Steve Hilton, Xavier Becerra and Tom Steyer have emerged as the leading contenders to advance to November's general election as vote counting continues.
The labor market continues to show strength despite rising inflation and concerns about slowing economic growth.
RISC-V has been in the “promising” phase for a long time now, especially for general purpose computing, never really breaking through into the mainstream in any measurable way. While I think that breakthrough is still relatively far away, we now do have newer RISC-V SoCs on the market supporting the RVA23 baseline RISC-V profile. One of them is the SpacemiT Key Stone KЗ, which promises to deliver a massive performance increase over previous RISC-V offerings. It’s exactly this chip that’s finding its way into complete, turnkey mini PC solutions, like this one from a company called Firefly.
The base model comes with 8GB of LDDPR5 RAM and 128GB of storage, at a price of about €300 or so (there’s also a 32GB/128GB model at well over €600). This is the first time I’m looking at a complete RISC-V solution where I feel like it might actually make for a good moment to jump in for us enthusiasts. No, the performance won’t rival anything Intel or AMD has to offer, but it seems capable enough for a lot of day-to-day tasks, and I’m curious to see just how far along the Linux world is when it comes to RISC-V support.
It’s not part of our current set of fundraiser incentives, but if you’d like to see this RISC-V mini PC reviewed here on OSNews, you can always donate and add a note that you specifically want to see such a review (so I can gauge interest not just from our few commenters, but also from the more than 99% of our readers who only lurk). As always, you can donate through Ko-Fi, or, if you’re European, via a SEPA direct bank transfer (Name: Thom Holwerda – IBAN: SE08 8000 0820 1684 4657 8414 – BIC: SWEDSESS).
Thousands have protested in the streets of the Albanian capital, Tirana, this week against a planned luxury resort backed by Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Groundwork has begun on the $1.6bn complex in an area long seen as one of the Mediterranean’s most environmentally sensitive, containing 200 species of birds including flamingos and Dalmatian pelicans.
After builders began erecting a concrete-based, barbed wire-topped fence around the site, alarm turned to public outrage at the environmental damage and lack of political transparency around the deal.
Lucy Hough speaks to US live news editor Chris Michael.
Continue reading...Data discredits claims reawakened by the death of Henry Nowak that UK police actions disadvantage white people
The US government has joined criticism of alleged two-tier policing in the UK in the wake of Henry Nowak’s murder. How did the term enter the mainstream, and is there any basis for the claim?
Continue reading...Out of an abundance of caution, NASA briefly directed five of the seven crew members aboard the International Space Station to wait inside the docked SpaceX Crew Dragon "Freedom" spacecraft.
Passage came after more than 18 hours of ‘vote-a-rama’ process; Lisa Murkowski was the only Republican senator to vote against it
Nine out of 15 migrants deported from the US to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in April have returned to their home countries, Congo’s government, a migrant and her lawyer said on Friday.
The 15 migrants arrived in Congo on April 17 as part of a bilateral agreement with the Trump administration announced two weeks earlier to accept third-country deportees from the US. Congo’s government said in a statement on Friday that “more than half” of the migrants had since returned to their countries and that others would return “shortly“.
Continue reading...Greater Manchester mayor’s proposals amount to a notable criticism of Keir Starmer’s policy in the area
Andy Burnham has proposed a 20% cut to business rates for pubs with many smaller, family-run enterprises taken out of paying the levy altogether, in his first major policy initiative during the Makerfield byelection.
Burnham’s plans amount to a notable criticism of Keir Starmer’s policy in the area, with the Greater Manchester mayor saying: “Labour have got it wrong on small businesses.”
Continue reading...Paul Quinn sentenced to 21 years but minimum term of 14 years means he may serve less time than innocent man
A “savage” rapist who evaded justice for nearly two decades could spend less time in prison than the innocent man who was wrongly convicted for his crime.
Paul Quinn, 52, was ordered to serve a minimum of 14 years in prison on Friday over a 2003 rape for which Andrew Malkinson wrongly spent 17 years behind bars.
Continue reading...Announcement that ‘policymakers’ need to be convened by US firm viewed as marketing ploy by some experts
Anthropic has floated the idea of a worldwide “temporary pause” on AI development – and said it was going to convene “policymakers” to discuss the dangers of advanced AI – in its latest release touting the capabilities of its products.
In a long post on Thursday, Anthropic detailed the progress of its AI model, Claude, towards “recursive self improvement” – that is, being able to make better and more powerful versions of itself. Recursive self-improvement is a bugbear of AI safety researchers, viewed as the key step for AI to become superintelligent and therefore unleash widespread consequences on humanity.
Continue reading...A garnishment judgment is only the start. You should know what creditors can do next — and what you can do, too.
