Files released by US apparently show Mandelson sending Epstein market-sensitive information while serving as business secretary
The Department for Work and Pensions has named 12 disability experts with “lived experience of disability or long-term health conditions” who will sit on the steering group of the review looking at the future of the personal independence payment (Pip), a disability benefit. Stephen Timms, the minister leading the review, says:
Disabled people deserve a system that truly supports them to live with independence and dignity, and that fairly reflects the reality of their lives today.
That’s why we’re putting disabled people at the heart of this review – ensuring their voices shape the changes that will help them achieve better health, greater independence, and access to the right support when they need it.
* Could we see a crunch point as soon as tomorrow over Mandelson?
* Tories have an opposition day debate - could they force a vote on Mandelson vetting disclosure. Shadow cabinet sources tell me they’re thinking about it
Continue reading...Karoline Leavitt claims Trump was referring to the Save Act and says he ‘believes there has been a lot of fraud in American elections’
Donald Trump has continued to sow doubt in the election system. While appearing on former deputy FBI director Dan Bongino’s podcast on Monday, the president called on Republicans to “nationalize the voting,” in at least “15 places”, although he did not clarify which ones.
“The Republicans should say, ‘we want to take over’,” Trump said in the interview.
Continue reading... | Need some help, just started happening last night when on a ride. I typically don’t have my headlight on because I like to be incognito so the issue could have started earlier. Any recommendations on what it could be and am I safe to ride it? [link] [comments] |
Officials said the aircraft was “acting aggressively” when it approached the USS Abraham Lincoln, which was sent to the Middle East amid renewed tensions between Washington and Tehran.
The House on Tuesday voted 217 to 214 to fund major parts of the government and end the partial shutdown. Follow live updates.
The Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington DC celebrated the birth of a baby Asian elephant on Monday, its first in nearly 25 years. The female calf was born to her 12-year-old mother Nhi Linh and 44-year-old father Spike
Continue reading...REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Feb. 3, 2026 — MinIO today announced the general availability of MinIO AIStor Tables. By unifying Tables and Objects in a single high-performance and Iceberg-native data store, AIStor eliminates structured and unstructured data silos to elegantly power any analytics, AI, and agentic workload at enterprise scale. With AIStor Tables, MinIO is demonstrating Open Table Format (OTF) leadership and is the first in the industry to build the full Apache Iceberg V3 Catalog REST API directly into the data store. The general availability of AIStor Tables reflects MinIO’s ability to commit and deliver innovation for customers, building on the September 2025 AIStor tech preview. AIStor Tables is now available globally and can be deployed across on-premises, private, sovereign, and hybrid environments.
MinIO AIStor Tables unifies tables and objects in a single enterprise data store built for agentic AI. By eliminating the silos between databases and object storage, AI agents can analyze structured and unstructured data together, operating on complete, up-to-date enterprise data at massive scale and performance.
MinIO’s integration of Apache Iceberg V3 API into AIStor marks a fundamental shift in how enterprises may more easily prepare and leverage data for analytics and AI use. With the AIStor Tables capability, Apache Iceberg tables become first-class citizens within AIStor itself—inclusive of Views and Multi-table Transactions. This ensures customers can consistently and securely store and query across more of their data ecosystem faster and more efficiently, and execute atomic multi-table transactions with simpler, industry-compliant catalog. Unlike AWS S3 Tables, MinIO AIStor Tables is included natively in AIStor—helping customers reduce list-price storage costs by up to 40%.
“Analytics and AI infrastructures are no longer defined by compute alone. The data layer now determines how much enterprise AI value can actually be realized,” said AB Periasamy, co-founder and CEO of MinIO. “When structured and unstructured data are unified, AI systems can learn more, reason better, and deliver greater impact. Only an object-native architecture like MinIO AIStor can make that data fast, fluid, and ready for AI at scale. With AIStor Tables, we bring enterprise data together in a high performance data store that feeds analytics and AI systems directly.”
The High Performance Analytics and AI Data Store Where All Data Lives Together
AIStor’s Tables feature is an on-prem and hybrid-capable breakthrough for enterprises building modern data intelligence stacks. Tabular data and object data coexist within a single data plane and security model, scaling seamlessly from small datasets to exabyte-scale environments. This architecture allows enterprises to treat all enterprise data as AI data, increasing its value when analytics, data science, and AI workloads operate on the same authoritative source.
AIStor Tables complements up-stack compute across warehouse, lake, and lakehouse query engines, as well as emerging AI agents. Enterprises can run analytics, data science, and AI workloads directly on the same data with predictable performance, consistent governance, and cost efficiency, regardless of where the infrastructure is deployed.
Object-Native by Design for Highly Performant Enterprise AI
Enterprise AI and analytics workloads demand massive concurrency, predictable latency, and the ability to support mixed workloads at scale. Traditional storage architectures introduce operational complexity and performance constraints that limit how efficiently data can be used across these environments.
MinIO AIStor takes a different approach. Built with a minimalistic, software-centric design, AIStor uses an object-native architecture to maximize flexibility and performance while reducing operational overhead. This design enables seamless scalability across edge, on-premises, private, sovereign, and hybrid deployments. With AIStor Tables, these object-native advantages extend fully to structured data, allowing a single system to support analytics and AI workloads end to end.
The general availability of AIStor Tables follows a highly active tech preview program that attracted strong enterprise interest in unifying enterprise data for AI and analytics. Early adopters validated the need for an object-native approach to tables that simplifies operations while maintaining performance and control.
“By running analytics and AI workload directly on the same data, MinIO AIStor Tables fundamentally simplifies how we build and operate data pipelines,” said Conor Brennan, Managing Director Risk IT at Nomura. “It allows us to move faster, reduce operational complexity, DR recovery process, and treat all our data as first class.”
MinIO AIStor Tables is available today as part of MinIO AIStor. Enterprises can download and deploy directly from min.io.
About MinIO
MinIO is the data foundation for enterprise analytics and AI. Built for exascale performance and limitless scale, MinIO AIStor delivers a secure, sovereign, and AI-ready data store that spans from edge to core to cloud. With rampant adoption across the Fortune 100 and 500, MinIO is redefining how organizations and government agencies store, manage, and mobilize all of their data in the AI era. MinIO is backed by Jerry Yang’s AME Cloud Ventures, Dell Technologies, General Catalyst, Index Ventures, Intel Capital, Softbank Vision Fund 2 and others.
Source: MinIO
The post MinIO Introduces GA of AIStor Tables, Unifying Enterprise Data for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.
| I inherited some belongings from a friend who moved out of the country, including this one wheel. I am trying to sell it on his behalf but I’m not sure what it is worth or how to assess the condition/mileage. Any recommendations on where to sell or what a reasonable price would be? [link] [comments] |
ClickOnThis writes: NASA has delayed the Artemis II launch to March of this year, after a wet dress-rehearsal uncovered a hydrogen leak. From the NASA article: During tanking, engineers spent several hours troubleshooting a liquid hydrogen leak in an interface used to route the cryogenic propellant into the rocket's core stage, putting them behind in the countdown. Attempts to resolve the issue involved stopping the flow of liquid hydrogen into the core stage, allowing the interface to warm up for the seals to reseat, and adjusting the flow of the propellant. Teams successfully filled all tanks in both the core stage and interim cryogenic propulsion stage before a team of five was sent to the launch pad to finish Orion closeout operations. Engineers conducted a first run at terminal countdown operations during the test, counting down to approximately 5 minutes left in the countdown, before the ground launch sequencer automatically stopped the countdown due to a spike in the liquid hydrogen leak rate.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nancy Guthrie was last seen on Saturday night and is believed to have been taken against her will
Officials in Arizona said on Tuesday afternoon they were no closer to finding the missing mother of Savannah Guthrie, the Today show host, three days after the octogenarian disappeared from her Tucson home – which detectives are treating as “a crime scene”.
Nancy Guthrie, 84, was last seen on Saturday night and is believed to have been taken against her will, Chris Nanos, the Pima county sheriff, said. Media reports on Tuesday said blood was found at the residence, and there were signs of forced entry.
Continue reading...Facility unites Laboratory’s quantum computing efforts under one roof
Feb. 3, 2026 — Los Alamos National Laboratory has formed the Center for Quantum Computing, which will bring together the Lab’s diverse quantum computing research capabilities. Headquartered in downtown Los Alamos, the Center for Quantum Computing will consolidate the Laboratory’s expertise in national security applications, quantum algorithms, quantum computer science and workforce development in a shared research space.
“This new center of excellence will bring together the Laboratory’s quantum computing research capabilities that support Department of Energy, Defense and New Mexico state initiatives to achieve a critical mass of expertise greater than the individual parts,” said Mark Chadwick, associate Laboratory director for Simulation, Computing and Theory. “This development highlights our commitment to supporting the next generation of U.S. scientific and technological innovation in quantum computing, especially as the technology can support key Los Alamos missions.”
The center will bring together as many as three dozen quantum researchers from across the Lab. The center’s formation occurs at a pivotal time for the development of quantum computing, as Lab researchers partner with private industry and on a number of state and federal quantum computing initiatives to bring this high-priority technology closer to fruition. Laboratory researchers may include those working with the DARPA Quantum Benchmarking Initiative, the DOE’s Quantum Science Center, the National Nuclear Security Administration Advanced Simulation and Computing program’s Beyond Moore’s Law project, and multiple Laboratory Directed Research and Development projects.
The center will also host the Quantum Computing Summer School, a 10-week fellowship program that connects quantum-interested undergraduate and graduate students with the theoretical foundations of quantum computation and the programming of commercial quantum computers. The Quantum Computing Summer School enrolls up to 25 students per year.
“I am thrilled to see these quantum computing teams coming together under one roof,” said Carleton Coffrin, quantum science coordinator for the Laboratory. “Each team is arguably world-leading in their specific domain expertise. An environment that fosters further collaboration and united effort will no doubt help our quantum computing teams achieve amazing things.”
Source: LANL
The post Los Alamos Forms Quantum Computing-Focused Research Center appeared first on HPCwire.
Considering a home purchase this February? Here are three critical questions to consider the answers to first.
Appropriations measure to let Democrats negotiate with White House and GOP leaders over Trump’s deportation efforts
The US House of Representatives on Tuesday passed a funding measure that will end the partial government shutdown, while giving Democrats time to negotiate with the White House and Congress’s Republican leaders over restrictions on Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign.
The Republican-controlled chamber approved the $1.2tn appropriations measure by a 217-214 vote, with all but 21 Republicans voting in favor and all but 21 Democrats against. Trump is expected to sign it, ending the shutdown that began after midnight last Friday, which halted many operations at departments including defense, health and human services, labor and transportation.
Continue reading...President claims idea to ‘nationalize’ elections in 15 states before midterms is to prevent rare noncitizen voting
Donald Trump suggested on a conservative podcast released on Monday that Republican state officials “take over” and “nationalize” elections in 15 states to protect the party from being voted out of office.
Trump framed the issue as a means to prevent undocumented immigrants from voting. Claims that noncitizens are voting in numbers that can affect an election are a lie. But it raises concerns about potential efforts by the president to rig the November midterm elections.
Continue reading...Gold prices have surged to historic highs in recent years and experts say the momentum is unlikely to slow anytime soon.
A 609 letter can help you challenge credit report errors, but it's not a magic fix for your debt. Here's why.
The massive merger is part of a plan to power "space-based AI," according to Musk.
Hillary Clinton will appear for a deposition on Feb. 26, while former President Bill Clinton will appear on Feb. 27, according to the House Oversight Committee.
Exclusive: Thames Valley police says it will review allegation that Epstein trafficked woman to UK to have sex with Andrew at Royal Lodge
British police are to review fresh allegations that Jeffrey Epstein provided Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor with a woman to have sex with at the Royal Lodge in 2010.
The woman has claimed she spent the night at the then prince’s residence in Windsor, her US lawyer, Brad Edwards, said after the allegations surfaced over the weekend. The woman, who is not British, was in her 20s at the time, and was later given a tour of Buckingham Palace, it is further alleged.
Continue reading...The seizure was announced on the same day that Colombian President Gustavo Petro met with President Trump at the White House.
Far-right leader was barred for five years after being found guilty of extensive fake jobs scam at European parliament
French state prosecutors have asked appeal court judges to maintain a five-year election ban on the far-right leader Marine Le Pen for embezzlement of European parliament funds in a fake jobs scandal.
If the judges decide to grant the request, Le Pen would probably not be able to run in France’s 2027 presidential election.
Continue reading...Linda Stevenson found unresponsive on 28 December after police responded to domestic dispute
The ex-husband of former US first lady Jill Biden has been arrested and charged with the murder of his wife, officials said on Tuesday.
William Stevenson, 77, was taken into custody on Monday and is facing a charge of first-degree murder in the death of Linda Stevenson, according to a grand jury indictment filed in Delaware.
Continue reading...Academic says risk factor is not sexual orientation but society’s treatment of sexual minority people
Life expectancy for people who identify as gay, bisexual or another sexual orientation in England and Wales was approximately a year lower than their heterosexual counterparts, according to the first analysis of its kind by the Office for National Statistics.
The life expectancy for men who identified as LGB+ was 1.2 years lower than men who identified as straight, at 59.4 years and 60.7 years respectively.
Continue reading...In 2010 then business secretary contacted Jes Staley, then at JP Morgan, about funding for £700m listing on London Stock Exchange
Jeffrey Epstein described Peter Mandelson as “devious” after lobbying a bank to underwrite a mining project launched by their mutual friend Nat Rothschild, emails included in the latest tranche of Epstein files suggest.
In April 2010, the then business secretary appears to have contacted banker Jes Staley, then at JP Morgan, from his personal email account in what appears to be an attempt to secure funding for Rothschild, Mandelson’s longtime friend.
Continue reading...Epstein files appear to show then business secretary passing market sensitive information to child sex offender
• UK politics live – latest updates
The Metropolitan police have formally launched a criminal investigation into allegations that Peter Mandelson leaked Downing Street emails and market sensitive information to the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Documents from the Epstein files released in recent days appeared to show the then business secretary sent confidential details of internal discussions to the late financier in the aftermath of the financial crash.
Continue reading... | Taking apart an older pint to turn it into a pint X and noticed the gasket was not in the groove and pinched and there was a fair amount of dust inside. I’m the first owner and have never taken it apart before. Nothing too concerning as I already ordered new gasket material before hand just thought this was interesting. [link] [comments] |
Alphabet is plotting to dramatically expand its presence in India [non-paywalled source], with the possibility of taking millions of square feet in new office space in Bangalore, India's tech hub. From a report: Google's parent company has leased one office tower and purchased options on two others in Alembic City, a development in the Whitefield tech corridor, totaling 2.4 million square feet, according to people familiar with the deal. The first tower is expected to open to employees in the coming months, while construction on the remaining two is set to conclude next year. Options in the real estate industry give would-be tenants the exclusive right to rent, or in some cases buy, a property at a predetermined price within a specific time frame. It's also possible Alphabet will not exercise the option to use the additional towers. If it does take all of the space, the complex could accommodate as many as 20,000 additional staff, which could more than double the company's footprint in India, said the people, asking not to be identified because the plans aren't public. Alphabet currently employs around 14,000 in the country, out of a global workforce of roughly 190,000. [...] US President Donald Trump's visa restrictions have made it harder to bring foreign talent to America, prompting some companies to recruit more staff overseas. India has become an increasingly important place for US companies to hire, particularly in the race to dominate artificial intelligence.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The brother and sister-in-law of Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein's most vocal accusers, are speaking out about the Justice Department's handling of the latest Epstein files release.
Moscow launched ‘terrorising’ attack on energy grid as temperatures reached -20C, Ukrainian president says
Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia on Tuesday of violating an agreement with Donald Trump to hold off from attacking Ukraine’s energy systems in the depths of a freezing winter, as its forces carried out large-scale airstrikes on Kyiv on the eve of three-way talks in Abu Dhabi.
Ukraine’s president said Moscow carried out a massive and “deliberate” attack overnight as temperatures in Kyiv plunged to -20C. It involved a record number of 71 ballistic missiles as well as 450 drones, he said, sent to destroy energy infrastructure.
Continue reading...Shahed-139 said to have approached USS Abraham Lincoln ‘with unclear intent’ as US warships head towards Iran
The US military says it shot down an Iranian drone that “aggressively” approached the Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea.
The Iranian Shahed-139 drone was flying toward the carrier “with unclear intent” when an F-35 fighter jet shot it down, US Central Command said on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Nvidia and Dassault Systèmes announced a new Industrial AI partnership today that aims to push the envelope in the use of AI and digital twin technology to accelerate innovation in the fields of biology, materials science, engineering, and manufacturing.
Dassault Systèmes is a digital powerhouse for product engineering. Its 3D computer aided design (CAD) and product lifecycle management (PLM) software is used by 15 million scientists and engineers around thew world. The company’s software benefits from the graphical processing power of Nvidia GPUs, and the two companies have been partners for decades.
Today’s announcement builds on that existing partnership, and commits the two companies to work together to bring new Industrial AI capabilities to market. Notably, the partnership calls for Dassault Systèmes to build new AI factories that combine its digital twin technology with Nvidia AI models. All of this, naturally, will run on Nvidia’s accelerated compute hardware.

Dassault Systèmes hopes to accelerate pharmaceutical research with its new Nvida-based solutions based on AI and virtual twin technology (Image courtesy Dassault Systèmes)
The goal is to combine emerging physical AI technologies with trusted scientific and engineering principles to provide a powerful new way to perform scientific research and engineer products, said Florence Hu-Aubigny, executive vice president of R&D at Dassault Systèmes.
“We are going to bring the factories of the future to life,” Hu said in a press conference on Monday, “and we are going to unlock the full potential of industrial knowledge through new ways of working.”
According to the announcement, to advance biology and materials research, the companies will integrate Nvidia’s BioNeMo models with Dassault Systèmes’ Biovia platform to accelerate the discovery of new molecules and next-generation materials.
In the field of AI-driven design and engineering, the companies are combining Dassault Systèmes “virtual twin” platform Similia with Nvidia CUDA-X and AI physics libraries to improve the accuracy of digital twins. They will also work to integrate Nvidia’s Omniverse physical AI libraries with Dassault’s Delmia software, which is used to automate manufacturing and operations.
Finally, the partners are also working to combine Dassault Systèmes’ 3Dexperience PLM and Industry World Models software with Nvidia Nemotron open models to give joint customers better modeling capabilities.
There’s a subtle but fundamental difference in how existing digital twin technology has been used in the past and how new the new AI-powered digital twin solutions that Dassault Systèmes and Nvidia are developing will work, said Rev Lebaredian, VP of Omniverse and simulation technology at Nvidia.
“The world foundation models that are being trained [currently] are being trained on information about what we observe as consumers of the world outside. So these are largely based on video and observations of the world after things are built,” Lebaredian said during the press conference.
“What’s missing is how the world is built, the information about that inside these world foundation models,” he continued. “These models are fundamentally different. They’re not just about how the world works after we built it, but it has knowledge about how we build the world.”
The new partnership also looks to leverage recent breakthroughs in agentic AI technology to help supercharge the abilities of scientist and engineers by giving them a team of assistants that can process information and augment their knowledge, Lebaredian said.
“By bringing [agentic AI] into the industrial space here, we’re effectively going to make it so anybody who is building and designing anything for the real world can now have a team of assistants that has deep knowledge about how things are built to help them,” he said.
“These kinds of abilities to build virtual twins, to simulate the physical world, have been restricted to a very small number of people who know how to operate and use these tools,” he continued. “The physical AIs, the industrial AI that that we are building with Dassault Systèmes will allow effectively every person eventually to be able to use all of these capabilities, not just the few small number of people in in in these niche areas in our companies.”
The post Nvidia and Dassuault in New ‘Industrial AI’ Pact appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 3, 2026 — Berkeley researchers have developed a proven mathematical framework for the compression of large reversible Markov chains—probabilistic models used to describe how systems change over time, such as proteins folding for drug discovery, molecular reactions for materials science, or AI algorithms making decisions—while preserving their output probabilities (likelihoods of events) and spectral properties (key dynamical patterns that govern the system’s long-term behavior).
While describing the dynamics of ubiquitous physical systems, Markov chains also allow for rich theoretical and computational investigation. By exploiting the special mathematical structure behind these dynamics, the researchers’ new theory delivers models that are quicker to compute, equally accurate, and easier to interpret, enabling scientists to efficiently explore and understand complex systems. This advance sets a new benchmark for efficient simulation, opening the door to scientific explorations once thought computationally out of reach.
Markov chains are widely used to model systems that evolve in time with some intrinsic randomness, from the folding of proteins to the spread of disease. But as the number of possible states grows—such as all the shapes a protein might take or all the reaction pathways in a chemical network—these models can become so large that even the most powerful computers struggle to simulate them. Existing simplification methods can speed up computation, but they often distort the system’s essential dynamics, making predictions unreliable. This has limited researchers’ ability to fully explore some of the most complex and important problems in science.
The Berkeley Lab team develops two complementary strategies to shrink large reversible Markov chains while preserving their essential behavior. The first, called projective compression, yields reduced models guaranteed to faithfully mirror the long-time dynamics of the original systems. The second, called structure‑preserving compression, builds a reduced Markov chain that follows the same rules as the original but operates only on a carefully chosen set of key states. Together, both of these approaches capture the system’s critical dynamics in a far more compact form.
To ensure the reduced models remain trustworthy, the team has developed strict and simple accuracy controls. They derived mathematical formulas to measure how closely the compressed version matches the original, relying on heretofore unknown connections between numerical linear algebra, probability theory, and complex analysis. These guarantees extend the applicability of a well-known mathematical technique called the Nyström approximation and use a modern optimization method—known as nuclear maximization—to select the best states to keep in the reduced model. In tests on complex systems, the approach produced models that ran much faster, retained essential dynamics, and were easier to interpret, bringing large-scale simulations within reach.
Co-authors: Mark Fornace and Michael Lindsey
Publication: An Approximation Theory for Markov Chain Compression
Image caption: Top: This diagram shows a mathematical path (blue arrows) through which researchers analyze how a system changes over time. The circles represent key numbers describing the system’s dynamics. The orange and green segments represent parts of the calculation that, in the limit, make no difference—allowing scientists to focus on the essential features of the system, for faster and just as accurate results.
Bottom: This illustration shows how a random process—like protein folding or a sequence of chemical reactions—can be broken down into repeating loops called cycles. Each colored mark along the line represents the process of visiting particular kinds of states. The red boxes highlight cycles where the process returns to a group of important states, while the blue boxes show a more specific kind of cycle returning to a single state. By mathematically analyzing these cycles, researchers can simplify and speed up complex simulations—while preserving what matters most about the system’s behavior.
About Computing Sciences at Berkeley Lab
High performance computing plays a critical role in scientific discovery. Researchers increasingly rely on advances in computer science, mathematics, computational science, data science, and large-scale computing and networking to increase our understanding of ourselves, our planet, and our universe. Berkeley Lab’s Computing Sciences Area researches, develops, and deploys new foundations, tools, and technologies to meet these needs and to advance research across a broad range of scientific disciplines.
Source: Linda Vu, Berkeley Lab
The post Berkeley Lab Advances Efficient Simulation with Markov Chain Compression Framework appeared first on HPCwire.
Charles "Sonny" Burton faces execution in Alabama for his role in a 1991 robbery in which a man was fatally shot, even though Burton did not fire the gun or witness the killing.
A day before Russian, Ukrainian and U.S. teams meet to talk peace, Putin's forces pounded Ukraine's energy infrastructure with dozens of drones and missiles.
U.S. Central Command said the drone "aggressively" approached the USS Abraham Lincoln as it was crossing through the Arabian Sea.
Through President Donald Trump’s first full 10 months in office, the cumulative U.S. trade deficit in goods and services was down 3.9% from the same period in 2024. His claim that he has “slashed our trade deficit by 77%” appears to compare the monthly trade deficit in January 2025 to the deficit nine months later in October.
Economic experts told us that Trump’s method is not the preferable way to measure whether the overall trade imbalance with international trading partners is up or down.
“[L]ooking at changes from one month to another is not a reliable way to assess whether the trade deficit is rising or falling in any meaningful sense,” Kyle Handley, a professor of economics at the University of California, San Diego, wrote in an email to us.
He said “[m]onthly trade balance figures are extremely volatile” and “reflect timing of shipments, energy prices, seasonal adjustment noise, and one-off transactions.” He suggested instead looking at trade trends over several months or, when possible, a full year.
On multiple occasions, however, Trump has claimed to have already reduced the trade deficit by a large amount based on just two months of data.
“We had the largest trade deficit in world history” under former President Joe Biden, “but in one year I’ve slashed our gaping trade deficit by a staggering 77%,” Trump said in Jan. 27 remarks in Iowa, for example.
In a speech at the World Economic Forum on Jan. 21, Trump made it more clear that he was comparing the trade deficit in one month to another, saying, “In one year, I slashed our monthly trade deficit by a staggering 77% — and all of this with no inflation, something everyone said could not be done.” The president highlighted the drop in the monthly trade deficit again in a Jan. 30 Wall Street Journal op-ed, in which he attributed the “astonishing” decrease to “the help of tariffs.”
He even predicted in a Jan. 20 White House press conference: “Next year we won’t have a trade deficit.”
To be clear, the Bureau of Labor Statistics says that the annual inflation rate has declined from 3% to 2.7% since Trump has been back in office, but it’s not at 0%. So prices are still increasing, just at a slower pace. His emphasis on the monthly trade deficit could also mislead people hearing or reading his remarks.
“The monthly trade balance has been unusually volatile this year, so I would be cautious about drawing conclusions from the data so far,” Robert Johnson, an international economist and associate economics professor at the University of Notre Dame, told us in an email.

In October, U.S. imports of goods and services exceeded exports by about $29.2 billion, the lowest one-month gap in trade since 2009, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The October figure was down roughly 77.3% from the $128.8 billion deficit in trade in January last year. That appears to be how Trump calculated the percentage, although the White House did not confirm that when we asked.
But Johnson said that deficits were “unusually large” in early 2025, between roughly $120 billion and $136 billion in January, February and March, because U.S. importers stocked up on goods to build their inventories before various tariffs on imported products that Trump had said he planned to implement went into effect. “Then, after the tariffs were put in place, imports fell back to normal,” producing smaller monthly deficits in later months.
“Whether this is a permanent change, or simply reflecting the drawdown in inventories, is too soon to tell,” Johnson said.
“If you just take the number from a month and you compare it to a number from another month, then you’re just introducing a lot of all of the noise that’s in the monthly data,” Monica de Bolle, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told us in an interview.
When the monthly trade deficit in goods and services dipped to a 16-year low in October, some economists attributed the decline mostly to an increase in U.S. exports of gold and a decrease in imports of pharmaceuticals. Meanwhile, BEA data released on Jan. 29 show that the monthly deficit nearly doubled to $56.8 billion in November, which would be a 55.9% drop from January – and would make the 77% figure outdated.
“Large month-to-month swings are common, even in periods with no underlying structural change in trade policy or economic conditions,” Handley, at UC San Diego, said. “For that reason, economists almost never evaluate claims about the ‘trade deficit’ based on comparisons between two individual months.”
He listed other measurements that better assess whether the trade deficit is rising or falling, such as comparing cumulative deficits within a year or year-to-date totals compared with the same period in prior years.
“On those measures, the claim that the deficit fell sharply in 2025 does not hold up,” he said.
As we noted, when totaling the trade deficit in each of Trump’s first full 10 months in office in 2025, from February to November, the most recent data available, the gap between imports and exports was $710.7 billion – a 3.9% decline from the same period in 2024. On the other hand, the trade deficit including all months from January to November last year was $839.5 billion – up 4.1% from the same 11 months in 2024.
Trump didn’t take office until Jan. 20, but to reemphasize Johnson’s point, there was a large trade deficit in the first quarter of 2025 as importers rushed to acquire goods ahead of Trump’s proposed tariffs.
Trade data for December, and thus all of 2025, should be published on Feb. 19, according to the Census Bureau’s release schedule. The largest annual U.S. trade deficit in goods and services on record was about $923.7 billion in 2022, during the Biden administration, according to BEA data going back to 1960. (The Census Bureau and BEA jointly provide this data.)
Although Trump may view a trade deficit as something negative, many economists don’t see it that way.
“A trade deficit sounds bad, but it is neither good nor bad,” Tarek Alexander Hassan, a professor of economics at Boston University, wrote in an April 2025 opinion post. “It doesn’t mean the US is losing money. It simply means foreigners are sending the US more goods than the US is sending them.”
The experts we consulted also told us that the trade deficit is unlikely to be eliminated “next year,” as Trump claimed.
“It is still the case that the U.S. is not self-sufficient in everything,” de Bolle, at PIIE, said. “It may be able to export a lot, but it still imports way more than it exports.”
She said on a macroeconomic level, the U.S. consumes more than it saves, and “that is going to translate into a trade deficit most of the time, not a trade surplus.”
Handley said to proceed “very cautiously” with predictions that the trade deficit will end due to tariffs, as Trump suggested in his Jan. 20 White House remarks.
“Trade deficits reflect saving and investment balances, exchange rates, and macroeconomic conditions, not just tariffs,” Handley said, adding that tariffs could reduce the exports of U.S. manufacturing firms by increasing the cost of goods imported for production, “and thus the deficit will not improve.”
He noted that most of the tariffs that Trump imposed in 2018 and 2019, during his first presidential term, applied to goods that American manufacturers imported for production purposes. “When their inputs got more expensive, their exports slowed down as well,” he said. “We are seeing those same dynamics right now.”
The last time that the U.S. did not have an annual trade deficit in goods and services was 1975. That year, there was a trade surplus of $12.4 billion, according to BEA records.
There is also the issue of whether all of Trump’s second-term tariffs will continue as implemented.
The Supreme Court is expected to rule this year on the legality of some Trump tariff policies. That will determine whether the tariffs remain in place in their current form.
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The post Trump’s Selective Comparison Overstates Trade Deficit Decline appeared first on FactCheck.org.
The man whom Jill Biden divorced for the eventual 46th President of the United States is now in jail on murder charges.
Apple might release its long-rumored first foldable phone in 2026, and the rumors continue to reveal potential hardware capabilities.
Mark Rutte and Volodymyr Zelenskyy hold joint press conference as air alert sirens blare across Kyiv
The EU’s foreign policy chief, Kajas Kallas, has been speaking as part of a panel on Arctic security. Kallas was asked if the EU was “too cautious” in taking action because of its dependence on the US for security, which has been exposed amid Russia’s war on Ukraine and the Trump administration’s threats on Greenland and erratic behaviour towards its longstanding western allies. Kallas, who has said Nato must “become more European” to maintain its strength, responded:
Of course, we are cautions because there is a lot at stake. There is a full-scale war going on the European continent and there are threats coming from economic coercion, big challenges from China that is influencing our economies.
If it is influencing our economies, it is influencing jobs and people’s salaries and then it is creating polarisation within our societies and more instability, so it is all very much interlinked.
Continue reading...
Days before the federal government falsely claimed cellphone-brandishing nurse Alex Pretti was a terrorist plotting a “massacre,” a jury in Chicago acquitted Juan Espinoza Martinez on bogus charges of a murder-for-hire plot against then-Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino. A recently unsealed court transcript shows the government used that case to bolster its claims about the dangers of “doxing” Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials. That pretext was used to convince a judge to obscure an ICE agent’s face during a public court proceeding when his name, face, employment, and location were publicly listed on his LinkedIn page.
As with its baseless claims about Pretti, the government presented no evidence supporting its proclamations that Martinez, a union carpenter, was a higher-up in the Latin Kings gang with the ability or intent to put out hits on Bovino or other immigration agents. The case against him hinged on ambiguous Snapchat messages that Martinez’s attorney called “neighborhood gossip.” But the Department of Homeland Security brought its allegations to the public long before it could be tested in court, repeating claims of bounties up to $50,000.
The transcript from a federal court in Chicago, which was recently released pursuant to a motion filed by law firm Mandell PC on behalf of local media outlets, shows how far the hysteria has gone. During an October 20, 2025, hearing in a case challenging immigration enforcement tactics, government lawyers asked for a private conference with Judge Sara Ellis to request the courtroom sketch artist not draw ICE Deputy Field Office Director Shawn Byers.
Government attorneys claimed that, in light of the alleged “bounties” on the heads of ICE agents, Byers had taken extensive precautions to disconnect his identity from his image online to protect himself. When the judge asked for details on the bounties, Department of Justice attorney Samuel Holt responded, “I don’t have all the details. My understanding is that I — I think it was a gang bounty.”
The judge cleared the courtroom and called Byers in to provide the details about the “threat.” Byers first claimed there was a $50,000 “bounty issued by the cartels on me,” along with $10,000 “for all my family members.” He also said the “credible threat” was out against “all senior ICE officials here in Chicago,” where Byers said he was the most senior ICE agent on the ground. Asked when he learned about the bounty, Byer said “It’s been about a week or so I believe.” Martinez’s arrest was announced two weeks earlier, on October 6; no other bounties were publicly reported in the interim. When the judge asked whether these threats were “directed specifically” at him, Byers seemed to walk his claims back, replying, “Well, all senior ICE officials. So it’s not just me.”
Byers also said he’d taken action to “limit social media exposure” and “reduce the footprint” to avoid his face being connected with his name and that even his appearance in court required “additional precautions.”
“You know, my name is out there. I’ve been doxed as — as recently as over the weekend,” Byers told the judge, according to the court transcript. “So my name is out there, but my name has not been connected to my face yet, so that’s what I’m trying to prevent from happening.”
Despite objections from opposing counsel that court proceedings (and courtroom sketches) should be public, the judge ordered the sketch artist to blur Byers’s facial features, concealing his identity. Ellis’s compromise, while likely intended as a good-faith effort to balance safety and transparency, nonetheless validated the notion that immigration agents operate under extreme risk, justifying extraordinary protective measures by our legal system. It also effectively brought the masks immigration agents wear on the street into the courtroom.
The judge’s compromise validated the notion that immigration agents operate under extreme risk, justifying extraordinary protective measures by our legal system.
Then, while Byers and other witnesses testified, someone apparently Googled his name and informed the judge that a simple search turned up his LinkedIn profile, complete with his photo, his exact job title, and his location in Chicago.
The judge called the parties back into closed session (it’s unclear why, given that the false reason for the earlier private sidebar had been exposed).
“I got to say, you know, I feel slightly foolish in trying to protect Mr. Byers when, you know, a simple Google search pulls up his name and his picture,” she said, according to the transcript. She also encouraged the attorney to advise the ICE deputy director that his name and photograph were readily available online. “If I could find his picture in two seconds with his name, it just looks a little silly to be asking the courtroom sketch artist to blur his features.” Being recognized is “the cost of being a public servant,” she continued.
The judge also said moving forward, she would “just be more hesitant to kind of obscure somebody’s identity,” but did not say she’d be entering any actual sanctions for the half-baked rationale used to convince her to censor the public record.
After some back and forth with the DOJ attorneys about whether Byers’s LinkedIn profile contained his actual picture, Ellis confirmed the profile for “Shawn B.” did when viewed by someone logged into LinkedIn. (A LinkedIn search for “Shawn Byers ICE” brings up just one profile for a Shawn B., who is listed as currently working as Deputy Field Office Director for ICE in Chicago. It also notes he is a 22-year veteran of the department and contains reposts about ICE removals in Chicago and a hiring notice for GEO Group, the for-profit prison conglomerate contracted with ICE, but no longer contains any profile picture.)
Since Byers’s manufactured emergency obviously wasn’t based on real concerns for his safety, what was the point of the whole sideshow? It was likely intended to feed the narrative that immigration agents face such grave threats that identifying them — in addition to filming their operations, following them to do so, tracking and communicating about their locations and other clearly constitutionally protected conduct — needs to be restrained. It’s the same fiction that primes segments of the American public to be receptive to claims that people like Pretti and Renee Good were threatening officers’ lives to justify their killings.
In January, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem scolded CBS News’ “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan for naming Jonathan Ross, the immigration agent who shot and killed Good in Minneapolis. She accused Brennan of “continu[ing] to dox law enforcement,” despite acknowledging that Ross’s name was already very public, citing unspecified attacks against his family. It’s far from the first time Noem and others have claimed that naming or videotaping law enforcement officers is improper, illegal, or even intended to foment violence.
These efforts to chill the work of reporters and ICE watchers have spread beyond immigration enforcement, as we saw from last month’s subpoena by the House Oversight Committee of journalist Seth Harp, which was accompanied by a criminal referral to the Department of Justice by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Republican from Florida. Harp was also accused of “doxing” for naming a Delta Force commander involved in the abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, an allegation backed up by unsubstantiated claims that the commander’s life was at risk.
The Byers ordeal is an unusually clear example of the current playbook being used to shield administration officials and their foot soldiers from accountability under the guise of protecting public officials’ safety.
The notion that naming public officials at the center of major news stories, who very often conceal their identities while carrying out unprecedented law enforcement operations on the streets of our cities, or that simply drawing their faces for the court record is “doxing” or otherwise improper, is a complete Trump administration fabrication. Still, the government is repeating it often enough that it’s warping the public’s perception of journalism. The Byers ordeal is an unusually clear example of the current playbook being used to shield administration officials and their foot soldiers from accountability under the guise of protecting public officials’ safety.
The next time this happens in court, the judge needs to demand specifics, with evidence, about whatever nebulous alleged plots or threats the government is pushing to justify secrecy. With comprehensive studies demonstrating their constant misrepresentations, nothing government lawyers say can be taken at face value. And when it happens outside the courthouse, the media needs to be similarly skeptical and not take the “threats” narrative at face value from an administration with a long, proven track record of misleading the public for its own political ends.
Judges also need to impose significant sanctions on lawyers and witnesses who mislead them, make them pawns in the administration’s anti-transparency objectives, and waste their time. Gently reprimanding them in private doesn’t cut it, especially when these false, alarmist narratives used in court are then being used to justify ICE killings to the public.
The post Judge Censored an ICE Agent’s Face Over “Threats.” His Info Was a Google Search Away. appeared first on The Intercept.
Four economists across Central European University, Bielefeld University and the Kiel Institute have built a general equilibrium model of the open-source software ecosystem and concluded that vibe coding -- the increasingly common practice of letting AI agents select, assemble and modify packages on a developer's behalf -- erodes the very funding mechanism that keeps open-source projects alive. The core problem is a decoupling of usage from engagement. Tailwind CSS's npm downloads have climbed steadily, but its creator says documentation traffic is down about 40% since early 2023 and revenue has dropped close to 80%. Stack Overflow activity fell roughly 25% within six months of ChatGPT's launch. Open-source maintainers monetize through documentation visits, bug reports, and community interaction. AI agents skip all of that. The model finds that feedback loops once responsible for open source's explosive growth now run in reverse. Fewer maintainers can justify sharing code, variety shrinks, and average quality falls -- even as total usage rises. One proposed fix is a "Spotify for open source" model where AI platforms redistribute subscription revenue to maintainers based on package usage. Vibe-coded users need to contribute at least 84% of what direct users generate, or roughly 84% of all revenue must come from sources independent of how users access the software.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Scheduling and financial impasses at Vancouver’s World Cup stadium are leading down a road the league hasn’t traveled in over a decade
On the surface, Vancouver Whitecaps CEO Axel Schuster’s press conference last week would have felt familiar to almost any North American sports fan. Once again, a team was agitating for more money or a better stadium. Once again, local governments were at least partially to blame.
Some of his comments, though, felt more alien, and raised a question that seemed unfathomable just a couple of months ago: are the Vancouver Whitecaps about to die?
Continue reading...The top sports streaming services for you depend on your favorite sports. We've analyzed the options, covering everything from the NFL and NBA to soccer and UFC.
A raft of online videos show parents serving up dinner without a single plate in sight, to the amazement of their families
Name: Dump dinners.
Age: Horribly new.
Continue reading...CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Feb. 3, 2026 — EPB recently launched a new Quantum Computing Fellowship to provide valuable training and real-world experience, equipping participants to develop quantum solutions that benefit EPB customers and our community. The program is designed to build a local quantum-ready workforce and support new, local job creation from the rapidly emerging quantum industry. Eight fellows participate in the program, which provides hands-on experience and quantum-ready skills.
“This critical investment in workforce development will prepare a highly skilled workforce to lead the quantum future and keep Chattanooga’s innovation ecosystem on the cutting edge,” said EPB President and CEO-elect Janet Rehberg.
Congressman Chuck Fleischmann (TN-03) has long supported EPB’s pursuit of quantum technology advancements, beginning in 2015 with an R&D 100 Award-winning project to use quantum networking to secure the energy grid.
“We appreciate the support of Congressman Chuck Fleischmann, who has championed East Tennessee’s role in advancing quantum technology to shape the future of national security, energy and economic competitiveness,” Rehberg continued. “This grant will support EPB Quantum’s work to develop a next-generation workforce and attract talent to our region.”
Quantum Computing Manager Paul Smith leads the Fellows program. Previously, Smith held leadership roles in technology and innovation at EPB, managing enterprise-scale systems and guiding teams through complex modernization efforts. With varied experience spanning software development, infrastructure optimization, and the adoption of emerging technologies, Smith applies his unique perspective to bridge traditional computing with quantum advancements.
The fellowship was established thanks to a $4 million National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) grant awarded in 2024 to accelerate the research, development, and workforce development of quantum technologies. The fellowship curriculum was developed in partnership with leading quantum platform company IonQ, which will also develop and execute a quantum executive education program and identify potential applications and quantum solutions for use cases that EPB and our community members can leverage. Last year, EPB announced the addition of an IonQ Forte Enterprise Quantum Computer to EPB Quantum Center in downtown Chattanooga.
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About EPB
Located in Chattanooga, Tennessee, EPB is a nationally recognized energy and communications provider with a mission to enhance quality of life for the people it serves across its 600-square-mile service area. Starting in 2010, EPB gained notice as a national model for building and utilizing its 100% fiber-to-the-home network to deliver cutting-edge services such as the world’s fastest community-wide internet, now with service up to 25 Gig, and the nation’s most advanced automated electric grid. As a pioneer in fiber optic innovation, EPB also launched EPB Quantum to provide access to cutting-edge quantum technology platforms and help innovators bring paradigm-shifting solutions into the real world. With the launch of EPB Quantum Network in 2023 and EPB Quantum Computing (coming in early 2026), EPB Quantum offers the most comprehensive, commercially available quantum technology platform in the U.S.
Source: EPB
The post EPB Awarded $4M Federal Grant to Boost Quantum Workforce Development appeared first on HPCwire.
HOUSTON, Feb. 3, 2026 — Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA today announced a long-term strategic partnership to establish a shared industrial architecture for mission-critical artificial intelligence across industries.
Combining Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Twin technologies with NVIDIA AI infrastructure, open models and accelerated software libraries will establish science-validated industry World Models, and new ways of working through skilled virtual companions on the agentic 3DEXPERIENCE platform, that empower professionals with new expertise.
“We are entering an era where artificial intelligence does not just predict or generate, but understands the real world. When AI is grounded in science, physics and validated industrial knowledge, it becomes a force multiplier for human ingenuity,” said Pascal Daloz, CEO of Dassault Systèmes. “Together with NVIDIA, we are building industry World Models that unite Virtual Twins and accelerated computing to help industry design, simulate and operate complex systems in biology, materials science, engineering and manufacturing with confidence. This partnership establishes a new foundation for industrial AI, one that is trustworthy by design and capable of scaling innovation across the generative economy.”
“Physical AI is the next frontier of artificial intelligence, grounded in the laws of the physical world,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Together with Dassault Systèmes, we’re uniting decades of industrial leadership with NVIDIA’s AI and Omniverse platforms to transform how millions of researchers, designers and engineers build the world’s largest industries.”
Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA Partner to Accelerate Every Industry
Dassault Systèmes, with its OUTSCALE brand, is deploying AI factories as part of its sustainable and sovereign cloud strategy. OUTSCALE AI factories will harness the latest NVIDIA AI infrastructure on three continents, bringing additional capabilities to operate AI models in the 3DEXPERIENCE platform, while guaranteeing data privacy, intellectual property protection and sovereignty of Dassault Systèmes’ customers.
NVIDIA is adopting Dassault Systèmes model-based systems engineering (MBSE) to design AI factories, starting with the NVIDIA Rubin platform and integrating into the NVIDIA Omniverse DSX Blueprint for large-scale AI factory deployment.
This infrastructure will power Dassault Systèmes’ industrial Virtual Twins using NVIDIA open models and libraries, unlocking new opportunities across biology, materials science, engineering and manufacturing:
The partnership elevates the existing collaboration between Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA to a shared long-term vision for how industrial AI will be built, validated and deployed at scale, through a unique combination of Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Twin Factories and NVIDIA’s AI technologies for all industries.
Global Leaders Build the Future of Industry With Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA
“Bel Group is building a sustainable food future through responsible formulation and packaging. Through the NVIDIA-Dassault Systèmes collaboration, we gain the computational power to model and optimize our products at scale-accelerating innovation while delivering on our sustainability commitments,” said Cécile Béliot, CEO of Bel Group.
“To address the growing complexity of modern manufacturing, the industry must move toward fully autonomous and digitally validated production systems,” said Motohiro Yamanishi, President of Industrial Automation at OMRON. “By combining NVIDIA Physical AI frameworks with Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Twin Factory and OMRON’s automation technologies, manufacturers can move from design to deployment with greater confidence and speed.”
“Lucid’s award-winning engineering and technology continues to set new standards in the automotive industry, and Dassault Systèmes remains a key partner, enabling us to stay at the forefront of vehicle and powertrain engineering,” said Vivek Attaluri, Vice President of Vehicle Engineering at Lucid. “Agility, speed of innovation and rapid iteration are at the core of our work flows, and our exploration of Virtual Twin AI-based physics, powered by NVIDIA’s open-source physics informed AI models, has the potential to help our teams move from concept to production faster than ever before, without sacrificing predictive accuracy. We look forward to continued collaboration and leveraging these new tools to support Lucid’s future innovations.”
“NIAR empowers the next generation of aircraft. From asset digitization through design and manufacturing creation and validation, Virtual Twin technology introduces unparalleled capabilities and efficiency. Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Companions for engineering, leveraging the 3DEXPERIENCE agentic platform using NVIDIA Nemotron open models and Dassault Systèmes Industry World Models, accelerate the by-design compliant synthesis of aircraft Virtual Twins. Using the platform to align the Virtual Twin to the means of compliance, reduces certification efforts while preserving sovereignty of the information,“ said Shawn Ehrstein, Director, Emerging Technologies and CAD/CAM, National Institute for Aviation Research, Wichita State University.
More from HPCwire: Nvidia and Dassuault in New ‘Industrial AI’ Pact
About Dassault Systèmes
Dassault Systèmes is a catalyst for human progress. Since 1981, the company has pioneered virtual worlds to improve real life for consumers, patients and citizens. With Dassault Systèmes’ 3DEXPERIENCE platform, 370,000 customers of all sizes, in all industries, can collaborate, imagine and create sustainable innovations that drive meaningful impact. For more information, visit: www.3ds.com
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.
Source: Dassault Systèmes
The post Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA Partner to Build Industrial AI Platform Powering Virtual Twins appeared first on HPCwire.
Caden Fine, 17, from Birmingham, Alabama, and two of his teammates were killed when their vehicle collided with a semi-truck in Canada.
The Democratic members of a U.S. House committee have released the findings of a report examining last month's fatal shootings in Minneapolis by federal immigration officers.
Successful shot would have made $1m for charities
Social media users say event was ‘dystopian’
The NHL has received backlash after slashing a donation to cancer research by $800,000 after a missed shot during a charity promotion.
The incident came during Sunday’s game between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Boston Bruins. Rob Higgins, the athletics CEO of the University of South Florida, was brought on to the ice to attempt a shot through a very small opening in an empty goal. If Higgins, who is a cancer survivor, made the shot the NHL said it would donate $500,000 to cancer charities; if he missed the donation would be $100,000. The event was broadcast live on Sportsnet in Canada and ESPN in the US. Higgins missed what was a very tough shot. He was then given another chance, with a guaranteed donation of $200,000 if he missed, which would increase to $1m if he scored. Higgins missed again.
Continue reading...Prosecutors’ announcement comes amid a hardening of European attitudes to social media firms
Prosecutors have raided the French headquarters of Elon Musk’s social media platform X and summoned the tech billionaire and the company’s former chief executive for questioning as part of an investigation into alleged cybercrime.
“A search is under way by the cybercrime unit of the Paris prosecutor’s office, the national police cyber unit and Europol,” the Paris prosecutors’ office said in a post on X on Tuesday, adding that it would no longer be publishing on the network.
Continue reading...A U.S.-flagged tanker heading for Bahrain was approached and threatened by Iranian gunboats in the Strait of Hormuz, a British maritime security firm says.
Investigators are combing through the house of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother, Nancy, in search of clues to the 84-year-old's disappearance.
AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 3, 2026 — FormationQ today announced the launch of a new applied quantum program in collaboration with the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. Powered by IonQ—the world’s leading quantum platform company—and its state-of-the-art trapped-ion quantum systems with world-record gate fidelity and all-to-all connectivity, the program will translate cutting-edge quantum research into practical, real-world applications while building an institutional ecosystem for long-term adoption.
The collaboration brings together the Cavendish Laboratory’s scientific leadership and FormationQ’s institutional and operational capabilities. The Cavendish Laboratory provides the scientific foundation, while FormationQ serves as the enabling platform and long-term operator, building the institutional pathways, governance, and continuity required to translate research into sustained real-world deployment. The program will leverage IonQ’s quantum technologies spanning computing, networking, sensing, and security systems. IonQ’s platforms provide participating researchers and teams with access to high-fidelity, scalable quantum hardware, enabling applied experimentation and system development that builds on laboratory demonstrations.
Quantum technologies are increasingly recognized as critical to science, security, medicine, and global systems. Yet despite rapid advances in research, adoption remains constrained by gaps in institutional readiness, business model innovation, workforce capability, and coordination across the broader quantum landscape. This partnership is intended to address those challenges by focusing on building the connective tissue—programmatic and organizational—that allows quantum technologies to move from laboratory discovery into credible, sustained use to address grand societal challenges.
Professor Mete Atatüre, Head of the Cavendish Laboratory, said: “Progress in quantum technologies requires strong collaborations and a constant dialogue between industry and academic research. This initiative, enabled by IonQ’s advanced quantum systems, is a fantastic step in this direction and will help turn our quantum research into practical solutions by bringing the community together.”
“Quantum’s bottleneck isn’t science—it’s the ecosystem,” said Nada Hosking, Founder and CEO of FormationQ. “Adoption demands scalable talent pipelines, interoperable institutions, and shared stewardship for long-term deployment. By uniting the Cavendish Laboratory’s scientific excellence, FormationQ’s operational backbone, and IonQ’s industry-leading quantum technologies, we’re finally constructing the bridges that turn today’s quantum discoveries into tomorrow’s practical revolutions.”
The partnership will launch the Quantum Technologies Accelerated Alignment Initiative, a two-year applied program focused on translating quantum research into real-world solutions through structured application development and institutional integration, while strengthening coordination across the quantum ecosystem. The initiative will concentrate on three areas: enabling reliable use of quantum computing systems beyond the laboratory, building and testing connected quantum technologies for communications and sensing, and preparing industry and society to engage with emerging quantum capabilities. Each area will be led by an academic expert and supported by interdisciplinary research teams, pairing clearly defined challenges with open, collaborative project development to ensure alignment with real-world needs, while contributing to economic growth and societal wellbeing in a responsible manner.
By combining the Cavendish Laboratory’s depth of scientific leadership and the expertise across departments of the University of Cambridge with FormationQ’s operational and institutional approach, the partnership aims to support long-term impact across research translation, workforce readiness, and applied deployment.
About FormationQ
FormationQ is the enablement layer for global quantum adoption. The company builds the institutional pathways and collaborative structures that allow quantum technologies to move from frontier research into real-world use. Working with leading institutions and technology partners, FormationQ operates and sustains programs that support talent development, application formation, and ecosystem coordination in ways that can be governed, trusted, and sustained over time.
About the Cavendish Laboratory
For 150 years, the Cavendish Laboratory has been at the forefront of scientific discovery. Its state-of-the-art facilities are open to students, researchers, and industry partners from across the world. It works at the frontier of experimental and theoretical physics to tackle some of the most monumental challenges of our times, from climate change and sustainability to harnessing the quantum revolution, transforming global healthcare, and understanding the origins of life. The Cavendish Laboratory is a place of pioneering physics, where world-leading research and teaching happens.
Source: FormationQ
The post FormationQ, Cavendish Laboratory Partner on Applied Quantum Initiative Using IonQ Systems appeared first on HPCwire.
While last year's Pixel 9A went on sale in April, the latest in Google's cheaper A series may be coming much sooner.
YouTube has confirmed that it is blocking background playback -- the ability to keep a video's audio running after minimizing the browser or locking the screen -- for non-Premium users across third-party mobile browsers including Samsung Internet, Brave, Vivaldi and Microsoft Edge. Users began reporting the issue last week, noting that audio would cut out the moment they left the browser, sometimes after a brief "MediaOngoingActivity" notification flashed before media controls disappeared. A Google spokesperson told Android Authority that the platform "updated the experience to ensure consistency," calling background play a Premium-exclusive feature.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nili Kupfer-Naouri and Rachel Touitou said to be accused of trying to block delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza
A French investigating magistrate has issued summonses to two French-Israeli nationals in relation to “complicity in genocide” over allegations they tried to block the delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza, French media have reported.
The summonses, which reportedly mark the first time a country has considered the blocking of aid “complicity in genocide”, were issued for Nili Kupfer-Naouri and Rachel Touitou in July, Le Monde and Agence France-Presse reported.
Continue reading...Information Commissioner’s Office to investigate whether Elon Musk’s firms have complied with data protection law
Elon Musk’s X and xAI companies are under formal investigation by the UK’s data protection watchdog after the Grok AI tool produced indecent deepfakes without people’s consent.
The Information Commissioner’s Office is investigating whether the social media platform and its parent broke GDPR, the data protection law.
Continue reading...There are still viable ways to earn a high interest rate on your money this month. Here are three to know now.
Reshona Landfair, known as Jane Doe during R. Kelly's 2022 trial, speaks to "CBS Mornings" for her first TV interview about her new memoir.
Cartoon lump of coal with giant eyes was spotlighted by US interior secretary in X post saying: ‘Mine, Baby, Mine!’
The Trump administration has turned to an unusual weapon in its attempt to resurrect coal mining – a cartoon lump of coal, complete with giant eyes and yellow mining garb, called “Coalie”.
The administration’s new mascot, kitted out with a helmet, boots and gloves, was introduced in a seemingly artificial intelligence-generated picture posted online by Doug Burgum, Donald Trump’s interior secretary. “Mine, Baby, Mine!” Burgum wrote on X, adding that Coalie will act as a “spokesperson” for Trump’s “American Energy Dominance Agenda”.
Continue reading...A new report from Realtor.com projects that the housing market will shift in a more buyer-friendly direction in 2026.
Exclusive: Trump endorsed national intelligence director’s sweeping review by sending her on Georgia raid last week
Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, is running her own review into the 2020 election with Donald Trump’s approval, working separately from a justice department investigation even as she joined an FBI raid of an election center in Georgia last week.
Her presence at the raid drew criticism from Democrats and former intelligence officials, who questioned why the country’s top intelligence officer with no domestic law enforcement powers would appear at the scene of an FBI raid.
Continue reading...Silver's dip offers a rare buying opportunity in a high-priced market, and there are ways to get it even lower.
For the first time, the top 10 cars on Consumer Reports' annual list of best new vehicles also include electric or hybrid models.
Lindsey Vonn, 41, said she ruptured her left anterior cruciate ligament, or ACL, but that she was still planning to compete.
Protein is essential, but it shouldn’t be your only focus. A balanced diet requires other nutrients. Here’s what you need to know.
PepsiCo said the price cuts are aimed at making its products more affordable as consumers struggle with affordability.
Pearson, Experian and others fall sharply after startup unveils software to automate a range of professional services
European publishing and legal software companies have suffered sharp declines in their share prices after the US artificial intelligence startup Anthropic revealed a tool for use by companies’ legal departments.
Anthropic, the company behind the chatbot Claude, said its tool could automate legal work such as contract reviewing, non-disclosure agreement triage, compliance workflows, legal briefings and templated responses.
Continue reading...The organization claims the report, which finds Israel’s denial of the right of return is a crime against humanity, is ‘paused pending further analysis and research’
Two Human Rights Watch (HRW) employees who make up the organization’s entire Israel and Palestine team are stepping down from their positions after leadership blocked a report that deems Israel’s denial of Palestinian refugees the right of return a “crime against humanity”.
In separate resignation letters obtained by Jewish Currents and the Guardian, Omar Shakir, who has headed the team for nearly the last decade, and Milena Ansari, the team’s assistant researcher, said leadership’s decision to pull the report broke from HRW’s customary approval processes and was evidence that the organization was putting fear of political backlash over a commitment to international law.
Continue reading...Springfield businesses are closing and families are making contingency plans for their children
Around the same time that Springfield, Ohio, and its growing Haitian community made national headlines in September 2024, the New Diaspora Live radio station moved into a sleek new studio in a co-working building in the city’s downtown.
Haitian-Creole speakers from across the country called in, sharing tips with fellow listeners and discussing life in Springfield, the Rust Belt city of 60,000 people in western Ohio where thousands of Haitian immigrants had moved.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: PayPal said on Tuesday it was booting its CEO and replacing him with its board chair Enrique Lores, sparing no ambiguity as to why: "The pace of change and execution was not in line with the Board's expectations," it said in a statement. One group that was blindsided was HP, where Lores was until Tuesday serving as CEO, according to people familiar with the matter. Lores' switchup sent them rushing to launch a search process, those people said. HP's board does have internal candidates which it's considering for the top job, according to a person familiar with the board's thinking. As chair of PayPal's board, Lores played a role in a process evaluating internal and external candidates. It was unclear when or if he recused himself from the final decision to name him as CEO. But HP's board was only made aware that Lores was taking the CEO role at PayPal in recent weeks, the people said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Even in the scale of global attacks on civilians and crackdowns on dissent, the magnitude of Iran’s violence against protesters stands out.
Unbroken: In Pursuit of Freedom for Palestine is a collection of writings by the Palestinian political leader, who has been held in Israeli prisons since 2002
A collection of writings by the imprisoned Palestinian political leader Marwan Barghouti will be published in November, bringing together prison letters, interviews, personal material and documents from the last three decades of Barghouti’s political life and incarceration.
As deadly attacks on Gaza continue despite a nominal ceasefire, the 66-year-old is seen by many as the best hope for a leader of any future Palestinian state.
Continue reading...Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey wants to eliminate the 15-year deadline to prosecute rape in cases where there’s a DNA match.
Current Massachusetts law bars rape prosecutions in older cases, even when DNA testing has identified a suspect.
An investigation last year by WBUR and ProPublica found that nearly all other states allow more time to charge rapes or similar assaults of adults than Massachusetts. Many of those 47 states extended their deadlines in recent decades as DNA technology helped solve old cases and as evidence mounted that police had failed to fully investigate rapes.
The WBUR-ProPublica investigation followed the story of Louise, a woman who had been raped and stabbed after accepting a ride in 2005 from a man who said he recognized her from college, a police report said. Although DNA testing would later connect a man accused of multiple assaults to her case, prosecutors had to drop charges in her attack under Massachusetts’ statute.
(WBUR does not identify victims of sexual assault without their permission. We agreed to identify Louise by her middle name.)
Healey’s proposal would eliminate the statute of limitations for rape cases when DNA evidence exists.
“With technological advances, new evidence is being collected and tested every day, and we need to make sure our judicial system keeps pace,” Healey said in a written statement on Saturday. “I hope this proposal will help survivors who have had to wait far too long for justice, while also improving our ability to hold offenders accountable.”
The new language is part of Healey’s budget proposal for the 2027 fiscal year. The provision must pass both chambers of the Legislature. It would take effect for cases in which the statute of limitations has not yet expired and future sexual assaults, but it would not affect older cases.
Legislators have tried to pass similar proposals every session since 2011, WBUR found, but those efforts have failed in part because defense attorneys have opposed changes, saying a longer deadline risks violating the rights of the accused. State Rep. Adam Scanlon, who has introduced legislation to create a DNA exception since 2021, said media attention helped push the issue forward again this year.
He said Healey’s “bill is really a testament to victims to ensure that folks that are in the same situation never have to go through the process of seeing somebody being able to walk away from an alleged rape when they know — when we know as a society — that DNA evidence connects them to that crime.”
That Healey, the state’s former attorney general, is backing the changes gives new hope for victims, said Louise, the woman featured by WBUR as part of its investigation. She was raped and repeatedly stabbed, a police report said. But DNA evidence did not match her assault to a suspect for 17 years.
“ There are several of us that have missed out on having justice. We won’t get to have that day when we know that our perpetrators are not going to get us,” Louise said.
Prosecutors alleged in 2022 that Louise’s attacker was a serial rapist. DNA from Ivan Cheung, a Boston-area man who worked in the financial services industry at the time of his arrest, also matched a 2006 stabbing and rape, court records show. But that attack was also beyond the state’s statute of limitations by the time the match was made.
Cheung has repeatedly maintained his innocence. His attorney did not reply to WBUR’s requests for comment.
Louise decided to advocate for survivors like her after Cheung’s prosecution failed. In June, she testified publicly before a state legislative committee in support of Scanlon’s bill.
She said she’s glad that the governor heard the voices of her and other survivors.
“I have beautiful family members, young women,” Louise said. “I care about all the youth in the community. I want them all safer.”
The post Mass. Governor Proposes Eliminating Statute of Limitations for Rape When DNA Evidence Exists appeared first on ProPublica.
The price of silver has noticeably changed in recent days. Here's where it sits as of February 3, 2026.
If you're looking for heart health supplements, these are the ones to take.
Conservationists find dunlin chicks thriving in boggy habitat created in collaboration with landowners
Deep in the Cumbrian Pennines, walkers might be lucky enough to spot small birds with spindly legs, long beaks and bodies like feathered balls hopping through the peat bogs.
These are endangered dunlins – at risk in England because their favoured soggy landscapes are drained and burned for farming and grouse shooting.
Continue reading...Josh D'Amaro, who oversees Disney theme parks and dozens of resort hotels worldwide, will become the next Disney CEO.
Vonn confident despite ACL rupture before Olympics
Will decide after testing knee at race speeds soon
Olympic downhill scheduled for Sunday at Cortina
Lindsey Vonn said she is “confident” she can compete at the Milano Cortina Winter Games despite revealing she has been managing a ruptured ACL, maintaining that her Olympic comeback remains on track after a crash last week raised fresh doubts over her participation.
Speaking on Tuesday, the 41-year-old American said she was approaching the final decision cautiously but remained focused on lining up for the downhill at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre in Cortina d’Ampezzo, where the Olympic women’s alpine programme opens Sunday.
Continue reading...Commentary: The high-profile Hollywood director created a studio dedicated to creating a "new cinematic grammar" built around AI. This is not a good start.
Former minister apparently shared confidential government emails with child sex offender and financier
Peter Mandelson has resigned from the House of Lords after a series of scandalous emails came to light that linked him to the child sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein, including ones that apparently leaked confidential UK government communications.
The move came as Keir Starmer said he had handed a dossier to the police after it emerged Mandelson had sent a string of emails to Epstein containing briefings he received as business secretary under Gordon Brown, including action the government was taking to deal with the global financial crisis.
Continue reading...NASA says it can't try until March at the earliest to send a crewed spacecraft on a flight around the moon and back, due to hydrogen leaks during testing of the Artemis II rocket.
President Trump says his administration is seeking $1 billion in damages from Harvard University after a published report said the school had won some concessions in ongoing settlement negotiations with the government.
A NASA mission is underway to map the heliosphere, which is a huge protective bubble around the solar system that was created by the sun.
The Climate Briefing: What does the EU’s CBAM mean for countries in the Global South? Audio thilton.drupal
Anna speaks to three experts about the implications of the EU’s CBAM for countries in the Global South: What are their main concerns, and what could be done to mitigate negative impacts?
The EU has introduced a Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) to prevent carbon leakage – when companies move production to countries with weaker climate rules, or when EU products are replaced by more carbon-intensive imports. But the measure has sparked controversy and concern, especially among countries in the Global South, as seen during COP30 in Belém.
This episode of the Climate Briefing explores the implications of the EU’s CBAM for countries in the Global South: What are their main concerns, and what could be done to mitigate negative impacts?
To discuss these questions and more, Anna is joined by Aparna Sharma (Programme Lead at the Council on Energy, Environment and Water – CEEW), Shimukunku Manchishi (Senior Policy Officer at the African Futures Policy Hub), and Ieva Baršauskaitė (Lead on Trade and Green Transition at the International Institute for Sustainable Development – IISD).
The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world.
You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify
Feb. 3, 2026 — Diraq has secured a strategic $20 million equity investment from the National Reconstruction Fund Corporation (NRFC) backing the company’s ambition to become the global leader in the development of utility-scale quantum computing and deliver its first product by 2029, a quantum computer capable of genuine quantum advantage.

