multiple disciplines.”
The consortium will be operated and administered by TechWerx – an Austin-based innovation hub that helps U.S. government agencies collaborate with private companies and research institutions. TechWerx is part of a broader network of “WERX” innovation hubs operated by RTI International, each designed to streamline public–private partnerships in strategic technology domains.
“We are honored to administer the Genesis Mission Consortium to help reimagine how science is done in America,” said Adam Klich, TechWerx and Genesis Mission Consortium lead at RTI. “By uniting the nation’s top research assets, from supercomputers and datasets to advanced models and scientific expertise, the consortium will accelerate discovery and strengthen U.S. leadership in science and technology in areas critical to national energy and security priorities.”
The Genesis Mission was launched last year by an executive order from President Trump. It marked one of the most significant shifts in U.S. science policy in recent memory. The goal, according to the order, is to launch a “dedicated, coordinated national effort to unleash a new age of AI‑accelerated innovation and discovery that can solve the most challenging problems of this century.”
At the time of the launch of the Genesis Mission, Michael Kratsios, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology had shared that “President Trump is taking a revolutionary approach to scientific research, harnessing the power of AI to propel America into the Golden Age of Innovation. The Genesis Mission connects world-class scientific data with the most advanced American AI to unlock breakthroughs in medicine, energy, materials science, and beyond.”
The introduction of the consortium builds on that mandatel by providing the structure and coordination needed to turn the Genesis Mission’s vision into sustained action. It establishes a formal mechanism to align stakeholders and enable more practical execution across the various initiatives that fall under the mission.
The post DOE Launches Genesis Mission Consortium to Advance AI-Driven Science appeared first on HPCwire.
Multiple studies show that women who take Depo-Provera have much higher risk of developing meningiomas
UK law firms are considering legal action on behalf of women who developed brain tumours after using the contraceptive injection Depo-Provera.
Depo-Provera is a high-dose synthetic progesterone, prescribed for contraception and other menstrual symptoms, administered via injection every three months. According to UN calculations, 74 million women worldwide and 3.1% of UK women aged 15-49 use injectable contraception.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
After Avelo Airlines announced it would end its contract to provide deportation flights, tensions eased between Delaware activists and Wilmington airport officials. The problem resurfaced after airport officials said they were considering leasing space to another aviation company linked with ICE, but now the company has decided to pull out of the proposal.
Daedalus Aviation, the Virginia company that recently struck a deal with the federal government to sell airplanes for deportation flights, has decided not to rent space at the Wilmington Airport “at this time,” according to a statement released Wednesday by the Delaware River and Bay Authority, which operates the facility.
The decision to withdraw from a potential lease follows weeks of outcry from local activists and state lawmakers who have urged Delaware officials to refrain from doing business with any companies linked to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, due to concerns over abuses of due process.
The Delaware River & Bay Authority had planned on discussing the lease agreement at its upcoming Feb. 18 board meeting. Daedalus previously indicated that it wanted to use a vacant hangar at the Wilmington Airport “for the purpose of housing their aircraft that they’re using for VIP flights,” DRBA officials told Spotlight Delaware late last month.
The little-known Virginia-based company recently struck a $140 million contract to sell planes to federal immigration officials for deportation flights, according to a report published last month by the Washington Post. In addition, its top executives also lead a company that contracted with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to fly deportation flights for the Trump administration.
Daedalus officials did not immediately respond Wednesday to a request to comment on why they decided to withdraw from the potential lease.
James Salmon, a spokesperson for the DRBA, told Spotlight Delaware that Daedalus did not provide a reason for why the company decided to scrap its proposal.
The public first became aware of the discussion of a possible lease to Daedalus in December, after a resolution to approve the contract with the company appeared on the agenda for a DRBA public meeting.
During the meeting, DRBA commissioners tabled the resolution so that it could be reviewed by New Jersey’s incoming governor, Mikie Sherrill, according to DRBA Executive Director Joel Coppadge.
The DRBA is a bi-state agency created by Delaware and New Jersey to operate and maintain the region’s bridges, ferries, and airports. Its governing board is appointed by the governors of each state.
Coppadge also confirmed that Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer had already reviewed the contract.
The initial December agenda item prompted advocates to urge DRBA officials not to enter into any contracts with companies that deal with ICE. But the DRBA has asserted that they must provide fair access to all prospective tenants or else they could lose federal dollars.
In its Feb. 11 statement, the DRBA noted that it has received approximately $100 million in Federal Aviation Administration grant funding for the Wilmington Airport since 1995.
“The DRBA will continue to comply with applicable federal and state laws as it pursues additional aeronautical users and diversified revenue sources to support growth at the airport,” DRBA officials wrote.
State Sen. Ray Seigfried (D-Claymont) also sent a letter to the DRBA last week asking the entity to drop the lease. The letter was signed by all 15 members of the Senate Democratic Caucus.
Seigfried previously sponsored a bill which would have stripped commercial airlines of Delaware’s aviation jet fuel tax exemption if they transported ICE detainees for deportation without meeting due process standards, including the presentation of judicial warrants.
The bill was aimed toward Delaware’s only commercial airline, Avelo Airlines, which recently ended its contract with the federal government to fly deportation flights.
Seigfried said that bill is now moot since Avelo ended its dealings with ICE, however, he plans on introducing new legislation targeted toward ICE operations in Delaware. The new bill is currently being drafted.
“I’m gonna do all I can to ensure that ICE never steps foot in Delaware,” he said.
The post Daedalus withdraws Wilmington Airport proposal appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
New deduction allows taxpayers to deduct up to $10,000 on interest they paid to buy a new American-made vehicle in 2025.
Cardi B appeared during Bad Bunny's halftime show at the Super Bowl, but one prediction market says it's unclear whether she sang.
Israeli leader was expected to advocate for more forceful US intervention during sixth visit to current White House
Donald Trump has said that he is still seeking a deal with Iran to prevent it from seeking a nuclear weapon following a three-hour meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu in which the Israeli leader was expected to advocate for a more forceful intervention by the US military.
Netanyahu’s sixth visit to the White House since Trump returned to office ended without any public remarks between the two leaders. The results of the hastily arranged meeting were announced by Trump in an online post.
Continue reading...Police said the suspected shooter, an 18-year-old resident of the community where the school is located, was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Matt Murray defends paper’s strategy as ‘demoralized’ staffers ask tough questions in contentious town hall
Top Washington Post editor Matt Murray acknowledged “a widespread sense of loss, of genuine trauma” in a contentious town hall meeting with staff on Wednesday after the company laid off nearly a third of its employees a week ago – though he expressed confidence that the Post was now on a path to success.
“There’s no doubt that just the sheer depth of the cuts – and also, with that, the reality of what we face at the Post – has been a very hard thing to wrap our heads around and to grapple with,” Murray said, according to a recording of his remarks obtained by the Guardian.
Continue reading...Tiffany Smyth is married to Seamus Culleton, who despite having a valid work permit was detained in September
The wife of an Irish man who has been held by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for five months - despite having a valid work permit – is pleading for help in instigating his release from the “dire conditions” he is facing in detention.
“I just want him home where he belongs. I want us to be able to finish what we started,” Tiffany Smyth, wife of Seamus Culleton, said during a Wednesday press conference.
Continue reading...Investigators on Tuesday released images of an “armed individual” appearing to tamper with the camera at Guthrie’s door in Tucson the morning she went missing.
Feb. 11, 2026 — University of Michigan is partnering with Los Alamos National Laboratory to develop a high performance computational research facility that will soon provide resources needed for U-M and collaborators to tackle some of the most challenging problems society faces.

Los Alamos scientists Daniel Israel and Joshua Dolence are leading collaborations at the University of Michigan. Credit: LANL.
The facility will immediately increase capacity for existing U-M research on topics ranging from brain cancer treatments to earthquake-resistant building designs. It will enable teams to ask even more difficult questions, leading to bigger solutions that serve the public good.
The project is creating plenty of attention, excitement, support and opposition.
Helping unpack the complexities of this project is U-M’s Steven Ceccio, project lead and the Vincent T. and Gloria M Gorguze Professor of Engineering, and professor of mechanical engineering and of naval architecture and marine engineering in the College of Engineering.
Ceccio spoke with the Record to answer the most commonly asked questions he receives from U-M faculty, staff and students, community members and media.
What exactly is the purpose of this research facility?
Ceccio: “This research facility is not a commercial data center. It will be a high performing computing center. We’ll use far less power, less than 1/10th of the energy required to fuel many commercial data center products. We are using specifically designed computers, chips and other technologies for specific research purposes and serving the public good. And, in coordination with the development of the facility, we are deepening our collaboration with LANL’s excellent researchers who will be working and living in Michigan as a result of this project.
The use of computational tools across the research landscape is accelerating. As the questions we ask, and the problems we try to solve, get more and more complicated, the computational resources needed to perform these advanced calculations and simulations get ever larger.
The high performance computing facility we are developing will be a powerful tool for the U-M research ecosystem across a variety of fields, whether that’s accelerating drug discovery, conducting material science research or helping researchers rapidly identify new treatments for diseases such as cancer and infectious diseases. We can model flood risks and extreme weather with street-level precision, giving local families and emergency responders more time to prepare.”
Is a partnership with Los Alamos new?
Ceccio: “University of Michigan researchers, faculty and students have worked with Department of Energy labs like Los Alamos since Los Alamos was created. Since 1973, LANL and U-M have co-authored 1,985 publications on a wide range of technical fields. And we have an outstanding collaboration through the LANL Michigan SPARC here on campus.
A few years ago, Los Alamos leadership began searching for a partner to help them meet their future needs for computational hardware and the many scientists and engineers who will work on their problems. After examining options offered by different universities and states, Michigan and the University of Michigan won that competition.
LANL determined that U-M would be an attractive partner for both the development of the facility and the creation of a satellite campus. While the intersection between academia, these laboratories and the government goes back to the very beginning and still exists today, this is the first time Los Alamos has expanded to partner with a university in this way.”
From a scientific partner perspective, what will the U-M community gain from this?
Ceccio: “A real advantage U-M has is our people. LANL chose a location with immediate access to experienced — and budding — scientists which makes our institution a global leader in innovation. Los Alamos wants to collaborate and we want that collaboration with them. We want to have their experts, their researchers, close to our faculty, students, and collaborators — providing jobs and learning opportunities in the process.
Los Alamos will open a satellite campus here in Ann Arbor that brings scientists to Michigan to work on public projects. And to be clear, they are not moving people from New Mexico to Michigan — this facility will create 200 new, permanent jobs.”
U-M’s portion of the research facility will feature public projects, but what’s happening at the Los Alamos side?
Ceccio: “Los Alamos researchers work on national security and classified projects. It’s important to remember that ‘national security’ in this context is much broader than people realize. It includes protecting our infrastructure from cyber threats, predicting extreme weather and securing our power grid. In fact, our first joint faculty appointment between Michigan and Los Alamos is focused specifically on making the power grid more resilient.
From a defense standpoint, Los Alamos is tasked with nuclear stewardship — not conducting live tests on weaponry, but instead using advanced computation to ensure the safety and reliability of our existing stockpile without the need for nuclear testing, especially as our stockpile ages. Computation provides an important tool for LANL to achieve this mission.”
And from a facilities standpoint, why Ypsilanti and not Ann Arbor?
Ceccio: “A big question I’ve often received is, ‘Well, if it’s such a great thing, why don’t you just build it on campus?’ And the short answer is: We’d love to. We actually tried to do that.
The main requirements for any new research center, manufacturing facility or other light industrial complex begin with the need for power and cooling. We first looked for sites on our campus, but U-M property does not have adequate electrical power line access. Therefore, we began to explore sites near campus that had the required power, water and zoning for light industrial activity.
We are exploring two sites in Ypsilanti Township that meet those needs. They offer direct access to high-transmission power lines and access to ample municipal water for cooling — not groundwater or nearby surface water.”
Expand on the environmental impact — what’s the energy consumption?
Ceccio: “Again, this is not a commercial data center. It’s much, much smaller, and our footprint reflects that. Commercial data centers often use well over 1,000 megawatts of electrical power annually. Our computational facility will use less than 1/10th that amount and also be much smaller in size.
When the facility opens, we expect to initially use around 50 megawatts annually, and it will be several years after before we ramp up to the 100 megawatt capacity being planned. But even at that upper end of usage, it’s comparable to a modest manufacturing facility, similar to the countless facilities that already exist across southeast Michigan.”
What about water usage?
Ceccio: “The Ypsilanti Township locations under consideration have access to utility water that meets our needs without putting any strain on residents or our Great Lakes environment.
We aren’t using groundwater for this, nor water from the Huron River. We would purchase water from the Ypsilanti Community Utilities Authority, which gets its water from the Detroit River.
And the authority has ample capacity. At our eventual highest operating level, we could potentially draw 500,000 gallons of water per day. The water utility currently has an excess supply of 8 million to 10 million gallons per day. So the utility actually has way more capacity than it can actually sell to their customers right now.”
What will daily life look like for neighbors of this facility, regardless of its final location?
Ceccio: “It would be a University of Michigan construction project, and we would build to the same standards that we would design any building we design and build. We are designing it in a way that’s attractive and not obtrusive, both from a visual and noise perspective.
Our plans will have to pass through the state’s regulatory review process from an environmental standpoint, including its impact on wetlands and wildlife.
We aren’t assembling products here, we aren’t doing chemical engineering, and residents won’t have the noise, sights and smells of an industrial site. We aren’t taking away residential space — the sites we are exploring are already zoned by Ypsilanti Township for light industrial use.
In fact, Amazon was a previous party exploring purchasing one of the sites we are considering. They would have used the facility as a last-mile distribution center — which would have been allowed under the zoning rules. Our research center would be much smaller and not have the truck traffic that would have accompanied that proposed project. And, if located there, only one-third of the property would be developed, leaving two-thirds of the northern boundary of the site undisturbed.”
How will U-M engage in the local community?
Ceccio: “We recognize that many members of the community have questions and concerns, and that has led to some frustration. We want to be clear: Our goal is to be a long-term, trusted partner in any community where this site will be located.
We’ve made significant efforts to communicate with Ypsilanti Township and the political leadership at all stages of this project, and we will continue to do so. We’ve held multiple public events with community members, and we will continue to plan outreach events. U-M strives to partner with our neighboring communities, and we look forward to having conversations about potential projects we could undertake in partnership with Ypsilanti Township should the facility be sited there.
More from HPCwire: Los Alamos Partners with University of Michigan on SPARC Supercomputing Initiative
Source: The University Record, University of Michigan
The post University of Michigan Explains Scope of Planned HPC Facility with Los Alamos appeared first on HPCwire.
Actor best-known for role in Hal Ashby’s black comedy also appeared in films by Robert Altman and Wes Anderson
Bud Cort, the actor best known for his role in dark comedy Harold and Maude, has died at the age of 77.
According to Variety, Cort died in Connecticut after a long illness.
Continue reading...Cross-party UK MPs campaigning for senior Fatah leader’s release from Israeli jail, saying he is unifying figure
The son of Marwan Barghouti, the Palestinian prisoner often described as the Nelson Mandela of the Palestinian movement, has called on the British government to put his father’s release at the heart of Palestinian democratic renewal.
Arab Barghouti warned the UK government that its recent recognition of a Palestinian state risks providing nothing but false hope unless it follows through by using diplomatic channels to secure his father’s freedom.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: The U.S. economy experienced almost zero job growth in 2025, according to revised federal data. On a more encouraging note: hiring has picked up in 2026. Preliminary data had indicated that the U.S. economy added 584,000 jobs last year. But the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised that number after it received additional state data, and found that the labor market had added 181,000 jobs in all of 2025. This is far fewer than the 1.46 million jobs that were added in 2024. One bright spot was last month, when hiring increased by 130,000 roles. This was significantly more than the 55,000 additions that had been expected by economists. "Job gains occurred in health care, social assistance, and construction, while federal government and financial activities lost jobs," BLS said in a statement.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Keir Starmer defends his actions as Kemi Badenoch asks why Matthew Doyle was given ‘a job for life’
Keir Starmer’s former communications chief Matthew Doyle “did not give a full account of his actions” before being nominated for a peerage, the prime minister has told the Commons after it emerged Doyle had campaigned for a friend charged with possessing indecent images of children.
Doyle, a longstanding Starmer aide who stepped down as the No 10 head of communications last March, was suspended on Monday from the Labour whip in his new role in the Lords after reports about his actions.
Continue reading...Closure of airspace draws attention to crime groups’ high-powered weapons – and may give Trump an excuse to attack
An alleged incursion by Mexican cartel drones into US airspace and the sudden closure of El Paso’s airspace has drawn renewed attention to the use of high-powered weapons by organized crime groups in Mexico.
There were conflicting accounts on Wednesday about whether the city’s airspace was shut down due to cartel drones or a disagreement over the Pentagon testing of counter-drone technology, but experts say the use of drones by drug gangs at the border has become increasingly common.
Continue reading...Jordan Stolz won gold in the men's 1,000 metres at the Winter Olympics on Wednesday, delivering the United States' first speed skating title at Milano Cortina.
Thames Valley police lead assessment of allegations concerning former duke’s links to Jeffrey Epstein
Police have held discussions with specialist prosecutors over investigations into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s links with Jeffrey Epstein while the former duke was acting as the UK’s trade envoy.
Oliver Wright, assistant chief constable of Thames Valley police, said on Wednesday that the force was leading the assessment of allegations against Mountbatten-Windsor of misconduct in public office, specifically relating to documents within the Epstein files released by the US justice department.
Continue reading...Former Mail editor was barely audible on witness stand while claimants’ barrister raced against judge’s deadline
Paul Dacre was “no shrinking violet” in the 27 years he edited the Daily Mail, he said in his witness statement to the high court in London this week. He had “captained a tough ship” in order to safeguard “the ‘patina’ and prestige that differentiated the Daily Mail from other titles, both the popular ones and the so-called quality newspapers”.
Others have described the editor’s tenure, and the impact it had on the UK, differently. Widely regarded as “the most powerful print journalist in Britain” (Politico) until he stood down in 2021, to his critics Dacre was “the man who hated liberal Britain” (New Statesman), and even the country’s “most dangerous man” (Observer).
Continue reading...WASHINGTON, Feb. 11, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Science is pleased to announce that the Office of Science Graduate Student Research (SCGSR) program is now accepting applications for the 2026 solicitation 1. Applications are due on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, at 5:00 p.m. ET.
SCGSR application assistance workshops will be held on March 5, 2026, 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m. ET (register on Zoom) and April 9, 2026, 2:00 p.m.–4:30 p.m. ET (register on Zoom). The first workshop will provide a general overview of the program and application requirements. It will also include time for attendees to discuss their potential research topics and their alignment with the SCGSR priority areas with managers of each participating program office.
The second workshop will guide attendees through the application process, answer general questions, provide guidance on proposal writing, and feature discussions with scientists and former awardees. Additionally, the program manager will host virtual office hours every Friday 1:00–2:00 p.m. ET starting on March 6, 2026 via this Zoom link.
The SCGSR program provides supplemental awards to outstanding U.S. graduate students for conducting part of their graduate thesis research at a DOE National Laboratory in collaboration with a DOE National Laboratory scientist. The goal of the program is to prepare graduate students for scientific and technical careers critically important to the mission of DOE’s Office of Science, with a special emphasis in supporting the goals of the Genesis Mission. The research opportunity will advance the students’ overall graduate theses while providing access to the expertise, resources, and capabilities available at the host DOE National Laboratories. In addition, SCGSR awardees may have the opportunity for short international research visits to select prestigious centers to broaden their horizons.
Since its inception in 2014, the SCGSR program has provided support to over 1,300 graduate awardees from more than 170 U.S. universities to conduct thesis research at all 17 DOE National Laboratories across the nation. Areas of research include but are not limited to: physics, chemistry, materials science, planetary science, geosciences, biosciences (non-medical), nuclear fusion science and engineering, mathematics, computer and computational sciences, engineering, microelectronics, quantum information science, and artificial intelligence.
The Office of Science’s Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) sponsors and manages the SCGSR program. WDTS manages the program in collaboration with the Office of Science’s six research program offices, the DOE Isotope R&D and Production office, and the DOE’s National Laboratories and User Facilities.
More information on the SCGSR program can be found by visiting the SCGSR program website or by emailing the SCGSR team.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy Office of Science
The post DOE Office of Science Now Accepting Applications for Graduate Student Research Awards appeared first on HPCwire.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11, 2026 — The Fiber Broadband Association (FBA) today released a new paper, The Evolving Data Center Market, which looks at how fiber broadband underpins the U.S. data center market and enables expansion into new regions.
With over 5,000 data centers operating across the country, demand for cloud services, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning (ML) is driving unprecedented growth. Traditionally concentrated in hubs like Northern Virginia, Silicon Valley, and parts of Texas, developers are now turning to secondary markets, rural regions, and edge locations as land costs, power availability, and congestion in established markets increase. These emerging regions depend on robust fiber infrastructure to deliver scalable and reliable operations.
“Fiber connectivity offers unmatched capacity, low latency, and scalability—qualities essential for powering hyperscale AI applications, quantum computing, and distributed data center networks,” said Deborah Kish, Vice President of Research & Workforce Development at FBA. “Communities and providers that invest in fiber today are positioning themselves to capture economic opportunity, attract new businesses, and enable the next generation of technology innovation.”
The paper highlights the economic impact for rural communities, where fiber deployment often coincides with available land and power resources. Data centers can serve as anchors for construction activity, technical jobs, and long-term operations roles, while cooperative-owned utilities and rural ISPs are increasingly partnering with developers to support new facilities. High-profile investments, like the Corning-Meta partnership, demonstrate how fiber deployment fuels domestic manufacturing, job creation, and regional economic growth, particularly in states with existing fiber infrastructure.
Fiber also plays a central role in enabling today’s AI-driven economy. At Fiber Connect 2026, the FBA will explore this evolving landscape during The AI and Emerging Technology Infrastructure Summit on Wednesday, May 20, 2026. The summit will bring together leading AI innovators, quantum experts, and technology futurists to discuss how the unlimited capacity of fiber broadband unlocks new possibilities for innovation and discovery. This discussion will illustrate how fiber infrastructure supports not just data centers, but the broader AI-enabled economy.
The summit kicks off with a keynote by noted futurist and theoretical physicist Dr. Michio Kaku, author of Quantum Supremacy: How the Quantum Computer Revolution Will Change Everything. Dr. Kaku will explore how quantum computing may accelerate AI development and help address some of humanity’s biggest challenges, including global warming, world hunger, and healthcare innovation.
Additional sessions throughout Fiber Connect 2026 will build on the paper’s findings, including:
Fiber Connect 2026 takes place May 17-20 at the Gaylord Palms Resort in Orlando, Florida. Learn more and register here. Subscribe to FBA’s Fiber Forward Weekly newsletter here to stay updated on the latest industry news.
About the Fiber Broadband Association
The Fiber Broadband Association (FBA) is the voice of fiber, helping providers, policy makers, and communities make informed decisions about how, where, and why to build better fiber broadband networks. FBA is the largest and only trade association that represents the complete fiber ecosystem of service providers, manufacturers, industry experts, and deployment specialists. Since 2001, FBA and its members have worked to advance fiber broadband deployment to accelerate innovation and increase quality of life by enabling every community to leverage the economic and societal benefits that only fiber can deliver. The Fiber Broadband Association is part of the Fibre Council Global Alliance, which is a platform of six global FTTH Councils in North America, LATAM, Europe, MENA, APAC, and South Africa. Learn more at fiberbroadband.org.
Source: Fiber Broadband Association
The post New Fiber Broadband Association Paper Highlights Fiber as Key Enabler for Data Center and AI Growth appeared first on HPCwire.
The aim of the "deceptively simple but thrilling strategy game" was to hunt and trap the opponent's pieces in as few moves as possible, scientists said.
US attorney general goes on attack during questioning by House judiciary committee over handling of files
The US attorney general Pam Bondi attacked and insulted Democrats during a House judiciary committee hearing on Wednesday as she defended the justice department’s handling of files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
Democrats pounded Bondi with questions about the way the department has complied with a law last year mandating the complete release of the files with specific and limited room for redactions. Since releasing the documents after the statutory deadline, the justice department has come under intense scrutiny both for releasing the names of survivors and redacting, without explanation, the names of people who may have committed crimes.
Continue reading...US star forced to wait through rival Wennemars’s reskate
Stolz delivers 1:06.28 finish in his signature event
Jordan Stolz had to wait a little longer than expected on Wednesday night. But when confirmation finally came, the 21-year-old American could celebrate his first Olympic gold medal – and the opening chapter of what could become one of the defining campaigns of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.
Skating in the second-to-last group, Stolz powered to an Olympic record time of 1min 6.28sec in the men’s 1000 metres, using a devastating final lap to deliver in his signature event and launch his pursuit of a potential four-gold haul across these Games.
Continue reading... | I just bought this used Onewheel+ XR Growler that was apparently on a valuable firmware that doesn’t have the infamous Haptic Buzz so instead of downloading toe OW app, I installed Nosedive like a redditor suggested. When I open the Nosedive app, it says I need to get to enter an encryption key to use the app with my board? Can anyone slide one my dm or show me how to find my own? Anything helps, thanks! [link] [comments] |
FAA initially cited ‘security reasons’ for shutting off skies around El Paso airport in area along border with Mexico
The top US aviation agency has lifted a surprise 10-day closure of airspace above the US-Mexico border town of El Paso, Texas, just hours after it abruptly announced that it would close off the skies for “special security reasons”.
While some officials claimed that Mexican cartel drones invaded US airspace, in recent days a balloon was reportedly mistaken for a drone.
Continue reading...So far, so good with the first XPS laptop I've seen from Dell in a couple years.
PALO ALTO, Calif., Feb. 11, 2026 — PsiQuantum has announced the appointment of Victor Peng, a veteran of the computing industry and former President at Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD), as Interim Chief Executive Officer, enabling Co-Founder Jeremy O’Brien to take up the role of Executive Chairman. O’Brien will lead the Board of Directors and continue to guide PsiQuantum’s strategy and key partnerships, working closely with the leadership team to deliver on the founding team’s mission of building and deploying the world’s first utility-scale quantum computers. With Peng serving as Interim CEO and O’Brien in the Executive Chairman role, PsiQuantum has experienced leadership in place as it conducts its search for a permanent CEO.