Crew previously told to enter docked spacecraft and don spacesuits in case an air leak worsened
Astronauts onboard the International Space Station have been told to return to normal duties after previously being on evacuation alert due to a worsening air leak.
The four astronauts of Nasa’s Crew-12 mission on the station – two US astronauts, a French astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut – received orders from Nasa mission control at 9.04am ET (2.04pm BST) on Friday to enter their Crew Dragon spacecraft docked to the station and don their spacesuits in case the air leak warranted an emergency evacuation, a Nasa official said.
Continue reading...This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here
A former chair of an influential parliamentary committee said it was “shocking” that the public spending watchdog had not established Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s income from subletting properties.
Margaret Hodge, who led the public accounts committee, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme she was “very concerned” that the National Audit Office (NAO) was not able to find out how much money the former prince had made from letting properties.
Continue reading...NASA ordered astronauts on the International Space Station to shelter in their spacecraft and prepare for possible evacuation after a worsening air leak in the Russian Zvezda service module's transfer tunnel. The Guardian reports: The four astronauts of NASA's Crew-12 mission on the station -- two US astronauts, a French astronaut and a Russian cosmonaut -- received orders from NASA mission control at 9.04am ET (2pm BST) on Friday to enter their Crew Dragon spacecraft docked to the station and don their spacesuits in case the air leak warranted an emergency evacuation, a NASA official said. NASA and Russia's space agency Roscosmos, the station's two primary operators, have debated for months over the cause and potential fixes of small air leaks onboard Russia's Zvezda service module, a key structure of the football-pitch-sized laboratory. The air leaks have been relatively minor in recent months. But on Monday the problem escalated from a pound of air per day to two pounds (0.9kg) a senior Nasa official told Reuters on condition of anonymity. UPDATE: "Roscosmos has paused Friday's structural repair efforts inside the Zvezda service module transfer tunnel, known as PrK, as more measurements and data is assessed," Bethany Stevens, a spokesperson for NASA, posted on X. "Given this development, NASA has instructed the crew members inside the Dragon spacecraft to end the safe haven procedures and return to planned operations aboard the International Space Station. We look forward to working with Roscosmos on a collaborative approach to address the leaks." Developing...
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
PARIS, June 5, 2026 — Quantum computing company Alice & Bob has released a new five-criteria framework to define and benchmark logical qubits and establish a fair and comprehensive performance evaluation across hardware modalities. Logical qubits are a key milestone on the path to fault-tolerant quantum computing, but there is no industry-wide standard for defining, measuring or comparing them.
Investors, analysts, enterprise decision-makers and researchers can use this new framework to objectively compare achievements from hardware with different levels of performance, maturity, and capability.
The paper, Defining the Logical Qubit: Five Criteria to Benchmark Logical Qubit Claims, builds on a growing body of industry research to argue that a logical qubit should be defined strictly as a fundamental building block of a fault-tolerant quantum computer. It sets out five qualities a true logical qubit must demonstrate to be a credible candidate for scaling the technology.
“Logical qubits are rapidly becoming the industry’s primary benchmark for progress toward fault-tolerant quantum computing, yet the term is used to describe achievements with vastly different levels of performance and capability,” said Jérémie Guillaud, VP Quantum Software, Alice & Bob. “Without a common benchmark, it’s difficult for the industry to compare approaches and evaluate genuine progress. At Alice & Bob, we believe a logical qubit should be more than an experimental demonstration – it should represent a fundamental building block of a fault-tolerant quantum computer. By proposing a clear definition and common set of criteria, we hope to make logical qubit claims more transparent, comparable, and easier to evaluate.”
Alice & Bob’s five essential criteria to “score” logical qubit claims are:
The whitepaper can be downloaded here.
“This is a strong, timely, and useful framework for cleaning up logical-qubit claims,” said Russ Fein, Managing Director, Corporate Fuel Partners. “It is especially valuable for investors and non-expert decision-makers because it provides a simple checklist for separating FTQC-relevant progress from weaker demonstrations.”
About Alice & Bob
Alice & Bob is a quantum computing company based in Paris and Boston whose goal is to create the first universal, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Advised by Nobel Prize winning researchers, Alice & Bob specializes in cat qubits, a technology developed by the company’s founders. Demonstrating the power of its cat architecture, Alice & Bob recently showed that it could reduce the hardware requirements for building a useful large-scale quantum computer up to 200 times compared with competing approaches.
Source: Alice & Bob
The post Alice & Bob Proposes Five-Criteria Framework for Evaluating Logical Qubits appeared first on HPCwire.
The Ilminster Ring was originally found by an amateur metal detectorist in 2018 and bought this week for more than $100,000.