David Gall, NRFC CEO, and Andrew Dzurak, Diraq CEO, standing in front of cryogenic fridges at Diraq’s laboratory. Credit: Diraq.
Diraq Founder & CEO Andrew Dzurak said, “We are at a pivotal moment where years of breakthrough research is transitioning into a commercial reality that will redefine future computing. Australia has always been a quantum powerhouse in the lab and, with the NRFC’s backing, we are ensuring it becomes a quantum powerhouse in the market. I’d like to thank the NRFC for its support, which is precisely the type of mandate the Corporation was created to fulfill. By backing Diraq, the NRFC is not just investing in a company; it is helping to building a sovereign, advanced manufacturing capacity that will allow Australia to lead the next era of computing.
“This investment arrives as Australia builds its strength in critical technology infrastructure, particularly within our booming data centre sector. Diraq’s quantum computers are natively designed to integrate seamlessly with existing data centers, offering a unique, homegrown advantage. By leveraging Australian quantum expertise, local businesses—from energy providers optimizing the power grid to defense and pharmaceutical innovators—can gain a decisive competitive advantage in the global market, ensuring Australia captures the full economic value of its inventions.”
NRFC CEO David Gall said, “Australia has the potential to lead the world in quantum computing and Diraq’s groundbreaking combination of silicon-based qubits and tried and tested semiconductor architecture will revolutionize the industry. Diraq’s growth prospects are immense, and the company represents the exact kind of high-value, transformative manufacturing the NRFC was created to support.”
Diraq is backed by global deep-tech investors including ICM and Quantonation, and has attracted investment from Australian superannuation funds Hostplus, NGS Super and UniSuper, in addition to Australian investors John Higgins Family Office, Taronga Ventures, Main Sequence Ventures, Co:Act Capital and Uniseed.
The company recently launched operations in Melbourne, in addition to its two hubs in Sydney, and has U.S. operations in Palo Alto, Boston and Chicago.
Main Sequence Ventures Investment Manager Alejandra Romero, said, “At Main Sequence, we look for ‘unfair advantages’. Diraq has the ultimate edge: they are the only players capable of putting millions of qubits on a single chip using the world’s existing multi-trillion-dollar silicon supply chain. While other quantum approaches require exotic materials or massive footprints, Diraq scales. The team has progressed rapidly in a few short years establishing partnerships with global technology leaders, including Dell and Nvidia, that recognize the opportunity and want to partner with Diraq to integrate the company’s quantum technology.”
Diraq’s quantum computers store information in silicon-based quantum bits, known as “qubits”. Diraq’s proprietary technology enables millions of qubits to be placed on a single chip, meaning Diraq is able to produce compact computers – minimizing the intensive cooling facilities required – and deliver practical quantum computing that is both cost-and-energy efficient.
Founded in 2022 and spun out of UNSW Sydney, Diraq currently employs more than 70 staff and PhD students in Australia. The NRFC investment will significantly grow the team with new Australian-based jobs in research, development, and commercialization.
More from HPCwire
Source: Diraq
The post Diraq Wins $20M Backing from Australia’s National Reconstruction Fund appeared first on HPCwire.
Trump administration is accusing protesters of ‘domestic terrorism’ but this brazen tactic is as old as the country itself
When federal immigration agents shot and killed ICU nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on 23 January, the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, wasted no time claiming to the press, without credible evidence, that Pretti had been engaged in “domestic terrorism”. Though the administration seems to be trying to soften that initial response after fierce backlash, it’s an accusation that members of the Trump administration have been leveling at wide swaths of people beyond Pretti – including Renee Nicole Good, another Minnesotan killed by ICE agents two and a half weeks prior, and Marimar Martinez, who survived being shot by ICE agents in Chicago in October – as part of an ongoing strategy to criminalize dissent.
It’s a claim Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents themselves have started to make directly in confrontations with citizens, seemingly to try and intimidate legal observers, sometimes known as ICE watchers. In one recent video from Portland, Maine, an ICE officer told an observer to stop recording him on her phone, and when she wouldn’t, he took her information down and said, “We have a nice little database … and now you’re considered a domestic terrorist.”
Continue reading...Uber Eats pits Bradley Cooper against Matthew McConaughey, and AI robots can't hold their liquor.
Adobe has emailed users of Adobe Animate to let them know the popular animation and game development program will be discontinued on March 1, an abrupt decision that has angered animators and game developers who say the tool remains an industry standard in television and game production. Animate, the successor to the once-popular Flash, is widely used for graphic creation, animation and building games in HTML5. The company has not offered a reason for the shutdown. On BlueSky, artist and animator Julia Glassman wrote that many television productions, games, and animated media still rely on Animate and Flash pipelines and cannot simply pivot to entirely new software.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Trump has prioritized fossil fuel companies over consumers, hitting the lowest-income families hardest
Donald Trump promised to cut energy prices by 50%. Instead, average electricity prices over the past year have risen by about 6.7%, while natural gas prices have increased by 10.8%. Energy prices are influenced by many factors beyond any president’s direct control, including market conditions, weather-driven demand, regional infrastructure constraints and the rapid growth of energy-intensive datacenters that are driving new system costs. Policy choices do not determine prices on their own, but they do shape market outcomes, and the direction of this administration’s energy policy has been clear.
From his first days in office, President Trump made clear that his energy agenda would prioritize fossil fuel producers over consumers. His administration moved to expand US liquefied natural gas exports, increasing exposure to volatile global markets. At the same time, it froze wind power projects that provide some of the cheapest new electricity, intervened to keep costly coal plants running, and backed the elimination of energy-efficiency tax credits that lower household energy bills.
Mark Wolfe is executive director of National Energy Assistance Directors Association, co-director of the Center on Energy Poverty and Climate and adjunct faculty at the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy at George Washington University
Continue reading...Letter comes after FBI executed criminal search warrant to seize almost 700 boxes of 2020 election documentation
Georgia’s Democratic lawmakers sent a letter to the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, this morning, inquiring into the presence of Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, at the scene last week of an FBI seizure of Fulton county election records from 2020.
The letter from Senator Raphael Warnock and representatives Lucy McBath and Nikema Williams asks “whether the Trump administration is investigating a legitimate foreign intelligence nexus, which would legally require immediate congressional briefing”. The group requested a briefing from the Department of Justice “concerning this activity and its related investigation by February 13, 2026”.
Continue reading...LOUISVILLE, Colo., Feb. 3, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing, announced research results from a collaboration with the University of Wisconsin–Madison that demonstrate a more reliable way to measure individual quantum bits, or qubits, without interrupting ongoing circuits. The work addresses one of the central challenges in quantum computing by enabling faster computation cycles while preserving fragile quantum states. This announcement follows Infleqtion’s plans to go public through a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X.
As quantum systems grow in size and complexity, the ability to measure qubits accurately and repeatedly becomes increasingly important. Conventional measurement techniques can introduce errors or cause information to be lost, slowing progress and limiting scalability. The results announced today show how combining precise measurement with continuous cooling can reduce these disruptions, allowing researchers to run computations more efficiently and with greater confidence.
“This work addresses a fundamental bottleneck in quantum computing,” said Dr. Pranav Gokhale, CTO at Infleqtion. “If you can measure qubits accurately without losing them, you can move faster, repeat measurements more reliably, and build systems that scale beyond the laboratory. That is why this result matters.”
Led by researchers in Professor Mark Saffman’s group at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, with sponsored support from Infleqtion, the collaboration delivered two key advances:
“High-fidelity, nondestructive measurement is a key requirement for scaling neutral atom quantum systems,” said Professor Saffman. “By combining measurement and cooling, this work shows a practical path toward faster, more reliable operation, and helps move these platforms from controlled laboratory experiments toward systems that can support larger-scale quantum computation.”
The full research findings are published in Physical Review Letters.
About Infleqtion
Infleqtion is a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing, powered by neutral-atom technology. We design and build quantum computers, precision sensors, and quantum software for governments, enterprises, and research institutions. Our commercial portfolio includes quantum computers as well as quantum RF systems, quantum clocks, and inertial navigation solutions. Infleqtion is the partner of choice for governments and commercial customers seeking cutting-edge quantum capabilities. Infleqtion announced in September 2025 it plans to go public via a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X (NASDAQ: CCCX).
Source: Infleqtion
The post Infleqtion and University of Wisconsin–Madison Show 99.93% Qubit Measurement Fidelity appeared first on HPCwire.
D’Amaro will take over next month from Bob Iger, who returned to lead the media company after a bungled succession
Disney has unveiled Josh D’Amaro as its next CEO, drawing a line under a bungled succession at the top of the global entertainment conglomerate.
Bob Iger, who led the media giant for 15 years, stepped down in 2020 – only to abruptly return in 2022 when his handpicked successor, Bob Chapek, was fired as the company came under pressure.
Continue reading...I’m sorry, but this is not just a political scandal. Time to refocus on the horrific mistreatment of women and girls, and the role of these ghouls
Like a lot of women, I do vaguely care about the latest political implosion of Peter Mandelson – but I think we’re all massively more obsessed with the fact that there really was a network of incredibly famous and powerful men trying to help a known ex-con minimise and wave away his underage sex crimes. Amirite, ladies? Sure, I’m crying my eyes out about some Gordon Brown adviser having his asset-sale memo forwarded in 2009 … but at the same time I’m a whole lot more concerned about the actual Sex Bilderberg. Which, even now, our eyes seem to keep being conveniently dragged away from. Can we refocus?
We are, naturally, talking about the Jeffrey Epstein files. Since the latest lot dropped, I’ve been collating the emails from extremely famous men who actively sought to help the since-deceased underage sex trafficker trivialise his crimes in the years after his jail release in 2009. Richard Branson, Noam Chomsky, Steve Bannon, Mandelson, Andrew (obviously) – all of these men offer strategic advice, or media training, or chummy solidarity. Or, in the case of Chomsky, all of the above plus a drive-by on the notion of female victimhood. According to text signed under his first name that Epstein sent to a lawyer and publicist in February 2019, months after the Miami Herald had run an explosive series of articles laying out the scale of Epstein’s serial underage sexual abuse and the perversion of justice that covered it up, Chomsky sneered at “the hysteria that has developed about abuse of women”. Wow. Never mind Manufacturing Consent – have a read of Not Giving A Shit About Consent. I thought Chomsky cared about power and exploitative elites? Still, nice photo of him laughing it up with Steve Bannon.
Continue reading...New US-owned app struggled with a storm and was accused of blocking content critical of Trump – can it recover?
Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m Blake Montgomery, writing to you from Doha, where I’m moderating panels about AI and investing as part of the Web Summit Qatar.
I want to bring your attention to the impact of a Guardian story. In December, we published a story, “‘A black hole’: families and police say tech giants delay investigations in child abuse and drug cases”, about grieving families and law enforcement officers who say that Meta and Snapchat have slowed down criminal investigations. (The tech companies contend that they cooperate.) This month, Colorado lawmakers introduced a bill to compel social media platforms to respond to warrants in 72 hours.
Elon Musk had more extensive ties to Epstein than previously known, emails show
Tesla discontinues Model X and S vehicles as Elon Musk pivots to robotics
What is Moltbook? The strange new social media site for AI bots
The slopaganda era: 10 AI images posted by the White House – and what they teach us
Apple reports record iPhone sales as new lineup reignites worldwide demand
South Korea’s ‘world-first’ AI laws face pushback amid bid to become leading tech power
Can you guess our screen time? A priest, pensioner, tech CEO and teenager reveal all
Continue reading...Whether it's called Clawdbot, Moltbot or OpenClaw, this AI assistant is taking the tech world by storm.
Samsung's buzzed-about new phone was tricky to get my hands on, but I'm excited to use it. Here are my ongoing observations.
This bulky, bizarre accessory for your Switch isn't exactly VR, but it is a lot more fun than I expected.
The 2026 State of AI Infrastructure Report, based on a survey of 600 U.S. IT and business leaders, reveals that infrastructure—more than AI models or accelerators—is now the critical determinant of enterprise AI success. As organizations transition from experimentation to production, four key pressures have emerged: rising infrastructure complexity, strained cloud environments, energy and cooling inefficiencies, and widespread skills gaps that slow progress and delay outcomes.
The report finds that 65% of teams struggle with overly complex AI environments, 93% are working to reduce energy footprints, and 54% have postponed projects due to infrastructure challenges. Cloud adoption is near-universal for scaling AI, and leading teams increasingly partner with external experts to build repeatable, resilient infrastructure strategies.
With actionable insights, benchmarks, and real-world data, this report helps technology leaders understand what’s holding teams back—and how unified, efficient infrastructure unlocks sustainable, scalable AI.
The post 2026 State of AI Infrastructure Report appeared first on HPCwire.
BOSTON, Feb. 3, 2026 — Zapata Quantum, a pioneer in quantum computing application and algorithm development, today announced that its patent for Quantum Intermediate Representation (QIR) has been granted in Canada, Europe, Israel and Australia, in addition to its earlier U.S. grant.
QIR is a hardware-agnostic translation layer that enables quantum applications to interoperate across distinct hardware platforms and programming frameworks. With global patent protection now in place, Zapata has secured exclusive rights to this capability, allowing developers to translate a program once into a universal representation, then execute it across any connected quantum hardware backend.
Core Component of Broader IP Strategy
As the only publicly traded, hardware-agnostic pure-play quantum software company, Zapata’s intellectual property strategy is focused on protecting foundational building blocks of the hybrid quantum-classical computing stack, not just individual algorithms. The Company’s portfolio includes over 60 granted and pending patents spanning key layers of application development, interoperability and deployment.
“QIR is the kind of broadly applicable infrastructure that helps make hybrid quantum-classical computing practical at scale so applications can move from one-off demonstrations to repeatable deployment across an evolving hardware landscape,” said Dr. Jonathan Olson, Zapata’s Strategic Advisor for Intellectual Property. “With QIR now patent-protected in major jurisdictions, we are well positioned to translate that leadership into durable, long-term value.”
QIR serves as a “universal translator” between quantum software and quantum hardware, enabling interoperability across a rapidly evolving ecosystem. Analogous to intermediate representations such as LLVM in classical computing, QIR allows developers to translate a program once into a universal representation and execute it across any connected quantum hardware backend, reducing fragmentation and simplifying application deployment.
Importantly, it also works in the reverse direction: a hardware provider that connects to QIR once can support many software tools and programming frameworks without custom integrations for each one. By reducing translation work on both sides, QIR lowers compatibility barriers and helps speed the path from development to deployment for hybrid quantum-classical applications.
Critical for Quantum Computing Evolution
As the quantum industry expands with many competing hardware approaches, standards-like layers such as QIR become increasingly important. This technology has motivated the ecosystem to collaborate on efforts such as the QIR Alliance, led by Microsoft, NVIDIA, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Quantinuum, Quantum Circuits Inc., and Rigetti Computing, to promote this standardized and interoperable framework for quantum programs.
Zapata views QIR as infrastructure technology critical to accelerating the delivery of useful quantum applications and ensuring they scale alongside advances in hardware. More broadly, these expanded QIR patent protections underscore the importance of clarity and consistency in how quantum technology is developed, adopted and commercialized.
“We’ve been pursuing a deliberate IP strategy for more than eight years, dating back to our origins in Harvard’s quantum computing lab,” concluded Sumit Kapur, Chief Executive Officer of Zapata Quantum. “By entering the field early and staying focused on software, we were able to identify and invest in foundational technologies like QIR at a time when few others were focused on the higher layers of the stack. That long-term perspective is now paying off as the industry shifts toward scalable, interoperable quantum applications.”
More from HPCwire
About Zapata Quantum
Zapata Quantum is a leading hardware-agnostic, pure-play quantum software company focused on accelerating quantum application development. With a portfolio of more than 60 granted and pending patents developed over seven years, Zapata supports applications across cryptography, pharmaceuticals, finance, materials discovery, defense, and more. The Company is the only organization to have participated across all technical areas of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking program and has worked with Fortune 500 enterprises and government agencies to translate quantum advances into real-world impact. Learn more at zapataquantum.com.
Source: Zapata Quantum
The post Zapata Quantum Receives Multinational Patent Grants for Quantum Interoperability Framework appeared first on HPCwire.
This silly $35 toy, available March 12, can dish snark, tell time and play music, but its conversations are strictly one-way.
Ring from Amazon offers a bewildering number of advanced doorbell models: Here are the picks worth your time.
An anonymous reader shares a report: By now, the Forbes 30 Under 30 list has become more than a little notorious for the amount of entrants who go on to be charged with fraud.[...] Gokce Guven, a 26-year-old Turkish national and the founder and CEO of fintech startup Kalder, was charged last week with alleged securities fraud, wire fraud, visa fraud, and aggravated identity theft. The New York-based fintech startup -- which uses the "Turn Your Rewards into [a] Revenue Engine" tagline -- says it can help companies create and monetize individual rewards programs. The company was founded in 2022, and offers participating firms the opportunity to earn ongoing revenue streams via partner affiliate sales, Axios previously reported. Guven was featured in last year's Forbes 30 Under 30 list. The magazine notes in the writeup that Guven's clients included major chocolatier Godiva and the International Air Transport Association, the trade organization that represents a majority of the world's airlines. Kalder also claims to have enjoyed the backing of a number of prominent VC firms. The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that, during Kalder's seed round in April of 2024, Guven managed to raise $7 million from more than a dozen investors after presenting a pitch deck that was rife with false information. According to the government, Kalder's pitch deck claimed that there were 26 brands "using Kalder" and another 53 brands in "live freemium." However, officials say that, in reality, Kalder had, in many cases, only been offering heavily discounted pilot programs to many of those companies. Other brands "had no agreement with Kalder whatsoever -- not even for free services," officials said in a press release announcing the indictment. The pitch deck also "falsely reported that Kalder's recurring revenue had steadily grown month over month since February 2023 and that by March 2024, Kalder had reached $1.2 million in annual recurring revenue." The government also accuses Guven of having kept two separate sets of financial books.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
How many of these chef-approved kitchen tools are you missing?
With masked paramilitary forces grabbing nonwhite people from the streets and shooting civilians with impunity, it can be difficult to keep focus on all the other ways Republicans are entrenching a fascist status quo nationwide. For trans people, however, the legislative and policy assaults, which have been escalating red states for nearly a decade, are only getting worse — and, as ever, drawing all too little concern from Democratic leaders.
Just last week, the Kansas legislature passed some of the most far-reaching measures to push trans and gender-nonconforming people out of public life to date. Bathroom bans that bar trans people from restrooms aligned with their gender identity have become grimly common; over 20 states have such a law on the books. But Kansas’s new anti-trans bathroom bill adds a dangerous twist: a bounty hunter provision.
The law would permit private citizens to sue and seek monetary reward based on claiming to encounter a trans person in the bathroom. That’s on top of some of the harshest punishments of any existing bathroom bans, such as criminal charges, steep fines and even jail time.
As journalist and trans rights advocate Erin Reed first reported, the bill’s vague language means that its reach could extend beyond public buildings — the remit of most bathroom bans around the country.
“As written, it would not only be the first bathroom bounty law to target transgender people directly, but also the first to extend a bathroom ban into private spaces,” noted Reed, “effectively creating the nation’s first private bathroom ban if enacted by empowering bounty hunters to search for trans people in bathrooms.”
The language of the bill, while vague, says that any person who alleges to be “aggrieved” by the presence of a trans person they encounter in a restroom facility can file a civil suit against that individual for “damages” of at least $1,000.
Kansas Republicans rushed through the bathroom ban, skirting public comment by essentially sneaking the bill into another piece of legislation aimed at denying trans people correct government IDs. The ID legislation is in and of itself extreme: it would invalidate driver’s licenses, government IDs, and even birth certificates that don’t list a person’s sex as assigned at birth.
The bill would require trans people to surrender their correctly identifying driver’s license or risk a misdemeanor offense for driving with a invalid license. Trans Kansans would thus have to choose between carrying identification with their assigned sex at birth — inviting potentially further harassment and violence in public — or forgoing aspects of public life entirely. It’s a policy in line with the Trump administration’s move to stop issuing accurate passports to trans Americans.
The aim is to produce a climate of distrust and terror.
The bathroom bounty hunter ban was then layered on top of the ID law in a so-called “gut and go” maneuver.
The twin bills passed both the state House and Senate with over two-thirds of the vote, given the significant Republican majority — enough to override a veto from Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly.
“Transgender people are already vulnerable to violence, especially in restrooms, and this bill layers prospective physical violence on top of the existing privacy violation of forced changes to identification documents,” said Logan DeMond, director of policy and research at the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, in a statement.
The fondness of Trumpian Republicans for bounty hunter laws comes as no surprise, recalling the dark legacies of Fugitive Slave Act laws and Jim Crow civilian surveillance. Now, whether criminalizing abortions, rounding up immigrants, or policing gender expression, far-right leaders and think tanks embrace vigilante violence as a key mechanism of enforcement. The aim is to produce a climate of distrust and terror.
Anti-trans zealots have been harassing people they believe to be trans — including multiple incidents involving cis women — even without the promise of financial payoff. The Kansas legislation only “turbocharges,” as Reed put it, the violent policing of access to public life.
“I have sat here for five and a half hours and listened to this entire room debate my humanity and my ability to participate in the most basic functions of society,” said Kansas Democratic state Rep. Abi Boatman, who is the only trans lawmaker in the state, when the new legislation was debated. “I hope none of you have to ever sit through something like that.”
It should not need repeating that it is trans people who overwhelmingly face harassment and violence in bathroom facilities; the framing of bathroom bills as a question of cis women’s safety has always been a bunk excuse to enforce gender conformism. It should also be obvious that any laws encouraging the surveillance and control of our bodies, particularly with women’s bodies as the site of paranoiac anti-trans obsession, make all women less safe. And as with any such laws, it is always Black trans and cis women who face the worst scrutiny.
We should not forget that just one decade ago, the Christian far-right groups that pushed the first round of model bathroom bills into statehouses largely failed. Politicians faced huge public backlash; the state of North Carolina faced massive boycotts in response to its 2016 bathroom bill. But conservative think tanks got to work, refocused manipulative messaging around children and women’s sports, and astroturfed the issue to activate the right-wing base. In the following years, anti-trans legislation swept through statehouses.
All the while, far too many Democratic leaders, like the serpentine California Gov. Gavin Newsom, have been willing to throw trans people under the bus. While bathroom bills have been the preserve of Republican-led states, Democrats with national standing have roundly failed in supporting the sort of pressure campaigns that gave state lawmakers pause for thought 10 years ago. Bathroom bans now abound, and 27 states have enacted laws or policies restricting or banning gender-affirming medical care for trans youth.
Within such a context, there’s little wonder that legislation is only becoming harsher and crueler. And while the attack on trans existence is part of a longer history of Christian right pro-natalism and attacks on bodily autonomy, it is not so long ago that public pressure made attacks on trans rights a political liability.
It is our responsibility to make it so again — particularly for Democrats claiming to represent a united anti-fascist front. And, above all, to ensure we support community-based networks working in solidarity with trans adults and children around the country so that they can have health care, work, learn, socialize, and share in public life without scrutiny or challenge. These are the minimal conditions for freedom — apparently too much to ask for some Democrats.
The post An Anti-Trans Bathroom Bill With a Cruel New Twist appeared first on The Intercept.
What Trump wants from Iran talks – and what Tehran is prepared to give Expert comment thilton.drupal
Iran’s nuclear programme, missile arsenal, militia network and crackdown on protesters could all feature in upcoming negotiations in Turkey.
US President Donald Trump has repeatedly said he prefers to make a deal with Iran over going to war. But what’s not clear is what type of deal he is willing to accept – or what compromises the Iranians are willing to make.
At the time of writing, the two sides agreed to negotiate and meet in Turkey on Friday, 6 December. US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi will meet in Istanbul, along with representatives from Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Reuters reported.
Common sense suggests that the more maximalist Trump’s demands are, the less likely Tehran will concede. In this case, military confrontation therefore becomes more likely. On the other hand, the more flexible Trump is, the more likely Tehran will cooperate and as a result, war becomes less likely.
So, what exactly is Trump asking for?
In May of last year, Trump said he would accept nothing less than the ‘total dismantlement’ of Iran’s nuclear programme. Last week, however, he said ‘NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS.’ But those are two very different things.
Every American president since George W. Bush has warned Iran against acquiring the bomb. If that is what Trump is seeking, then Tehran will happily bargain, lie, and conceal – as it always has – to avoid facing a far superior US military machine. It might give up its highly enriched nuclear material, but in return, keep its programme intact, essentially buying itself time until Trump leaves power so it can resume enrichment.
But if Trump insists on Iran terminating all of its nuclear programme, then Tehran most probably will not agree. This is not only because it has put in a lot of effort, time, and money into building its nuclear programme.
It’s also because for Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, it will look like surrendering to the Americans, whom he views (just like his predecessor Khomeini did) as the ‘Great Satan.’ If it comes down to it, Khamenei might decide to take his chances by fighting (and hope Trump doesn’t finish off the regime, given his aversion to open-ended wars) rather than signing a capitulation agreement with his arch-enemy.
The nuclear programme is not the only important issue at play. Iran’s missile arsenal and its regional militia network will also likely feature in negotiations. And there are also the freedom aspirations of the Iranian people, especially in the light of the regime’s recent crackdown on protests.
At first, Trump seemed to show care for the protesters, threatening to bomb Iran if the regime didn’t stop killing them. But now, his focus seems to have shifted. That shouldn’t be shocking, though. The harsh reality is that human rights in Iran have not been the priority for Trump or any American president before him when dealing with the Islamic Republic. The priority has always been security.
On Iran’s missiles, about which Israel and the Gulf Arab states worry a lot, it’s even more complicated than the nuclear programme. It’s doubtful, if not inconceivable, that Iran will give up the only shield that’s preventing its adversaries from toppling its regime.
The bargaining range on the nuclear programme is wider than it is on the missiles, on which Khamenei and his generals are unlikely to make any concessions. Similar to his logic on totally giving up the nuclear programme, Khamenei might as well use those missiles in a war for survival instead of giving them up and thus making Iran especially vulnerable to future attacks.
The biggest space for bargaining, perhaps, is on Tehran’s regional proxies. Those actors – the Lebanese Hezbollah, the Yemeni Houthis, the Iraqi militias, and the Palestinian Hamas and Islamic Jihad – are important tools for Iran to project power. But unlike the missiles and the nuclear programme, they’re not existential issues over which Tehran can’t negotiate.
Former CNN anchor faces charges over coverage of an anti-ICE protest that disrupted a Minnesota church service.
Don Lemon says about a dozen federal agents came to his Los Angeles hotel to arrest him overnight on 30 January, even though the former CNN anchor’s attorney had told authorities he would turn himself in to face federal civil rights charges over his coverage of an anti-immigration enforcement protest that disrupted a Minnesota church service.
Lemon on Monday told the ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel that sending the agents was a waste of resources because law enforcement would not have had to dispatch agents to follow him if he had been allowed to surrender to authorities.
Continue reading...New England have won six Super Bowl titles
2026 class will be announced later this week
New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft has reportedly joined his team’s former head coach Bill Belichick in missing out on this year’s Hall of Fame class.
ESPN cited several league sources, who said that Kraft did not receive the necessary number of votes to enter the Hall. The new members of the Hall of Fame will be revealed on Thursday night, in the run-up to this weekend’s Super Bowl.
Continue reading...Austin Appelbee is being hailed as a hero after he rescued his family. “I couldn’t feel how tired I was,” the 13-year-old said of his hours-long feat.
Evaluation of the Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction
This project examines the accomplishments, effectiveness and efficiency of the partnership and its work.
LToremarkWith the ongoing geopolitical tensions and rapid technological evolution, there is a broad acknowledgement of the need to understand whether international initiatives remain fit for purpose in preventing the spread and misuse of chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) weapons and materials.
The Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction (GP) was established at the 2002 G7 Kananaskis Summit, drawing on post–Cold War initiatives and catalysed by the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks. Over 22 years, the GP has provided a platform for partners to fund, coordinate and deliver non proliferation projects on the ground. It began by supporting cooperative projects primarily in Russia, focused on non-proliferation, disarmament and nuclear safety. From 2014, biosecurity moved up the agenda, and since 2021 the GP has broadened its focus to include biological risk reduction in Africa, revitalised efforts to minimise highly enriched uranium (HEU), support to Ukraine in countering CBRN threats and advancing information-sharing and counter-disinformation initiatives.
Understanding the GP’s effectiveness, challenges and how it can evolve is essential for future global CBRN security.
The Global Health Programme and International Security Programme are working together to examine the accomplishments, effectiveness and efficiency of the GP and its work, lessons for the partnership’s programme of work and the way it functions, and the challenges and opportunities it faces going forward in its role as a cornerstone of international cooperation and coordination to counter CBRN threats.
This project is funded by the Weapons Threat Reduction Program of Global Affairs Canada and the UK’s International Biological Security Programme.
Don Lemon says he offered to turn himself in to face charges over his coverage of a protest at a church but federal agents were sent for him anyway.
Many Super Bowl 60 ads are already online, along with teasers for commercials that will be unveiled during the NFL championship on Feb. 8.
The president said he persuaded Russia’s Vladimir Putin to stop striking Ukraine’s energy grid during a frigid period, but missiles fell on Kyiv hours later.
ITV Sport opts for studio in Brooklyn
BBC will stay in UK until at least quarter-finals
ITV has gained an early advantage over the BBC before their ratings battle at this summer’s World Cup by securing a studio in Brooklyn with views of the Manhattan skyline and Brooklyn Bridge. ITV Sport will be basing all of its World Cup coverage, to be presented by Mark Pougatch and Laura Woods, from its New York studio, whereas the BBC team of Mark Chapman, Gabby Logan and Kelly Cates will be in Salford until at least the quarter-finals.
The BBC’s decision to stay in the United Kingdom was based on a combination of financial and environmental factors, with the corporation committed to limiting air travel in an attempt to reduce its carbon footprint.
Continue reading...Erin Jackson is the first Black woman to win an individual gold medal at a Winter Olympics. Frank Del Duca is the first bobsledder in 70 years to carry the U.S. flag.
The best 55-inch TVs give you the most bang for your buck and are perfect for a smaller room or as a gaming TV. See our top picks from Samsung, Roku and more.
Apple's reportedly releasing a lower-priced iPhone 17, and it might offer notable improvements over last year's iPhone 16E.
How To Train Your Dragon, Tyler Perry's Joe's College Road Trip and The Black Phone are a few of the newest titles arriving on Netflix this month.
The stepson of Crown Prince Haakon is accused of 38 offenses, including four counts of rape, domestic violence, assault and drug possession between 2018 and late 2024.
Chagossian people would be allowed to fish in area that has teemed with life since ban was introduced in 2010
One of the most precious marine reserves in the world, home to sharks, turtles and rare tropical fish, will be opened to some fishing for the first time in 16 years under the UK government’s deal to hand back the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.
Allowing non-commercial fishing in the marine protected area (MPA) is seen as an essential part of the Chagossian people’s return to the islands, as the community previously relied on fishing as their main livelihood. But some conservationists have raised the alarm, as nature has thrived in the waters of the Indian Ocean since it was protected from fishing.
Continue reading...Artemis II mission was due to begin as early as next week and astronauts have spent almost two weeks in quarantine
Nasa has postponed its historic mission to send astronauts around the moon and back again, after issues arose during a critical test of its most powerful rocket yet.
The US space agency had planned to launch the Artemis II mission from Kennedy Space Center in Florida as early as next week, but announced overnight that it would be delayed until March, without specifying a date.
Continue reading...French officials search X's office in Paris and ask Elon Musk to answer questions about the platform amid a probe into its algorithms and AI functions.
Apple's streamer is chock-full of must-watch shows.
Picking favorites isn't easy, but after months of wearing both, it's clear they each have their strengths.
Modern refrigerators use far less electricity than their predecessors. I did the math to see how much a new model saves compared with a 10-year-old fridge.
So-called ‘reactionary centrist’ pundits proclaimed that there was a global ‘vibe shift’ in favor of the right. They were wrong
Recent exercises in taking stock after one year of Trump 2.0 – for many an eternity of terrifying news and political traumas – tended to leave something out: the fact that, a mere 12 months ago, plenty of pundits (and politicians, for that matter) were instructing us to accept that a global “vibe shift” in favor of the right had taken place. And that, in the face of what supposedly “felt” like a landslide, resistance was pointless and “cringe”.
Well, it doesn’t feel like that today. But understanding why observers not generally in the pro-Trump propaganda business rushed to portray the spirit of the age as effectively far-right is important. A way of thinking occasionally dubbed “reactionary centrism” plays an important role; it could yet again become influential in hindering or at least holding up post-Trump radical reforms which US democracy desperately requires.
Jan-Werner Müller is a Guardian US columnist and a professor of politics at Princeton University
Continue reading...A burgeoning set of Muslim creatives and intellectuals are thriving amid the backdrop of Zohran Mamdani’s rise. We ask 18 of them about this historic moment in New York City life
Against the backdrop of Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral rise is a dynamic scene of Muslim creatives and intellectuals who are helping usher in a new era for New York City. Their prominence represents a rebuke of the ugly Islamophobia that defined the period following 9/11, and is in many ways an outcrop of the mass movement for Palestinian rights forged over the last two years. We ask 18 Muslim New Yorkers to discuss their work and what this moment means.
How Muslim New Yorkers are changing the city’s cultural landscape
From the election of Zohran Mamdani to buzzy restaurants and nightlife, Muslim New Yorkers are creating a growing imprint on the city
Real power in America is often built at dinner tables. That adage is particularly relevant to the past few years in New York City, where Muslims and non-Muslims have come together at Iftar and Eid events, marking the moment and reimagining traditions. In Chinatown lofts and Bushwick studios, Muslim artists and writers have gathered to pass around plates of papri chaat and basboosa. Some of these dinners have made the pages of Vogue and glowing New Yorker write-ups. The New York Times even described Eid morning prayers in Washington Square Park as the “Muslim Met Gala”.
At one Eid al-Fitr event in Bushwick last April, the guest list featured hosts Ramy Youssef, Hasan Minhaj and Zara Rahim, and guests such as Kareem Rahma, Rashid Khalidi, Cynthia Nixon and David Byrne, among others. After dinner, Zohran Mamdani – who was still an outside bet and yet to secure the Democratic nomination for New York City mayor – took the mic. “New York City is at a historic crossroads. Does it want to look to the future,” he asked, “or look to the past?” Six months later, the question was answered resoundingly.
Continue reading...Despite the Galaxy Z TriFold's eye-watering $2,900 debut, this could finally be the year of the foldable iPhone and a wave of other exciting smartphones.
Chuck Negron, a founding member of Three Dog Night whose lead vocals powered a string of hits for one of the top rock acts of the late 1960s and early '70s has died. He was 83.
The original Switch is officially Nintendo's best-selling console of all time after surpassing the DS handheld in lifetime sales. From a report: In its latest earnings release, Nintendo reports that the Nintendo Switch has, as of December 31, 2025, sold 155.37 million units since its launch in 2017, compared to 154.02 million units for the 2004 Nintendo DS. In November, Nintendo reported that the Switch and DS were neck and neck. We expected the holiday sales period would see the Switch surpass the DS, even with Nintendo announcing that primary development would focus on the Switch 2. Nintendo previously said that it would continue to sell the original Switch "while taking consumer demand and the business environment into consideration." Nintendo has to keep selling the Switch if it wants to dethrone Sony's PlayStation 2 as the best-selling video game console of all time. The PlayStation 2, discontinued in January 2013, sold more than 160 million units over its 13-year lifespan.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
"The waves are massive and I have no life jacket on. … I just kept thinking 'just keep swimming, just keep swimming,'" Austin Appelbee said.
Marius Borg Høiby, 29, pleads not guilty to most serious charges in trial that has embarrassed the royal family
The son of Norway’s crown princess has pleaded not guilty to four counts of rape on the first day of his trial for multiple offences, a legal saga that has embarrassed the royal family and raised questions over domestic abuse in Norway.
Appearing in front of a packed courtroom at Oslo district court on Tuesday morning, Marius Borg Høiby also denied charges including abuse in close relationships and filming women’s genitals without their knowledge.
Continue reading...The Hennepin County sheriff is considering whether to notify ICE before releasing people accused of the "worst of the worst" crimes — murder, rape and violent felonies.
The Flashback looks, feels and even works like an old-school disposable film camera, except it's digital with a unique, retro experience.
Kareem’s Daily Quote: Whether it’s a small bundle or a small package…does it sound familiar?
Sheikh Yer Booty: (And by booty, I mean cash.)
The Mad Makeover King Strikes Again: Did the Kennedy Center really need a remodel?
Hidden Roots: My favorite lawman, Marshal Bass Reeves
Bad Bunny Wins: Great night for my friend
What I’m Reading: Blood Grove, Walter Mosley
Jukebox Playlist: Always made me laugh- Your feet’s too big
“…a person wrapped up in himself makes a small package.” - Harry Emerson Fosdick
Benjamin Franklin said it first: “A person wrapped up in himself makes a very small bundle.” A few years later, ordained Baptist minister Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick improved upon it, getting rid of the qualifier (“very”) and changing bundle to package to make it more modern. It must’ve worked, because a hundred years later, we’re still quoting it. And whether you prefer his version or Franklin’s, it makes its point. No matter how talented you are, no matter how many achievements you stack up—hell, you might be the most powerful human in the world!—if that world begins and ends with you, it’s gonna be pretty small.
In other words, when we become centered on the self, we shrink.
Public commentary has often focused on Donald Trump’s communication style, which tends to underscore his personal success, his personal grievances, and other people’s loyalty to (who else?) him. Those who love him and voted for him view this as confidence. Those who can’t stand him (or in any case aren’t in awe) see it as self‑centeredness. They argue that when a leader’s focus remains on personal image, the broader responsibilities of public office take a back seat. Or even no seat at all.
That’s because personal image is tricky. It weighs nothing while taking up too much space…not in the world, but in the mirror. When a leader is heavily centered on how he or she comes off, the scope of decision-making narrows. It has to, because that damned reflection blocks out the view of everything else. Or, if you don’t like the mirror analogy, picture Trump a cupboard under the stairs, like Harry Potter. Picture him angry that you treated him badly, or that you weren’t “fair” to him. Now picture him trying to take a step back, to refocus, to use logic and pragmatism.
He can’t. That cupboard under the stairs of resentments won’t let him.
But, as we know too well, being “other-centered” comes at a price. Fosdick paid it by taking up causes that were unpopular in his day. He was an outspoken critic of racism and fought so eloquently against injustice of all sorts that none other than M.L.K. Jr., called him “the greatest preacher of this century.” He defended the teachings of evolution and rejected creationism. And he was one of the first ministers to give his approval to Alcoholics Anonymous. Why? Because he saw “the other,” the downtrodden, the less fortunate, the needy. And in seeing them instead of himself, his view expanded. He expanded.
If instead it’s all about me, then public messaging, policy choices, or official actions become closely tied to personal branding or personal benefit. Ethics experts warn that when a leader’s attention turns inward, the space for collective responsibility, transparency, and public trust has to shrink. The “small package” becomes a metaphor for leadership that contracts, limiting its ability to serve the American people until all it’s serving is itself.
We're all in on air fryers. This Ninja model is our definitive top pick after testing more than two dozen.
Senators Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire and Susan Collins of Maine sent Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth a letter warning against any changes that could affect victims' care.
Bezos has not publicly responded to several letters sent by Post staffers urging him to curb potential layoffs
While Washington Post employees remain in the dark about an impending round of cuts that could dramatically reshape the publication, the man that many hoped could soften or stop the blow, owner Jeff Bezos, has remained silent.
So far, three staff-organized letters sent by Post employees to Bezos imploring him to protect the Post’s robust coverage have gone unanswered.
Continue reading...State resolutions are underutilized right now and could be a significant mobilizing factor for the Democratic party
The Democrats hold in their hands constitutional means yet unused to check the Trump regime’s ruthless attempt to impose a police state. That the Democrats thus far have failed to create this oppositional political center of gravity may be because the method has been lost to history, not wielded effectively for 113 years. Focused on the ICE outrages, however, this political instrument can be revived in the 16 states where the Democrats control the governorships and both chambers of the state legislatures, as well as introduced in states with mixed power.
Before the enactment of the 17th amendment in 1913, state legislators and not the voters selected US senators and regarded them frequently as their agents. It was a common practice for legislatures to send what were called “orders of instruction” urging senators and sometimes members of the House of Representatives to take a particular stand on important issues. The orders were not binding, but had significant force given the power of legislatures and political parties to decide who would hold Senate seats. These resolutions were variously called instructions, petitions and memorials.
Continue reading...Advocates call for further disclosures after Trump’s justice department released more than 3m files last week
The release of about 3m Jeffrey Epstein investigative files has failed to quell outrage over justice department officials’ handling of these disclosures, with advocates claiming potentially millions of documents are still being withheld.
Donald Trump’s Department of Justice was required to disclose all investigative files by 19 December under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). While the justice department did release some documents on that date, last week’s disclosure came nearly six weeks after this deadline.
Continue reading...Phishing attempts continue to grow with help from generative AI and its believable deepfakes and voice impersonations.
The scale of the buildup seems aimed at readying forces for expansive operations, analysts said.
Carlo Soracchi, who infiltrated anti-fascist group in early 2000s, accused of suggesting crime as he had ‘got nothing’
Three anti-fascist activists have accused an undercover police officer of attempting to incite them to firebomb a shop that was said to be a front for the far right, the spycops inquiry has heard.
The accusation has been levelled against Carlo Soracchi, an officer who spent six years infiltrating anti-fascist and leftwing groups. He has denied the claim.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 3, No. 498.
The last time the Seahawks and Patriots met in a Super Bowl, a dramatic interception by an undrafted rookie changed the history of both franchises
When the New England Patriots faced off against the Denver Broncos in this season’s AFC championship, Malcolm Butler was at home in Houston. He had considered attending the game in Denver or watching on TV in a No 21 Patriots jersey, which he wore in Foxboro for four seasons through the mid-to-late 2010s, but feared he might jinx the outcome. In the end, it was just him and his nerves for company.
Just as Butler was feeling somewhat at peace with that setup, and the Patriots’ prospects, a bad omen intruded: His wifi glitched, delaying the broadcast as the Patriots clung on to a three-point lead in the fourth-quarter. “I was lagging bad,” Butler tells the Guardian. “But I did get the wifi back working. And as soon as I did my phone was ringing like crazy, so I knew something was going right. It’s crazy that we’re back.”
Continue reading...Latest communications undermine Chomsky’s earlier claims that he primarily had financial dealings with Epstein
The close friendship that Noam Chomsky maintained with Jeffrey Epstein continued being detailed extensively among millions of investigative records pertaining to the late convicted sex offender recently released by the US justice department, including Chomsky “fantasizing about the Caribbean island”.
In Friday’s tranche of the so-called Epstein files, which built upon earlier disclosures of their close social ties, there is no indication that the famed academic and linguist was referring to his friend’s private Caribbean island where children were sexually abused. But the personal familiarity between the two men in that exchange is palpable, as it is in numerous other emails between Chomsky and Epstein aimed at planning more mundane social gatherings.
Continue reading...Outcome of meeting uncertain as ‘erratic, temperamental’ presidents could be either ‘confrontational’ or amicable
One month ago, a White House meeting between Donald Trump and his Colombian counterpart, Gustavo Petro, would have been unthinkable.
The US raid on Caracas to capture the Venezuelan leader, Nicolás Maduro, brought already heated relations between them to a boil, with Trump warning the leftist Colombian leader “could be next”, claiming Petro was a “sick man who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States”.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
On Saturday, Gov. Matt Meyer said he had spoken with superintendents in New Castle County to determine which roads, sidewalks and bus stops remain unsafe, and that the Delaware Department of Transportation would be clearing those streets ahead of school on Monday. But even though the Colonial School District opened its doors on Monday, it was unable to provide transportation to all communities because of remaining road conditions.
Days after Gov. Matt Meyer said it was “unacceptable” that Delaware schools remained closed nearly a week after a crippling snowstorm swept through the state, some students in the Colonial School District were still unable to go to school Monday because of road conditions.
Last week, parts of Kent County received more than 6 inches of snowfall on Sunday, while New Castle County saw up to 10 inches, according to the National Weather Service. Freezing rain in some areas then added an inch of solid ice atop that accumulation.
Temperatures have remained frigid in the days since the storm, and much of the snow has compacted into a dense layer of ice, which has stifled cleanup crews, according to state and city transportation officials.
On Saturday, Meyer said he had spoken with each New Castle County superintendent and “received lists of roads, sidewalks and bus stops that remain unsafe.”
Meyer added that the Delaware Department of Transportation would be clearing those streets over the weekend to ensure schools could open their doors on Monday.
Still, transportation was not available to multiple communities in the Colonial School District on Monday. Those communities included Rosegate, Garfield Park, and Willow Grove, among others.
Colonial Superintendent Jeff Menzer said the district originally released a statement Sunday night saying the district would not be able to pick up students from 11 neighborhoods along Route 9 and one in the lower half of the district due to difficult driving conditions.
Many district bus drivers then reported back to officials that they were unable to finish their routes early Monday morning. Menzer said the district pushed out information to the district’s middle and elementary school families that buses would not be able to pick up students.
Menzer said attendance was down in some of the schools that were part of the impacted communities, such as Eisenberg Elementary School and McCullough Middle School.
Attendance across the district was at roughly 60% to 70% on Monday.
The Brandywine, Red Clay Consolidated, and Christina school districts also reopened their doors on Monday, following Meyer’s weekend announcement.
Some of those districts, though, also experienced complications with picking up students.
Although the Red Clay Consolidated School District’s transportation went well, one bus did temporarily get stuck in a neighborhood, Director of Transportation Kelly Shahan wrote in a statement to Spotlight Delaware. The incident occurred before the bus had picked up any students, and it only resulted in a minor delay, Shahan said.
The Christina School District also wrote to families on Sunday, saying there may be some “unavoidable delays due to neighborhood conditions, which could mean that wait times at bus stops will be longer than usual.”
The Brandywine School District successfully ran all bus routes on a staggered schedule, though some stops and sidewalks still pose a challenge to students, according to a statement from Superintendent Lisa Lawson.
Brandywine will also be returning to its regular bus and school schedules on Tuesday, Lawson said.
All four school districts also said students will not be marked late because of the weather. Districts are also offering excused absences to families who do not feel comfortable sending their children to school with the road conditions.
Menzer said the district had shared a list of priority areas and roads that were impassable with DelDOT on Jan. 29, but his district was not seeing improvements late last week. By Jan. 31, the ice was too thick for salt to help break down the compact, Menzer said.
C.R. McLeod, a spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Transportation, said in a statement the department had to apply salt to the roads and wait for the sun to melt enough ice for plowing to be effective in neighborhoods.
“We’ve been in communication with the [Colonial] school district and expect to see improvement today and tomorrow with temperatures above freezing,” McLeod wrote.
Last week, Colonial Supervisor of Transportation Marc Emerick told Spotlight Delaware the district’s smaller neighborhoods, “who are digging themselves out,” were the most impacted by the storm.
“If you are fortunate enough to live in a neighborhood with a DART route, you know that at least some of your roads are going to be tended to by DelDOT, which is the most effective way of clearing a road,” he said.
Communities that are not near a DART route or roads that DelDOT plows typically rely on contractor services to clear the snow.
But Emerick said districts must also check the passability of streets, because some contractors’ plows do not create a path wide enough for school buses. If a bus gets stuck or experiences a minor fender-bender that does not impact student safety, it can still delay students’ pickups for an hour.
Colonial’s buses go into neighborhoods and pick students up close to their homes. At the same time, more than half of Colonial’s bus fleet are 84-passenger, flat-nose buses that require a wider turn radius than typical buses, Menzer. said
Menzer said those two factors complicated student pick-ups on Monday.
“Even though our drivers had driven the routes and checked them out in their personal vehicles, it’s different,” Menzer said. “You don’t really know until you get your bus upon it and realize, ‘Man, I can’t make that corner.’”
The district also adjusted its bus stops for students in the communities it had previously suspended transportation to, with buses picking students up at main streets in those communities rather than going down side streets.
The post A week after winter storm, Colonial students still can’t get to school appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Port of Wilmington is one of the last anchors of good-paying, blue-collar jobs in Delaware. It also has suffered a string of financial blows over a dramatic six-year-period. How the state responds to the setbacks may determine the shape of Delaware’s workforce into the future.
Delaware’s quest to build one of the mid-Atlantic’s biggest port container terminals may have quietly cleared a key hurdle last month.
During a meeting on Monday of the state board that oversees the Port of Wilmington, Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez said Delaware is no longer required to secure an approval from the Port of Philadelphia in order to move forward with efforts to recapture construction permits that a federal judge invalidated in 2024.
Delaware port officials need the permits to fulfill their longstanding, yet beleaguered, goal of building a new port at the site of a former chemical plant in Edgemoor. Hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars have already been committed to the project, which port officials say will create thousands of new jobs in the state.

Patibanda-Sanchez said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — which is in charge of issuing the permits — agreed last month to grant an exception to a rule requiring Delaware to obtain a formal ”statement of no objection” from the Port of Philadelphia – a regional competitor that has long opposed Delaware plans to expand the Port of Wilmington.
Internal port documents state that the Port of Philadelphia, as of last fall, had declined to sign such a statement.
Now, with an exception to the rule, Patibanda-Sanchez said the Corps of Engineers can begin its review of Delaware’s application for permits to build a port seawall, and to dredge the Delaware River from the Edgemoor docks to the main channel.
“And we’re very excited to have cleared that first step,” she said during the Monday meeting of the board of the Diamond State Port Corporation – the state-owned entity that oversees the Port of Wilmington.
The development follows years of turmoil that has plagued the Port of Wilmington and its $600 million expansion plans.
When the state privatized the port’s operations in 2018, the company that took over, Gulftainer, promised to privately fund the development of Edgemoor by doubling the shipments at the Port of Wilmington’s existing facility along the Christina River. Not only did those bold projections fail to materialize, but the port’s finances under Gulftainer also deteriorated.