Pictured (L-R): Dr. Pete Shadbolt, Chief Scientific Officer; Prof. Jeremy O’Brien, Executive Chairman; Victor Peng, Interim CEO; and Prof. Terry Rudolph, Chief Architect. Not pictured: Prof. Mark Thompson, who continues to serve as PsiQuantum’s Chief Technologist.
Over the past decade, PsiQuantum has built the core technologies required to deliver and deploy fault-tolerant quantum computers. This includes the development of its mass-manufacturable silicon photonic chipset, Omega; new platforms and partnerships for advancing fault-tolerant algorithms; intermediate scale test systems; new cryogenic form factors; and the announcement of the world’s first utility scale quantum computing sites in Brisbane, Australia, and Chicago, Illinois. Peng’s deep experience scaling complex technologies and leading global organizations through periods of rapid growth and execution will build on this foundation to accelerate PsiQuantum’s core mission.
“PsiQuantum was founded to realize the potential of quantum computing, and the team has spent years doing the hard technical work to make that possible,” said Jeremy O’Brien, Co-Founder and Executive Chairman of PsiQuantum. “As we shift into large-scale deployment and execution, Victor brings exactly the leadership we need. He has guided multiple major computing platform transitions, and I’m excited to partner closely with him as we deliver on PsiQuantum’s mission.”
Peng will lead PsiQuantum’s day-to-day operations and execution, shaping the company’s business, financial, and operational strategies. In this role, he will leverage his industry experience leading multi-billion-dollar businesses and scaling technologies and teams. This includes advancing PsiQuantum’s utility-scale quantum computing systems in Australia and Chicago, driving business growth, overseeing technical development across silicon photonics and other core platforms, and partnering closely with the company’s leadership team.
“PsiQuantum has done the hard work to establish a real foundation for utility-scale quantum computing — from silicon photonics to fault-tolerant architectures and large-scale deployments,” said Victor Peng, Interim CEO of PsiQuantum. “The task ahead is execution. Jeremy and the founding team have built something truly unique, and I’m excited to partner closely with them to help translate their mission into deployed systems that unlock this technology.”
At AMD, Peng helped shape the company’s broader platform strategy, integrating hardware, software, and system-level architectures to address emerging AI workloads. Prior to joining AMD, Peng served as CEO of Xilinx, where he led the company’s transformation into a global leader in adaptive computing, culminating in its approximately $49 billion acquisition by AMD in 2022. Over his career, Peng has played a central role in major computing shifts spanning CPUs, GPUs, FPGAs, and system-level architectures.
Peng’s appointment comes after a decisive year for PsiQuantum. In 2025, the company advanced to the final stage of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (QBI); raised over $1 billion in a Series E round led by world-class investors; broke ground on America’s largest quantum computing site in Chicago; announced a broad partnership with NVIDIA spanning quantum computing and next-generation silicon photonics for AI supercomputing; expanded application-focused collaborations with Airbus, Lockheed Martin, and others; launched Construct, the only software platform dedicated to fault-tolerant algorithm development; and unveiled Omega, its silicon photonic chipset manufactured at GlobalFoundries in New York.
About Victor Peng
Victor Peng is Interim CEO at PsiQuantum and has over 40 years of industry experience leading global teams and multi-billion dollar businesses delivering high performance adaptive SoCs, FPGAs, CPUs, and GPUs. He currently serves on the boards of KLA Corporation and Microchip Technologies.
Mr. Peng was President at AMD from February 2023 until his retirement from AMD in August 2024. He was responsible for the Embedded and Data Center GPU businesses, Advanced Research and the company’s AI strategy including the AI hardware and software roadmaps. Mr. Peng rejoined AMD in February 2022 after 14 years at Xilinx, Inc. most recently serving as CEO and member of the Board of Directors. Prior to joining Xilinx, Mr. Peng worked at AMD as Corporate Vice President of Silicon Engineering for the Graphics Products Group, and before that he held executive and engineering leadership roles at MIPS Technologies, SGI, and Digital Equipment Corp.
Mr. Peng holds four U.S. patents and has a BSEE degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a M.Eng. degree from Cornell University.
About PsiQuantum
PsiQuantum was founded by four world leaders in quantum computing in 2016 and is headquartered in Palo Alto, California. The company’s mission is to build and deploy the world’s first useful quantum computers. PsiQuantum’s photonic approach enables it to leverage high-volume semiconductor manufacturing, existing cryogenic infrastructure, and architectural flexibility to rapidly scale its systems.
Source: PsiQuantum
The post PsiQuantum Names Former AMD President Victor Peng Interim CEO appeared first on HPCwire.
The San Fernando Valley couple said they received two IRS 1099 tax forms indicating that someone had earned thousands of dollars working for Uber using the husband's name and Social Security number.
Two U.S. government officials and a member of Congress pushed back on Wednesday on Trump administration claims about the reasons for the sudden closure of airspace over El Paso, Texas.
After the Federal Aviation Administration quickly rescinded an order to ground flights for 10 days, Sean Duffy, the secretary of transportation, and other Trump administration officials claimed that a Mexican drug cartel drone incursion prompted the shutdown. “The threat has been neutralized,” Duffy said. “Mexican cartel drones breached U.S. airspace. The Department of War took action to disable the drones,” another Trump administration official told The Intercept.
But two government officials with knowledge of the reasons for the shutdown say the closure was connected to the Department of War’s new counter-drone laser technology and a misunderstanding by — or miscommunication with — FAA headquarters of the risks it might pose to air traffic in and around El Paso.
The government officials told The Intercept that the counter-drone laser system near Fort Bliss was tested this week. One official said a cartel drone may have been damaged or disabled by the new system. Another said that a Mylar party balloon was destroyed. The incidents appeared to be different events.
Cartel drone activity isn’t unusual along the border, the sources said. The situation, as they described it, never constituted a threat.
“There was not a threat, which is why the FAA lifted this restriction so quickly.”
Asked if the closure stemmed from testing of counter-drone technology near Fort Bliss, a Department of War spokesperson said: “We have nothing further to provide.”
During a call with reporters on Wednesday morning, Democratic Rep. Veronica Escobar, who represents Texas’ 16th Congressional District in El Paso, also said that drone activity is frequent in the area and in this case did not pose a danger.
“There was not a threat, which is why the FAA lifted this restriction so quickly,” Escobar said. “There was nothing extraordinary about any drone incursion into the U.S. that I’m aware of.”
Escobar emphasized that she had been in communication with Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash. — the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee — who she said had received the same information. Escobar added: “If there were any incursion that would have posed a threat, the Armed Services Committee would have been made aware, and that would have been shared with me in my conversation with the ranking member this morning.”
Smith’s office did not return a request for comment prior to publication.
Late Tuesday night, the FAA announced it would halt all flights for 10 days due to “special security reasons,” surprising Escobar and other state and local officials. The shutdown went into effect at 11:30 p.m. local time on Tuesday and was lifted a little before 7 a.m. on Wednesday. “The temporary closure of airspace over El Paso has been lifted. There is no threat to commercial aviation,” the FAA announced on X on Wednesday morning. “All flights will resume as normal.”
Escobar made the point that the closure order came from Washington, not local authorities or reigonal air traffic control. “I want to emphasize that this was an FAA decision,” she said. “It was their decision. There was no information provided to me or my office, no information or advance notice provided to the airport or to the city of El Paso, which is the municipality that operates the airport.”
The post Officials Dispute Trump Explanation of El Paso Airspace Closure: “There Was Not a Threat” appeared first on The Intercept.
Whether it’s the $1bn price tag or the US president’s outsized power, key allies are steering clear of the board
This was originally published in This Week in Trumpland; sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday
Hey, do you like peace? Oh, cool, you do? Then, how about we establish a group of countries, all committed to that concept, working together to create global harmony? No, not the one that has already existed for 80 years. A new one. Who’s in?
It turns out: not that many world leaders or global citizens.
Continue reading...The apparent change follows a cease-and-desist letter from the House of Mouse in December.
I wouldn't have considered induction even five years ago. Here are four reasons I'm loving my new connected stove.
Electric vehicles accounted for just 1% of new car sales across Africa in 2025, but a study published in Nature Energy by researchers at ETH Zurich finds that EVs paired with solar off-grid charging systems -- solar panels, batteries and an inverter -- could become cheaper to own than gas-powered equivalents across most of the continent by 2040. The analysis considered total cost of ownership including sticker price, financing and fuel or charging costs, but excluded policy-related factors like taxes and subsidies. Electric two-wheelers could reach cost parity even sooner, by the end of the decade, thanks to smaller battery packs. Small cars remain the toughest segment. The biggest obstacle is financing: in some African countries, political instability and economic uncertainty push borrowing costs so high that interest on an EV loan can exceed the vehicle's purchase price. South Africa, Mauritius and Botswana are already near the financing conditions needed for cost parity; countries like Sudan and Ghana would need drastic cuts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Newly released documents are renewing interest in how Jeffrey Epstein amassed his fortune. Here's how he made his money.
American crashed out of Olympic downhill event
Lindsey Vonn says she has had a successful third surgery on the broken leg she suffered during the women’s Olympic downhill on Sunday.
Vonn posted an update on Instagram that included photos of her giving a thumbs up in her hospital bed with a metal frame attached to her leg.
Continue reading...Man who was detained released after several hours of questioning in connection to Guthrie’s disappearance
The FBI announced on Wednesday that it was conducting “an extensive search” along multiple roadways close to the Arizona home of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie who has been missing for 10 days.
The development came after authorities released a man earlier in the day who was detained in a traffic stop following several hours of questioning “in connection to the investigation”, according to reports.
Continue reading...Chancellor says stronger alignment with Europe is ‘biggest prize’ for trade and economic growth
Rachel Reeves has insisted Labour can win the political argument for a closer relationship with the EU, calling it the “biggest prize” for UK economic growth.
Some Labour strategists have been wary of making the case for stronger alignment with the EU, believing it could alienate pro-Brexit voters.
Continue reading...Remote coalmining community of Tumbler Ridge struggles to make sense of attack that has left Canada in shock
Within moments of receiving reports that there was a shooter nearby, Stacie Gruntman, the principal of Tumbler Ridge secondary school, did what educators are increasingly trained to do: she put the school in lockdown.
Gruntman rushed through the tiny school in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in northern British Columbia, checking that classroom doors were secured. Teachers shut off the lights and huddled with their students.
Continue reading...Wambach is first major sports figure to depart agency
Agency founder had emailed with Ghislaine Maxwell
LA 2028 Olympics board says it backs chairman
Former US soccer star Abby Wambach has announced she is leaving the Wasserman talent agency and called for its founder and 2028 Los Angeles Olympics chairman, Casey Wasserman, to resign after emails between him and Ghislaine Maxwell were revealed in the Jeffery Epstein files.
The two-time gold medalist and World Cup winner shared a statement on Wednesday saying she was leaving Wasserman, an agency that represents an extensive roster of athletes and celebrities across the sports and entertainment industries.
Continue reading...The deployments encountered repeated legal setbacks that stymied President Donald Trump’s desire for a show of force in Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland, Oregon.
The 41-year-old American came out of retirement to compete in the 2026 Winter Olympics and crashed seconds into her downhill race on Sunday.
AMA to review safety of respiratory vaccines as health agencies end recommendations based on no new data
The largest medical organization in the US will help conduct a review on the safety and effectiveness of respiratory vaccines as federal health agencies and advisers end vaccine recommendations based on no new information.
“They are filling a void that the government created,” Ezekiel Emanuel, vice-provost for global initiatives at the University of Pennsylvania, told journalists on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Apple's latest update adds end-to-end encryption to RCS messaging, alongside a new Android transfer tool and other new minor tweaks.
RICHLAND, Wash., Feb. 11, 2026 — There’s been a seismic shift in science, with scientists developing new AI tools and applying AI to just about any question that can be asked.

SeisModal brings together data about many characteristics of earthquakes into one foundation model that can be adapted to broader scientific questions. Still image of animation by Sara Levine | PNNL.
Researchers are now putting actual seismic waves to work, using data from the world’s largest repository of earthquake data to develop “SeisModal,” an AI foundation model designed to explore big questions about science. The effort, known as Steel Thread, involves researchers from five national laboratories operated by the U.S. Department of Energy.
Foundation models form the cornerstone of the AI landscape and are a must-have tool for researchers. They’re built using a broad set of data and form a foundation of knowledge and reasoning that can be adapted to many specific purposes. Current large language models are good examples, providing a knowledge base of text and code that can be built upon to explore many types of questions.
While many powerful foundation models have been created by industry and others, few are built from inception with the science of nuclear nonproliferation as the focus. That’s the goal of Steel Thread.
“We’re creating a foundation model with broad capability that can be applied to multiple problems in science with minimal retraining for each application,” said Karl Pazdernik, a chief data scientist at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory who is the science lead of the Steel Thread team. He discussed the effort in an invited talk at the annual Joint Statistical Meetings in Nashville last summer.
The Steel Thread project is funded by the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Office of Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Research and Development. The project includes scientists from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Chengping Chai) and Sandia National Laboratories (Lisa Linville), as well as PNNL.
The lead architects of SeisModal are PNNL scientists Sai Munikoti and Ian Stewart.
For any AI model, the size, quality and diversity of the dataset are key: The more high-quality data that is sufficiently diverse in scope, the better the chance that the model will be accurate across many tasks.
Earthquakes trigger massive amounts of energy that move through the Earth, offering a source of information that could be relevant to the discrimination of underground events. So, the Steel Thread team is drawing on a dataset maintained by the National Earthquake Information Center. The database includes information about more than 16,000 seismic events and meets several important criteria: It’s publicly available, the data is of high quality and thousands of earthshaking events are included.
Multimodal SeisModal
An important feature of SeisModal is that it’s what researchers call “multimodal”: The model can incorporate and make sense of many types of data. For earthquakes, that includes information about the intensity of the earthquake, location, timing, details about the event’s waveform, text and imagery like photos or video.
The model integrates all those streams of information, creating a comprehensive picture of each event and providing a basis to study new events. Even when a few details are missing, a robust multimodal model can oftentimes draw firm conclusions from the data that is available. The goal of Steel Thread researchers is to create a model that can analyze a broad set of scientific data relevant for nuclear nonproliferation.
“Creating an AI foundation model whose goal is to understand scientific concepts can be a big lift, but it can have many applications beyond seismology,” said Pazdernik.
“Since we want our models to be rooted in science, a major focus of our project is also to make sure that any model that we build is trustworthy. To evaluate its trustworthiness, we need to understand the training data, be sure of its origin, and describe the security and usability of the model. SeisModal provides an excellent example of training on transparent data to build a trustworthy model for science,” added Pazdernik.
A strength of SeisModal is its capacity to analyze a “time series”—a series of events or data points, such as tremors from an earthquake or the electrical signals of a heartbeat.
“SeisModal can reason over complex time series data such as seismic waveforms, which is an advance over many current large language models,” said Stewart. “The ability to detect these signals and other uncommon data types opens the door to a wider variety of scientific analysis methods that were previously unavailable.”
About PNNL
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in energy resiliency and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle and supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.
Source: Tom Rickey, PNNL
The post PNNL: Earthquake Data Provide Solid Footing for AI Foundation Science Model appeared first on HPCwire.
An attorney for one of the lawmakers who appeared in a video telling members of the military to reject "illegal orders" demanded that the federal prosecutors preserve records for a potential suit.
LAS VEGAS, Feb. 11, 2026 — I/ONX High Performance Compute has been selected to participate in a series of classes and training workshops at University of Nevada Las Vegas’ (UNLV) College of Engineering.