Hopes for the port’s expansion were revived in 2023 when Delaware brought in a new operating company, Enstructure. But a year later, a federal judge invalidated the Edgemoor permits following a lawsuit brought by competing ports along the Delaware River, including the Port of Philadelphia.
The upstream ports sued the Army Corps of Engineers for what they said was a “perfunctory and inadequate review” of Delaware’s permit applications. While many in Delaware saw the lawsuit as part of a powerplay between officials at the ports of Wilmington and Philadelphia, the legal complaint alleged that ships leaving a future Edgemoor port would cause a dangerous marine bottleneck when turning into the river’s main channel.
In the sharply worded ruling issued in October, 2024, U.S. District Judge Mark Kearney stated that the Army Corps of Engineers had acted “arbitrarily and capriciously” when it issued the Edgemoor building permits.
He also criticized Delaware port officials for failing to obtain a statement of no objection to the permits from their upstream neighbor. The requirement was in place because the Port of Philadelphia had been the primary non-federal financial sponsor of a recent Delaware River dredging project along the estuary to deepen the shipping channel.
Kearney also stated that if the Corps of Engineers reevaluated the Edgemoor permits, it must address “navigation and safety issues,” and must ensure that Delaware “obtains a Statement of No Objection from the Philadelphia Port Authority.”
It is not immediately clear how the judge will interpret the Army Corps of Engineers’ recent decision to make an exception for the requirement.
Patibanda-Sanchez did not directly address the issue when asked by email why she believes the exception will pass muster with Kearney.
Instead, she said in a statement that Delaware’s port officials “continue our work on the Delaware Container Terminal project and are encouraged with the progress we have made so far.”
“We look forward to the USACE’s (Corps of Engineers’) complete review of our application. As we make progress on the permitting, we are also working on issues raised by the community and all the stakeholders involved with this project,” Patibanda-Sanchez said in the statement.
The post Port of Wilmington officials: Edgemoor plans clear a key hurdle appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
While Israel has faced sharp criticism over its war in Gaza, start-up executives say foreigners are eager to buy systems developed and tested on the battlefield.
Under Trump, the Department of Homeland Security has weaponized administrative subpoenas to attack free speech, according to privacy and civil rights groups.
Valdis Dombrovskis says bloc is ‘ready to engage’ amid meetings with ministers including Rachel Reeves
The European Commission would be “open-minded” to discussing closer trade ties with the UK, including a customs union, a senior EU official has said.
The EU economy commissioner, Valdis Dombrovskis, told the BBC that the European bloc was “ready to engage with an open mind” when asked about a customs union.
Continue reading...Britons cut back in January after record grocery spending in December, turning to own-label products
Britons started 2026 by buying more healthy food such as fruit and yoghurt as they attempted to hit new year health goals, while grocery price inflation eased to the lowest level since April, research has shown.
Annual grocery inflation fell back to 4% in the four weeks to 25 January from 4.7% in December, offering some relief for shoppers, according to a monthly snapshot of the grocery sector from the research company Worldpanel by Numerator.
Continue reading...Aerospace business and artificial intelligence firm to unite for IPO as world’s most valuable private company
Elon Musk’s aerospace company SpaceX has acquired his artificial intelligence business xAI, in a $1.25tn (£910bn) merger that consolidates part of Musk’s empire as SpaceX prepares to go public later this year.
The two companies announced the deal on Monday in a statement on SpaceX’s website, saying the merger would form “the most ambitious, vertically-integrated innovation engine on (and off) Earth, with AI, rockets, space-based internet, direct-to-mobile device communications and the world’s foremost real-time information and free speech platform”.
Continue reading...Tributes for Queensland snowboarder Brooke Day recall a ‘cherished team mate’ who had an ‘infectious sense of humour’
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The family of an Australian woman who died in a ski lift accident in Japan have remembered their “beautiful girl” as someone who kept others safe as tributes pour in for the 22-year-old “vibrant spirit”.
The Queensland snowboarder Brooke Day sustained critical injuries on Friday after her backpack was caught in a ski lift at Tsugaike Mountain resort in Otari, near Nagano.
Continue reading...sinij writes: Automakers have increasingly implemented door handles that retract into the bodywork for aerodynamic reasons, but they are now off limits in China. My issue is with electronic-only door latch mechanism. It should be possible to open the door from both inside and outside the car in case of complete power loss.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US president makes further claims of antisemitism against Ivy League school amid wider dispute with higher eduction institutions
Donald Trump has announced that his administration is seeking $1bn in damages from Harvard University, the latest step in a long-running battle with the university over allegations of antisemitism.
In a Truth Social post late on Monday, Trump accused the Ivy League school of being “strongly antisemitic”, adding that Harvard president Alan Garber “has done a terrible job of rectifying a very bad situation for his institution and, more importantly, America itself”.
Continue reading...Iran’s leaders now face unprecedented peril. The regime has lost its footing, and the global mechanisms to avoid conflict no longer work
Dr Sanam Vakil is the director of Chatham House’s Middle East and North Africa programme
Forty-seven years on from the Iranian revolution, Iran is confronting a strategic reality it has never faced before – a simultaneous crisis of domestic legitimacy and a credible threat of external attack so severe that regime survival can no longer be taken for granted. Until now, Tehran has survived wars, sanctions, assassinations, mass protests and international isolation through a strategy of projecting strength abroad, repressing dissent at home and generating a permanent crisis to justify poor leadership and political failure.
Today, Donald Trump has mobilised an “armada” to the Middle East that includes the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group, guided-missile destroyers, an expanded air presence and missile defence systems. This force projection suggests the US is no longer focused on containing Iran but rather compelling a final resolution of a long-running conflict. The choice at hand is either the acceptance of a US-imposed settlement or the destruction of the Islamic republic as it exists today.
Continue reading...Masoud Pezeshkian instructs foreign minister to seek negotiations with US as Trump warns ‘bad things would happen’ if no solution agreed
Iran’s president said on Tuesday that he had instructed his foreign minister to “pursue fair and equitable negotiations” with the US, as the two countries reportedly prepared to send top envoys to Istanbul for high-stakes talks on the Iranian nuclear programme later this week.
President Masoud Pezeshkian said in a post on X: “I have instructed my minister of foreign affairs, provided that a suitable environment exists – one free from threats and unreasonable expectations – to pursue fair and equitable negotiations, guided by the principles of dignity, prudence, and expediency.”
Continue reading...Authorities in the Tucson, Arizona, area are searching for the mother of "Today" show host Savannah Guthrie, 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie.
Sleek car doors reduce vehicle drag but are prone to losing operability in the event of a crash, officials say
China will soon ban concealed door handles on electric vehicles (EVs), becoming the first country to do so after several deadly incidents triggered global scrutiny of the controversial design first popularised by Tesla.
According to regulations announced on Monday by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, cars sold in China will now be required to have a mechanical release on both the inside and outside of every door except the boot.
Continue reading...Euphoric scenes are a snub to theocracy’s culture of piety, say analysts, and carry message of rebellion
Iranians killed in recent protests that rocked the country have been laid to rest in boisterous funerals featuring loud pop music and dancing, apparently intended to convey defiance to the ruling Islamic regime.
Instead of holding sombre traditional mourning ceremonies presided over by a Shia cleric, bereaved relatives are turning the burials into exultant celebrations of the lives of their loved ones in what analysts say is an intentional snub to the culture of piety demanded by Iran’s theocracy.
Continue reading...Annual review highlights growing capabilities of AI models, while examining issues from cyber-attacks to job disruption
The International AI Safety report is an annual survey of technological progress and the risks it is creating across multiple areas, from deepfakes to the jobs market.
Commissioned at the 2023 global AI safety summit, it is chaired by the Canadian computer scientist Yoshua Bengio, who describes the “daunting challenges” posed by rapid developments in the field. The report is also guided by senior advisers, including Nobel laureates Geoffrey Hinton and Daron Acemoglu.
Continue reading...Why states keep trading even in the midst of conflict.
I saw some comments about tennis racket grip tape, is that my best option?
Thank you! :)
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 3
| I ordered mint rail guards and red bumpers which I think would look awesome together. The problem is the “mint” is blue. Photos attached [link] [comments] |
Elon Musk's SpaceX has acquired his AI startup xAI in an all-stock deal that values the combined entity at $1.25 trillion, ahead of what would be the largest initial public offering in history. SpaceX pegged its own valuation at $1 trillion -- a markup from the $800 billion it commanded in a December secondary stock sale -- and priced xAI at $250 billion based on a recent $20 billion funding round that valued the two-year-old AI company at $230 billion. SpaceX CFO Bret Johnsen told investors on a call Monday that shares in the combined company would be priced at $527 and that xAI shares would convert into SpaceX stock at a roughly seven-to-one exchange rate. The company is still targeting a June IPO expected to raise as much as $50 billion, surpassing Saudi Aramco's $29 billion listing in 2019. Musk said the least expensive way to do AI computation within two to three years will be in space. "Global electricity demand for AI simply cannot be met with terrestrial solutions, even in the near term, without imposing hardship on communities and the environment," he wrote. SpaceX filed last Friday for permission to launch up to a million satellites into Earth's orbit. xAI merged with Musk's social media platform X last March in a $113 billion deal, and Tesla announced a $2 billion investment in xAI last week.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The judge said the Trump administration’s move to withdraw the temporary protected status was probably illegal. The Department of Homeland Security plans to appeal.
This live blog is now closed.
House speaker Mike Johnson is set to swear in Christian Menefee, a Democrat who recently won a runoff election for a reliably blue seat in Texas.
Menefee’s victory, however, means the margin in the House is even more slim: 218 Republicans to 214 Democrats. His current term will end at the end of the year, and he’ll have to start campaigning almost immediately for the 2026 midterms. But this time, it will be for a new district, after the GOP-controlled legislature successfully gerrymandered the state’s congressional map.
Continue reading...By the end of 2026, most United flights will have the faster in-flight Wi-Fi, the companies say.
Scientists at the University of Utah have analyzed nearly a century's worth of human hair samples and found that lead concentrations dropped 100-fold after the EPA began cracking down on leaded gasoline and other lead-based products in the 1970s. The findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, drew on hair collected from Utah residents -- some preserved in family scrapbooks going back generations. Lead levels peaked between 1916 and 1969 at around 100 parts per million, fell to 10 ppm by 1990, and dropped below 1 ppm by 2024. The decline largely tracks the phase-out of leaded gasoline after President Nixon established the EPA in 1970; before the agency acted, most gasolines contained about 2 grams of lead per gallon, releasing nearly 2 pounds of lead per person into the environment each year. The study arrives amid the Trump administration's broader push to scale back the EPA. Lead regulations have not yet been targeted, but the authors note concerns about loosened enforcement of the 2024 Lead and Copper rule on replacing old lead pipes.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Other countries are expected to join Project Vault, which US president said would ensure that US businesses are ‘never harmed by any shortage’
Donald Trump has announced the creation of a critical mineral reserve worth nearly $12bn, a stockpile that could counter China’s ability to use its dominance of the hard-to-process metals as leverage in trade talks.
“Today we’re launching what will be known as Project Vault to ensure that American businesses and workers are never harmed by any shortage,” Trump said at the White House on Monday.
Continue reading...The Clintons made a last-ditch effort to avoid a contempt vote.
A federal judge on Monday blocked the Trump administration from revoking Temporary Protected Status for Haitians, granting a last-minute reprieve to 350,000 immigrants who were set to lose protections on Tuesday.
Up to 350,000 Haitians legally live and work in the US due to being granted temporary protected status
A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration from stripping temporary protected status from up to 350,000 Haitians, a status that allows them to legally live and work in the United States amid the turmoil in their homeland.
Judge Ana Reyes issued a temporary stay that prevents Kristi Noem, the US homeland security secretary, from implementing her decision to remove the status known as TPS, which was scheduled to expire on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 3, No. 1,690.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 3 #968.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 3, No. 702.
CEO Alex Karp hails ‘iconic’ financial results despite criticism over contracts with ICE and homeland security
Palantir celebrated its latest financial results on Monday, as the tech company blew past Wall Street expectations and continues to prop up the Trump administration’s push to deport immigrants.
Palantir has secured millions of dollars in federal contracts amid Trump’s crackdown on immigrants. The multibillion-dollar Denver-based firm creates tech focused on surveillance and analytics, to be used by the government agencies and private companies.
Continue reading...Rusne Augustinaite is from Lithuania, and her mom had never been to the U.S. to see her play a college game in person.
As President Trump prepares to shut down the Kennedy Center for renovations, sources told CBS News there has been no discussion of demolishing or gutting the building.
All federal immigration agents in Minneapolis will begin wearing body cameras, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said Monday, a policy that could be rolled out nationwide.
Brendan Banfield, who was having an affair with the family's Brazilian au pair, was found guilty on Monday of murdering his wife and another man.
Latest release of files about disgraced financier reveals she told Epstein he was ‘the brother I have always wished for
The charity of Sarah Ferguson has announced that it is closing after new revelations emerged about the former duchess’s friendship with convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Sarah’s Trust, the international charity launched by the ex-wife of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, will close “for the foreseeable future” after “some months” of discussion, according to a spokesperson.
Continue reading...Donald Trump hit out at Trevor Noah over a joke about the US president and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein at the 2026 Grammys. 'I think he’s terrible. I think he did a terrible job at the Grammys,' Trump told reporters during an Oval Office meeting. In a social media post, Trump earlier threatened to sue Noah
Continue reading...We recently talked about Apple’s pre-Mac OS X dabblings in UNIX, but Apple wasn’t the only computer and operating system company exploring UNIX alternatives. Microsoft had the rather successful Xenix, Atari had ASV, Sony had NEWS, to name just a very small few. The Amiga, too, wanted in on the UNIX action, and as such, released Amiga UNIX, based on AT&T System V Release 4. The Amiga UNIX website is dedicated to everything you would ever want to know about this operating system.
This site is dedicated on preserving Amix’s history and sharing information and instructions on what Amix is, how to install it (either on real hardware or in emulation) and what can you do with it. Mainly, it tries to cater to people who wish to run AMIX for whatever reason on their hardware. By documenting experiences with it, it is hoped that subsequent SVR4 junkies will find the way more smooth than it might have been without any guidance at all. For even a relatively experienced modern Unix or GNU/Linux administrator, System V UNIX is sufficiently different to present difficulty in installation and administration. Not so much in moving around between directories, and using common utilities that persist to this day – although many of those are hoary and somewhat forgetful in their retirement – but of doing more in depth tasks and understanding the differences.
↫ The Amiga Unix Wiki
If you wish to run Amiga UNIX yourself, you’ll either have to have one of the original two models sold with it – the 2500UX and 3000UX – or one of the Amigas that meets the minimum requirements. Another option is, of course, emulation, and WinUAE has support for running Amiga UNIX.
Immigration officials said agent shot two ‘vicious gang members’ in Portland, but records obtained by the Guardian reveal US prosecutor contradicted claims
Immediately after a US border patrol agent shot two people in Oregon last month, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the targets were “vicious” gang members connected to a prior shooting and alleged they had “attempted to run over” officers with their vehicle.
In the weeks since, key parts of the federal government’s narrative have fallen apart.
Continue reading...Decision to give testimony comes days before House was expected to vote to hold pair in contempt of Congress
Bill and Hillary Clinton agreed on Monday to testify in a House investigation into the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, days before the chamber was expected to vote to hold them in contempt of Congress.
The concession follows a tense back-and-forth between the Clintons and the Republican James Comer, chair of the House oversight committee, who on Monday said that he would insist both Clintons sit for a sworn deposition before the committee in order to fulfill the panel’s subpoenas.
Continue reading...There were 579,475 instances of emergency hospitalisation being needed in the year to March 2025, analysis finds
The number of people requiring emergency care for pneumonia has risen by a quarter over two years to reach more than half a million cases, new figures show, amid warnings that preventable cases are adding pressure on overstretched A&E departments.
Analysis of the most recent NHS England data from between April 2024 and March 2025 found that there were 579,475 cases of pneumonia requiring emergency hospitalisation, and this was likely to have risen further since, according to the charity Asthma + Lung UK. There were 461,995 cases between April 2022 and March 2023.
Continue reading...Caroline Willgoose, whose 15-year-old son was killed by another pupil, says murder was ‘senseless and avoidable’
The family of a 15-year-old boy who was stabbed to death at school by another pupil has said her son’s murder was “senseless and avoidable” and that a report ordered by the school showed too many “red flags” were missed.
Harvey Willgoose died one year ago to the day, and his killer, Mohammed Umar Khan, is serving a minimum term of 16 years’ detention. A report commissioned by the trust that runs Harvey’s school, All Saints Catholic high school in Sheffield, has highlighted a number of missed opportunities in the run-up to the murder. The review was undertaken by a former school headteacher and inspector of schools at Learn Sheffield.
Continue reading...The owners of Leica Camera AG -- Austrian billionaire Andreas Kaufmann and private equity giant Blackstone -- are considering a sale of a controlling stake in the German camera maker in a deal that could value the company at about $1.2 billion, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter. HSG, formerly known as Sequoia Capital China, and Altor Equity Partners are among a handful of bidders. The Kaufmann family could re-invest following a transaction. Leica traces its roots roughly 150 years to Ernst Leitz's microscope company and was publicly traded on the Frankfurt stock exchange until the Kaufmann family took it private in 2012.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Minister announces Microsoft, Cisco and Adobe to help apply AI to local schools, hospitals, GPs and businesses
In 2002 Barnsley toyed with a redesign as a Tuscan hill village as it sought out a brighter post-industrial future. In 2021 it adopted the airily vague slogan “the place of possibilities”. Now it is trying a different image: Britain’s first “tech town”.
The technology secretary, Liz Kendall, has anointed the South Yorkshire community as a trailblazer for “how AI can improve everyday life” in the UK.
Continue reading...Starting early Wednesday, United customers won't be able to book flights and access other services as the airline upgrades its reservation system.
Numbers Israel permitted to enter Egypt after reopening border were far lower than expected following delays
A small number of sick and wounded Palestinians have begun crossing into Egypt to seek medical treatment after Israel permitted a limited reopening of the Palestinian territory’s Rafah border post as fragile diplomatic efforts to stabilise the conflict inch forward.
About 150 people were due to leave the territory on Monday, and 50 to enter it, according to Egyptian officials, more than 20 months after Israeli forces closed the crossing. However, by nightfall, Reuters reported that Israel had permitted 12 Palestinians to re-enter the territory, according to Palestinian and Egyptian sources. A further 38 had not cleared security and would wait on the Egyptian side of the crossing overnight, it said.
Continue reading...Peter Attia, a doctor and author well known for his research on longevity, is apologizing for what he calls "embarrassing, tasteless, and indefensible" emails he exchanged with Jeffrey Epstein.
Regional powers are working to bring together high-level negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program, in hopes of staving off war.
Messages show Epstein arranging women for Tisch
76-year-old denies any wrongdoing over matter
The NFL says it is looking into links between New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Tisch’s name was mentioned more than 400 times in emails relating to Epstein that were released by the US justice department last week. Tisch has never been charged with any crime connected to the investigation into Epstein.
Continue reading...Prosecutors say other man was lured to Brendan Banfield’s house as a fall guy in scheme to get rid of Banfield’s wife
A Virginia man having an affair with the family’s Brazilian au pair was found guilty Monday of murdering his wife and another man that prosecutors say was lured to the house as a fall guy.
Brendan Banfield, a former IRS law enforcement officer, told police he came across Joseph Ryan attacking his wife, Christine Banfield, with a knife on the morning of 24 February 2023. He shot Ryan and then Juliana Magalhães, the au pair, shot him, too.
Continue reading...This will be the first time that humans have traveled all the way to the moon since the early 1970s.
| So my board stopped charging and I can see two of the 3 connectors is sunk. Any ideas on how to fix this? Should I open it up and see if I can push them out from the other side? Is there another way I'm not considering? Any help is appreciated [link] [comments] |
An anonymous reader shares a report: The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency won't attend the annual RSA Conference in March, an agency spokesperson confirmed to The Register. Sessions involving speakers from the FBI and National Security Agency (NSA) have also disappeared from the agenda. "Since the beginning of this administration, CISA has made significant progress in returning to our statutory, core mission and focusing on President Trump's policies for maximum security for all Americans," CISA spokesperson Marci McCarthy told us. "CISA has reviewed and determined that we will not participate in the RSA Conference since we regularly review all stakeholder engagements, to ensure maximum impact and good stewardship of taxpayer dollars." McCarthy declined to comment on whether the decision had anything to do with former CISA director Jen Easterly being named chief executive of RSAC last week. Easterly, who was appointed to lead America's top cyber-defense agency under the Biden administration, joined her predecessor and CISA's first-ever director Chris Krebs in President Trump's line of fire back in July.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

It was a reunion of sorts as former FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino relaunched his podcast and brought in the man who tapped him for the federal job — President Donald Trump — for an interview.
Bongino and Trump talked about a variety of issues, including Minnesota, where Trump’s administration has sent some 3,000 immigration enforcement officers, prompting a backlash, especially after the deadly shootings of two U.S. citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
Minneapolis, the focus of the enforcement effort, is home to many Somalis, most of whom are U.S. citizens, either by birth or naturalization.
During the interview with Bongino, Trump referred to Somali immigrants in Minnesota.
"These are people that don’t work," Trump said. "These are people that are just not an asset to our society, to put it mildly. And we’ve got to get them out. … Ninety-two percent don’t work. They have an unbelievable corrupt system of welfare. You know, many of them drive Mercedes Benzes. They had nothing when they came over."
Federal data shows that Somalis are poorer, on average, than other Minnesotans. But the notion that 92% of them don’t work is unfounded; official government data shows far lower percentages.
White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson did not provide support for the 92% figure. "Aliens who come to our country, complain about how much they hate America, fail to contribute to our economy, rip off Americans, and refuse to assimilate into our society should not be here," she said.
The immigration enforcement buildup came after Trump criticized a spate of fraud cases involving Somalis in Minnesota, which have been prosecuted under former President Joe Biden and Trump. Since 2022, federal prosecutors have charged about 98 people with defrauding the federal government. The majority have been convicted; many cases are pending.
There are about 108,000 Somalis in Minnesota, representing roughly 2% of the state’s population. Most Somalis came to the state in the 1990s, fleeing civil war in their home country. Some came as refugees — an immigration category for those fleeing persecution — while others were sponsored by family members or moved from other states.
Census Bureau data from 2024 estimates that for Somalis in Minnesota, the labor force participation rate — that is, the share of the population 16 and older that is either working or looking for work — is about 72%. That means that about 28% of the Minnesota Somali population is not employed and not looking for work — less than one-third of the 92% share Trump cited.
The rate of labor force participation is higher for Somalis than it is for Minnesotans overall. In December 2025, Minnesota’s overall labor force participation rate was 68%; that would make the non-working rate about 32%, or four percentage points higher than for Somalis.
The Center for Immigration Studies, a think tank that favors low immigration levels, produced a December report that details demographics of the Somali community in Minnesota using Census data.
The report found significant economic and social challenges, including that 52% of children in Somali immigrant homes in Minnesota live in poverty, compared with 8% of children in homes headed by U.S.-born people. It also found that about 39% of working-age Somalis have no high school diploma, compared with 5% of U.S. natives, and that half of working-age Somalis who have lived in the U.S. for at least 10 years cannot speak English "very well."
But the report found that when it comes to employment, Somalis in Minnesota measure up relatively well.
"Somali joblessness is not as common as one would predict based on their population’s low education level," the report said. "Employment is therefore a bright spot in the data for Somalis, relatively speaking."
The report’s author, resident scholar Jason Richwine, told PolitiFact he suspects Trump’s 92% figure results from "a common misunderstanding about welfare and work."
Richwine said his research found that about 9 of every 10 Somali immigrant households with children receive means-tested, anti-poverty benefits — but that doesn't mean that 90%, or 92%, don't work. That’s because most welfare programs are available to workers, including food stamps and Medicaid.
Richwine said the economic challenge associated with Somali immigration "isn't so much that they don't work. Rather, it's that their marketable skills are in many cases insufficient to raise their families out of poverty. As a consequence, they use a lot of welfare."
Trump said that among Somalis in Minnesota, "92% of them don’t work."
The most recent data shows that about 28% of Somalis in Minnesota aren’t working — a far lower number than Trump’s 92%, and a smaller rate than for Minnesotans overall.
About 9 in 10 Somalis receive some form of public assistance, but these programs typically allow low-wage workers to participate; receiving public benefits does not mean someone isn’t working.
We rate the statement Pants on Fire!
RELATED: Trump leaders say Minnesota officials withhold detained immigrants from ICE. Is that true?
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 2, No. 1,689. And it's an iconic word in Wordle history!
Lawyers discussed possibility of Epstein’s cooperation with prosecutors – and more names surfaced in new documents
A new trove of about 3m files related to the financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was released on Friday, offering new details about his network and interactions with wealthy and powerful figures and the federal investigations into his crimes.
The release follows legislation passed in November by US lawmakers that mandated the disclosure of all Epstein-related documents.
Continue reading... | Thanks city workers for fixing streets and sidewalks but also grrr. [link] [comments] |
White House says president is not involved in running his businesses. Ethics experts remain concerned
Donald Trump has been accused of “corruption, plain and simple” after it was revealed that a member of the Emirati royal family was behind a $500m investment into the Trump family’s cryptocurrency company.
Ethics experts say the deal – struck just days before the US president’s inauguration last January – amounts to a deep conflict of interest for the White House, amid calls for a congressional investigation into the transaction.
Continue reading...Several iPhone Fold leaks have been reported, including a massive battery life, design elements, cameras and more.

Social media posts claim to show photos of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani as a child, along with his mother Mira Nair, attending multiple events with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. But the images aren’t real.
American actor Michael Rapaport posted a picture on X showing Nair, a filmmaker, holding a baby and standing next to former President Bill Clinton and Epstein in what looks like a tropical setting.
"Mira Nair holding her baby Zohran Mamdani with Bill and Epstein," Rapaport wrote Jan. 31. "Yeah….read that again…."
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones shared another image Feb. 1 on X of what appeared to be Mamdani as a child posing with Nair, Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein, Clinton, Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos.
Other X users also shared multiple images of Mamdani as a child supposedly attending Epstein’s events.
(Screenshot of X post)
The images went viral online after the Department of Justice released millions of more documents related to the Epstein files. The files include a 2009 email that says Nair attended an after-party for the film Amelia, which she directed. The party was held at Maxwell’s Manhattan townhouse.
Mamdani was born in 1991 and the email is from 2009, so if Mamdani had attended the party with his mother, he would have been about 18 years old at the time, not a child as the images claim to show.
PolitiFact found that the images of Nair with Mamdani as a child and Epstein were generated with artificial intelligence.
The photos originated on a parody account known as "DFF," which describes itself on X as sharing "high quality AI videos and memes."
The account shared the fake photos Jan. 31 and all of them had a "DFF" watermark. It also admitted one of the images was fake, saying, "Damn you guys failed. I purposely made him a baby which would technically make this pic 34 years old. Yikes."
(Screenshot of AI-images with DFF watermarks)
PolitiFact uploaded the three images shared by DFF to Gemini, Google’s AI tool. It found the images contain the SynthID watermark for images created or edited by the tool. It's not visible looking at the images, but Google's technology can detect it.
We rate the claim that images shared on X are real photos of Mamdani as a child with his mother and Epstein Pants on Fire!
Several documents and ‘media’ may have inadvertently exposed sensitive information of victims, drawing outcry
The justice department said on Monday it had taken down several thousand documents and “media” that may have inadvertently included victim-identifying information since it began releasing the latest batch of documents related to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein on Friday.
It blamed the release of sensitive information that drew an outcry from victims and their lawyers on mistakes that were “technical or human error”.
Continue reading...He acknowledged that the weekend’s revelations further entangled him in the “understandable furor” surrounding the convicted sex offender.
Ron Johnson says he does not ‘have a problem’ with key demand made by Democrats blocking agency’s funding
The homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, said that all federal agents in Minneapolis will immediately begin wearing body cameras and that the program will be expanded nationwide “as funding is available”.
The announcement on Monday comes after Republican senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin suggested, in a concession that could pave the way to an agreement on Capitol Hill to fund the much criticized agency, that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents could wear body cameras on immigration patrols.
Continue reading...Complete closure of the performing arts center in Washington, D.C., will start on July 4, Mr. Trump said. It's not yet clear how extensive the changes to the building might be.
Apple's co-founders signed the check in 1976, just weeks before establishing their partnership agreement.
"Project Vault" will be funded by a $10 billion loan from the U.S. Export-Import Bank, along with $2 billion in private-sector financing, President Trump said.
Kennedy’s pilot program to offer funding for long-term recovery after Trump signed order related to addiction
Robert F Kennedy Jr announced on Monday $100m in new grants for a pilot program aimed at addressing homelessness and substance use recovery in eight cities, building on an executive order Donald Trump signed last week related to addiction.
The funds will be distributed as part of the Safety Through Recovery, Engagement, and Evidence-based Treatment and Supports (Streets) program, which will be managed by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (Samhsa) within the Department of Health and Human Services.
Continue reading...Author says accusations ‘spread and amplified’ by people more interested in ‘outrage and getting clicks’
Neil Gaiman has said that multiple sexual assault allegations against him are “simply untrue” and claimed to be the victim of a “smear campaign”, in the first post addressing the accusations for almost a year.
Gaiman, 65, author of novels including American Gods and the Ocean at the End of the Lane, has faced allegations of sexual abuse and coercive behaviour, which were outlined in a podcast by the Tortoise Media team in July 2024.
Continue reading...The smaller, squarish model could quickly follow the company's first foldable phone, if that device sells well.
Move from Claudia Sheinbaum comes after Trump signed an order threatening tariffs on countries that sell oil to Cuba
Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, has pledged to send humanitarian aid this week to Cuba and said Mexico was “exploring all diplomatic avenues to be able to send fuel to the Cuban people”, despite efforts from Washington to cut off oil to the Caribbean nation.
Donald Trump last week signed an executive order allowing the US to slap tariffs on countries sending crude oil to Cuba and on Saturday said that Sheinbaum had agreed to halt shipments of oil at his request – a claim the Mexican leader rejected.
Continue reading...Democrats and one Republican demand release of millions more pages they insist are still being deliberately withheld
Democrats have promised to fight what they say is a “full-blown cover-up” of the Epstein files after the Trump administration on Sunday effectively declared its investigation into the disgraced late financier and sex offender closed.
The release of more than 3m new pages by the justice department on Friday represented the final act of compliance with legislation ordering the full disclosure of all investigative documents in its possession, according to the deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche.
Continue reading...Met police assessing reports of alleged misconduct in public office after government information apparently shared
Peter Mandelson is facing a possible police investigation into his alleged leak of market-sensitive information to Jeffrey Epstein at the height of the financial crisis.
New disclosures from the Epstein files appear to show Mandelson sent a string of emails to the late sex offender containing confidential information that the government was receiving to deal with the global crash while he was business secretary under Gordon Brown.
A confidential UK government document outlining £20bn in asset sales.
Mandelson claiming he was “trying hard” to change government policy on bankers’ bonuses.
An imminent bailout package for the euro the day before it was announced in 2010.
A suggestion that the JPMorgan boss “mildly threaten” the chancellor.
Continue reading...Couple say they love their daughter immeasurably but have a moral obligation to try to find child’s biological parents
A couple is suing a Florida fertility clinic after learning that they were implanted with the wrong embryo, and are going public with their attempts to find their child’s biological parents.
Tiffany Score and Steven Mills have filed a lawsuit against IVF Life Inc, which operates as the Fertility Center of Orlando, and its lead physician, Dr Milton McNichol. The suit, which was initially filed under pseudonyms to protect their family’s privacy, states that three viable embryos were created with Score’s eggs and Mills’s sperm, and an embryo was successfully implanted in April 2025.
Continue reading...Martin was tapped to lead the Weaponization Working Group after he failed to win enough support from the Senate to be confirmed as D.C.'s U.S. attorney.
The American Federation of Teachers called on Target CEO Michael Fiddelke to "clearly state" that the company wants ICE agents to leave Minnesota.
The proposed site is situated along a flight path for nearby Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Virginia.
The House is back in Washington on Monday to begin considering a revised funding package to end the partial government shutdown.
alternative_right writes: Fintraffic's national traffic priority system, which is set to be introduced this summer, will recognize the location of an emergency vehicle and automatically change the lights to green to facilitate its passage. (Why isn't everyone doing this already?)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Commissioner to file motion requesting return of property unlawfully taken during raid related to 2020 election
Fulton county leaders said they would fire back in court on Monday, intent on limiting the scope of a federal warrant that led the FBI to seize 2020 elections documents last week.
County attorneys intend to file a motion in federal court asking for an order mandating the return of property that was unlawfully seized or retained, said the Fulton county commissioner Marvin Arrington Jr.
Continue reading...Trump and Petro’s unpredictable meeting could be pivotal for Latin America Expert comment thilton.drupal
Drugs, migration, China and Venezuela likely to be on the agenda as two outspoken leaders meet in Washington ahead of Colombia’s elections later this year.
Over the past year, US President Donald Trump and Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro have exchanged criticism, insults and even apparent threats. On February 3, they will meet at the White House where they are expected to discuss wide-ranging topics including drug trafficking, migration, Colombia’s border security with Venezuela and relations with China.
The meeting, which has been in preparation for months, is unpredictable due to the personalities of both men, who are known for being outspoken.
Colombia’s President Petro has been a vocal critic of US foreign policy in Latin America as the Trump administration seeks to revive the Monroe Doctrine. Petro condemned the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and accused the US of committing ‘murder’ in its strikes against vessels allegedly manned by drug traffickers in the Caribbean. He has also criticized the deportation of migrants from the US.
The Trump administration sees the leftist Colombian president as hostile to its strategy in the Western Hemisphere and its wider Make America Great Again ideology. In line with its new National Security Strategy, Washington has sought to curb migration and combat organized crime and drug trafficking into the US while projecting its influence and expanding its control in the Western Hemisphere.
The Trump administration has accused Petro’s government of not doing enough to stop the drug trade (accusations Petro denies) and has pressured Bogota to clamp down on drug traffickers and the National Liberation Army (ELN) guerrillas who operate in Colombia. Cocaine production in Colombia has reportedly risen to between 2,600 to 3,000 tons in 2024 (although the figures are disputed) while armed groups involved in the drug trade have expanded their territory.
In September, Washington removed Colombia’s certification that it is doing enough to eliminate cocaine crops. Later that month, the Trump administration revoked Petro and his family’s US visas and included them on the OFAC US Sanctions list. Trump then announced the US would stop sending subsidies to Colombia.
In December, Trump appeared to threaten Petro when he said that ‘he better wise up or he’ll be next’ in the US’s war on drugs. However, relations appeared to thaw with a phone call earlier this month, and the US granted Petro a temporary visa, paving the way for the February 3 meeting.
The meeting will be shaped by internal issues with both countries facing important election years. ‘Both presidents know that when they talk, they will be speaking to their constituencies,’ says Gimena Sánchez, a researcher at the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA).
Ahead of crucial mid-term elections in November, Trump may want to show American voters who oppose US involvement in ‘endless wars’ that his actions towards Petro’s government have been taken to avoid a full-scale military intervention.
The Trump administration may also be considering how its interactions with Colombia are perceived by Latino voters. This is especially the case in Florida, Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s political base, which is home to a large Colombian diaspora alongside many Venezuelans and Cubans.
For his part, Petro is travelling to Washington just months before Colombia holds presidential elections in May. Petro is not eligible to run for re-election himself due to the country’s term limits, but his handling of relations with the US could impact the outcome.
Colombian right-wing opposition members have accused Petro of ruining relations with the country’s most important international ally and creating an economic crisis; if Petro manages to ease tensions with the US, it would be a success for his Pacto Histórico coalition and its candidate, Ivan Cepeda.
The Colombian business community is also closely watching the meeting in Washington. The two countries have substantial trade relations. The Colombian-American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham Colombia) has just indicated that the meeting will be ‘one step in a process of gradual reconfiguration that will be subject to constant evaluation by Washington.’
Trump will likely demand that Petro reduce his relationship with China. While the US is Colombia’s leading overall trade partner, China is a fast-growing partner for imports. Since October 2023, China and Colombia have elevated their relations to a strategic partnership based on trade and investment. By 2024, bilateral trade in goods reached approximately $21 billion.
UPTON, N.Y., Feb. 2, 2026 — Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have developed a novel artificial intelligence (AI)-based method to dramatically tame the flood of data generated by particle detectors at modern accelerators. The new custom-built algorithm uses a neural network to intelligently compress collision data, adapting automatically to the density or “sparsity” of the signals it receives.

Particle collisions produce many tracks inside the sPHENIX time projection chamber, but most of the volume of the house-sized detector is empty. Brookhaven scientists have developed a new algorithm for compressing such “sparse” data so the detector can record many more collision events that could lead to discoveries. Credit: sPHENIX Collaboration.
As described in a paper just published in the journal Patterns, the scientists used simulated data from sPHENIX, a particle detector at Brookhaven Lab’s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), to demonstrate the algorithm’s potential to handle trillions of bits of detector data per second while preserving the fine details physicists need to explore the building blocks of matter. The algorithm will help physicists gear up for a new era of streaming data acquisition, where every collision is recorded without pre-selecting which ones might be of interest. This will vastly expand the potential for more accurate measurements and unanticipated discoveries.
“Our goal is to improve the scientific capability of particle detectors like sPHENIX at RHIC and detectors at future colliders, including the upcoming Electron-Ion Collider (EIC),” said Jin Huang, the principal investigator for this project. The EIC is a state-of-the-art nuclear physics research facility to be built at Brookhaven Lab after RHIC completes its scientific mission later this year.
Taming the Data Deluge
RHIC is a DOE Office of Science user facility that accelerates beams of particles ranging from protons to heavy atomic nuclei, such as gold, and steers them into head-on collisions so scientists can explore the building blocks of matter and the forces that hold them together. Collisions occur thousands of times per second, each potentially creating thousands of new subatomic particles that streak through detectors like the time projection chamber at sPHENIX.
Acting like a 3D digital camera, the time projection chamber records the particles’ trajectories in a gas-filled chamber using nearly 160,000 electronic channels. The electronic sensors that make up the detector produce a data flow of trillions of data points — known as voxels in such 3D images — per second.
“Right now, RHIC is producing more collision events than we can record in our experiments,” Huang said. “To maximize the physics output from the facility, we need a reliable and innovative way to pack more information into each byte of data recorded so we can eliminate the need for an event selection bias and record more and more collision events.”
The most promising approach is data compression on the fly — finding shorthand ways to collectively describe key features of the data instead of including all the repeating details of every data point. Successful shorthand encoding would allow an accurate picture to be reconstructed once the data is decompressed while minimizing the loss of crucial information.
“As an example, instead of recording every single pixel of a red square, it would be more efficient to describe a square with a particular side length and red color. AI is very good finding such high-level abstraction of patterns,” said Yihui (Ray) Ren, a member of Brookhaven Lab’s Computing and Data Sciences team who led the AI aspects of this project.
Of course, the data produced in particle collisions is considerably more complex. And the data is actually quite sparse. This may sound like a contradiction, given the scale of the signals described above. But even with the number of particles produced during energetic smashups inside the house-sized detector, their tracks take up very little space in the time projection chamber; most of the vast number of voxels recorded for each collision are empty.
“Traditional data compression tools designed for weather models or fluid simulations, which work well for data that is more continuous, don’t work well on such sparse data,” said Ren. “So, we have to innovate and design our own approach.”
Smarter Data Compression
The new algorithm uses an AI architecture that processes only the non-empty parts of the data. It was developed by a Brookhaven-led team, including members of sPHENIX and the Lab’s Computing and Data Sciences directorate, along with collaborators from Texas A&M University, Columbia University, UCLA, and Stony Brook University.
“Our algorithm can zoom in on the meaningful parts of the picture — the few voxels filled by particle tracks — and do computation only on these values,” said Yi Huang, a computational scientist at Brookhaven Lab and the lead author on the paper. Contrast this with a conventional algorithm that would run computations on even the empty background voxels, which can often impede performance.
“In this way, sparsity becomes an advantage for us,” she said. “The fewer voxels with meaningful values, the less computation our algorithm needs to do, resulting in faster data processing.”
In addition, as in the red square example, the algorithm scans through the data to identify repetitive features or key points, and it develops shorthand to describe those features collectively. In parallel, a decompressor component of the algorithm tries to use that description, or code, to reconstruct the data, and it compares the reconstructed data with the original input, prior to compression.
After training over a large dataset, the algorithm learns the best ways to maximize data compression while keeping information loss as low as possible to avoid sacrificing key data features essential for discoveries.
More Compact, Faster, and More Accurate
So far, the team has tested the algorithm on simulated data generated for sPHENIX’s time projection chamber. In those tests, compared to previous models, the new algorithm achieved: a model size that is more than 100 times more compact — all while maintaining high processing speed as the data become sparser; 75% less error in reconstructing raw data; and 10% higher compression ratio, meaning 10% more collision data can be saved.
This performance makes the algorithm especially promising for streaming data acquisition systems, which continuously record all collisions instead of using “triggers” to capture only events that meet certain predetermined criteria.
“Triggers are an effective way to narrow the data you collect if you already know what kind of event you are looking for,” Huang said. “But if you want to be able to minimize selection bias or to make discoveries about unknown physics, it’s better to have all the data preserved so you can analyze it in many different ways — even many years in the future.”
sPHENIX’s particle-tracking system was designed to use streaming readout, and the ePIC detector for the EIC is expected to use this approach as well.
To move beyond simulations to handling real detector signals, the team will need to expand their work and demonstrate that the algorithm can manage electronic noise and other signal-masking complexities. They are also exploring optimizations that could enable deployment on innovative AI chips that are much faster and more energy efficient than the processing units currently used for many computing applications
“Our ultimate goal is to integrate intelligent data compression directly into the detector readout chain to better explore the frontier of physics with a faster and smarter data pipeline,” said Huang.
The custom AI approach could also be useful in other fields involving sparse data, for example, in event-based cameras used for security applications.
This research was supported by Brookhaven’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) program and carried out in collaboration with the sPHENIX Collaboration at RHIC. The project builds on earlier work by the same team listed in the related links. RHIC operations are funded by the DOE Office of Science.
Brookhaven National Laboratory is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit science.energy.gov.
Source: BNL
The post Brookhaven Unveils AI-Based Approach for Managing High-Volume Particle Physics Data appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 2, 2026 — Fifty years after Seymour Cray unveiled his Cray-1 supercomputer in Chippewa Falls, technology advancements at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire are creating more extraordinary opportunities for students and faculty to conduct deep research using artificial intelligence.
From improved drug screening to faster cancer detection and improved crop yields, Blugolds are producing results in AI research thanks in large part to unique access to high-performance computing.
HPC is a standard of computing that far exceeds the conventional desktop by using a network of powerful machines to process information faster. The Blugold Center for High Performance Computing supports undergraduate research, faculty research and classroom learning by providing free access to the supercomputing infrastructure necessary to make new discoveries and opportunities possible.
The center, formed in 2021, has two supercomputer clusters with more than 90 machines available for students, staff and faculty to use for research and class activities. Last semester alone, the campus completed more than a million hours worth of research in only five months thanks to the system’s capacity to complete multiple calculations at the same time, according to Tyler Bauer, the HPC clusters’ system administrator.
UW-Eau Claire is one of only three Universities of Wisconsin schools with campuswide supercomputing cluster access, along with UW-Madison and UW-Milwaukee. UW-Eau Claire saw its first cluster arrive in the chemistry department in 2009, and upgrades came in 2012 when a group of faculty members wrote a grant to secure funding to establish a campuswide cluster. In 2019-20, a National Science Foundation Major Research Instrumentation grant and an in-kind grant from Hewlett Packard Enterprise brought the now flagship BOSE system online.
The latest transformation came last summer, when UW-Eau Claire designated a new graphics processing unit server with two Nvidia H100 94 gigabyte cards for the BOSE system. Bauer says it has created more opportunities while solving a capacity problem, since the cards can be split seven ways, allowing up to 14 students to use a single machine.
“That not only allows for the type of generative AI work and [large language model] work that a lot of different research groups are starting to look at and industry in general,” Bauer says. “It also added the capacity to support computer science classes, in general, to take advantage of GPUs.”
The HPC clusters supported 10 academic departments, 13 courses — including three with an emphasis in AI artificial intelligence — and 639 undergraduate students during the recent fall semester. Bauer says it also supported a geography class at UW-La Crosse and has the capacity to host more classes for other campuses moving forward.
Life-Changing Opportunities
Free access to the HPC clusters has proven to be life-changing for UW-Eau Claire student Will Jerome. He came to campus four years ago interested in computer science, but unsure of how to utilize his knowledge. Access to the clusters provided an opportunity to perform more intensive research than most students, which Jerome used to develop and optimize multiple U-Net variations, a deep learning model often used for image segmentation in the medical imaging domain.
“Essentially, you’ll feed the U-Net model a CT scan of the abdomen, and in turn, the model will provide pixel-wise classification identifying the pancreas as well as any potential cancerous lesions,” Jerome says.
Last June, he earned the opportunity to present at the Mayo Clinic’s AI Summit, where his research abstract on a clinical agentic pipeline was chosen for publication.
“I was pretty fired up,” says Jerome, who beat out dozens of other entries.
The experience also deepened his knowledge and helped him land an internship in the Mayo Clinic GI AI Lab, known as GAIL, starting this spring.
“For me to have that opportunity to be able to find my niche, to be able to know what I want to do for my career, I’m just extremely thankful,” Jerome says.
The senior enjoyed working with the clusters so much he joined Bauer’s team as a student administrator to assist other students with their research needs. Jerome works alongside fellow administrator and AI researcher Jack Hagen, a junior majoring in both computer science and political science.
Hagen has utilized the HPC clusters for dozens of projects, including his favorite that used AI models to analyze themes found in scripts from series across the “Star Trek” universe. He’s working on multiple other projects, including one that creates a dataset of AI-generated phishing messages to develop more effective modern-day detection.
“I feel like I come up with more projects I can use the cluster for every day,” Hagen says. “Just having this resource available for free 24/7 is super helpful and makes it much, much, much easier to do really any of the research that I want to do.”
Dr. Matt Jewell, professor and chair of the materials science and biomedical engineering department, uses the HPC clusters to advance his work in superconductivity. He says his research would not happen without the technology readily available on campus.
“It’s really the presence of the cluster and the resources and support like Tyler that make it feasible for me to do the work,” Jewell says. “Now I can give my students a totally new field of research for them, a new set of techniques.”
A Hub for Collaboration
The HPC clusters have become an interactive community of students, faculty and research groups advancing AI on campus.
Dr. Rahul Gomes, associate professor and chair of the computer science department, has worked with students like Jerome and with faculty members in different areas to facilitate research in addition to his own work.
Gomes is currently collaborating with CareChronical founder Justin Flechsig to help patients better understand their health with AI. Gomes is working with students on developing large language models that can be reliable and explainable for diabetes management while experiencing a fresh look at new technology through Flechsig.
“Justin’s collaboration is also giving us the opportunity to use the open-source models and build a foundation of these explainable AI models,” Gomes says. “If this turns out to be good, then Justin would take the open-source ones and try to make it better or commercialize it in their setting.”
Gomes leads summer projects through Research Experiences for Undergraduates, an NSF grant-supported nine-week program that brings 10 students from across the country to campus. Machine and deep learning will be a focus of interest once again in the fifth year of the initiative.
The HPC clusters also support Research Experiences for Teachers, another NSF-funded program that provides K-12 STEM educators with hands-on research experience. This summer, Teachers As Researchers in Computing Classrooms will host 10 teachers from western Wisconsin and eastern Minnesota for an intensive seven-week experience that will include computer science projects at UW-Eau Claire, UW-River Falls and UW-Stout.
Bauer says the center has held summer workshops for Upward Bound students for the last five summers to introduce computational science. The federally funded program helps local high school students from underrepresented populations prepare for college.
Beyond that, there are also faculty-led research opportunities for high school students. Last summer, UW-Eau Claire’s Dr. Sudeep Bhattacharyay, professor of chemistry and biochemistry, worked with a student from Eau Claire North High School to develop a computing technique that can be used to produce an AI tool for studying molecular recognition hidden in multiple enzyme active sites.
“It’s students like that that really show, one, how much computational work supports their learning initiatives, but also their growth as a future college student,” Bauer says. “A high school student really pushed everything forward beyond what we’ve ever expected.”
Bauer says UW-Eau Claire is constantly looking for proposals to write and for grants to better position itself as a regional leader in supercomputing. The center is also looking at acquiring more GPUs and large memory machines, which should sustain student innovation.
“Seeing the passion that many of them have for the type of work they’re doing to really try new things beyond the bounds of what they learn in the classroom is pretty cool,” Bauer says. “The HPC team looks forward to continuing to collaborate with our Blugolds and campus partners to see what’s possible and bring new ideas to life.”
Learn more about the Blugold Center for High Performance Computing here.
Source: UW-Eau Claire
The post UW-Eau Claire’s HPC Center Fuels Student and Faculty AI Research appeared first on HPCwire.
Ruling clears Denmark’s Ørsted to resume construction on its Sunrise Wind project off the coast of New York
All five offshore wind projects halted by the Trump administration in December can resume construction after a federal judge’s ruling on Monday that cleared Denmark’s Ørsted to proceed with its Sunrise Wind project off the coast of New York.
Ørsted’s request for an injunction blocking the interior department order was the fifth brought by an offshore wind developer since the 22 December pause on five leases. The agency stopped work on the multibillion-dollar facilities due to national security concerns around radar interference.
Continue reading...Gordon Brown calls for inquiry over Peter Mandelson’s apparent disclosure of highly sensitive government information to Jeffrey Epstein
Peter Mandelson “leaked a sensitive UK government document to Jeffrey Epstein while he was business secretary that proposed £20bn of asset sales and revealed Labour’s tax policy plans”, the Financial Times is reporting.
In his story, Jim Pickard says:
The memo, dubbed “Business Issues”, was written on June 13 2009 by Nick Butler, who at the time was special adviser to the then prime minister Gordon Brown.
The confidential document, which was released by the US Department of Justice as part of a tranche of millions of files relating to Epstein, had been sent to British government officials including cabinet secretary Jeremy Heywood.
It is right that Peter Mandelson is no longer a member of the Labour party. Disciplinary action was underway prior to his resignation.
Jeffrey Epstein’s heinous crimes destroyed the lives of so many women and girls, and our thoughts remain with his victims.
A slew of notable individuals appear in the latest Justice Department release of Jeffrey Epstein files.
After a seemingly endless stream of tone deaf news from Mozilla, we’ve finally got some good news for Firefox users. As the company’s been hinting at for a while on social media now, they’ve added an “AI” kill switch to the latest Firefox nightly release, as well as a set of toggles to disable specific “AI” features.
You can choose to use some of these and not others. If you don’t want to use AI features from Firefox at all, you can turn on the Block AI enhancements toggle. When it’s toggled on, you won’t see pop-ups or reminders to use existing or upcoming AI features.
Once you set your AI preferences in Firefox, they stay in place across updates. You can also change them whenever you want.
↫ Ajit Varma at the Mozilla blog
I’m particularly enamoured with the specific mention that the setting will remain unaffected by updates. It’s incredibly sad that Mozilla even has to mention this, but they have nobody to blame but themselves for that one. None of this is enough to draw me away from Librewolf and back to Firefox, but at least it gives those of us who prefer to keep using Firefox the option to disable all of this “AI” nonsense. Also, there’s no Librewolf for POWER9, so I have to use Firefox somewhere.
It’s unlikely Chrome or Safari will get such clear “AI” kill switches, so it might become a reason for some to switch to Firefox from Chrome or Safari.
Fittingly, the puzzle has begun reusing words on Groundhog Day, and it chose the very first Wordle answer ever to use again.
Amazon's Echo brand has great sales all the time, but this is different. For a limited time, you can get the 11-inch version for under $200.
Action could begin next week in some of state’s largest districts including San Diego, San Francisco and LA
California is facing the prospect of massive teacher strikes across the state as conflicts over working conditions, pay and special education staffing reach a boiling point.
The strikes, which could begin as soon as next week, have been approved by thousands of educators – affecting schools in some of the state’s largest districts including San Francisco, San Diego and Los Angeles.
Continue reading...Israeli troops seized the Rafah border crossing in May 2024. The reopening marks progress toward the second phase of the U.S.-backed ceasefire deal.
Allies downplay president’s links to Epstein but newly released documents offer slightly more complicated picture
Almost immediately after deputy attorney general Todd Blanche announced the justice department was releasing 3m additional pages of files related to Jeffrey Epstein on Friday, Fox News published an exclusive interview with him seeking to shape what Americans could expect to find in the files.
After reviewing years of Epstein’s correspondence, Blanche said, the justice department determined that there was nothing in them in which Epstein said anything criminally implicating Trump.
Continue reading...In the late 1980s, with the expansion of the Internet (even though it was not open to commercial activities yet) and the slowly increasing capabilities of workstations, some people started to imagine the unthinkable: that, some day, you may use your computer to record voice messages, send them over the Internet, and the recipient could listen to these messages on his own computer.
That was definitely science fiction… until workstation manufacturers started to add audio capabilities to their hardware.
↫ Miod Vallat
A great story detailing how the audio hardware in the HP 9000/425e was made to work on OpenBSD and NetBSD.
The United States and India finalized a trade agreement Monday, helping stabilize a relationship that had been in decline during Trump’s second term.
I have a onewheel pint and finally have some money to replace the tyre.
My friend says he may be able to change it at his uni workshops as they have garages for motorsport and automotive engineering. Is there a way of safely changing the tyre ourselves?
Is it ideally better to just send my board to the guys i'm buying from to tyre change?
Microsoft is reevaluating its AI strategy on Windows 11 and plans to scale back or remove Copilot integrations across built-in apps after months of sustained user backlash, according to a Windows Central report citing people familiar with the company's plans. Copilot features in apps like Notepad and Paint are under review and could be pulled entirely or stripped of their Copilot branding in favor of a more streamlined experience. The company has paused work on adding new Copilot buttons to any other in-box apps. Windows Recall, the screenshot-based search feature delayed by an entire year in 2024 over security and privacy concerns, is separately under review -- Microsoft internally considers the current implementation a failure and is exploring ways to rework or rename the feature rather than scrap it entirely, the report said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
BETHESDA, Md., and KAWASAKI, Japan, Feb. 2, 2026 — Lockheed Martin and Fujitsu Limited today announced a new Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to jointly accelerate technology development in several critical areas, leveraging Lockheed Martin’s integrated systems expertise and Fujitsu’s world-leading technologies and commercial scale to advance innovation of dual-use capabilities.
Through the MOU the companies plan to strengthen the technological foundation for dual-use solutions in quantum computing, edge computing enabled by advanced sensing and real-time data fusion, artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML), advanced microelectronics, and multi-domain next-generation network solutions.
“This collaboration accelerates technologies that are critical to meeting the future needs of our customers,” said Craig Martell, vice president and chief technology officer, Lockheed Martin. “Coupling the expertise of Lockheed Martin and Fujitsu across technology areas will be a force multiplier, advancing leadership in critical technologies like microelectronics, inference at the edge and quantum solutions. We look forward to our work together and delivering innovation with speed to our customers.”
“We are honored to collaborate with Lockheed Martin, a leader in defense technologies, on the development of advanced ICT technologies for future dual-use applications,” said Vivek Mahajan, corporate executive officer, corporate vice president, and chief technology officer in charge of System Platform, Fujitsu Limited. “Through this collaboration, we aim to strengthen the competitive standing of both companies.”
The MOU expands on a May 2025 agreement that selected Fujitsu as the supplier of Lockheed Martin’s SPY-7 Subarray Suite Power Supply Line Replaceable Unit, and established a strategic collaboration to strengthen Japan’s defense industrial base.
About Lockheed Martin
Lockheed Martin is a global defense technology company driving innovation and advancing scientific discovery. Our all-domain mission solutions and 21st Century Security vision accelerate the delivery of transformative technologies to ensure those we serve always stay ahead of ready.
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 Lockheed Martin and Fujitsu to Accelerate Dual-Use Tech Development appeared first on HPCwire.
January 2026 report to be rescheduled after BLS has already been faced with major delays from last year’s shutdown
The US’s closely watched jobs report will once again be delayed, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced on Monday, amid a government shutdown.
The January 2026 jobs report, originally scheduled to be released on Friday, will be rescheduled when federal funding resumes. Data collection for the report has been completed, but the shutdown has forced a delay to releasing the report, which will provide crucial jobs data on the US labor market following the weakest year for job growth since 2020, with the addition of only 584,000 jobs in 2025 compared with 2 million in 2024.
Continue reading...Feb. 2, 2026 — Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is working to transform petabytes of imaging data from advanced light and neutron scattering user facilities in the U.S. into actionable knowledge, demonstrating AI-accelerated advanced discovery capabilities that can be applied to energy, semiconductors, medicine, and other essential technologies.

Alexander Hexemer, Tanny Chavez, and Liz Clark pictured at the ALS microtomography beamline with an AI-driven web interface that will be leveraged by SYNAPS-I. Credit: Marilyn Sargent, Berkeley Lab.
The multi-lab effort, called SYNAPS-I (SYnergistic Neutron and Photon Science – Intelligence), is part of the Genesis Mission, a new national initiative led by the Department of Energy to advance AI and accelerate discovery, providing solutions for challenges in science, energy, and national security. A cornerstone of the Genesis Mission is the Transformational AI Models Consortium, which will build and deploy self-improving AI models by harnessing DOE’s unique data, facilities, and expertise. SYNAPS-I is one of three AI model teams that Berkeley Lab leads or plays a key role in, building on AI expertise in high-performance computing, managing large datasets, and pioneering AI models in partnership with industry.
“Our national lab facilities are already world leaders in scientific discovery. SYNAPS-I will radically accelerate the path from experiment to insight by embedding AI directly into the analysis workflow,” said Alex Hexemer, a senior scientist at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS) and SYNAPS-I lead point of contact.
The SYNAPS-I platform will integrate large machine learning models as well as foundation models across all participating light and neutron sources, enabling unified analysis of imaging data from cutting-edge X-ray and neutron instruments at seven DOE Basic Energy Sciences user facilities, including the ALS, a synchrotron light source that produces X-ray, ultraviolet, and infrared light. The increased data outputs of recently completed and in-progress facility upgrades, such as Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source Upgrade (ALS-U) project, bring even greater opportunities to accelerate scientific discovery across a wide range of disciplines.
SYNAPS-I is a public-private partnership uniting national laboratories, university researchers, and key industry innovators in AI, materials, pharmaceuticals, and energy, including partners from Berkeley Lab, Argonne National Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
“By pooling expertise and data across facilities, we can build AI capabilities that benefit all users and accelerate scientific discovery in ways that no single facility could achieve alone,” Hexemer said.
“SYNAPS-I marks the first step into an exciting new era for science at modern facilities. With the ALS — especially after the ALS-U upgrade — we’ll gain an unprecedented view into the inner workings of nature and technology. The challenge lies in turning that immense detail into knowledge that advances humanity. SYNAPS-I begins this next chapter of discovery,” said Dimitrios Argyriou, Interim ALS-U Project Director.
An Advanced AI Tool for X-ray and Neutron Science
X-ray microscopy and neutron scattering techniques help scientists study phase changes in the chemical composition and molecular makeup of active materials. This information can show how chemical processes and structural defects evolve in a material, and those insights can assist in the development of more durable materials for batteries and other useful applications.
Advances in automation for X-ray microscopy have allowed scientists to speed materials analysis for new applications. For example, more than a decade ago at the ALS, a collaboration of researchers used ptychography — a lensless, computational X-ray microscopy technique that analyzes the structure of a sample down to the atomic level — to image 5-nanometer structures in lithium iron phosphate, a material of interest for energy storage applications. That record-setting breakthrough allowed new understanding of the formation of defects in lithium iron phosphate during a chemical phase transformation.
Over the next few years, the multi-lab SYNAPS-I team wants to further accelerate knowledge extraction from X-ray microscopy and neutron scattering. To meet this goal, the team will build a machine-learning pipeline to augment existing algorithms for automated ptychography and image segmentation of X-ray and neutron data. Ptychography scans a sample with overlapping beam positions, collects diffraction patterns, and computationally reconstructs them into high-resolution images in 2D, or scans a sample from multiple angles to form a 3D image. Segmentation identifies patterns and features in X-ray and neutron imaging.
A battery material can be made up of millions of grains and particles. And with image segmentation done the traditional way, the painstaking manual process of identifying individual grains can take considerable time to complete. The SYNAPS-I AI platform will make this significantly easier and faster. By taking advantage of existing and to be developed AI solutions, SYNAPS-I will replace the tedious task of manual segmentation with an automated tool that segments and characterizes particles while you’re viewing the material at an X-ray or neutron beamline instrument.
“Automated segmentation in advanced microscopy is still a significant challenge in science. There are segmentation AI models available today for images of everyday objects, but they don’t work well for scientific data. We’re building SYNAPS-I to fill that gap,” Hexemer said.
Berkeley Lab is also contributing to other projects focused on AI code development, critical minerals and materials, cosmology, microelectronics, and quantum algorithms. Berkeley Lab’s contributions to the Genesis Mission build on decades of research in high-performance computing, managing large datasets, and pioneering AI models that yield insights across many science domains.
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: Theresa Duque, Berkeley Lab
The post Berkeley Lab: How a Machine Learning Pipeline Could Accelerate Innovation appeared first on HPCwire.
BOZEMAN, Mont., Feb. 2, 2026 — Snowflake today announced a new collaboration with OpenAI that enables global enterprises to unlock greater value from their proprietary data with AI. This multi-year, $200 million partnership agreement cements Snowflake and OpenAI’s commitment to co-innovation and joint go-to-market (GTM) strategies aimed at deploying AI agents across global enterprises. Snowflake and OpenAI will work closely together to develop and deploy customized AI solutions for joint enterprise customers that deliver tangible return on investment.
The direct, first-party partnership agreement also makes OpenAI models natively available to Snowflake’s 12,600 global customers within Snowflake Cortex AI across all three major clouds. This empowers global organizations like Canva and WHOOP to bring OpenAI models to their enterprise data for deep research and instant insights. OpenAI models like GPT-5.2 will be accessible within Snowflake Intelligence, the trusted enterprise intelligence agent that empowers every employee to securely access, analyze, and act on all their organization’s knowledge using natural language.
“By bringing OpenAI models to enterprise data, Snowflake enables organizations to build and deploy AI on top of their most valuable asset using the secure, governed platform they already trust,” said Sridhar Ramaswamy, CEO, Snowflake. “Customers can now harness all their enterprise knowledge in Snowflake together with the world-class intelligence of OpenAI models, enabling them to build AI agents that are powerful, responsible, and trustworthy. Together, we’re setting a new standard for AI innovation, helping businesses transform with confidence, while maintaining strong security and compliance standards.”
“Snowflake is a trusted platform that sits at the center of how enterprises manage and activate their most critical data,” said Fidji Simo, CEO of Applications at OpenAI. “This partnership brings our advanced models directly into that environment, making it easier to deploy AI agents and apps, so businesses can close the gap between what AI is capable of and the value they can create today.”
“As we scale our visual AI offering on Canva, both OpenAI and Snowflake have played key roles in how we rapidly empower our users with new creative tools,” said Helen Crossley, Head of Data Science, Canva. “As our platform continues to scale, Snowflake has been foundational to how we manage and activate data, and we’re excited to explore how leveraging OpenAI models in Snowflake Cortex AI can help us extend that foundation. The ability to bridge advanced AI models with our enterprise data allows us to move quickly and test new ideas, without compromising on security or performance.”
“Speed and precision in decision-making are critical for us as WHOOP continues to scale,” said Matt Luizzi, Senior Director of Business Analytics, WHOOP. “Rolling out Snowflake Intelligence to our employees and developing Cortex Agents has provided a secure and governed way for WHOOP to analyze data and make decisions. With OpenAI’s models available directly within Snowflake Cortex AI, we can further enhance those agents with advanced reasoning and analysis, all while maintaining strong security and governance. This partnership will help us continue to make AI a practical, everyday tool for the business.”
Snowflake and OpenAI Help Global Enterprises Deploy AI Agents
By bringing OpenAI models to Cortex AI, global enterprises can gain insights from all their data to deliver richer, more engaging AI agents. Key benefits of the partnership include:
Snowflake and OpenAI Deepen Collaboration to Advance Responsible AI and Workforce Productivity
This partnership builds on the companies’ existing collaboration, with OpenAI leveraging Snowflake as a secure, scalable data platform for experiment tracking, analytics, and testing.
In turn, Snowflake leverages OpenAI’s ChatGPT Enterprise product internally, empowering employees to harness AI in their day-to-day work and accelerate productivity. As a result, employees can make decisions faster, streamline workflows, and drive stronger cross-functional collaboration through AI-powered insights.
About Snowflake
Snowflake is the platform for the AI era, making it easy for enterprises to innovate faster and get more value from data. More than 12,600 customers around the globe, including hundreds of the world’s largest companies, use Snowflake’s AI Data Cloud to build, use and share data, applications and AI. With Snowflake, data and AI are transformative for everyone. Learn more at snowflake.com (NYSE: SNOW).
Source: Snowflake
The post Snowflake, OpenAI Sign $200M Deal to Deploy Enterprise AI Agents appeared first on HPCwire.
PM Sébastien Lecornu pushes budget through using constitutional powers that avoided vote in parliament
France has finally passed a budget for this year after the minority government survived a series of no-confidence votes in a long-running political saga that has unsettled debt markets and alarmed the country’s European partners.
The prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, told parliament on Monday, after months of wrangling, that French people “refuse this disorder and want our institutions to function”.
Continue reading...The Department of Energy is seeking input to determine how the nation can train 100,000 scientists and engineers in AI technologies and techniques over the next decade as part of its Genesis Mission project to accelerate scientific discovery.
“The goals of the Genesis Mission require rapid mobilization of the full capabilities of our nation’s S&T [science and technology] enterprise and tightly coordinated efforts across DOE and its National Laboratories, universities, industry, and philanthropic organizations,” the DOE stated in its January 16 request for information (RFI). “Further, a workforce of 100,000 American scientists and engineers will need to be trained over the next decade to lead the world in AI-powered science innovation and applications.”
The Genesis Mission was launched in November 2025 as “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,” President Trump stated in his executive order creating the program. The endeavor, which is being led by Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil, will leverage the Department of Energy’s 17 National Laboratories as well as industry and academia partners, in pursuit of three main goals: advancing research in energy; building new tools for AI-powered scientific discovery; and developing advanced AI technologies to ensure national security.

Darío Gil, Under Secretary for Science, DOE (Credit: DOE)
The January 16 RFI states that the AI-focused science and engineering jobs of the future “requires formulation of new training approaches.” DOE is looking to establish “an AI for Science and Engineering pipeline” in American universities that focus on bolstering “dual competencies” in AI and a scientific or engineering discipline at the undergraduate and graduate levels. This pipeline would feed into “rapidly expanding private and government sector jobs, as well as advanced degree educational programs.” New training and research opportunities for students will also exist at the graduate and post-doctorate levels, the RFI states.
Specifically, DOE is asking for help in expanding and reformulating educational and training programs in AI, science, and engineering. It’s looking for schools to strengthen its curricula in these areas, and also to find additional ways to incentivize students to seek careers in this area.
You can view the DOE’s January 16 RFI here. Interested parties are encouraged to share their ideas for bolstering AI for science and engineering education. The deadline for submitting information is March 4.
The Federal Government sought to bolster the AI education of American students even before the Genesis Mission was launched. In April 2025, President Trump signed a pair of executive orders, titled “Advancing Artificial Intelligence Education for American Youth” and “Preparing Americans for High-Paying Skilled Trade Jobs of the Future.” The White House also included a section titled “Training a Skilled Workforce for AI Infrastructure” in Trump’s “America’s AI Action Plan,” which was unveiled in July 2025.
While Genesis Mission focuses primarily on advancing the interests of the United States, the effort also includes some overseas partners. Last week, Argonne National Laboratory, one of the top DOE labs for AI-driven science, announced a new partnership with RIKEN, Fujitsu, and Nvidia in support of the Genesis Mission goals. RIKEN is Japan’s top government-run research laboratory and development institute, while Fujitsu is one of the country’s top server makers. Nvidia, meanwhile, is a leading developers of GPUs.
The four organizations will collaborate in several areas, including defining and prototyping next-generation compute architectures that tightly couple modeling, simulation, and AI workloads. They’re also looking to build integrated HPC systems and platforms; provide a shared software ecosystem for AI-enabled science; develop flagship AI for science applications and use cases; develop AI-powered lab robots; and accelerate quantum supercomputing and integration.
“This U.S.-Japanese collaboration with industry is an important opportunity to accelerate discovery, and demonstrates the powerful impact of combining advanced AI, high-performance computing, next-generation computing platform development, and quantum technologies with open innovation,” stated Ian Buck, vice president of Hyperscale and HPC at Nvidia. “Together, we are making progress across fields such as materials science, drug discovery, and energy research-empowering scientists to tackle challenges that were once beyond reach.”
The Genesis Mission is barely two months old, but it is moving quickly. There are several deadlines looming for Genesis Mission, including finding federal computing, storage, and networking resources to support the mission (due by February 22) and identifying and beginning to centralize the initial data sets in support of AI-powered scientific research (due by March 24). The DOE secretary must complete a review of capabilities across DOE labs by July 22, and the system should be demonstrated to be working by August 21. The DOE secretary was to have submitted a list of 20 science and technology challenges of national importance by January 23.
The post DOE Seeks ‘Rapid Mobilization’ to Train Army of Scientists and Engineers for Genesis Mission appeared first on HPCwire.
The latest revelations and reaction to them may mean he has finally encountered a scandal he is unable to outrun
It was the evening of 6 May 2010 and months after being released from jail for procuring a child for prostitution, Jeffrey Epstein was curious as to the result of Britain’s general election.
“Well?” he emailed Peter Mandelson, the then de facto deputy prime minister in Gordon Brown’s government.
Continue reading...Mortgage interest rates have been gradually declining, but will they continue to fall this month? Here's what to know.
| Hey everyone. My board randomly jerks when I power off sometimes. I do have my thumb on the sensor but that’s how I power off my GT and my old plus with no issues. Has anyone else had this issue or know what’s causing it? [link] [comments] |
President Trump announced that he and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi have agreed to a trade deal that will lower tariffs and halt India's purchase of Russian oil.
The latest partial government shutdown is disrupting the release of closely watched economic data.
A look back at the esteemed personalities who've left us this year, who'd touched us with their innovation, creativity and humanity.
Apple's long-standing dominance over its electronics supply chain is eroding as AI companies outbid the iPhone maker for critical components like chips, memory and specialized glass fiber, giving suppliers the leverage to demand that Apple pay more. CEO Tim Cook acknowledged the pressure during a Thursday earnings call, noting constraints in chip supplies and significant increases in memory prices. Nvidia has overtaken Apple as TSMC's largest customer, CEO Jensen Huang said on a podcast; Apple had held that position by a wide margin for years. DRAM prices are set to quadruple from 2023 levels by year-end and NAND prices will more than triple, according to TechInsights. The firm estimates Apple could pay $57 more for memory in the base iPhone 18 due this fall compared to the base iPhone 17 currently on sale -- a significant hit on a device that retails for $799.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ring is bringing its pup-finding AI to everyone, even non-Ring owners, with an adorable video for the big game day.
British Medical Association members back further action as union’s chair says ‘a deal is there to be done’
Resident doctors in England have voted to strike for another six months in their long-running jobs and pay dispute with the government.
Their decision means that, unless an agreement emerges, the campaign of strikes by resident – formerly junior – doctors will enter its fourth year, as the industrial action began in March 2023.
Continue reading...I think I really want to DIY build and tinker. I do this with cars, stereos, guitar equipment- amps and electronics- so it fits my style. I like the part of self-repair and switching things per my lifestyle.
Again: what do you wish you had known beforehand or what have you learned so far you want to tell me?
Wondering how much silver is too much? Here's what you should know about silver ownership limits under federal law.
This live blog is now closed. You can read the latest full report here:
More than 400 European former top diplomats and officials have urged the EU to increase pressure on Israel to end “excesses and unremitting violations of international law” over Gaza and the West Bank.
The statement, due to be sent to EU leaders on Monday, calls on the bloc and its member states to take action in line with its support for a UN resolution for a two-state solution and a just and lasting peace in the Middle East.
Continue reading...Want to find the best true-wireless earbuds? Start here with CNET's top earbuds lists, curated by style, price and use case.
Reports estimate that Grok's AI image generator created millions of nonconsensual sexual images last month.
Demand for year 7 pupils is expected to fall by 7.6% over the next four years, with similar numbers expected in primary schools
Schools in London could lose £45m in funding over the next four years as pupil numbers continue to fall, a report has warned, with secondary schools facing staff and curriculum cuts as budgets dwindle.
Until now, primary schools in the capital have been worst hit by falling birth rates, leading to about 90 school closures or mergers in the past five years. But the crisis is now spreading to secondary schools, which are expected to see steep declines in pupil numbers.
Continue reading...Both accounts remain viable for savers right now. Here's which one could earn more with a $10,000 deposit this year.
New MacBook Pro models with faster processors should be available within a month, according to a report.
Feb. 2, 2026 — The European Union has granted EUR 25 million to the SUPREME consortium, marking a significant milestone in industrialization of superconducting quantum technologies across Europe. Together with national funding from the member states, the total funding adds up to 50 million Euros. Key objectives of the initiative include developing stable superconducting technology and giving access to it for both industry and academia. The first phase will commence in early 2026 and span three and a half years, bringing together 23 partners from eight Member States.
SUPREME launched with the mission to industrialize superconducting quantum technologies and strengthen Europe’s position as a global leader in quantum innovation. The aim is to develop scalable and stable fabrication processes for superconducting quantum devices and make them accessible to European SME’s, large enterprises, startups and academia.
The project has a total budget of approximately EUR 50 million, with funding provided equally by the EU Chips Joint Undertaking and national funding agencies. The funding has been approved to cover the first phase of the initiative, spanning 3.5 years.
“This initiative has been set to strengthen the European quantum ecosystem. We will make sure that the innovations developed through SUPREME can be widely adopted by businesses across Europe, ultimately delivering significant market impact. To support this, we will execute on an ambitious roadmap, which will guide and accelerate the industrialization of superconducting quantum technologies,” said Pekka Pursula, Vice President for Microelectronics and Quantum Technology at VTT and coordinator of the SUPREME consortium.
The key objective is the development of stable technologies and giving access to them for industry and academia. A significant milestone will be fabrication and demonstration of a 3D-integrated qubit module containing 200 qubits. This will showcase the improved stability, higher yield and improved reproducibility of the key fabrication processes for superconducting quantum chips.
SUPREME focuses on developing and validating key quantum processes, including angle-evaporated junctions, etched junctions, 3D integration and hybrid processes for applications in quantum computing, quantum sensing and quantum communication. The aim is to reach technology readiness level TRL 6 and manufacturing readiness level MRL 6.
Enabling European Industry Growth and Innovation
To maximize impact, SUPREME will make its fabrication processes available for companies by offering piloting services. Access to the technologies will be given through Process Design Kits (PDKs) and pilot runs to enable companies to design and develop their own quantum devices and systems.
Shared fabrication runs are particularly beneficial for early-stage companies, allowing sharing the cost of full wafer fabrication run between many users. Process design kits (PDKs) provide design rules and validated process specifications.
SUPREME is committed to strengthen Europe’s position in quantum technology by building the basis for European technology sovereignty for superconducting quantum technologies. It significantly contributes to goals of the European Quantum and the European Chips Act.
Consortium Partners
The consortium combines European expertise in superconducting technology from academia, RTO’s, industrial technology developers and end-users.
The consortium involves the following 23 partners from eight EU Member States:
More from HPCwire: EU Selects SUPREME Consortium to Scale Up Industrial Production of Superconducting Quantum Chips
About VTT
VTT is a visionary research, development and innovation partner. We drive sustainable growth and tackle the biggest global challenges of our time and turn them into growth opportunities. We go beyond the obvious to help the society and companies to grow through technological innovations. We have over 80 years of experience of top-level research and science-based results. VTT is at the sweet spot where innovation and business come together.
Source: VTT
The post EU Selects SUPREME Consortium to Develop Superconducting Tech for Wider Industrialization appeared first on HPCwire.
Lawmakers are working to create a state-level version of the act as the US high court decides on latest voting rights case
On Martin Luther King Jr Day this year, hundreds of Mississippians gathered on the steps of the state capitol building in support of protecting voting rights in the state. The Mississippi house representative Zakiya Summers and state senator Johnny DuPree, both Democrats, introduced legislation that would create a state-level version of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The move comes after years of the supreme court weakening protections formerly guaranteed by the act, and aims to prohibit the dilution of minority voters in the state.
The legislation would create a Mississippi voting rights commission, which would require certain jurisdictions to obtain pre-clearance approval from said commission for any changes to election policy or practice. It would also establish protections for people with limited English proficiency along with additional measures.
Continue reading...Donald Trump claims that the release of millions more files related to Jeffrey Epstein 'absolve' him of wrongdoing, even though his name appears hundreds of times. The latest documents also indicate high-profile figures , including the former prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Labour peer Peter Mandelson, continued friendships with the disgraced financier after his child sex abuse convictions. So what have we learned from the newly released files and what happens next? Lucy Hough speaks to columnist and host of Politics Weekly America Jonathan Freedland
Continue reading...Moltbook, a Reddit-like social network that launched last week and bills itself as a platform "built exclusively for AI agents," had a security vulnerability that exposed private messages shared between agents, the email addresses of more than 6,000 human owners, and over a million credentials, according to research published Monday by cybersecurity firm Wiz. The flaw has since been fixed after Wiz contacted Moltbook. Wiz cofounder Ami Luttwak called it a classic byproduct of "vibe coding." Moltbook creator Matt Schlicht posted on X last Friday that he "didn't write one line of code" for the site. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment when reached out by Reuters. Luttwak said the vulnerability also allowed anyone to post to the site, bot or human. "There was no verification of identity," he said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Cooking in the air fryer is fast and easy. Here's how to make (almost) any recipe air fryer friendly.
Savannah Guthrie’s mother, Nancy, 84, was last seen on Saturday evening and signs indicate she did not leave alone
Authorities in Arizona searching for the 84-year-old mother of the Today show presenter Savannah Guthrie said on Monday they were treating the missing woman’s home as a crime scene, and expressed “grave concern” for her safety.
Nancy Guthrie was last seen by her family at her house near Tucson on Saturday night, and was reported missing on Sunday at lunchtime, sparking a search using a helicopter, drones and dogs, officials said.
Continue reading...US president made announcement on Truth Social after a Monday call with India’s prime minister
Donald Trump claimed India has agreed to stop buying Russian oil as he announced plans to cut US tariffs on Indian exports.
The US president announced that he and the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, whom he proclaimed to be “one of my greatest friends”, had agreed to strike a trade deal.
Continue reading...January ended with a big chainsword to the face.
I took apart and weighed every part of my Pint. It has 1400 miles of wear and some dirt on it, so other boards will be a tiny bit different. The weight of screws were included mostly with the part they hold in place. Anything marked with (*) was too heavy to weigh with my scales and was calculated by adding up the weights of its components
| Onewheel Pint | 12,305* |
|---|---|
| mudguard | 463g |
| bottom plate | 487g |
| raw onewheel pint | 11,355g |
| Raw Onewheel Pint | 11,355g* |
|---|---|
| front footplate | 388g |
| rear footplate | 338g |
| front bottom plate | 299g |
| rear bottom plate | 100g |
| left rail w/ wire guide | 487g |
| right rail | 482g |
| mag handle | 197g |
| wheel | 6,426g* |
| control unit | 650g |
| battery unit | 1,988g |
| Wheel | 6,426g* |
|---|---|
| stator + flange | 3,027g |
| rim + rotor + tyre | 3,399g |
| Control Unit | 650g |
|---|---|
| lid | 172 |
| bottom tub | 354g |
| controller board | 119g |
| Battery Unit | 1,988g |
|---|---|
| lid | 366g |
| bottom tub | 455g |
| battery | 1,110g |
| bms | 38g |
Prosecutors said the suspects ran an export network that sent more than 16,000 shipments worth more than $30 million to Russian customers, including arms manufacturers.
Fifa president sorry for comment about arrests
Infantino says it is time to look at readmitting Russia
The Fifa president, Gianni Infantino, has apologised over remarks he made about British fans and defended the decision to award a peace prize to the US president, Donald Trump.
Infantino said at last month’s World Economic Forum in Davos that the World Cup in Qatar in 2022 had been special because “for the first time in history no Brit was arrested”.
Continue reading...Trump’s pick of ‘respected central banker’ Kevin Warsh as Fed chair prompts investors to sell safe haven assets
Gold and silver prices seesawed on Monday, after a “meltdown” in the metals market deepened and rattled investors around the world.
Gold prices tumbled by as much as 8% to $4,465 an ounce on Monday, ending a run of record highs that took it to nearly $5,600 last week. It later recovered some ground, but was still down by 3.5% at $4,700 in afternoon trading.
Continue reading...Detention of Marius Borg Høiby comes as Epstein files pile pressure on his mother, crown princess Mette-Marit
The son of Norway’s crown princess, Marius Borg Høiby, has been arrested on new charges just days before the start of his rape trial, as his mother continues to face questions over her relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
The Oslo police district said Høiby had been arrested on Sunday evening on suspicion of assault, making threats with a knife and violating a restraining order.
Continue reading...For real this time.
Several factors are weighing on the value of gold and silver after the precious metals ascended to record highs last week.
Blizzardlike conditions stemming from a "bomb cyclone" brought heavy snow to the Southeast and ushered in frigid temperatures to much of the East Coast.
Luthair writes: Notepad++ claims to have been targeted by a state actor, given their previous stance on Uyghurs one can speculate about a candidate. Notepad++, in a blog post: According to the analysis provided by the security experts, the attack involved infrastructure-level compromise that allowed malicious actors to intercept and redirect update traffic destined for notepad-plus-plus.org. The exact technical mechanism remains under investigation, though the compromise occurred at the hosting provider level rather than through vulnerabilities in Notepad++ code itself. Traffic from certain targeted users was selectively redirected to attacker-controlled served malicious update manifests.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I think I really want to DIY build and tinker. I do this with cars, stereos, guitar equipment- amps and electronics- so it fits my style. I like the part of self-repair and switching things per my lifestyle.
For the X7: what are the must reads for vesc programming? (I want to read to ensure I understand and don’t overestimate my skill set)
I’d like to be able to install a fender. What have you done to make this happen?
Which accessories for customization fit this? Bumper brands, etc
Again: what do you wish you had known beforehand or what have you learned so far you want to tell me?
Pep Guardiola’s side would be on top of the league had they not consistently struggled to hold leads
The focus had been on Arsenal. They had not won in three Premier League games before this weekend and it was reasonable to ask how secure their position at the top of the table was. But the impact of their wobble was not that their lead was eaten into, but that they missed opportunities to extend it, because those in the chasing pack were also dropping points.
In their six league games since the New Year fixtures, Arsenal have dropped seven points. But City in the same period have dropped 11, as have Aston Villa and Liverpool. Fulham have dropped 10, Everton have dropped nine, Brentford and Newcastle have dropped eight, Chelsea seven and Manchester United six; hardly anyone in the top half of the table has closed the gap on Arsenal at all, which is why, after Saturday’s comfortable win at Leeds, their lead remains at six points.
Continue reading...The rodent forecasters of Groundhog Day are notoriously bad at their jobs. Is AI any better? Probably not.
Lawyers of woman said to be in her 20s at the time said she spent night with former prince at Royal Lodge in 2010
Lawyers for a second woman who alleges she was sent to the UK by Jeffrey Epstein for a sexual encounter with the then Prince Andrew have urged King Charles’s lawyers to issue a “real apology”.
Brad Edwards, from the US firm Edwards Henderson, previously told the BBC his client, said not to be British and in her 20s at the time, had spent the night with Andrew at Royal Lodge in 2010 and been given a tour of Buckingham Palace.
Continue reading...The Girl, based on Samantha Geimer’s memoir, will revisit ‘one of Hollywood’s most notorious scandals through the eyes of the person most misrepresented by it’
A new movie will explore the notorious Roman Polanski statutory rape scandal from the perspective of the 13-year-old girl, Samantha Geimer.
The Girl, based on Geimer’s 2013 memoir The Girl: A Life in the Shadow of Roman Polanski, will trace her time in the famous director’s orbit in the 1970s, her experience being subjected to sexual assault and the media maelstrom that followed after Polanski, then 43, was arrested in 1977 on charges of statutory rape and lewd and lascivious act with a child.
Continue reading...Vladimir Motin was on sole watch when his vessel crashed into the Stena Immaculate near the Humber estuary
The Russian captain of a ship that crashed into an oil tanker off the Yorkshire coast has been found guilty of killing a crew member in the collision.
Vladimir Motin, a 59-year-old from St Petersburg, was on sole watch when his ship, the Solong, collided into the Stena Immaculate oil tanker near the Humber estuary on 10 March last year. Mark Angelo Pernia, a 38-year-old Filipino man, was killed in the wreck.
Continue reading...Residents of 16 houses on Clydach Terrace in Ynysybwl express relief after repeated floods caused by climate crisis
A row of homes in a village in south Wales is to be bought by a local authority and demolished as they can no longer be protected from flooding caused by the climate crisis.
It will cost Rhondda Cynon Taf county borough council more than £2.5m to buy the 16 riverside properties, pay for legal costs and help to rehouse dozens of residents.
Continue reading...Take to the air, start a fight, explore the ice or shoot some aliens this month.
A teacher who lost her sister in a car accident more than a decade ago is carrying on her legacy through a kindness challenge with her students.
Struggling with high credit card balances? You may have options to reduce or erase some of your debt this month.
An 18-year-old student at Northern Arizona University died after a fraternity rush event, police said. Three students were arrested and charged with hazing.
The U.S. laid fiber-optic cables to a record number of homes last year as billions of dollars in federal broadband grants and a surge in data-center construction fueled an enormous buildout, but the industry does not have enough workers to sustain the pace. A 2024 report by the Fiber Broadband Association and the Power & Communication Contractors Association projects 58,000 new fiber jobs between 2025 and 2032 and estimates 120,000 workers will leave the field in that period, mostly through retirement -- a combined shortage of 178,000. The gap is especially acute among splicers, who fuse hair-thin filaments by hand, and directional drill operators. Telecommunications line installers and repairers earned annual median wages of $70,500 for the year ended May 2024, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, against a $49,500 national median. Push, a utility-construction firm, raised hourly pay for fiber crews by 5% to 8% in each of the past several years and expects the pace to quicken.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Gothams LLC’s draft proposal, obtained by the Guardian, suggests seven-year trucking and logistics monopoly
A US disaster response firm submitted a plan to White House officials that would guarantee 300% profits and a seven-year monopoly over a new trucking and logistics plan for Donald Trump’s Board of Peace in Gaza, according to a November proposal obtained by the Guardian.
The draft plan from Gothams LLC would allow it to collect a fee for every truck moving goods into Gaza, and charge for the use of its warehousing and distribution system.
Continue reading...Auditor calls renewable energy targets ‘unrealistic’ unless ‘EU ups its game’ in mining, refining and recycling of metals such as rare earths
The EU is struggling to free itself from dependence on China and countries in the global south for critical minerals and rare earths needed for everything from smartphones to wind turbines and military jets.
A damning report by the European Court of Auditors (ECA) in Luxembourg found that the bloc’s targets for 2030 were “out of reach” because of lack of progress in domestic production, refining and recycling.
Continue reading...Former Italian PM and ECB chief says Europe must urgently unify on defence and foreign affairs
Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the country’s energy system remained “seriously” challenged by the impact of recent Russian strikes.
More than 200 buildings are still without heating in Kyiv, as temperatures plummeted to -17 Celsius, with “crews from many regions of Ukraine … deployed for the repair work.”
“Europe absolutely can defend yourself. Please stop whining. Why is this so much whingeing about [on], you know, if the US leave, what are we going to do? Come on.
… Europe … why are we so scared: ‘please, don’t leave the US leave…’ Please stand up to my president. Hold us accountable. Make us live up to our talking points.”
Continue reading...Charge is designed to protect much-loved monument from overtourism, but not all visitors like the idea
Teresa Romero is in Rome to celebrate a milestone birthday and one of the first things she did on Monday was visit the Trevi fountain to participate in the ritual of tossing a coin into the waters of the late baroque masterpiece.
But before the Portuguese tourist could get close to the fountain, she had to hand over €2 (£1.70) – the cost of an access fee that has finally been enacted by Rome council officials after years of discussions.
Continue reading...President Trump has attacked U.S. District Judge James Boasberg for his decisions against the administration in a case involving the summary removals of Venezuelan migrants to a Salvadoran prison.
Feb. 2, 2026 — Modern biological research generates data at unprecedented scale—from single-cell sequencing to whole-brain connectomics—yet transforming that data into validated biological insights remains a fundamental bottleneck. Knowledge synthesis, hypothesis generation, and experimental interpretation still depend on manual processes that can’t keep pace with the data being produced.
Today, Anthropic is announcing two flagship partnerships designed to close that gap. The Allen Institute and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) will serve as founding partners in life sciences, extending Claude’s capabilities to frontier scientific research and enabling teams of scientists to work more effectively together and take on ambitious scientific challenges. Each collaboration brings together Anthropic’s expertise in foundation models, agentic systems, and interpretability with world-class research institutions tackling distinct but complementary problems in biology and biomedical science. These partnerships position Claude at the center of scientific experimentation and will build a foundation in which scientists actively use Claude to plan and execute experiments.
Both partnerships are committed to transparency and advances that will help the broader scientific community rigorously deploy AI tools across many scientific domains. Scientific AI systems must not only produce accurate predictions but also provide reasoning that researchers can evaluate, trace, and build upon. These collaborations position Claude as a tool that augments, rather than replaces, human scientific judgment — ensuring that AI-generated insights are grounded in evidence and legible to the scientists who use them.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute: Building the Infrastructure for AI-Enabled Scientific Discovery
HHMI will partner with Anthropic to accelerate discovery in the biological sciences as one part of the Institute’s AI@HHMI initiative. The collaboration is anchored at HHMI’s Janelia Research Campus, which has been developing transformative technologies—from genetically encoded calcium sensors to electron microscopes engineered for understanding the architecture of the brain—for two decades. This foundation uniquely positions HHMI to help shape how AI systems participate in and enhance the research process.
The partnership with Anthropic will involve close collaboration on both the deployment and ongoing development of AI models, ensuring that AI tools evolve in direct response to real experimental needs. Since announcing AI@HHMI in 2024, HHMI has launched several projects that seek to use AI tools to solve longstanding scientific problems ranging from computational protein design to neural mechanisms of cognition. The collaboration with Anthropic will focus on developing specialized AI agents for use within labs. These will serve as a comprehensive source of experimental knowledge integrated with cutting-edge scientific instruments and analysis pipelines to speed the pace of discovery.
Allen Institute: Multi-Agent Systems for Mechanistic Discovery
The Allen Institute will collaborate with Anthropic to develop multi-agent AI systems for multi-modal data analysis and exploration across the institute’s areas of scientific focus. The work will explore how multiple specialized AI agents—for multi-omic data integration, knowledge graph management, temporal dynamics modeling, and experimental design—can be coordinated to support the full arc of scientific investigation.
This collaboration will explore how agentic AI systems can compress months of manual analysis into hours while surfacing patterns that human researchers might otherwise miss. These systems are designed to amplify scientific intuition rather than replace it, keeping researchers in control of scientific direction while handling computational complexity.
For Anthropic, this collaboration provides in-depth feedback from real scientific use with day-to-day workflows where reliability and judgment matter. Working with the Allen Institute helps surface usability gaps and failure modes that don’t appear in more controlled settings.
Looking Ahead
These partnerships will inform the broader development of Claude’s life science capabilities, generating insights about how AI systems can most effectively support scientific workflows across diverse research contexts. Anthropic is committed to responsible development that prioritizes scientific rigor, interpretability, and researcher autonomy.
Source: Anthropic
The post Anthropic Launches Life Sciences Collaborations with Allen Institute and HHMI appeared first on HPCwire.
Trump supporter Júnior Pena falsely claimed migrants being rounded up, including Brazilians, were ‘all crooks’
A rightwing Brazilian influencer who claimed Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown targeted only “crooks” has been arrested by ICE agents in New Jersey.
Júnior Pena, whose full name is Eustáquio da Silva Pena Júnior, declared his support for the US president in a recent video message to his hundreds of thousands of social media followers.
Continue reading...The president called the ceremony ‘garbage’, but in reality it was a celebration of artists whose commercial success was matched by boundary-pushing boldness
Donald Trump, it seems, did not much enjoy the 2026 Grammys. Shortly after the conclusion of the ceremony’s live broadcast in the US, there he was on Truth Social, calling it “the worst”, “garbage”, “unwatchable” and threatening to sue host Trevor Noah.
Perhaps that was the reaction the Recording Academy wanted. You could, if you wished, divine a certain Maga-baiting intent not just in the decision to give the album of the year award to Bad Bunny – a Puerto Rican who attracted criticism from the Trump administration after he was booked to headline the SuperBowl LX half-time show – but the choice of the Buena Vista Social Club, a Broadway hit based on the 1997 album of the same name featuring veteran Cuban musicians, as the best musical theatre album: the latter two weeks after the New York Times reported that Cubans settled in Florida are being deported in record numbers.
Continue reading...The victim's wife managed to escape after park rangers scared the animal away, officials said.
British pop collective decry use of 1997 hit Tubthumping to promote the party’s ‘small-minded, hate-fuelled agenda’
The British pop collective Chumbawamba has asked Spain’s Vox to stop using their best-known song to promote “its small-minded, hate-fuelled agenda” after the far-right party chose its 1997 hit single Tubthumping to soundtrack a social media post railing against migration.
Santiago Abascal, who leads Vox, visited the north-eastern Spanish town of Caspe last week in the run-up to this weekend’s regional election in Aragón. He posted images of the visit to Facebook on Friday, along with the caption: “Great welcome yesterday in Caspe … for a street press conference. The locals are sick of the migratory invasion. And we stand with them.”
Continue reading...Looking to buy a home or refinance your existing one? Here are the mortgage interest rates you'll need to know now.
A VPN can help you unlock the entire Olympic games, potentially for free.
See Budweiser celebrate its birthday, Derrick Henry on an adventurous trolley ride and a KPop Demon Hunters star.
Awards host alluded to president’s association with late sex offender in awards ceremony remarks
Grammys host Trevor Noah has been threatened with legal action by Donald Trump for a joke during Sunday’s awards ceremony about the president’s connection to the disgraced late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Trump fired off an angry post on his Truth Social platform shortly after the comedian said the song of the year award was “a Grammy that every artist wants – almost as much as Trump wants Greenland, which makes sense because Epstein’s island is gone, he needs a new one to hang out with Bill Clinton”.
Continue reading...Norwegian Crown Princess Mette-Marit's son hit with new criminal charges as she apologizes for "poor judgment" over Epstein ties.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. and BOSTON, Feb. 2, 2026 — QuEra Computing and Roadrunner Venture Studios today announced a $4 million strategic partnership to build a quantum testbed at the Roadrunner Quantum Lab (RQL) powered by the State of New Mexico in Albuquerque. QuEra’s commitment includes running facilities with full-time hires in state, making Albuquerque’s Innovation District a world-class center for quantum companies.
“QuEra is one of the most innovative quantum companies in the world and they are now bringing their neutral atom platform to New Mexico,” said Adam Hammer, CEO and Co-Founder of Roadrunner Venture Studios. “Together, QuEra, Roadrunner, and the State of New Mexico are removing a significant burden that New Mexico-based founders face in validating their technologies: access to leading engineers, top-of-market equipment, and compute. This new facility will be an unparalleled proving ground for America’s next generation of quantum companies.”
The partnership is a significant economic investment in New Mexico and the first step in a long-term commitment to the state. QuEra will establish a physical presence at the RQL and hire multiple full-time employees, while expanding access to its quantum computing systems for resident companies. The testbed is designed to generate high-skill jobs, workforce training programs, startup formation, and increased federal and private capital—building the foundation for a durable advanced technology economy in New Mexico.
“To build a quantum economy, companies need to test and prove their technologies quickly, efficiently, and accurately,” said Nate Gemelke, Chief Technology Strategist of QuEra Computing. “This partnership brings infrastructure to New Mexico that fills a real gap in getting quantum technology to market. With the help of our New Mexico partners, QuEra’s vision is to bring more resources to New Mexico in the coming years and make the state a national hub for neutral-atom quantum computing.”
The collaboration is the latest accomplishment in the state’s $300 million effort to build a globally competitive quantum economy. Backed by the New Mexico Economic Development Department and the State of New Mexico, Roadrunner is advancing its quantum coalition promise to bring quantum companies from around the United States to the state by bringing one of the world’s leading quantum compute companies to New Mexico’s innovation ecosystem.
“New Mexico has always had research strengths in quantum. Now, the state’s investments and unique partnerships are bringing industry growth that means real economic impact for New Mexicans,” said Nora Meyers Sackett, Director of the Technology and Innovation Office at the New Mexico Economic Development Department. “QuEra’s addition to the state’s fast-growing quantum ecosystem is more confirmation that New Mexico is the quantum state.”
Neutral-atom quantum computing offers unique advantages—such as scalability, performance, and speed—for founders aiming to validate quantum components including laser systems. By testing on QuEra’s systems, founders and scientists can speed up expensive, time-consuming builds and deliver and deploy technology more efficiently.
The testbeds will support R&D across multiple domains, including:
The facilities are expected to launch later this year, starting with academic and national lab partners before opening to industry collaborators and quantum startups. Roadrunner’s quantum coalition includes nearly a dozen partners spanning national laboratories (Sandia, Los Alamos), the private sector (Qunnect, QuEra Computing, Maybell), academic institutions (University of New Mexico), and venture capital firms (DCVC, Playground Global, Quantonation). These partnerships have been made possible with the support of the State of New Mexico.
About QuEra Computing
QuEra is putting quantum to work. As the scientific and commercial leader in neutral-atom quantum computing, we help enterprise innovators leverage quantum to gain competitive advantage, support HPC centers as they help users tackle classically intractable problems, and enable government programs to build national capability and sovereign capabilities. We do this through our quantum innovation platform, combining quantum systems available on-premises and via the cloud with application co-design and collaborative research. Born at Harvard and MIT, still advancing together, QuEra operates globally from Boston, Tokyo, and the United Kingdom. As quantum computing moves from “one day” to “Day One,” QuEra delivers practical impact today while advancing toward large-scale, fault-tolerant systems. See what’s possible at quera.com.
About Roadrunner Venture Studios
Roadrunner is the nation’s first venture studio purpose-built for hard science company creation. The studio works with national labs, research institutions, and venture capital firms to turn research in advanced energy, robotics, and quantum into scalable, venture-backable companies. For more information, visit www.roadrunnerventurestudios.com.
Source: QuEra Computing
The post QuEra Partners with Roadrunner Venture Studios on $4M Quantum Testbed in New Mexico appeared first on HPCwire.
Starbucks has been pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into AI and automation -- testing robots that take drive-through orders, virtual assistants that help baristas recall recipes and manage schedules, and scanning tools that count inventory -- as the 55-year-old coffee chain tries to reverse several years of struggling sales. The company last week reported its first same-store sales increase in two years in the U.S., where it earns roughly 70% of its revenue. Shares still slid 5% on concerns that heavy spending, including $500 million to boost staffing, had hurt profits. CEO Brian Niccol, who joined in 2024 after engineering Chipotle's turnaround, told the BBC he is confident consistent growth will address that; the company has pledged to find $2 billion in cost savings over three years.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Millions of dollars have been raised for Bondi hero Ahmed al-Ahmed, while campaigns are backing families hit by Victoria’s bushfires. What does this way of giving mean for the charity sector?
Within hours of the Bondi beach terror attack, the money had already begun to pour in. As images of the tragedy flooded social media, people from around the world donated tens of thousands of dollars to the victims, their families and first responders.
Passing the hat around the neighbourhood or the local pub has always been a staple response in times of crisis. But today, that instinct to open your wallet has been exponentially supercharged via a digital simulacrum: online crowdfunding platforms.
Continue reading...Wael Tarabishi, who has a lifelong muscle disorder, died after Maher, his father and primary caretaker, was detained
Until three months ago, Wael Tarabishi and his father, Maher, were inseparable. It was a necessity; in addition to being best friends, Maher was the caretaker for 30-year-old Wael, who was diagnosed with a progressive muscle disorder called Pompe disease when he was a child.
As Wael’s mother said in November, Maher was his son’s “case manager, his equipment company, his doctor, his everything”.
Continue reading...New rates will impact subscribers in the US.
China's decades-old network of elite high-school "genius classes" -- ultra-competitive talent streams that pull an estimated 100,000 gifted teenagers out of regular schooling every year and run them through college-level science curricula -- has produced the core technical talent now building the country's leading AI and technology companies, the Financial Times reported Saturday. Graduates of these programs include the founder of ByteDance, the leaders of e-commerce giants Taobao and PDD, the billionaire behind super-app Meituan, the brothers who started Nvidia rival Cambricon, and the core engineers behind large language models at DeepSeek and Alibaba's Qwen. DeepSeek's research team of more than 100 was almost entirely composed of genius-class alumni when the startup released its R1 reasoning model last year at a fraction of the cost of its international rivals. The system traces to the mid-1980s, when China first sent students to the International Mathematical Olympiad and a handful of top high schools began creating dedicated competition-track classes. China now graduates around five million STEM majors annually -- compared to roughly half a million in the United States -- and in 2025, 22 of the 23 students it sent to the International Science Olympiads returned with gold medals. The computer science track has overtaken maths and physics as the most popular competition subject, a shift that accelerated after Beijing designated AI development a "key national growth strategy" in 2017.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Demand by US that it take control of Arctic island is for many a reminder of troubling imperial past
On a bitterly cold recent morning in the Canadian Arctic, about 70 people took to the streets. Braving the bone-chilling winds, they marched through the Inuit territory of Nunavut, waving signs that read: “We stand with Greenland” and “Greenland is a partner, not a purchase.”
It was a glimpse of how, for Indigenous peoples across the Arctic, the battle over Greenland has become a wider reckoning, seemingly pitting the long-fought battle to assert their rights against a global push for power.
Continue reading...Fulton County plans to file a motion challenging what local leaders call an unprecedented and improper seizure of 2020 election records, following an FBI search of the county's elections office last week.
India wants to reset relations after Bangladesh elections. It will be easier said than done Expert comment LToremark
India is hoping a new democratically elected government in Bangladesh will help improve bilateral relations. But identity politics in both countries could derail progress.
As Bangladesh prepares to hold elections on 12 February – after almost 18 months under an unelected interim government – India is seeking a reset in bilateral relations. The relationship between Dhaka and New Delhi has deteriorated after the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in August 2024 following large-scale unrest in which some 1,400 people were killed. India’s historically close relations with Hasina’s party – the Awami League – fuelled allegations that New Delhi empowered her government’s increasingly autocratic tendencies.
The fact that Hasina fled to India and has continued to make statements from there has added to the bad blood, as has the verdict issued in November which found her guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced her to death. Bangladesh and India maintain an extradition treaty, but New Delhi has so far refused to extradite Hasina on the grounds that it has the right to refuse requests if the offence is of a ‘political character’.
New Delhi fears that Hasina’s removal from power has created space for groups that are hostile towards India, amid growing anti-India rhetoric and violence in Bangladesh. Attacks on minorities – including Bangladesh’s 13 million-strong Hindu population – have exacerbated tensions. The Bangladeshi government claims that such attacks have been exaggerated and are largely politically motivated, not about religious affiliation. The murder in December of a Bangladeshi youth activist who had been critical of India triggered further unrest, including the lynching of a Hindu man. Claims that the suspects fled to India worsened relations between the two countries.
Reflecting the poor state of bilateral relations, India halved its financial assistance to Bangladesh in its latest budget.
Adding insult to injury is the Bangladeshi government’s outreach to countries that have historically difficult relations with India, including China and Pakistan. But close ties with China are not new. Beijing has been a longstanding trade, investment and defence partner for Bangladesh – more than 70 per cent of the country’s arms imports came from China in the 2019-23 period for example. Nonetheless, India fears that China is seeking to exploit its deteriorating relations with Bangladesh. In June, Bangladesh, China and Pakistan held the inaugural meeting of a foreign secretary/vice foreign minister dialogue. This parallels a similar initiative between Afghanistan, China and Pakistan. New Delhi views this as an effort to marginalize India in its own neighbourhood.
During a visit to China in March 2025, Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Muhammed Yunus referred to India’s ‘landlocked’ northeastern states and said Bangladesh is the ‘only guardian of the ocean’ that could serve as an ‘extension of the Chinese economy’. This did not go down well in New Delhi. China is involved in several high-profile infrastructure projects in Bangladesh, including modernization of the Mongla Port – its second-largest seaport – and a water management project along the Teesta River. The latter is of particular concern to New Delhi as Bangladesh and India have been engaged in stalled negotiations on sharing the river waters.
Dhaka’s engagement with Islamabad have seen a more notable shift. The two countries have had historically strained relations following Bangladesh’s secession from Pakistan in 1971 following a violent independence struggle. Improved relations have seen a relaxation of visa rules and trade restrictions, the establishment of direct sea links between Chittagong and Karachi and several senior-level interactions. Dhaka and Islamabad have also discussed deepening defence cooperation. For example, Bangladesh is considering procuring the JF-17 fighter aircraft, which is jointly produced by China and Pakistan.
India is hoping the return to democratic rule in Bangladesh will help reset relations. In preparation, New Delhi has sought to deepen and diversify its political engagement with Bangladesh, to dispel allegations surrounding its historic ties with the Awami League. India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Yunus met on the sidelines of a conference in Bangkok in April and Modi sent a condolence letter following the death of Khaleda Zia – leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) – in December. Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar also attended Zia’s funeral where he met her son, Tarique Rahman. Rahman has recently returned to Bangladesh after 17 years in exile and is widely tipped to be the next prime minister if the BNP performs well in the election.
However, identity politics in both countries threatens to derail progress. A new government in Dhaka that is overtly hostile towards India, for example one that includes Islamic hardliners, will make rapprochement difficult. Even a BNP-led government does not guarantee improved relations. In an interview, Rahman stated that ‘the people of Bangladesh have decided that relations will remain cool. So, I have to stand with my country’s people’. When the BNP ruled Bangladesh in 2001-06 relations with India deteriorated amid growing instability along the border and a surge in terrorist activity.
A shift in mindset towards India will be dictated in part by the issue of Hasina’s extradition. Publicly, New Delhi will remain averse to extraditing her. Privately, however, the Indian government will be looking to make the issue go away, for example by Hasina moving onto a third country.
In India, meanwhile, attacks on Bangladeshi Hindus have become a prominent issue in public and media discourse. India will be holding elections this year in two states that border Bangladesh – Assam and West Bengal – which could see an increase in anti-Bangladesh rhetoric in the run-up to the polls.
The credibility of the Bangladeshi election and its outcome will also determine the trajectory of the bilateral relationship. A low voter turnout fuelled by violence could undermine the credibility of the electoral process. Supporters of the Awami League have threatened to disrupt the elections after the party has been effectively banned from standing in the election. The former foreign minister in the Hasina government, Hasan Mahmud, has said stability will not return to Bangladesh if the Awami League is excluded.
Deputy US attorney general says the government cannot ‘just create evidence’ but victims’ attorney accuses government of hiding perpetrators while exposing survivors. Plus, the Mormon women who fought a Republican-led redistricting initiative in Utah – and won
Good morning.
The deputy US attorney general, Todd Blanche, told ABC News yesterday that prosecutors’ review of the Jeffrey Epstein-Ghislaine Maxwell sex-trafficking case “is over”, and in a separate interview to CNN said “victims want to be made whole”. “And we want that,” Blanche said. “But that doesn’t mean we can just create evidence or that we can just kind of come up with a case that isn’t there.”
What are the latest disclosures to emerge from the huge dump of 3.5m documents related to Epstein on Friday? Some of the documents suggest that other men were involved in his sexual abuse, prompting questions about officials’ contentions that there isn’t evidence to investigate third parties for potential involvement in the late financier’s crimes.
What did Bad Bunny say? “Before I say thanks to God, I’m gonna say ICE out,” he said. “We’re not savage, we’re not animals, we’re not aliens, we’re humans and we are Americans … The only thing more powerful than hate is love so please we need to be different.”
Continue reading...Russia’s attacks on Ukraine’s energy system 5 February 2026 — 1:00PM TO 2:30PM Anonymous (not verified) Online
What are the consequences and how should Europe respond?
What are the consequences and how should Europe respond?
Since the onset of the full-scale invasion, Russia has launched systematic, high-precision strikes against Ukraine’s civilian energy grid. By February 2026, the cumulative degradation of critical infrastructure has reached a critical point that threatens the continuity of essential services and puts civilian lives at risk during the winter season. In destroying power, heating and water systems during sub-zero temperatures, Russia’s attacks aim to undermine morale and put pressure on the Ukrainian state to divert its limited resources from the battlefield to constant, costly infrastructure repairs. Russia’s damage of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure also increases the risk of new waves of displacement which could further strain Western European social systems and political unity.
This discussion will examine the economic and humanitarian impact of Russia’s strikes and explore different response options for Ukraine and its partners.
Rightwing populist elected in landslide after promising to crack down on rising violence linked to cocaine trade
The rightwing populist Laura Fernández has won Costa Rica’s presidential election in a landslide after promising to crack down on rising violence linked to the cocaine trade.
Fernández’s nearest rival, centre-right economist Álvaro Ramos, conceded defeat as results showed the ruling party far exceeding the threshold of 40% needed to avoid a runoff.
Continue reading...The U.N. and IOC are asking for a pause in wars, an ancient Olympic tradition, amid the Winter Games. Athletes from countries beset by violence are set to compete.
Punxsutawney Phil looked for his shadow during the 2026 Groundhog Day ceremony.
Trump’s presidency has brought a windfall to billionaires while hurting the poor. In these conditions, democracy cannot survive
Trump ran on a promise to lower costs on day one, but a year into his presidency, the real beneficiaries are his billionaire donors. Instead of making life more affordable for everyday Americans, Trump has used the presidency to enrich himself and his billionaire allies, while making the largest cuts to Medicaid and food assistance in history and leaving working families behind.
As families struggle with rising costs, Trump has effectively turned the White House into a slush fund, running the federal government like a personal ATM. Public money, political favors and government power are funneled to his friends and family businesses, while regulatory agencies and enforcement mechanisms are hollowed out or weaponized for profit. His oligarch allies, from big tech executives to big oil barons, are already seeing massive returns on their political investments. This is not democracy. It is a hostile corporate takeover and working people are being exploited.
Joseph Geevarghese is the executive director of Our Revolution. Rashida Tlaib is a US representative for Michigan
Continue reading...Scores of live music fans in New York’s hip borough report having their phones stolen during live music shows
During a December visit to see family in his home state of New York, Zander Cammarata, who now lives in Berlin, purchased a new iPhone because they cost less in the United States. He then went to see one of his favorite bands, Silverstein, a post-hardcore emo group, in Brooklyn.
By the time he flew back to Germany, he was again using his old phone.
Continue reading...2027 is going to be a big year for iPhones and here's what you can expect.
Online gaming legend Mark Fischbach writes, directs and stars in this feature about a convict on a vague intergalactic mission – but his barebones production has nothing to show
William Goldman’s old showbiz maxim continues to apply that nobody knows anything. Independently financed horror movie Iron Lung has been smuggled into multiplexes without the usual promotional hoopla, where it was keenly awaited by the massed followers of its Hawaiian writer-director-star Mark Fischbach, better known as YouTube gaming legend Markiplier. Many of us have long sensed culture is making a decisive break with the analogue in favour of the (perhaps terminally) online and Fischbach’s film makes that paradigm shift not just visible but visceral; it feels not unlike spending 12 hours on Twitch with all the curtains closed.
Though Markiplier is approaching the horror genre from a notionally fresh angle – by adapting Dave Szymanski’s eponymous space-submarine sim – he lands on the narratively rusty idea of an astronaut straying beyond his depth; this is Moon in dimmer light. Beset by ominous rumbles and mounting doubts about the state of mankind, the begrimed and squalid craft singlehandedly piloted by Fischbach’s straggle-haired convict Simon is indistinguishable from the average teenage bedroom. Our hero staggers round this intergalactic deathtrap completing vaguely specified missions – ram this, repair that, download something or other – like a harassed dad ticking off his Sunday to-do list. In this, Simon proves more proficient than Fischbach’s offscreen self, who is either stumped by or oblivious to the film’s fundamental issues.
Continue reading...Volunteer workers say increasing case numbers and dozens of dead birds raise fears spread is wider than recorded
Members of the public and charity volunteers are working to contain a suspected outbreak of bird flu among swans in the Thames Valley, amid signs that confirmed cases are continuing to rise.
Since October, 324 cases of bird flu in swans have been recorded by the Animal and Plant Health Agency (Apha), which is sponsored by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). Of these, 39 were recorded in the first four weeks of 2026 alone.
Continue reading...PM believes ex-Labour minister should not be member of House of Lords or use title, No 10 spokesperson says
Keir Starmer has suggested that Peter Mandelson should resign from the House of Lords and that the upper chamber should urgently modernise its disciplinary procedures to strip him of his peerage.
The cabinet secretary, the UK’s most senior civil servant, will also investigate Mandelson’s actions as business secretary when Labour was last in power, after emails to Jeffrey Epstein about government policy emerged.
Continue reading...“Terrorist” is the word that the Trump administration employs to describe the victims of its most egregious acts of state violence.
President Donald Trump has used the word “terrorist” to justify the extrajudicial killings of civilians in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean. And his deputies used it to explain away the killings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis by federal agents.
“Earlier this morning, on my Orders, U.S. Military Forces conducted a kinetic strike against positively identified Tren de Aragua Narco terrorists,” Trump wrote following the initial boat strike on September 2, 2025. He said the attack “occurred while the terrorists were at sea in International waters.”
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said that Good and Pretti were guilty of “domestic terrorism.” And top White House adviser Stephen Miller used similar language to describe both.
These killings were conducted thousands of miles apart by different agencies in very different contexts. But the connection between them could be more than semantic.
Under National Security Presidential Memorandum 7, or NSPM-7, Trump’s Justice Department is now assembling a secret “domestic terrorist organization” database. It also maintains a secret list of “designated terrorist organizations” with whom the U.S. claims to be at war.
For months, the White House and Justice Department have failed to answer a question that becomes more relevant with every person branded a domestic terrorist, shot by federal agents, or both: Are Americans who the federal government deems to be domestic terrorists under NSPM-7 subject to extrajudicial killings like those it claims are members of designated terrorist organizations on boats at sea?
“If we’re going to say it’s OK to kill so-called terrorists in the Caribbean, for actions that have traditionally been dealt with as a criminal matter, using due process — what’s to say you can’t do the same in an American city?” asked Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-Pa., the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Constitution and Limited Government. “That is the very scary but logical end of all these things the Trump administration is doing.”
Trump’s de facto declaration of war on dissent, NSPM-7, conflates constitutionally protected speech and political activism with “domestic terrorism” — a term that has no basis in U.S. law. That memorandum, which was issued in September, and an implementation memo released in December by Attorney General Pam Bondi, specifically targets those that espouse what the administration defines as anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, anti-Christianity, anti-fascism, and radical gender ideologies, as well as those with “hostility toward those who hold traditional American views.” At a minimum, the memorandum raises serious First Amendment, due process, and civil liberties concerns.
Bondi’s December memo, “Implementing National Security Presidential Memorandum-7: Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence,” which the Justice Department shared with The Intercept, defines “domestic terrorism” in the broadest possible terms, including “doxing” and “conspiracies to impede … law enforcement.”
Federal immigration agents consider observing, following, and filming their operations a crime under 18 U.S.C. § 111: 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.
A recent report by the CATO Institute notes that it is “crucial to understand that ICE and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) consider people who follow DHS and ICE agents to observe, record, or protest their operations as engaging in ‘impeding.’” It goes on to note that DHS “has a systematic policy of threatening people who follow ICE or DHS agents to record their activities with detentions, arrests, and violence, and agents have already chased, detained, arrested, charged, struck, and shot at people who follow them.”
Before their killings, both Pretti and Good had been observing agents’ activities. In the wake of Good’s death, the Justice Department opened an investigation of Good’s widow for allegedly “interfering” with an ICE operation — apparently for filming the shooting.
NSPM-7 alleges vast “organized structures, networks, entities, organizations, [and] funding sources” support leftist “criminal and terroristic conspiracies.” It adds, “These campaigns are coordinated and perpetrated by actors who have developed a comprehensive strategy to achieve specific policy goals through radicalization and violent intimidation.”
The Trump administration has framed the Minneapolis protests and a larger movement in Minnesota and beyond in the same terms as NSPM-7, painting it as a “Radical Left Movement of Violence and Hate” coordinated by a vast network of “highly paid professional agitators and anarchists,” as well as “insurrectionists” supported by corrupt Democratic lawmakers and officials or “sanctuary politicians” who are inciting violence against federal officers.
Trump endorsed Vice President JD Vance’s baseless claim that Good was part of a “broader left-wing network” that sometimes uses “domestic terror techniques” to “attack, to dox, to assault and to make it impossible for our ICE officers to do their job.” Miller suggested Pretti was one of an unknown number of militants operating in Minneapolis. “A would-be assassin tried to murder federal law enforcement and the official Democrat account sides with the terrorists,” he wrote on X on Saturday, referring to comments by a Democratic party account calling for ICE to withdraw from Minneapolis.
Trump initially described Pretti as a “gunman,” although the ICU nurse never drew his licensed handgun before being executed at point blank range by federal agents. After briefly softening his tone on Pretti, Trump called him an “Agitator and, perhaps, insurrectionist” in a Friday Truth Social post.
Miller bills NSPM-7 as the first “all-of-government effort to dismantle left-wing terrorism,” which he calls a sophisticated, well-funded network supported by an “entire system of feeder organizations that provide money, resources, weapons.” Bondi’s implementation memo also offers a fictitious apocalyptic vision of urban America which the Trump administration has employed to justify its domestic military occupations, including “mass rioting and destruction in our cities” and “violent efforts to shut down immigration enforcement.”
“Every accusation is a confession with this administration.”
“This political violence is not a series of isolated incidents and does not emerge organically,” Scanlon told The Intercept, quoting from a section of NSPM-7 that details a supposed coordinated effort by antifascists and other administration enemies. But Scanlon framed it in terms of the Trump administration’s own authoritarian campaign. “The paragraph describing how political violence takes root and becomes more widespread basically describes the Trump era. Every accusation is a confession with this administration. You talk about targeted intimidation and radicalization and threats and violence designed to silence opposing speech — it’s all there, and we’re seeing it unfold.”
Federal immigration officers have shot at least 13 people since September, killing at least five, including Pretti and Good, according to data compiled by The Trace.
“What the Trump Administration is doing in Minnesota is a testing ground for a paramilitary police state across the country,” said Rep. April McClain Delaney, D-Md., on January 25. “Masked DHS agents are now operating in Minnesota neighborhoods with impunity — terrorizing families and neighborhoods, slandering the victims with lies, silencing dissent, seizing and detaining protesters, eroding basic civil liberties and killing American citizens.”
At the same time shootings by immigration agents have ramped up at home, the Trump administration has been killing civilians in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean. The U.S. military has carried out 36 known attacks, destroying 37 boats, since September, killing at least 126 civilians. The most recent attack occurred in the Pacific Ocean on January 23, killing three people. The administration insists the attacks are permitted because the U.S. is engaged in “non-international armed conflict” with “designated terrorist organizations” it refuses to name. Experts, current and former government officials, and lawmakers say these killings are outright murders.
“This administration has asserted the prerogative to kill people outside the law, solely on the basis of the president labeling them terrorists. And there are no obvious limits to this license to kill,” said Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer who is a specialist in counterterrorism issues and the laws of war. “The president has wielded that authority in the Caribbean and the Pacific and could wield it domestically. Indeed, the fact that they invoked domestic terrorism to justify the killings of Rene Good and Alex Pretti suggests they already might have.”
Since October, The Intercept has been asking if the White House would rule out conducting summary executions of members of the list “of any such groups or entities” designated as “domestic terrorist organization[s]” under NSPM-7, without a response. Return receipts also show that Justice Department spokesperson Natalie Baldassarre has repeatedly read The Intercept’s questions on this subject over months but has failed to offer an answer.
Faiza Patel, the senior director of the Brennan Center for Justice’s liberty and national security program, told The Intercept that while it wasn’t possible to directly link NSPM-7 to the killings of Good and Pretti, the memorandum’s rhetoric about what constitutes domestic terrorism “is reflected in senior officials’ statements and it seems that DHS agents on the ground view any opposition to their actions as warranting extreme and even lethal force.”
Federal agents from ICE and Homeland Security Investigations assigned to Minneapolis received a memo earlier in January asking them to collect identifying information on “agitators, protestors, etc.,” CNN reported Tuesday. Last week, a masked immigration agent warned a woman filming their activities in Portland, Maine, that her information would be entered into a “nice little database” that would label her a “domestic terrorist.” Tom Homan, Trump’s border czar and Border Patrol commander-at-large Gregory Bovino’s replacement, also mentioned the database the same month on Fox News. “We’re going to create a database,” he said, noting that it would include those “arrested for interference, impeding and assault.” Journalist Ken Klippenstein recently reported on more than a dozen “secret and obscure watchlists” being used to track protesters and supposed “domestic terrorists.”
DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin says her department does not administer the secret database. “There is NO database of ‘domestic terrorists’ run by DHS,” she told The Intercept by email. “We do of course monitor and investigate and refer all threats, assaults and obstruction of our officers to the appropriate law enforcement.” DHS’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis does admit that it “nominated over 4,600 people to the terrorist watchlist” in the last year and says ICE arrested more than 1,400 “known or suspected terrorists.”
NSPM-7 directs Bondi to compile a list “of any such groups or entities” to be designated as “domestic terrorist organization[s],” and Bondi has ordered the FBI to “compile a list of groups or entities engaging in acts that may constitute domestic terrorism,” according to the December 4 memo. Last fall, FBI Director Kash Patel told senators that there were “1,700 domestic terrorism investigations” and that it represented “a 300% increase in cases opened this year alone versus the same time last year.”
When asked if Good or Pretti were on any domestic terrorism list, watchlist, or under surveillance by federal authorities, a bureau spokesperson said: “The FBI has no comment.”
Neither NSPM-7 nor the December 4 memo mentions summary executions, and both speak explicitly in terms of “prosecution” and “arrest” of members of domestic terrorist organizations. Attacks on members of designated terrorist organizations are justified by another document: a classified opinion from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel with a secret list of cartels and gangs attached to it.
The Justice Department memo notes that under Section 3 of NSPM-7, “the FBI, in coordination with its partners on the [Joint Terrorism Task Forces], and consistent with applicable law, shall compile a list of groups or entities engaged in acts that may constitute domestic terrorism” and “provide that list to the Deputy Attorney General.”
The FBI’s national press office directed The Intercept to contact the Department of Justice concerning questions about the NSPM-7 list. Baldassarre also failed to respond to those queries.
“To the extent that the White House somehow has a secret enemies list and people don’t know who’s on it — that goes beyond McCarthyism,” Scanlon told The Intercept. “It’s absolutely horrific.”
“To the extent that the White House somehow has a secret enemies list and people don’t know who’s on it — that goes beyond McCarthyism.”
Recent reported statements by Trump suggest that the president may see little difference between those the administration brands foreign and domestic terrorists nor in efforts to combat them. Last month, the U.S. attacked Venezuela and abducted its president, Nicolás Maduro, killing scores of people, including civilians. Maduro — whom Trump branded a terrorist — was brought to the U.S. and charged with numerous offenses, foremost among them, according to the State Department, “narco-terrorism.”
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said last week that Trump compared his federal immigration crackdown in his state to the attack in Venezuela that ousted Maduro. “He told me how well that went,” Walz told MS NOW. “Which really was strange to me was he saw an operation in Venezuela against a foreign nation in the same context he saw an operation against a U.S. state and a U.S. city.”
The White House did not return a request for comment.
The post Trump Calls His Enemies Terrorists. Does That Mean He Can Just Kill Them? appeared first on The Intercept.
The New York Times lists other reasons a company lays off people. ("It didn't meet financial targets. It overhired. Tariffs, or the loss of a big client, rocked it...") "But lately, many companies are highlighting a new factor: artificial intelligence. Executives, saying they anticipate huge changes from the technology, are making cuts now." A.I. was cited in the announcements of more than 50,000 layoffs in 2025, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a research firm... Investors may applaud such pre-emptive moves. But some skeptics (including media outlets) suggest that corporations are disingenuously blaming A.I. for layoffs, or "A.I.-washing." As the market research firm Forrester put it in a January report: "Many companies announcing A.I.-related layoffs do not have mature, vetted A.I. applications ready to fill those roles, highlighting a trend of 'A.I.-washing' — attributing financially motivated cuts to future A.I. implementation...." "Companies are saying that 'we're anticipating that we're going to introduce A.I. that will take over these jobs.' But it hasn't happened yet. So that's one reason to be skeptical," said Peter Cappelli, a professor at the Wharton School... Of course, A.I. may well end up transforming the job market, in tech and beyond. But a recent study... [by a senior research fellow at the Brookings Institution who studies A.I. and work] found that AI has not yet meaningfully shifted the overall market. Tech firms have cut more than 700,000 employees globally since 2022, according to Layoffs.fyi, which tracks industry job losses. But much of that was a correction for overhiring during the pandemic. As unpopular as A.I. job cuts may be to the public, they may be less controversial than other reasons — like bad company planning. Amazon CEO Jassy has even said the reason for most of their layoffs was reducing bureaucracy, the article points out, although "Most analysts, however, believe Amazon is cutting jobs to clear money for A.I. investments, such as data centers."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The US president tried to kill offshore wind projects – now four are back under construction
Construction has resumed on four offshore wind mega-projects after they survived a near fatal attack by Donald Trump’s administration thanks to rulings by federal judges. These are being seen as victories for clean energy amid a wider war being waged on it by the Trump administration.
The wind farms are considered critical by grid planners as America faces an energy affordability crisis. Together, the four projects will contribute nearly five gigawatts of energy to the east coast, enough to power 3.5 million homes.
Continue reading...Island’s first tropical storm of season may bring 150mm of rain – meanwhile, eastern Europe freezes with possible night-time lows of -30C
At least three people have died and nearly 30,000 people have been affected by flooding after Madagascar’s first tropical storm of the season hit over the weekend.
Tropical Cyclone Fytia formed to the north-west of Madagascar over the northern Mozambique Channel on Thursday.
Continue reading...The once-lauded director of Black Swan and The Wrestler has drowned himself in AI slop with an embarrassing new online series
If you happen to find yourself stumbling through Time magazine’s YouTube account, perhaps because you are a time traveller from the 1970s who doesn’t fully understand how the present works yet – then you will be presented with something that many believe represents the vanguard of entertainment as we know it.
On This Day … 1776 is a series of short videos depicting America’s revolutionary war. What makes On This Day notable is that it was made by Darren Aronofsky’s studio Primordial Soup. What also makes it interesting is that it was created with AI. The third thing that makes it interesting is that it is terrible.
Continue reading...Labour suspended Norris, 66, last year after his original arrest on suspicion of child sexual abuse offences
Dan Norris, a former Labour minister and now an independent MP, has been rearrested on suspicion of rape, sexual assault, voyeurism and upskirting, it is understood.
Labour suspended Norris, 66, who defeated Jacob Rees-Mogg at the last election, last year after his original arrest.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Charities and experts fear changes to special needs education in England may weaken legal protections
Ministers have been warned that any dilution of legal rights for disabled children and their families would cross “red lines”, as the government prepares substantial changes to special education needs and disabilities (Send) provision in England.
The Disabled Children’s Partnership, which represents more than 130 charities and professional groups, has written to the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, and MPs to raise concerns that the overhaul will “come at the expense of children’s legal protections”.
Continue reading...Lionel Messi’s presence has been crucial to the defending champions’ excellent offseason
Winning MLS Cup brings only a couple guaranteed returns: the cup itself and a cash prize ($300,000, roughly the salary of one MLS backup defender). Historically, it has also ushered in a near-mandatory squad rebuild, a consequence of MLS’s parity-driven design. With rare exceptions, great teams find it nigh-on-impossible to keep the band together, or to improve on what they already have.
Not so for Inter Miami this year. After a slew of high-powered offseason additions capped by Friday’s $15m capture of Monterrey striker Germán Berterame, a historically fortunate franchise has gotten even better; completely unlike the 29 MLS Cup champions that preceded them.
Continue reading...Providers are arranging home visits and telehealth as neighbors pick up prescriptions, groceries and diapers
A public health crisis is unfolding in Minnesota as people targeted by federal agents are afraid to seek healthcare while some healthcare staff are also fearful for their safety at work.
Community organizations and health providers are now arranging home visits, telehealth appointments and other alternate care.
Continue reading...We are witnessing a dangerous escalation in the Trump administration’s attacks on the press and a clear threat to first amendment freedoms
The extraordinary arrests of the journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort last week are a dangerous escalation in the Trump administration’s attacks on the press and pose a clear threat to first amendment freedoms. Mere weeks after federal law enforcement executed a search warrant targeting a Washington Post reporter, the justice department is now pursuing criminal charges against two independent journalists for reporting from the scene of a protest in Minnesota citing – ironically – federal laws intended to protect the exercise of constitutional rights. These indictments are an affront to the first amendment of the US constitution.
On 18 January, protesters entered the Cities church in St Paul, where an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) official is a pastor, and interrupted a service with chants of “ICE out.” By all indications, Lemon, a former CNN host, and Fort, a local journalist, entered the church to cover the demonstration against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in the Twin Cities.
Theodore J Boutrous, Jr & Katie Townsend are partners in the law firm of Gibson Dunn and co-chairs of the firm’s first amendment and free expression group
Continue reading...Authorities said officers killed three suspects in the shooting of two women, whom Secretary of Public Education Mario Delgado later identified as his aunt and cousin.
The 2026 Grammy Awards recognized the best of the best in music from last year, with big wins for Kendrick Lamar and Bad Bunny. Here's the full list of winners and nominees.
Gaza's Rafah border crossing with Egypt reopened on Monday for limited traffic, a key step as the Israeli-Hamas ceasefire moves ahead, Egyptian and Israeli security officials said.
I take hydration seriously, but this reusable, smart water bottle helped me realize I wasn't drinking enough water.
A panic pervades the internet: terrified talk of troops in American cities, federal shock troops brutalizing citizens and neighbors, the targeting of gun owners, mass surveillance, the deployment of militarized artificial intelligence, and the suspension of the Constitution. The year is 2015, and the far right is incensed.
This was a period of intense American paranoia and anger, largely spurred by the right-wing meltdown over the consecutive victories of President Barack Obama. It was also a time of post-Snowden horror, as a nation realized it lived inside an unfathomably immense government surveillance dragnet endorsed and expanded by both political parties. It was in this moment that, for a certain segment of conservatives, Jade Helm 15 became an American crisis.
A decade later, this imaginary emergency reveals much about the hucksters who pushed it and the tolerance of many Americans for state oppression — so long as they are not the intended targets. The cauldron of race hatred, federal violence, and surveillance brewed by the paranoiacs who pounced on Jade Helm has spilled over today not in the form of right-wing phobia, but right-wing policy.
In July 2015, Alex Jones, at that point still little more than a punchline, issued a dire warning on his website InfoWars: “This is an emergency broadcast,” Jones began, warning of an impending campaign to “militarize police and to put standing armies on the streets to suppress the population and to carry out political operations.”
Jones was referring to publicly released Pentagon planning documents detailing Jade Helm 15, a military training exercise throughout sparsely populated swaths of the American South, from Florida to Texas. As is often the case when the dishonest have primary documents and a vast megaphone, Jones misstated nearly every detail of the materials. A map from what was essentially a large-scale military roleplaying game labeling Texas as “hostile,” colored in red, was irrefutable evidence to Jones that the Obama administration was preparing to let loose the national security state on the conservative heartland.
“We’re not becoming a police state. We’re already here.”
All of this was simple pretext, he claimed. The White House was leveraging the national security state to build the infrastructure for the federal paramilitary occupation of the country to choke out political dissent by force. Unwanted portions of the populations would be herded into Department of Homeland Security-administered camps, warned Jones and other stalwarts of right-wing paranoia. “We’re not becoming a police state,” he told viewers. “We’re already here.”
Though there was never any factual reason to suspect Jade Helm disguised a federal takeover, the broader paranoia was anchored in some fact. Jones claimed that the training exercise was connected to the broader militarization of American police agencies, a real trend he misconstrued as a leftist scheme against his audience. “You have massive military gear being cached — armored vehicles, machine guns, helicopters, night vision, Humvees — with the police departments around the country,” Jones explained. “It’s about suppressing the patriot population.”
Jones was not alone. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott quickly endorsed InfoWars’ ravings, deploying the state guard to “monitor” Jade Helm so that “Texans know their safety, constitutional rights, private property rights and civil liberties will not be infringed,” as he put it in an April 2015 letter ordering their mobilization. Former Texas congressman Louie Gohmert suggested the White House was hoping to provoke an armed confrontation between the military and the administration’s critics. “It is no surprise that those who have experienced or noticed such persecution are legitimately suspicious,” he said. “I understand the reason for concern and uncertainty,” agreed Sen. Ted Cruz.
Some Americans heeded the warning. The New York Times interviewed a Texas doctor stockpiling ammunition. Locals organized Jade Helm volunteer groups that monitored and recorded military movement. The Oath Keepers, a prominent American anti-government militia, described Jade Helm on its website as a “Portentous government plan, a pre-fabricated and pre-constructed umbrella under which a black op by the Deep State’s compartmentalized agencies could possibly ‘Go Live’ in a fantastic sort of Shock and Awe False Flag psycho-coup to jar the public mind of America through fear into acceptance of some nefarious policy the government desired, such as the establishment of Martial Law and the complete loss of individual liberty and our Constitution.”
These days, Jade Helm isn’t talked about much because nothing happened. But in the decade since, there has been a near-total inversion of the panic that Jade Helm sparked. Largely unconcerned and frequently unconstrained by law, Trump has found in his Department of Homeland Security what Jones warned was coming a decade ago: a paramilitary force to terrorize political opponents and demographic undesirables. Eleven years past schedule, Trump and a docile American right wing have finally delivered the Jade Helm presidency.
Armored personnel carriers today carry masked, heavily armed, pointlessly camouflaged federal commandos through American cities that voted against the president, backed by a sophisticated national surveillance apparatus. Trump and his lieutenants, beneficiaries of an American right-wing reshaped by the likes of Jones and his audience, make real and explicit the quiet fantasizing attributed to Obama’s during Jade Helm, speaking openly of American communities as hives of the enemy. In September, Trump announced impending deportation operations in Chicago with a doctored image depicting the city under attack by napalm, captioned “Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.”
The notion of ideological foes not as electoral enemies but legitimate targets of violence is no longer the stuff of conspiracy podcasts, but the political mainstream. Trump referred to a need to stamp out the “enemy within” the United States in September speech at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, suggesting the unconstitutional use of the military to “handle” them, and mused about using American cities as “training grounds” for the Pentagon. Gun-toting agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well as Custom and Border Protection are the foot soldiers of a government that describes its people as terrorists. They have been joined at times by actual soldiers, Marines and National Guard members, deployed illegally in cities like Los Angeles where the president’s policies are unpopular.
Since Trump’s speech, DHS agents have shot 12 people, killing four of them. Minneapolis residents describe the experience of ICE and CBP’s surge as something akin to a military occupation. Where Obama’s Jade Helm fell short in the collective imaginations of the InfoWars right, Trump’s second term has succeeded in wielding DHS as an ideological cudgel. After Minneapolis residents Renee Good and Alex Pretti were gunned down by DHS agents, the department’s justification for dispensing the death penalty on the sidewalk — that they were both domestic terrorists bent on killing federal personnel — quickly disintegrated in the face of video evidence. All that was left was a rationale more foreboding than anything Jade Helm truthers attributed to the Obama administration, a shrug that boils down to this brutal view: That’s what they get for wanting this to stop.
“Was he simply walking by and just happened to walk into a law enforcement situation and try to direct traffic and stand in the middle of the road, and then assault, delay, and obstruct law enforcement?” CBP’s Greg Bovino wondered of Pretti at a press conference. “Or was he there for a reason?” (Pretti’s reason for being there that day was clear, having been filmed from multiple angles: to legally observe and record the agents who then killed him.)
The idea that merely opposing the president’s immigration policy is reason enough to warrant summary execution is, if not stated outright, now on the lips of many right-wing commentators. It’s an implicit threat that the next person to record a masked cop on their block could receive the same.
Immigration authorities have brought to life the id of Jade Helm not just through overt displays of force, but also through the vast intelligence and surveillance apparatus within DHS.
In May 2015, InfoWars correspondent David Knight warned that Jade Helm would involve the collection and exploitation of enormous reams of personal information. “They analyze the data, and then because you stick out in some way, now you’re treated as if you’ve already had due process, as if you’ve already been found guilty of a crime,” resulting in the government kicking down the doors of innocent people. “If you understand the technology that’s involved, then you’ll see that Jade Helm is more of an intelligence operation using geospatial intelligence mapping,” claimed InfoWars correspondent Lee Ann McAdoo. “And as information from low-level surveillance technologies such as stingrays and predictive policing programs are all getting siphoned up into NSA data centers, a detailed global map will continue to grow with near-endless stats on all individuals.”
This much was true — in broad strokes, if not the specifics — back in 2015 and even more so today. DHS has steadily amassed for itself a security state within the security state, one now plump with record funding under a Trump second term clinched with the promise of a ruthless immigration crackdown. “With a budget for 2025 that is 10 times the size of the agency’s total surveillance spending over the last 13 years,” the Electronic Frontier Foundation wrote last month, “ICE is going on a shopping spree, creating one of the largest, most comprehensive domestic surveillance machines in history.”
Thanks to the unregulated market in commercial surveillance technology, DHS has little need for a spy agency like the NSA.
Thanks to the unregulated market in commercial surveillance technology, DHS has little need for a spy agency like the NSA. Last fall, ICE reactivated its contract with spyware-maker Paragon, which makes software that can remotely break into a smartphone. DHS also makes ample use of phone-cracking tools like Cellebrite, and has been purchasing warrantless access to cellphone location data since at least 2017, providing a turn-key means of tracking virtually anyone, anywhere, while bypassing the Fourth Amendment entirely. A 2023 DHS inspector general’s report found that both ICE and CBP consistently used this data illegally. Smartphone-based face recognition makes suspects out of anyone DHS agents might encounter on the street, immigrant and citizen alike.
Some in the InfoWars orbit speculated the word Jade itself “may or may not be an acronym for a military-developed artificial intelligence,” columnist Mark Saal observed in 2015. Like other facets of the Jade Helm freakout, this fear managed to be prescient despite its own baselessness. What’s unimpeachably true today is that DHS uses a litany of sophisticated artificial intelligence tools, including those provided by Palantir, a longtime military and intelligence contractor that has previously aided the NSA and continues to provide analytic and database services to ICE.
The role of Palantir alone within DHS is the stuff of InfoWars reverie: The company is building a tool “that populates a map with potential deportation targets, brings up a dossier on each person, and provides a ‘confidence score’ on the person’s current address,” according to a recent report by 404 Media. In contract documents renewing ICE’s use of Palantir case management software reviewed by The Intercept, the agency notes that the company has a “critical role in supporting the daily operations of ICE.” The case management system alone ingests data from across the federal government, including the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services, Department of Justice databases, the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, and the Office of Biometric Identity Management, among others.
Omnipresent data collection in the name of Homeland Security has allowed for novel means of taunting and intimidating the president’s critics. In a video clip that began circulating on X last week, a masked DHS agent is seen recording a car’s license plate with his phone.
“Why are you taking my information down?” the woman asks. “Because we have a nice little database,” the agent replies. “And now you’re considered a domestic terrorist.”
It’s unclear what “little database” the agent was referring to, or on what grounds recording a video on a public street would be considered an act of terrorism. Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told The Intercept there is “no such database.” McLaughlin would not answer when asked repeatedly whether DHS endorsed its personnel threatening to place people on a domestic terrorism database it now claims does not exist.
A national security presidential memorandum issued by Trump in September, known as NSPM-7, explicitly labels certain political and ideological stances — including “anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity” along with unspecified views on race and gender — as forms of domestic terrorism.
The Jade Helm presidency hasn’t matched the scope and scale of what Jones et al. hallucinated a decade ago. But Trump’s DHS — a department already plagued by bipartisan abuse, brutalization, and overreach since its founding — represents in spirit and practice exactly what far-right and right-libertarians once warned was a genuine emergency.
Though it made no effort to attach itself to facts, Jade Helm fearmongering touched, glancingly, on some uncomfortable truths: The federal government is willing to use force, surveillance, and extraconstitutional power to suppress dissent. But the greater truth revealed in the intervening decade is that for many Americans, these abuses aren’t a problem so long as it’s someone else’s back pushed onto the concrete, someone else’s car windows smashed, and someone else dealing with the pain of a chemical irritant.
Far-right commentators and elected officials are making clear that their opposition was never to authoritarian violence or state terror, but instead to being subjected to that violence and terror themselves. The contingent of the country that swore to avenge Ruby Ridge and Waco now seem mostly content to cheer on more of the same beneath X videos.
The far right is making clear that their opposition was never to authoritarian violence or state terror, but instead to being subjected to that violence and terror themselves.
When the administration blamed Alex Pretti’s death on his wholly legal gun ownership, having failed to slander him as an “assassin,” even the National Rifle Association, which once derided federal police as “jackbooted government thugs,” felt obliged to claim he was “antagonizing” ICE, even while defending his right to bear arms.
“We now know that Alex Pretti was a violent agitator who repeatedly went out armed to deliberately instigate physical confrontations with law enforcement,” conservative commentator Matt Walsh posted on X. “He is not a victim. He was not a mere ‘protester.’ And he got what was coming to him. Simple as that.”
InfoWars’ Jade Helm coverage is now seemingly scrubbed from the site. With a friendly president in the White House, the publication has shifted from condemning the Pentagon as the harbinger of American apocalypse to joining its official press corps. But the spirit of the old anti-state paranoia of InfoWars remains — just inverted entirely in the state’s service.
Headlines like “Could the Minneapolis Rioters Be Using Automatic License Plate Recognition Systems?” are what the Jade Helm-believers now wonder about dragnet surveillance. “Watch Two Brave ICE Officers Fight Off A Violent Leftist Mob That Invaded Their Hotel!” is the formerly paranoid right’s assessment of DHS. The notion of camouflaged agents in the streets is cause for celebration, not an “emergency broadcast” of 2015. “A War Has Erupted On The Streets Of America, And It Is Going To End With Martial Law In Major U.S. Cities,” InfoWars warns today, paired with an AI-generated image of federal officers defending themselves from an antifa onslaught.
Eleven years after Jade Helm, this is forecast with at least a little excitement.
The post Welcome to the Jade Helm Presidency appeared first on The Intercept.
He has the chance to be the steward of a national treasure, but he’s blowing it
Would you inherit a rare Stradivarius violin, polish it up for a few years, and then decide to take a hammer to it?
Would you somehow acquire the Hope diamond, set it in a blue velvet case, and then toss the whole thing into the Potomac River?
Continue reading...Allegations prompt questions about officials’ contentions that there isn’t evidence to investigate third parties
The disclosure of more than 3m files related to Jeffrey Epstein suggests that other men were involved in his sexual abuse, prompting questions about officials’ contentions that there isn’t evidence to investigate third parties for potential involvement in the late financier’s crimes.
Some newly released documents contain allegations that Epstein provided victims to other men. Documents released in prior disclosures, as well as court documents, also point to others’ possible criminal involvement with Epstein and his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Continue reading...Heather Jones of Alabama says two-year probation agreement leaves her ‘free and clear’ of legal matter
An Alabama woman has resolved a misdemeanor case that authorities opened against her within days of speaking out about a Roman Catholic priest whom she accused of predatory behavior.
Heather Jones had publicly recounted that she was 17 when the priest, Robert “Bob” Sullivan, arranged to provide her financial support in exchange for companionship including sex – prompting him to resign from the clergy in November.
Continue reading...The city of Milan and beyond will light up to spread the Olympic spirit during the event.
The science fiction on Prime Video hits different.
A seemingly esoteric dispute over the proper way to take Communion signals the rising power of more traditional voices within the Catholic Church.
New Mexico attorney general accuses Meta of failing to safeguard children against trafficking and sexual abuse
Meta’s second major trial of 2026 over alleged harms to children begins on Monday.
The landmark jury trial in Santa Fe pits the New Mexico attorney general’s office against the social media giant. The state alleges that the company knowingly enabled predators to use Facebook and Instagram to exploit children.
Continue reading...Do the people imprisoning kids like Liam Ramos have no children of their own? Do they have no decency, compassion or basic humanity?
Liam Conejo Ramos. We have all seen his picture, or by now we all should have seen the image of the adorable five-year-old in his bright blue hat, its floppy bunny ears so appropriate for a child whose middle name means “rabbit”. In the photo, he is wearing his Spider-Man backpack, which, like so many kids his age, he loves and is very proud of. And we know – or we should know – what happened to him.
On 20 January 2026, the pre-K student was seized by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on his way home from school in Columbia Heights, Minnesota. His family, which had emigrated from Ecuador in 2024, had applied for political asylum. No order of deportation had been issued against them, nor had any of them – obviously, not little Liam – been accused of a crime.
Francine Prose is a former president of the PEN American Center and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
This article was amended on 2 February 2026. A previous version misspelled a name in the headline.
Continue reading...One resident said she was hit with rubber bullets while trying to get home. Others said they wore gas masks or slept in their bathtubs to escape the tear gas.
Rose wins Farmers Insurance Open with 72-hole record
Total of 265 pips Woods’s 1999 mark by one
Justin Rose became the first wire-to-wire winner at Torrey Pines in 71 years, starting with a six-shot lead and never letting anyone get any closer to him Sunday as he closed with a two-under 70 to win the Farmers Insurance Open.
Rose opened with a 62 on the North course and never let up, playing even better on the South course that has hosted two US Opens. He broke the 72-hole tournament record at 23-under, 265, one better than Tiger Woods in 1999. George Burns also shot 266 in 1987. “Sorry, T-dub, if you’re watching,” Rose said.
Continue reading...Defending NATO’s Eastern Flank: How Romania Is Responding to Russian Aggression and European Rearmament 9 February 2026 — 5:30PM TO 6:30PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Oana Țoiu, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Romania, speaks at Chatham House on support for Ukraine, European security, and tackling the Russian threat.
Oana Țoiu, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Romania, speaks at Chatham House on support for Ukraine, European security, and tackling the Russian threat.
Romania’s geographical position places it at the heart of the effort to defend NATO’s eastern flank.
Amid Russian drone incursions near Romanian territory and intensified information warfare. As a frontline state bordering the war in Ukraine, Romania is acutely aware of the threat Russia poses to European stability. Ukrainian and Russian operations in the Black Sea have given Romania a unique vantage point on the future of naval warfare, while the relocation of NATO’s largest base to Romanian territory underscores the country’s strategic importance within the Alliance.
Oana Țoiu, Romania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, has repeatedly reaffirmed Romania’s commitment to supporting Ukraine and strengthening European security. She has highlighted Romania’s ongoing defence modernization, sustained investment in its armed forces. Her message aligns closely with NATO’s push to reinforce deterrence along its eastern perimeter and ensure member states remain coordinated and resilient.
But critical questions remain: Is Europe making meaningful progress on rearmament? And is it doing enough to deter an increasingly assertive, imperialist Russia—especially at a time when the United States appears less engaged in Europe’s security affairs?
How can Libya reconcile and reunify after 15 years of instability? 12 February 2026 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
HE Abdullah al-Lafi, Member of the Libyan Presidential Council—the three‑member body that serves as Libya’s head of state—will outline how international partners can support and engage with Libya to tackle the global challenges it faces.
HE Abdullah al-Lafi, vice-chairman of the Libyan Presidency Council—the three member body that serves as Libya’s head of state—will outline how international partners can support and engage with Libya to tackle the global challenges it faces.
Fifteen years after the uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi, Libya remains in a state of ‘no war and no peace’. Governance is still contested, with rival administrations in western Libya (internationally recognised) and eastern Libya (unrecognised). The Presidency Council continues to act as the country’s collective head of state, while Libyans face a worsening economic climate marked by rising inflation and declining purchasing power.
The United Nations is working to help Libya hold elections and reunify its political institutions. Its efforts continue to focus on mediating between factions and supporting initiatives to repair the country’s fractured social fabric.
In this session, HE Abdullah al-Lafi will assess the current situation in Libya and outline the Presidency Council’s progress on national reconciliation. He will also discuss how international partners can best work with Libya on shared concerns—such as organised migration crime—and contribute to addressing the country’s ongoing political divisions.
With the Presidential Council facing a wide range of immediate challenges, can these issues wait for the formation of a new government?
Key questions to be discussed include:
Explore the Guardian’s tracker to see which operators are nationalised and if services are improving under public ownership
The majority of Great Britain’s major rail operators are now in public ownership, as the Labour government continues its efforts to make the railways “more reliable, affordable and accessible”.
The nationalisation of West Midlands Trains on 1 February represents the tenth major passenger service to be brought back into public ownership, leaving six to go before the government’s deadline of completing every operator by 2027.
Continue reading...The Federal Aviation Administration has issued a sharp warning that rocket launches could “significantly reduce safety” for airplanes, urging pilots to prepare for the possibility that “catastrophic failures” could create dangerous debris fields.
The official notice, known as a safety alert for operators, was dated Jan. 8, the same day that ProPublica published an investigation showing how pilots scrambled to avoid debris after two SpaceX Starship megarockets exploded over busy airspace last year. The alert was an acknowledgment that travelers were at risk on those days, when the FAA hastily activated no-fly zones to help air traffic controllers steer planes away from falling rocket parts.
In the last two decades, the agency has issued about 245 such safety alerts to the aviation community about issues ranging from runway threats to mechanical problems, but last month’s warning is the first to address the danger to airplanes when rockets launch or reenter Earth’s atmosphere, according to the FAA’s website.
SpaceX and other companies have ramped up launches in recent years. Starship, a version of which is supposed to one day land on the moon, has followed a flight path that soars over well-trafficked commercial airways in the Caribbean.
The FAA previously told ProPublica that it “limits the number of aircraft exposed to the hazards, making the likelihood of a catastrophic event extremely improbable.” It also said it takes steps to keep pilots informed and planes safe during launches, such as creating the emergency no-fly zones, known as debris response areas.
The January alert also pointed to those procedures.
“Past events have shown that when a mishap does occur, debris has fallen within or near the DRA, and pilots should exercise extreme caution near these areas,” the notice said.
But it warned that debris can fall in places where the FAA doesn’t enact no-fly zones, such as international airspace over oceans without radar coverage, saying pilots need to have “additional situational awareness” to avoid debris fields there.
Neither SpaceX nor the FAA has released data showing where debris fell after the Starship explosions last year.
SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment. Previously, the company has said that it learns from its mistakes and that each test improves Starship’s reliability. “SpaceX is committed to responsibly using airspace during launches and reentries, prioritizing public safety to protect people on the ground, at sea, and in the air,” it said on X in December.
Last year, the FAA granted SpaceX permission to launch Starship as many as 25 times a year from its base in Texas. But, after repeated setbacks, only five of the giant space vehicles lifted off in 2025.
In its warning, the FAA urged aircraft operators to “evaluate the impact of space launch and reentry operations on their planned flight routes and take appropriate precautionary measures.” Those should include ensuring they have enough fuel in case air traffic controllers put them in a holding pattern, the agency said. In its investigation, ProPublica found several airplanes began running low on fuel after the January 2025 Starship incident, with at least one declaring an emergency and crossing the no-fly zone to reach an airport.
The world’s largest pilots union told the FAA in October that such events call into question whether “a suitable process” is in place to respond to unexpected rocket mishaps. “There is high potential for debris striking an aircraft resulting in devastating loss of the aircraft, flight crew, and passengers,” wrote Steve Jangelis, a pilot and the group’s aviation safety chair.
The FAA adjusted its practices over the course of the failed launches last year but still allowed SpaceX to launch more Starship prototypes over the same airspace, adding stress to the already-taxed air traffic control system, ProPublica found. The Wall Street Journal reported in December that an air traffic controller needed to intervene to prevent a collision when at least two aircraft flew too close to each other after one of the explosions.
The FAA did not respond to requests for comment for this story.
Airlines for America, a trade association for the leading U.S. airlines, said it is “committed to ensuring the safety of all flights especially amid the growing number of space launches.” The association said in a statement that airlines coordinate with both the federal government and commercial space companies to make sure the airspace stays safe.
Rep. Nellie Pou of New Jersey, a Democrat on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee’s aviation panel, applauded the FAA for issuing the warning, saying the Trump administration “must protect American travelers from all threats, including space launches and reentry operations.”
“Perfect safety demands scrupulous and forward-looking attention to detail from our federal agencies and close coordination with operators,” Pou said. “I am heartened FAA is showing both here.”
ProPublica’s Jan. 8 story showed how airplanes had to maneuver quickly to clear wide swaths of airspace after SpaceX Starships blew up over the Caribbean in January and March last year.
Our analysis of flight tracking data found that in each incident, multiple planes were in the projected debris zones at the time of the explosions and that others likely had to change course to steer clear of falling debris. Pilots reported seeing flaming streaks far above the horizon.
Before the third Starship launch last year, in May, the agency settled on a more conservative approach, proactively closing more airspace ahead of time. That mission failed too, with the rocket’s booster exploding over the Gulf and its upper stage blowing up over the Indian Ocean.
SpaceX is now seeking FAA approval to add new trajectories as Starship strives to reach orbit. Under the plan, the rocket would fly over land in Florida and Mexico, as well as the airspace of Cuba, Jamaica and the Cayman Islands, likely disrupting hundreds of flights.
The company says it’s committed to public safety as it ramps up its launch cadence, saying in a post on X that it “will continue to ensure maximum public safety while also working to integrate Starship more efficiently into the airspace.”
The post FAA Warns Airlines About Safety Risks From Rocket Launches, Urges “Extreme Caution” appeared first on ProPublica.
As health care costs skyrocket and federal lawmakers pull back help on ACA insurance premiums, more middle-income families are facing tough choices on health care.
Many Americans are expected to lose ACA or Medicaid coverage in the coming months and years, but doctors and researchers say there are still ways to find affordable care.
Washington and Caracas have moved quickly to open Venezuela’s oil sector to U.S. investment. Ordinary Venezuelans will wait longer to feel any benefit.
The Post spoke to four Kenyans who fought in Ukraine and relatives of nine other recruits, as a secret pipeline funnels young Africans to Russia’s military.
Myanmar’s military regime has tightened import restrictions, exacerbating the country’s economic crisis and sparking widespread hardship among the people.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware could become home to five new data centers that would bring a combined energy demand that nearly equals what the entire state uses today. New legislation in the Delaware statehouse aims to prevent the costs of a demand spike from being passed onto other energy consumers, though critics say they may also scare off the growing industry.
A bill that would require data centers companies to pay more for their electricity will likely come up for a vote in the full Delaware House of Representatives after it moved out of committee on Wednesday.
Sponsored by Rep. Frank Burns (D-Pike Creek), House Bill 233 comes in response to fears that a surge of energy-hungry data center projects could strain the power grid and raise residents’ bills.
The same day that the House Natural Resources and Energy Committee released Burns’ bill, the Senate’s energy committee debated another bill that would require data centers to obtain new permissions from electricity regulators — called certificates to operate.
The two bills follow a stalled attempt by New Castle County to regulate the burgeoning data center industry, which has grown rapidly in recent years as investors chase the expected riches of artificial intelligence.
Both bills also attempt to make data centers bear the cost of high energy demands, rather than residents.
If current development proposals move forward, Delaware could be home to five new data centers in the coming years that have a combined energy demand that could double the state’s entire electricity usage.
Critics fear that scenario would lead to increased energy bills across the state — both because of a limited supply of electrons, and because of the costs of the infrastructure needed to serve the demand.
“Gone are the days of the single project that could be expected to only impact a small discrete area,” State Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown) said during the Wednesday hearing of the Senate Environment, Energy and Transportation Committee.