I/ONX Chief Executive Officer and Board Member, Justyn Hornor, introduces I/ONX during AI-driven, Career Inspiring Experiential Program for Semiconductor Education (ACIES) program at University of Nevada Las Vegas’ (UNLV) College of Engineering.
I/ONX has joined the AI-driven, Career Inspiring Experiential Program for Semiconductor Education (ACIES) program as an industry partner, and Chief Executive Officer Justyn Hornor is leading the discussions about I/ONX’s cutting edge, future-ready hardware and software technology solutions.
“Partnering with UNLV’s College of Engineering through the ACIES program is a powerful opportunity for I/ONX to help shape the future of semiconductor and microelectronics education,” Hornor said. “By bringing real-world, AI-driven HPC technologies into the classroom, we are empowering the next generation of engineers to become thoughtful stewards of AI compute—equipped not only with technical expertise, but with a sense of responsibility to use these tools to protect people, the environment, and our shared future. Together with UNLV, we are helping students build the confidence, curiosity, and skills needed to contribute positively to the world and lead what comes next.”
The ACIES curriculum in microelectronics and semiconductor technology is tailored specifically for high school students. The series is focused on enhancing high school students’ knowledge, skills, and interests in microelectronics and semiconductor fields. The workshops also boost self-efficacy in learning electrical and computer engineering, as well as physical sciences. The classes will also bridge the gap between educational and professional development, and investigate factors that impact high school students’ career choices in STEM and Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) fields.
Specific topics on I/ONX’s agenda for discussion during the classes includes challenges of managing heterogeneous computing environments, working with advanced accelerators, and edge technologies for AI.
The four-year project, funded by the National Science Foundation, engages 96 high school students (grades 10-12) in an immersive learning experience in microelectronics and semiconductor fields through three-phase training workshops, and connects them with their future career pathways through paid internships with local industry.
“Collaborating with I/ONX and other local high tech companies ensures a robust curriculum for Nevada’s first semiconductor education program designed for high school students by incorporating the most cutting-edge technological advancements and industry practices,” said Mei Yang, ACIES program director and chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at UNLV. “The semiconductor ecosystem encompasses system-level research and development, chip design, manufacturing and fabrication, as well as testing and packaging. Through structured training workshops, participants will develop a comprehensive understanding of the semiconductor ecosystem and gain hands-on experience with the end-to-end design flow. The internship component will further connect students with industry partners, enabling them to apply their knowledge to real-world challenges and supporting informed decision-making as they explore career opportunities.”
The partnership is a testament to both I/ONX’s and UNLV’s commitment to informing the next generation of engineers—empowering them to leave a positive mark on the world.
About I/ONX
I/ONX High Performance Compute, founded in 2020, is headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada, and is a global leader in flexible, heterogeneous, and secure AI solutions for enterprises–revolutionizing, connecting, and integrating High Performance Compute (HPC) systems. I/ONX eliminates supply chain disruptions and dependence on any single hardware or software provider. IONX is pioneering a new global standard that benefits all governments and enterprises with Heterogeneous AI compute. I/ONX’s platform is the world’s first future ready, mixed processor compute solution that guarantees data sovereignty, derisks supply chain availability, eliminates vendor lock, improves efficiency, and enables scalability. The I/ONX team spans across the United States and is humbled to have the opportunity to be stewards of AI compute and enable the vision of protecting all humans and our environment across the globe. We are committed to building an inter-operable world that benefits people everywhere–and empowering the next generation with the tools they need to also contribute positively to our universe. At I/ONX, core values of Compassion, Curiosity, Courage, Communication, and Commitment define and drive the organization forward.
Source: I/ONX
The post I/ONX Partners with University of Nevada Las Vegas College of Engineering appeared first on HPCwire.
Small opening cut into floor at Merchant’s House Museum indicates site was probably used as ‘safe house’, experts say
A landmark house in Manhattan preserved as a museum to New York’s 19th-century history has revealed an even more intriguing secret: its previously unknown status as a refuge for people who escaped slavery before and during the civil war.
The Merchant’s House Museum’s link to the Underground Railroad, a network of abolitionists who secured the safe passage of enslaved people to freedom, was discovered when archaeologists looked beneath the drawers of a built-in dresser in the wall of a hallway leading to bedrooms on the building’s second floor.
Continue reading...If you’re a developer and use KDE, you’re going to be interested in a new feature KDE is working on for KDE Linux.
In my last post, I laid out the vision for Kapsule—a container-based extensibility layer for KDE Linux built on top of Incus. The pitch was simple: give users real, persistent development environments without compromising the immutable base system. At the time, it was a functional proof of concept living in my personal namespace.
Well, things have moved fast.
↫ Herp De Derp
Not only is Kapsule now available in KDE Linux, it’s also properly integrated with Konsole now. This means you can launch Kapsule containers right from the new tab menu in Konsole for even easier access. They’re also working on allowing users to easily launch graphical applications from the containers and have them appear in the host desktop environment, and they intend to make the level of integration with the host more configurable so developers can better tailor their containers to their needs.
The UK's Ministry of Justice has ordered the deletion of the country's largest court reporting archive [non-paywalled source], a database built by data analysis company Courtsdesk that more than 1,500 journalists across 39 media organizations have used since the lord chancellor approved the project in 2021. Courtsdesk's research found that journalists received no advance notice of 1.6 million criminal hearings, that court case listings were accurate on just 4.2% of sitting days, and that half a million weekend cases were heard without any press notification. In November, HM Courts and Tribunal Service issued a cessation notice citing "unauthorized sharing" of court data based on a test feature. Courtsdesk says it wrote 16 times asking for dialogue and requested a referral to the Information Commissioner's Office; no referral was made. The government issued a final refusal last week, and the archive must now be deleted within days. Chris Philp, the former justice minister who approved the pilot and now shadow home secretary, has written to courts minister Sarah Sackman demanding the decision be reversed.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Get the best desk for your office with some advice from our CNET experts.
Why a resurgent Japan is good for Asia Expert comment jon.wallace
Beijing will be displeased by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s election triumph, but most Asian leaders will welcome a strong Japanese government.
Last weekend’s landslide election victory by Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s prime minister, prompted China to warn Tokyo to ‘follow the path of peaceful development rather than return to militarism’. Beijing is wary of Takaichi’s right-wing, nationalist credentials, and had already launched a round of military provocations and coercive economic measures in response to comments she made about Taiwan in November.
But many Asian governments will welcome Takaichi’s victory – if she can use her unprecedented parliamentary majority to strengthen Japan’s economy, security and global role. Asia’s leaders do not want to see their region dominated by Beijing or at the mercy of Washington’s will. They see a resurgent Japan as a key partner to bring balance to the world’s most consequential continent.
After five prime ministers in six years, Takaichi now has the political platform to bring about lasting change. She has vowed to use her mandate to cut taxes, boost defence spending and revise Japan’s pacifist, post-Second World War constitution, which constrains the military, known as the Self-Defense Forces.
It was these promises, alongside her straight-talking style, embrace of traditional values and call for an immigration crackdown, that helped her ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) secure support from a broad swathe of the Japanese public.
The 64-year-old, who wants to take on the mantle of her mentor, the late former prime minister Shinzo Abe, will find delivering on these pledges difficult. There are unresolved tensions between her ambitions to reduce taxes and expand public spending, while balancing the budget, managing the heavy debt burden and keeping Japan’s international investors on side.
Constitutional reform – never yet achieved – will require a two-thirds majority in both parliamentary houses, which the LDP only has in the lower house. It will also need backing in a public referendum.
And the international outlook remains fraught, amid an ongoing diplomatic row with China and the turbulence emanating from the US, Japan’s key defence ally.
However, there is little doubt that, beyond Beijing, most of the rest of Asia wants Takaichi to succeed. The region is wary of becoming too reliant on either Beijing or Washington, and fearful about how the rivalry between the two superpowers could create damaging instability.
These feelings are shared, albeit to differing degrees, across US allies, countries with independent foreign policies, and those moving closer to China. In a world where multilateral institutions are in decline, and transactional diplomacy is in the ascendency, governments are looking for stable and predictable partners.
Takaichi can build on strong foundations. Japan is already respected for its principled approach to diplomacy, its long-term focus on infrastructure and industrial investment, and its nascent efforts to boost security and defence cooperation.
The prime minister should continue to expand Japan’s security partnerships with non-aligned nations, particularly with India and in Southeast Asia, where most reject China’s exaggerated claims that Tokyo is seeking to replay Second World War militarism. On the contrary, they see Japan as an important partner to help them boost their own independent capabilities, while China’s People’s Liberation Army advances at a worryingly rapid pace and scale.
There are plenty of risks on the international front. Takaichi will need to carefully manage the relationship with the US, keeping Tokyo’s security guarantor on side.
President Donald Trump, who likes big election winners, offered warm congratulations to Takaichi on her victory.
But his administration is also pushing Tokyo to move forward quickly with a $550 billion agreement to invest in the US. To many in Japan the deal looks like a shakedown, with the vast majority of any eventual profits going to the US side.
Although Takaichi shares Trump’s nationalist stance, her public support at home could come under pressure if she appears to be selling Japan short without demonstrating that Washington is truly committed, long-term to Japan’s defence.
She must also expand ties with other US allies such as the UK and Australia, who are keen to hedge against their long-term reliance on an increasingly unreliable Washington. Her predecessors made positive progress toward deepening the connective tissues between US allies, without depending on or antagonizing the US.
She needs to build on these links, because Japan and other US allies can only offer effective economic, security and diplomatic alternatives if they can pool their resources and efforts.
The relationship with China is another point of concern. Ties have deteriorated rapidly since November, when Takaichi told Parliament that a Chinese attack on Taiwan could be a ‘survival-threatening situation’ that would allow Tokyo to deploy its Self-Defense Forces.
She has since said she will not speak about such hypotheticals in future. But Beijing has resisted efforts to resolve the spat and seems determined to keep the pressure on Tokyo. While a strong Japan provides necessary balance against China, a downward spiral between Asia’s two biggest economies would be highly damaging for the region.
The social media platform changed its privacy policy last month, inviting users to allow it to track their specific location.
A former FBI agent called the actions of the person seen in video at Nancy Guthrie's home "extremely amateurish."
| Looking to purchase a used Pint X and looking for some advice. Currently has 630 miles and what looks like a very worn tire. Purchase price is $400. Thoughts? [link] [comments] |
These standing desks have earned high praise from our CNET experts.
Moscow reiterates willingness to adhere to expired nuclear weapons treaty, "as long as the United States does not exceed the aforementioned limits."
Joshua Bonehill-Paine revealed as owner of X account known for videos depicting politicians such as Keir Starmer
The person behind an anonymous social media account that posts AI videos of UK politicians has been identified as a man who has spent time in prison for multiple hate crimes directed towards Jewish people.
Joshua Bonehill-Paine was identified by Channel 4 News as the owner of Crewkerne Gazette, a satirical X account that created AI videos depicting politicians such as Keir Starmer, Angela Rayner and Andy Burnham apparently singing popular songs from artists such as Amy Winehouse, Barry Manilow and Elton John with altered, politically themed lyrics.
Continue reading...The racism was not new. What was new was the inability to look past it. For a moment, at least, the blinders were off
John from New Mexico, a self-professed lifelong Republican, called into C-Span’s Washington Journal earlier this month with penitence on his mind.
“I voted for the president and supported him,” he began. “But I really want to apologize.”
Jamil Smith is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...Reports of the compact disc's death may have been slightly premature, according to a new analysis from Stat Significant that finds CD sales as a share of U.S. music industry revenue have quietly stabilized after years of steep decline. RIAA data shows CD revenue share fell from 7.15% in 2018 to 3.04% in 2022 but has since flatlined at roughly 3%, coming in at 3.14% in 2023 and 3.06% in 2024. Google search traffic for "CD Player" has ticked upward over the past 16 months after two decades of near-continuous decline, and a May 2023 YouGov poll found 53% of American adults willing to pay for music on CDs -- ahead of vinyl at 44% and online streaming at 50%. Respondents under 45 were more likely to express interest in buying physical formats than older cohorts. But on the supply side, Discogs data shows vinyl remains the dominant format for new physical releases; artists have not meaningfully shifted back toward CD production.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Commentary: The public deserves more than a marketing pitch. The AI boom needs a truth audit about the real risks.
A close family friend tells CBS News about the Olympic dream Team USA skater Maxim Naumov shared with his parents, and how "he did it."
Judges’ verdict on embezzlement challenge will determine whether far-right leader can stand in 2027 election
Defence lawyers for Marine Le Pen have told a Paris appeals court she did not orchestrate a system to misuse European parliament funds, at the close of an embezzlement trial that will determine whether the far-right leader can run in the 2027 French presidential election.
Le Pen’s lawyer, Sandra Chirac Kollarik, told the court on Wednesday: “At no moment did Marine Le Pen imagine that she broke the rules.” She added: “Never in her life would she have deliberately accepted making a false contract.”
Continue reading...A win for Pep Guardiola's men in west London would move them within 3 points of EPL leaders Arsenal.
The one feature that tipped the scales for me in the Apple Watch vs. Oura Ring debate might not be a dealbreaker for everyone.
Team USA's curlers are trying to focus on the ice at the Winter Games in Italy, but one member from Minnesota says "what's going on there is wrong."
TEL AVIV, Israel, Feb. 11, 2026 — Classiq today announced the availability of Classiq 1.0, a major version milestone. It brings together strategic platform improvements to provide a robust foundation for teams building, verifying and running quantum software in real-world environments.
For years, quantum progress has been measured in qubits, papers and demos. As organizations move from experimentation to engineering, the challenge is turning that progress into software workflows that teams can trust over time. Until now, challenges included correctness, repeatability, cost control and the ability to adapt as hardware evolves.
Classiq 1.0 is designed for enterprise quantum R&D groups, algorithm developers, researchers and engineering teams that need to connect classical logic and constraints to quantum models and carry that intent through optimization and execution.
“Classiq 1.0 is a commitment to quantum software as an engineering discipline,” said Nir Minerbi, CEO and co-founder of Classiq. “Teams need a platform they can build on with confidence, where correctness is enforced by default, and the path from problem definition to execution is continuous. This release unifies what we have delivered across the platform into a production-ready framework for long-term quantum engineering.”
Classiq 1.0 consolidates advancements delivered across recent development cycles spanning language expressiveness, compiler correctness, execution, visualization and developer experience. The new release also integrates AI-driven guidance in the platform to help translate intent into correct, optimized quantum models while keeping workflows explicit and inspectable.
Key Features in Classiq 1.0
“Quantum development teams need tooling that reduces fragile handoffs and makes complex programs easier to inspect, debug and maintain,” said Lior Gazit, Vice President of Product at Classiq. “With 1.0, we focused on correctness enforced by the platform, an expressive modeling and programming layer that matches real problem structure, and a development experience that keeps execution, analysis and transparency in the loop as teams scale their work.”
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 Releases Quantum Software Engineering Platform Version 1.0 appeared first on HPCwire.
BEIJING, Feb. 11, 2026 — The 2026 ASC Student Supercomputer Challenge (ASC26) was officially launched in Beijing recently. The kickoff event brought together leading experts in high-performance computing (HPC) and artificial intelligence (AI), along with faculty and student representatives from participating institutions.
This year, ASC26 has attracted more than 300 student teams from universities and colleges across Chinese mainland, the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, Singapore, Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, Malaysia, Thailand, Taiwan, and Macao, underscoring the competition’s international reach and its vital role in cultivating the next generation of supercomputing leaders.
ASC26 continues its established Preliminary Round + Finals competition framework, inviting students to engage deeply with authentic, real-world computing challenges that bridge theory and practice. During the Preliminary Round, participating teams design complete HPC clusters, optimize applications, and deliver innovative technical proposals. Top-performing teams will advance to the on-site Finals at Wuxi University from May 16 to 20, 2026, where students will demonstrate their skills, teamwork, and innovation in a high-intensity, hands-on competition environment.
To inspire students to push the boundaries of artificial intelligence and scientific computing, the ASC26 Preliminary Round introduces two flagship applications: Robotic Embodied Intelligence and Numerical Simulation of Gravitational Waves.
As the world’s largest and most demanding student supercomputing competition, ASC26 presents frontier, high-complexity applications that seamlessly integrate artificial intelligence with core scientific and engineering disciplines. Through intensive, hands-on challenges, participating students strengthen essential capabilities in problem formulation, modeling, system and solution design, and the practical deployment of AI tools, laying a strong foundation for their development as the next generation of innovators and researchers in science and technology.
Jack Dongarra, Chair of the ASC Advisory Committee, Turing Award laureate, and Emeritus Professor at the University of Tennessee, stated: “We are living in a truly remarkable time of technological change. The deep integration of artificial intelligence and supercomputing is not only advancing science and industry, but is also opening new opportunities for young students. The ASC Student Supercomputer Challenge is a unique platform where you can develop skills, collaborate with peers from around the world, and prepare yourselves to become the next generation of leaders in supercomputing and AI.”
Cao Guangxi, Vice President of Wuxi University, stated: “We look forward to further promoting the two-way integration of supercomputing and AI computing in higher education and industrial practice through hosting the ASC26 Finals, building an international stage for young students from around the world to showcase technical strength and exchange frontier ideas, and helping them grow into the backbone, driving future scientific and technological innovation.”
At the meeting, the ASC announced collaboration with A*STAR Institute of High Performance Computing (A*STAR IHPC), the Beijing–Hong Kong Academic Exchange Centre, and the Zhongguancun Academy × Zhongguancun Institute of Artificial Intelligence. These organizations contribute through avenues such as defining technical challenge topics, helping to equip students with an international outlook and interdisciplinary skills to strengthen the future innovation pipeline.
In parallel, the ASC26 Training Camp was held in Beijing from January 27 to 28. The program featured expert briefings on ASC competition rules, alongside in-depth technical sessions covering key supercomputing topics, such as cluster architecture and optimization, Linux systems, Fortran programming, MPI and OpenMP parallel programming models, AMD CPU architecture roadmaps, and introductory optimization using ROCm. Foundational AI training was also included, together with detailed analyses of the preliminary round challenges and recommended solution approaches, providing participating teams with comprehensive technical guidance for their competition preparation.
About ASC
The ASC Student Supercomputer Challenge serves as an international platform for technical exchange and the development of the next generation of supercomputing talent with broad support from leading experts and institutions across Asia, Europe, and the United States. Through a rigorous, hands-on competitive format, ASC aims to advance academic excellence and practical skills in supercomputing application development and research, positioning high-performance computing as a catalyst for scientific discovery, technological progress, and industrial innovation. Now in its 13th edition, the ASC Student Supercomputer Challenge has engaged tens of thousands of university students from six continents, establishing itself as the world’s largest student supercomputing competition. Learn more about this exciting competition on the official website: http://www.asc-events.net/StudentChallenge/index.html.
Source: ASC
The post ASC26 Finals to Be Held in Wuxi, Teams to Compete in World Model and Gravitational Wave Challenges appeared first on HPCwire.

Part 3 of the Delaware Civics 101 Series:
Understanding How Delaware Organizes, Spends, and Balances Its Money
As our lives roll on from day to day, it can be tough keeping track of where all our money goes. We save for vacation — then get hammered with a car repair bill. We budget for groceries — then watch inflation dilute our dollars.
To some extent, the folks in charge of Delaware’s budget face the same kind of challenges: Each year, they must find a way to divvy up the cash needed to fund the absolute necessities of a modern society — public safety, education, healthcare.
But the decisions get tougher once those “must-have” spending obligations have been met: Like any household, the state must find a way to achieve its dreams with the money that remains after the mandatory bills have been paid.
Should we invest in new schools, or new corporate tax incentives? Give residents a tax cut, or put more road crews on the street? Sock the money away for a rainy day, or spend it on something that might — or might not — create a better Delaware for everyone?
From teacher pay to Medicaid, from bridge repairs to clean water projects, each dollar spent represents a public decision about our shared priorities as Delawareans.
Delaware’s total state budget (for Fiscal Year 2026) is about $15 billion — roughly $15,000 per
resident. That money comes from four main “buckets” (see Part 1 for more on these buckets):
Remember this: Most state spending (about two thirds of the General Fund) is not up for debate. Certain programs must be fully funded by law, and are mostly beyond the power of the governor or lawmakers to change or cut.
Lawmakers refer to these baked-in spending obligations as “door openers,” and they are largely driven by Medicaid reimbursements (based on patient volume), school funding formulas (based on student counts), and state employee/retiree benefits (including pensions and healthcare). The total costs of these door openers has been on the rise, thanks to inflation and population growth. The state’s annual contribution to its pension system has also become a major driver of overall budget growth in recent years.
Other budget items also are driving cost increases, especially state employee and teacher pay raises, which aim to address recruitment and retention issues. The rest of the state’s spending is more discretionary, meaning that lawmakers can decide who gets money, and how much they get. It’s this portion of the budget that frequently generates fireworks, and creates dilemmas. If the state’s mandatory spending obligations grow too fast, and revenue doesn’t keep pace, there may not be much left for “new” ideas — like universal pre-K, environmental programs, or additional tax credits.
“There’s less squawking in tight budget years than when there’s a lot of money,” said Charlie Copeland, director of the Center for Economic & Fiscal Policy at the Caesar Rodney Institute and a former Delaware Senate leader. “When there’s money available, everybody’s got an idea. Everybody comes in with their favorite plan.”
Delaware spends about 35-40% ($2.4 billion) of the General Operating budget on public education, and about a quarter of Bond Bill funds (over $200 million) go toward building new schools. The federal government allocates more than $300 million in funds for low-income students, students with disabilities, school lunches, headstart and other programs.

The remainder of the funds needed by schools is raised through local property taxes. This mix of state, federal and local funds is known as a “tri-share” financing model, and here, Delaware is a bit of an outlier: Many states rely more heavily on local property taxes instead of state allocations. (NOTE: The state is currently debating an overhaul of its school spending model that aims to enhance flexibility.)
Altogether, Delaware spends more than $3 billion a year on public education using state and federal funds. That’s excluding revenue from local property taxes, which total more than $1 billion, accounting for 30% of the budget for the 19 school districts. About 35–40% of Delaware’s General Fund goes to education — by far the largest share.
Health care and human services make up about one-fourth of Delaware’s budget — and they’re the largest areas supported by federal dollars. They’re also arguably where state spending has the greatest power to directly support the well-being of its constituents.
But those moral obligations can impose some tough financial realities for the state. About a quarter of all Delawareans rely on Medicaid, and the state is mandated by law to pay for the care of every qualified recipient. A school can delay a new heating system due to lack of funds, but by law the state is not permitted to “run out” of Medicaid money in any given year.
That can mean making some tough choices. If medical costs suddenly jump (as they are expected to in 2026, by 5%), funding must be cut from other areas, like parks or libraries.
Roughly 10–15% of the General Fund supports Delaware’s justice and public safety system, most of it to pay salaries in this personnel-heavy sector. In recent times, there’s been ongoing pressure to spend more on officer pay, to stay competitive with other states and localities contending with their own officer shortages.
These recruiting challenges also create their own budget pressures. When officers work mandatory overtime to make up for staff vacancies, a vicious cycle can occur: Too much overtime work increases burnout, leading to more resignations, deeper shortages, and consequently even more overtime.
Running a state means funding the everyday machinery of government, from motor vehicle inspections to salaries for its roughly 31,000 employees.
Infrastructure spending sits mostly outside the General Fund, relying instead on Special Funds, Federal Funds, and the Transportation Trust Fund (TTF). The Bond Bill then authorizes the state to use these funds.
Delaware invests heavily in programs that support low-income families — through a mix of General Fund, Federal Funds, Special Funds, and Bond Bill resources. Total spending is estimated at $1.4 billion.
Here’s how the state’s spending would look ifthe $15 billion were divided equally among 1 million residents:
Including these and other spending categories, state spending amounts to $15,000 per Delawarean, every year — funded through a mix of state taxes, fees, bonds, and federal grants.
Part 4 — How Delaware’s Budget Is Decided — and How You Can Participate
Take a journey through the budget-making process, from the time agencies submit their requests to the high-pressure legislative sessions where the final spending plan gets approved.
About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.
The post Civics 101: Breaking down where the money goes — and how it shapes life in Delaware appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
A group of activists gathered outside the Prairieland Detention Center near Dallas last July 4 with fireworks and plans to mount more than a polite protest.
They were there for less than an hour before things took a turn: A police officer was wounded by a gunshot.
Only one member of the group is accused of pulling a trigger, but 19 people went to jail on state and federal charges. Attorney General Pam Bondi labeled the defendants terrorists, and FBI Director Kash Patel bragged that it was the first time alleged antifa activists had been hit with terror charges.
Months later, the Trump administration recycled the label to smear Renee Good and Alex Pretti, Minneapolis residents who were shot and killed by federal immigration agents. They were supposedly dangerous left-wing agitators, in Pretti’s case legally carrying what the government said was a “dangerous gun.” The videos of Good and Pretti’s killings disproved the administration’s lies.
Unlike the Minneapolis shootings, the full events at Prairieland were not caught on video. Instead, a jury in federal court will hear evidence against nine defendants at a trial starting next week, which will serve as the first major courtroom test of the Trump administration’s push to label left-wing activists as domestic terrorists.
“I wonder how they are going to make it stick when their attempts at framing Alex Pretti didn’t work.”
Court hearings in the case have taken place under heavy security, with police caravans whisking defendants to and from an art deco courthouse in downtown Fort Worth, Texas. Inside the courtroom, straight-backed officers maintain a perimeter.
The odds once looked long for the Prairieland group given the conservative jury pool and the seven defendants who pleaded guilty before trial, including several who are cooperating with the prosecution. The protests, crackdowns, and killings in Minneapolis, however, may have shifted perceptions of what happened seven months earlier in Texas.
“When they were crafting this indictment, they came up with that there is such a thing as a ‘north Texas antifa cell,’” said Xavier de Janon, a lawyer representing one defendant in state court. “I wonder how they are going to make it stick when their attempts at framing Alex Pretti didn’t work, fell flat on its face.”
Jurors in the Prairieland case will be faced with key questions about protest in the Trump era. Are guns at protests a precaution or a provocation? Can the government succeed in using First Amendment-protected literature, such as anarchist zines, to win convictions? And how far can activists go when they believe their country is sliding into fascism?
Federal investigators and a support committee for the defendants offered starkly different takes on the purpose of the late-night gathering at the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas.
For the feds, it was a planned ambush of law enforcement staged with guns, black garb, and bad intentions. Prosecutors described the defendants as “nine North Texas Antifa Cell operatives.” Supporters of the defendants say the protest was an attempt to conduct a noise demonstration, of the sort that have since become common outside U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement buildings in places like Chicago and Minneapolis.
The Prairieland facility, which was built to hold 700 people, housed over 1,000 by the spring of 2025. The privately operated detention center was in the news again this week, when the family of a Palestinian woman detained there since last year on alleged visa violations said she had been hospitalized after weeks of deteriorating health.
On July 4 last year, a larger group of protesters had staged a traditional demonstration of the conditions inside the lockup. That night, a group of people who had conferred on an encrypted chat app arrived outside the detention center.
Around 10:37 p.m., the fireworks started flying, according to the testimony of an FBI agent at a pretrial hearing. Some of the group of a dozen or so slashed tires on cars in the parking lot near the detention center and sprayed “ICE Pig” on one car.
Guards called 911. Local police showed up. Within minutes, an Alvarado police officer who answered the call had been shot in the neck.
The U.S. attorney’s office alleges that the shooter was Benjamin Song, a former Marine Corps reservist who was a fixture in local left-wing organizations such as the Socialist Rifle Association and Food Not Bombs.
At a preliminary hearing in September, prosecutors painted a dramatic picture of the shooting: Minutes after police arrived, Song allegedly shouted “get to the rifles” and let loose with an AR-15 that had a modified, binary trigger designed to fire at a fast rate.
At the same hearing, however, defense attorneys poked holes in the government’s narrative that the shooting had been planned.
Prosecutors’ case that the group wanted to commit violence depends heavily on messages that members of the group allegedly sent through the encrypted messaging app, Signal, or at an in-person “gear check” before the action.
“I’m not getting arrested,” Song allegedly said at one point.
Defense attorneys objected to the idea that such ominous-sounding statements were proof that the group planned an attack.
Under questioning from a defense attorney, an FBI agent acknowledged that no one had talked about killing police that night in the Signal group. Meanwhile, in addition to guns and black clothes, the protesters brought bullhorns.
One defense attorney asked an FBI agent on the case whether the group’s members might have thought they needed guns for self-defense from police.
“A person peacefully protesting, I would say there’s no risk to be killed by law enforcement,” said the agent, Clark Wiethorn.
When asked whether he would acknowledge that at least some of the protesters had no plans to commit violence, the agent pushed back.
“I would say every person out there had the knowledge of the risk of violence,” Wiethorn said.
While the government has portrayed the group as a disciplined team of antifa attackers, the messages show members of the group squabbling.
“All this stuff was kind of ad hoc,” said Patrick McLain, the attorney for defendant Zachary Evetts. “When I’m reading these texts, they were just all over the place, and they’re getting into stupid arguments with each other.”
Song, the former Marine accused of shooting the officer, managed to escape a massive police response that night. According to testimony at a pretrial hearing, they hid in brush for 24 hours before supporters whisked them away.
Shawn Smith, an assistant U.S. attorney, said at the hearing that the fact that so many people were willing to help Song “speaks to the kind of personality of Mr. Song and what he can motivate.” At another point, he likened Song to a cult leader.
In the weeks that followed, investigators arrested and charged people with far looser connections to the action at Prairieland.
One of them was Dario Sanchez, a soft-spoken teacher who lives in a Dallas suburb. He was at home on the morning of July 15 when officers ripped open his door and tossed flashbangs to gain entrance.
In an interview with The Intercept, Sanchez said he was taken away in handcuffs. Law enforcement attempted to question him in a car, warning him that he faced decades in prison if he did not cooperate. Sanchez said he told his interrogators that he knew nothing about the July 4 protest — but that did not stop them from arresting him.
The allegations, Sanchez would later learn, centered on the claim that he purposefully booted a defendant accused of helping Song out of a Discord group chat operated by the Socialist Rifle Association.
Sanchez was arrested twice more, once when he was rearrested on a new charge, and another time on an alleged probation violation.
He faces only state charges in Johnson County, Texas, and he plans to take his case to a trial that has been set for April, after the federal proceeding is over.
Law enforcement has delved deep into messages among the protesters that night that appear to show allegiance to antifascism.
To boost their case against the defendants, the government has secured the services of a witness who works at a right-wing think tank, the Center for Security Policy, that was founded by Islamophobic conspiracy theorist Frank Gaffney.
Prosecutors also highlighted the pamphlets and zines that two of the defendants were publishing from a garage printing press, and the membership of some defendants in a local leftist reading group, the Emma Goldman Book Club.
The titles the government spotlighted at the September hearing include “Safer in the Front,” “Our Enemies in Yellow,” and “Why Anarchy.”
One defendant faces charges solely for ferrying such materials from one residence to another at the request of his wife, which advocates say essentially criminalizes the possession of materials protected by free speech.
“I think what they’re going to be poring through in those things is any writings in there that advocate violence or harm, and somehow they are going to try to stretch that out,” McLain said. “They are really stretching.”
Judging by the Signal messages obtained by the government, many of the Prairieland defendants self-consciously distanced themselves from more mainstream protesters. Still, the case could have implications beyond the Dallas-Fort Worth anarchist and socialist scenes — even though at the September court hearing, a prosecutor appeared to express surprise at schisms on the left.
“They actually don’t like these liberal protesters who are out there just holding signs?” Shawn Smith, the prosecutor, asked the FBI agent, who agreed with him.
“These people can’t imagine that someone would care about someone else.”
The Trump administration cited Prairieland as part of a supposed wave of antifascist terrorism backed or encouraged by nonprofits and Democrats. In his National Security Presidential Memorandum-7, or NSPM-7, issued in September, Trump cited both the assassination of Charlie Kirk and the Prairieland action as proof of a wave of organized political violence from the left.
“A new law enforcement strategy that investigates all participants in these criminal and terroristic conspiracies — including the organized structures, networks, entities, organizations, funding sources, and predicate actions behind them — is required,” Trump said.
Although many of the Prairieland defendants had already been arrested by the time NSPM-7 was issued, it was only in October that the government obtained its first indictment charging some of them with material support of terrorism.
Sanchez believes prosecutors have pursued the case so aggressively because of a “weird antifa delusion.”
“These people can’t imagine that someone would care about someone else, really,” Sanchez said. “Why the hell would a bunch of people show up to protest outside an ICE detention center? Why would anyone care about these people? They can’t fathom that people would have that amount of empathy, and so in their minds, they have to cook up the idea that this has to be some kind of weird conspiracy.”
The post Texas “Antifa Cell” Terror Trial Takes On Tough Questions About Guns at Protests Against ICE appeared first on The Intercept.


Paying for the services that Delawareans rely on is rarely as simple as it might seem. Schools are a great example of just how complex things can get.
No single stream of funding can cope with the many unique needs of the state’s school system, which runs on a head-spinning mix of revenue sources, each governed by different rules and used for different purposes. Together, those funding streams provide more than $2 billion annually for Delaware’s public K-12 system.
Money from three “budget buckets” — the state’s General Operating Budget, the Capital Budget (known as the Bond Bill), and Federal Funding — accounts for 70% of the funding for Delaware’s 19 school districts. The other 30% is paid for by property taxes at the county level.
Understanding how all those pieces fit together helps explain why education consistently represents Delaware’s largest public investment — and why budget debates often focus not just on how much is spent, but which bucket the money comes from and what it can legally fund.
The single largest source of education funding comes from this bucket. In Fiscal Year 2025, Delaware’s operating budget totaled approximately $6.6 billion, with over $1.8 billion — nearly 29% of all state operating spending — allocated to K-12 public education.
Under Delaware’s FY 2025 Capital Improvements Act, the state authorized approximately
$238.8 million for K-12 public school projects. These funds are restricted to long-term investments such as construction, renovations, and technology upgrades.
Local school districts contribute an estimated $500 million-$550 million annually, primarily through property taxes approved by voters, representing about 25% of total public education spending.
The federal government provides approximately $250 million-$300 million each year in ongoing education aid, accounting for about 10% to 12% of total K-12 funding. One-time COVID-19 relief funds are no longer part of the ongoing budget.
When combined, the four funding buckets produce a total annual investment of roughly $2.1 billion-$2.2 billion in Delaware’s public K-12 education system.
| Funding Source | Approximate Amount | Share of Total | Primary Use |
| State Operating Budget | $1.76 billion | ~65% | Salaries, instruction, transportation, operations |
| State Bond Bill (Capital Budget) | $238.8 million | Capital only | Construction, renovations, infrastructure |
| Local School Districts | $500–550 million | ~25% | Local staffing and programs |
| Federal Government | $250–300 million | ~10–12% | Targeted programs, meals, special education |
| Total Public K-12 Funding | ~$2.1–2.2 billion | 100% | All public school funding |
About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.
The post Civics 101: The fine print of school funding shows state budget system’s complexities appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
In the 459 days that Willa Mae James spent living in a Fairfield Inn in Eastern North Carolina, her footsteps wore down paths in the carpet: from the door to the desk, from the bed to the wooden armchair by the window, her favorite place to read the Bible.
The 69-year-old retired dietitian had been sent there in July 2024 by North Carolina’s rebuilding program after Hurricane Florence ravaged her home and many others in 2018. The state had promised to help thousands of people like her rebuild or repair. But it had taken the program years to begin work. James spent nearly six years living in her damaged house in Lumberton, where floodwaters had turned the floorboards to pulp, causing her floors to sink and nearly cave in.
Of the more than 10,000 families who applied, 3,100 were still waiting for construction five years after the storm. Thousands of others had withdrawn or been dropped by the program. As of November, more than 300 families were still waiting to return home.
And James was the last of more than 100 displaced homeowners staying at the hotel.
“It’s like being in jail,” James said. “Everybody else done moved back home in their houses, enjoying it, except me.”
On the other side of North Carolina, nearly 5,000 homeowners find themselves waiting for the state government to help them rebuild after 2024’s Hurricane Helene. Gov. Josh Stein created a new program, Renew NC, promising to learn from the problems of the previous program that left James and thousands of others hanging for years.
Renew NC is just getting off the ground; the program began accepting applications in June and has completed work on 16 of the 2,700 homes it plans to repair and rebuild. But through public records and interviews with homeowners, The Assembly and ProPublica have found that some of the same problems that plagued the earlier program are surfacing in the Helene recovery.
That earlier program, which has the similar name ReBuild NC, was set up after Florence decimated a region that had been hit by Hurricane Matthew two years earlier. ReBuild NC was designed to help low- and moderate-income homeowners restore their homes by hiring and paying contractors to complete the work.
But the North Carolina Office of Recovery & Resiliency, which runs the program, failed at nearly every step, according to reports by outside consultants, journalists and auditors. It struggled to manage its $779 million budget and couldn’t keep track of expenses. It rarely held contractors accountable for delays that dragged out projects and drove up costs for temporary housing and storage. ReBuild NC provided only limited resources to understaffed local governments that couldn’t handle the volume of permit and inspection requests.
At the same time, the agency was laden with “administrative steps, paperwork, and procedures” to comply with federal regulations, according to a state auditor report. And rigid rules meant the agency spent money rebuilding homes that needed less expensive repairs, some homeowners said.
“The response from North Carolina to hurricanes Matthew and Florence was a disaster,” State Auditor Dave Boliek said in a statement after releasing a report on ReBuild NC in November.
The auditor’s office consulted with the former administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency under the Obama administration, Craig Fugate, who noted that ReBuild NC officials “spent a tremendous amount of time on process, when their job was swinging hammers.”
Bridget Munger, a spokesperson for the North Carolina Office of Recovery & Resiliency, said the office welcomed the report. “NCORR remains committed to serving those affected by hurricanes Matthew and Florence and any insight that supports that mission is valuable,” Munger said in a statement.
Have you applied to Renew NC or other assistance programs, such as a hazard mitigation buyout, following Hurricane Helene? We want to hear from you to better understand how recovery efforts are working in North Carolina.
State leaders set out to manage Helene recovery differently. Among Stein’s orders on his first day in office in 2025 was to lay the groundwork for a new home rebuilding program with fresh leadership in a different department. The state would again pick and pay contractors to repair and rebuild homes of people who applied, but this time, it would scrutinize contractors more to ensure quality. Stephanie McGarrah, who oversees Renew NC, pledged “robust financial oversight” and a willingness to work with stakeholders who “identify challenges and gaps in funding.”
But again, homeowners are encountering rules that steer them toward demolition and reconstruction when less expensive repairs would do. Some counties are struggling to get the staff and inspectors to handle all the required permits. Many residents will be out of their homes without a plan from the state to pay for temporary housing or storage during construction.
McGarrah, a deputy state commerce secretary, said that every disaster is different and that the agency is learning as it goes and has already revised policies to allow more homes to be eligible for repairs. “There’s this perception that you can figure out what all the problems are going to be, and you can figure them out at the beginning,” she said.
The Helene recovery program set an ambitious goal to finish all homes before June 2028, but the long waits of James and others in Eastern North Carolina serve as a warning for what might happen next.

North Carolina had just begun rebuilding homes Matthew destroyed in 2016 when Florence hit two years later, bringing up to 2 feet of rain in some inland counties.
Damage from the two storms totaled an estimated $22 billion spread across half of North Carolina’s 100 counties, among the costliest storms in U.S. history. After FEMA’s short-term disaster assistance ended, the state received applications from more than 10,000 homeowners still in need of repairs.
But progress was slow. The state’s homebuilding program trailed others after 2018 hurricanes, according to a 2022 Government Accountability Office report. North Carolina had completed 0.4% of the homes it set out to repair and rebuild after Florence while South Carolina had completed 22%.
ReBuild NC’s management problems are most apparent in the time people like James spent in hotels waiting for construction. One of the reasons it took so long is that ReBuild NC hired two administrative contractors, one to manage construction and another to handle temporary relocation.
Although the agency denied it, contractors told the legislature that ReBuild NC discouraged its relocation vendor from speaking directly with the construction vendor, requiring them to communicate via a spreadsheet that was supposed to track construction. The approach delayed repairs as the vendors were unable to line up move-out dates with construction start dates. Among the 766 families who spent at least a year out of their homes during construction, more than 500 didn’t have damage that required them to move out early.
Such problems contributed to the roughly $100 million ReBuild NC spent on temporary relocation services, like hotels and portable storage pods, for 3,800 families.
The program required families to move out before construction was ready to begin. James was moved into the Fairfield Inn nine months before her assigned construction company filed for demolition and construction permits. A large part of the delay was caused by ReBuild NC pausing “notices to proceed” for four months as it ran low on funds and sought more money from the legislature. While the local government OK’d the permit applications within days, it took another two months for the contractor to pay for the permits and begin reconstruction. P.H. Lowery, the general contractor for James’ home, did not respond to calls or text messages seeking comment about the delays. The nonprofit news organization NC Newsline found that ReBuild NC never fined contractors for missing deadlines during the program’s first years.
Other families faced delays because ReBuild NC failed to coordinate rebuilding efforts with local governments or because the homeowners came up against the program’s rules. The state had a set number of home designs that homeowners could choose from. Sometimes, the state’s plans proposed homes that were too big for properties or didn’t account for septic systems.
Kath Durand encountered such problems when she sought ReBuild NC’s help after Florence’s deluge seeped through the roof, saturated the walls and collapsed part of the ceiling of her home in Atlantic Beach. She applied to ReBuild NC in 2020, hoping to finish an estimated $20,000 in repairs after she ran out of money to fix the home herself.

But under ReBuild NC’s rules, wood-frame homes like hers had to be above a certain level to avoid flooding before the program would pay for repairs, and the program wouldn’t pay to elevate houses. The home was just shy. So ReBuild NC would only pay to demolish the home and build a new one — a more expensive undertaking.
It took four years for the agency to offer Durand a floor plan, but none of the designs fit her 1/6-acre lot. One plan placed part of the home in the street easement, which utility companies need to access. A second placed the home in the tidal zone, effectively putting her home in a canal. A third covered the septic field, which could have destroyed the system that breaks down sewage. All those things would have been cause for rejected permits, she said, making her question ReBuild NC.
“I would like to get in a room and talk to them about ‘what were you thinking?’” she said. Durand said she settled for a smaller home, but at the end of December, ReBuild NC withdrew her from the program, saying it didn’t have houses available for the size of her lot.
Munger, ReBuild NC’s spokesperson, said the program has the ability to develop custom building plans to fit challenging lots, but doing so in every case “would have exponentially increased project costs and greatly reduced the number of families helped by the program.”



Such delays and complaints from homeowners led to years of legislative scrutiny, after which ReBuild NC’s two top leaders left the agency.
In 2022, the agency’s chief program delivery officer, Ivan Duncan, resigned after he was accused of giving preferential treatment to a construction vendor, NC Newsline reported. Then, after several legislative meetings questioned oversight of the program, his boss, ReBuild NC director Laura Hogshead, abruptly left the agency in 2024.
Duncan said in an interview that the allegations were unfounded. He said he cooperated with the investigations, was not asked to resign and left for a higher-paying job.
Hogshead did not respond to requests for comment. At a 2024 legislative hearing, she listed several things the program would do differently if it were put in charge of the Helene recovery but noted that rebuilding thousands of older homes across a wide area came with challenges.
Behind the scenes, ReBuild NC struggled to hold contractors accountable to timelines, paid invoices without verifying work and spent money on things auditors couldn’t track, according to reports by disaster recovery consultant SBP and the state auditor and an internal audit.
For James, the wait was especially hard as her husband, Christopher, was in treatment for bone cancer. She remembers Christopher questioning whether the home would ever be done. “Baby, them people might never get to you,” he’d told her. When he died in 2021, she was left to fight alone for the home to be rebuilt.
James said a neighbor who applied for ReBuild NC died days after moving into the hotel. She knows others who are still staying with friends or family as they wait on ReBuild NC to finish their homes.
She hopes Western North Carolina residents have better experiences.
“I pray that they don’t go through what we did, I sure do,” James said.

Under pressure from the legislature and homeowners to not repeat these problems with the Helene recovery, the new state program, Renew NC, made a number of reforms.
ReBuild NC had been criticized for locating its office almost 100 miles from the epicenters of the disaster zones. Renew NC’s office is in Asheville, in one of Helene’s hardest-hit counties. A bipartisan group of legislators, business leaders, activists and government officials meets across Western North Carolina to publicly advise on challenges and assist with recovery.
To avoid the problem of having different vendors administer the construction and relocation, Renew NC has hired one vendor to manage the housing recovery program.
Despite the reforms, the Stein administration has already faced questions from lawmakers over potential conflicts of interest. His first Helene recovery adviser, Jonathan Krebs, had been a partner at the company administering the housing program and contributed heavily to Stein’s campaign and a Democratic political committee in the year before receiving his job.
Kate Schmidt, a spokesperson for the governor, said Krebs “was hired because of his decades of experience working on nearly every major disaster recovery since Katrina” and noted that the State Ethics Commission found no conflict of interest. Krebs said at a legislative meeting last year that while he helped draft the request for proposal and scoring criteria for an $81 million contract that was awarded to Horne, his former employer, he viewed his past employment not as a conflict but as an asset.
“They’ve got to have somebody in the room that knows what’s going on and what has to happen to get houses built. I was that person,” said Krebs, whose temporary role has ended. Krebs echoed those sentiments in an interview, noting that he supported Stein as a candidate who was “trying to be practical and help people.”
The state did not renew Horne’s Florence and Matthew recovery contract amid complaints over slow application processing. BDO, an accounting and consulting firm that has since acquired Horne, referred questions to the state. A state official said in contracting documents that the decision to not renew was mutual and acknowledged that “problems continued” after the state took over case management.
As South Carolina did after Florence, Renew NC has avoided the high costs of temporary housing and storage simply by not paying for them, except under “extreme circumstances,” though it is common for disaster recovery programs to pay for such costs. That has left homeowners to cover the costs themselves.
The lack of coverage for temporary housing concerns Vicki Meath, a local housing advocate working on the recovery.
“When I think about survivors that have been impacted and would apply to this program that are below 60% of the area median income, they don’t have a lot of resources,” she said. “They don’t have another place to live.”
In an interview, McGarrah noted that her agency is discussing policy changes to help make temporary housing more affordable but will need local partners to identify places families can live.
“We’re seeing some slowdowns in our pipeline because people don’t have places to go,” she said.
Local governments in Western North Carolina, like those on the other side of the state, are struggling with a lack of staff and resources. Dennis Aldridge, a commissioner in Avery County, northeast of Asheville, said the county’s 18,000 residents face a shortage of environmental inspectors who certify well and septic systems, on which homes in rural counties overwhelmingly rely. Aldridge said he reached out to the state for assistance, but there aren’t enough inspectors in North Carolina — an issue that’s been known for years.
“It’s taking right now about six to nine months to get a well and septic permit because we don’t have the people,” Aldridge said in September.
Danny Allen, inspections director in Madison County, north of Asheville, said he’s worried his department will face backlogs on building permits with about 75 local homeowners actively applying for the state program.