Hansen is the sponsor of the Senate Bill 205, which would require big commercial energy consumers to obtain certificates to operate from state regulators. The certificates could include mandates that the companies pay for grid modernization or commit to providing additional energy generation.
Hansen said she does not yet have enough votes from the energy committee for the bill to be released to the full Senate.
In response, critics of the bills — including some lawmakers, business lobbyists and union representatives — have expressed fears that the legislation could prevent the growing data center industry from even coming to the state.
“We’re putting up another sign that says Delaware is not open for business. And when we continue to do this, then we hurt everybody,” Rep. Jeff Hilovsky (R-Long Neck/Oak Orchard) said about the House bill.
During Wednesday’s hearing, Senate Bill 205 received more criticism than positive feedback from committee members.

Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown) said he does not think the bill would prevent rising energy costs, since Delaware is part of the PJM grid and is impacted by a regional rise in energy demand.
He also said the bill could cause data center companies to instead invest in neighboring states with fewer regulations.
State Sen. Eric Buckson (R – Dover South) agreed, and asserted that multi-billion dollar companies will not want to invest in a state with rules that he believes could shut down data center project entirely.
“In my opinion, this becomes a de facto moratorium,” Buckson said.
Hansen said her bill is not meant to prevent data centers from coming to the state. Her bill does not appear to give the Public Service Commission the power to reject data center projects entirely, unless the companies do not follow the conditions laid out in the certificate.
Speaking in support of her bill on Wednesday was Delaware Municipal Electric Corporation President Kimberly Schlichting, who serves more than a half dozen cities and towns in Delaware, and representatives from the Delaware chapter of the Sierra Club. They said the legislation would provide protections against energy price increases for residents.
But representatives from local unions spoke against the bill, saying it would prevent new construction jobs from coming to the state.
During its committee hearing, House Bill 233 received similar criticism but bill sponsor Burns argued that Delaware has other incentives for data center companies, such as low taxes and access to a major transmission line.
At one point during the House committee, the question arose about whether Delmarva Power could simply prevent energy-hungry projects from connecting to the grid if they raised consumers’ electric bills. Rep. Rich Collins (R-Millsboro) said he would turn to an AI chatbot — powered by a data center — for the answer.
When he began to read its response to the committee, Rep. Krista Griffith (D-Fairfax) interrupted with a point of order. She stated that she is not comfortable with him using AI to answer the question when there were experts in the room.
Lisa Oberdorf with Delmarva Power then addressed the questions, stating the company does have an obligation to serve any users that want to connect to the grid.
Her answer contradicted the AI chatbot’s response.
The post Data center regulation bill advances in Delaware legislature appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Phoronix reports: Chris Mason, the longtime Linux kernel developer most known for being the creator of Btrfs, has been working on a Git repository with AI review prompts he has been working on for LLM-assisted code review of Linux kernel patches. This initiative has been happening for some weeks now while the latest work was posted today for comments... The Meta engineer has been investing a lot of effort into making this AI/LLM-assisted code review accurate and useful to upstream Linux kernel stakeholders. It's already shown positive results and with the current pace it looks like it could play a helpful part in Linux kernel code review moving forward. "I'm hoping to get some feedback on changes I pushed today that break the review up into individual tasks..." Mason wrote on the Linux kernel mailing list. "Using tasks allows us to break up large diffs into smaller chunks, and review each chunk individually. This ends up using fewer tokens a lot of the time, because we're not sending context back and forth for the entire diff with every turn. It also catches more bugs all around."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bad Bunny and Kendrick Lamar won major Grammy awards on a night charged with political defiance, as musicians pushed back against Donald Trump’s deadly ICE crackdown. Billie Eilish, who took song of the year for Wildflower, used her speech to declare: 'No one is illegal on stolen land.' The best new artist award went to Olivia Dean, presented by last year’s winner Chappell Roan. 'I am up here as the granddaughter of an immigrant,' Dean said, drawing loud applause
Continue reading...‘I need to focus on getting better, on being with family and friends and making sure that I’m giving my health my best shot’, Afternoons host says
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Broadcaster and saxophonist James Valentine is retiring from the ABC after almost 40 years, due to cancer, ending 25 years of hosting Sydney’s Afternoons program on ABC Radio.
Valentine, 64, has been a fixture on the public broadcaster since he joined as host of the Afternoon Show for kids on ABC TV in 1987 after a decade of playing in bands including The Models.
Continue reading...Ahead of a major exhibition in London documenting the South American wetland as it faces unprecedented threat, Lalo de Almeida recounts the stories behind his award-winning images
Lalo de Almeida is a documentary photographer based in São Paulo, Brazil. In 2021 his photo essay Pantanal Ablaze was awarded first place in the environment stories category at the World Press Photo contest. In 2022, he won the Eugene Smith grant in humanistic photography and World Press Photo’s long-term project award for his work Amazonian Dystopia, which documents the exploitation of the world’s largest tropical forest.
I have been photographing socio-environmental issues for more than 30 years, especially in the Amazon. 2020 was no different. News of the uncontrolled fires devastating the Pantanal began to catch my attention. So, together with a fellow journalist, I decided to go and see what was happening for myself.
Continue reading...OpenClaw is billed as ‘the AI that actually does things’ and needs almost no input to potentially wreak havoc
A new viral AI personal assistant will handle your email inbox, trade away your entire stock portfolio and text your wife “good morning” and “goodnight” on your behalf.
OpenClaw, formerly known as Moltbot, and before that known as Clawdbot (until the AI firm Anthropic requested it rebrand due to similarities with its own product Claude), bills itself as “the AI that actually does things”: a personal assistant that takes instructions via messaging apps such as WhatsApp or Telegram.
Continue reading...In today’s newsletter: Public outrage has reached fever pitch following the killing of US citizens. But, amid the focus on violence, another story of mutual aid and neighbourhood organising is unfolding
Good morning. The world’s attention has been fixed on Minneapolis for weeks now. The small midwestern US city has been under siege since Donald Trump’s administration launched its latest immigration crackdown in December.
Public outrage has reached fever pitch across the US after the killing of two US citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretti. Though the White House has softened its rhetoric in relation to the killings, there is little indication of any meaningful shift in tactics on the ground.
Epstein files | Peter Mandelson says he has resigned his membership of the Labour party to avoid causing it “further embarrassment” after more revelations about his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein.
Iran | Donald Trump has said Iran is talking to the US, hinting at a deal that would avoid the use of military strikes.
Ukraine | A Russian drone attack on a bus carrying mine workers in Ukraine’s central-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region has killed at least 12 people, officials said.
Cuba | The United States has said it will ensure there will be no more fuel shipments to the beleaguered island, “Cuba will be failing pretty soon,” Donald Trump said earlier in the week.
Grammy awards | Bad Bunny and Kendrick Lamar took home major Grammy awards during a night that saw musicians hit back at Donald Trump’s ICE occupation.
Continue reading...Seen two years later, a suppressed U.S cable warning of a “wasteland” in northern Gaza, as reported by Reuters, is a small footnote of history.
The president and his supporters joining forces to decide what audiences read and see seems straight from a fascism playbook
Two events, juxtaposed, tell us a great deal about what is rapidly taking shape in the US. In one, Melania Trump releases a glossy documentary, Melania, an account of her return to the White House. Amazon outbid others to secure the rights to the documentary, spending $75m (£54m) in total, and ticket sales so far suggest that this was, shall we say, not a purely commercial venture.
In the other, the Washington Post is set to cut up to 200 jobs early this month, including the majority of its foreign staff and a sizeable chunk of its newsroom. Both Melania and the Washington Post are backed by Jeff Bezos. His two decisions, to invest in state propaganda and divest from the fourth estate that supposedly holds power to account, reveal much about how capital and authoritarianism join forces to decide what audiences read and see.
Nesrine Malik is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...A bit like Reddit for artificial intelligence, Moltbook allows AI agents – bots built by humans – to post and interact with each other. People are allowed as observers only
On social media, people often accuse each other of being bots, but what happens when an entire social network is designed for AI agents to use?
Moltbook is a site where the AI agents – bots built by humans – can post and interact with each other. It is designed to look like Reddit, with subreddits on different topics and upvoting. On 2 February the platform stated it had more than 1.5m AI agents signed up to the service. Humans are allowed, but only as observers.
Continue reading..."Technology companies spent part of the 2010s trying to convince us that we would want an 8K display one day..." writes Ars Technica. "However, 8K never proved its necessity or practicality." LG Display is no longer making 8K LCD or OLED panels, FlatpanelsHD reported today... LG Electronics was the first and only company to sell 8K OLED TVs, starting with the 88-inch Z9 in 2019. In 2022, it lowered the price-of-entry for an 8K OLED TV by $7,000 by charging $13,000 for a 76.7-inch TV. FlatpanelsHD cited anonymous sources who said that LG Electronics would no longer restock the 2024 QNED99T, which is the last LCD 8K TV that it released. LG's 8K abandonment follows other brands distancing themselves from 8K. TCL, which released its last 8K TV in 2021, said in 2023 that it wasn't making more 8K TVs due to low demand. Sony discontinued its last 8K TVs in April and is unlikely to return to the market, as it plans to sell the majority ownership of its Bravia TVs to TCL. The tech industry tried to convince people that the 8K living room was coming soon. But since the 2010s, people have mostly adopted 4K. In September 2024, research firm Omdia reported that there were "nearly 1 billion 4K TVs currently in use." In comparison, 1.6 million 8K TVs had been sold since 2015, Paul Gray, Omdia's TV and video technology analyst, said, noting that 8K TV sales peaked in 2022. That helps explain why membership at the 8K Association, launched by stakeholders Samsung, TCL, Hisense, and panel maker AU Optronics in 2019, is dwindling. As of this writing, the group's membership page lists 16 companies, including just two TV manufacturers (Samsung and Panasonic). Membership no longer includes any major TV panel suppliers. At the end of 2022, the 8K Association had 33 members, per an archived version of the nonprofit's online membership page via the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. "It wasn't hard to predict that 8K TVs wouldn't take off," the article concludes. "In addition to being too expensive for many households, there's been virtually zero native 8K content available to make investing in an 8K display worthwhile..."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Woman, 22, thought to have suffered a cardiac arrest after being dragged along the snow and suspended mid-air
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An Australian woman has died after a ski lift accident in a Japanese resort after her backpack got caught and she was left hanging mid-air.
The 22-year-old snowboarder sustained critical injuries at the Tsugaike ski resort in Otari near Nagano on Friday.
Continue reading...Report covering 23 conflicts over last 18 months concludes more than 100,000 civilians have been killed as war crimes rage out of control
An authoritative survey of 23 armed conflicts over the last 18 months has concluded that international law seeking to limit the effects of war is at breaking point, with more than 100,000 civilians killed, while torture and rape are committed with near impunity.
The extensive study by the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights describes the deaths of 18,592 children in Gaza, growing civilian casualties in Ukraine and an “epidemic” of sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Continue reading...How to limit Hamas’s influence and ensure Israel’s compliance.
The latest military purge signals China’s leader is entering a new era.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 2, No. 497.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 2
Bad Bunny used his Grammy acceptance speech on Sunday to denounce U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and call for the end of the ongoing immigration crackdown.
| Just finished my first real ride on a 134V VESC build and I honestly wasn’t ready for how different it feels compared to stock boards. Torque, stability at speed, and the way it recovers from mistakes is on another level. Still learning the limits but it already feels like a whole new category of board. Full ride video here if anyone’s curious: [link] [comments] |
Trump announces two-year closure of Kennedy Center, citing construction needs – key US politics stories from 1 February 2026
Donald Trump, who remains embroiled in tensions surrounding ICE’s presence in Minnesota, as well as scrutiny over the justice department’s latest release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, has made another announcement on Sunday evening: the temporary closure of the John F Kennedy Center in Washington DC.
Trump, who overhauled the center’s leadership at the start of his second term and renamed it to include his own name, described the center as “tired, broken, and dilapidated,” adding that it has been in “bad condition, both financially and structurally for many years”.
Continue reading...The EU "has switched on parts of its homegrown secure satellite communications network for the first time," reports Bloomberg, calling it part of a €10.6 billion push to "wean itself off US support amid growing tensions." SpaceNews notes the new government program GOVSATCOM pools capacity from eight already on-oribit satellites from France, Spain, Italy, Greece and Luxembourg — both national and commercial. And they cite this prediction by EU Defense and Space Commissioner Andrius Kubilius. The program could expand by 2027. "All member states can now have access to sovereign satellite communications — military and government, secure and resilient, built in Europe, operated in Europe, and under European control," [Kubilius said during his opening remarks at the European Space Conference]... Beginning in 2029, GOVSATCOM is expected to integrate with the 290 satellites in the Infrastructure for Resilience, Interconnectivity and Security by Satellite constellation, known as IRIS2, and be fully operational... "The goal is connectivity and security for all of Europe — guaranteed access for all member states and full European control."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Senate passed a deal on a package of spending bills late Friday, sending it to the House, though funding for dozens of government agencies lapsed until the House takes it up.
Bannon’s claim revealed in text messages in tranche of documents released by US authorities in connection with Jeffrey Epstein
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Australian billionaire Clive Palmer’s spokesman has denied claims by far-right political strategist Steve Bannon that he was behind Palmer’s controversial $60m advertising strategy at the 2019 federal election.
The text conversation purporting to be between Bannon and an unidentified person – who appears to be convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein – was among a tranche of documents released by the US Department of Justice in connection with Epstein.
Continue reading..."Most Go developers are now using AI-powered development tools when seeking information (e.g., learning how to use a module) or toiling (e.g., writing repetitive blocks of similar code)." That's one of the conclusions Google's Go team drew from September's big survey of 5,379 Go developers. But the survey also found that among Go developers using AI-powered tools, "their satisfaction with these tools is middling due, in part, to quality concerns." Our survey suggests bifurcated adoption — while a majority of respondents (53%) said they use such tools daily, there is also a large group (29%) who do not use these at all, or only used them a few times during the past month. We expected this to negatively correlate with age or development experience, but were unable to find strong evidence supporting this theory except for very new developers: respondents with less than one year of professional development experience (not specific to Go) did report more AI use than every other cohort, but this group only represented 2% of survey respondents. At this time, agentic use of AI-powered tools appears nascent among Go developers, with only 17% of respondents saying this is their primary way of using such tools, though a larger group (40%) are occasionally trying agentic modes of operation... We also asked about overall satisfaction with AI-powered development tools. A majority (55%) reported being satisfied, but this was heavily weighted towards the "Somewhat satisfied" category (42%) vs. the "Very satisfied" group (13%)... [D]eveloper sentiment towards them remains much softer than towards more established tooling (among Go developers, at least). What is driving this lower rate of satisfaction? In a word: quality. We asked respondents to tell us something good they've accomplished with these tools, as well as something that didn't work out well. A majority said that creating non-functional code was their primary problem with AI developer tools (53%), with 30% lamenting that even working code was of poor quality. The most frequently cited benefits, conversely, were generating unit tests, writing boilerplate code, enhanced autocompletion, refactoring, and documentation generation. These appear to be cases where code quality is perceived as less critical, tipping the balance in favor of letting AI take the first pass at a task. That said, respondents also told us the AI-generated code in these successful cases still required careful review (and often, corrections), as it can be buggy, insecure, or lack context... [One developer said reviewing AI-generated code was so mentally taxing that it "kills the productivity potential".] Of all the tasks we asked about, "Writing code" was the most bifurcated, with 66% of respondents already or hoping to soon use AI for this, while 1/4 of respondents didn't want AI involved at all. Open-ended responses suggest developers primarily use this for toilsome, repetitive code, and continue to have concerns about the quality of AI-generated code. Most respondents also said they "are not currently building AI-powered features into the Go software they work on (78%)," the surveyors report, "with 2/3 reporting that their software does not use AI functionality at all (66%)." This appears to be a decrease in production-related AI usage year-over-year; in 2024, 59% of respondents were not involved in AI feature work, while 39% indicated some level of involvement. That marks a shift of 14 points away from building AI-powered systems among survey respondents, and may reflect some natural pullback from the early hype around AI-powered applications: it's plausible that lots of folks tried to see what they could do with this technology during its initial rollout, with some proportion deciding against further exploration (at least at this time). Among respondents who are building AI- or LLM-powered functionality, the most common use case was to create summaries of existing content (45%). Overall, however, there was little difference between most uses, with between 28% — 33% of respondents adding AI functionality to support classification, generation, solution identification, chatbots, and software development.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The measles cases at the Dilley Immigration Processing Center were detected Friday, Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to CBS News.
DC arts venue, which has seen wave of canceled events after Trump’s takeover, will start renovations in July
The John F Kennedy Center, a world-class venue for the performing arts in Washington DC, will halt entertainment events for two years starting on 4 July during renovations, Donald Trump posted on Sunday on Truth Social.
The Kennedy Center, which has seen a wave of performers cancel events in recent months as well as the lowest ticket sales in years, has been in turmoil since the president orchestrated a leadership overhaul in the beginning of his term.
Continue reading...With big numbers for Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga, Bad Bunny and more, check out the nominated artists this year
Bad Bunny – DtMF
Sabrina Carpenter – Manchild
Doechii – Anxiety
Billie Eilish – Wildflower
Lady Gaga – Abracadabra
Kendrick Lamar with SZA – Luther
Chappell Roan – The Subway
Rosé & Bruno Mars – APT.
NASA is working to take astronauts farther from Earth than any humans have ever gone, but the ambitious and costly moonshot has been plagued by delays.
Lawmakers are calling for an independent investigation into immigration enforcement tactics in Minnesota as members of the Trump administration face scrutiny over claims they've made.
More than 50 years after NASA's last human mission to the moon, four astronauts, three Americans and a Canadian, are set for the 10-day Artemis II mission to the far side of the moon.
Some of the biggest American comics have gotten their starts at Boom Chicago, an Amsterdam improv theater. Seth Meyers, Jordan Peele, Amber Ruffin and Jason Sudeikis have all cracked jokes there.
As NASA prepares for astronauts' first lunar fly-around in more than half a century, take a look back at 60 Minutes' Artemis coverage.
Artemis II echoes the Apollo-era missions that paved the way for the first moon landing — and sets the stage for what comes next.
Boom Chicago, a small improv theater in Amsterdam, launched as "the best stoner idea ever," and has been churning out big names in comedy for decades.
Seth Meyers said the Dutch improv theater Boom Chicago gave him and his comedy partner Jill Benjamin a "road map" to create a show that eventually got the attention of "Saturday Night Live."
USAFacts evaluates IRS tax data and offers independent, expert-informed recommendations to make tax statistics timelier, easier to access, and AI-ready.
Talks "are at a standstill" for Anthropic's potential $200 million contract with America's Defense Department, reports Reuters (citing several people familiar with the discussions.") The two issues? - Using AI to surveil Americans - Safeguards against deploying AI autonomously The company's position on how its AI tools can be used has intensified disagreements between it and the Trump administration, the details of which have not been previously reported... Anthropic said its AI is "extensively used for national security missions by the U.S. government and we are in productive discussions with the Department of War about ways to continue that work..." In an essay on his personal blog, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warned this week that AI should support national defense "in all ways except those which would make us more like our autocratic adversaries. A person "familiar with the matter" told the Wall Street Journal this could lead to the cancellation of Anthropic's contract: Tensions with the administration began almost immediately after it was awarded, in part because Anthropic's terms and conditions dictate that Claude can't be used for any actions related to domestic surveillance. That limits how many law-enforcement agencies such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Federal Bureau of Investigation could deploy it, people familiar with the matter said. Anthropic's focus on safe applications of AI — and its objection to having its technology used in autonomous lethal operations — have continued to cause problems, they said. Amodei's essay calls for "courage, for enough people to buck the prevailing trends and stand on principle, even in the face of threats to their economic interests and personal safety..."
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Witnesses say protest outside ICE facility was peaceful until agents deployed teargas and rubber bullets around children
The mayor of Portland, Oregon, demanded US Immigration and Customs Enforcement leave his city after federal agents launched teargas at a crowd of demonstrators – including young children – outside an ICE facility during a weekend protest that he and others characterized as peaceful.
Witnesses said agents deployed teargas, pepper balls and rubber bullets as thousands of marchers arrived at the South Waterfront facility on Saturday. Erin Hoover Barnett, a former OregonLive reporter who joined the protest, said she was about 100 yards (91 metres) from the building when “what looked like two guys with rocket launchers” started dousing the crowd with gas.
Continue reading...Jesus Ochoa and Raymundo Gutierrez are both officers with Customs and Border Protection, ProPublica reports
Government documents have identified the two federal officers who fatally shot Alex Pretti in Minneapolis as Jesus Ochoa, a border patrol agent, and Raymundo Gutierrez, an officer with Customs and Border Protection (CBP), according to ProPublica.
According to those records, Ochoa, 43, and Gutierrez, 35, were the agents who fired their weapons during the confrontation last weekend that resulted in Pretti’s death. The shooting sparked widespread demonstrations and renewed demands for criminal inquiries into federal immigration enforcement actions. Immediately following Pretti’s killing, the Trump administration repeatedly pushed false claims about the shooting.
Continue reading...The memo details a series of recommendations for Congressional committees to probe allegations of excessive force and violations by ICE agents in Minneapolis.
The Wall Street Journal says that Meta "might be reaping some of the richest benefits from the AI boom so far." Meta's revenue grew 22% year over year in 2025 to $201 billion, and the company expects even bigger gains in the current quarter, potentially as high as 34%. That is huge growth for a company that brought in nearly $60 billion in the latest three-month period. And Zuckerberg signaled that Meta was just scratching the surface of AI's potential. "Our world-class recommendation systems are already driving meaningful growth across our apps and ads business. But we think that the current systems are primitive compared to what will be possible soon," he said on a call with investors and analysts... [Meta's Chief Financial Officer Susan] Li said the company doubled the number of graphics-processing units that it used to train its ad-ranking model in the fourth quarter and adopted a new learning architecture. Those actions led users to click on ads on Facebook 3.5% more often and to a gain of more than 1% in conversions, meaning purchases, subscriptions or leads, on Instagram, she said. Other AI-related improvements led to a 3% increase in conversions across its family of apps. On the ad-buying side, Meta has also been working toward using AI to automate ad creation for businesses that want to advertise their products or services on Facebook and Instagram. On the call, Li said the combined revenue run rate of video-generation tools hit $10 billion in the fourth quarter. In short, CNBC reported, Meta's stock price surged over 10% this week "after showing signs that AI investments are boosting the bottom line." Benjamin Black, an internet analyst at Deutsche Bank, explained the connection to the Wall Street Journal. "The more compute the ad platform gets, the far better it performs, and that's a real structural advantage that Meta has. If you can see that yesterday's spend is driving this month's growth, then as a good business person, you're going to continue to feed the beast." CNBC says now Meta "plans to spend between $115 billion and $135 billion on its AI build-out this year. That's nearly double what it spent in 2025."
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About 150m faced cold weather advisories along eastern US, and two in North Carolina died in storm-related conditions
A bomb cyclone produced freezing temperatures across a large portion of the US from the Gulf coast to New England, bringing heavy snow to North Carolina where two were killed in storm-related conditions, and setting records in Florida, where officials warned of ice and falling iguanas.
About 150 million people were under cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings in the eastern portion of the US, with wind chills near zero to single digits in the south and the coldest air mass seen in south Florida since December 1989, said Peter Mullinax, a meteorologist with the weather prediction center in College Park, Maryland.
Continue reading... | I have an older OneWheel+XR, Hardware 4209, Firmware Gemini - 4165. I am the original owner. I left it charging for too long and believe the BMS fried. It doesn’t respond unplugged. When plugged in, the app shows 0% battery, although the battery icon looks full. When I plug it in the error 16 pops up. See attached pics. Will someone please inform me of where, if possible, I can get a replacement BMS for my hardware? Or, at this point, is it better to do a new battery refresh? Don’t necessarily want to spend a lot of money if can simply get a new, used, or refurbished bms for an affordable price and resolve the issue. I am years out of OneWheel knowledge and no longer informed of current technology and availability, so please explain to me like a 5 year old. Any and all help and recommendations are very much appreciated. Thank you in advance, Old OneWheeler trying to get my XR wheeling again. [link] [comments] |
Departure from party follows release of documents in US appearing to show Jeffrey Epstein sent former US ambassador $75,000
Peter Mandelson has said he has resigned his membership of the Labour party to avoid causing it “further embarrassment” after more revelations about his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein.
The peer, who was sacked as US ambassador last year because of his links to Epstein, featured in documents released by the US Department of Justice on Friday related to the convicted sex offender.
Continue reading...Children were among a crowd of "ICE out" protesters in Portland on Saturday, witnesses said.
A Russian attack on coal mining facilities in Ukraine Sunday killed at least 12 miners, according to DTEK, the country’s largest private energy company.
October saw Bitcoin reach $123,742. But less than four months later, "The world's largest cryptocurrency slipped below $76,000..." Bloomberg reports, "dropping about 40% from its 2025 peak..." "What began as a sharp crash in October has morphed into something more corrosive: a selloff shaped not by panic, but by absence of buyers, momentum and belief." Unlike the October drawdown, there's been no obvious spark, cascading liquidations or systemic shock — just fading demand, thinning liquidity, and a token that's untethered to broader markets. Bitcoin has failed to respond to geopolitical stress, dollar weakness, or risk rallies. Even during gold and silver's violent swings in recent weeks, crypto saw no rotation. Bitcoin fell nearly 11% in January, marking its fourth straight monthly decline — the longest losing streak since 2018, during the crash that followed the 2017 boom in initial coin offerings... Even more striking than the drop itself is the relative lack of optimism around it on social media. In a space known for relentless bravado and "number go up" memes, Bitcoin's slide has been met with little cheerleading or dip-buying fanfare... [Despite legislative wins and some institutional investments] Many investors say that optimism was front-run. Prices rallied early — and then stalled. Meanwhile, spot ETFs continue to bleed, a sign of weakening conviction among mainstream buyers — many of whom are now underwater after buying at higher prices. On Thursday, Bitcoin closed at 88,228. By Sunday it had plunged another 13%, to 76,790...
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Incident came after dispute over handshake line
Coach is considering legal action over incident
Tuskegee men’s basketball coach Benjy Taylor is considering legal action after being handcuffed and led off court at the end of his team’s loss to Morehouse College on Saturday.
Tuskegee athletic director Reginald Ruffin said Taylor had attempted to make sure protocols were followed when opposing Morehouse football players joining the basketball players in the postgame handshake line.
Continue reading...US president announces efforts being made to strike a deal having earlier threatened to stop island importing oil
Washington is negotiating with Havana’s leadership to strike a deal, Donald Trump has said, days after threatening Cuba’s reeling economy with a virtual oil blockade.
“Cuba is a failing nation. It has been for a long time but now it doesn’t have Venezuela to prop it up. So we’re talking to the people from Cuba, the highest people in Cuba, to see what happens,” Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida on Sunday.
Continue reading...The two federal immigration agents who fired on Minneapolis protester Alex Pretti are identified in government records as Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa and Customs and Border Protection officer Raymundo Gutierrez.
The records viewed by ProPublica list Ochoa, 43, and Gutierrez, 35, as the shooters during the deadly encounter last weekend that left Pretti dead and ignited massive protests and calls for criminal investigations.
Both men were assigned to Operation Metro Surge, an immigration enforcement dragnet launched in December that sent scores of armed and masked agents across the city.
CBP, which employs both men, has so far refused to release their names and has disclosed few other facts about the deadly incident, which came days after a different immigration agent shot and killed another Minneapolis protester, a 37-year-old mother of three named Renee Good.
Pretti’s killing, and the subsequent secrecy surrounding the agents involved, comes as the country confronts the consequences of President Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration crackdown. The sweeps in cities across the country have been marked by scenes of violence, against immigrants and U.S. citizens, by agents allowed to hide their identities with masks — an almost unheard of practice in law enforcement. As a result, the public has been kept from one of the chief ways it has to hold officers involved in such altercations accountable: their identity.
Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers have called for a transparent investigation into the killing of Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care unit nurse working at a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital.
“We must have a transparent, independent investigation into the Minnesota shooting, and those responsible—no matter their title—must be held accountable,” Republican Sen. John Curtis of Utah wrote on X on Monday.
The agency sent a notice to some members of Congress on Tuesday acknowledging that two agents fired Glock pistols during the altercation that left Pretti dead. That notice does not include the agents’ names. A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees CBP, said the agents had been placed on leave after the Jan. 24 shooting. And after a week of protests and calls from lawmakers for a review, the Justice Department said Friday that its Civil Rights Division is investigating the shooting. A DOJ spokesperson did not answer questions, including whether DHS has shared materials, such as body-camera footage, with its investigators.
Ochoa is a Border Patrol agent who joined CBP in 2018. Gutierrez joined in 2014 and works for CBP’s Office of Field Operations. He is assigned to a special response team, which conducts high-risk operations like those of police SWAT units. Records show both men are from South Texas.
In the aftermath of the shooting, Gregory Bovino, who has orchestrated high-intensity immigration sweeps and arrests in a string of Democratic-led cities since early 2025, was removed from his role as Border Patrol commander at large and reassigned to his former post in El Centro, California.
A spokesperson for DHS declined to answer questions about the two agents and referred ProPublica to the FBI. The FBI declined to comment. ProPublica made several attempts to call Ochoa and Gutierrez but neither answered.
Ochoa, who goes by Jesse, graduated from the University of Texas-Pan American with a degree in criminal justice, according to his ex-wife, Angelica Ochoa. A longtime resident of the Rio Grande Valley, Ochoa had for years dreamed of working for the Border Patrol and finally landed a job there, she said. By the time the couple split in 2021, he had become a gun enthusiast with about 25 rifles, pistols and shotguns, Angelica Ochoa said.
DHS’ disclosure to Congress was drawn from an internal review of the agents’ body-camera footage, which has not been released to the public. State investigators, meanwhile, have accused their federal counterparts of blocking them from investigating the shooting.

“We don’t have any information on the shooters,” a Minneapolis city spokesperson said. A spokesperson for Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said Tuesday that his office also had “not been given the names, and we don’t have any new information on the investigation.”
Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee, in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi Monday, accused the Justice Department of covering up evidence in both Pretti’s and Good’s killings.
“DOJ has also blocked prosecutors and agents from cooperating with state law enforcement officials and prevented state officials from accessing evidence,” the letter said.
Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, told CNN on Sunday that immigration agents should not be masked.
“They should not be anonymous. They should be identifiable. And they have to have rules of engagement that don’t allow them to terrorize and intimidate, harass and assault U.S. citizens and other people,” he said.
The notice to Congress said that the shooting happened when Pretti resisted arrest after officers were unable to get him and a female protester out of the street.
The CBP officer “attempted to move the woman and Pretti out of the roadway. The woman and Pretti did not move,” the report reads. “CBP personnel attempted to take Pretti into custody. Pretti resisted CBP personnel’s efforts and a struggle ensued.”
According to the report, one agent then yelled “He’s got a gun!” multiple times, and two others “discharged” their Glock pistols.
In videos widely shared online, Pretti can be seen holding up a phone, documenting the movements of federal agents and officers as they roamed the streets of a popular food and arts district. According to news reports, Pretti was concerned about the increasingly volatile siege of the city by federal agents.
In the videos, a masked agent appears to knock a woman to the ground. Pretti comes to her aid, getting between them, at which point the officer deploys pepper spray at his face. Two agents then grab Pretti and pull him to the ground, while more federal personnel pile on. During the struggle, the agents unleash a series of shots — approximately 10 — as onlookers scream.
Pretti was armed at the time of the encounter with a legally owned handgun, according to state and federal officials. Some analyses of bystander video appear to show a federal agent taking Pretti’s gun from his hip before the first shots were fired. The agents’ masks and the chaos of the altercation make it difficult to differentiate one from another.
Those videos appear to contradict the claims by Bovino and other officials, including DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, that Pretti had come to attack agents.
“The agents attempted to disarm the individual, but he violently resisted,” Bovino said in a Jan. 25 news conference. “Fearing for his life and the lives and safety of fellow officers, a Border Patrol agent fired defensive shots.”
In the initial aftermath, Stephen Miller, a top Trump aide and a leading force behind the immigration enforcement operations, called Pretti “a would-be assassin.” But Miller changed tack later in the week when he said in a statement that CBP officers “may not have been following” protocol related to confronting bystanders.
Additional video has surfaced showing Pretti in another altercation with federal agents 11 days before he was killed. The video shows Pretti yelling at the agents, who get in an SUV and start to drive away. Pretti then kicks out the taillight of the vehicle and the agents, who wore protective masks, jump out and tackle him to the ground.
It is unclear if any of the same agents were involved in both incidents.
Lauren Bonds, executive director of the National Police Accountability Project, said that many local and state police departments are “much more transparent” than CBP when officers shoot people. “More and more police departments are choosing to release bodycam footage or dashcam footage within a couple of days.”
Gil Kerlikowske, a former CBP commissioner, told ProPublica that it’s difficult to draw conclusions from the chaos in bystander videos. Still, he said, the shooting might have been prevented. Pretti’s attempt to help the woman knocked to the ground could have been seen as interfering with federal law enforcement, he said. But the decision by the officers to immediately use pepper spray created a chaotic scene that likely contributed to Pretti’s death.
“The other agent could have said ‘don’t interfere’ or ‘stand back,’” Kerlikowske said. “Rather than move immediately to pepper spray, you can arrest the person.” It’s part of a pattern, he said, of federal officers jumping straight to use of force in situations that could have been de-escalated but instead create danger for both agents and their targets.
Pretti’s death, and the federal government’s characterization of the event, sparked immediate protests, spurring thousands of people to go out into frigid conditions in Minneapolis and other American cities. The shooting has also drawn intense criticism from political leaders, including Walz, who has promised his state’s law enforcement will conduct its own criminal investigation.

The post Two CBP Agents Identified in Alex Pretti Shooting appeared first on ProPublica.
Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father were released from ICE custody on Sunday, a day after a federal court ordered their release.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 2 #967
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 2, No. 701.
PM says Europe must ‘step up’ and signals he wants to work more closely with other states to build military capability
The UK should consider re-entering talks for a defence pact with the EU, Keir Starmer has said, arguing that Europe needs to “step up and do more” to defend itself in uncertain times.
The prime minister signalled that he wanted to work more collaboratively with other European countries to increase defence spending and build up military capability, and doing so through the EU’s scheme is one option available.
Continue reading...LaFleur was in charge of Rams’ red-hot offense
Cardinals last reached playoffs in 2021 season
The Arizona Cardinals hired Mike LaFleur as head coach on Sunday, turning to a division rival’s offensive coordinator to try to pull the franchise from the bottom of the NFC West. The Cardinals’ announcement brought an end to a nearly four-week hiring process.
The 38-year-old Los Angeles Rams assistant replaces Jonathan Gannon, who was fired in January after compiling a 15-36 record over three seasons, including 3-14 last year. LaFleur – who is the younger brother of Green Bay Packers head coach Matt LaFleur – has been the Rams’ offensive coordinator for the past three seasons.
Continue reading...Walmart, the world's largest retailer, will be adding spaces for electric vehicle charging to parking lots in 19 different states, reports MLive: The move follows up on a plan announced in 2023 to build a network of charging stations at Walmart and Sam's Club stores throughout the U.S... "With a store or club located within 10 miles of approximately 90% of Americans, we are uniquely positioned to deliver a convenient charging option that will help make EV ownership possible whether people live in rural, suburban or urban areas," wrote Walmart Senior Vice President of Energy Transformation, Vishal Kapadia in 2023. Walmart plans to have the nationwide network operating by 2030. Walmart plans to have the nationwide network operating by 2030. Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Geoffrey.landis for sharing the news.
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If the countdown and fueling test go well, four astronauts will set their sights on a Super Bowl Sunday launch to the moon.
The following is the full transcript of the interview with Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado, a portion of which aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 1, 2026.
On this "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" broadcast, Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado and Rep. Michael McCaul join Margaret Brennan.
Commentary: This off-kilter cooking show is a fun binge if you like things seasoned with a heaping helping of chaos, comedy and charm.
Genie 3 lets you generate a video game-like world in seconds with only a text prompt.
Funds, paid to former security guard Matthew Ammel, were from former US senator’s campaign committee in October
A man identified in court filings as having an affair with former senator Kyrsten Sinema received almost $9,000 from Sinema’s former campaign committee in October, according to newly filed documents. The filings come just weeks after the man’s estranged wife accused Sinema of wrecking their marriage.
According to a report from Notus, which cites a newly filed Federal Election Commission (FEC) document, the recipient was Matthew J Ammel, who worked as a security guard for Sinema. He was paid $1,815.91 on 15 October and $7,136.14 on 31 October in payments listed as “payroll”, according to a filing submitted on Saturday by Sinema for Arizona.
Continue reading...Hello all- Question. Is a 150lb. rider able to enjoy the full range of a GT safely if ridden in moderation? Just trying to avoid nosedives. What range can be expected on asphalt?
Long-time Slashdot reader destinyland writes: Just months after his 20th birthday, Bill Gates had already angered the programmer community," remembers this 50th-anniversary commemoration of Gates' Open Letter to Hobbyists. "As the first home computers began appearing in the 1970s, the world faced a question: Would its software be free?" Gates railed in 1976 that "Most of you steal your software." Gates had coded the BASIC interpreter for Altair's first home computer with Paul Allen and Monte Davidoff — only to see it pirated by Steve Wozniak's friends at the Homebrew Computing Club. Expecting royalties, a none-too-happy Gates issued his letter in the club's newsletter (as well as Altair's own publication), complaining "I would appreciate letters from any one who wants to pay up." But freedom-loving coders had other ideas. When Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs released their Apple 1 home computer that summer, they stressed that "our philosophy is to provide software for our machines free or at minimal cost..." And early open-source hackers began writing their own free Tiny Basic interpreters to create a free alternative to the Gates/Micro-Soft code. This led to the first occurrence of the phrase "Copyleft" in October of 1976. Open Source definition author Bruce Perens shares his thoughts today. "When I left Pixar in 2000, I stopped in Steve Job's office — which for some reason was right across the hall from mine... " Perens remembered. "I asked Steve: 'You still don't believe in this Linux stuff, do you...?'" And Perens remembers how that movement finally won over Steve Jobs and carried the day. "Three years later, Steve stood onstage in front of a slide that said 'Open Source: We Think It's Great!' as he introduced the Safari browser, which at that time was based on the browser engine developed by the KDE Open Source project!"
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Melania, however, cost quite more than a typical documentary, at $40m to make and $35m to promote.
Amazon’s Melania Trump documentary has reportedly beaten box office expectations and recorded the strongest start of any documentary in over a decade, taking $7m at the US box office during its lavishly-promoted opening weekend. But it also cost quite more than a typical documentary, at $40m to make and $35m to promote.
And Amazon – which recently cut 16,000 corporate jobs – has been hit with criticism that making the documentary about the first lady, and paying so highly for it, was little more than a ploy to curry favor with her husband, Donald Trump, during his second presidency.
Continue reading...Boy and his father back in Minneapolis after being detained by ICE and held in immigration facility for more than a week
A five-year-old boy and his father were back in Minneapolis on Sunday after being released from a Texas immigration detention center where they were held for more than a week, according to US House representative Joaquin Castro.
“Liam is now home. With his hat and his backpack. Thank you to everyone who demanded freedom for Liam,” Castro, a San Antonio Democrat, said in a post on X. “We won’t stop until all children and families are home.”
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed. For the latest, you can read our Epstein coverage here.
We can bring you more from the interview with housing secretary Steve Reed on Sky News’ Trevor Phillips programme this morning (see this post for what Reed said about Peter Mandelson in the same interview).
When asked if the British government would comply with an extradition request from the US if there was a charge brought against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, Reed said he could not answer that question as it was an “entirely hypothetical” one.
Continue reading...Patients missing out on effective new radiotherapies widely used in other countries, health secretary told
Cancer patients are being denied access to cutting-edge treatments on the NHS because of a “deadly postcode lottery” in access, doctors have warned.
Patients in England are missing out on two innovative forms of radiotherapy that are known to be effective against several forms of the disease and are widely available in other countries, due to “red tape” and lack of funding.
Continue reading...Deputy US attorney general says victims ‘want to be made whole’ but that doesn’t mean ‘we can just create evidence’
The deputy US attorney general, Todd Blanche, the point person on the Trump administration’s Epstein files release, told ABC News on Sunday that prosecutors’ review of the Jeffrey Epstein-Ghislaine Maxwell sex-trafficking case “is over”.
Separately, in comments to CNN about Epstein, Blanche said that “victims want to be made whole” after surviving the scheme attributed to the late convicted sex offender and which led to a 20-year prison sentence for Maxwell beginning in 2022.
Continue reading...Gary Cohn, IBM vice chairman, said President Trump's nominee for chairman of the Federal Reserve Board is "very highly qualified" and will "take the Fed back to its traditional" norms.
Getting the right amounts of vitamins and nutrients is essential throughout all stages of life, but it can get more difficult as you age. Here are the best multivitamins to support your health in 2026.
Mette-Marit apologises for ‘poor judgment’ as documents reportedly include scores of email exchanges with child sex offender
Norway’s crown princess has become embroiled in another scandal after newly unsealed files appeared to show her years of extensive contact with the late child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The latest tranche of Epstein files, released on Friday by the US justice department, appear to include nearly 1,000 mentions of the crown princess, Mette-Marit.
Continue reading...Promoted by President Trump as "a must watch," the Melania Trump documentary "Melania" debuted with $7 million in ticket sales, according to estimates Sunday.
Families allege Bright Horizons brushed concerns aside allowing Vincent Chan to commit dozens of offences
Families of victims of a paedophile are taking legal action against a north London nursery where their children were abused, as they allege a “consistent culture of brushing concerns aside”.
Vincent Chan, 45, is facing prison for molesting girls aged between two and four while working at the now-closed Bright Horizons nursery in Finchley Road, West Hampstead.
Continue reading...The following is the transcript of the interview with Gary Cohn, IBM vice chairman and former director of the U.S. National Economic Council, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 1, 2026.
Wilson found fame in the seminal 1970s sitcom and then went on to become a minister in the 1980s
Demond Wilson, who found fame in the 1970s playing Lamont on Sanford and Son and went on to become a minister, has died. He was 79.
Mark Goldman, a publicist for Wilson, confirmed to the Associated Press that he died following complications from cancer on Friday.
Continue reading...Speaker Mike Johnson is ‘convinced’ the impasse over homeland security funding will be resolved by Tuesday
The ongoing partial US government shutdown is expected to continue into early next week, with no reopening likely before Tuesday, if what federal officials on both sides of the country’s political aisle are saying is any indication.
House Democrats have so far said they are refusing to guarantee the votes needed to speed passage of a funding measure that would restore government operations.
Continue reading...Even after a 12-day war with Israel, Iran retains the arsenal to hit U.S. allies and bases. U.S. strikes would lead to “regional war,” Iran’s supreme leader said.
The right fitness app should fit your schedule, workout preference and lifestyle. Here are the top options to consider.
Vineyard Wind (powering Massachusetts) is one of five offshore wind projects "that the Trump administration tried to hold up in December," reports The Hill. This week it became the fourth of those wind projects allowed by a judge to resume construction, the article notes, while even the fifth project "is still awaiting court proceedings." Federal Judge Brian Murphy, a Biden appointee, issued a preliminary injunction blocking the administration's stop work order against Vineyard Wind... According to its website, when complete, Vineyard Wind would be able generate enough power for 400,000 homes and businesses. The project already has 44 operational wind turbines and was working on an additional 18. The Trump pause applied to the construction work that was not yet complete.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bovino allegedly denied promoting two border patrol officials because of their race, according to several reports
Recently demoted border patrol official Gregory Bovino, who served as the face of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in several US cities, was compared to a Confederate general in an email sent to him by a colleague in 2018, according to multiple reports.
A border patrol agent who was later promoted to a senior role in New Orleans sent the email in question as well as a number of Confederacy-related images after Bovino canceled a job listing and installed that same agent – a white officer – in the listed role by bypassing the agency’s standard career-advancement process.
Continue reading...Three bishops accuse British government of contributing to ‘culture of impunity’ in the occupied territory
Three prominent Church of England bishops have accused the UK government of contributing to a “culture of impunity” in which Israel has accelerated its de facto annexation of the West Bank.
Guli Francis-Dehqani, the bishop of Chelmsford, Rachel Treweek, the bishop of Gloucester, and Graham Usher, the bishop of Norwich, visited Palestinian Christian communities in the occupied West Bank last week.
Continue reading...The following is the transcript of the interview with Rep. Michael McCaul, Republican of Texas, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 1, 2026.
After stories revealed high levels of contamination in neighborhood around factory processing US toxic waste, government announces sweeping array of tactics
The Mexican government has announced it will pursue a sweeping array of tactics to combat industrial pollution, from $4.8m in fines against a plant processing US hazardous waste to the rollout of a new industrial air-monitoring system, following investigations by the Guardian and Quinto Elemento Lab, a Mexican investigative unit.
Those stories revealed high levels of heavy-metal contamination in the neighborhood around the factory, Zinc Nacional, in the Monterrey metropolitan area, and showed the broader extent of industrial pollution in the region, linked to Monterrey’s role in manufacturing and recycling goods for the US market.
Continue reading...Employees of Ukraine’s largest private energy firm, DTEK, were travelling about 40 miles from frontline, says police
A Russian drone attack on a bus carrying mine workers in Ukraine’s central-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region has killed at least 12 people, officials said.
The bus was driving about 40 miles (65km) from the frontline, according to police. Images published by Ukraine’s state emergency service showed what appeared to be an empty bus, its side windows shattered and windscreen hanging from the front.
Continue reading...US naval battle group gathers off Iran’s shores as supreme leader in Tehran warns attack would spark regional war
Donald Trump has said Iran is talking to the US, hinting at a deal that would avoid the use of military strikes, as Iran’s supreme leader warned that any attack by the US would spark a regional war.
The US president’s comments came as Washington deployed a naval battle group led by the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln off Iran’s shores, after Trump’s threats to intervene in Iran’s deadly crackdown on anti-government protests.
Continue reading...Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's comments are the most direct threat he's made so far amid escalating tensions with the U.S.
Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado told CBS News any positive steps taken by the new post-Maduro government over the last month are due to pressure from President Trump.
As family detentions spike, the Trump administration is increasingly ensnaring the youngest, and most vulnerable, lawyers and advocates say.
Exclusive: Dr Susan Gilby, who won £1.4m bullying payout, says whistleblower protections must be strengthened
Patients are being put at risk by NHS bosses launching “sham investigations” into whistleblowers to shut down concerns, a former hospital chief executive who won a £1.4m bullying claim has said.
Dr Susan Gilby took over as chief executive at the Countess of Chester hospital in 2018 after it was rocked by the Lucy Letby case. She was awarded the payout – one of the biggest in NHS history – last month after a tribunal ruled she had been unfairly dismissed after raising concerns about alleged bullying and harassment by the chair of the hospital board.
Continue reading...Some users are stepping away from the app after it made a deal to create a US entity and updated terms and conditions
Many TikTok users across the US say they’re rethinking their relationship with the platform since its ownership and terms and conditions have recently changed, with some citing censorship and lack of trust as reasons why they’re removing themselves from the app.
Keara Sullivan, a 26-year-old comedian, says TikTok jumpstarted her career and provided a pathway to getting a manager and a literary agent.
Continue reading...Airports identified as biggest winners of government’s £4.3bn support package with Heathrow alone taking £900m discount
Struggling hotels, restaurants and nightclubs are calling for more financial help with business rates after it emerged that Heathrow is among the biggest beneficiaries of a multibillion-pound package of state support.
The UK’s biggest airport is in line for a discount of nearly £900m on its rates bill over the next three years. That is a fifth of the total £4.3bn “transitional relief” fund announced by the chancellor in the budget for all businesses facing big bill increases.
Continue reading...Keir Starmer among those suggesting Mountbatten-Windsor should appear before Congress following allegations of sexual encounter at Royal Lodge
A second woman has alleged that Jeffrey Epstein sent her to the UK to have a sexual encounter with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, according to her lawyer, as UK government pressure on the former prince to testify before the US Congress mounted.
The woman has claimed she spent the night at the former prince’s residence Royal Lodge in 2010, her US lawyer, Brad Edwards, told the BBC. The woman, who is not British, was in her 20s at the time, it was reported.
Continue reading...Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Michigan "have created the world's smallest fully programmable, autonomous robots," according to a recent announcement. The announcement calls them "microscopic swimming machines that can independently sense and respond to their surroundings, operate for months and cost just a penny each." Barely visible to the naked eye, each robot measures about 200 by 300 by 50 micrometers, smaller than a grain of salt. Operating at the scale of many biological microorganisms, the robots could advance medicine by monitoring the health of individual cells and manufacturing by helping construct microscale devices. Powered by light, the robots carry microscopic computers and can be programmed to move in complex patterns, sense local temperatures and adjust their paths accordingly... "We've made autonomous robots 10,000 times smaller," says Marc Miskin, Assistant Professor in Electrical and Systems Engineering at Penn Engineering and the papers' senior author. "That opens up an entirely new scale for programmable robots." The announcement describes them as "the first truly autonomous, programmable robots at this scale" (as described in two recent academic articles). The team had to design a new propulsion system that utilized the unique locomotion physics in the microscopic realm, according to the university's announcement. So the robots "generate an electrical field that nudges ions in the surrounding solution." Those ions, in turn, push on nearby water molecules, animating the water around the robot's body. "It's as if the robot is in a moving river," says Miskin, "but the robot is also causing the river to move." The robots can adjust the electrical field that causes the effect, allowing them to move in complex patterns and even travel in coordinated groups, much like a school of fish, at speeds of up to one body length per second... To be truly autonomous, a robot needs a computer to make decisions, electronics to sense its surroundings and control its propulsion, and tiny solar panels to power everything, and all that needs to fit on a chip that is a fraction of a millimeter in size. This is where David Blaauw's team at the University of Michigan came into action... The robots are programmed by pulses of light that also power them. Each robot has a unique address that allows the researchers to load different programs on each robot. "This opens up a host of possibilities," adds Blaauw, "with each robot potentially performing a different role in a larger, joint task." Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader fahrbot-bot for sharing the news.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Prioritize your mental health this year with these convenient apps offering therapy, meditation and wellness support.
Emails suggest Sarah Ferguson and former prince Andrew contacted disgraced financier during his house arrest
The more than 3m Epstein documents released by the US Department of Justice include emails from accounts labelled “The Duke” and “The Invisible Man” as well as from “Sarah”, and references to “Fergie”, suggesting they are from the former Prince Andrew and his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson.
They appear to reveal the two were in contact with Epstein immediately after the end of his house arrest in August 2010, and Mountbatten-Windsor’s visit to the US that December. Epstein had pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting a minor for prostitution, for which he served 13 months in a jail work-release programme. He was later released under house arrest for a year.
Continue reading...Cherub at landmark church causes ecclesiastical and political uproar with alleged resemblance to Italian PM
Italy’s culture minister and the diocese of Rome have launched investigations after claims were made that an angel in a landmark church in Rome was restored in the likeness of the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni.
The resemblance was first flagged by the newspaper La Repubblica, which noted that one of the two angels flanking a marble bust of Italy’s last king in the Basilica of St Lawrence in Lucina now had “a familiar, astonishingly contemporary face”.
Continue reading...Here are some highly rated films to watch, plus a list of new additions to the streamer in February.
Seven in 10 residents who were forced to leave have not returned, with many living in temporary housing in other cities or even countries
Esmeralda Rodas sits on the ground in front of what was once the front door of her home, haunted by memories of her previous life. She remembers jumping for joy in 1989, when her husband, Hector Rodas, presented her with the Altadena house as a birthday gift.
It was small, Esmeralda says, but it was her castle – with windows overlooking purple mountains that, one night last January, glowed ominously red with wildfires which razed many homes on her street.
Continue reading...But effort fell short of state surgeon general’s promise to end Florida’s immunization mandates altogether
Republicans advanced a bill in the Florida legislature this week to weaken vaccine protections for children, but it fell well short of state surgeon general Joseph Ladapo’s promise made last year to end immunization mandates.
The proposed new law, introduced by Jacksonville state senator Clay Yarborough, and which narrowly passed the chamber’s health policy committee on Monday in a 6-4 vote, seeks only to expand exemptions for parents who do not want their school-age children vaccinated.
Continue reading...I've reviewed hundreds of projectors. Here are the best portable projectors I've tested from Anker, TCL and more.
Militant attacks erupted in a resource-rich region where Pakistan is seeking to attract foreign investment in mining and minerals.
Kick-start your 2026 strength training journey with these expert tips and strategies.
The following is the full transcript of a panel with Mayors Eileen Higgins, David Holt, Quinton Lucas and Mark Freeman, a portion of which aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on Feb. 1, 2026.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Government works best when its citizens are knowledgeable and engaged. Delaware’s government has scores of commissions, working groups, agencies and legislative committees. All must hold meetings that are open to the public. Below we highlight a few of those meetings that are happening this week.
Below are some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening around the state this week.
Delaware’s legislative session will kick into full gear next week when lawmakers begin holding hearings to negotiate the following year’s budget. The hearings of the Joint Finance Committee will occur about a week after Gov. Matt Meyer introduced his $6.9 billion proposed operating budget.
In his budget address, Meyer said he will overcome an estimated half-billion-dollar deficit through a series of cuts, which will also free up an additional $42 million that he will put toward teacher and state employee raises, affordable housing incentives, and Medicaid, among other items.
The Joint Finance Committee hearings will feature a series of testimony from state agency directors who will explain their specific operational requests for the following year.
Hearings on Tuesday will feature a statewide financial overview, before testimony begins from the Office of Management and Budget, the Departments of Human Resources, and the Department of Finance.
Wednesday will include testimony from the departments of Technology and Information, Labor, and State.
Thursday will feature testimony from the state’s higher education institutions – Delaware Technical Community College, Delaware State University, and the University of Delaware.
Testimony from the remaining state offices and agencies will occur in later weeks.
📍 The Joint Finance Committee will meet 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover. For information about virtual attendance for the Tuesday meeting, click here. For the Wednesday meeting, click here. And for the Thursday meeting, click here.
Gov. Matt Meyer’s economic development office on Monday will hear proposals for taxpayer grants to two businesses, including a $1.4 million award to the Delmar Business Center, LLC, a business entity created last year.
Shortly after it formed, the company submitted concept plans to the town of Delmar to build a business park described in planning documents as containing warehouse space alongside potentially storefronts, among other uses.

The proposed grant for the development comes a month after Meyer told attendees at Spotlight Delaware’s Legislative Summit that, through state economic development, he “wants to help promising startups become truly investment-ready.”
“We want good ideas to create jobs and to scale faster than anywhere else in the country,” Meyer said.
His comments came after his administration last year signed off on one of the largest taxpayer-backed incentives in state history:a $30 million grant to biopharmaceutical giant Merck to build a $1 billion campus near Wilmington.
📍 The Delaware Council on Development Finance will meet at 10 a.m. Monday at the Delaware Public Archives offices, located 121 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. in Dover. Click here for additional details, including information about attending virtually.
The question of when – and whether – the Port of Wilmington will expand through the construction of a new container terminal in Edgemoor continues to linger on the minds of many state officials.
To do so, the Diamond State Port Corporation – the state entity that oversees the Port of Wilmington – needs to reacquire dredging permits that a federal judge invalidated in 2024, following a legal challenge from the owners of the Port of Philadelphia.
Over the past six months, port officials have repeatedly stated publicly that they are making progress in their new application to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the permits. Still no announcements have been made about them being successfully secured.
Those officials will meet publicly again on Monday. On the agenda for the meeting is an update about the Port of Wilmington’s plans to expand in Edgemoor. Also on the agenda is a presentation from the port’s private operator, Enstructure, which on Wednesday announced Eryn Dinyovszky as the new president for its Mid-Atlantic operations including the Port of Wilmington.
Her predecessor, Bayard Hogans, quietly left Enstructure last summer. At the time, the company declined to disclose the reason for his departure.
📍The board of the Diamond State Port Corporation will meet at noon on Monday at the state’s Buena Vista property, located at 661 S. DuPont Highway near New Castle. Click here for additional details, including information about attending virtually.
Before housing or commercial developments are brought before local governments, they are presented to a committee of state officials who provide feedback about potential impacts on transportation and on the environment.
A handful of plans will be presented to the committee on Wednesday, including a proposal to build 245 homes in the small western Sussex County town of Laurel, and another to expand residential development at Fort DuPont, a former military facility that operated from the Civil War to World War II.
📍Members of the Preliminary Land Use Service committee will meet at 9 a.m. Wednesday at the Haslet Armory in Dover, located at 122 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Click here for additional details, including information about attending virtually.
In November, a fiery debate on the New Castle County Council over data center regulations ended with Councilman Timothy Sheldon flipping off Councilman Kevin Caneco.
Two months later, the Council sat for a regular, public “ethics training” meeting. During the meeting, Caneco asked about the ethics of a developer who has a land-use plan before the Council contributing to a political campaign of one of the members.
Johanna Bishop, who serves on the county’s ethics commission and put on the training session, said she did not believe that to be ethical.
Following the comments, several council members pushed back, with arguments centering around their assertions that an individual’s $600 check to a candidate is unlikely to sway a policy decision.
Caneco responded, first by asserting that there are council members “that will take every developer check they can to run a campaign.” He said that constituted “a public trust integrity issue” that other municipalities around the country have regulated.
His remarks then turned personal when he referenced earlier comments from one councilmember and said “you can’t even file your campaign finances correctly.”
Several councilmembers then interjected, with some calling Caneco’s comments out of order.
Last week, Councilwoman Janet Kilpatrick introduced a resolution that apologizes “to the public for conduct unbecoming a council.”
The New Castle County Council’s finance committee will discuss the resolution on Tuesday evening. Later in the evening, the full council will discuss it again.
Also listed on Tuesday’s full council meeting is the ordinance to impose data center regulations, which have been the subject of months of debate. But the sponsor of the ordinance, Councilman Dave Carter, said he will keep the proposal “tabled” on Tuesday and bring it back at a later date.
📍 The New Castle County Council’s finance committee will meet at 5 p.m. Tuesday at the Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For more information, including about virtual attendance, click here. The full Council will meet again at 6:30 Tuesday at the same location. For more information, click here.
Eastern Sussex County’s booming building trend continues this week when the County Council considers an ordinance to change the zoning for a 183-acre piece of land from agricultural to residential.
The change would make way for the development of 352 homes along the Delaware-Maryland state line near Selbyville, just northwest of the farthest reaches of the inland bay that sits next to Ocean City.
If approved, the subdivision would be among dozens of others planned for Southern Delaware, which has been the fastest growing part of the state for more than a decade.
📍 The Sussex County Council will meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday for its weekly meeting to discuss a range of topics, including Selbyville zoning change. The meeting will take place at the Sussex County Administrative Office Building, located at 2 The Circle in Georgetown. Information about virtual attendance can be found at the bottom of the meeting agenda document here.
The post Get Involved: Budget hearings, port updates, and a county apology? appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
"A box full of viruses and bacteria has completed its return trip to the International Space Station," reports ScienceAlert, "and the changes these 'bugs' experienced in their travels could help us Earthlings tackle drug-resistant infections..." Scientists aboard the space station incubated different combinations of bacteria and phages for 25 days, while the research team led by biochemist Vatsan Raman carried out the same experiments in Madison, down here on Earth. "Space fundamentally changes how phages and bacteria interact: infection is slowed, and both organisms evolve along a different trajectory than they do on Earth," the researchers explain. In the weightlessness of space, bacteria acquired mutations in genes involved in the microbe's stress response and nutrient management. Their surface proteins also changed. After a slow start, the phages mutated in response, so they could continue binding to their victims. The team found that certain space-specific phage mutations were especially effective at killing Earth-bound bacteria responsible for urinary tract infections (UTIs). More than 90 percent of the bacteria responsible for UTIs are antibiotic-resistant, making phage treatments a promising alternative.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| Snagged a board before they sold out. This is my first one but I’ve snowboarded for the last 30 years hoping they are similar. Do XR fenders and parts fit on this? And advice or things I should do to it? Thanks everyone. [link] [comments] |
In an uncertain time, folk musician Jesse Welles – a four-time Grammy Award-nominee from Ozark, Arkansas – is reinvigorating the spirit and relevance of the protest song, spreading messages on such topics as health insurance and ICE agents.
Mel Robbins' podcasts, TED Talk and bestselling books, including "The Let Them Theory," have spread her inspirational messages about positivity and empowerment. She talks about how she overcame her own sense of failure, and appreciates success later in life.
Film with a cast headed by Anthony Hopkins tells the story of a supercar marque that began in a small Bologna garage
Dozens of Maseratis of 1920s and 1930s designs have been built specially for a feature film about the Italian car company’s earliest days, with a cast headed by Anthony Hopkins.
Maserati: The Brothers tells the story of siblings driven by their love of cars to create an automotive company from scratch. It all began in a little garage in the Italian city of Bologna: in 1914 they founded a sports supercar company that went on to make some of the fastest vehicles on the planet.
Continue reading...The four-time national figure skating champion from Virginia, the only person in the world to have landed a quad axel in competition, is the heavy favorite for gold at this year's Winter Olympics.
These across-the-board raises to all employees versus individual performance-based raises are simply lazy
Looking forward to a raise in 2026? You may be getting “peanut butter”.
A new report from compensation software and data provider Payscale predicts that in 2026, many employers will be giving “peanut butter raises” to their employees – increases given “across the board” as opposed to being calculated individually based on performance or merit. They’re spread evenly, like peanut butter on a slice of bread.
Continue reading...Jeff Tweedy has released more than two dozen records in his career, both as a solo artist and as frontman of the rock band Wilco. But he may have outdone himself with his latest triple-album "Twilight Override."
Taylor Rehmet’s win adds to Democrats’ record of overperforming in special elections so far this cycle
Democrat Taylor Rehmet won a special election for the Texas state senate on Saturday, flipping a reliably Republican district that Donald Trump won by 17 points when he clinched a second presidency in 2024.
Rehmet, a labor union leader and veteran, easily defeated Republican Leigh Wambsganss, a conservative activist, in the Fort Worth-area district. With almost all votes counted, Rehmet had a comfortable lead of more than 14 percentage points.
Continue reading...Eighteen-year-old Swiss national injured in blaze at Swiss ski resort died on Saturday
A teenager injured in the fire that engulfed a bar in the Swiss ski resort of Crans-Montana during new year celebrations has died in hospital, taking the death toll from the blaze to 41.
The Wallis canton’s public prosecutor, Beatrice Pilloud, said in a brief statement on Sunday: “An 18-year-old Swiss national died at a hospital in Zurich on January 31. The death toll from the fire at Le Constellation bar on January 1 2026 has now risen to 41.”
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It’s darkly fitting that “Melania,” the new $75 million snoozefest from Amazon about America’s first lady, was released in theaters the same day her husband’s Justice Department dropped 3 million pages of documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case. As we now know, Epstein and Donald Trump were bosom buddies for years, and the grim specter of that relationship hangs over “Melania.”
The movie’s director is Brett Ratner, who six women accused of sexual assault or harassment in 2017, including one alleged victim who was 19 at the time. Ratner has been biding his time in Israel, where he has reportedly become friendly with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
In what one would hope is enough to undo Amazon’s $35 million “Melania” marketing budget, Ratner is also in the new batch of Epstein files: There are photos of him and Epstein embracing two women whose identities are redacted. An earlier Epstein document dump included a photo where Ratner hugs the shirtless torso of Jean-Luc Brunel, the French modeling agent and Epstein associate who died in prison facing multiple charges of rape and sexual assault, including of a minor under the age of 15.
It’s hard not to watch “Melania” with all that context top of mind. It’s a big, nasty club, and we’re not in it, thankfully.
This film opens by putting too fine a point on all of it. The camera pans expansively over the ocean and the beach before arriving at Mar-a-Lago and Melania Trump’s red-bottomed heels. She boards a motorcade to travel to New York City, and the chorus of the Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter” plays: “Rape, murder, it’s just a shot away.” (That song was famously used to great effect in Martin Scorsese’s “Casino” and “Goodfellas,” films in which criminal psychopaths meet their demise after stealing and assaulting everyone in sight in service of personal enrichment and their depraved sense of morality.)
What follows is an hour and 44-minute-long lifestyle infomercial about a public figure with all the charisma and intrigue of eggshell-white paint drying. (We are reminded multiple times throughout the movie, as a tie-in with its marketing campaign, that the first lady loves the colors black and white, which are also the colors of Regal Cinemas’ novelty popcorn bucket for its release.)
Melania is seen trying on a multitude of outfits ahead of her husband’s second inauguration, with festivities that include no fewer than three different balls, along with a ghoul-studded candlelight dinner. At that fete, the president’s table is a who’s who of his donors and scions of industry: There are three separate shots of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his wife Lauren Sanchez. Bezos sits next to Miriam Adelson, the arch-conservative megadonor, and Trump cheerleader Elon Musk is there, too, caught on video as a brunette swoops in to sit on his lap. (For his part, Musk is also in the latest tranche of Epstein emails, asking the sex trafficker in November 2012, “What day/night will be the wildest party on your island?”) Mark Zuckerberg, whose company, Meta, donated $1 million to the president’s inauguration fund, doesn’t appear until the inauguration luncheon, but he still shows up.
Melania glides over it all, her unlined face impassive and unaffected, which creates a genuinely disquieting effect. Rather than an intimate portrait of a misunderstood woman — tellingly, the tagline for the movie is simply “A new film,” which is about as much as you can truthfully say about it — we’re treated to platitude after platitude in voiceover narration by the first lady.
Melania admits she’s a fan of AI; The audiobook of her memoir, also called “Melania,” is read by an AI replica of her voice. Most of her lukewarm observations feel like they could be AI-generated as well. Among them are statements so generic they achieve utter meaninglessness: “I felt the weight of history,” “Freedom is not free,” and “I honor the importance of the White House.” Describing the coat she wore for the inauguration, she states: “I want to feel like it’s a coat.” “Melania” is a stunning document, if only for its ability to say so little despite what we’re informed is unprecedented access.
“Melania” is a stunning document, if only for its ability to say so little despite what we’re informed is unprecedented access.
“Everyone wants to know” what it’s like becoming first lady again, Melania says early on in the movie. But if early ticket sales are any indication against its massively bloated budget, she has a generous definition of “everyone.” I saw the movie on opening night at Alamo Drafthouse in Brooklyn, admittedly far from MAGA America, with a mere nine strangers. Other than a few “ooohs” from my seatmate when Melania tried on a new dress, only the appearance of her husband got any reaction from the assembled faithful, who laughed easily whenever Trump said anything. The biggest laugh came from shots of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris waiting out of public view before the inauguration, where Harris’s face is furrowed in disbelief, and of the mad dash to move out anything the Bidens might have touched before the Trumps arrive back at the White House.
The first time Melania and Trump are onscreen together, he greets her as she disembarks from a private jet emblazoned with TRUMP in all-capital letters. It appears that they’re going to shake hands before ultimately pivoting to an embrace. Their warmth is captured elsewhere, like when Trump calls his wife to tell her the final Electoral College totals that usher him into the White House once again. “That’s a good one,” Melania says without mirth. “Bye, congrats.”
All other efforts to humanize Melania fall similarly flat. You can practically see the boxes being checked off as they’re fulfilled on screen. She is a mother who bizarrely praises Barron Trump’s “composure” and calls him “very confident” as the song “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World” plays. (On the campaign trail in 2016, Donald Trump memorably referred to Barron as “her son.”)
“Being hand in hand with my husband in this moment is very emotional,” she tells us in voiceover. “Nobody has endured what he has over the past few years. People tried to murder him, incarcerate him, slander him, and here he is. I’m so very proud.”
The lack of self-awareness is positively nauseating, and this feeling is only moderated slightly by the sheer tediousness of approving table designs, invitations, and other window-dressing.
Melania also cares deeply about “the children.” (It is perhaps worth noting that she began her modeling career at 16.) On a video call with French first lady Brigitte Macron where she talks about her “Be Best” anti-bullying initiative, she makes the note “no phones till 11,” a Macron recommendation, on a “Be Best”-branded notepad (Bezos for some reason is also seen on screen as part of the call, which goes unremarked upon.) While watching news coverage of the Los Angeles wildfires, a vaguely misty-eyed Melania says in voiceover, “I think about the families, the children who have lost everything.” Crucially, this sympathy does not seem to extend to children killed by her husband’s bombs in Gaza.
Melania at one point meets with an Israeli woman, Aviva Siegel, who was captured on October 7 and held hostage by Hamas. She was initially freed but forced to leave her husband, Keith, behind. (He was released on February 1, 2025, as part of the ceasefire deal.) “I would pray that he doesn’t suffer,” Melania tells her, with all the sympathy of a woman eyeing a damaged piece of produce. “I will always use my influence and power to fight for those in need,” she sums up the experience in voiceover.
But Ratner goes to great lengths to convince us that Melania is also fun, even a little goofy. This does not work in the slightest. At a victory event with Trump supporters at the D.C. Capital One Arena, Melania is seen dancing ever-so-slightly to the Trump campaign mainstay “YMCA,” but only as she leaves the stage; Trump does not join in. From behind sunglasses in a black SUV, Melania tells us, somewhat concerningly, that Michael Jackson is her favorite musician, and that she and Donald met him in New York. “Billie Jean” plays on the car’s sound system, and Melania lightly sings along, including to the line, “Be careful of who you love,” but any deeper meaning is lost on all parties involved.
Moments like these have led some to fall for the gag, and even to suggest that Ratner is making a slyly anti-Trump movie, which couldn’t be further from the truth. He’s a sycophant to his core, after Melania and Trump finally return to the White House after a great many parties, Ratner coos from off-camera: “Sweet dreams, Mr. President.”
(As a reward for his obsequiousness, Ratner is slated to direct “Rush Hour 4,” the buddy-cop series that’s reportedly being revived after Trump personally leaned on Larry Ellison, a Trump supporter and media mogul who now owns Paramount, which is set to distribute the film.)
As the movie mercifully draws to a close, Melania once again returns to the children, who are our future. “With the celebrations behind us, the first day of my husband’s second term has arrived. There is much to accomplish in the next four years,” she says like a threat. “Children will always remain my priority. … I will move forward with purpose and, of course, with style.”
Moving forward, of course, means a regime of mass deportation and the trampling of our civil rights, all right in front of our faces. Her husband has ushered in an era where the unencumbered American id rules, one in which avarice, flagrant corruption, and clear bribery are the animating forces of a nation and a people. In that sense, the vacuousness of “Melania” perfectly captures the meaner, more selfish world we live in now. After all, it’s always been about Trump — not us, and certainly not Melania — despite any $75 million effort to convince us otherwise.
The post “Melania” Is as Vacuous as Its Subject appeared first on The Intercept.
Thanks to decades of conservation efforts, black bear populations are rebounding across the U.S. In Arkansas, hunters talk about their annual black bear hunt — a practice they acknowledge is complicated and contentious, yet central to their way of life.
In-person interactions break down barriers in east London, as AI startups also try to bridge communication divide
Wesley Hartwell raised his fists to the barista and shook them next to his ears. He then lowered his fists, extended his thumbs and little fingers, and moved them up and down by his chest, as though milking a cow. Finally, he laid the fingers of one hand flat on his chin and flexed his wrist forward.
Hartwell, who has no hearing problems, had just used BSL, British Sign Language, to order his morning latte with normal milk at the deaf-run Dialogue Cafe, based at the University of East London, and thanked Victor Olaniyan, the deaf barista.
Continue reading...Democrats call the upset a warning sign for the GOP, saying Rehmet's victory shows voters are rejecting Republican policies even in longtime strongholds.
Officials say calm restored to province day after dozens killed in suicide and gun attacks in at least 10 cities
Pakistan’s security forces have intensified their operations against separatist militants in Balochistan province who launched a large-scale assault on Saturday in which at least 31 civilians and 17 security personnel were killed.
A day after the militants carried out suicide attacks in the heart of the province’s capital, Quetta, the chief minister of the south-western region, Sarfraz Bugti, said 145 people he described as militants had been killed in 40 hours and that their bodies were in the custody of the authorities.
Continue reading...The administration’s efforts show the lengths to which Trump is willing to go to lay the groundwork for 2026
While the nation’s attention was focused on the ICE invasion of Minneapolis, another part of Trump’s authoritarian state apparatus was in action more than a thousand miles away. On Wednesday 28 January, the FBI carried out a stunning raid at the central election facility in Fulton county, Georgia.
Its purpose: to seize ballots cast in the 2020 election. Such an action is unprecedented.
Austin Sarat, William Nelson Cromwell professor of jurisprudence and political science at Amherst College, is the author or editor of more than 100 books, including Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death Penalty
Continue reading...ICE’s killing of Renee Good has revealed how the state will only defend those who uphold a white racial order. A 1915 film points to the origins of this social pact
In the hours after the 7 January fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old Minneapolis mother of three, gut-wrenching footage of her killing was released, discrediting initial claims from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and the Department of Justice that she was shot in self-defense. As a response to the public outcry, the Trump administration and a chorus of conservative public figures unleashed a litany of dehumanizing and defamatory remarks about Good, a beloved wife, neighbor and dental assistant, in ways that were unduly callous.
The Fox News host Jesse Watters derided Good’s queer identity, and mocked her as a “self-proclaimed poet from Colorado with pronouns in her bio”. The homeland security secretary Kristi Noem vilified Good as a domestic terrorist who “weaponized” her vehicle in an attempt to run over officers – a patently false comment. Laura Loomer, a personal adviser to the president, posted to social media, “She deserved it … I’m shocked her lesbian girlfriend wasn’t shot with her.” JD Vance lobbed the biting accusation that the victim was “a deranged leftist”, before adding that “it’s a tragedy of her own making”. Donald Trump justified the shooting, telling reporters that “at a very minimum, that woman was very, very disrespectful to law enforcement”. And on 17 January, the justice department announced a criminal investigation into claims tying her grieving widow, Becca Good, to unnamed “activist groups” (six federal prosecutors resigned in objection to the investigation).
Continue reading...These shows are reminders of just how dramatic the Olympics can get.
Tired of squinting at every LED headlight? A simple anti-reflective coating on your actual glasses is a much better investment.
Recreating cosmic dust may help answer questions about how meteorites hitting Earth came to contain organic matter
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How does one acquire star dust? One option, as the Perry Como song suggests, is to catch a falling star and put it in your pocket, so to speak.
Thousands of tonnes of cosmic dust bombard the Earth each year, mostly vaporising in the atmosphere. The asteroid and comet fragments that do not burn up – known as meteorites and micrometeorites if they hit Earth – provide scientists with valuable clues about the cosmos.
Continue reading...A collector just bought the chairs for her home. They became famous from a photo of former president Jimmy Carter, President Joe Biden and their wives.
Late singer said kids loved his personality and wanted to touch and hug him, and ‘sometimes it got me into trouble’
As Michael Jackson saw it, children would become enamored with his personality as well as want to touch and hug him – and “sometimes it [got] me into trouble,” the late US pop superstar says in previously unheard audio recordings contained in a new documentary.
The UK’s Wonderhood Studios included the recordings of Jackson voicing those thoughts for a new four-episode documentary series beginning on Wednesday that explores his acquittal on child sexual abuse charges after a 14-week criminal trial near Los Angeles in 2005.
Continue reading...Super Bowl LX is one week away. See the best ways to watch or stream the game, commercials and Bad Bunny halftime show on NBC or Peacock.
I got an inside look at SP80's kite-powered sailboat designed to break the world sailing speed record this year in Namibia.
These phones tried some wild things. Not all of them succeeded.
Seen by rivals as a dangerous rightwinger, others hope the controversial culture minister can snatch Paris from the left
She was the first woman of north African and Muslim heritage to hold a major French government post and she redefined political celebrity in France. Now Rachida Dati wants to become mayor of Paris and take the city from the left, which has been in power for 25 years.
“I want to bring back authority,” Dati, France’s culture minister, told Le Figaro last month, promising a law and order drive to arm municipal police with guns. Her opponents call her a dangerous rightwinger who would turn the French capital into a “Trumpist laboratory”.
Continue reading...Country is already suffering acute fuel shortage; experts say complete cutoff will be ‘catastrophic’ to its infrastructure
It’s just gone midday on Linea, one of the main roads through Havana’s Vedado neighbourhood, and Javier Peña and Ysil Ribas have been waiting since 6am outside a petrol station. They’re passing the time fixing a leak on Ribas’s 1955 gold and white Mercury.
A tanker has pulled up on the forecourt in front of them, and so the queue behind is growing fast. Although this station only takes US dollars, at a cost far out of reach of most Cubans, Peña says it’s their only choice. “There is no gas in the national pesos,” he says, shrugging.
Continue reading...Move is dramatic departure for advisory group under Kirk Milhoan, who says he doesn’t like the term ‘established science’
All vaccine recommendations are being reconsidered by the US’s vaccines committee, according to its top adviser, who in recent interviews slammed vaccination requirements for attending school and said vaccines should be taken on the advice of an individual’s doctor.
The stance from Kirk Milhoan, chair of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), represents a dramatic departure for the group tasked with making US vaccine recommendations for decades, signaling an increasingly hostile approach from the Trump administration to routine vaccines.
Continue reading...The latest research shows that wearables could be a valid way to track your heart health.
Time travel and heart-hitting family themes make this show intriguing.
Each Groundhog Day, Punxsutawney Phil makes his prediction about a late end to winter weather or early start to spring temperatures. Here's how accurate his forecasts have been over the years.
Vibration plates are trending, but do you really need them? We got some insight from personal trainers.
Carlos Alcaraz came from a set down to beat Novak Djokovic in four becoming, at 22 years and eight months, the youngest man to achieve a career grand slam
Our players are ready to come out. This is going to be special.
I keep saying it, but it bears repetition: we’re at the start of a golden age in women’s tennis. Sabalenka, Rybakina, Gauff, Swiatek and Osaka at their peaks, Anisimova coming, Andreeva getting there, then Mboko, Baptiste and Jovic on the match; ooooh yeah.
Continue reading...This year in America, renewables and battery storage "will account for 99.2% of net new capacity — and even higher if small-scale solar were included," reports Electrek, citing EIA data reviewed by the SUN DAY Campaign: EIA's latest monthly "Electric Power Monthly" report (with data through November 30, 2025), once again confirms that solar is the fastest-growing among the major sources of US electricity... [U]tility-scale solar thermal and photovoltaic expanded by 34.5% while that from small-scale systems rose by 11.3% during the first 11 months of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024. The combination of utility-scale and small-scale solar increased by 28.1% and produced a bit under 9.0% (utility-scale: 6.74%; small-scale: 2.13%) of total US electrical generation for January to November, up from 7.1% a year earlier. Wind turbines across the US produced 10.1% of US electricity in the first 11 months of 2025 — an increase of 1.2% compared to the same period in 2024. In November alone, wind-generated electricity was 2.0% greater than a year earlier... The mix of all renewables (wind, solar, hydropower, biomass, and geothermal) produced 8.7% more electricity in January-November than a year earlier and accounted for 25.7% of total US electricity production, up from 24.3% 12 months earlier. Renewables' share of electrical generation is now second to only that of natural gas, whose electrical output actually dropped by 3.7% during the first 11 months of 2025... Since January 1 to November 30, roughly the beginning of the Trump administration, renewable energy capacity, including battery storage, small-scale solar, hydropower, geothermal, and biomass, ballooned by 45,198.1 MW, while all fossil fuels and nuclear power combined declined by 519.2 MW... [In 2026] natural gas capacity will increase by only 3,960.7 MW, which will be almost completely offset by a decrease of 3,387.0 MW in coal capacity.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
This year in America, renewables and battery storage "will account for 99.2% of net new capacity — and even higher if small-scale solar were included," reports Electrek, citing EIA data reviewed by the SUN DAY Campaign: EIA's latest monthly "Electric Power Monthly" report (with data through November 30, 2025), once again confirms that solar is the fastest-growing among the major sources of US electricity... [U]tility-scale solar thermal and photovoltaic expanded by 34.5% while that from small-scale systems rose by 11.3% during the first 11 months of 2025 compared to the same period in 2024. The combination of utility-scale and small-scale solar increased by 28.1% and produced a bit under 9.0% (utility-scale: 6.74%; small-scale: 2.13%) of total US electrical generation for January to November, up from 7.1% a year earlier. Wind turbines across the US produced 10.1% of US electricity in the first 11 months of 2025 — an increase of 1.2% compared to the same period in 2024. In November alone, wind-generated electricity was 2.0% greater than a year earlier... The mix of all renewables (wind, solar, hydropower, biomass, and geothermal) produced 8.7% more electricity in January-November than a year earlier and accounted for 25.7% of total US electricity production, up from 24.3% 12 months earlier. Renewables' share of electrical generation is now second to only that of natural gas, whose electrical output actually dropped by 3.7% during the first 11 months of 2025... Since January 1 to November 30, roughly the beginning of the Trump administration, renewable energy capacity, including battery storage, small-scale solar, hydropower, geothermal, and biomass, ballooned by 45,198.1 MW, while all fossil fuels and nuclear power combined declined by 519.2 MW... [In 2026] natural gas capacity will increase by only 3,960.7 MW, which will be almost completely offset by a decrease of 3,387.0 MW in coal capacity.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
When Melissa Lamesch is found dead at home in Mt. Morris, Illinois, on the day before Thanksgiving, authorities zero in on Matthew Plote, a man trained to save lives, not take them.
Ten days before investigators say Katlyn Lyon Montgomery, 28, was strangled in her sleep in the Virginia apartment she shared with her 4-year-old daughter and a new roommate, she had broken up with Trenton Frye, a North Carolina man she met online months before.
At 22 years and 272 days, Carlos Alcaraz is the youngest man to complete a set of all four major singles titles.
Editors' Choice: Centered around a gorgeous 16-inch OLED display, this Yoga laptop provides the performance and build that graphics pros demand.
Exclusive: Thousands of pounds unlocked to fund more diversity initiatives in diocese of capital
Church of England clergy will be encouraged to promote antiracism in sermons as senior figures unlock thousands of pounds in funding to promote diversity initiatives in London.
Church Commissioners, the body that manages C of E assets, is funding the Diocese of London, which covers more than 400 parishes and 18 boroughs north of the River Thames, to boost inclusion work as part of the three-year Racial Justice Priority (RJP) project.
Continue reading...In Trump’s first term, activists focused on lobbying and voting. Now tactics are shifting to nonviolent civil disobedience
On 24 January, Alex Pretti was killed by federal agents while he was helping another civilian in Minneapolis who had been knocked to the ground – just weeks after an ICE agent killed Renee Good. In response to this second killing of a Minnesotan, demonstrations spread across the United States to protest the Trump administration and its ultra-violent immigration enforcement tactics.
Minneapolis has been in a state of sustained protest. Its general strike on 23 January mobilized tens of thousands of Minnesotans to participate in an economic blackout and march in the streets. Solidarity protests, strikes and marches also took place across the country, including the Free America Walkout, which involved more than 900 local actions across all 50 states on the anniversary of Donald Trump’s second inauguration.
Continue reading...This is my secret to hitting my step count every day.
Speed up your fitness progress by eating these eight nutrient-rich foods.
I'm an unlikely induction stove convert and I'm here to tell my story.
The Charmera is one of the smallest cameras you'll ever see, but it attracts major attention... though not for its photos.
App endured a major outage and user backlash over perceived censorship. Now it’s facing an inquiry by the California governor and an ascendant competitor
A little more than one week ago, TikTok stepped on to US shores as a naturalized citizen. Ever since, the video app has been fighting for its life.
TikTok’s calamitous emigration began on 22 January when its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, finalized a deal to sell the app to a group of US investors, among them the business software giant Oracle. The app’s time under Chinese ownership had been marked by a meteoric ascent to more than a billion users, which left incumbents such as Instagram looking like the next Myspace. But TikTok’s short new life in the US has been less than auspicious.
Continue reading...Tranche of government-held files filled with ‘ham-fisted redactions’ and expose survivors’ identities, say attorneys
Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking operation have reacted to the voluminous – and possibly last – tranche of government-held investigative documents with calls for further accountability for the scheme’s alleged clients.
“It is without question that a significant piece of Epstein and [his convicted associate Ghislaine] Maxwell’s vast sex trafficking operation was to provide young women and girls to other wealthy and powerful individuals,” said Sigrid McCawley, a partner with Boies Schiller Flexner, a firm representing survivors of the scheme.
Continue reading...Networks created after police killed George Floyd were reactivated to challenge Trump’s mass deportation policy
Cory never expected he’d spend hours each day driving around after immigration agents, videotaping their moves. The south Minneapolis resident is “not the type of person to do this”, he said.
The dangers of what he’s doing, even after the killings of two observers, largely stay out of his mind when he’s watching Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents – even when he’s gotten hit with pepper spray. In quieter moments, it occurs to him that agents likely know where he lives. Alex Pretti, the 37-year-old whom agents killed while he was filming them, “100% could have been me”, Cory said.
Continue reading...Looking to upgrade your TV speakers? My picks for the best soundbars for any budget will help elevate sports, movies and music.
When the cops arrived at a party in Cantón la Estancia, a tiny hamlet in the shadow of the San Miguel volcano, Walter Josué Huete Alvarado didn’t think he had any reason to worry. He had a minor infraction on his criminal record — a DUI when he was a teenager — but that shouldn’t matter in El Salvador. It happened in the United States, where he is a citizen. Yet Alvarado’s U.S. passport didn’t deter Salvadoran police from dragging him away, pointing to the tattoos on his hands and claiming he was a member of MS-13.
It was May 2023, the third year of Joe Biden’s presidency. Alvarado, his relatives and legal counsel told The Intercept, is still incarcerated in El Salvador.
Two years before the second Trump administration targeted Kilmar Ábrego García over his tattoos and sent him to a notorious Salvadoran prison, the Biden State Department was made aware of Alvarado’s detention — and, for reasons of diplomacy and optics, did nothing. Today, the world has seen the viral images of men lined up at El Salvador’s Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo, or CECOT — heads shaved, crammed front-to-back and forced to straddle each other — as a result of Donald Trump’s brutal deportation regime. But according to lawyer Jorge Palacios, the total number of U.S. citizens and residents detained in El Salvador’s less prominent prisons and jails is unknown.
Palacios, who brought Alvarado’s case before the United Nations, said that members of his group, Socorro Jurídico Humanitario, “have had people come to them saying their detained relatives are U.S. citizens who were visiting,” as was the case with Alvarado. Families often lose touch with their loved ones after their arrests, so “exact details are limited.”
In Alvarado’s case, a Salvadoran police report, testimony from two of his closest relatives, and insight from legal experts offer a relatively clear picture of what happened. At the police station in Moncagua, officers disregarded his American citizenship and stomped on his passport, telling him it was worthless. Alvarado had a tattoo of the letters “L.A.” — the city of his birth — but officers insisted it represented the city where MS-13 was formed. A “W” — his first initial — was actually an inverted “M,” they said, and a dollar sign was an obscured “S.”
The police report says Alvarado’s tattoos were “ambiguous, and there is no documentary or evidentiary support indicating that Mr. Huete Alvarado belongs to any gang, organization, or structure involved in the commission of criminal acts.” It was determined that “the police procedure may have been dysfunctional due to the lack of certainty regarding the individual’s belonging to or links with gangs.”
Alvarado has been shuffled between a handful of prisons and penal institutions in the nearly three years since then, never receiving a trial. His situation is in many ways exceptional, given his nationality, but it reflects the broader crisis facing countless families in El Salvador struggling to understand their loved ones’ perpetual, often inexplicable detentions. As similar models of criminalization are being rolled out across Latin America, Alvarado’s case may offer a preview of things to come.
When Alvarado was detained, the country of his birth was led by a Biden presidency that had, from the beginning, pitched its commitment to “upholding universal rights” as the “grounding wire of our global policy, our global power.” But since the Biden administration neglected to intervene in Alvarado’s detention, the authority with the best shot at saving him now is the second Trump administration, ideologically aligned with El Salvador’s reactionary leadership and its sweeping gang crackdown. Now, the Salvadoran regime that has effectively disappeared thousands into an opaque network of prisons without trials is more emboldened than ever.
Alvarado’s family was initially supportive of Nayib Bukele, the bearded, grinning, bitcoin-boosting millennial and self-described dictator who rose to power the first time Trump was in office and has held onto it, despite a Salvadoran constitutional prohibition, into a second consecutive term. Murder was declining when Bukele became president in 2019, but many Salvadorans still felt trapped by widespread gang violence and drug trafficking. Bukele, like his predecessors, at first brokered a clandestine truce with gang leaders — providing “financial incentive” to artificially reduce the number of homicides.
The pact fell apart in early 2022, and murders hit a 30-year high in a single day. Bukele enacted his “state of exception,” which allowed his government to suspend constitutional rights for 30 days, paving the way for an unfettered war on organized crime. Bukele and his governing Nuevas Ideas party have renewed the suspension 39 times.
El Salvador now has the highest incarceration rate in the world. Bukele’s government has arrested more than 90,000 Salvadorans, close to 2 percent of the population, including thousands of minors. Human rights experts and lawyers estimate that as many as half of everyone detained under the state of exception have no known gang connections. Prisons are overflowing, with the cumulative system operating at over 300 percent capacity.
By some standards, El Salvador is now considered one of the safest countries in Latin America. Bukele touts record lows in homicide and last year claimed 861 consecutive days without a murder — though, as the Washington Office on Latin America noted, the tally did not include the more than 427 people who have died in custody since the state of exception was decreed. Voters, in turn, have expressed overwhelming support: Bukele had an 85 percent approval rating as of June 2025.
Others, like Alvarado’s family — with members in both El Salvador and the U.S. — soured on the regime once their relatives disappeared under the state of exception.
The Biden administration soured on Bukele, too. Initial optimism that the young right-wing leader would bring much-needed reform soon turned to criticism of El Salvador’s “democratic backsliding.” In May 2021, then-Vice President Kamala Harris denounced Bukele’s illegal removal of the country’s attorney general and the dismissal of five of its Supreme Court judges who had tried to stop him from overriding the constitution. The State Department sanctioned several members of Bukele’s inner circle for bribery and undermining democratic processes, and the Treasury Department sanctioned two more for their role in the secret gang truce.
Bukele came into conflict with the interim U.S. ambassador to El Salvador, Jean Manes, claiming on social media that Manes had tried to pressure him into freeing a politician charged with corruption. In November 2021, Manes temporarily suspended diplomatic relations with El Salvador.
Yet Alvarado’s case didn’t get the treatment of a high-profile American detained by an authoritarian pariah state, like Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, imprisoned in Russia just two months before Alvarado traveled to El Salvador. By May 2023, the Biden State Department had decided that Bukele’s mercurial nature and tendency to lash out warranted a softer touch. No longer would they scold out in the open. Instead, according to a former State Department official familiar with the matter, the National Security Council emphasized back-channeling over public condemnation.
State Department apparatchiks hoped that smoothing relations with Bukele would help them maintain El Salvador’s cooperation on immigration enforcement and counternarcotics, an official who worked under the Biden administration explained to The Intercept, and that an impending loan from the International Monetary Fund would trigger more transparency. The Bukele administration maintained that the state of exception would at some vague point be wound down, and Manes’s replacement, William H. Duncan, insisted on handling any concerns about the country’s punitive turn behind closed doors.
Duncan, per two former State Department employees who asked not to be named for fear of professional consequences, “was very difficult to work with.” He insisted on being the only point of contact to Bukele. Efforts by members of the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor and Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, or WHA, to bring attention to Alvarado’s case proved ineffective. Duncan’s embassy was aware of the case, but he wasn’t enthusiastic about efforts to push for more visits from embassy legal counselors for Alvarado. Duncan shut down anyone who tried to push for any other lateral communication, “especially any criticism,” one of the State Department sources said.
These tactics would culminate in an almost subservient brand of appeasement. In June 2024, after Bukele had successfully run for a consecutive (and constitutionally prohibited) term as president, a robust delegation of Biden officials led by Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas — and flanked by Duncan and the WHA’s Assistant Secretary Brian Nichols — attended the Salvadoran strongman’s second inauguration. (Duncan and Nichols did not respond to The Intercept’s requests for comment.)
“During the visit, Secretary Mayorkas met with President Bukele to discuss the many cultural, and economic ties our two countries share and reaffirmed the mutual commitment to address our common challenges,” a DHS press briefing reads.
Alvarado had spent just over a year behind bars.
Alvarado’s absence has been especially difficult for his daughters. His stepdaughter “feels guilty,” said a relative, who requested anonymity for fear of targeting by the U.S. government. “At first it was really, really hard, because she was like, ‘I feel like it’s my fault.’” After getting support at school, she showed signs of improvement, the relative said, but “when she turned 15, she was like, ‘I don’t want to have anything, because Walter’s not here.’”
His youngest daughter was just 2 when her father was arrested. She has started asking if Alvarado has passed away.
Bukele’s army of internet trolls has mocked the family, expressing loyalty to a president they see as an effective leader against gang violence. When they posted about Alvarado’s detention, the family told The Intercept, they would be greeted by accusations that he was, in fact, a gangster who deserved to be punished.
The Salvadoran president’s popularity can be explained, in part, by previous administrations’ inability to reckon with the country’s post-war contradictions. El Salvador’s reconciliation process in the early 1990s, overseen by the United States and the ultra-conservative Alianza Republicana Nacionalista, or ARENA, party, paved the way for the selling of the country’s telecommunications, banking, and energy infrastructure off to the highest bidder and exported the country’s natural commodities through the use of cheap labor.
The austerity regime made prime breeding ground for an intricate network of organized crime in the country. The U.S. expelled Salvadoran refugees who had gotten caught up in Los Angeles drug trafficking scene, allowing La Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, to blossom in El Salvador’s urban centers. Successive governments implemented tough-on-crime policies dubbed mano dura, Spanish for “iron fist,” to no avail, and populist, left-wing politicians found it difficult to unravel this Gordian knot through redistributive politics alone.
“It was tough, but replacing gang violence with state violence is not the answer.”
“It’s perfectly understandable that people support Bukele because he resolved an issue that was really hurting people,” Vicki Gass, the executive director of the Latin America Working Group, told The Intercept. “You’re not making a lot of money. You get remittances from your dad living in the United States. It gets extorted. A friend of mine had his whole workshop and tools stolen. You know, his livelihood, right? It was tough, but replacing gang violence with state violence is not the answer.”
Boosting the image of state violence has become a useful propaganda tool of the Bukele government. The strategy is most clearly captured by CECOT, the state-of-the-art supermax prison where Ábrego García was sent last year. But it is only one of 24 prisons in the country.
Alvarado was first sent to the Centro Penal de Izalco, an older prison where detainees are fed a spartan diet and beating and medical neglect are common. These carceral facilities, where a majority of the individuals caught up in the state of exception have been sent, have been the site of hundreds of deaths from violence and lack of medical care. In 2024, Socorro Jurídico Humanitario reported that of the 235 deaths they had recorded in prisons like Izalco, 94 percent of those who died were not affiliated with any gangs.
According to the director of the Americas division of Human Rights Watch, “torture, ill-treatment, incommunicado detention, severe violations of due process and inhumane conditions” were rampant in Izalco.
Alvarado smuggled messages to his family through the U.S. embassy in El Salvador, saying he cried every night and that he could not stomach the food. He told his infant daughter to behave herself, and mentioned he was forced to sleep on the concrete floor in only his boxers. His family would send him food to supplement his nutrition, but he would report often not receiving the goods — reflecting a common practice in Salvadoran prisons, according to the Salvadoran human rights group Cristosal, which found that goods sent to the country’s detention centers are often diverted by prison staff.
After the Biden era cool-off period, Democrats are again incensed by “the world’s coolest dictator.” Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen made a personal trip to El Salvador to lay eyes on Ábrego García, who was a Maryland resident, and the party has lambasted the cruelty of so-called “third-country” deportations under Trump. Some have been pursuing their efforts since Biden was in power: In November 2023, a group of Democratic congress members petitioned the State Department to determine how many Americans had been detained under El Salvador’s state of exception. It remains unclear if they received a response.
Bukele, meanwhile, again renewed the decree in August that allows his government to detain those captured under the state of exception without trial. The tentative date for those hearings was pushed back to 2027.
Just four months into his incarceration, Alvarado became so ill that he was transferred to the Granja Penitenciaria de Rehabilitación de Zacatecoluca, a lower security facility just a 15-minute drive from CECOT. Since then, he’s been moved multiple times, most recently to the Centro Industrial de Cumplimiento de Penas y Rehabilitación, where the state holds many political and foreign prisoners. Primarily, the facility is a work camp for detainees who are considered free of any gang associations.
The post An American Citizen Has Been Stuck in El Salvador’s Prison System Since the Biden Administration appeared first on The Intercept.
Brian O’Hara worries that gains his department made since George Floyd’s murder are at risk amid an immigration crackdown that has enraged the city.
Britain’s Benn enters ring, sparks buzz as future foe
Shakur Stevenson described his dominant victory over Teófimo López at Madison Square Garden as the product of discipline, preparation and years of studying his opponent, after producing what many observers viewed as the finest performance of his career.
The unbeaten American outboxed López over 12 rounds to become a four-division world champion, a moment Stevenson said validated his long-held belief that he belongs among boxing’s elite.
Continue reading...As Americans celebrate Black History Month, museums and other institutions continue to face pushback from the Trump administration over DEI.
Officials say Gaza residents travelling on foot only will be allowed through border point, which was shut in May 2024
Gaza’s main border crossing in Rafah will reopen for Palestinians on Monday, Israel has said, with preparations under way at the war-ravaged territory’s gateway, which has been mostly closed for almost two years.
Before the war, the Rafah crossing with Egypt was the only direct exit point for most Palestinians in Gaza to reach the outside world as well as a key entry point for aid. It has been largely shut since May 2024.
Continue reading...Los Blancos look to bounce back from their midweek European disappointment as they host Los Franjirrojos.
Voters to choose president and 57 members of congress, with current president’s hardline pick Laura Fernández expected to win first round
Costa Rica heads to the polls on Sunday in an election dominated by increasing insecurity and warnings of an authoritarian turn in a country long seen as a model of liberal democracy in the region.
Crime is a big concern for many voters as criminal groups battle to control lucrative cocaine trafficking routes to Europe and the US, casting a shadow on the Central American country famous for its wildlife tourism.
Continue reading...The march of wearable tech is coming to the aid of women in what some say is a long underserved market
For any bodily function you want to measure these days there is a gadget – a wristband for step-counting, a watch to track your heart rate or a ring for measuring sleep.
Now the march of wearable tech is coming to the aid of what some say is a long underserved market: menopausal women.
Continue reading...I previously covered x64 OpenVMS release on VMware. This was insanely cool achievement for the operating system. While it had no practical ramification there was one small annoyance. The OS console was on a serial port. In VMware it meant another VM connected via named pipe.
Now OpenVMS x64 supports (limited?) local console on
↫ Virtually FunOPA0.
I think this has been available for a while now – since 2024 – but we hadn’t covered it yet. That same 2024 post also indicates CDE and DECWindows work now, a side effect of a C/C++ compiler bugfix. Sadly, VSI has made it clear that desktop support is not at all on their list of things to spend time on, so don’t expect graphics support to improve meaningfully other than by accident like in this case.
But NixOS isn’t the only declarative distro out there. In fact GNU forked Nix fairly early and made their own spin called Guix, whose big innovation is that, instead of using the unwieldy Nix-language, it uses Scheme. Specifically Guile Scheme, GNU’s sanctioned configuration language. I’ve been following Guix for a bit, but it never felt quite ready to me with stuff like KDE being only barely supported and a lot of hardware not working out of the box.
However, now that (after three years) Guix announced its 1.5.0 release with a lot of stuff stabilized and KDE finally a first-party citizen, I figured now is the best time to give it a fresh shot. This post captures my experiences from installation to the first 3-4 days.
↫ Nemin’s blog
If you’re interested in Guix, but aren’t quite sure if you want to take the plunge, this article does a great job of showing you the ropes, listing what issues you might run into, some pitfalls to avoid, and so on.
The BBC reports: China has executed 11 members of a notorious mafia family that ran scam centres in Myanmar along its north-eastern border, state media report. The Ming family members were sentenced in September for various crimes including homicide, illegal detention, fraud and operating gambling dens by a court in China's Zhejiang province. The Mings were one of many clans that ran the town of Laukkaing, transforming an impoverished backwater town into a flashy hub of casinos and red-light districts. Their scam empire came crashing down in 2023, when they were detained and handed over to China by ethnic militias that had taken control of Laukkaing during an escalation in their conflict with Myanmar's army. With these executions Beijing is sending a message of deterrence to would-be scammers. But the business has now moved to Myanmar's border with Thailand, and to Cambodia and Laos, where China has much less influence. Hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked to run online scams in Myanmar and elsewhere in South East Asia, according to estimates by the UN. Among them are thousands of Chinese people, and their victims who they swindle billions of dollars from are mainly Chinese too. Frustrated by the Myanmar military's refusal to stop the scam business, from which it was almost certainly profiting, Beijing tacitly backed an offensive by an ethnic insurgent alliance in Shan State in late 2023. The alliance captured significant territory from the military and overran Laukkaing, a key border town. Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader sinij for sharing the news.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In the final part of this series, we look at how infighting has ripped the left apart online while the right has flourished – and how some progressives are turning the tide
Robert Topinka is a reader in digital media and rhetoric at Birkbeck, University of London
There is politics before the internet, and politics after the internet. Liberals are floundering, the right are flourishing, and what of the left? Well, it’s in a dire state. This is despite the fact that the key political problems of the last decade – rising inequality and a cost of living crisis – are problems leftists claim they can solve. The trouble is, reactionaries and rightwingers steal their thunder online, quickly spreading messaging that blames scapegoats for structural problems. One reason for this is that platforms originally built to connect us with friends and followers now funnel us content designed to provoke emotional engagement.
Back when Twitter was still the “town square” and Facebook a humble “social network”, progressives had an advantage: from the Arab spring to Occupy Wall Street, voices excluded from mainstream media and politics could leverage online social networks and turn them into real-life ones, which at their most potent became street-level protests that toppled regimes and held capitalism to account. It seemed as though the scattered masses would become a networked collective empowered to rise up against the powerful.
Robert Topinka is a reader in digital media and rhetoric at Birkbeck, University of London
Continue reading...About 20 countries including G7 states in talks on rare earths including calls for US to guarantee minimum price
Ministers from the US, EU, UK, Japan, Australia and New Zealand will meet in Washington this week to discuss a strategic alliance over critical minerals.
The summit is being seen as a step to repair transatlantic ties fractured by a year of conflict with Donald Trump and pave the way for other alliances to help countries de-risk from China, including one centred on steel.
Continue reading...Some families have lost up to £10,000 after being duped into sending money to fraudsters’ bank accounts
Foreign students attending independent schools in the UK are being targeted by fraudsters seeking to intercept their fee payments, according to new research.
Some families have lost up to £10,000 after being duped into sending money to the bank account of a criminal, after receiving a fake email from the school bursar.
Continue reading...Five years after the junta’s coup, the civil war devastating Myanmar has reached a turning point. The military is carrying out large-scale counter-offensives across the country to reclaim territory seized by pro-democracy rebels of various ethnic and religious backgrounds
In Tanintharyi, the southernmost region of Myanmar, the local resistance has managed to contain the military. After five years of guerrilla warfare, the revolutionary youth there remain determined to restore democracy through armed struggle.
A long, narrow stretch of land at the southern tip of Myanmar, between the Andaman Sea to the west and Thailand to the east, Tanintharyi region is one of the areas where the resistance challenges the military’s authority. For decades, the region has been home to an armed rebellion led by the Karen ethnic minority, which operated mainly in the peripheral mountains.
Soldiers from the Karen National Union (KNU) inspect the ruins of a Buddhist monastery destroyed by a junta airstrike in Myeik district, Tanintharyi region
Continue reading...Nick Carter says easing controls on MDMA will allow drug to be used as alternative treatment for those with PTSD
A former head of the British military is calling for the government to ease restrictions on the party drug MDMA so that it can be tested more cheaply as a treatment for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Sir Nick Carter, who was chief of the defence staff until 2021, said existing regulations meant a single gram of “medical grade” MDMA cost about £10,000 compared with a street price of about £40, inflating the cost of trials.
Continue reading...Pressure mounts after government said it would publish names of those killed during recent unrest
Calls are growing inside Iran for an independent inquiry into the number of people killed during recent protests after the government said it would oversee the publication of the names of the deceased.
The highly unusual government move, announced on Thursday, is designed to head off claims that crimes against humanity have been committed and that as many as 30,000 Iranians have been killed. Iran’s official death toll released by the Martyr’s Foundation is 3,117, including members of the security services.
Continue reading...… Teófimo López, whose name draws louder boos but louder cheers also. The Sunset Mark native makes his entrance to Punisher by late Bronx rapper Big Pun before it segues to Whoa! by Black Rob before it segues to U Don’t Know by Jay Z before it segues to Skrilla by Kodak Black. And he’s not even out of the tunnel yet! Perhaps a spot of gamesmanship as he makes Stevenson wait in the ring.
Now a half-dozen of the Jabbawockeez have taken the runway while MOP’s Ante Up goes into DMX’s Party Up. Good lord: López is making a movie. He finally makes it to the ring, dancers in trail, before climbing the apron and holding a single green glove aloft. The crowd is eating this up.
Continue reading...Stevenson beats López to become four-weight champion
Unanimous 119-109 cards underline one-sided outcome
Shakur Stevenson delivered the most complete performance of his career on Saturday night, outmaneuvering, outthinking and ultimately outclassing Teófimo López over 12 rounds to claim the WBO and lineal junior welterweight titles and become a four-division champion.
Stevenson cruised to a unanimous decision at Madison Square Garden by identical scores of 119-109, 119-109 and 119-109, numbers that reflected a fight largely contested on his terms from the opening bell. (The Guardian had it 118-110.)
Continue reading...Whether in streets draped in anti-drone nets or deep in urban basements, Kherson residents go about their everyday activities with the constant threat of Russian bombing
Galyna Lutsenko, a crisis psychologist, is moving busily among a small group of children seated around a table in a basement in Kherson, unique in being Ukraine’s only leading city almost directly on the frontline with Russian forces – and one where people live with the daily threat of attack.
She dangles a plasticine butterfly on a thread over a playhouse on the table. Her own house in the city, she says, was hit by Russian shelling in 2024, injuring her in the leg and stomach.
Continue reading...The Doomsday Clock is ticking ever more loudly as arms-control mechanisms fail and leaders become more reckless. The time to be alarmed is now
Keir Starmer’s tentative pivot to the Dragon Throne has played well in Beijing, though not in Trumpland. That’s partly because, like other needy western leaders, Britain’s prime minister did not dwell on awkward subjects such as human rights abuses, the Jimmy Lai travesty, spying and Taiwan. But in talks with President Xi Jinping, one vital issue was avoided altogether and should not have been: China’s dangerous, unexplained, secretive and rapid buildup of nuclear weapons.
More than the climate crisis, global hunger, Kaiser Trump’s Prussian militarism and the ever prevalent threat of pandemic disease, the uncontrolled proliferation of weapons of mass destruction is the most immediate, existential threat to humanity. Last week, the Doomsday Clock advanced to 85 seconds to midnight – closer to Armageddon than ever before. “Nuclear and other global risks are escalating fast and in unprecedented ways,” warned the clock-watchers, via the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
Continue reading...Five French unions representing Ubisoft workers "have called for a 'massive international strike'," reports the gaming news site Aftermath. The move follows a "series of layoffs and cancellations" at Ubisoft, the article points out, plus what the company calls a "major organizational, operational and portfolio reset" that will lead to more layoffs and cancellations announced last week. Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot even sent an end-of-day message warning that management continues to "make difficult decisions, including stopping certain projects" and "potentially closing select studios," an earlier article points out: Slipped in between the grand vision and subtle threats was the reversal of a popular hybrid work-from-home policy that would have a direct impact on everyone working at Ubisoft. Staff would be back in the office five days a week, but with the promise of a generous number of work from home days. "The intention is not to question individual performance, but to regenerate our collective performance, which is one of the key elements in creating the best games with the required speed," Guillemot wrote. There was immediate confusion and frustration. One French union representing Paris Ubisoft developers called for a half-day strike. "It is out of the question to let a boss run wild and destroy our working conditions," Solidaires Informatique wrote in a press release. "Perhaps we need to remind him that it is his employees who make the games...." [The article notes later that "There's concern that these shifts could make it harder for Ubisoft to recruit the talent it needs to improve, or even worse, actively drive away more of the company's existing veterans."] Particularly galling about the new return-to-office policy for some Paris staff was that they had only recently finished negotiating to ensure two days of work-from-home per week. "It's only been six months since the situation was more or less 'back to normal' and now it's shattered to the ground by Yves' sole decision with zero justification, zero documents, zero internal studies proving RTO increases productivity or morale, nothing," one developer told me. The specific details for the rollout of the return-to-office policy have yet to be communicated to everyone, could vary team by team, and might not go into effect for much of the year. The "massive international strike" would take place from February 10-12, Aftermath notes, citing the five French unions representing Ubisoft workers (CFE-CGC, CGT, Printemps Ãcologique, Solidaires Informatique, and STJV): "The announced transformation [at Ubisoft] claims to place games at the heart of its strategy, but without us, these games cannot exist," the unions wrote in a joint release.... We are not fooled: rather than taking financial responsibility for layoffs, they prefer to push us out by making our working conditions unbearable. It's outrageous...." The Ubisoft unions hope that February's strike will be the largest yet, and they're coordinating with unions outside France to present a globally united front against the company. A union representative at Ubisoft Paris even argued to Aftermath that because the CEO "needs to find 200€ million for the coming year, any person who has to quit because of this is a net benefit for him."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Louisiana governor says the shooting in Clinton is ‘absolutely horrific and unacceptable’
Five people, including a six-year-old child, have been wounded in a shooting during a parade in Louisiana, sending people in the crowd fleeing for cover, authorities say.
The shooting occurred shortly after the midday start of the Mardi Gras in the Country parade in Clinton, East Feliciana sheriff Jeff Travis told reporters.
Continue reading...Democrat Christian Menefee won a Texas U.S. House seat in a special election Saturday that will narrow Republicans' already-slim majority.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 496 for Sunday, Feb. 1.
Plaintiffs in case say they were lured from Japan, exploited for labour and cut off from families for generations
It has been more than six decades since Eiko Kawasaki left Japan to begin a new life in North Korea. Then 17, she was among tens of thousands of people with Korean heritage who had been lured to the communist state by the promise of a “paradise on Earth”.
Instead, they encountered something closer to a living hell. They were denied basic human rights and forced to endure extreme hardship. Official promises of free education and healthcare plus guaranteed jobs and housing had been a cruel mirage. And to their horror, they were prevented from travelling to Japan to visit the families they had left behind.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Sunday, Feb. 1.
Any threads or recommendations for replacing a dead Pint battery?
| Running the Pint through the snow in the dark... [link] [comments] |
Remember that lawsuit questioning WhatsApp's end-to-end encryption? Thursday Bloomberg reported those allegations had been investigated by special agents with America's Commerce Department, "according to the law enforcement records, as well as a person familiar with the matter and one of the contractors." Similar claims were also the subject of a 2024 whistleblower complaint to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, according to the records and the person, who spoke on the condition that they not be identified out of concern for potential retaliation. The investigation and whistleblower complaint haven't been previously reported... Last year, two people who did content moderation work for WhatsApp told an investigator with Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security that some staff at Meta have been able to see the content of WhatsApp messages, according to the agent's report summarizing the interviews. [A spokesperson for the Bureau later told Bloomberg that investigator's assertions were "unsubstantiated and outside the scope of his authority as an export enforcement agent."] Those content moderators, who worked for Meta through a contract with the management and technology consulting firm Accenture Plc, also alleged that they and some of their colleagues had broad access to the substance of WhatsApp messages that were supposed to be encrypted and inaccessible, according to the report. "Both sources confirmed that they had employees within their physical work locations who had unfettered access to WhatsApp," wrote the agent... One of the content moderators who told the investigator she had access said she also "spoke with a Facebook team employee and confirmed that they could go back aways into WhatsApp (encrypted) messages, stating that they worked cases that involved criminal actions," according to the document... The investigator's report, dated July 2025, described the investigation as "ongoing," includes a case number and dubs the inquiry "Operation Sourced Encryption..." The inquiry was active as recently as January, according to a person familiar with the matter. The inquiry's current status and who may be the defined target are both unclear. Many investigations end without any formal accusations of wrongdoing... WhatsApp on its website says it does, in some instances, allow information about messages to be seen by the company. If someone reports a user or group for problematic messages, "WhatsApp receives up to five of the last messages they've sent to you" and "the user or group won't be notified," the company says. In those cases, WhatsApp says it receives the "group or user ID, information on when the message was sent, and the type of message sent (image, video, text, etc.)." Former contractors outlined much broader access. Larkin Fordyce was an Accenture contractor who the report says an agent interviewed about content moderation work for Meta. Fordyce told the investigator he spent years doing this work out of an Austin, Texas office starting as early as the end of 2018. He said moderators eventually were granted their own access to WhatsApp, but even before that they could request access to communications and "the Facebook team was able to 'pull whatever they wanted and then send it,'" the report states... The agent also gathered records that were filed in the whistleblower complaint to the SEC, according to his report, which doesn't describe the materials... The status of the whistleblower complaint is unclear. Some key points from the article: "The investigative report seen by Bloomberg doesn't include a technical explanation of the contractors' claims." "A spokesperson for Meta, which acquired WhatsApp in 2014, said the contractors' claims are impossible." One contractor "said that there was little vetting" of foreign nationals hired to do content moderation for Meta, saying this granted them "full access to the same portal to review" content moderation cases
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The blast happened a day before a planned naval drill by Iran in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which a fifth of all oil traded passes.
There is a Pint X listed nearish me on facebook marketpalce for $350. The seller says the battery and motor end of the board got wet (river) very briefly worked fine for a year or so but now when under high load or high speed it randomly turns off. They specifically clarified that the front controller end of the board didn't go under and they took what they reasonably could apart and dried it as soon as it happened. Battery or BMS issue?
Is there a reasonable fix to this? I've looked around and haven't been able to find anything useful. Or maybe a different issue although? Power button ring? Or is it just useful for main parts for a vesc conversion?
Any advice is greatly appreciated, thanks!
Kristi Noem’s department told to ‘under no circumstances’ get involved with protests in cities led by Democrats unless they ask for help – key US politics stories from 31 January at a glance
Donald Trump has instructed the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, not to intervene in protests occurring in cities led by Democrats unless local authorities ask for federal help amid mounting criticism of his administration’s immigration crackdown.
On his social media site, Trump posted that “under no circumstances are we going to participate in various poorly run Democrat Cities with regard to their Protests and/or Riots unless, and until, they ask us for help”.
Continue reading...Below his signature on the order, the judge included a photo of Liam Ramos as he was taken into custody wearing a Spider-Man backpack and bright blue hat.
Latest Epstein file release shows 2003 emails between Casey Wasserman and the convicted sex trafficker
Casey Wasserman, the head of the Los Angeles Olympics organizing committee, said on Saturday that he “deeply regrets” emails from 2003 between him and Ghislaine Maxwell that appeared in the latest collection of government files released Friday on Jeffrey Epstein.
Among the exchanges included one from Wasserman telling Maxwell “I think of you all the time. So, what do I have to do to see you in a tight leather outfit?”
Continue reading...Top Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino allegedly used language offensive to Jewish federal officials on a recent call, sources said.
An anonymous reader shared this report from the Associated Press: American workers adopted artificial intelligence into their work lives at a remarkable pace over the past few years, according to a new poll. Some 12% of employed adults say they use AI daily in their job, according to a Gallup Workforce survey conducted this fall of more than 22,000 U.S. workers. The survey found roughly one-quarter say they use AI at least frequently, which is defined as at least a few times a week, and nearly half say they use it at least a few times a year. That compares with 21% who were using AI at least occasionally in 2023, when Gallup began asking the question, and points to the impact of the widespread commercial boom that ChatGPT sparked for generative AI tools that can write emails and computer code, summarize long documents, create images or help answer questions... While frequent AI use is on the rise with many employees, AI adoption remains higher among those working in technology-related fields. About 6 in 10 technology workers say they use AI frequently, and about 3 in 10 do so daily. The share of Americans working in the technology sector who say they use AI daily or regularly has grown significantly since 2023, but there are indications that AI adoption could be starting to plateau after an explosive increase between 2024 and 2025... A separate Gallup Workforce survey from 2025 found that even as AI use is increasing, few employees said it was "very" or "somewhat" likely that new technology, automation, robots or AI will eliminate their job within the next five years. Half said it was "not at all likely," but that has decreased from about 6 in 10 in 2023. A bar chart lists the sectors most likely to be using AI at their jobs: Technology (77%) Finance (64%) College/University (63%) Professional Services (62%) K-12 Education (56%) Community/Social Services (43%) Government/Public Policy (42%) Manufacturing (41%) Health Care (41%) Retail (33%)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Brandon Johnson gives police ‘clear procedure’ to follow if they witness or get reports of agents involved in illegal activity
Chicago’s mayor Brandon Johnson has ordered Chicago police to investigate and document alleged illegal activity by federal immigration (ICE) agents in the city, a move that will escalate tensions over jurisdiction between local and federal authorities.
The executive order, titled ICE on Notice, gives Chicago police “clear procedure” to follow if they witness or receive reports of ICE agents involved in illegal activity and refer evidence of potential violations to city prosecutors.
Continue reading... | Up for sale if anyone is interested [link] [comments] |
The memo suggests the rules are designed to give ICE greater flexibility to quickly arrest unauthorized immigrants who are not the original targets of an operation.
The right way to deploy military threats, pressure, and support for the opposition.
This blog is now closed. Find more of our coverage on Jeffery Epstein here
According to one file, Mountbatten-Windsor was said to be “very focused” on financier Harlan Peltz’s girlfriend during a dinner with Maxwell.
The apparent FBI document details a 2020 interview with Peltz in which he provided information to agents about Maxwell.
Peltz was at a dinner with Maxwell and Prince Andrew and Peltz’s then girlfriend. Prince Andrew was very focused on Peltz’s girlfriend. Maxwell would sometimes mention Prince Andrew’s name and that they were friends.
Maxwell would have outrageous parties back then. She liked to put people in uncomfortable positions for her entertainment. Peltz realised that he was a pawn to her and she would try to use him. Sometime later on he found out that he was listed in Epstein’s black book.
People in the finance world never seemed to know how Epstein got his money.
Continue reading...The U.S. Embassy for Venezuela also announced Friday that all American citizens detained in Venezuela have been released.
"A future with flying cars is no longer science fiction," writes the Los Angeles Times. "All you need to order your own is about $200,000 and some hope and patience." The Palo Alto-based company Pivotal has been developing the technology since 2009 and is nearly ready to bring it to market... [Company founder Marcus] Leng engineered an ultralight, electric-powered vertical takeoff and landing aircraft known as an eVTOL. Other VTOL aircraft, such as helicopters, had existed for decades, but Leng's invention was fixed-wing and didn't rely on gas. The Canadian engineer dubbed his creation BlackFly and spent years working on it in secret. The company moved to the Bay Area in 2014 and by 2018 had developed a second version of BlackFly that laid the groundwork for Helix, the aircraft Pivotal now offers for sale... Those who are curious — and wealthy — can reserve a Helix today with a $50,000 deposit. The aircraft starts at $190,000 with the option of purchasing a transport trailer for $21,000 and a charger for $1,100. A customer who makes their reservation today could receive their aircraft in nine to 12 months, [Pivotal Chief Executive Ken] Karklin said. It takes less than two weeks to learn how to fly it. In order to complete Pivotal's flight certification training, a customer has to pass the FAA knowledge test and complete ground school. Training, which takes place at the company's Palo Alto headquarters and at the Monterey Bay Academy Airport, teaches customers how to control and maintain the aircraft, as well as how to transport and assemble it... It is uncertain how fast the company and others like it can ramp up production and how communities will react. Not everyone is on board. Darlene Yaplee, president of the Aviation-Impacted Communities Alliance, said there are concerns about having different types of aircraft in limited airspace. Pivotal has around six early-access customers who already own a version of the BlackFly and are flying it for fun... Helix will have an electric range of about 30 minutes and a cruise speed of 62 mph, the company said. It takes 75 minutes to charge it using a 240 volt charger. The noise produced by the aircraft during takeoff and landing is equivalent to a couple of leaf blowers, Karklin said. When flying it is overhead, someone on the ground might not be able to hear it. Karklin said the simplicity of the aircraft comes with lower cost, lower weight and higher safety. The aircraft, which has only 18 moving parts, is full of redundancy to prevent system failures. In short, the article describes it as "a single-person aircraft for recreational use and short-haul travel that also has the potential to support emergency response and military operations."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The images from Planet Labs PBC show that roofs have been built over two damaged buildings at the Isfahan and Natanz facilities.
"Apple has gone for a choose-your-own-adventure when shopping for a new Mac," writes long-time Slashdot reader esarjeant. Macworld explains: Apple has shifted from selling pre-configured Mac models to a fully customizable build-to-order system on its website, allowing customers to select display size, chip, memory, and storage options... This change emphasizes building a machine within budget rather than choosing from set configurations, potentially preparing for future CPU/GPU core selection with M5 chips. Third-party retailers like Amazon and Best Buy are expected to continue offering standard configurations for customers preferring traditional purchasing methods... Apple is rumored to offer the ability to customize CPU and GPU cores with the upcoming launch of the M5 Pro and M5 Max MacBook Pro models, so this new system could pave the way for more build-to-order options. It could also be a way to âoehideâ smaller price increases as memory and other component costs rise throughout 2026.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Sunday, Feb. 1, No. 1,688.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Sunday, Feb. 1, No. 966.
Former prime minister Tony Blair paid tribute to Triesman as a ‘vital part of the New Labour movement’
Lord Triesman, a former Labour minister and chair of the Football Association, has died at the age of 82. The Labour party said the peer died on Friday night “peacefully and at home”.
The former prime minister Tony Blair paid tribute to David Triesman as a “vital part of the New Labour movement”. Labour’s leader in the House of Lords, Angela Smith, described him as “respected and loved by his colleagues for his courtesy, kindness, wisdom, loyalty and generosity of spirit”.
Continue reading...Less than two weeks before convicted abuser was found dead, lawyers met with Manhattan federal prosecutors
Less than two weeks before Jeffrey Epstein’s death in jail, his lawyers and Manhattan federal prosecutors met and discussed his potential cooperation, several documents within a cache of newly released investigative files state.
“On July 29, 2019, FBI and [prosecutors] met with Epstein’s attorneys, who, in very general terms, discussed the possibility of a resolution of the case, and the possibility of the defendant’s cooperation,” an FBI document titled “Epstein Investigation Summary & Timeline” statement.
Continue reading...It’s time once again for HPC Career Notes, our monthly feature that’s designed to keep you up-to-date on the latest career developments for individuals in the HPC community, including promotion, new company hires, and accolade. Check in each month for an updated list and you may even come across someone you know, or better yet, yourself!