“They’re feeling it now, but it’s really going to be six months from now that the pressure is going to build,” said Aimee Wall, dean of the University of North Carolina’s School of Government.
The number of people waiting for inspections could increase if homeowners who applied for repairs learn they need to have their homes rebuilt because damages exceed the state’s threshold of $100,000 for wood-frame homes. The amount is intended to avoid costly repairs, as homes could have additional issues like termite damage that aren’t immediately visible. But it doesn’t cover all scenarios.
That’s what Chuck Brodsky, a folk musician and songwriter, encountered after two landslides wiped out much of the Asheville mountainside that supported his home. His two-story house survived Helene unscathed, but it’s now perched on a cliff that drops to a road 150 feet below.
Two construction companies quoted him about $200,000 to stabilize the mountainside and keep his home from falling over the edge. He couldn’t afford it, so he began the application for help from Renew NC to repair his storm-impacted property in September.
But the agency told him under the program’s rules, to fix the mountainside, it would have to tear down his home and rebuild. It can’t just repair the land.
The agency told him he could appeal, but he worries he’ll receive the same answer. McGarrah noted that the region had over 3,000 landslides, and the agency will evaluate properties affected by them case by case.
“It would cost them way more to demolish the house and rebuild the house than repair the landslide,” Brodsky said. “The whole thing is just preposterous.”
The post As Helene Survivors Wait for State Help, Some Victims of Earlier Hurricanes Are Still Out of Their Homes appeared first on ProPublica.
AMSTERDAM, Feb. 10, 2026 — Cisco continues to transform the network into an AI innovation platform, today unveiling the Silicon One G300, a 102.4 Tbps switching silicon designed for massive AI cluster buildouts. The Cisco Silicon One G300 will power new Cisco N9000 and Cisco 8000 systems that push the frontier of AI networking in the data center.
The systems feature innovative liquid cooling and support high-density optics to achieve new efficiency benchmarks and ensure customers get the most out of their GPU investments. In addition, the company enhanced Nexus One to make it easier for enterprises to operate their AI networks — on-premises or in the cloud — removing the complexity that can hold organizations back from scaling AI data centers.
“We are spearheading performance, manageability, and security in AI networking by innovating across the full stack – from silicon to systems and software,” said Jeetu Patel, President and Chief Product Officer, Cisco. “We’re building the foundation for the future of infrastructure, supporting every type of customer—from hyperscalers to enterprises—as they shift to AI-powered workloads.”
“As AI training and inference continues to scale, data movement is the key to efficient AI compute; the network becomes part of the compute itself. It’s not just about faster GPUs – the network must deliver scalable bandwidth and reliable, congestion-free data movement,” said Martin Lund, Executive Vice President of Cisco’s Common Hardware Group. “Cisco Silicon One G300, powering our new Cisco N9000 and Cisco 8000 systems, delivers high-performance, programmable, and deterministic networking – enabling every customer to fully utilize their compute and scale AI securely and reliably in production.”
Silicon One G300: The Networking Foundation for the Agentic Era
The new Silicon One G300 is a 102.4 Tbps switching silicon that exemplifies Cisco’s rapid innovation and sets a new standard for AI backend networking. It is designed to power massive, distributed AI clusters with high performance, security, and reliability.
The G300 uniquely offers Intelligent Collective Networking, which combines an industry-leading fully shared packet buffer, path-based load balancing, and proactive network telemetry to offer better performance and profitability for large-scale data centers. It efficiently absorbs bursty AI traffic, responds faster to link failures, and prevents packet drops that can stall jobs, ensuring reliable data delivery even over long distances. With Intelligent Collective Networking, Cisco can deliver 33% increased network utilization, and a 28% reduction in job completion time versus simulated non-optimized path selection, making AI data centers more profitable with more tokens generated per GPU-hour.
Cisco Silicon One G300 is highly programmable, enabling equipment to be upgraded for new network functionality even after it has been deployed. This enables Silicon One-based products to support emerging use cases and play multiple network roles, protecting long-term infrastructure investments. And with security fused into the hardware, customers can embrace holistic, at-speed security to keep clusters up and running.
Cisco Silicon One is the industry’s most scalable and programmable unified networking architecture, offering a complete portfolio of networking devices across AI, hyperscaler, data center, enterprise, and service provider use cases. Introduced in 2019, Cisco Silicon One is playing critical roles in major networks around the world.
New Systems, Optics: High-Density, Scalable Design for Power-Efficiency and Performance
To enable AI network builders of all sizes – hyperscale to enterprise – Cisco is introducing the next generation of Cisco N9000 and Cisco 8000 fixed and modular Ethernet systems, powered by Silicon One, and designed for the extreme power and thermal demands of AI workloads. Cisco is also introducing innovative optics that unlock even higher efficiency and greater reliability. These advancements deliver a major leap forward in power-efficient, high-performance AI infrastructure.
Cisco Nexus One: Intelligent AI Networking to Drive AI Infrastructure Forward
Organizations need greater flexibility in where and how they run AI workloads. To address the diverse requirements of these environments, Cisco is advancing Nexus One with a unified management plane that brings together silicon, systems, optics, software, and programmable intelligence as a single integrated solution. We’re also introducing AgenticOps for data center networking through AI Canvas — making it easier to troubleshoot through guided, human-in-the-loop conversations that turn complex issues into actionable resolutions. Key capabilities include:
Cisco’s flexible and integrated approach enables more choice, stronger security, and deeper observability—making upgrades and innovation easier, regardless of where customers begin their AI journey.
Availability
The Silicon One G300, G300-powered systems and optics will ship this year.
Ecosystem Support
Cisco is proud to work with its strategic technology partners, including AMD, DDN, Intel, NetApp, NVIDIA, and VAST, to combine cutting-edge networking, compute, and storage to deliver optimized infrastructure. Cisco’s partnerships across the AI ecosystem give customers confidence and choice in their investments.
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
The post Cisco Announces New Silicon One G300, Advanced Systems and Optics for AI Data Centers appeared first on HPCwire.
Trump, outraged by clip of six lawmakers, called them ‘traitors’ and said behavior was ‘punishable by death’
A Washington DC grand jury declined to indict six Democratic lawmakers who were denounced by Donald Trump after they made a video urging troops to refuse illegal orders.
Federal prosecutors had sought an indictment against the Democrats who participated in the video, including Elissa Slotkin, Mark Kelly, Jason Crow, Chris Deluzio, Maggie Goodlander and Chrissy Houlahan, who all have military and intelligence backgrounds.
This story was amended on 11 February 2026. An earlier version reported that a federal grand jury twice declined to indict Letitia James; however, James was indicted, and her case was later dismissed, as was the case against James Comey.
Continue reading...A 14-year-old girl said she was "crying" and "struggling to breathe" when law enforcement officers herded her onto a racetrack with other detainees and zip-tied her hands.
A process to deport some immigrants without undergoing the full removal process was expanded in 2025.
Another month, another Redox progress report. January turned out to be a big month for the Rust-based general purpose operating system, as they’ve cargo and rustc working on Redox.
Cargo and
↫ Ribbon and Ron Williamsrustcare now working on Redox! Thanks to Anhad Singh and his southern-hemisphere Redox Summer of Code project, we are now able to compile your favorite Rust CLI and TUI programs on Redox. Compilers are often one of the most challenging things for a new operating system to support, because of the intensive and somewhat scattershot use of resources.
That’s not all for January, though. An initial capability-based security infrastructure has been implemented for granular permissions, SSH support has been improved and now works properly for remoting into Redox sessions, and USB input latency has been massively reduced. You can now also add, remove, and change boot parameters in a new text editing environment in the bootloader, and the login manager now has power and keyboard layout menus. January also saw the first commit made entirely from within Redox, which is pretty neat.
Of course, there’s much more, as well as the usual slew of kernel, relibc, and application bugfixes and small changes.
With each successive trove of documents from the Epstein files the Department of Justice releases, we’re treated to rare insight into how our ruling class behaves in private, and how connected many of them were to the late sex trafficker.
The list of elites who maintained close relationships with Epstein is long and includes prominent politicians, media figures, academics, and business leaders. In contrast, the list of people who have faced any meaningful consequences, at least in the United States, is so far quite short. Recently, Brad Karp, a top Democratic Party fundraising “bundler,” was removed as chair of the white-shoe law firm Paul Weiss after his extensive ties to Epstein were revealed. Peter Attia, the celebrity doctor and a new hire at Bari Weiss’ CBS News, resigned from a protein bar company after emails showed him making dirty jokes with Epstein. The economist Larry Summers was deemed toxic after a previous DOJ disclosure, went on leave from teaching at Harvard, and was unceremoniously dropped by numerous institutions. So far, that’s about the extent of it.
To be very explicit, this lack of serious consequences is a choice that powerful people in the United States are making. Meanwhile, in the United Kingdom, Prince Andrew is prince no more, reduced to merely Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor after King Charles removed all of his remaining royal titles; the former CEO of Barclays has been barred from the finance industry; the British ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, has been forced out; Morgan McSweeney, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s chief of staff and a Mandelson protege, was forced to resign under pressure; and Starmer risks losing his post over the Mandelson appointment. In Slovakia, the national security adviser to the prime minister has resigned. Accountability, if you care to enforce it, is in fact possible.
But on this side of the pond, elites have moved to protect powerful people with Epstein connections (themselves included). Donald Trump is the most obvious example; for any other president, the relationship between the two men would have been a fast track to impeachment. The documents also reveal how many powerful people maintained relationships with Epstein years after he was convicted of soliciting a minor for prostitution in 2008: Among them are former presidential adviser and current podcast bro Steve Bannon, Trump’s Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Tesla et al. CEO and “MechaHitler” progenitor Elon Musk, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, Palantir co-founder Peter Thiel, and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates. Extensive redactions to the documents by the Justice Department have slow-walked matters even further, but on Tuesday, Rep. Ro Khanna took aim by reading off the names of “six wealthy, powerful men that the DOJ hid for no apparent reason” on the floor of Congress.
If there’s to be any measure of accountability, the powerful people who palled around with Epstein, asked his advice, or otherwise provided cover for him need to be cast out of polite society forever.
To make matters worse, many figures who appear in the files have reacted to the ongoing Epstein disclosures in ways that merit aggressive eyebrow raising. After the threat of being held in contempt of Congress, former President Bill Clinton, who for years had a close relationship with Epstein, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have finally, under pressure, agreed to testify before the House Oversight Committee. The Clintons resisted subpoenas, even calling them “invalid and legally unenforceable,” until a bipartisan majority of the House Oversight Committee voted to move the measure to hold them in contempt to the full House. Before that inflection point, they apparently expected Democrats to close ranks around them, as they always have in the past. Republican maneuvering aside, the presumption that noncompliance with a legitimate subpoena from Congress is somehow permissible, or even noble, reflects the air of impunity that ruling elites have toward basic functions of the rule of law.
But make no mistake: If there’s to be any measure of real accountability, the powerful people who palled around with Epstein, asked his advice, or otherwise provided cover for him need to be cast out of polite society forever.
Beyond being packed with salacious gossip and more than enough material for months more of investigative journalism, the newly released documents are striking in how they reveal elites’ widespread casual disdain for us commoners. Perhaps more than anything, the Epstein files are jarring for how transparently they communicate that members of our elite believe that norms, consequences, and even laws don’t apply to them. There seems to be no end to the number of emails from powerful people seeking out Epstein’s advice for how to handle controversies ranging from sexual assault allegations to formal human resources investigations to media scrutiny. (Former Arizona State University professor Lawrence Krauss is probably the clearest example; as Grace Panetta wrote for The 19th, “Krauss turned to Epstein for public relations advice and strategy, sent him possible cross-examination questions for his accusers, forwarded an article on the dos and don’ts for apologizing, and fielded Epstein’s edits and feedback on draft statements.”)
Not to put too fine a point on it, but it should absolutely be disqualifying to seek image management tips from someone like Epstein, particularly years after they pleaded guilty to soliciting sex from a minor. If you’re running to a convicted child sex trafficker to plan your PR strategy, if you’re chummily asking for his insights and making social plans, or if you are seeking advice on how to use professional leverage to induce a subordinate to have sex with you, then you are probably someone we should never hear from again.
It is worth being quite clear here: This does not mean everyone who makes any appearance at all in the files needs to be excised from public life. For instance, the political commentators Megan McArdle, Josh Barro, Ben Dreyfuss, and Ross Douthat recently recorded a podcast episode titled “We’re All in the Epstein Files,” which notes that they all are there because of tweets that a third party shared with Epstein, mostly via a newsletter sent out by Gregory Brown. That sort of thing is not the point. In order to actually clean house, we need to be clear where the dirt is.
But there are many cases where influential figures were cavorting with Epstein for years, maintaining close relationships with a prominent sex trafficker, and often being creepy in the correspondence itself. In many more, the emails became damning in context.
For example, the MIT Media Lab, an initiative heavily backed by billionaire Hoffman, accepted Epstein’s donations for years after his conviction, including soliciting donations in 2016. Importantly, MIT Media Lab staff internally flagged Epstein’s criminal history in 2013 — even sending a helpful link to his Wikipedia page — when Media Lab director Joichi Ito raised him as a prospective funder, according to a report commissioned by the university. Ito ignored those concerns, accepted Epstein’s money, and remained in touch until well into 2019, including exchanging text messages in May, just three months before Epstein’s death.
The new documents also show Ito attempted to arrange a meeting with himself, Hoffman, and Epstein during a 2016 conference, while promising to “drag interesting [p]eople over” from the conference to a nearby house. That awkwardness is compounded by the fact that the MIT Media Lab gave Epstein an appreciation gift even later in 2017. Ito, for his part, did resign from MIT, as well as from the boards of multiple foundations in 2019.
Or take prominent evolutionary biologist Robert Trivers, who continued to solicit funding from Epstein until at least 2017, based on a check from January and a thank you note from August of that year. Trivers, along with Ito, shows how Epstein was still influential in shaping our public discourse long after he became a publicly known sex offender. In a February 2017 email, Trivers even passed along a “small joke” about his association with Epstein being described as a “folly” and he a “fool” for continuing the relationship (an allusion to Trivers’ book The Folly of Fools). Trivers also credited Epstein with coming up with the idea to branch out in order to land speaking gigs, which resulted in a speaking engagement in London.
The Epstein saga has been unfolding against the backdrop of eroding trust in institutions and elites. What it has taught the public so far is that elites were undeserving of our implicit trust in the first place and, more broadly, that their shared interests are only with one another. If we want to move back toward a healthy public sphere where people are able to believe in the system and their ability to shape it, we need to reform it to be worthy of that trust. That will require never again letting people lacking any concept of basic human decency set the terms of our public discourse, dictate our moral frameworks, wield the powers of our government, or serve as our leaders. We need to cast out the creeps — permanently.
Correction: February 10, 2026, 6:49 p.m. ET
This story has been updated to clarify that Summers went on leave from his teaching role at Harvard voluntarily.
The post Americans Want Accountability With the Epstein Files. Elites Couldn’t Care Less. appeared first on The Intercept.
Hi all,
I am confused with what is happening to my onewheel. I thought it was just due to the cold, but today I rode at 49F which I think should be warm enough to not mess with battery performance.
What happens: I will be riding for about 15-20min and then I get stopped with a forceful push back and red light on front foot pad. I check my battery on the OWCE app and it's at about 50V. I'll turn the board off then on again and ride for a bit and it happens again in about 5-10 minutes. I'm worried about nose-diving so I stop trying this more than once or twice.
Few things about my board: I have a Onewheel Pint from 2021. At the end of 2023 I upgraded the battery to Chii Battery and rewheeled to firmware 5040. I ground the battery box to fit it and added a floatplate to protect. I also upgraded the tire mid 2024 to an Enduro and gave it a raised footpad; so it's heavier than the original.
I generally charge overnight. I stopped riding as often due to WFH and its winter / been too cold for longer than 10 min rides. My board can do the short rides no problem; even in 25F.
Any suggestions/ advice? Do I need a new battery or is this a firmware issue? I did crash into a gate about a month ago (my fault), and the board tumbled on concrete a bit, idk if that messed anything up.
Thanks in advance!
So update: I tried riding again and I noticed that when it turns red, the motor seems to still be running but everything else is stalled. There is a sound coming out that sounds like the motor anyways. I also watched the cells as I rode and the middle one is consistently less than all the others (at the end it was 3.45V while the others were 3.85: Total V read 58.). The sound turns off when I turn the board off and start it up again, then it's quiet like normal.
https://reddit.com/link/1r1c8ia/video/ifqj8ngpdxig1/player
this screen recording is right after it gave me red light and push back. I turned the board off and then on again and screen recoded this. I have not tried screen recording right when it gives me push back, as it' hard to time when that will happen... but I could try
Under pressure from Republican state attorneys general, the agency that advises the U.S. Supreme Court and federal judges on scientific and technical matters has withdrawn the entirety of its content on climate change from a new judicial reference manual.
The move by the Federal Judicial Center leaves judges without any official support on how to weigh evidence about basic weather and climate changes just as numerous climate cases make their way through state and federal courts, including two on the docket of the U.S. Supreme Court for the current term.
The center was created as an education agency and is chaired by Chief Justice John Roberts. By law, it is charged with overseeing court policies and researching technical and scientific issues that come before the court. The Supreme Court press office did not respond to a request for comment.
On Dec. 31, 2025, the center released the first update in 15 years of its 1,682-page peer-reviewed guide, called the “Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence,” including more than 90 pages defining climate terminology and describing the state of scientific consensus on climate change and the methods used to attribute specific weather events to climate warming and its causes. The chapter acknowledges uncertainty in some areas of climate science; it generally reflects the conclusions of the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The manual, widely cited and relied upon by law clerks and justices, is produced in partnership with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine and also includes chapters on artificial intelligence, DNA identification and epidemiology, among other subjects. It is considered among the most important and trusted guides for justices grappling with technical material, in large part because it is endorsed by the judicial branch itself.
Its publication of the chapter on climate change, however, drew immediate criticism from conservatives, who allege that the section is slanted against oil and gas producers and represents an effort by activists to sway the opinion of judges deliberating on current cases.
The withdrawal comes as a number of lawsuits seek to hold oil and gas companies accountable for the damage caused by climate change, which has been scientifically linked to the emissions produced by burning fossil fuels. Republican attorneys general have repeatedly criticized these lawsuits, accusing liberal groups of using tort law to enact regulatory policy and supporting efforts to have cases dismissed or moved into federal court.
On Feb. 2, more than 20 Republican attorneys general wrote to the House and Senate judiciary committees stating that the manual is “tainted by biased authors, reviewers, and sources involved in ongoing litigation,” and that it is an “inappropriate attempt to rig case outcomes in favor of one side.” The group encouraged the House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Ohio Republican Jim Jordan, to include the publication in a recently announced investigation into a program by the Environmental Law Institute, a nonpartisan research group, to educate justices on climate change.
The next day, the Federalist Society, a conservative judicial organization, convened a panel to discuss the publication of the manual. The moderator said it runs counter to the Federal Judicial Center’s role as a “neutral arbiter of fact” and warned that the “inclusion of a climate science section advances an ideological agenda.”
The chapter reflects “an assumption that certain bodies of evidence are automatically more credible than others,” Michael Williams, West Virginia’s solicitor general, told the panel’s audience. It suggests “certain questions are resolved when they’re actually still being litigated before courts.”
On Feb. 6, the director of the Federal Judicial Center, Judge Robin Rosenberg of the Southern District of Florida, wrote to West Virginia Attorney General John McCuskey that the center “has omitted the climate science chapter.”
In their letter last week, the attorneys general raised concerns that one of the authors of the climate chapter is employed by the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University and that in the footnotes of the report the authors thank the executive director of that program, Michael Burger. Burger, who declined to comment, is of counsel to the law firm Sher Edling, which represents several of the plaintiffs in the climate cases, including the city of Honolulu.
The objections by the state attorneys general represent “a bad-faith critique that is ultimately aimed at repressing scientific information,” Jessica Wentz, one of the chapter’s authors, said. The withdrawal of the chapter, she said, “is going to be used to advance this narrative that there is a debate about even the most fundamental aspects of climate change.”
Wentz said that she has never been a witness or served as counsel in any climate litigation and that it is disingenuous for the attorneys general to object to the material in the climate chapter — which acknowledges the consensus that human activity is responsible for warming — because it is the subject of contested litigation. None of the major climate lawsuits that she is aware of debate the science of warming and instead address questions about fossil fuel companies’ responsibility. “The infusion of bias,” Wentz said, comes not from exposure to scientific information but “from the suppression of that scientific information.”
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine has maintained a copy of the original manual on its own website even as the Federal Judicial Center has removed the version with the climate change chapter from its own. A representative from the center declined to comment, and members from the House Judiciary Committee could not immediately be reached for comment.
The post Under GOP Pressure, Federal Agency Pulls Climate Change Chapter From Official Manual for U.S. Judges appeared first on ProPublica.
A progressive organizer beat the odds against millions in outside spending to win the special primary election for a congressional seat in New Jersey, offering a promising sign to left insurgents in the coming midterms and revealing a severe miscalculation on the part of the pro-Israel lobby.
Former Rep. Tom Malinowski conceded the race in New Jersey’s 11th Congressional District on Tuesday to Analilia Mejia, former political director for Sen. Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign, after initial results showed a slim margin between the two candidates for several days.
Mejia won “despite being outspent essentially ten-to-one by not just AIPAC and outside groups but also the New Jersey political machine,” said Antoinette Miles, state director for the New Jersey Working Families Party. Mejia previously led the group, which backed her campaign and helped organize her field operation.
“No one would really categorize this district as being a left district,” Miles said, pointing to the race as a sign progressive candidates can connect with voters in more moderate districts. A Republican represented the district until 2019, when former Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen retired and former Rep. Mikie Sherrill was elected.
With the deck stacked against Mejia and little public polling in the three months since Sherrill vacated the seat to take office as New Jersey governor, there was no clear front-runner in the race. Internal polling in the final weeks of the race showed Malinowski and Mejia pulling ahead and almost equally matched, with New Jersey Lt. Gov. Tahesha Way further behind in third place, according to a source with knowledge of the data.
Rather than targeting Mejia, the pro-Israel lobby spent more than $2 million against Malinowski, likely splitting moderate voters, while known pro-Israel donors directed funding in Way’s favor. United Democracy Project, the super PAC for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, spent on ads attacking Malinowski, and AIPAC donors flooded Way’s campaign with more than $50,000 in the final weeks of the race. The strategy, which UDP said was meant to help them elect the more pro-Israel candidate because Malinowski had previously questioned the provision of unconditional aid to Israel, appeared to backfire, as some observers predicted.
“This election is a clear rejection of AIPAC by Democratic voters — AIPAC’s spending and support for candidates is becoming a kiss of death in Democratic primaries because of the work our movement has done to expose them,” said Justice Democrats spokesperson Usamah Andrabi. The group did not endorse in the race but said Mejia’s win was a positive sign for the left as midterms progress.
“This is a clear sign that the Democratic electorate is desperate to elect new leaders — like the dozen of working-class champions we’re supporting in primaries this cycle — that aren’t bought by AIPAC, crypto, AI, or any other corporate lobby that has created the intentionally weak and ineffective Democratic Party failing us in Congress right now,” Andrabi added.
In a statement released on Tuesday, Malinowski pointed to AIPAC’s influence in the race.
“Analilia deserves unequivocal praise and credit for running a positive campaign and for inspiring so many voters on Election Day,” Malinowski wrote. “But the outcome of this race cannot be understood without also taking into account the massive flood of dark money that AIPAC spent on dishonest ads during the last three weeks. I wish I could say today that this effort, which was meant to intimidate Democrats across the country, failed in NJ-11.”
On Friday, United Democracy Project issued a statement signaling it’s still paying close attention to the race ahead of the general election in April.
“The outcome in NJ-11 was an anticipated possibility, and our focus remains on who will serve the next full term in Congress. UDP will be closely monitoring dozens of primary races, including the June NJ-11 primary, to help ensure pro-Israel candidates are elected to Congress,” UDP said in a statement posted on X.
Some corners of the Democratic establishment are also reeling from the results of the race. After spending close to $2 million to back Way, the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association has not made any public statements since results started rolling in on Thursday evening. DLGA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In an email to supporters on Thursday night, the Democratic National Committee prematurely congratulated Malinowski on winning the race. The release was later removed from the DNC website.
The Democratic establishment hasn’t recently had to run in competitive primaries in the district, Miles pointed out, while progressives had been preparing for this moment.
“That says something about the shift that is happening in New Jersey right now,” Miles said. “This is the first race — at least at the congressional level — in which there is an open primary, the possibility for better candidates to run, the possibility for new ideas, and the machine is being tested.”
The post AIPAC Strategy Backfires as Progressive Underdog Wins Key House Race in New Jersey appeared first on The Intercept.
In the mountainous southwestern part of the country, Grazalema — in the Andalusia region — has recorded over 90 inches of rain so far this year, including 78 inches in just the last 20 days alone.
The disruption of a current that carries heat north from the tropics would make much of the world hotter, while turning Iceland into “one giant glacier.”
The Trump administration’s push for mass deportations has resulted in more than 18,000 challenges in federal court from immigrants claiming their detention is illegal, more than were filed under the last three administrations combined — including President Donald Trump’s first term.
So far this year, immigrants are filing on average more than 200 of these cases, known as habeas petitions, daily across the country, with California and Texas accounting for about 40% of new cases, a ProPublica analysis of federal court filings found. To keep tabs on this historic rise, ProPublica is publishing a habeas case tracker.
“I don’t recall a time that anything like this has ever happened,” said Daniel Caudillo, director of the Immigration Law Clinic at Texas Tech University School of Law and a recently departed immigration judge.
An analysis of habeas cases since 2009 shows that immigrants have filed more challenges to their detention in the first 13 months of Trump’s second term than in the last three administrations combined — and the number keeps rising.

The wave of habeas petitions comes in response to new administration policies aimed at ramping up the number of deportations. Among those are policies that require the majority of immigrants who entered the country illegally to remain in detention while their immigration cases are proceeding.
Lawyers say these policies upend decades of legal precedent that previously allowed immigrants who had been in the country for years and posed no security or flight risk a chance to remain in their communities until an immigration judge could determine whether they could stay in the country legally.
On Friday night, a divided three-judge panel in the conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit sided with the administration in limiting bond hearings to immigrants who entered the country lawfully. Caudillo called the decision “devastating,” adding that as a result, most immigrants held in states that fall under the circuit, which includes Texas, will now be subject to mandatory detention. Appeals of judges’ rulings in habeas cases challenging immigrants’ detention have been filed in nine of the 12 regional appeals courts, meaning the question could ultimately find its way to the Supreme Court.
A large majority of federal judges who’ve ruled on the habeas petitions so far are siding with immigrants. A recent analysis by Politico found that over 300 judges have ruled against the administration’s new detention policies, while only 14 have upheld them. The result is that federal judges frequently are ordering the government to either release immigrants from detention or offer them a bond hearing before an immigration judge to determine whether they are eligible for release while their immigration case proceeds.
Officials from the White House and Department of Homeland Security didn’t respond to a list of questions, but in statements, spokespeople insisted that the Trump administration is fully enforcing federal immigration law and placed the blame on the federal judges.
“President Trump and Secretary Noem are now enforcing the law and arresting illegal aliens who have no right to be in our country, and reversed Biden’s catch and release policy. We are applying the law as written,” wrote Tricia McLaughlin, a DHS spokesperson.
The caseload has overwhelmed legal advocates and government attorneys.
In court filings, U.S. attorneys are telling judges the sheer volume of petitions is burdening their offices, pushing them to shift resources away from other priorities. In a case originating from Minnesota, where the administration has been waging a monthslong immigration crackdown, U.S. Attorney Daniel Rosen wrote in a declaration that his attorneys and paralegals were “continuously working over time” while the office’s civil division was at 50% capacity.
The number of habeas filings in that state jumped from a dozen in 2024 to over 700 in the past two months alone, placing Minnesota third behind Texas and California, ProPublica found. The load has been such that, in a rare moment of candor, a government attorney detailed to the office complained to a federal judge that “the system sucks, this job sucks.” The lawyer, Julie Le, reportedly was let go from the U.S. attorney’s office after the public rant. (ProPublica was not able to reach Le for comment. The Department of Justice confirmed her detail with the office was over.)
“If rogue judges followed the law in adjudicating cases and respected the Government’s obligation to properly prepare cases, there wouldn’t be an ‘overwhelming’ habeas caseload or concern over DHS following orders,” a DOJ spokesperson wrote in response to questions from ProPublica.
“Then there are a lot of rogue judges,” said David Briones, a senior judge in the Western District of Texas, in response to the Justice Department’s statement. “Obviously we feel that we’re correct, that’s all I can say.” The Western District of Texas leads the country in habeas cases, with over 1,300 filed in the last three months, and Briones has generally ruled against the government in these cases, according to El Paso Matters. The Texas Tribune has also reported on the rise of habeas cases in Texas.
Judges are growing increasingly frustrated, publicly rebuking the administration for missing deadlines and failing to comply with court orders.
Recently, a Texas federal judge ordered the release of the 5-year-old Minnesota boy who made headlines after he was pictured wearing a blue bunny hat and a Spider-Man backpack as immigration agents escorted him and his father to their vehicle. In a fiery ruling, judge Fred Biery of the Western District of Texas chastised the administration for Liam Conejo Ramos’ detention. “The case has its genesis in the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas, apparently even if it requires traumatizing children,” he wrote.
The number of immigrants held in detention has increased from around 40,000 when Trump took office to more than 70,000 this year. While the number of recent border crossers in detention has fallen, the number of detained immigrants arrested by federal immigration agents elsewhere in the country tripled during the first nine months of the Trump administration, a recent analysis by the Deportation Data Project found.
“It’s just been a very, very chaotic landscape,” said Sirine Shebaya, executive director of the National Immigration Project, a national advocacy organization that, among other things, represents detained immigrants and provides assistance to attorneys and community-based groups.
“And I think that chaos is bleeding into communities everywhere, both because of the extremely traumatizing ways that people are being arrested and detained,” she said, and because of the amount of money and resources being spent on detaining people who in the past would have gotten out on bond or not been detained in the first place as their cases made their way through the process.
Denise Gilman, co-director of the Immigration Clinic at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law, who has argued habeas cases on behalf of immigrants over the years, sees a positive side to the sudden rise in cases, she told ProPublica.
“People are starting to pay attention to how massive and arbitrary and illogical the immigration detention system is.”
For this story, ProPublica analyzed federal habeas petitions filed by immigrant detainees in district courts across the country using records from Public Access to Court Electronic Records and the Free Law Project. The data includes some cases that were refiled for a variety of reasons, such as filing errors or deficiencies.
The post Immigrants Who Say Their Detention Is Illegal Have Filed More Than 18,000 Cases. It’s a Historic High. appeared first on ProPublica.
Japan’s rise has been systematic, with a deep talent pool, while the United States struggled to find a clear successor to Shaun White.
As the U.S. formally exited from the World Health Organization last month, Trump administration officials misleadingly claimed that the WHO “pushed” or “promoted” lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic. The group did not explicitly recommend lockdowns, although it also did not advise countries not to implement them. It said it recognized that the measures might be needed in some cases.

More than six years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, federal health officials are spinning the facts about the WHO as part of their justification to leave the organization. The U.S. formally exited the WHO on Jan. 22, a year after giving notice to do so, much to the chagrin of many in public health.
The WHO “ignored rigorous science and promoted lockdowns,” Acting Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Jim O’Neill wrote on the day of the exit in an X post that also made claims about Taiwan.
The same day, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya similarly said in an interview on Fox News that the WHO “absolutely failed during the pandemic … pushing, still to this day … lockdown policies that plagued Americans for years.”
Those comments led to contentious exchanges with WHO officials who have taken issue with the statements.
“All untrue,” Maria Van Kerkhove, an infectious disease epidemiologist and the WHO’s technical lead for COVID-19, responded to O’Neill in a Jan. 24 post, adding, “we don’t ignore science and WHO never recommended lockdowns.”
The WHO also pushed back in a Jan. 24 statement, writing, “WHO recommended the use of masks, vaccines and physical distancing, but at no stage recommended mask mandates, vaccine mandates or lockdowns. We supported sovereign governments to make decisions they believed were in the best interests of their people, but the decisions were theirs.”
The dispute recalls a similar situation in October 2020 when President Donald Trump, then in his first term, incorrectly said that the WHO had “just admitted” that he was “right” about lockdowns. Trump had criticized lockdowns, saying they were “worse than the problem itself.” Trump was in office at the height of the pandemic when COVID-19 restrictions in the U.S. were the most stringent.
As we wrote then, the WHO’s position on lockdowns had always been more nuanced — the group neither recommended the measures nor advised against them, saying it recognized that lockdowns can harm society but are sometimes necessary.
The organization did at times praise China’s aggressive response, and supported countries in their decisions, which could be interpreted as an implicit endorsement of the measures. But it’s an oversimplification to say that the WHO “pushed” or “promoted” lockdowns. We did not find evidence that the WHO explicitly recommended them, consistent with the organization’s statements.