Eric Demers
Intel turned some heads recently with the hiring of Eric Demers as a senior vice president. Demers, who was the father of the Radeon and Adreno GPUs at ATI (acquired by AMD in 2009), brings an immediate upgrade to Intel’s GPU fortunes.
Intel has been late to the data center accelerator game, which is currently dominated by GPUs from Nvidia, with GPUs from AMD occupying a distant second place. The rollout of the company’s line of Gaudi AI accelerators has been erratic, with the Falcon Shores chip canceled in favor of Jaguar Shores, which will use 18A process node and HBM4E memory and is currently slated to launch in late 2026 or early 2027.
Demers comes to Intel by way of Qualcomm, which he joined in 2012 and left as senior vice president of engineering. As Intel’s new senior VP for GPUs, Demers will be tasked with charting the legendary chipmaker’s AI accelerator strategy.
“Over the last few months, I’ve talked and met with [Intel CEO] Lip-Bu Tan several times,” Demers wrote in a LinkedIn post. “I find myself like I was 14 years ago, excited for a new adventure!”
IonQ, a provider of trapped ion quantum computing solutions, has promoted Katie Arrington to the position of chief information officer. Arrington, who previously worked in the Department of Defense and was served two terms in the South Carolina House of Representatives, is tasked with protecting and modernizing IonQ’s global enterprise systems, securing its digital assets and supply chains, and strengthening its operational and cyber resilience.

Katie Arrington
Prior to joining IonQ, Arrington performed the duties of the Department of War’s Chief Information Officer, advising the DoW’s Secretary on enterprise information management; satellite, communications, and spectrum capabilities; cyber assurance; and space and emerging technology policy. Earlier, as Deputy CIO for Cybersecurity, Arrington led defense-wide oversight of cyber strategy, governance, and compliance.
“Katie has spent her entire career as a passionate advocate to ensure the United States maintains its technological edge—from strengthening the industrial base to protecting critical systems and capabilities across the Department of War,” stated IonQ Chairman and CEO, Niccolo de Masi. ‘Her passion for defending the nation and advancing the kind of breakthrough innovation that quantum computing represents will help accelerate IonQ’s growth and impact.”
Photonic quantum computer maker Q.ANT has hired Utz Bacher to be its vice president of software. The quantum computing veteran is charged with strengthening Q.ANT’s software stack and make photonic co-processing practical for real-world AI and high-performance computing.

Utz Bacher
Bacher joins Q.ANT from IBM Germany, where he has held senior technical roles across enterprise infrastructure, client services and advanced computing technologies. Bacher played a key role in IBM’s first European quantum data center in Ehningen, and is looking forward to enabling hybrid classical and quantum solutions for research and enterprises.
“Photonic computing only matters if developers and operators can use it as real systems, with familiar workflows,” stated Michael Förtsch, founder and CEO of Q.ANT. “Utz brings deep experience building and operating complex compute infrastructure, including enterprise, hybrid cloud, high-performance computing and quantum computing environments. As we scale, his leadership will help us sharpen our software execution and make adoption easier for partners and customers.”
“I’ve been working at the intersection of technology, platforms, and adoption for years,” Bacher stated. “Q.ANT has a strong technical foundation and a clear product direction. I’m looking forward to helping the team scale the software platform with the rigor and clarity needed for the next stage.”
Crusoe has hired Michael Gordon to be its new chief operating officer and chief financial officer. The former MongoDB executive brings more than 25 years of experience to Crusoe, which is a vertically integrated provider of AI data center solutions.

Michael Gordon
Gordon helped lead MongoDB’s IPO during his 10-year tenure at the company, which saw the database company’s revenue grow by 50x. Prior to joining MongoDB, Michael was COO and CFO at Yodle. The Harvard Business School MBA holder is now helping Crusoe, which is developing the “Stargate” AI data center campus in Abilene, Texas.
“I believe Crusoe is uniquely positioned to solve the most critical challenges facing the AI industry today,” Gordon stated. “The company’s vertically integrated approach – combining energy, data centers, and cloud software – is unique in the market. I look forward to working with Chase, Cully, and the team to build the operational and financial engines needed to capture this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”
Neocloud Lambda has hired Leonard Speiser to be its new chief operating officer. Speiser brings more than a decade of experience to Lambda, which provides GPUs as a service through its “superintelligence” cloud.

Leonard Speiser
Before joining Lamba, which recently announced a $1.5 billion Series E round, Speiser was a founder at Clover, which grew into one of the largest point-of-sale platforms, and also led development of commercial cooking AI technology at Level. Speiser also previously held roles at Intuit, eBay, and Yahoo! and worked in technology corporate finance and M&A at Credit Suisse First Boston.
“Lambda’s differentiated position as an AI pure-player, combined with their deep expertise and modular datacenter architecture, positions them to deliver the global-scale compute that has the potential to power humanity’s AI future,” Speiser stated. “I’m excited to help grow these critical operations.”
Lenovo has appointed Tareq Alangari to the role of senior vice president and president of its Middle East, Türkiye, and Africa (META) business. Alangari brings 25 years of leadership experience across technology, telecom, cloud, and digital industries to Lenovo.

Tareq Alangari
Alangari previously served as CEO of e& enterprise Saudi Arabia, which provided digital infrastructure, cloud, AI, cybersecurity, and FinTech services. Lenovo said his appointment reflects the company’s broader strategy to deepen its presence in META through investments, including the establishment of its regional headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, as well as the establishment of a new manufacturing facility in the country with its partner, Alat.
“I’m honored to join Lenovo at such an exciting time,” Alangari stated. “The META region is full of opportunities for digital transformation and national development, and Lenovo is uniquely positioned to support these ambitions with its comprehensive portfolio of devices, infrastructure, and services. Our goal is to help countries and businesses realize their technology visions, from AI adoption to cloud modernization, while fostering local talent and business momentum. Together, we will partner to deliver solutions that drive economic growth and empower communities across the Middle East, Türkiye, and Africa.”
Biopharmaceutical veteran Matt Studney has joined TetraScience, which develops an AI and data platform for scientific research, as its new chief customer officer. Studeny joins TetraScience from the pharmaceutical giant Merck, where he spent 24 years, ultimately achieving the role of senior vice president in charge of research and development for IT.

Matt Studney
TetraScience CEO and Co-founder Patrick Grady said the hiring of Studney reflects an change in approach for pharmaceutical research. “Matt has lived firsthand the limits of artisanal approaches to scientific data and AI,” Grady stated. “His move to TetraScience signals that the center of gravity is shifting–from bespoke internal efforts toward shared platforms purpose-built to make scientific intelligence durable, cumulative, and scalable.”
Studney will be tasked with helping TetraScience scale its platform to meet new challenges facing scientific data and AI-powered research. “The AI era makes clear that true transformation now requires a fundamentally new architectural foundation,” he states. “Scientific intelligence cannot scale on fragmented data or bespoke workflows. TetraScience has built the platform needed to industrialize scientific data and make learning cumulative across the enterprise. Patrick’s long-standing vision for Scientific AI, combined with the company’s deep technical and scientific capabilities, makes clear that TetraScience is the natural steward of this next phase of the industry.”
For the previous edition of HPC Career Notes, click here.
The post January 2026 HPC Career Notes appeared first on HPCwire.
Party picks ward councillor Angeliki Stogia to defend seat as PM and colleagues argue only Labour can beat Reform
Keir Starmer has said the byelection in Gorton and Denton will be a referendum on “true patriotism” and that Labour is the only party that can defeat the “poisonous division” of Reform.
The prime minister, during his visit to Japan, said he saw the vote as a two-way contest between Labour and Reform UK, as he criticised Nigel Farage’s party.
Continue reading...Newly released files reveal how the paedophile tried to leverage his relationship with the former Duchess of York
When Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York, was confronted in 2011 about her closeness to the paedophile billionaire Jeffrey Epstein she could not have been more fulsome in her regret.
“I personally, on behalf of myself, deeply regret that Jeffrey Epstein became involved in any way with me,” she said. “I abhor paedophilia and any sexual abuse of children and know that this was a gigantic error of judgment on my behalf. I am just so contrite I cannot say.”
Continue reading...Paul George of the Philadelphia 76ers has been suspended for 25 games for violating the NBA's anti-drug program.
I saw a video online where a guy rides a lift up a mountain at a resort and rides down to charge his board off the regen. He claims he can’t remember the last time he’s even plugged his charger in.
Here’s my idea and I’m wondering if anyone has tried it. Riding in a city, there are plenty of parking garages that go up quite a few levels. Has anyone tried riding the elevator up and riding down the garage levels to charge from regen? I know it isn’t a mountain, but I’d be curious to know if it’s feasible to charge up a few miles in a pinch if you’re SOL and need to get home.
Right now it’s pretty dang cold and snow everywhere, but if anyone cares for stats on it I might try it out once it warms up and the parking garage conditions get safer.
EDIT: Found a video of exactly this
Bar owners say they struggle to dissuade people from forming a line as behavioural experts point to post-pandemic ‘new norms’
“I’m not sure what else we can do to be honest,” Paul Loebenberg said, of the people lined up at his bar. “Maybe there’s something I’ve missed, but we’ve tried everything.”
To anybody who frequents pubs and dislikes feeling as if they are waiting at a bank, Loebenberg’s exasperation is all too familiar.
Continue reading...The brutal handling of immigration raids and the killing of Alex Pretti have tested the reticence of the corporate class
During Donald Trump’s first term, the US’s corporate titans were prepared to literally turn their backs on the president when they disagreed with him. Weeks of growing national anger over deadly immigration crackdowns in the US have highlighted how much has changed.
Publicly, the US’s top CEOs have stayed – mostly – quiet during Trump’s second term, even as his administration has undermined free trade policies, cracked down on the immigration that many businesses relied on, and attacked the Federal Reserve – a pillar of the US’s financial hegemony.
Continue reading...Less than 40 minutes after federal immigration agents shot and killed 37-year-old nurse Alex Pretti on Nicollet Avenue in south Minneapolis, Clayton Kelly was thrown face-first onto the sidewalk, tasting snow and street grime as a federal agent’s knee drove into his back.
The incident, a video of which The Intercept reviewed and corroborated with an independent eyewitness, occurred not long after Kelly and his wife arrived in the area where Pretti was killed. With protesters amassing and agents from Customs and Border Protection as well as Immigration and Customs Enforcement flooding the area, the couple told The Intercept, they just wanted to observe the scene.
“All of a sudden,” Kelly said, a federal agent “started running toward me, pointing and yelling, ‘That’s him. Get him.’”
Ten days earlier, Kelly had watched as an immigration agent shot Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis in the leg during a federal enforcement action in north Minneapolis. As Kelly told the local outlet Sahan Journal, an SUV with police lights chased another vehicle, and then, “They went into a house. … I heard two shots before the area was just being swarmed by ICE immediately.” Sosa-Celis was injured — and Kelly’s account contradicted the official narrative released by the Department of Homeland Security.
At the scene of Pretti’s killing, Kelly told agents they would find themselves “on the wrong side of history,” he recalled. After the exchange, he and his wife, Alana Ericson, began walking toward another section of Nicollet Avenue where people were congregating, and as soon as Kelly turned his back, that was when agents began shouting and running toward him.
“I had my hands up. I kept saying, ‘I’m leaving. I’m leaving,’” Kelly said.
Kelly is far from the only civilian to be brutalized by federal agents in Minneapolis this month. But his detailed account of his beating and detention offers a clear example of how the agents, ostensibly deployed to carry out immigration enforcement, have instead shifted their purpose to encompass a crackdown on dissent. In Kelly’s case, it raises the question of whether he was facing retaliation for acting as a witness.
In December 2025, a group of Minnesota residents and the American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota filed a federal class-action lawsuit, Tincher v. Noem, alleging that federal agents participating in Operation Metro Surge used excessive force, intimidation, and arrests to deter civilians from observing, recording, or protesting immigration enforcement.
The complaint alleges retaliation against people engaging in constitutionally protected conduct, including arrests of observers who were not interfering with federal operations. In January, a federal judge issued a limited injunction barring agents from retaliating against peaceful protesters and observers.
While federal agents pinned Kelly down, given Pretti’s recent shooting, Ericson feared they could kill her husband.
“I kept telling them he’s a U.S. citizen. They said, ‘We don’t give a f—,’” she said.
Kelly had previously undergone fusion surgery in his thoracic spine, a procedure that permanently joins vertebrae to stabilize the back. “Several agents piled on top of me,” Kelly said, and one put his knee on the site of his surgical wounds. “They were sitting directly on my spine.”
“I was screaming that I couldn’t breathe, but I had almost no air left,” Kelly said. “An agent pushed the pepper spray nozzle right into my left eye and sprayed. I turned my head so I wouldn’t get it in both eyes, but my left eye was completely burned.”
Pinned beneath multiple agents, Kelly said panic quickly gave way to fear that he might not survive. He said he was unable to catch his breath and felt his limbs go limp beneath the weight on his body.
“An agent pushed the pepper spray nozzle right into my left eye and sprayed.”
Kelly was then forced to his feet and handcuffed, leaving deep indentations on both wrists that were still visible in photographs taken three days later and shared with The Intercept. At some point, his phone fell out of his pocket. He was dragged to a vehicle and placed in the back seat, where he said agents told him he was being taken to the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis for detention.
After being pepper-sprayed, Ericson said she was unable to drive. A bystander offered her a ride home, where she and her mother-in-law spent the day calling attorneys and trying to determine where Kelly had been taken and whether he was alive.
An independent eyewitness who said they did not know Kelly or his wife said they were standing nearby when agents rushed Kelly, tackled him to the ground, and deployed pepper spray, corroborating Kelly’s account of the arrest. After Kelly and Ericson were gone, the witness remained near Nicollet Avenue as federal agents continued clearing the area.
Moments later, the witness said they were grabbed from behind, thrown to the pavement, and sprayed in the face. Medical records from Hennepin County Medical Center reviewed by The Intercept show the witness sustained a fractured shoulder. According to the documentation, the injury will require surgery and months of physical therapy.
The Intercept reached out to the Department of Homeland Security, CBP, and ICE with detailed questions about the use of force by federal agents in Minneapolis, the detention and processing of civilians, the seizure of phones and other personal property, and policies governing crowd control. DHS, CBP, and ICE did not provide responses by publication time.
Kelly was transported to the federal building in downtown Minneapolis, a facility commonly used by immigration authorities for detention and processing.
Several of the people detained alongside him, Kelly said, had directly witnessed or recorded the fatal shooting of Pretti earlier that morning.
Kelly said detainees were never told why they were being held and were not informed of any charges. He said federal officials discussed possible criminal violations but ultimately filed none.
Shauna Kieffer, an attorney with the National Lawyers Guild who is now representing Kelly, said her client was never read his Miranda rights. They’re required only when law enforcement seeks to obtain a statement, she said, so a person may be detained without being advised of those rights if officers are not questioning them and no statement is taken. At one point, Kelly said, ICE agents asked whether detainees would be willing to give interviews. All declined and invoked their right to remain silent.
According to Kelly, no medical care was provided upon arrival, even though multiple detainees had visible injuries and repeatedly asked for assistance. One older man, Kelly said, was bleeding from his elbow when brought into custody. Kelly said detainees used their drinking water to clean blood from the man’s arm while the staff ignored their requests for assistance, and that the man didn’t receive treatment until after a shift change.
Kelly and his family have been unable to recover his phone. At the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, Kelly said agents later showed him the phone, asked whether it belonged to him, and told him he would not be getting it back. According to Kelly, no one listed the device on his property inventory, and agents told him they would seek a warrant to access its contents.
A copy of the property inventory receipt reviewed by The Intercept does not list a cellphone among Kelly’s belongings. Additional photographs show his belongings placed in an ICE-labeled property bag bearing his name and a U.S. citizen designation.
In an affidavit he signed with his attorney, Kelly said the confiscated phone contained photos he took of the January 14 shooting of Sosa-Celis that he witnessed, a detail he says underscores its evidentiary value and why he wanted it returned.
Attorneys representing several detainees said federal officials told them they were considering charges of assaulting, interfering with, or resisting federal officers, according to Kieffer and another detainee’s attorney. Kieffer said the statute is often interpreted broadly, but verbal objections, mere presence at a scene, or passive conduct alone do not meet its standard.
In Kelly’s case, “any movements of his body are simply because a bunch of grown men are pummeling him,” Kieffer said, referring to the video of his arrest.
Kelly estimated he was detained for roughly eight hours before being abruptly released. After a brief stop at home, he sought medical treatment at Methodist Hospital in St. Louis Park. Discharge paperwork from that visit, reviewed by The Intercept, documents his injuries as assault-related.
Kelly said he continues to fear retaliation following his detention.
The following morning, he said, several federal vehicles drove slowly down the residential street where he and his wife live, an occurrence he described as highly unusual for their area.
Kieffer said her client’s fears are not unfounded.
She described instances in Minneapolis in which attorneys and civilian observers reported being followed by federal vehicles after monitoring immigration enforcement activity, and in some cases later saw federal agents parked outside their homes. One attorney shared video of ICE agents following him and parking outside his house with The Intercept.
In Kieffer’s view, the sheer number of people taken into custody while observing or documenting federal activity has made Minneapolis stand out.
The emotional toll of the arrest, Kelly and his wife said, has not ended with his release.
“I’ve been having nightmares. This doesn’t feel like real life. It feels like a really bad dream that I can’t wake up from,” Ericson said. “After he spoke publicly about that shooting, I felt like he was already on their radar.”
The post He Witnessed an Earlier Shooting. Feds Arrested Him at the Scene of Alex Pretti’s Killing. appeared first on The Intercept.
My use of mobile phones has been compulsive – has it been for better or for worse?
• From a priest to a pensioner, a teenager to a tech CEO: can you guess our screen time?
In 2003, the Stanford social scientist BJ Fogg published an extraordinarily prescient book. Persuasive Technology: Using Computers to Change What We Think and Do predicted a future in which a student “sits in a college library and removes an electronic device from her purse”. It serves as her “mobile phone, information portal, entertainment platform, and personal organiser. She takes this device almost everywhere and feels lost without it.”
Such devices, Fogg argued, would be “persuasive technology systems … the device can suggest, encourage, and reward”. Those rewards could have a powerful effect on our relationship with these devices, akin to gamblers pumping quarters into slot machines.
Continue reading...
The FACE Act was written with a very specific purpose: to protect those seeking abortions without restricting First Amendment-protected speech. Passed in 1994 under President Bill Clinton, the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act arose after a horrific string of attacks on reproductive care facilities and providers across the United States.
Decades later, the Trump administration is twisting this law to chill dissent by prosecuting journalists for the crime of reporting.
Two journalists, former CNN host Don Lemon and independent journalist Georgia Fort, were arrested Friday after covering a recent protest at a Minneapolis-area church. According to the Department of Justice, Lemon’s crime was a start-to-finish livestream reporting on the protest, beginning with an organizing meeting and concluding with the protest itself at Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. As for Fort, the only allegation proffered by federal prosecutors is that she and Lemon approached the pastor — who has a day job running the local Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office — in “close proximity” and tried to oppress and intimidate him by “peppering him with questions.”
Covering a protest — even one inside a church — isn’t a crime.
Such actions, prosecutors allege, are violations of the FACE Act, which includes a provision focused on houses of worship.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi brought these charges despite the fact that the FACE Act protects “expressive conduct (including peaceful picketing or other peaceful demonstration) from the jeopardy of prosecution.” That language clearly did not confuse a federal magistrate and an appellate court when they refused to issue a warrant. So the Justice Department convinced a grand jury to indict them.
Courts have found the right to report and record events of public concern almost universally to be “expressive conduct.”
The FACE Act itself provides specific instructions on the kind of behavior that constitutes a violation. It notes that one cannot interfere, intimidate, or obstruct ingress or egress to a reproductive health services clinic or to or from a place of worship, “rendering passage to or from such a place of worship unreasonably difficult or hazardous.”
It’s this language about a place of worship that the Trump administration is leaning on. But it’s clear that this language ensures that the law applies only to actions involving restriction on physical freedom of movement, interference in access to property, or actions causing a person to experience reasonable fear of harm.
In this case, the term “interfere with” means to restrict a person’s freedom of movement. “Intimidate” means to place a person in reasonable apprehension of bodily harm to themselves or to others. And “physical obstruction” means making it unreasonably difficult or dangerous to enter or leave a facility that provides reproductive health services or a place of worship.
Looking at video of the protest, it’s clear that these journalists weren’t interfering, obstructing, or intimidating in ways that would violate the FACE Act. Covering a protest — even one inside a church — isn’t a crime. And asking questions — including difficult ones — isn’t a violation of religious freedom.
These are things all journalists do, which is precisely what makes this prosecution so chilling.
Courts have warned about the danger of the FACE Act being abused by overzealous prosecutors for years.
In the case New York v. Operation Rescue, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals noted in 2001 that courts must prevent abuse of the FACE Act because an erroneous application “threatens to impinge legitimate First Amendment activity.” The courts have made a distinction between actions that make going to a place of worship “unpleasant or even emotionally difficult, including yelling,” and conduct that is prohibited by the FACE Act. Since the act does not criminalize protesting or even unpleasant yelling, it certainly does not criminalize two reporters doing their job by covering a community crisis — even if that community crisis is at a house of worship.
This, of course, isn’t the first attempt by the Trump administration to stifle the press. Just this month, for instance, federal agents raided the home of a Washington Post reporter and seized her devices in a leak investigation.
As the Trump administration’s attacks on press freedom continue to mount, it’s critical that journalists who find themselves under fire find support. As the director of the Press Freedom Defense Fund, I’m working to make sure that Fort has the resources she’ll need to mount a strong defense.
What’s critical is that the media cover this attack, look at the administration’s motivations, and pay attention to who is being prosecuted.
Weaponizing the FACE Act against journalists is a dangerous escalation from the White House. What’s critical is that the media cover this attack, look at the administration’s motivations, and pay attention to who is being prosecuted — whether it’s a Washington Post reporter with a deep Rolodex of government sources, or two Black journalists covering anti-ICE activism in Minnesota.
The news industry must also continue to chronicle the litany of abuses carried out by the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement apparatus on the streets of Minneapolis and other cities across the U.S. This is not simply a shambolic legal gambit, but also an obvious attempt to divert attention away from the horrifying assault that has resulted in true violations of First Amendment rights of protesters and journalists, and the brutal killings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti.
The post The Farcical Case Against Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for Protest Reporting appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
New Castle County officials will soon be able to begin reviewing the reassessment results of some of the most contentious commercial properties in the county after state lawmakers on Thursday passed legislation enabling them to do so. The bill was scrutinized by some Republicans as being another rushed through quick fix, but Democrats say they needed to act quickly.
The Delaware legislature passed one half of a two-bill package Thursday that would give New Castle County new authority to review the results of its much maligned property reassessment.
That first bill, Senate Bill 228, gives New Castle County the ability to temporarily expand the authority of its Office of Finance to conduct “quality control” reviews of its commercial property assessments.
Rep. Cyndie Romer (D-Newark), the House sponsor of SB 228, said she saw an unwillingness from New Castle County to investigate “clear outliers” after Delaware’s first-in-a-generation property reassessment. Her legislation is meant to explicitly give county officials the authority to look into commercial properties that were seemingly undervalued.
But House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover) said concerns about ensuring “due process” for business owners stopped lawmakers from holding a vote on the second bill, Senate Bill 230, which would give New Castle County officials the power to subpoena certain businesses for records showing the income earned from their properties.
With the General Assembly beginning its six-week break to scrutinize and amend Gov. Matt Meyer’s proposed budget for the 2027 fiscal year, the New Castle County subpoena bill will not be voted on until at least mid-March.
Despite this delay, Harris said New Castle County officials told her they can begin their property review, even without the codified ability to subpoena business records.
“Consulting with New Castle County, they determined that as long as [Senate Bill] 228 was run, they could get started,” Harris said.
A spokesperson for New Castle County confirmed as much on Friday afternoon, telling Spotlight Delaware that once Meyer signs SB 228 into law, county officials can begin the process of searching for an outside vendor to complete the quality control review.
A spokesperson for Meyer’s office did not immediately respond Friday evening to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment.
The two-bill assessment review package had been the subject of Republican scrutiny when it was first introduced in the Senate, largely over warnings it was being needlessly rushed.
Rep. Mike Smith (R-Pike Creek Valley) echoed those sentiments during the House floor vote Thursday evening.
After conducting a series of joint committee hearings to investigate exactly what went wrong during Delaware’s first-in-a-generation property reassessment, Smith said he had hoped lawmakers would take more time to craft legislation.
“This frustration is not with anyone in this chamber,” Smith said. “It’s more frustration toward folks across the way in the other chamber. But one thing we talked about in the committee, and ended on, is that we were going to be more methodical of our approach and not rush things.”
But Romer rebuffed these claims. She said that finding ways to review property assessments has been a “central topic” throughout the series of investigative committee hearings.
“If you’ve been following along, this has come up time and again in the committee meetings,” she said. “And the decision is, ‘We must act now.’”
While SB 228 and SB 230 mark the first pieces of reassessment legislation to follow the joint committee, Romer also told Spotlight Delaware that a separate package of bills is being developed by committee members.
Karl Baker contributed to this report.
The post Legislature passes reassessment ‘quality control’ bill appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Reporter Julia Merola joins “Beyond the Headlines” to discuss her article ‘Afraid to Die’: Parents of Disabled Adults Struggle to Find Housing. The article profiles three families who are concerned they will not be able to provide supportive housing for their adult children with disabilities before the parents pass away.
Merola shares how a previous article built trust and connections in the disability community that led directly to this article, how she worked to draw readers into an issue they may not have personal experience with, and why she thinks a profile like this has strong news worthiness even though it’s not breaking news.
The podcast is hosted by Director of Community Engagement David Stradley.
This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.
I’d like to start with our “Hey, mom” question. Imagine you’re talking to your mom and literally start with, “Hey mom, I wrote this article about…” and then tell her briefly what’s interesting about this story.
So I would say, “Hey mom, I wrote this article about families with adult children who have intellectual and developmental disabilities in Delaware, and those families are really struggling with finding housing options for their children. And you know, it’s interesting to hear about something that I never knew about before talking to these families.”
So you never knew about this issue. How did it become a Spotlight Delaware story?
Back in October we had written a story about the Neyers family and this mom whose son has autism, and he wasn’t getting the resources he needed in school. The family was trying to find a way to get therapy outside of school.
And after the story was published, one of our CEO’s friends reached out and said that there’s also this struggle with finding housing for adults with intellectual developmental disabilities. It was something that I hadn’t really thought about before and I hadn’t really seen being reported on too much before. So it was something that I wanted to dive into.
So in some ways this was a case of one careful, respectfully reported article leading to trust in a community and opening up an avenue for another article.
Yes.
How were you then connected to the families that do appear in this article?
Back to how I was saying our CEO’s friend reached out. After she reached out, I followed up on that tip and I was able to get connected to a few families who are involved in an organization called the A-Team Delaware and that organization advocates for accessible housing for adults with intellectual developmental disabilities.
So I was just able to speak to a few families in that community and hear their stories.
We don’t typically do this on the podcast, but I thought the way you began this article was a really effective way to bring the reader into it. I’d like to actually ask you to read out loud the first several paragraphs of the story so our listeners can hear it in your voice. Would you mind doing that?
For sure.
‘A good day for Ramara Shackelford is one when her 21-year-old son makes it through his daily routine without prompting.
On those days, her adult son Marcellus “Dre” Shackelford will wake up and get dressed by his second alarm. Then, he will make his breakfast, take his medication, brush his teeth, and wash his face before going to his day program. Many of those steps will be done independently, with minimal prompting from his mother.
Shackelford says that happens about twice a month.
Most days, every step of Dre’s routine is rushed. He lies in bed past his alarms. Then, with help from his mom, he races out to catch his morning bus to a program hosted by the Red Clay Consolidated School District that serves students with intellectual and developmental disabilities in kindergarten through age 22.
On those days, Dre still makes it to his classes at the Meadowood Program, where he works on his social skills, such as conversation starters, and learns to do tasks, such as washing dishes. Shackelford’s goal is for her son to ultimately have more independence as an adult.
“I want him to be able to go to a retail shop and buy his deodorant,” she said, “just things that regular people do.”
Soon, Dre will be too old for the Meadowood Program, so Shackelford has begun to look for housing where her son can live independently. In doing so, she has encountered a system of adult living situations that can be overwhelming in their complexity. She can’t imagine what it would be like for some who have to do it on his own.’
Thank you, Julia. I know when I read that, I was immediately brought into the situation, particularly that third sentence of “this happens about twice a month” – the good morning routine. Why and how did you decide to start the article in this way?
Whenever I’m doing a story that’s focused more on families or students or teachers, I like to start it in a way that shows the reader the everyday life of whoever I’m talking about.
So for this particular article, I wanted to start the draft by just showing this is what the routine looks like. This is the reality of that routine. And now that routine could be totally changed in the future. If Dre goes through this housing process and he no longer lives with his parents, this routine that they’ve established could easily be changed in the next few years. But this is what it looks like right now.
As I’ve been learning about the journalism world, I’ve learned that this kind of open is called a narrative lead versus a hard news lead. Can you talk about the differences between those two approaches and, again, why you thought a narrative lead was the best way to start this article?
The hard news lead is usually something that’s more straight to the point, I’ll say. Like, if there’s a particular statistic about, you know, this is how many Delawareans have intellectual and developmental disabilities and they’re also struggling with finding housing.
I think that sometimes that works. I just thought for this story, it was more impactful to show the reader the daily life of this woman who actually has a son who has an intellectual and developmental disability, and she’s actually going through the housing process for her son and contemplating what comes next.
I just think that it was a more impactful lead than a statistic would’ve been.
Can you take us through a little bit more of your reporting process on this article? I have to imagine it was a delicate one as you tried to understand and capture the complexities of the lives of these families.
As someone who is not part of this space, it’s a lot of listening and making sure that you’re trying to understand someone’s experience as much as possible so that you’re accurately portraying it – doing these stories as articulately and as clearly as you can
At the same time, you know, one of these families – she’s a mother to three daughters with intellectual developmental disabilities. So you want to respect her space. In general, having three kids and trying to schedule an interview with a parent is tough. But you want to respect their space and build that trust over time so that you’re able to get that story out there.
Was your first step phone call interviews or did you just show up at people’s homes and get to know them that way?
No. I personally wouldn’t have that be my first step, just because I think that sometimes that can put a lot of pressure on a family to change their whole day-to-day routine. Especially if a routine is really important to a family like the Shacklefords.
I did a mix of Zoom and phone call interviews. Then with the Shacklefords, after that Zoom interview, I asked to see if she was comfortable with me coming in one day and taking a few photos of her and her family. And she said yes.
I came in and I made sure that her son Dre was comfortable with me being there. I didn’t rush him or anything like that because he was still going through his daily routine when I got there.
I waited to see when he was ready for me to take those photos. In the meantime, I took photos of his schedules and his breakfast that was laid out for him.
For you personally, just being there with the Shacklefords in their home, did you gain additional insights being there in person versus the phone call or the zoom that you had with them?
I don’t know if I would say I got any additional insights. I think what I would say is I kind of got a basic understanding of who Dre is and what his routine looks like based on the Zoom call with his mom. He did make a very short, special guest appearance on that Zoom call, but was not interested in speaking with me. So that was very short.
But I think that when I went to their home, it was really just making sure that he was comfortable and I wasn’t rushing him or pressuring him or anything like that.
I remember he came downstairs from his room and I think he was getting his breakfast together. Then he just sat on the couch with his breakfast. His TV was on and I took pictures right before he started eating. I told him it would be quick and I tried to do it as quickly and painlessly as possible.
One of our editors says that the aim of news reporting is to make the unknown known. He’ll frequently ask, “What’s the news here?” In other words, what is the unknown? Do you see this article fitting into that model for assessing the newsworthiness of the topic? And if not, why is this a Spotlight Delaware news article?
I will just say I think that anyone who has ever taken a journalism course in high school or college, when you hear “newsworthiness” it’s kind of this buzzword to mean something that just happened this past week or within the month.
Obviously this is not something that happened last week. This is an issue that parents have been experiencing for multiple years. But at the same time, going back to “making the unknown known”, I think that’s what this article does.
One of our missions at Spotlight Delaware is to empower Delawareans. And I just felt this was a story that I hadn’t really heard too much about before and it was something that I felt should be talked about. If there’s programs out there that parents are feeling there’s issues with accessing those programs, I think that needs to be talked about.
In reading your article, there seemed to be a disconnect between the state – in this case Jody Roberts who is the director of Delaware Health and Social Services Division of Developmental Disability Services – and the families. You quote Roberts articulating these very clear processes that the state has for assessing housing needs of adults with disabilities and assisting families with finding housing.
But each of the families identified gaps in service they experienced and in different ways express that the process was not clear for them. Did your reporting identify where that disconnect happens, and is there any solution for trying to clear up that disconnect?
During the reporting process, I spoke to families and then I spoke to the state. I think that I realized after speaking with the state, that sometimes there’s a difference in the language that’s being used. Families talk to me about this idea of there being a waiting list, versus the state who said there isn’t a waiting list but they understand where that confusion comes from.
And so I think that there’s information out there. Maybe it’s not always the most accessible or it’s not the most understandable for a family who either has multiple children and one of those children has intellectual and developmental disabilities or, you know, they have multiple children who all have intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Then at the same time, there was the conversation about Delaware is also being impacted by a national shortage of direct support professionals. And those are the people who work with adults with disabilities. That shortage is something that is on parents’ minds.
It’s a complex issue that’s not just affecting Delaware. So I thought that that was a really interesting concern of parents as well.
You got a lot of feedback once this article was published. We have an internal messaging system at Spotlight Delaware, and we have a whole channel in there that’s called the Impact Channel. In less than an hour after the newsletter was sent out that this article was in, you had already filled that channel with three or four or five different people who had reached out to you and shared feedback on this story.
Was there any of the feedback that you received that was particularly meaningful to you?
I won’t single out any particular message, but I think there was this cumulative message that so many people have family members who have intellectual and developmental disabilities. Even though those family members don’t always live in Delaware, their experiences with finding residential options and looking at what housing is available, those experiences are all really similar.
We had a lot of people telling me that they were glad that Spotlight Delaware was putting these stories, these experiences out there, because it’s not something that people typically think about unless you’re part of that space where you’re advocating for people who have disabilities and you’re advocating on the housing side as well.
It was nice to see that. Although this story resonated with a lot of people – which isn’t something that you would maybe want to hear, you would probably want to hear more success stories – they still felt like there was hope in the sense that we were putting that story out there and getting eyes on an issue.
That’s great. Well, thank you, Julia, for educating yourself on this issue that was unknown to you and making it known to a lot more of us.
Yes, of course.
The post Beyond the Headlines: Housing needs of disabled adults appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Part 1 of the Delaware Civics 101 Series:
Understanding How Delaware Organizes, Spends, and Balances Its Money
To many Delawareans, the state’s budget process has always been a bit of a mystery. We read headlines about “bond bills” and “capital budgets,” and wonder why we should care. We hear legislators battle over spending priorities, but it’s not always clear where the money goes – or where it’s come from. Are we living within our means – or beyond them? And what are the consequences in either direction?.
This series aims to resolve that murky picture – and show the many ways that Delaware’s budget has the power to affect our lives, our families and our future.
When lawmakers pass the state budget each year, they’re doing more than playing politics –they’re shaping how the state educates children, builds roads, attracts business, keeps communities safe, and provides care for families and seniors.
To follow how those policy choices come to life, it helps to understand the basic structure of Delaware’s finances. The state budget is built around four main parts – think of them as “buckets” of money – each with a specific role and funding source:
Across all four of those buckets, Delaware’s total budget can add up to $15 billion (depending on the year), but when most people talk about the “state budget,” they’re talking about the general fund. In this current fiscal year (July 1, 2025-June 30, 2026), the general fund fell just shy of $6.6 billion.
The process follows a predictable rhythm each year:
As a starting point, the state turns to the Delaware Economic and Financial Advisory Council (DEFAC), an independent body of experts that since 1977 has issued quarterly forecasts of how much revenue the state is expected to take in. By state law, the governor and General Assembly must base the budget on DEFAC’s official, politics-free projections.
This is an area where Delaware’s lawmakers are restrained by the state constitution – the legislature is required to spend no more than 98% of the estimated available revenue. The remaining 2% must be used as a cushion to prevent deficits and safeguard against overspending.
With revenue numbers in hand, the state then begins to decide how the money will be divided among agencies. Each agency submits their budgetary “wish lists” every summer, and in November, the governor’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) holds public hearings and produces a report.
Even though the legislature ultimately has the “power of the purse” in Delaware, state code gives the governor the first crack at the budget: “[The governor] may make such changes … as the Governor may deem necessary or desirable in accordance with the Governor’s own best judgment … and shall submit the budget report … to each House of the General Assembly, on or before February 1 of each year.”
That proposed budget then goes to the Joint Finance Committee (JFC), made up of House and Senate lawmakers. (The JFC is one of the most powerful and sought-after committee appointments in the legislature, and is often made up of the chamber’s most experienced lawmakers, from both parties.) The JFC holds public hearings on the governor’s proposal, reviews agency requests line-by-line, and ultimately writes the final budget bill that will be voted on by the entire assembly.
Once the legislature approves the bill, it goes on to the governor, who gets one more chance to make their voice heard: Through a “line-item veto,” the governor has the power to strike out specific spending items in the budget bill without vetoing the entire budget. This executive power isn’t available for all legislation, and it can make final budget negotiations particularly intense.
But it’s rarely used: The last governor to use this leverage was Jack Markell, in 2011.
By law, all this maneuvering has to be settled by June 30 each year, making the start of Delaware’s summer a notoriously hectic time for lawmakers.
In addition to the “Four Buckets” detailed below, there are a few budget-related mechanisms to keep in mind. These serve as tools to help keep the process running smoothly, and safeguard against the unexpected:
Delaware’s main spending account, also referred to as the “operating budget.” It pays for salaries, services, and ongoing programs that keep the state running.
• Personal and corporate income taxes
• Franchise and business license fees
• Gross receipts tax (on business sales and services), and lottery revenue
• Education (~35-40%) – Teacher pay, classroom operations, special education, and higher-ed funding.
• Health & Social Services (20–25%) – Medicaid, public health, child welfare, and mental-health services.
• Public Safety (10–15%) – State Police, prisons, courts, and emergency response.
• General Government (10%) – Administration, finance, technology, and facilities.
• Debt Service (5–10%) – Payments on prior borrowing and contingency funds.
• Your child’s teacher in Milford? Paid from the General Fund.
• A state trooper patrolling Route 1? General Fund.
• The public health nurse giving free flu shots? General Fund.
So-called “Appropriated Special Funds” are earmarked revenues – money that can be spent only on its assigned purpose. These funds – approximately $1.2 billion in FY 2026 – come from fees, fines, or dedicated taxes rather than general income.
• Transportation Trust Fund (TTF): Motor-fuel taxes, tolls, and registration fees pay for roads, bridges, and DART transit.
• Lottery & Gaming Proceeds: Support education and addiction-prevention programs.
• Environmental Fees: Support clean-water and state-park improvements.
• Health Funds: Tobacco-settlement dollars for cancer prevention and public-health campaigns.
• The pothole repairs on Route 13? Transportation Trust Fund.
• The playground upgrades in a state park? Environmental Special Funds.
• Problem-gambling hotlines and education grants? Lottery Special Funds.
The Bond and Capital Improvements Act, or Bond Bill, funds construction and long-term investments, often by authorizing the state to borrow money through the bond market. Think of it as Delaware’s infrastructure plan for schools, roads, and state facilities that will be needed in the near future.
By law, the state cannot simply borrow what it wants – it must follow a fixed formula designed to prevent the state from borrowing too much money. Mandated by statute, the Debt Affordability Limit is based on a formula related to personal income and revenue.
The Bond Bill is ultimately drafted by the separate Joint Committee on Capital Improvement (often called the Bond Committee), which is similar to the Joint Finance Committee’s role in the Operating Budget.
• General obligation bonds (state borrowing)
• General Fund transfers
• Special Funds such as the TTF
• Federal matching grants
• Education: New schools, renovations, HVAC, and safety systems.
• Transportation: Road and bridge projects, transit hubs, bike trails.
• Public Safety: Police barracks, courts, correctional facilities.
• Environment: Clean-water systems, flood control, park facilities.
• Technology: Modernized data centers and cybersecurity systems.
• A new elementary school wing in Sussex County? Bond Bill.
• A bridge replacement on Route 9? Bond Bill.
• Beach nourishment in Lewes or state-park renovations? Bond Bill.
Federal Transfer Funds are grants and reimbursements from the U.S. government that support specific programs. They make up roughly $2–3 billion of Delaware’s total budget.
• Health & Social Services: Medicaid, SNAP (food), TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families), and public-health initiatives.
• Education: Title I (low-income schools) and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (special education).
• Transportation: Federal highway and transit grants.
• Environment & Housing: Clean-water revolving funds, FEMA disaster relief, HUD housing programs.
• A Medicaid patient’s hospital visit? Half paid by the federal government.
• Title I reading tutors in Wilmington? Funded federally.
• Highway upgrades on I-95? Largely federal grants.
Together, these four funds make up Delaware’s financial ecosystem:
• General Fund = everyday operations
• Special Funds = dedicated programs
• Bond Bill = infrastructure investments
• Federal Funds = federally supported programs.
As an example of how the four parts of the system work together, consider a schoolteacher who earns a salary (General Fund), drives to school on Delaware roads (Special Funds), arrives at her new school building (Bond Bill), and teaches with support of a reading grant supporting struggling students (Federal Funds).
Part 2 – Where the Money Comes From: Delaware’s Revenue, Taxes, and Fees.
We’ll break down how the state raises its funds — from income and corporate taxes to tolls, fees, and federal matches — and how those sources shape our ability to invest in Delaware’s future.
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: Dive into the four buckets of Delaware’s State Budget appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