We reached out to the NIH to ask about Bhattacharya’s comments and to the CDC to ask about O’Neill’s, but did not receive a reply. The WHO pointed us to a Q&A post — last updated Dec. 31, 2020 — that we also previously referenced, which notes that so-called “lockdown” measures can work to slow viral transmission but can have “a profound negative impact,” especially for disadvantaged groups.
“WHO recognizes that at certain points, some countries have had no choice but to issue stay-at-home orders and other measures, to buy time,” the post continues, adding that “WHO is hopeful that countries will use targeted interventions where and when needed, based on the local situation.”
Similar language also appears in an April 2020 WHO document, which states there is an “urgent need” to transition away from lockdown measures, but also cautions that premature lifting of restrictions without careful planning is likely to lead to an uncontrolled surge in COVID-19 cases.
It’s worth noting that there is no unified definition of what “lockdowns” are. While they generally refer to what the WHO terms “large scale physical distancing measures and movement restrictions,” they varied greatly in scope and severity in different countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. The U.S. version — which at its most restrictive involved stay-at-home orders and school and business closures, implemented by states and local governments — was far lighter than measures imposed in China, for example.
In some parts of China, residents at times could not leave their cities, were not allowed to use their own cars and needed permission to leave their apartments. In the U.S., there was never a federal lockdown, although the Trump administration issued guidelines that told people to avoid large gatherings and encouraged school and nonessential business closures early in the pandemic.
“My administration is recommending that all Americans, including the young and healthy, work to engage in schooling from home when possible. Avoid gathering in groups of more than 10 people. Avoid discretionary travel. And avoid eating and drinking at bars, restaurants, and public food courts,” Trump said on March 16, 2020, when announcing the government’s “15 Days to Slow the Spread,” which was later extended. On March 23, 2020, Trump said that “America will again, and soon, be open for business — very soon.”
The word “lockdown” has sometimes erroneously been applied to any public health measure, even those that don’t limit social interactions.
In response to Van Kerkhove’s post about O’Neill, Bhattacharya pointed to some text of the WHO-China Joint Mission report in February 2020, and wrote, “That is just plain false. The WHO mission to China in 2020 lauded the Chinese lockdown as a success, in effect endorsing the model for the rest of the world.”
The text he cited stated that the measures employed in China — at their core, proactive surveillance, rapid diagnosis and case isolation and tracking and quarantine of close contacts — “are the only measures that are currently proven to interrupt or minimize transmission” of the coronavirus. “Given the damage that can be caused by uncontrolled, community-level transmission of this virus, such an approach is warranted to save lives and to gain the weeks and months needed for the testing of therapeutics and vaccine development,” the report added.
Van Kerkhove, however, replied: “What you’re reading here is that we acknowledged that governments had to take tough decisions to protect their populations, but lockdowns were never recommended, nor were they a policy recommendation by @WHO.”
Finishing the exchange, Bhattacharya wrote: “What I’m not reading here is a condemnation of lockdowns at a time where governments worldwide were seriously considering them. If you want the world to trust the WHO, take honest ownership of this failure.”
Bhattacharya has also objected to statements from the WHO’s leader, Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who had responded to an X post from Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., saying that the HHS statement “contains inaccurate information” and that the WHO “never recommended lockdowns.”
“That is just deeply dishonest,” Bhattacharya wrote in a Jan. 24 X post. “If the WHO opposed lockdowns, where was the WHO condemnation of them in 2020 or 2021? Or of China’s lockdowns in 2022?”
A day later, Bhattacharya posted a thread with what he called “receipts” of evidence that the WHO is wrong, which included statements from the WHO about what countries should ideally do before lifting lockdown measures.
The disagreement between U.S. and WHO officials partly comes down to semantics. Bhattacharya is correct that the WHO mission praised China’s response — and that the group did not come out against lockdowns. But Van Kerkhove and the WHO have not claimed to have done so. Moreover, not opposing lockdowns is different from recommending them.
“WHO neither recommended nor categorically opposed lockdowns,” Van Kerkhove told us in an email responding to questions about the claims. “We recommended a comprehensive risk-based approach including surveillance, contact tracing, testing, quarantine (for those infected), isolation (for contacts), physical distancing, the use of masks/respirators, personal protective equipment for health workers, improved ventilation, vaccines, therapeutics and more. At the same time, we acknowledged that in some circumstances, countries felt they had no choice but to introduce lockdowns to prevent their health systems being overwhelmed resulting in more lives lost. We respected that choice, as it was their sovereign right, but we said that lockdowns should not be used as the primary or default strategy for controlling COVID-19, and highlighted their serious social and economic consequences.”
“We did say, repeatedly and clearly, that lockdowns came with risks and potential harms, and that they were not a sustainable solution,” she added.
She pointed to multiple examples of the WHO expressing this view or warning about the harms or potential harms of lockdown measures, including a speech the director-general gave in April 2020 that reminded nations that “there is a need to respect human rights and dignity” and that the “restrictive measures governments are implementing are already having a massive impact on livelihoods.”
“Lockdowns are a blunt instrument that have taken a heavy toll in many countries,” the WHO director-general similarly said in September 2020. “With the right mix of targeted and tailored measures, further national lockdowns can be avoided.”
Van Kerkhove also cited a Q&A video from the WHO that Van Kerkhove appeared in and was shared on social media in October 2020.
Bhattacharya cited the same video in his X thread, saying, “A WHO epidemiologist lauds lockdowns as a way to ‘stop’ covid outbreaks.”
Van Kerkhove said that was a “deliberate misinterpretation of what was said.” In the clip, speaking for the WHO, she said, “we haven’t recommended” lockdowns, adding that “we do recognize that some countries and some areas have had to use what is called so-called lockdown measures because they needed to buy themselves some time.”
“This clip cannot be interpreted as me ‘lauding’ lockdowns,” she said.
Other individuals on social media have highlighted statements from February 2020 by Dr. Bruce Aylward, a Canadian physician and epidemiologist who was then a senior adviser to the WHO director-general, that Bhattacharya reshared on X.
During the press conference for the WHO-China joint mission, Aylward emphasized that what China had done did appear to be working. “What China has demonstrated is, you have to do this,” he said at one point. “If you do it, you can save lives and prevent thousands of cases of what is a very difficult disease.”
Van Kerkhove said this was also a case of misinterpretation. “Dr Aylward spoke positively about China’s overall response to COVID-19, and recognized that other countries including Italy were now taking ‘extremely aggressive actions,’” she told us in an email. “Dr Aylward’s comment that ‘you have to do this’ was a reference to the overall ‘aggressive’ or ‘rigorous’ approach that was needed to stop transmission and save lives, not specifically to the role of lockdowns.”
Aylward “did not recommend that countries impose lockdowns,” she added, pointing to earlier comments of his that day, in which he said “it’s important that other countries think about” applying “not necessarily the full lockdowns … but that same rigorous approach.”
Lawrence Gostin, a global health law professor at Georgetown University, told us that it is “certainly true that WHO officials praised China’s COVID-19 [response], and that was irresponsible.”
But, he added, “we forget how frightening the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic were. We had no vaccines or treatments and the virus was spreading exponentially. In that context, a temporary lockdown was clearly justified to buy time for the development and deployment of vaccines. Lockdowns were also intended to protect overwhelmed hospitals and health workers. It is easy to blame WHO for its proactive response in the midst of a global crisis. But it’s wrong.”
He said Bhattacharya’s posts “lack any subtlety or context” and emphasized that the WHO “has no power to order lockdowns & it never did.”
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The post WHO Didn’t Recommend Lockdowns, Contrary to Health Officials’ Suggestions appeared first on FactCheck.org.
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MINNEAPOLIS — On Friday, legal observers on an encrypted group call in Minneapolis received a desperate plea. A fellow observer was following federal agents who’d just loaded her friend into an unmarked vehicle. Now, she herself was boxed in.
“Please help,” the woman said, again and again, her voice rising to a scream.
Then, her pleas stopped.
By the time support arrived, the observer was gone. All that remained was an empty SUV, engine running, abandoned in the middle of the city’s snow-lined streets.
Referred to locally as abductions, it was at least the fourth such disappearance of the day — the third in a span of less than 30 minutes.
The observers call themselves commuters. They are locals who have organized to resist “Operation Metro Surge,” a massive U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol campaign targeting Minnesota’s undocumented population, by monitoring federal operations in the Twin Cities. The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees both agencies, has called the incursion the largest immigration enforcement operation in history.
“She was so scared. The terror in her voice was really, really horrible.”
Three days before the commuters were taken, the new head of Metro Surge, Trump administration border czar Tom Homan, announced a “drawdown” of 700 federal officers and agents. The president had tapped Homan to head the mission a week earlier, appointing the former ICE acting director to take over from Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, whose heavy-handed tactics culminated in three shootings in three weeks, including the killings of U.S. citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
Homan has vowed to take a more “targeted” line of attack in Minnesota. His announced drawdown has fueled speculation that the civil rights abuses and unlawful arrests documented in viral videos and court filings during Bovino’s tenure may be coming to an end. On the ground, the feeling is quite different.
In a message circulated among commuters Friday, the community group Defrost MN, which uses crowdsourced data to track federal immigration operations, warned residents of an “uptick in abductions” — which refer to arrests of both immigrant community members and legal observers — following Homan’s takeover and an increase in the number of government personnel and vehicles involved in those operations.
“National attention on Minnesota has waned with the departure of Bovino and rhetoric by Homan that things are de-escalating,” the group noted, but recent data and reports from commuters in the field did not support those conclusions. Despite orders to the contrary, the group continued, “Agents continue to draw their weapons and deploy chemical agents against observers.”
Meanwhile, the deportation pipeline out of Minnesota continues to flow, with 66 shackled passengers loaded onto a plane the night of Homan’s address — the highest total in nearly two weeks — according to evidence collected at the Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport.
Friday’s midafternoon disappearance of multiple commuters in quick succession provided visceral evidence that, despite the change in leadership, the struggle between President Donald Trump’s federal agents and residents continues.
Commuter Kaegan Recher was among those who hurried to the scene of the observer who disappeared while on call.
“She was so scared,” Recher told The Intercept. “The terror in her voice was really, really horrible.”
In Minneapolis and St. Paul, as well as the surrounding suburbs, tens of thousands of immigrant families are relying on churches and mutual aid for food and financial support. People have not left their homes for weeks. Local schools have reverted to Covid-era online measures to support immigrant students too terrified to come to class. Those students who still attend in person are transported by U.S.-born neighbors and family friends. Campuses at all grade levels are patrolled by volunteers in fluorescent vests, an effort aimed at deterring federal agents’ practice of targeting parent pick-up and drop-off sites.
Conservative estimates from local healthcare providers suggest emergency room and clinic visits in the Minneapolis area are down by 25 percent. City leaders report local businesses are losing upwards of $20 million a week. Immigrant-owned businesses have been devasted, with revenue losses hovering between 80 to 100 percent and many closing their doors for good.
These are the conditions commuters respond to. Their focus is two-fold: to document and alert. Some participate on foot, others by bicycle, many by car. They patrol neighborhoods, reporting suspicious vehicles, the license plates of which are run through a crowdsourced database of known or suspected Department of Homeland Security vehicles. When confirmations are made, commuters follow, honking their horns while observers on foot blow whistles at the passing vehicles. The Intercept has observed several such interactions in recent weeks.
Typically, federal agents try to lose the tail. If they are traveling in a caravan, one vehicle may drive slowly ahead of a commuter, allowing others to speed away. If commuters outnumber the agents, the maneuver can be difficult. Unable to shake their noisy entourage, agents will often head for the highway and, if the pursuit continues, retreat to federal headquarters.
Most commuters are careful to keep a distance between their vehicles and those of the agents. Sometimes, the authorities will pull over and stop. The commuters will stop behind them. Both vehicles will sit idling, waiting for the other to move, then carry on.
Occasionally, agents, heavily armed and frequently masked, will exit their vehicles and warn commuters to cease their pursuit. Some commuters do; others don’t. Sometimes, commuters come upon agents at a home, a business, or an apartment complex. Given the heated state of affairs — two Americans dead, immigrants living in terror, children unable to attend school, and sweeping social and economic impacts — the encounters are often raw with emotion. Nearly everything is recorded, by agents and commuters alike.
As these interactions have become a familiar, legal experts have noted that following and filming law enforcement is protected under the Constitution. With the federal government asserting sweeping and highly contested immigration authorities, they say those efforts are more important than ever.
The Trump administration has taken a different view. Officials argue Minnesota is infested with “agitators” impeding law enforcement. Mounting evidence suggests they are mobilizing resources to put their resistance down.
Much of the recent media attention surrounding Metro Surge has focused on Homan’s reduction in forces, a move the border czar has linked to Minnesota expanding ICE’s access to jails, thus reducing the number of federal personnel needed to meet the administration’s immigration arrest quotas.
With some 2,000 officers and agents still on the ground, the current federal contingent is still 13 times larger than the agencies’ normal footprint, outnumbering the Minneapolis Police Department three to one.
While reducing the number of federal agents dominated headlines, it isn’t the only talking point Homan has driven home since taking over.
Homan spent much of a press conference last week describing how ICE’s full withdrawal hinges on the public acquiescing to the agency’s mission, which, he stressed, is to achieve the president’s promise of “mass deportations.” The immediate goal in Minnesota is a complete federal drawdown, Homan explained, “but that is largely contingent on the end of the illegal and threatening activities against ICE and its federal partners that we’re seeing in the community.”
In the past month, Homan told reporters, 158 people have been arrested for interfering with federal law enforcement, a crime for which penalties range from one to 20 years in prison. Of those cases, he claimed, 85 have been accepted for prosecution. The rest are still pending.
In most cases, people arrested for interfering with ICE are taken to the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, a seven-story edifice that is part of Fort Snelling, the historic site of a government-run concentration camp during the U.S.–Dakota War of 1862.
Typically, commuters and other legal observers are held for around eight hours before being released. During that time, U.S. officials collect a range of identifying information. With ample evidence that the Department of Homeland Security is amassing a growing catalogue of the president’s critics, and with Homan himself advertising his desire to include people who follow ICE’s activities in a government “database,” community concern is running high over what, exactly, the Trump administration is doing with its information on U.S. citizens.
In his address last week, Homan described an evolving effort by federal officials, including creation of a “multi-agency surge task force” and a new “unified joint operations center” that will allow the agency to “leverage joint intelligence capabilities to effectively target threats.” He emphasized that there would be no reduction in security elements — often militarized tactical teams — assigned to guard deportation operations against “hostile incidents, until we see a change in what’s happening with the lawlessness in impeding and interfering and assaulting of ICE and Border Patrol officers.”
Homan reminded the press that he’s long warned that the “hateful extreme rhetoric” of the president’s opponents would lead to bloodshed. Now, he said, “there has been.” Without acknowledging whose blood had been spilled, or by whom, Homan implored local leaders to urge calmness and “end the resistance.”
Recher, the commuter who responded to Friday’s observer disappearances, has been in the streets monitoring ICE’s operations since early January. His busiest week was after Homan took over. He’s since noticed that agents have been less prone to immediately jump out of their cars with guns drawn — a welcome change — but that a similarly unsettling directive appears to have gone out regarding ICE’s engagement with the public.
A video he shot Friday appeared to confirm as much, with a deportation officer telling Recher that he and his colleagues have been ordered to give commuters a single warning before taking them into custody.
“You just got one warning, that’s it,” the officer said. “What we’re told, that’s all you need.”
“I hear more and more about abductions of observers.”
Recher heeded the officer’s warning. He received the panicked and disturbing call for help from the vanished commuter soon after.
“I hear less and less about successful abductions, which I’m glad,” he said. “But I hear more and more about abductions of observers.”
For Recher, like so many others following ICE’s operations in Minnesota, the point of commuting is the thousands of immigrant families living in hiding across the Twin Cities. It is an effort to push back against the pervasive fear at the heart of the Trump administration’s occupation.
“How do you justify terrorizing an entire community?” he asked. “It is the most un-American thing I’ve ever experienced in my entire life.”
The post “Uptick in Abductions”: ICE Ramps Up Targeting of Minneapolis Legal Observers appeared first on The Intercept.
Update: we’ve already hit the €5000 goal, in a little over 24 hours. Considering I thought this would take weeks – assuming we’d hit the goal at all – I’m a bit overwhelmed with all the love and support. Thank you so, so much. Since people are still donating, I upped the goal to €7500 to give people something to donate to.
You people are wild. Amazing.
It’s time for an OSNews fundrasier! This time, it’s unplanned due to a financial emergency after our car unexpectedly had to be scrapped (you can find more details below). If you want to support one of the few independent technology news websites left, this is your chance. OSNews is entirely supported by you, our readers, so go to our Ko-Fi and donate to our emergency fundraiser today!
Why support OSNews?
In short, we are truly independent. After turning off our ads, our Patreons and donors are our sole source of income, and since I know many of you prefer the occasional individual donation over recurring Patreon ones, I run a fundraiser a few times a year to rally the troops, so to speak. This particular fundraiser wasn’t planned, however, given the circumstances described below, several readers have urged me to run a fundraiser now.
We’re incredibly grateful for even having the opportunity to do something like this, and as always, I’d like to stress that OSNews will never be paywalled, and that access to our website will never be predicated on your financial support. You can ignore all of this and continue on reading the site as usual.
Sadly, and unexpectedly, we’ve had to scrap our car. Our 2007 Hyundai Santa Fe did not survive this Arctic Winter, as the two decades in the biting cold has taken a toll on a long list of components and parts – it would no longer start. After consulting an expert, we determined that repairs would’ve been too expensive to make financial sense for such an old vehicle. Sometimes, you have to take the loss lest you throw money down a pit. An unreliable car in an Arctic climate is a really bad idea, since getting stranded on a back road somewhere when it’s -30°C (or colder) with two toddlers is not going to be a fun time.
On top of that, my wife uses our car to commute to work, and while using the bus is going to be fine for a little while, her job in home care for the very elderly and recovering alcoholics is incredibly stressful and intensive. Dealing with bus schedules and wait times at such low temperatures is not exactly compatible with her job. Since she’s just recovering from a doctor-mandated rest period – very common in her line of work – her income has taken a hit. Taking professional care of people with severe dementia or other old-age related conditions is a thankless and underpaid job, and it’s no surprise those working in this profession often require mandated rest (and thus a temporary pay cut).
And so, urged on by readers on Mastodon, I’m doing an OSNews fundraiser to help us pay for the “new” car. Of course, we’re looking for a used car, not a new one, and based on our needs we’ve set a budget of around €10,000. This should allow us to buy something like a used Mazda 6 or Volvo V60 from around 2014-2015, or something similar in size and age, with a reasonable petrol engine (an EV is well out of our price range). We consider this the sweet spot for safety features, size, age, longevity, and reliability. We’ve got some savings, but most of the purchase price will have to come in the form of a car loan. We’ve already made some changes to our monthly expenses to cover for part of the monthly repayments, including a lucky break where our daycare expenses will be going down considerably next month.
Based on this, I’ve set the fundraising goal at €5000. If we manage to hit that – and the last few times we hit our goals quite fast – it won’t cover the entire purchase price, but it will cut down on the amount we need to loan considerably.
I’m feeling a little apprehensive about all of this, since this isn’t really an OSNews-related expense I can easily get some content out of. However, I’m entirely open to suggestions about how I could get some OSNews content out of this – perhaps buying and installing one of those Android headunits with a large display? They make them tailored for almost every vehicle at low prices on AliExpress, and the installation process and user experience might be something interesting to write about, as it’s potentially a great way to add some modern features to an older car. Feel free to make any suggestions.
I’m also open to other crazy ideas. If you happen to work at an automaker, and need some testing done in an Arctic environment – including ice roads – I’m open to ideas.
Since about half of our audience hails from the United States, I figured I’d make a few notes about car pricing in Europe, and in Arctic Sweden in particular. Cars are definitely more expensive here in Europe, doubly so in the sparsely populated area where we live (low supply leads to higher prices). Buying a brand new car is entirely out of the question due to pricing, and leasing is also far too expensive (well over €500/month for even a basic, small car). Used electric cars are still well out of our budget as well, and since we don’t have our own driveway, we wouldn’t be able to charge at home anyway.
Opting to forego a car entirely is sadly not an option either. With two small children, the Arctic climate, the remoteness, my wife’s stressful job and commute, and long distances to basic amenities, we can’t “go Dutch” and live off public transport and bicycles, no matter how much we’d want to. We have considered it, but it’s just not a realistic long-term solution. Had we lived in The Netherlands or in a big city, going carless would’ve possibly been a more realistic option.
We intended to drive the Santa Fe until it fell apart, but we did not expect this to happen so soon. Feel free to sound off if you have any other questions regarding car buying and ownership where we live, and I’ll try my best to answer your questions.
As always, thank you for your support, thank you for reading OSNews, and thank you for being here.
This story was supported by the Pulitzer Center.
KAMPALA, UGANDA — Ever since President Donald Trump was elected a year ago, sex workers in Kampala have suffered. The sex has suddenly become too painful.
For years, sex workers and public health workers in Uganda say condoms and sexual lubricant were plentiful. Usually paid for by American foreign aid programs such as USAID and PEPFAR, they were distributed “in bars, in hospitals, in hotels, anywhere people gathered,” said Turinawe Samson, founder of Universal Love Alliance Clinic in Kampala. In a country where about 5 percent of the population has HIV — the tenth highest prevalence rate in the world — easy access was key to slowing the spread of the disease and saving lives.
But immediately after Trump’s election in November 2024 — months before the Trump administration cut funding to USAID and PEPFAR — things began to change in Uganda.
Lube became stigmatized as “an immoral product used by sex workers and homosexuals,” according to Samson. Uganda’s Ministry of Health doesn’t group it among “essential health commodities,” meaning its import isn’t subsidized. Few health facilities in Uganda are able to procure it. Where it can be commercially purchased, the product is either prohibitively expensive due to diminishing supply, being dangerously sold past its expiration date, or both.
This lack of lube and the broader shaming of sex in Uganda may well result in more vaginal and urinary tract infections, and more sexually transmitted infections — including HIV.
“We need to not be judged.”
People have started using “cooking oil, unhygienic products” or “nothing at all,” said Babu Ramahdan, an LGBTQ+ and human rights activist who is on his way to becoming an unlikely Ugandan lube manufacturer. “I’ve got all the ingredients,” he says with pride, and he’s already made some samples (including in different flavors). He even met with university researchers eager to help him produce it domestically. But for Ramahdan, getting his product through clinical trials may prove as difficult as finding funding: In Uganda, as in large swaths of the United States, gaining institutional approval to research anything seemingly related to LGBTQ+ health has become almost impossible.
Condoms, too, are harder to find. They are not being given away freely with the same frequency, so those who need them increasingly must buy them. But they are economically out of reach for those who need them most in a country where the average income is less than $100 a month. Interviews with 10 patients and practitioners at a clinic run for and by sex workers revealed the stark economics: Sex with a condom goes for as little as 2,000 shillings (less than 50 U.S. cents) and up to about 6,000 ($1.50). But a condom costs a sex worker 3,000 to 4,000 shillings (between 75 cents and $1) — meaning they might lose money having safe sex. Sex without a condom pays much more: up to 10,000 shillings (about $2.50).
The newfound scarcity of lube and condoms illustrates just one example of how Trump’s policies have disincentivized safe sex and encouraged the transmission of disease in Uganda — not just among sex workers and their clients, but also among men who have sex with men, transgender people, those who use injection drugs, and poor people. In Uganda, these people are euphemistically called “key populations,” or KPs, most at risk for HIV (terms that acknowledge or even hint at queerness have been long avoided, and since Trump was elected, that’s the case even for euphemisms like “minority”).
“We need to not be judged,” one sex worker said, describing her health care needs. “We need to be asked by a doctor, ‘What are your needs?’ We need to feel safe answering about the kinds of sex we have. We need to be listened to, honestly.”
But since the stop work order came on January 20, 2025, for projects funded by the United States, the kinds of clinics where KPs like her will not be judged have either closed with little or no notice or become overburdened by a lack of resources, an influx of clients, or both. This has pushed KPs toward Uganda’s public hospital system, where seeking care means putting themselves at risk of persecution from a homophobic government.
The sex worker who wished to not be judged is one of several who told The Intercept that women in Uganda who test positive for syphilis three times at a public hospital can be denied medication, accused of being a sex worker, or even turned over to the police. (The latter means she could be arrested, extorted, or raped.) People living with HIV report that if they seek antiretroviral medication at a public hospital, their privacy may not be respected and their HIV status may be exposed to their neighbors. Queer men, fearful of potentially being referred to the police for “aggravated homosexuality” and prosecuted under Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act, often skip seeking health care at public hospitals altogether.
These fears are not confined to so-called KPs: They are making patients who may be suffering from anal fissures, vaginal infections, or rectal cancer refrain from seeking care because they are too afraid. In a country where abortion is illegal and more than 1 million people are living with HIV, this campaign of anti-queerness will result in more people forced to have children they do not want, more people becoming infected with HIV, and without medication, more people eventually dying of AIDS.
In November 2025, almost a year after Trump’s global stop work order, it was nearly impossible to drive anywhere in Kampala and avoid the profile of a mustached man in a white shirt and Panama hat against a stark yellow background.
It was the height of Uganda’s election season, and President Yoweri Museveni was running for a seventh term as Uganda’s president. His face — sometimes rendered several stories in height — was inescapable. At age 81 and already president for four decades, Museveni would soon secure another term after an election in which he shut down the internet and his opposition candidate claimed to have been abducted. Museveni will serve at least 45 years as president of Uganda, if he doesn’t die in office.
Accompanying his 50-foot-high face was the phrase “Protecting the Gains — as we make a qualitative leap into high middle income status.”
Seeing this propaganda spelled out over Uganda’s unpaved roads (and even a UNICEF school made out a fraying tent) led Ugandans who spoke with The Intercept to ask: What gains?
Uganda is not without any resources. It is known as the “pearl of Africa,” a term perhaps first coined by Winston Churchill while on a safari to describe Uganda’s beautiful plants and animals. Today it applies to American, European, and Chinese interest in Uganda’s bounty of rare earth minerals. Uganda is also the birthplace of the River Nile, which not only feeds Northern Africa with fresh water but also the foundations of Western religion — like the story of Moses in the reeds in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
But Uganda has been subjected to what Guyanese historian Walter Rodney has called the deliberate European underdevelopment of Africa. Largely falling historically into five Bantu kingdoms, modern Uganda was colonized in the 19th century, with the Imperial British East Africa Company claiming control of the region in the 1880s. (Anti-queerness was part of the colonial playbook: Despite local ways of living that today might be described as queer or trans, when the British Empire named Uganda a colony in 1894, it criminalized queer sexuality by way of Penal Code Section 377, which punished “whoever voluntarily has carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal.”)
Amid a wave of anti-colonial resistance in Africa, Uganda shook Britain off in 1962. But over the course of six decades of independence, Uganda’s presidency has been defined mostly by two men.
Idi Amin, Uganda’s third president, often cast as a brutal dictator in the West, is remembered, among other things, for expelling all British and 80,000 members of Uganda’s Indian community. Locally, he is remembered as “Big Daddy.” (Among those calling for recasting Amin as a more sympathetic anti-colonial figure is one of those Ugandans whom Amin expelled: Mahmood Mamdani, author of “Slow Poison: Idi Amin, Yoweri Museveni, and the Making of the Ugandan State” and father of the newly elected Uganda American New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani).
“Why have we been relying on the United States for 20 years? Why hasn’t my government made this a priority for us?”
Museveni, Uganda’s ninth president, has ruled since 1985, coinciding with the AIDS era. He quickly became a major face of Uganda’s “ABC” approach to HIV: Abstain before marriage, be faithful in marriage and — if you fail at those two — use a condom. Ugandan HIV prevention workers who did not wish to be named for fear of persecution describe Museveni as indifferent to the crisis and having outsourced all responsibility to foreign funding.
For instance, as one medical doctor put it, when PEPFAR began funding HIV medication in the early 2000s, “it was supposed to be an emergency plan. It’s right there in the name,” the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. “Why have we been relying on the United States for 20 years? Why hasn’t my government made this a priority for us?”
As he managed to retain power for decades, Museveni increasingly turned a tactic of social control favored by political leaders from Vladimir Putin in Russia to Keir Starmer in England to Trump in the United States alike: Whipping up a moral panic about LGBTQ+ people.
All of this history made it so that when public health workers in Uganda encountered what they called the “three disasters” of their recent history, it was hard to recover.
The first occurred on March 21, 2020, when the first Covid-19 case was reported in Uganda, which led to strict lockdowns that made HIV care very difficult to provide.
The second struck in the spring of 2023, with the passage of Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act. It made “aggravated homosexuality” punishable by death and “promoting homosexuality” — which could include gatherings of LGBTQ+ people, discussions to plan HIV prevention, and every meeting attended by The Intercept in reporting this story — punishable by up to 20 years in prison. The standard penalty for consensual same-gender sexual acts is life imprisonment.
The Anti-Homosexuality Act passed after evangelical missionaries from the United States spent years, and tens of millions of dollars, spreading homophobia in Africa in general and in Uganda specifically. Of the $54 million spent by more than 20 U.S. evangelical groups in Africa’s 54 nations from 2007 to 2020 “to influence laws, policies, and public opinion against sexual and reproductive rights,” about a third went to Uganda, according to OpenDemocracy.
And the third disaster came on November 5, 2024, when Trump was reelected. Not only did PEPFAR and USAID funds quickly disappear, but strict restrictions were also placed on the little aid that survived. For example, PrEP — pre-exposure prophylaxis, which prevents HIV infection — could no longer officially be given to those most at risk, such as sex workers or gay men, but only to pregnant and nursing mothers.
And yet, despite the “three disasters,” dedicated queer and trans Ugandans — many who could flee to exile to secure their own personal safety — refuse to give up trying to protect the health of their community, even as they’re being crushed.
Things are so bad under Trump, some Ugandan health care providers are pining for George W. Bush.
“George Bush Jr., is my best friend,” Dr. Edith Namulema, chief of the HIV/AIDS Counseling and Home Care Department at Mengo Hospital in Uganda, told The Intercept.
Over the sound of chirping tropical birds, Dr. Namulema spoke in a large, breezy part of her ward that is mostly used to treat patients with tuberculosis, who slept on the other side of thin blue curtains. Just outside was an adjacent clinic room with a roof but no walls for treating people with HIV, where patients were having their blood drawn by smiling young phlebotomists in dark blue scrubs.
Namulema never met Bush. But despite his global trail of destruction spurred by his war on terror — and his generally homophobic domestic agenda — such effusive praise for “Bush Jr.” is common among African AIDS researchers and doctors.
Namulema has worked with HIV since the 1990s, before there were medications that prevented an HIV diagnosis from becoming a guaranteed AIDS death sentence. For years, she buried one patient after another.
But when Bush made antiretroviral medication available circa 2001 via PEPFAR, she saw the deaths begin to slow within a week.
A nurse at Universal Love Alliance described a startling shift in the first year of Trump’s second term. “I have seen people die with HIV before,” she said. “But I rarely saw someone die because they could not adhere to their medications.” Over the last decade, the nurse witnessed maybe one death per year due to a patient failing to take their medication. In 2025, she saw this happen 10 times.
Every nurse and HIV peer educator in a community clinic who spoke to The Intercept said they have seen an uptick in HIV-diagnoses and related deaths. Official statistics do not show this trend — sources say it’s because they are not able to record “KP data.” The Trump cuts have, predictably, caused a chaotic data scenario. The Uganda Ministry of Health predicts four Ugandans are becoming infected with HIV every hour. Meanwhile, the Uganda AIDS Commission reported a “sharp fall” in AIDS-related deaths of 64 percent to the Parliament in October.
One doctor interviewed by The Intercept at a large hospital said they have not seen an increase in HIV positivity, but attributed it to the fact that “KPs are in hiding” and the hospital lost all funding to hire people to go where KPs dare to live.
En route to a “KP clinic” in Kampala, The Intercept rode in a four-wheel-drive Toyota. The passengers included Samson, who fled his rural village town for Kampala when he realized the other boys were trying to burn him with acid because he was gay, and Kukunda Sharon, a former school instructor who goes by “Teacher” and “had to escape” her village when her lesbianism was met with an attempt to coerce her into a forced marriage; she is now associate director of Universal Love Alliance.
Even in Kampala’s center near the U.S. Embassy — an intimidating imperial outpost that takes 10 minutes to drive around — the roads are not great, but at least they are paved. But as the SUV sloped downhill, it traveled onto rough red clay roads lined by open gutters of untreated sewage. The buildings grew lower, then came single-story metal roofed shacks, where people live largely without electricity or plumbing.
Nearly 7 million people live in Kampala, and yet the city has no functional train or bus system. Kampalans move about in “taxis” (minivans that seat 14, which LGBTQ+ people consider too dangerous), or on the back of “boda boda” motorbikes. Such movement is difficult for people who are sick and, given the high price of petrol, it is economically prohibitive; gas is roughly the same price as in the United States, even though the average income in Uganda is just about 1 percent of America’s average income. People walk long distances on roads without sidewalks to get where they need to go — nearly impossible for sick people.
Thus when it comes to treating HIV effectively, it is necessary to have many clinics spread throughout the city’s poorest areas so that people living with HIV can come for their medical care, or have their medicine delivered. A year ago, the Ugandan Health Ministry announced it would be shutting all HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis clinics in the country. According to Sky News, one official said the closure of HIV clinics was a necessary response because of the loss of funding from USAID. Also shuttered were standalone pharmacies supplying antiretroviral drugs. Millions in Uganda, especially the more than 1 million people living with the virus, depend on these facilities to provide HIV treatments and preventative therapies. According to an International Planned Parenthood Federation survey published in December 2025, some 1,175 affiliated IPPF health sites closed across Africa, affecting 396 staff positions and 5.9 million clients due to the funding changes. Thousands of health workers in Uganda — including doctors, nurses, and community experts — have lost their jobs.
The Intercept visited one of the few “KP clinics” still operating, despite a government raid and threats of arrest for its staff. It sits in a compound behind a wall, just off of a busy street. It is extremely hot, without air conditioners or fans in any of the simple examination and testing rooms.
Staff members from three of the remaining KP clinics gathered here to speak with The Intercept in a room that usually hosts group therapy, whenever a trustworthy volunteer therapist can be found.
At first, the conversation was taciturn. The meeting is technically illegal, the gathered medical workers weren’t all familiar with each other there, and there are always worries in such get-togethers that someone might be a spy. But after sitting on the floor and eating samosas, “the boys” — as these young men refer to themselves and each other — begin to open up.
They talk about the cuts. At one clinic, salaries were reduced by 50 percent. At another, the staff was trimmed from 15 to just four — a medic there says he’s wracked with survivor’s guilt. He tells a common story: He was a preacher’s son who knew he was different. It wasn’t until he went to the clinic looking for sexual health information that he could even talk to anyone like himself. He fell into a global pattern in queer health — largely destroyed by Trump — in which someone goes to a clinic for services, then becomes a volunteer, then starts working there and helping others.
“It was the only place I could just be … me,” he said, with a heavy sigh, indicating he did not have to hide appearing gay. He loved working with “the boys” and was gutted that 11 co-workers lost their jobs. Most of them, he said, still show up at the clinic and work unpaid for three reasons: “They have nothing else to do,” “There is nowhere else to go for them to be themselves with other people,” and “for food” available at the facility.
When people with little or no money have to choose between food and HIV medications, they will always choose food.
Two suddenly gregarious medical assistants (also both preachers’ kids) talk with candor about their shared situation: Being gay meant both had to leave their families and their churches. One said he’s still happy to go to work despite seeing his wages cut in half, but is dismayed that the cuts mean he simply cannot offer the care that clients need. The number of people they treat has plummeted. This is in part because USAID cuts took away money for the clinic’s staff to make outreach tours to sex work and gay “hot spots.” It’s also because the clinic used to feed clients who came in for the treatment. The free food helped mitigate the cost to patients for traveling to the clinic and is necessary because HIV medications don’t work for people who aren’t consistently eating enough. (When people with little or no money have to choose between food and HIV medications, they will always choose food.)
“We used to give away bags of food two times a week,” he said. “Now, we have only given it out two times this whole year, which is basically nothing.”
The Trump-era cuts have pushed KPs out of other medical settings, he said, which makes them wary of trusting any medical care. When USAID money was flowing, he said, patients told him that they were tolerated when they sought care at a public hospital because the workers there knew they would be compensated. But since the cuts, “some of our patients tell us they’ve been told, ‘There’s no money in you now. Go away.’”
Referring people to get viral load tests — an important step in managing HIV care — has also become nearly impossible in Kampala. It’s not just that the U.S.-financed health care workers who did the tests were laid off; some of them took the equipment with them when they left.
Then, there’s the issue of medication. The U.S. still pays for some antiretrovirals. But while The Intercept saw ample supplies of emtricitabine and tenofovir, the most common antiretrovirals, at most clinics visited, not everyone can take that treatment. When people fall out of treatment, they may grow resistant to specific medications and need a different combination should they survive long enough to restart medication in the future. But since the cuts, little aside from the common combo is available to treat HIV; doctors say it is almost impossible to get anything else.
“When someone comes looking for something they need” and a clinic doesn’t have it — whether it’s food, medicine, or just a kind ear to listen to them — “they usually won’t come back,” one of the medical assistants said.
Then, they’ll become infectious and HIV will move throughout their networks.
The boys were already seeing bad trends. They used to see a positive HIV diagnosis every two or three months. Now they said they are seeing one a week.
Asked by The Intercept if they, or their patients, are able to use geolocation hookup apps like Grindr, the boys laugh.
“Yes,” they answer.
“How?”
“VPNs. People have needs.”
“But how do you know someone isn’t a cop?”
“You don’t!”
“What can you rely on to lessen the chances he’s a cop?”
“Luck!”
“Sometimes,” another health worker chimes in, “a guy will meet another guy on Grindr, have sex with him, and then arrest him.” In theory, this kind of undercover sting could lead to prosecution for “aggravated homosexuality,” but mostly, cops do this for extortion, which is rampant. By the end of 2025, Uganda’s Human Rights Awareness and Promotion Forum had “handled a total of 956 cases involving actions specifically targeting LGBTQ+ persons,” which have affected 1,276 individuals, since the implementation of the Anti-Homosexuality Act in 2023.
And that fear of prosecution and harassment keeps people who may have HIV or even signs of cancer from seeking medical treatment.
“Here, we do not tolerate trans people,” said Gabbie, who is trans. “It is as simple as that.”
Ramahdan, the LGBTQ+ activist, along with Samson and Sharon of Universal Love Alliance, have set up a meeting with a dozen trans and gender-nonconforming people in a conference room at a hotel near the Gaddafi Mosque. It is not a “gay hotel” — no such thing exists in Kampala. It was chosen because it is trusted by the community to be friendly enough and discreet. Security is a huge concern for everyone. The trans Ugandans span late teens to mid-50s, and their body language reveals nervousness: Any time a waiter comes into the room through a swinging door, everyone falls silent until they leave.
Their fear is understandable. A show of hands reveals everyone has been arrested at least once. At the municipal jail, they said they have been tortured (forced to strip and humiliated in front of all the other detainees), sexually assaulted (sometimes under the pretense of checking their gender, sometimes not), and even raped. A Muslim trans woman (who wears both a hijab and also a mask to protect against Covid) was arrested on her first-ever date with a man. (People in the room chuckles knowingly when she shares that the date did not intervene when the police took her away, and she never saw him again.)
When arrested, trans women are often put into men’s holding area, at least initially; they are terrified of becoming infected with HIV from rape. Most everyone has been kicked out of their families of origin or lost jobs (usually when a relative has outed them).
Fear of being subjected to the “queer tax” — when a landlord charges more or an employer pays less under threat of outing — was universal in the group. One young trans man, not yet 20, cried when describing his fear to even leave his house. His landlord figured out he is trans and was trying to evict him, but he cannot move until he pays off the extortion money. (The group took a collection to pay off his debt.)
The extortion threat has only grown with the collapse of USAID. At a follow-up meeting at a Kentucky Fried Chicken a few days later, Gabbie arrived after an expensive two-hour journey on a trans-friendly boda boda. “You cannot afford for random drivers to know where you live,” she said. (Another trans person The Intercept interviewed in a homeless shelter said they would take three boda bodas from home to work, switching rides like a spy to keep anyone from being able to trace her.)
Gabbie has been pushed from her family to a queer church shelter, which was raided and evicted, to another group situation, that was also raided and evicted. She now shares a studio apartment with four trans women at the outskirts of Kampala. Their water and electricity are periodically turned off for non-payment, and they open the windows when they cook on a coal stove to avoid breathing carbon monoxide.
Gabbie dropped out of college when her family saw a video of her preaching in a queer-affirming church, cut her off, and told her never to come back. Six months later they invited her back, then locked the gate behind her; she was trapped in an exorcism and had to escape over the wall.
It was never easy to be trans in Uganda. Surgeries — even those performed abroad — are almost unheard of, and long before Trump it was difficult to source hormones. Since Trump’s reelection, Gabbie has found that it’s theoretically possible, if prohibitively expensive, to source hormones on the black market. There is the physical danger: Injecting hormones with unsterilized syringes from unverified sources without a doctor’s supervision exposes trans people to HIV, hepatitis, and the possibility of dangerous, even lethal, side effects. But part of why Gabbie has stopped taking hormones and is now passing as a man in public is because sourcing hormones on the black market “opens you up to extortion” by anyone along the supply chain. She can’t afford that. (While in the West, most trans people use the terms “passing” to refer to being accepted as their true gender, in much of Africa, many trans people use it to refer to “passing” for the gender assigned to them at birth.)
The cuts hit Gabbie’s job at a trans-affirming nonprofit, where the staff was reduced from five people to just one: Gabbie. The office was abandoned, and she only works part-time, out of the studio she shares with four people.
“It was very painful, returning to this body, this body I do not want.”
Gabbie is also a model, and hopes to feel free presenting as her true feminine self at least while at home with her roommates. But they’ve been raided doing that, too. On her phone, she showed The Intercept a series of photos. In the first few, she and her girlfriends are happy, decked out in high glam in their apartment. But in the last photo, in an image reminiscent of the 1969 Stonewall Riot arrest photos, she is crying in the back seat of a police car. Their house had been raided, presumably on a complaint from a neighbor. After six weeks in jail, she was released without charges. But the damage was done: She made the difficult decision to stop her transition — to “go stealth,” as she put it, in public as a man.
“It was very painful,” she said, “returning to this body, this body I do not want.”
She hopes one day to transition again. “You can’t not be yourself 24 hours a day,” she said, sniffling slightly, her eyes darting around the KFC, hoping no one would notice her tears or hear us.
Two weeks later after the meeting at the Kampala KFC, Gabbie texts pictures of herself in a graduation robe. Without her family’s help, it took her a few more years than she wanted. But she had graduated from university, with a degree in accounting — which she wants to use to secure more resources for LGBTQ+ work in Uganda.
Near a sex “hot spot,” there is a clinic for sex workers. Inside the open garage door of a modest house, a half dozen sex workers were waiting for treatment. A medic draws a patient’s blood. One patient bounced an infant gently to soothe its cries. Another laid her newborn gingerly on the floor on a blanket; he smiled up at all the faces smiling down at him.
Up until the Trump stop work order, this clinic was run by a team of 17, including medics, peer educators, and community health navigators. They went out and recruited patients, educated them on STIs, and followed up with people to keep them adherent on antiretrovirals. Ten people lost their jobs, and the number of medics dropped from 12 to five. Those who remain have seen steep pay cuts: Average earnings fell from 800,000 Uganda shillings a month (about $222 USD) to just 250,000 (about $70).
As a “stud lesbian,” one sex worker tells The Intercept, this kind of clinic is the only place “where I can ask a doctor about my needs.” Most doctors assume she has sex with men, and until she sought out this clinic, she had no idea what was safe, or not, in her ways of having sex.
The situation for lesbian women in Uganda is dire. “You are forced into a marriage you do not want. You are forced into getting pregnant with a baby you do not want. In a body you don’t want. And you cannot get an abortion, and so you are forced into having a baby and raising a child you do not want,” said one queer sex worker.
It has become harder to insist their customers use condoms — if they can even afford them.
Sex work has grown more difficult since the cuts. Beyond health expenditures, USAID paid for construction projects and conferences. “When people are in town for a conference, they have money to spend on entertainment: on restaurants, on hotels, on us,” one sex worker put it. But USAID stopped most of that.
With laid-off people turning to sex work, more Ugandans are trying to sell sex to fewer customers. This is economically deleterious, making it harder for the workers to dictate the terms of their encounters. The result is that they have less power in the kinds of sex they are willing to have. It has become harder to insist their customers use condoms — if they can even afford them.
The clinic is struggling to keep up with their clients’ urgent needs. There’s a sudden lack of STI medication. HIV self-testing kits have become almost impossible to source, condoms are scarce, and lubricants “disappeared entirely,” said the clinic’s project manager.
“When you use too many men, you get dry,” the project manner noted, “and you can’t avoid the condom breaking.”
PrEP and birth control pills could theoretically help prevent HIV and pregnancy. Uganda adopted oral pre-exposure prophylaxis in 2016 and by the end of December 2023, over 550,000 clients had initiated the treatment. But since the cuts, PrEP is not officially available to most sex workers — only to pregnant women and nursing mothers. Birth control pills were paid for by USAID; now they are prohibitively expensive.
Trump isn’t alone in his policy of foreign austerity. The United Kingdom and the Netherlands, along with some private funders, have followed Trump’s lead in cutting off any money to Uganda that might help trans people. (We document this funding crisis in our short film “A Visit to the Homeless Shelter for Trans Ugandans.”)
There is some hope on the horizon for more foreign aid, but questions remain about how much of it will reach the country’s so-called KPs.
On December 10, the U.S. and Uganda signed “a five-year, nearly $2.3 billion bilateral health cooperation agreement that signifies the importance of the relationship between the two countries,” in which “the United States plans to invest up to $1.7 billion to combat HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis (TB), malaria and other infectious diseases across Uganda while helping strengthen Uganda’s health system.”
No one who spoke with The Intercept spoke expected this money could undo the lost trust, unemployment, and damage of the last year — nor did they expect such efforts to make their way to KPs. One public health activist, who did not want to be named for fear of persecution, claimed that “that money is not for health, it was given a month before the elections. That money was for elections.”
Dr. Peter Kyambadde, the senior program officer at the Ministry of Health, said, “Key populations still remain among the prioritized populations for epidemic control” but admitted that “how much of those resources will be committed to key populations” remains an open question.
“They consider us criminals.”
Samson, of the Universal Love Alliance, did not believe any government resources will flow their way. “What you see Trump doing in the United States aligns with Uganda’s goals. They consider us criminals.”
The potential return of U.S. health funding comes as an injectable form of PrEP that lasts for six months called was just approved for use in Uganda. The medication is considered a breakthrough in HIV prevention that, if distributed widely enough, has the potential to eradicate the virus.
But only 1,000 doses of the shot have been delivered to Africa, and none to Uganda.
It costs $28,000 a year. A $40 generic version won’t be ready until at least 2027. And the distribution channels in Uganda — namely the clinics where patients trust they could access such a drug without risk — have largely been undermined or destroyed.
This essay is part of the series Global Stop Work Order, featuring reporting about how the Trump administration’s cuts are affecting LGBTQ+ health and HIV/AIDS around the world. The series is supported by a Pulitzer Center Global Reporting Grant and the Fund for Investigative Journalism.
The post By Slashing Foreign Aid, Trump Is Fueling the Spread of HIV in Uganda appeared first on The Intercept.
Fourteen-year-old Ariana Velasquez had been held at the immigrant detention center in Dilley, Texas, with her mother for some 45 days when I managed to get inside to meet her. The staff brought everyone in the visiting room a boxed lunch from the cafeteria: a cup of yellowish stew and a hamburger patty in a plain bun. Ariana’s long black curls hung loosely around her face and she was wearing a government-issued gray sweatsuit. At first, she sat looking blankly down at the table. She poked at her food with a plastic fork and let her mother do most of the talking.
She perked up when I asked about home: Hicksville, New York. She and her mother had moved there from Honduras when she was 7. Her mother, Stephanie Valladares, had applied for asylum, married a neighbor from back home who was already living in the U.S., and had two more kids. Ariana took care of them after school. She was a freshman at Hicksville High, and being detained at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center meant that she was falling behind in her classes. She told me how much she missed her favorite sign language teacher, but most of all she missed her siblings.
I had previously met them in Hicksville: Gianna, a toddler who everyone calls Gigi, and Jacob, a kindergartener with wide brown eyes. I told Ariana that they missed her too. Jacob had shown me a security camera that their mom had installed in the kitchen so she could peek in on them from her job, sometimes saying “Hello” through the speaker. I told Ariana that Jacob tried talking to the camera, hoping his mom would answer.
Stephanie burst into tears. So did Ariana. After my visit, Ariana wrote me a letter.
“My younger siblings haven’t been able to see their mom in more than a month,” she wrote. “They are very young and you need both of your parents when you are growing up.” Then, referring to Dilley, she added, “Since I got to this Center all you will feel is sadness and mostly depression.”

Dilley, run by private prison firm CoreCivic, is located some 72 miles south of San Antonio and nearly 2,000 miles away from Ariana’s home. It is a sprawling collection of trailers and dormitories, almost the same color as the dusty landscape, surrounded by a tall fence. It first opened during the Obama administration to hold an influx of families crossing the border. Former President Joe Biden stopped holding families there in 2021, arguing America shouldn’t be in the business of detaining children.
But quickly after returning to office, President Donald Trump resumed family detentions as part of his mass deportation campaign. Federal courts and overwhelming public outrage had put an end to Trump’s first-term policy of separating children from parents when immigrant families were detained crossing the border. Trump officials said Dilley was a place where immigrant families would be detained together.
As the second Trump administration’s crackdown both slowed border crossings to record lows and ramped up a blitz of immigration arrests all across the country, the population inside Dilley shifted. The administration began sending parents and children who had been living in the country long enough to lay down roots and to build networks of relatives, friends and supporters willing to speak up against their detention.
If the administration believed that putting children in Dilley wouldn’t stir the same outcry as separating them from their parents, it was mistaken. The photo of 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos from Ecuador, who was detained with his father in Minneapolis while wearing a Spider-Man backpack and a blue bunny hat, went viral on social media and triggered widespread condemnation and a protest by the detainees.
Weeks before that, I had begun speaking to parents and children at Dilley, along with their relatives on the outside. I also spoke to people who worked inside the center or visited it regularly to give religious or legal services. I had asked Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials for permission to visit but got a range of responses. One spokesperson denied my request, another said he doubted I could get formal approval and suggested I could try showing up there as a visitor. So I did.
Since early December, I’ve spoken, in person and via phone and video calls, to more than two dozen detainees, half of them kids detained at Dilley — all of whose parents gave me their’ consent. I asked parents whether their children would be open to writing to me about their experiences. More than three dozen kids responded; some just drew pictures, others wrote in perfect cursive. Some letters were full of age-appropriate misspellings.
Among them was a letter from a 9-year-old Venezuelan girl, named Susej Fernández, who had been living in Houston when she and her mother were detained. “I have been 50 days in Dilley Immigration Processing Center,” she wrote. “Seen how people like me, immigrants are been treated changes my perspective about the U.S. My mom and I came to The U.S looking for a good and safe place to live.”
A 14-year-old Colombian girl, who signed her name Gaby M.M. and who a fellow detainee said had been living in Houston, wrote a letter about how the guards at Dilley “have bad manner of speaking to residents.” She wrote, “The workers treat the residents unhumanly, verbally and I don’t want to imging how they would act if they where unsupervised.”
Nine-year-old Maria Antonia Guerra, from Colombia, drew a portrait of herself and her mother wearing their detainee ID badges. A note on the side said, “I am not happy, please get me out of here.”
Some of the kids I met spoke English as well as they did Spanish.
When I asked the kids to tell me about the things they missed most from their lives outside Dilley, they almost always talked about their teachers and friends at school. Then they’d get to things like missing a beloved dog, McDonald’s Happy Meals, their favorite stuffed animal or a pair of new UGGs that had been waiting for them under the Christmas tree.
They told me they feared what might happen to them if they returned to their home countries and what might happen to them if they remained here. Thirteen-year-old Gustavo Santiago said he didn’t want to go back to Tamaulipas, Mexico. “I have friends, school, and family here in the United States,” he said of his home in San Antonio, Texas. “To this day, I don’t know what we did wrong to be detained.” He ended with a plea, “I feel like I’ll never get out of here. I just ask that you don’t forget about us.”