This year’s Delaware state budget carries far greater urgency than your typical budget cycle. State leaders are confronting an immediate and unprecedented $400 million revenue loss, driven largely by recent federal tax changes and declining revenue. That means tougher choices – tradeoffs that require critical decisions, with real consequences for people in Delaware.
Because the stakes are so high, Delaware LIVE and SpotLight Delaware are launching a new explanatory series, Civics 101, to help readers better understand how the state budget works – and why it is the most powerful policy tool the state has.
As leaders across government confront this moment, there is broad agreement on a central point: The budget is more than a financial ledger, it’s the primary mechanism for setting policy and asserting priorities.
Here are what some of the state’s most powerful voices have said about the budget in recent times, and why it matters so much …
Matt Meyer has consistently framed the state budget as an expression of Delaware’s priorities and long-term policy goals.
“The budget reflects our core Delaware values – investing in education, affordable housing, accessible healthcare, and safer neighborhoods,” Meyer said when announcing his FY26 budget reset.
Meyer has also emphasized tax fairness and the need to protect the economy from the impact of recent federal tax changes. (Delaware was looking at a $400 million revenue shortfall thanks to those changes, but lawmakers quickly passed a bill that decoupled Delaware from federal tax law, averting the revenue hit for now.)

Delaware’s Lieutenant Gov. Kyle Evans Gay has described the budget process itself as a critical opportunity to drive change.
She believes that budget season should be a time for leaders to reassess priorities, redirect existing resources, and address stubborn challenges by aligning funding with community needs. When she identified $30 million within the existing budget to reinvest in childcare – without raising taxes – she was credited with demonstrating how policy goals can be achieved through better budget oversight
Gay sees the budget as a living policy tool, capable of delivering results. But she emphasizes that meaningful reform depends on meaningful collaboration between the administration and the General Assembly.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) set the tone for the FY2027 budget process when it laid down new guidelines for the state agencies preparing their annual budget.
Agencies were instructed not to expect automatic budget growth, to justify every request with detailed documentation, and to prepare for both modest increases and potential reductions. The guidance emphasized transparency, accurate reporting, and accountability – requiring agencies to document vacant positions, structural changes, and long-term obligations.
Taken together, OMB’s message to agencies – and indirectly to the public – was clear: Delaware must do more to live within its means, protect essential services, and plan for economic uncertainty.

Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez does not write the budget, but her office plays a key role in administering publicly funded programs and maintaining public trust.
Her Department of State oversees business filings, professional licensing, archives, arts and cultural grants, along with veterans services – areas where open records, public access, and accountability are essential. At the core of her agency is a belief that transparency is a foundational principle of state government, upheld through public hearings, legislative review, and detailed agency reporting.
Budget decisions are frequently tough, but the chair of the Joint Finance Committee says the current fiscal environment makes them even tougher.
“Every budget is about making choices,” Rep. Kim Williams said, “and that was especially tough this year with so much uncertainty at the federal level, and forecasts pointing to slower revenue growth for the state.”
Another lawmaker, Senate Majority Whip Tizzy Lockman, points to housing investments as a clear example of how the budget can serve as validation of certain policy directions, and how they are (or aren’t) shifting.
“It’s very exciting … to see housing so centered in our state budget, which is unusual, and this is an unprecedented investment,” Lockman said.
For the budget to stay healthy, leaders must be vigilant protecting the sources of its strength. That’s the view of lawmakers like Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend, who works to protect Delaware’s lucrative, outsized role as the nation’s corporate home.
Annual amendments to Delaware General Corporation Law are intended to preserve the balance and transparency of the law, and with it the stream of corporate fees and franchise revenues that stand as a major pillar of state funding. By maintaining stability and confidence in Delaware’s corporate law ecosystem, Townsend says the state can better safeguard funding for schools, healthcare, and public services.
The impact of Corporate Services revenue is undeniable — it currently generates about a third of the revenue in the General Operating budget.

Over time, the budget process evolves, and new tools appear that are aimed at getting everything to run a little more smoothly. The approach gaining renewed attention recently is a more formalized approach to budget smoothing, aimed at reducing volatility between strong revenue years and economic downturns.
In 2019, Republican Rep. Mike Smith was the co-sponsor of House Bill 155, which aimed to create a pathway toward a constitutional amendment that embraced budget smoothing. Like the state’s existing “rainy day funds,” this would save surplus revenues in strong years, then tap them during downturns, allowing the state to avoid abrupt spending cuts or tax increases.
While these mechanisms have been part of the state budgetary process since FY 2019, they deserve to be formalized rather than applied inconsistently, Smith said.
Are budget woes caused by not enough revenue – or too much spending?
House Minority Leader Mike Ramone believes it’s the latter. “Delawareans need an executive who will be a responsible steward of their tax dollars,” Ramone said, calling for greater accountability and targeted investment.
Rep. Bryan Shupe of Milford has echoed that view, warning that without spending restraint, future budgets could force tax increases or service cuts.
Last year, Rep. Eric Morrison co-sponsored HB 13 to create a new tax bracket to require higher-income residents to pay a larger percentage of their income to the state, and create a more progressive tax system in Delaware.
The state also took a different approach to raising more money last year – to address motor fuel tax revenue, the state (DelDOT) raised DMV fees, tolls and the motor fuel tax.
From education and childcare to healthcare and housing, the state budget is the last word on what Delaware can – and cannot – do.
This year’s unusually urgent budget cycle, shaped by a major revenue shock, cautious OMB guidance, calls for transparency, and competing fiscal philosophies, underscores why understanding the budget matters more than ever. As the Civics 101 series continues, Delaware LIVE and Spotlight Delaware will break down the key concepts behind the decisions now confronting state leaders – and how those choices affect every resident of the state.
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 What leaders say about the Budget (and why it’s more important than ever) appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Understanding Delaware’s state budget can be challenging — not because the issues aren’t important, but because the language used to describe them is often unfamiliar, technical, or assumed knowledge in political discussions.
As part of Delaware LIVE and Spotlight Delaware’s Civics 101 series, this glossary is designed to serve as a clear, plain-language reference for readers who want to better understand how the state raises, manages, and spends public dollars.
Each article in the Civics 101 series introduces new concepts, institutions, and budget tools that shape Delaware’s financial decisions. With every installment, new terms will be added to this glossary, allowing readers to return to a single, permanent resource as their understanding grows.
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: Glossary of Terms appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Special Series: Civics 101
This series on the Delaware State Budget, produced jointly by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team, aims to give every Delawarean the tools they need to understand state spending and participate in the process that defines Delaware’s future. Stay tuned for more articles in the days ahead, and visit the Civics 101 Homepage for more.
Every year, Delaware’s lawmakers make thousands of choices about spending billions of dollars, shaping nearly every aspect of our lives: the quality of our schools, the safety of our neighborhoods, the strength of our healthcare system, and even the condition of the roads we drive.
Yet few of us ever see how those choices are made – or realize how powerfully the state budget transforms policy into lived reality for us all.
This series aims to help you understand how government spending works, and what tradeoffs our leaders face. Our goal is simple: to give every voter, taxpayer, and community advocate the tools to follow the money and participate in the process that defines Delaware’s future.
The state budget isn’t just very long numbers on a very big spreadsheet – it’s a reflection of society’s shared values and priorities. It shows what we, as a community, choose to invest in: from classroom teachers to highway maintenance, from elder care to environmental protection.
Too often, that process can seem hazy and obscure, hidden behind acronyms and agencies. When citizens don’t understand it, they lose the ability to hold decision-makers accountable – or to advocate effectively for what matters most.
This multi-part series is designed to change that.
Over the coming weeks, this series will unpack six key topics:
Understanding how Delaware’s budget works isn’t just for accountants or politicians – it’s for everyone who wants a voice in the state’s direction. By learning how the process functions, you can:
Throughout this series, we will publish explainers, graphics, interviews, and a glossary of terms and definitions to make the state budget clear and relevant. We’ll show how fiscal policy connects directly to everyday issues – schools, healthcare, housing, small-business growth, environmental resilience, and the cost of living.
So, whether you’re a student, parent, business owner, or retiree, or (in some cases) a legislator, consider this your invitation: Take the time to learn how the Delaware State Budget works. It’s one of the most powerful ways to participate in democracy – and to help shape the quality of life in the place we all call home.
Coming Soon: Part 1 – The Four Buckets of Delaware’s Budget: How the State Organizes and Spends Its Money
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’ special series: Your guide to Delaware’s high-stakes budget process appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Through boom times and, more recently, slumping sales, Nike Inc. has stuck by a key claim about its overseas suppliers: They pay the average factory worker about twice the local minimum wage.
It’s a claim company co-founder Phil Knight first made in the 1990s, when the company faced accusations of sweatshop conditions in the overseas factories hired to make Nike’s apparel. And it’s one the sneaker giant has reasserted since 2021.
But the experiences of workers in Indonesia, Nike’s second-largest production hub, illustrate how misleading the claim can be for vast portions of its supply chain.
When a reporter for The Oregonian/OregonLive visited the country and interviewed roughly 100 workers from more than 10 factories that supply Nike, none said they made anywhere near twice the minimum wage.
“Bullshit,” a union official said, in English, while sitting on a makeshift couch on the porch of his office near Jakarta, the Indonesian capital. (Like most workers currently employed by Nike suppliers, the official did not wish to be named because of fears of retaliation, including fines and termination.)
One worker from a factory in West Java asked a reporter where on the company’s website Nike makes the wage claim.
“No, no, no,” he said, through a translator. “It’s not true.”
“Nike is not paying double the minimum wage,” said a union official in Central Java, a lower-wage area where Nike’s contract factories have been expanding. “The fact is the opposite. Nike is seeking cheaper workers.”

Last year, a ProPublica reporter visited Cambodia and found that only 1% of the 3,720 workers at a former Nike supplier earned at least 1.9 times the minimum wage, based on a factory payroll ledger. Interviews and paystubs for other workers corroborated that earnings are typically closer to the minimum wage than double that amount.
A reporter for The Oregonian/OregonLive subsequently spent seven days in Indonesia, where Nike’s contractors, including its materials suppliers, employ about 280,000 people.
All the workers interviewed said they made around minimum wage, which is as little as $150 a month in some parts of the country.
Sandra Cho, who oversees human rights for Nike, didn’t dispute that some factory workers — including in Indonesia and Cambodia — make less than 1.9 times the minimum wage, describing the figure as a “global average.”
“Some countries will be less than 1.9, some countries will be higher,” she said.
In Vietnam, Nike’s biggest production center, two workers told The Oregonian/OregonLive they made minimum wage — about $204 a month — but two said they made twice as much. That’s in keeping with reports from Nike’s competitor, Puma, which says its biggest factories in Vietnam pay around double the minimum wage.
Nike pushed back when asked whether it’s misleading for its disclosures to highlight the figure of 1.9 times the minimum wage.
“A company trying to mislead would not voluntarily publish wage data, openly acknowledge its journey toward improvement, or subject itself to third-party scrutiny,” Nike said in a written statement.
But the transparency that Nike provides is limited.
The company’s global pay figure is based on data for 700,000 of its roughly 1.2 million workers in its nearly 700 contract factories. In other words, nearly half a million workers are omitted from the math. Nike doesn’t disclose which factories, or which workers, are left out. It’s said that the data covers its biggest partners, which account for an outsize share of production.
(A Nike spokesperson said the wages of the roughly 500,000 workers not included in the calculation are audited to ensure they make at least the minimum wage.)
Nike competitors Adidas and Puma similarly produce wage estimates for only a subset of their suppliers, but they have published data down to the country level in recent years. Adidas reports wage variations within countries. Advocates say the data helps workers determine whether they’re paid fairly and push for pay increases if they are not.
Nike said focusing solely on pay relative to the minimum wage is a mistake.
The company’s main focus with wages is whether they’re high enough to cover basic expenses and a little more, Cho said, a concept known as a living wage. Some countries have minimum wages that meet that threshold, some don’t. Nike has said 66% of workers at its suppliers, at least those for whom it has data, earn a living wage. That’s up from 53% in 2021.
But living-wage calculations can vary widely, and they don’t always match the perceptions of people on the ground. Workers interviewed near Jakarta, where the local minimum pay rate is ostensibly more than a living wage, said it’s not enough to live on.

One said she wakes up seven days a week, before the sun rises, to set up a small shop in front of her home.
She sells groceries, gas canisters for cooking, water, cigarettes and snacks, mostly to housewives buying daily necessities.
She opens the store around 6 a.m.
A half hour later, on weekdays, she leaves for her job at the factory. Over the next eight hours, while her husband minds the shop, she works standing up, often in sweltering conditions, cutting fabric for 1,600 pairs of Nike sneakers — one every 18 seconds.
She returns to her small apartment around 6:30 p.m., eats a quick dinner of instant noodles, then goes back to the shop until 10 p.m.
She earns around $300 a month from making sneakers, just about minimum wage. The store brings in another $60.
“I always come home late, sometimes in the heat and rain,” she said through a translator, “but I still endure it to meet me and my child’s needs.”
Nike’s beginnings were rooted in the low labor costs that overseas manufacturing could offer.
In 1962, while working toward a master’s degree in business administration at Stanford University, Knight wrote an academic paper that became the company’s basic business plan. A core pillar: the disruptive power of cheap labor.
“Low Japanese labor costs make it possible for an exciting new firm to offer these shoes at the low low price of $6.95,” Knight wrote in 1964 in his first ad, according to his 2016 memoir, “Shoe Dog.”
In his book, he also wrote about the crushing poverty he saw on an around-the-world trip as a 24-year-old. Knight, who did not respond to detailed questions for this article, wrote in the book that hiring low-wage workers in developing countries would spur economic development.
The first decades of Nike’s history backed up his belief. As the economy bloomed in Japan and wages rose, Nike shifted production from Japan to Korea and Taiwan and, later, Indonesia and Vietnam.
“Thirty years ago, Nike shared that responsible participation in global manufacturing could accelerate economic development in emerging economies,” Nike said in its statement. “History has largely validated that.”
When Nike arrived in Indonesia in 1988, the country offered an enticing economic carrot to companies hunting for overseas factories: a minimum wage around $1 a day in Jakarta, compared with $8 in South Korea, $14 in Taiwan and $33 in Tokyo, according to a 1988 U.S. State Department report.
But Indonesia also presented new problems. The country was a target of activists because of its history of human rights abuses.
As companies ramped up production there, anti-sweatshop protests and negative press accounts multiplied, with some noting the country’s minimum wage was so low that many factory workers were malnourished.
Numerous stories took aim at Nike, whose soaring success, coupled with its popular athletic endorsers and corporate aloofness, made it a rich target.
The early coverage included a memorable 1992 story in Harper’s Magazine that showed the paycheck of an Indonesian factory worker who made $1.03 a day at the time and concluded she’d need to work more than 44,000 years to match Nike endorser Michael Jordan’s annual Nike income.
Knight and Nike pushed back on the criticism. Where Knight once sang the praises of low wages, he and the company now boasted the company’s suppliers paid generously.
In 1996, Nike distributed a fact sheet that said the median wage in its Indonesian factories was $108.65 a month, or more than double the minimum wage. In June of that year, Knight wrote a letter to the editor of The New York Times saying Nike “has paid, on average, double the minimum wage” to factory workers. A month later, he told CNN Nike paid “over two times” the minimum wage in Indonesia. He told shareholders in 1996 that pay was “double the minimum wage throughout Indonesia.”

The Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, Time Magazine and the editorial board of The Oregonian, the biggest newspaper in Nike’s home state, all repeated the claim.
But The Oregonian/OregonLive and ProPublica could find no contemporaneous data that supported Nike’s assertion. Neither could Nike.
“Those statements were made nearly 30 years ago, based on the data and understanding available at the time, and reflected a broader belief that responsible participation in global trade could raise incomes and expand opportunity in emerging economies,” Nike said in its 2026 statement. “Like most companies, we do not retain granular factory-level payroll data from partners in the mid-1990s.”
The Oregonian/OregonLive and ProPublica found plenty to challenge the claim, including statements by the company itself. In fact, between 1994 and 2001, four reports issued directly by Nike, done at the company’s request or compiled by the U.S. government never put the average wage in Indonesia higher than 37% above the minimum.
When asked to address the contradictory numbers from the 1990s, Nike said via email: “What’s relevant today is how Nike operates now, including the rigor of our current disclosures, the progress we’ve made, and the work still ahead to advance wages and opportunity across our supply chain.”
The accuracy of Nike’s past wage claims didn’t go unchallenged.
In 1998, California labor activist Marc Kasky sued Nike, alleging several claims about its overseas factories were “deceitful” and false advertising.
He submitted a pile of Nike statements as evidence, including Knight’s letter to the editor of The New York Times.
Nike said in a court filing, without admitting any of its statements were inaccurate, that those statements were not subject to a court’s opinion about their veracity. The company’s words were protected by the First Amendment, Nike wrote, because they were intended not to sell Nike products but to answer Nike’s critics concerning “issues of public interest.”
Nike settled the lawsuit in 2003, for $1.5 million, without admitting fault. The money was earmarked for factory monitoring and programs for workers, including economic ones.

Since the Kasky settlement, Nike has published nearly 2,000 pages of reports on its work to become a better corporate citizen. The closest it came to shedding new light on wages was in 2021, when the company reported on new efforts to understand what factory workers earn.
The 184-page report said that workers had “average gross pay of 1.9 times the minimum wage” — almost identical to the assertion the company made back in the ’90s.
The company said it based the claim on information from 103 “strategic suppliers” in 13 countries that employed over 700,000 workers. The report did not identify the suppliers or disclose the wages paid to workers.
Nike reiterates the claim in a disclosure currently posted on its website, which has been updated with 2022 data. It’s now based on data from 111 factories.
Workers in Indonesia reported wide deviations from the company’s stated average pay for the supply chain as a whole.
The workers’ accounts of earning minimum wage or a little bit more are consistent with 63 paystubs from three Indonesian factories, which The Oregonian/OregonLive and ProPublica obtained from a labor group. At two factories, workers averaged 1.1 times the minimum wage. At the other factory, workers averaged 1.4 times the minimum.
Those numbers align with disclosures of Adidas and Puma, which have released more information about factory wages than Nike.
In its 2024 annual report, Adidas said nearly 100,000 of its factory workers in Indonesia made between 1.1 and 1.4 times the minimum wage. Data from Puma’s 2024 sustainability report indicated that workers at four Indonesian suppliers averaged $208 in monthly wages, 17% above the average minimum wage where the factories were located.
Presented with detailed questions about pay practices, Nike said looking at pay relative to the minimum in isolation “misses the broader picture of real wage growth and economic development” in countries where Nike sources its goods.
In Vietnam, Nike’s contract factories account for 2.5% of the country’s gross domestic product, according to a 2019 diplomatic cable obtained by The Oregonian/OregonLive.
“We’re proud of the role Nike and our industry have played in building employment, skills, and opportunity in many countries, including Vietnam today, where the industry contributes meaningfully to national GDP,” the company said, adding that it remained “committed to pushing for continued improvement.”
Nike’s Cho said the company’s work to lift wages includes a program that’s helped female workers advance into higher-paid positions. Roughly 80% of factory employees are women, Cho said, but men are 2.5 times more likely to get promoted off the manufacturing line. She said 21% of participants in the program got a promotion within three months.
The company said what matters more than what people are paid relative to the minimum wage is whether they make enough to cover basic expenses. Some regions of Indonesia, including Jakarta, have minimum wages higher than local living wage estimates by the WageIndicator Foundation, an independent Dutch nonprofit.
The living wage “is where we focus our energy and work,” said Nike’s Cho.
But an income that meets the living wage benchmark on paper doesn’t always match what workers say they need, at least in Indonesia.

Standing in an overgrown lot outside Jakarta, 30 workers broke into laughter when asked if they got paid enough to cover their basic expenses.
One said factory wages weren’t enough to pay for new uniforms, books and shoes for school-aged children.
Another worker estimated as much as 70% of her coworkers had second jobs, a comment that drew approving nods. That work includes operating motorbike taxis, fish farming, collecting scrap metal and cleaning fruit, workers said. Some workers sell goods inside the factory, including coffee, snacks and cosmetics, which they said comes with the risk of disciplinary action, including termination.
Knight once told documentary filmmaker Michael Moore that factory jobs were such a road to upward mobility that someone working in an Indonesian factory making Nike goods might someday be Moore’s landlord.
Two workers who invited a reporter into their homes in a neighborhood near Jakarta last summer were not landlords.
They lived in 150-square-foot barracks-style apartments with almost no furniture except for thin mattresses, which had been propped against the wall to create living space. Small electric fans cooled the apartments, which cost around $30 a month to rent.
Workers largely agreed Nike contract factories are preferable to local alternatives. Nike factories are clean and pay on time, they said. Many have exhaust fans that can provide some relief from the tropical heat. Forced overtime is no longer a problem. Government regulations tend to be followed.
But the workers said wages remain chronically low, describing the typical pay as only enough to support one person.
“It’s as if the company wants us to stay single forever,” a worker near Jakarta said.
Another worker said she started stitching Nike sneakers 25 years ago, about the time Knight spoke to Moore about workers becoming landlords.
She said after all those years, she makes $300 a month — roughly the local minimum wage.
The post Nike Says Its Factory Workers Make Nearly Double the Minimum Wage. In Indonesia, Workers Say, “It’s Not True.” appeared first on ProPublica.
Once a month, American labor activist Jim Keady logs into Remitly, an app for transferring money abroad, at his New Jersey home and sends $100 to a former Nike factory worker in Indonesia.
Cicih Sukaesih helped bring the world’s attention to the lives of the young women in poor countries who made sneakers in the 1990s, first by organizing a strike and later by marching onto Nike’s bucolic corporate campus in Oregon to demand a meeting with co-founder Phil Knight.
Her story — at a time of police and military harassment of labor organizers abroad — caught the attention of The New York Times and other news organizations. It also helped inform a generation of workers about their rights.
“She helped to birth, I would argue, the Indonesian trade union movement within Nike’s supplier factories,” Keady said.

But media attention and accolades don’t pay the bills. Cicih had trouble finding work following her 1990s activism. (Cicih prefers to go by one name. It’s pronounced “Chee Chee.”)
Decades after her crusade faded from the headlines, Keady and other labor organizers began sending Cicih money to keep her afloat.
“She took a stand and she was a revolutionary,” Keady said. “And she has nothing to show for it.”
Now 62, Cicih welcomed a reporter for The Oregonian/OregonLive into her home last year, part of a reporting trip that included interviews with about 100 workers who make Nike sneakers, mostly in Indonesia, which was ground zero for the decade of sweatshop criticism that stained Nike’s reputation in the 1990s.
Cicih said she’s proud of the example she set by standing up to Nike. She said workers “became aware of their rights and aware of the law.”
“Many things changed,” she said.
The advocacy led to improvements, she said, including cracking down on child labor, installing better safety equipment and providing menstrual leave.
“Many of my friends,” Cicih said, “became brave enough to speak up.”

But she described her work as incomplete because problems linger, including chronically low wages.
Nike did not address specific questions about Cicih’s experience or about the Nike supplier that employed her in the 1990s, nor did Knight provide comment. Instead, Nike issued a broad statement saying, in part, “We’re appreciative of the efforts that individuals and organizations, including Cicih, have made in helping push the industry forward.”
Nike said the company has been “deeply committed to advancing a responsible and resilient supply chain for more than 30 years” and that while progress hasn’t been perfect, it has sought “systemic improvements across the industry.” Nike’s goal, the statement said, is that “all people involved in the manufacturing of Nike’s products are respected, valued, and treated fairly.”
Cicih keeps tokens of her activism in her home, including a framed poster that depicts a factory worker and reads, “Who made your shoes?”
Jeff Ballinger, a labor organizer who was prominent in the 1990s’ anti-sweatshop movement, gave it to her. In an interview, Ballinger said he still considers Cicih a “hero” — albeit unsung, even in Tangerang, the industrial hub where the Indonesian factory movement took off.
“Like in wartime, some people just step up,” Ballinger said. “In a perfect world, there’d be a statue of her in Tangerang.”
Cicih sat for an interview in a backyard filled by a chicken coop and a small garden that included pumpkins, bananas and edible bamboo. The small house she and one of her sisters inherited from their parents in Menes, her childhood village about a 90-mile drive west of Jakarta, is now home.
After putting out snacks that included a traditional Indonesian dessert made from rice and grated coconut in banana leaves, Cicih often flashed a wide grin as she reflected on a life intertwined with Nike’s emergence in her country.


Nike, then known as Blue Ribbon Sports, bought its first sneakers from Japanese factories in the 1960s. But as Japan’s wages rose, it shifted manufacturing to lower-cost Asian countries, including Taiwan and South Korea.
In 1988, it started making sneakers in Indonesia.
The country had a terrible human rights record, but it was eager to attract foreign investors. Factories in Jakarta paid wages as low as $1 a day, compared with $8 in South Korea, $14 in Taiwan and $33 in Tokyo, according to a 1988 State Department report.
In 1989, five years after she graduated from high school, Cicih joined one of her sisters making Nike sneakers at the Sung Hwa Dunia factory 40 miles west of Jakarta, Indonesia’s biggest city.
She started work each day at 7 a.m.
At first, she said, she cleaned glue and chemicals off sneakers with her bare hands. Then she moved to a glue line, attaching soles to shoes. The factory was poorly ventilated. Co-workers coughed from the fumes. Cicih recalled seeing one person faint and then return to the assembly line because factory managers didn’t give her permission to go home.
(The factory is still open, but it has changed owners and now has a different name. The current owner did not respond to emails. The previous owner could not be reached.)

Worker safety was “very, very bad,” Cicih said through an independent journalist The Oregonian/OregonLive hired to translate the conversation.
“There were many, many labor laws that the company did not follow,” she added.
Like today, the vast majority of factory workers were young women. Most of the managers were older men, which Cicih said led to a natural power imbalance and problems with sexual harassment.
“I have watched and seen a lot of women being sexually abused, or touched inappropriately,” she said.
There was constant pressure to meet daily production quotas.
Cicih made $1.26 a day, around minimum wage. A 1989 study found the minimum wage was so low that many factory workers were malnourished.
“It was not enough for me to get by on a daily basis,” she said. “However, I had to make it on the amount I received.”
Cicih often worked overtime until 9 p.m. Sometimes she worked on Saturday and Sunday, which she considered forced labor. The amount of overtime, she said, motivated her to “rebel.”

The turning point for Cicih came when one of the company’s buses, which workers rode to the factory and were always overcrowded, flipped and killed a co-worker.
“How can we protest this issue to the company?” she asked another co-worker.
Unbeknownst to Cicih, this co-worker had joined an organization that taught workers about labor rights. Cicih faked a doctor’s letter, got a sick day and took a class.
Through the organization, she met Ballinger, who had moved to Indonesia to organize factory workers. In 1992, Ballinger wrote a story for Harper’s Magazine that compared the wages of Sadisah, one of Cicih’s co-workers, to the earnings of Nike endorser Michael Jordan. Sadisah earned 14 cents an hour. It would have taken her more than 44,000 years to make what Jordan earned from Nike in a single year.
Cicih started skipping lunch and prayer breaks to organize her co-workers.
On Sept. 28, 1992, Cicih and workers from her factory went on strike. The New York Times reported 600 walked out, but Cicih and other activists have put the number of strikers in the thousands. They demanded better treatment of women, better union representation, better food, better transportation and, most importantly, better pay.
“A wage increase was the top priority,” she said, holding up the original document that listed protesters’ demands.


Her activism came with great risks. Around that time, Marsinah, a factory worker who was recognized last year as the country’s first National Hero from the labor movement, was kidnapped, tortured and murdered.
“Military and police were everywhere,” Cicih said, but she said her desire to help her co-workers “eclipsed all the fear.”
The strike lasted two days.
It ended after the factory agreed to increase wages for many employees, Cicih said, but she added that her seniority made her eligible for just a small raise. The company accepted other demands, including allowing menstrual leave. Cicih said she was the first worker to take it.
That same year that Cicih led the strike, Nike released a code of conduct, becoming one of the first brands to do so. Codes of conduct have since become the default method companies like Nike use to police overseas factories. The basic system: The company writes rules and contract factories agree to follow them. Auditors monitor compliance.
A few months after the strike, Cicih and roughly two dozen of her co-workers got laid off. Leslie Milano, a prominent American labor organizer in the early 2000s, said unemployment at the time was high in Indonesia.
“That’s why a lot of people didn’t want to do what Cicih did,” Milano said. “They didn’t want to lose their jobs.”

Cicih said that not long after being laid off, she was hauled into a police station and spent two days being pressured to confess to destruction of property and causing a disturbance. She was not allowed to go to the bathroom, she said.
Cicih said the police made her watch them beat a suspect. Then they made her sit in his blood, she said, before releasing her.
The Indonesian embassy in Washington, D.C., did not respond to questions about military repression of worker rights in the 1990s. (The country undertook democratic reform after the dictator Suharto stepped down in 1998, although problems remain.)
After her release, encouraged by Ballinger and others, she joined co-workers in filing a lawsuit against the factory alleging wrongful termination. The lawsuit went all the way to Indonesia’s Supreme Court. In 1996, Cicih and her co-workers prevailed. She got about $200 in back wages. She still has the check in a binder with other documents from her organizing days.
For two years of lost wages, Ballinger figures Cicih should have gotten more than $2,000. That would have been enough to set up a small business.
“It would have been a hell of a lot of money back then,” he said. The movement’s failure to deliver greater restitution to Cicih and others “is something that I’ll never get over.”
Around the time the lawsuit concluded, in July 1996, Cicih walked onto Nike’s suburban campus near Beaverton, Oregon, and demanded a meeting with the company’s co-founder.
“I’m here to meet with Phil Knight,” she said, according to The Oregonian’s coverage of her visit. “I want to ask him to consider the plight of Indonesian workers.”
Cicih had stayed in touch with Ballinger. He helped bring her to the United States to put pressure on Nike, one of four such visits she made to the country.
Knight refused to see her.

A week before Cicih arrived in Beaverton, Knight wrote a letter to her trip’s organizers, saying he was “sympathetic” to her case but preferred to meet with people “interested in constructive, proactive solutions, not those who announce their intentions through news conferences and mean-spirited media campaigns.”
He defended Nike’s response to problems at Cicih’s factory, saying Nike had worked to correct them.
“The factory where Ms. Sukaesih worked has been under new Indonesian management for two years, the grievances have been addressed and the minimum wage is in force,” Knight wrote. “In our view, this is an example of the benefit Nike brings in upgrading labor practices in emerging market societies.”

After she made her request to meet with Knight, a “trio of beefy Nike security guards” escorted Cicih off Nike’s campus and local sheriff’s deputies asked her to leave the premises, according to The Oregonian’s coverage.
Roughly a week later, Knight sat across the table from President Bill Clinton at the White House to talk about labor reforms, according to records obtained from the Clinton Presidential Library. Knight then stood in the Rose Garden behind Clinton as the president announced a sweeping effort to address sweatshop conditions in overseas factories.
“While I think that we have been good citizens within our industry, I think there’s clearly a lot more that we can do, that we can indeed be better,” Knight said in his brief remarks.
The meeting with Clinton led to the creation of the Fair Labor Association, one of several groups that monitor factory working conditions.
Knight publicly committed to specific sweatshop reforms in a 1998 speech at the National Press Club. Knight announced six changes, including heightened indoor air quality standards, increased factory monitoring and raising the minimum age in footwear factories to 18.
He didn’t say anything about raising wages.
These days, Nike factory workers in Indonesia told The Oregonian/OregonLive, the kind of forced overtime that sparked Cicih’s desire to “rebel” is nonexistent. They also said Nike lived up to Knight’s commitment to get underage workers out of Indonesian factories.
But they said problems remain.
In interviews, they criticized the auditing process, the linchpin of the factory monitoring system that Nike helped pioneer. Workers said factories know in advance when auditors will arrive. At one factory, workers said safety equipment had been distributed on the eve of an audit.
“The best time to work at a Nike factory is when it’s being audited,” a worker said.
Workers said more rigorous and consistent auditing would catch problems with safety and sexual harassment, which they said remain persistent.
Asked about the workers’ description of factories prepping for planned audits, Nike said that it conducts unannounced audits in addition to those that are scheduled in advance, and that these are supplemented by “worker engagement and well-being surveys,” among other efforts.
“When issues are brought to our attention, through any mechanism, we work with suppliers to validate, identify root causes and implement comprehensive remediation processes,” Nike said.
Nike’s most recent disclosures say 87% of the 623 suppliers it audited in fiscal year 2024 at least met the company’s basic code of conduct requirements. The company also disclosed a factory injury rate significantly below its peers. Less than 1% of code of conduct violations related to harassment and abuse, according to the disclosure.
Workers and union leaders also say their No. 1 concern — low wages — has not been addressed. Many said they work second jobs to make ends meet.
“One job isn’t enough,” Keady said. “They’re not getting a second job because they want to send their kid to a really good private school or they want to buy a home in a great neighborhood. They’re getting a second job because they can’t afford three meals a day for their family.”
Cicih also has struggled.
After her lawsuit against the factory that once employed her, she had the option to return, but she declined. She thought the environment would be uncomfortable because of her history as an organizer.
She did some volunteer work as a labor organizer. Some other organizers encouraged her to set up a small business.
Those efforts never panned out. She moved back to her hometown of Menes in 2018.
A sister on whom Cicih depended financially died during the pandemic. Cicih opened a roadside food stall and sold vegetable salad and gado gado, a type of Indonesian dish, but it didn’t go well.
She gets by on donations from American do-gooders, including Keady. She grows some of her own food. She doesn’t have a pension or savings.
“Nothing,” she said.
But she’s resolute.
“You have to do this,” she said, reflecting on her years as an activist. “You have to fight.”

The post She Was a Key Voice of the 1990s Labor Movement in Nike’s Indonesia Factories. Today She Relies on Donations From Abroad. appeared first on ProPublica.
Talk of a Turkish military alliance with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan reflects Ankara’s opportunistic ‘hedging’ strategy Expert comment jon.wallace
An alliance with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan would not make NATO member Turkey better defended. But it would provide other advantages.
On 9 January, Bloomberg reported that Turkey was ‘likely’ to join the defence pact between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, and that talks to do so were in an ‘advanced’ stage. Later that month Pakistan’s Minister for Defence Production told Reuters that a draft defence deal between the three countries had been prepared.
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan agreed a defensive pact in September 2025, following American inaction on two occasions: initially in 2019, when Iranian drone attacks on Saudi Arabia failed to elicit more than mild condemnation from Washington; and in 2025, when Israel’s attacks on Qatar were met only with lukewarm rebuke.
The potential inclusion of Turkey into the alliance has received mixed reactions from Turkish commentators. Some interpret the anonymous briefing as more of a messaging strategy than concrete statement of intent. It remains to be seen whether the alliance will come to pass.
Certainly, a level of ‘synergy’ could exist in a Pakistan–Saudi–Turkey alliance. Turkey and Pakistan both have developed, modern defence economies which specialize in different sectors, and have become increasingly linked in recent years. The countries have a long history of cooperation on shipbuilding and fighter pilot training.
Turkey could provide access to NATO standards of training – by the standards of the Middle East, Turkey’s military is highly effective and capable – as well as large-scale shipbuilding facilities. Saudi finance would be welcome in reinforcing Turkey’s inflation-battered economy, just as it has been in Pakistan.
The idea that this might be an ‘Islamic NATO’ is misleading – most Muslim states sit outside the alliance, and religion lacks any real salience in regional foreign policy. But the alliance would likely be well-received by Turkish President Recep Erdoğan’s base, as well as playing into his own desire to be seen as a leader of the Muslim world.
Furthermore, historic tensions between Ankara and Riyadh have been more effectively managed since 2022, and no major international issue (currently) divides the three countries.
Turkey was content to side with Pakistan against India during their brief confrontation last year, going so far as to block the transit of Indian equipment through Turkish airspace. Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has demonstrated satisfaction with the new regime in Syria, and the integration of the SDF into centralized Syrian institutions, aligning with Turkey’s position. The trio have also converged on their stance on Israel and the war in Gaza over course of the past year.
Like Saudi Arabia, Turkey’s potential alliance with Pakistan would represent a ‘hedging’ strategy, as it seeks to create redundancy around existing structures and partnerships. However, Turkey has less to gain from such an arrangement.
Whereas Riyadh has long sought a formalized defence agreement with Washington, Turkey has enjoyed a formal security agreement with the US for decades, via NATO. Nor does an alliance with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan offer Ankara anything better than the status quo, or anything it couldn’t obtain via less binding means.
For a start, any offer by Pakistan to extend nuclear deterrence to Turkey is unrealistic. Pakistani missiles do not comprehensively reach Turkey’s potential adversaries. Their range covers Iran, and stretches as far as Rostov-on-Don inside Russia, but no further.
Pakistan is unlikely to station such weapons abroad, and even less likely to be drawn into a direct confrontation with a NATO state such as Greece. Turkey could pursue a technology transfer from Pakistan without a binding alliance. But that would mean leaving the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and risking international isolation.
Most compellingly, within NATO, Turkey is already protected by American and British nuclear weapons: of considerably higher quality and reliability then Pakistan’s. Up to fifty American nuclear bombs are already stationed at Incirlik air base.
Ankara may view the alliance as a way to shore up its regional power, build its export base, acquire foreign currency, or develop its ballistic technology. But it could achieve such goals without committing to a binding mutual defence agreement. Its own armed forces are comparatively strong. And the ongoing peace process with the PKK in Turkey, and integration of the SDF in Syria, leaves it yet more secure. A Saudi–Pakistan alliance offers Ankara nothing that NATO or other agreements cannot do better. So why bother?
Some commentators have suggested the move indicates a lack of faith in NATO, following recent ‘America First’ belligerence. But such an explanation is insufficient. Even in the event of an American departure from NATO, European members would likely work hard to keep Turkey in the alliance, aligned against Russia, with whom it remains locked in competition.
If Turkey enters into a formal alliance with Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, it would represent a broader regional trend of ‘hedging’: should NATO become unreliable in the future, Turkey is made more secure by a new, separate defence agreement.
But a new alliance would also represent a continuation of a uniquely Turkish policy of opportunism. Just as Turkey has reached out (or loudly announced it is reaching out) to BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), ‘hedging’ affords not only alternatives to alliances like NATO, but crucially leverage within them.
President Donald Trump has said on multiple occasions in recent months that he takes a “large” dose of aspirin to prevent cardiovascular disease. His comments could perpetuate a common misperception, so we wanted to clarify the current science and what the recommendations are.
Low-dose aspirin is recommended for people who have already experienced a cardiovascular event, but it generally isn’t recommended for those looking to avoid a first heart attack or stroke — and neither is high-dose aspirin.

Trump brought up his aspirin use in a Jan. 22 press gaggle when he was asked by a reporter about some bruising on his hand. “I would say take aspirin if you like your heart. But don’t take aspirin if you don’t want to have a little bruising,” he said. “I take the big aspirin. And when you take the big aspirin, they tell you, you bruise.”
The Wall Street Journal reported in January that Trump’s physician said the president takes 325 milligrams of aspirin a day for “cardiac prevention.” That’s considered a high dose, compared with a typical low, or “baby,” aspirin dose of 81 milligrams.
“They say aspirin is good for thinning out the blood, and I don’t want thick blood pouring through my heart,” Trump told the outlet in the same story, which drew on an October interview with the president. “I want nice, thin blood pouring through my heart.”
Trump, who is 79 years old, similarly told the New York Times on Jan. 7 that he takes a “large dose” of aspirin because he wants “nice, thin blood going through my heart,” adding that he has taken aspirin for 30 years and has never had a heart attack or been diagnosed with heart disease of any kind.
Trump has expressed some awareness that his aspirin use deviates from the norm, suggesting on various occasions that his doctors have said that he is taking too much aspirin. It’s not clear if he knows that even low-dose aspirin is not typically recommended for people who don’t have cardiovascular disease. In his remarks, he is primarily speaking about his own case and does not appear to be giving advice to others.
Still, because his remarks could reinforce common misunderstandings about aspirin, we wanted to address the topic.
When we inquired, the White House did not clarify what Trump’s doctors have recommended, but provided a statement attributed to Trump’s physician, Dr. Sean Barbabella, that said the president takes 325 milligrams of daily aspirin “to maintain his exceptional cardiovascular health.” Barbabella added that Trump’s “medical evaluations and laboratory results continue to show excellent metabolic health, and have revealed his cardiovascular health puts him 14 years younger than his age. Overall, the President remains in exceptional health and perfectly suited to execute his duties as Commander in Chief.”
Aspirin is thought to lower cardiovascular risk by reducing blood clotting. By making platelets — the cell fragments that are involved in clotting — less sticky, clots are less likely to form. But for the same reason, aspirin also increases the risk of potentially dangerous bleeding.
While aspirin used to be more widely recommended, as early as 2014 the Food and Drug Administration concluded that “the data do not support the use of aspirin as a preventive medication by people who have not had a heart attack, stroke or cardiovascular problems, a use that is called ‘primary prevention.'”
“In such people,” the agency explained on its website, “the benefit has not been established but risks—such as dangerous bleeding into the brain or stomach—are still present.” The agency also emphasized that people should consult a doctor before starting any daily aspirin regimen.
In subsequent years, additional studies have shown that for many people without cardiovascular disease, the benefits don’t outweigh the risks.
Since 2019, the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association have said that aspirin “should be used infrequently in the routine primary prevention of [atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease] because of lack of net benefit.”

“Most people without known cardiovascular disease like a prior heart attack, stroke, or blockages in major arteries, do not need aspirin,” Dr. Ann Marie Navar, a preventive cardiologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, told us. “This will increase their risk of bleeding problems – not just bruising but bleeding in the stomach or gut.”
Instead, she advised, people should avoid smoking, eat a heart-healthy diet, get regular exercise, and focus on lowering their cholesterol and keeping their blood pressure controlled.
She added that bruising is “common” among aspirin users and that mild bruising “is not concerning.”
The details are a little more nuanced in Trump’s case, as his cardiovascular risk is somewhat elevated, but the president is also taking more aspirin than is recommended. Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones, chief of preventive medicine at Boston University, told us that given past reports that Trump has plaque build-up in his coronary arteries, it “may be reasonable” to take low-dose aspirin for cardiac prevention purposes. But, he said, the high dose “is certainly not needed or indicated.”
In 2018, Trump’s physician revealed that the president completed a coronary artery calcium test — a scan evaluating the amount of plaque in his arteries — with a moderately high score of 133. Although common for a man of his age, a score over 100 is suggestive of heart disease. Lloyd-Jones said the score “indicates that he has atherosclerotic coronary heart disease and subclinical cardiovascular disease at a moderately advanced state.”
If Trump is unaware of the changing practices around aspirin, he wouldn’t be alone. Last year, a survey conducted by the Annenberg Public Policy Center, our parent organization, found that nearly half of U.S. adults mistakenly believe that the benefits of low-dose aspirin for cardiac prevention outweigh the risks.
For people without cardiovascular disease, daily aspirin is not explicitly recommended for any population for cardiovascular disease prevention.
According to the 2019 guidelines from the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association, which are the most recent, low-dose aspirin “might be considered” for people 40 to 70 years old who are at higher cardiovascular risk and do not have an increased risk for bleeding. For anyone above the age of 70 or a person of any age who has a higher risk of bleeding, the groups advise against routine aspirin use.
Similarly, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a federally funded panel of independent national experts in disease prevention, advised in a 2022 update against starting low-dose aspirin for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease in people 60 years or older. For adults 40 to 59 years old at elevated risk only, the group said the decision to use aspirin “should be an individual one,” as the net benefit is “small.”
Both guidelines were influenced by three large placebo-controlled trials that were published in 2018, which collectively involved more than 47,000 patients and helped clarify the current harms and benefits of low-dose aspirin in various groups.
The ARRIVE trial, which included men age 55 and older and women 60 and older at average cardiovascular risk, identified no cardiovascular benefit to low-dose aspirin and a small increased risk of gastrointestinal bleeding.
The ASPREE trial, which enrolled people who did not have cardiovascular disease and were mostly 70 years and older, found low-dose aspirin “resulted in a significantly higher risk of major hemorrhage and did not result in a significantly lower risk of cardiovascular disease than placebo.”
The ASCEND study, which evaluated low-dose aspirin use in people 40 years and older with diabetes but no known cardiovascular disease, did identify a reduction in vascular events, but those were “largely counterbalanced,” according to the authors, by an increase in major bleeding events.
Earlier studies had found aspirin was more effective, Lloyd-Jones told us. As he also detailed in a 2022 editorial in JAMA Cardiology, this is likely because in the past, physicians were not very good at controlling blood pressure, cholesterol or other major cardiovascular risk factors. Now, in an era with statins and blood pressure medications, and less smoking, for example, there is less “room” for aspirin to be needed or to help, he said. And because aspirin has retained the same bleeding risk, it has shifted the risk-benefit calculus.
“For patients without ischemic heart disease, there is very clear evidence from randomized controlled trials that aspirin is not associated with a clear benefit (and may be associated with harm from bleeding),” Dr. William Schuyler Jones, an interventional cardiologist at Duke University, told us in an email, referring to the type of heart disease that occurs when arteries are narrowed, usually due to plaque build-up.
Still, Navar said that there is a bit of a gray area — and that many preventive cardiologists do recommend aspirin for people “with evidence of a lot of cholesterol buildup in their heart arteries,” such as those with “very high” coronary artery calcium scores.
Experts emphasized to us that for all the confusion and discussion about the recommendations for those without cardiovascular disease, for those with disease — such as after a stroke, heart attack or after a stent — there remains a strong recommendation to take low-dose aspirin to prevent another event, or what’s called secondary prevention. Some patients, however, may not take aspirin if they are on other blood thinners or anti-platelet medications, Navar said.
A 2021 trial, which Jones led, compared high- and low-dose aspirin in patients with established cardiovascular disease. It did not find that the higher dose was more effective. And while it also didn’t find that the higher dose led to more bleeding, patients often preferred to switch to the low-dose regimen.
Jones said patients with cardiovascular disease should take the low dose.
Other trials and observational studies, Navar said, “have shown higher doses of aspirin do increase bleeding risk.”
Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
The post Trump’s Aspirin Use and Doctors’ Recommendations appeared first on FactCheck.org.
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