Around 3,500 detainees, more than half of them minors, have cycled through the center since it reopened, more than the population of the town of Dilley itself. Although a long-standing legal settlement generally limits the time children can be held in detention to 20 days, a data analysis by ProPublica found that about 300 kids sent to Dilley by the Trump administration were there for more than a month. The administration in legal filings has said the agreement from 1997 is outdated and should be terminated because there are new statutes, regulations and policies that ensure good conditions for immigrant minors in detention.
Habiba Soliman, 18, told me she had been detained for more than eight months with her mom and four siblings, ranging in age from 16 to 5-year-old twins, after her father was charged for an alleged antisemitic attack in June at a rally in Boulder, Colorado, supporting the Jewish hostages who were being held in Gaza. Their father, Mohamed Soliman, pleaded not guilty to federal and state charges. Authorities have said they are investigating whether his wife and her children provided support for the attack. They deny knowing anything about it and an arrest warrant reports that he told an officer he never talked to his wife or family about his plans.
Despite Trump’s promise to go after violent criminals, the vast majority of adults detained at Dilley over the last year had no criminal record in the United States. Some of the parents I spoke to had overstayed visas. Many had filed applications for asylum, had married U.S. citizens or had been granted humanitarian parole and were detained when they voluntarily showed up for appointments at ICE offices. They said that it was unfair to arrest them, and that detaining their children was just plain cruel.
There were children in Dilley who were so distraught they cut themselves or talked about suicide, several mothers told me. Recently, two cases of measles were discovered in the center. Federal officials said they quarantined some immigrants, and attorneys said ICE cancelled in-person legal visits until Feb. 14 as a safety precaution.
The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, said in a statement that all detainees at Dilley are “being provided with proper medical care.” DHS did not respond to questions about individual detainees but said that all “are provided with 3 meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, soap, and toiletries” and that “certified dieticians evaluate meals.” Detained parents are given the option for their families to be deported together, or they can have their children placed with another caregiver, the statement said.
CoreCivic said that Dilley, like its other facilities, is subject to multiple layers of oversight to ensure full compliance with policies and procedures, including any applicable detention standards.
Moms told me that their kids had lost their appetites after finding worms and mold on their food, had trouble sleeping on the facility’s hard metal bunk beds in rooms shared by at least a dozen other people, and were constantly sick.
“The shock for my daughter was devastating,” Maria Alejandra Montoya from Colombia wrote in an email to me about her daughter Maria Antonia. “Watching her adapt is like watching her wings being clipped. Hearing other children fight over card games at the tables makes me feel like we are not mothers and children, but inmates.”
Alexander Perez, a 15-year-old from the Dominican Republic, told me about going to school at Dilley. He said classes included kids from mixed age groups, and each class allowed only 12 students and lasted for just one hour. Slots were assigned on a first-come-first-served basis. Children would line up, hoping to get in. The staff leading the class would distribute handouts and worksheets to those who made it inside.
Alexander Perez complained that the lessons were usually meant for kids who were younger than him, so he found them boring. But because there wasn’t much else to do, he used to go whenever he could, until an instructor turned a social studies lesson into what felt like an interrogation about immigration policy.
“If we have recreational activities and classes designed to help us disconnect from what we’re experiencing here, why the need to ask ourselves these questions?” he said during a video call with me. “I didn’t think that was right.”
He, his mother and his 14-year-old brother, Jorge, said they had been detained while traveling from Los Angeles to Houston when the bus they were on was stopped by immigration agents who checked everyone’s status. They’d been in Dilley for four months by the time we spoke. His mother, Teresa, told me she was in the process of appealing a judge’s denial of her asylum petition, which might explain why it was a touchy subject for Alexander when it came up in class. He told me that after he gave up on attending classes at Dilley, he played basketball in the recreation area and watched a lot of Spanish soap operas on TV. Jorge, who celebrated his birthday in December at Dilley with a tiny cake made from vanilla commissary cookies, spent most of the day sleeping.
DHS said in its statement that “children have access to teachers, classrooms, and curriculum booklets for math, reading, and spelling.”
Boredom was a theme that ran through many of the letters from children at Dilley. “They told me I could only be here 21 days but I have already spent more than 60 days waking up eating the same repeated meals,” wrote a 12-year-old Venezuelan girl who signed her letter Ender, and who a fellow detainee said had settled with her mother in Austin, Texas. She wrote that when she felt sick and went to the doctor, “the only thing they tell you is to drink more water and the worst thing is that it seems like the water is what makes people sick here.”
Ariana expressed similar concerns in her letter. She wrote, “If you need medical attention the longest you have to wait is 3 hours, but to get any medicine, pill, anything it takes a while, there are various viruses people are always sick. Serious situations happen and the officers can’t take them serious enough there are no consecuenses, they don’t care.”


The lack of reliable medical care was perhaps the most serious concern parents and children spoke about in their interviews with me. The Texas-based nonprofit advocacy organization RAICES, which provides legal representation to many families at Dilley, said in a recent court declaration that its clients had raised concerns about insufficient medical care on at least 700 occasions since August 2025. The organization reported, “Children with medical complaints frequently experience delays, dismissals, or lack of follow-up.”
Kheilin Valero from Venezuela, who was being held with her 18-month-old, Amalia Arrieta, said shortly after they were detained following an ICE appointment on Dec. 11 in El Paso, Texas, the baby fell ill. For two weeks, she said, medical staff gave her ibuprofen and eventually antibiotics, but Amalia’s breathing worsened to the point that she was hospitalized in San Antonio for 10 days. She was diagnosed with COVID-19 and RSV. “Because she went so many days without treatment, and because it’s so cold here, she developed pneumonia and bronchitis,” Kheilin said. “She was malnourished, too, because she was vomiting everything.”
Gustavo Santiago, the 13-year-old boy who’d been living in Texas, said he has been sick several times since he and his mom were detained on Oct. 5 of last year at a Border Patrol checkpoint. His mom, Christian Hinojosa, said that when Gustavo had a fever, the medical staff told her he was old enough for his body to fight it off without medication, so she sat up with him all night, draping him in cold compresses. She had to take him to the infirmary for a skin rash that she believed was caused by poor water quality at the center. She said he has also experienced stomach pain and nausea, which she blamed on unsanitary food preparation.
Among logs we obtained of calls made to 911 and law enforcement about the facility since it began accepting families again last spring, I found pleas for help for toddlers having trouble breathing, a pregnant woman who passed out and an elementary-school-aged girl having seizures. Local authorities were also called in for three cases of alleged sexual assault between detainees.
DHS said in its statement, “No one is denied medical care.”
CoreCivic said that health and safety is a top priority for the company and that detainees at Dilley are provided with a continuum of health care services, including preventative care and mental health services. The company said its medical staff “meet the highest standards of care” and said the facility works closely with local hospitals for any specialized medical needs.
Reporter Mica Rosenberg talked with dozens of detainees at Dilley, who shared their experiences in letters, videos, phone calls and voice memos.



Ariana and her mother, Stephanie, were detained on Dec. 1, when they went for one of their regular check-ins at an ICE office in New York City’s Federal Plaza, which are required as they wait for a decision on their asylum case. Stephanie had come to the U.S. with experience working as an accountant and, after securing her work permit, she had finally found a job at a local import business where she could put that experience to use. They had been regularly checking in with ICE for years without incident. But after mom and daughter showed up for their 8 a.m. ICE appointment, they were told they couldn’t leave this time and were on a plane to Dilley by 6 that evening, without being given a chance to call their family. “Since the day my mom and I get detained in Manhattan NY, my life was instanly paused,” Ariana wrote in her letter from detention after our meeting. “All kids are being damage mentally, they witness how the’ve been treated.”
A 7-year-old Venezuelan girl named Diana Crespo was living in Portland, Oregon, when she and her parents, Darianny Gonzalez and Yohendry Crespo, were detained outside a hospital where they’d taken Diana for emergency care. The family had been granted humanitarian parole after entering the United States in 2024 and then applied for asylum when Trump revoked the parole program, saying that Biden had used it to allow immigrants to pour into the country at record levels. She said their active asylum case didn’t stop the immigration agents who intercepted them outside the emergency room from detaining them.

Maria Antonia Guerra, the 9-year-old from Colombia, told me that the 10-day vacation to Disney World that she had planned with her mother and stepdad turned into more than 100 days at Dilley. She’d flown into Florida from Medellin, Colombia, where she lived with her grandmother, with a Cruella de Vil costume in her suitcase. Her mother, Maria Alejandra Montoya, was living in New York and had overstayed her visa, but had since married a U.S. citizen and was just waiting for her green card to be approved. Maria Antonia traveled regularly back and forth to the U.S. on a tourist visa, and Maria Alejandra had flown down to meet her at the airport. Immigration agents intercepted them and flew them to Texas. They both told me that it felt like a kidnapping.
“I am in a jail and I am sad and I have fainted 2 times here inside, when I arrived every night I cried and now I don’t sleep well,” Maria Antonia, who wears thick glasses, wrote to me. “I felt that being here was my fault and I only wanted to be on vacation like a normal family.”
In January, shortly after my visit to Dilley, ICE released some 200 people all at once, without explanation. Among them were Ariana and her mom.

The releases came as such a surprise that Stephanie said another woman began screaming and refused to let go of her bunk, fearing she was about to be deported back to Ecuador. Stephanie was fitted with an ankle monitor, and she and Ariana were dropped off in Laredo, Texas, where they scrambled to buy a plane ticket to LaGuardia in New York.
On Jan. 22, two days after her release, I met Stephanie again, this time holding Gigi as she showed up for her first ICE check in at an office near her home. She had been so nervous that she got lost on the way to the appointment. She was given a series of instructions and shown videos that explained the purpose and cadence of her regular check-ins. She’d have one every month at the office, and every two months she would be visited at her home.
Jacob had initially refused to go to school because he was afraid his mother and sister wouldn’t be there when he came home, but she’d finally gotten him to go by promising every morning that she’s not leaving again.

Ariana went back to school a few days later. Her English teacher immediately hugged her and sobbed, “We really missed you.”
I called Ariana last Wednesday to check in on her. She was helping Jacob with his homework, but she took a break to give me an update. There are a lot of other immigrants at her school, but she had only told her close friends, who she sits with at lunch, about the reason for her prolonged absence. When other people asked, she just said, “I had to go to Texas for something.”
She says she’s trying to put the ordeal behind her, but the toll is real.
Her mother lost her job because her boss is uncomfortable employing someone with an ankle monitor. And Ariana worries about her. She also worries about the people she met back at Dilley. Days after I asked DHS about several families mentioned in this story, five of them were released: Gustavo and his mom, Christian; Teresa and her sons, Alexander and Jorge; Kheilin and her baby, Amalia; Darianny and her daughter, Diana. Maria Antonia and her mom, Maria Alejandra, were returned to Colombia. Others are still detained. Ariana said, “I wish they got out because they shouldn’t be there any longer.”
Before we hung up, Ariana said something that suggested her youthful optimism hadn’t been entirely broken. She’d found that she’d gotten better at playing volleyball at Dilley and now plans to try out for her school team.

For this story, ProPublica analyzed federal data on ICE detentions released through the Deportation Data Project. The data contains records for immigrant arrests and detentions going through October of 2025.
The post The Children of Dilley appeared first on ProPublica.
A rainbow, a family portrait, a heart. These are the drawings found in handwritten letters from children detained at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in South Texas.
In early February there were more than 750 families, nearly half of them including children, as well as some 370 single adult women being held at this facility. It is just one of many immigration centers across the country, but the only one holding families. Since the start of the Trump administration, the number of children in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention has skyrocketed, increasing sixfold.
ProPublica received letters in mid-January from several children at Dilley. All but two of them had been living in the United States when they were detained. In their words and drawings, they convey how much they ache for creature comforts and describe the anguish of being trapped. They write about missing their friends and teachers, falling behind at school, having unreliable access to medical care when they’re sick — some say they’re sick a lot — and feeling scared about what comes next.
The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, said in a statement that all detainees at Dilley are “being provided with proper medical care.” DHS did not respond to questions about individual detainees but said all “are provided with 3 meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, soap, and toiletries” and that “certified dieticians evaluate meals.” DHS also said “children have access to teachers, classrooms, and curriculum booklets for math, reading, and spelling.” Detained parents are given the option for their families to be deported together, or they can have their children placed with another caregiver, the statement said. CoreCivic, which operates the facility, said it is subject to multiple layers of oversight and that health and safety are a top priority.
The public is rarely given an opportunity to glimpse inside Dilley and get a look at how the kids there are doing. Here, we let the children speak for themselves.


Susej F
A 9-year-old from Venezuela who was living in Houston, Texas
Detained for 50 days
Letter transcript:
“Hello, my name is Susej F and I’am 9 years old. I’am from Venezuela. I have been 50 days in Dilley Immigration Processing Center. And I want to go to my Country. But I miss my school and my friends I feel bad since when I came here to this Place, because I have been here too long. I have been 2 years and 6 months in united states, and I was happy with my friends in The school but now I need to leave. I miss my family in my country so now I want To go to Venezuela. But my mom do not want to leave because she wants a better future for me. Seen how people like me, immigrants are been treated changes my perspective about the U.S. My mom and I came to The U.S looking for a good and safe place to live, and my mom was looking for a Good job.”
Listen to Ariana read her letter
Ariana V. V.
A 14-year-old from Honduras who was living in Hicksville, New York
Detained for 45 days
Letter transcript:
“Hello, my name is Ariana V.V. im 14 years old and im from Honduras, ive been detained for 45 days and I have never felt so much fear to go to a place as I feel here everytime I remind myself that once I go back to Honduras a lot of dangerous things could happen to my mom and my younger siblings haven’t been able to see their mom in more than a month. They are very young and you need both of your parents when you are growing up. Since I got to this Center all you will feel is sadness and mostly depression. When people have their courts the longest they will last is 15 minutes, our rights are not being provided, arrest are happening when people don’t even have any type of order, arrests are happening illegally.
Its sad to hear that peoples case are being denied and are getting send back to their country places where they are escaping from and are looking for protection and want to feel safe. Not a lot of people know what is happening in the Centers where immigrants are placed at. I haven’t been getting any school time. Every single person in here had their jobs they had their lifes, they aren’t any danger for this Country.
Ive been in this country for almost 7 years and in those 7 years my mom and I found a home and made a bigger family. I have never been separated from my siblings and its honestly sad because they are little and they need their mom and sister, yeah they are with their dad but its still different for them and my mom and I. Since the day my mom and I get detained in Manhattan NY, my life was instanly paused, from my knowledge you can’t be under custody for more than 15 or 20 days, well here in Dilley Immigration Processing Center people have been in this place for 7 months, 5 months, 4-2 months, its not fair that the ICE officers are not following the laws. All kids are being damage mentally, they witness how the’ve been treated.
They don’t have schools, doctor, all they have are nurses, if you need medical attention the longest you have to wait is 3 hours, but to get any medicine, pill, anything it takes a while, there are various viruses people are always sick. Serious situations happen and the officers can’t take them serious enough there are no consecuenses, they don’t care.”

Luisanney Toloza
A 5-year-old from Venezuela who had recently crossed the U.S.-Mexico border
Mia Valentina Paz Faria
A 7-year-old from Venezuela who was living in Austin, Texas
Detained for 70 days
Letter transcript:
“Hello my name is Mia Valentina Paz Faria I am from Venezuela I have been living in the United States for 3 years, I am 7 years old, I have been here for 70 days in this place, I don’t want to be in this place I want to go to my school, I miss my grandparents, I miss my friends, I don’t like the food here, I miss my school, I don’t like being here, I am bored here, I don’t feel so good in this place, I already want to leave this place, I miss my uncles, I hope to leave here soon.”
Scarlett Jaimes
A 17-year-old from Venezuela who was living in El Paso, Texas
Letter transcript:
“01/16/25
First of all I want to introduce myself my name is Scarlett Jaimes and I am writing this to express how I feel in this place, since they detained my mother and me I feel really, really bored and overwhelmed because even though I am someone who doesn’t do many productive things being locked up against my will is quite overwhelming, also I feel down about the idea that I couldn’t finish my school year and that I bet I’m going to end up in a worse school in my own country, in my opinion what I think about this place is not a big deal since it’s a normal and ordinary camp.One of the things that I could complain about is that they don’t have varied food and it’s almost the same and it bores me and I lose my appetite and I am not going to even mention the store food because some people don’t have enough money and also some food tastes like cardboard, also in the store it seems a little unfair to me that they buy things that are high priced and bad quality like for example the notebooks and also colored pencils. In my opinion this place has to change several things like the cleanliness and I know it’s not the workers’ fault but the people’s and I know that even if there are rules nobody is going to care about them and that is why people are against the workers here because it seems that there will always be conflict they should keep their word of keeping people a maximum 21 days because if this continues like this this camp is going to get worse for many people.”


Gaby M.M
A 14-year-old from Colombia who was living in Houston, Texas
Detained for 20 days
Letter transcript:
“Hola! my name is Gaby M.M im 14 years old im from Colombia
I ve been detained in Dilley Immigration Processing Center for 20 days and I haven’t been getthing the rigth education due to being in here. I have’t been able to see my family and friends, since I got here I started to feel sad also I haven’t feelt happy since I got here.
The officers have bad manner of speaking to residents when the are asking anithing the workers treat the residents unhumanly, verbally and I don’t want to imging how they would act if they where unsupervised. I really want to go home I don’t care if I have to go to Katy or Colombia because in both places I have a home and school I get bored a lot and I don’t know what to do, I made friends here and they told me how the been here for 7 months and I get really surprised because I can’t imaging how bad and sad and stessed being here.
I want to tell you guys how I feel and is hell like I really want to go the food is bad im tired of almots the same thing. I feel so much sadness and depression of not being able to leave, its really sad to hear that peoples cases are being denied and getting send back to their countrys.”
Ender
A 12-year-old from Venezuela who was living in Austin, Texas
Detained for 60 days
Letter transcript:
“Hello I am Ender and I am 12 years old, I have been at this center for 2 months. I arrived here for an immigration appointment and I don’t think they should grab immigrants who are innocent, like instead of grabbing criminals because I mean they prefer to lock up children than look for people who really shouldn’t be in the U.S. They told me I could only be here 21 days but I have already spent more than 60 days waking up eating the same repetitive meals, going outside and that the majority of guards never pay attention to people, eating dinner always the same as the day before, seeing people cry every day for the same reasons, trying to sleep in that horrible uncomfortable bed, going to the doctor and that the only thing they tell you is to drink more water and the worst thing is that it seems like the water is what makes people sick here, going to wait for the bad answers from the judges, hearing the bad news from people who no longer have hope, having to share a room with minimum 3 families, and all that so they send us back to our countries.”
Maria Antonia Guerra Montoya
A 9-year-old from Colombia
Detained for 113 days
Letter transcript:
“Name Maria Antonia Guerra Montoya
Country I am colombian
Age 9 years
Locked in custody how long 113 Days
I am Maria Antonia Guerra Montoya and I have been 113 days in detention I miss my friends and I feel they are going to forget me. I am bored here. I already miss my country and my house, I came on vacation for 10 Days and they took me into an ice office an officer interrogated me 2 hours without my mom, I was traveling with flight attendant because my mom lives in new york, they only wanted to arrest my mom, because my mom didn’t have documents to live in U.S.A., I always traveled with my tourist visa but ice used me to catch my mom and now I am in a jail and I am sad and I have fainted 2 times here inside. When I arrived every night I cried and now I don’t sleep well, I felt that being here was my fault and I only wanted to be on vacation like a normal family.
They don’t give me my diet I am vegetarian, I don’t eat well, there is no good education and I miss my best friend julieta and my grandmother and my school I already want to get to my house.
Me in dilei [Dilley] am not happy please get me out of here to colombia.
Antonia”
Reporter Mica Rosenberg asked detainees whether their children would be willing to write letters or draw pictures about their experiences. One detainee gathered the letters and brought them out of the center when they were released from Dilley on Jan. 20. The detainee said the parents whose children participated were aware that the letters would be shared with a journalist with the intention of making them public. Afterward we reached out to the detainee who shared the letters and obtained, when possible, additional details like the locations where the families were living before they were detained. The length of time the children say they have been detained is as of mid-January, when they wrote the letters. Some of the letter writers have since been released; the status of others is unclear.
The post “I Have Been Here Too Long”: Read Letters from the Children Detained at ICE’s Dilley Facility appeared first on ProPublica.
A conservative researcher whose theories have often been rejected by Georgia election overseers and who once pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of voyeurism is emerging as a central figure in the investigation that culminated in the FBI’s shocking seizure of 2020 election records from Fulton County, Georgia, in late January.
The researcher, Kevin Moncla, has tried repeatedly to prove that the 2020 vote in Fulton County was tainted by fraud. Although many of his claims have been discredited or debunked, they’ve continued to be cited by President Donald Trump and those connected to Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election and publicly pressed his administration to reinvestigate it.
Last week, Moncla told ProPublica he’d been interviewed twice by “investigators, attorneys of various offices, who work on behalf of the U.S. government” regarding his claims that proof of fraud could be found in Fulton County’s 2020 voting records. He said he provided them with data backing complaints he’s filed to Georgia’s State Election Board.
Other conservative activists linked to Mitchell have also claimed that Moncla’s work helped fuel government investigations related to Fulton County.
According to a recording of a December video conference call obtained by ProPublica, two activists associated with Mitchell’s Election Integrity Network alleged that the Justice Department had used files and exhibits from Moncla’s research in suing Fulton County for the same records seized by the FBI. The DOJ filed the suit the day after purportedly soliciting Moncla’s materials, the activists said.
“They went to Kevin Moncla for that information,” Garland Favorito, a leader in the Election Integrity Network, said on the call. (Moncla denied speaking with Justice Department officials but wouldn’t say which agency he dealt with.) Favorito also claimed to have sent information to the DOJ himself.
“The DOJ knows who to call to get the information that they need,” he said. “I’ll be honest with you, they rely on a lot of our stuff.”
A spokesperson for the DOJ declined to answer questions related to the claims by Moncla, Favorito and Mitchell, instead referring ProPublica to televised comments from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche in which he said that the Trump administration is “investigating issues around elections to make sure we have completely fair and appropriate elections.” Blanche also said he could not comment on criminal investigations.
Mitchell didn’t respond to a request for comment from ProPublica, but on the day of the FBI raid, she pointed to information in a report authored by Moncla as the basis for the action.

“This is THE answer to everyone’s question, ‘why did the FBI raid Fulton County’s election warehouse?’” Mitchell wrote on the social media platform X, linking to Moncla’s report.
Favorito declined to answer specific questions, saying that he’d “had no contact with the FBI.”
It is not known what evidence the federal government used to show probable cause for the raid because the underlying affidavit was sealed.
Last week, Fulton County commissioners sued to unseal the affidavit, arguing that “debunked theories” from Moncla and Favorito had “supported the federal warrant.”
Experts said that if the affidavit was based on information sourced from the activists, it would raise questions about the raid’s legitimacy.
“If the underlying affidavit is based on thoroughly debunked assertions about unlawful activity, I think that is at least the basis for arguing that the probable cause does not exist,” said Danielle Lang, the vice president of voting rights at the Campaign Legal Center.
Over the weekend, the judge ordered the affidavit to be unsealed by the close of business on Tuesday.
The 263-page report by Moncla, published in early January, is part of a yearslong campaign by him, Mitchell and others to get access to Fulton County’s 2020 election records. He acknowledged that not much in the report is new, but rather a compilation of complaints he and the other contributors have filed to Georgia’s State Election Board over the past five years.
Many of the complaints have been dismissed by the board, after investigations by Georgia’s Republican secretary of state. Even when investigators have validated aspects of complaints, they’ve found no evidence of malfeasance.
In one high-profile instance, investigators reported that a small number of inconsistencies were “not due to the intentional misconduct by Fulton County’s election staff” but due to “human error in entering the data,” and that these “did not affect the result of the 2020 General Election Fulton County, which were confirmed as accurate.”
Moncla said he didn’t trust the secretary of state’s conclusions, calling him “a politician who doesn’t have any fucking credibility,” and said his own research proved the issues with Fulton County’s 2020 vote went beyond human error.
The secretary of state’s office didn’t respond to questions about Moncla’s criticism.
Trump and his lawyers have continued to cite Moncla’s claims about election fraud in Fulton County even as unsavory incidents in his past have surfaced and other conservatives have called him untrustworthy.
In 2004, Moncla pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor voyeurism charge and was subsequently ordered by a jury to pay $3.25 million in damages after secretly filming guests in his home bathroom.
Moncla told ProPublica the matter had no bearing on his election-related research. “That has nothing to do with this,” he said. “That was 20 years ago in a divorce custody battle.”
In a case stemming from the 2020 election, a lawyer for the conservative website The Gateway Pundit called Moncla “a goddamned fraud” and “a known fabricator,” according to a court filing. The messages were revealed in a defamation lawsuit against the website, which had accused two election workers in Fulton County of committing fraud. One of the site’s reporters had communicated with Moncla. The case ended in a settlement, the terms of which were not disclosed. Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani was ordered to pay around $150 million for repeating related discredited claims against the two election workers.
Moncla said people were free to examine his research and make up their own minds. “I don’t want people to trust me,” he said. “I want people to trust the county’s records and facts” and the report, which he described as “meticulously documented.”
Moncla said he’d been surprised by the FBI’s raid on the Fulton County election center, which he found out about via Fox News. He also said he thought his report was being “exploited” for political gain and that what he’s found shouldn’t be the basis for a criminal action.
“I’m not saying that Trump won the election. I’m saying that Georgia’s election system is broken and needs to be fixed,” he said. “I don’t want anyone to go to jail. I don’t want anyone to be hurt.”
The post The Conservative Researcher Being Linked to the FBI’s Seizure of Election Records in Georgia appeared first on ProPublica.
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