Von der Leyen tells Balkans summit that bloc needs to make enlargement process ‘faster and more credible’
The EU must prove its willingness and ability to take in new members and speed up its enlargement process, leaders of the bloc have said, as they gathered with their counterparts from six western Balkan countries that hope to join soon.
“The European Union has to show that it is capable of enlarging and willing to enlarge, and we want to discuss that here,” Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, told reporters on Friday at the summit in Tivat, a coastal town in Montenegro.
Continue reading...Team now plans to see if they can use yeast strains harvested from Ötzi the Iceman to brew beer too
Scientists have baked a sourdough loaf of bread using yeast strains harvested from a 5,000-year-old mummy and now plan to see if they can use them to brew beer too.
The yeast came from Ötzi the Iceman, a famous corpse remarkably preserved by being frozen in Alpine ice near the Italy-Austria border until he was discovered in 1991. Ötzi has been the subject of intense study since he was found and has shed much light on pre-historic European people and their way of life.
Continue reading...The additional payouts come from uncashed settlement funds and will be issued to eligible claimants beginning on June 9.
A wave of federal student loan changes lands next month, and asking the right questions now could save you money.
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
A Netherlands court said the three men warranted a custodial sentence "because of the nature and gravity" of their crime.
Michael Gledhill, 44, was arrested on suspicion of murder after he turned himself in following the fatal stabbing of Handy, the LAPD said.
Experts warn primary vote-counting could go on for days in governor’s race, LA mayoral race and congressional races
Three days after Californians headed to the polls, key races in the primary election remained too close to call and experts warned the counting could continue for days.
In the governor’s race, the British-born conservative pundit Steve Hilton was narrowly leading with an estimated 60% of ballots counted by Friday morning. Xavier Becerra, a former US health and human services secretary under Joe Biden, followed closely behind, and billionaire Tom Steyer trailed behind the pair. The top two vote-getters will advance to the general election in November.
Continue reading...From Values to Action: Where do LGBTIQ+ rights sit in UK foreign policy? 30 June 2026 — 17:30 TO 19:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
In an increasingly contested world order and global threats to LGBTIQ+ rights, experts discuss a path forward for LGBTIQ+ rights and the rule of law in UK foreign policy.
In an increasingly contested world order and global threats to LGBTIQ+ rights, experts discuss a path forward for LGBTIQ+ rights and the rule of law in UK foreign policy.LGBTIQ+ rights are a meaningful but increasingly complicated pillar of UK foreign policy. The UK has positioned LGBTIQ+ rights as an integral aspect of its foreign policy, from diplomacy to development and international advocacy.
But UK foreign policy on LGBTIQ+ issues has been shaped by challenges of aid cuts, changing political priorities at home and the wider world order. LGBTIQ+ people in the UK continue to face significant systemic issues, including hate crimes, discrimination, healthcare disparities and transphobia. UK foreign policy also operates in an increasingly contested normative world order, with rising global backlash against LGBTIQ+ rights.
To commemorate Pride Month, Chatham House’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity Working Group has the privilege of convening a panel bringing together leading voices to examine what lies ahead for the UK’s foreign policy approach towards LGBTIQ+ rights.
What role does advocacy for LGBTIQ+ rights currently play in UK foreign policy?
How might the UK’s commitment to protecting the rule of law and LGBTIQ+ rights - at home and abroad - advance its soft power?
How does the UK’s domestic record on LGBTIQ+ rights affect its legitimacy as a global advocate?
This panel is followed by a drinks reception.
CBS News projects that incumbent Mayor Karen Bass will advance to the November election, while her opponents, Councilmember Nithya Raman and political newcomer Spencer Pratt, compete for the final spot.
Senate votes 52-47 to fund ICE and border patrol for three years, ending partial shutdown, with House still to vote
The US Senate passed legislation to fund Donald Trump’s controversial immigration crackdown early on Friday morning, ending a partial government shutdown that has lingered since February.
The 52-47 vote on funding for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) passed with no Democratic support at 5am, after a marathon session of votes to knock down proposed amendments.
Continue reading...Collaboration expands quantum computing in LATAM, supporting quantum machine learning for digital pathology
SANTIAGO, Chile, and BOSTON, June 5, 2026 — Classiq and Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (UC Chile) have announced a joint research project to develop hybrid quantum algorithms for biomedical image analysis, assisted by classical machine learning and the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform for quantum-classical computing.
The 12-month engagement, titled “Enhancing Pathology through Quantum Computing,” is funded through Avanza UC 2025, the Internal Research and Creation Competition of UC Chile. To the collaborators’ knowledge, it is the first announced consortium in Latin America to combine quantum computing, machine learning and computational pathology.
The engagement marks quantum computing’s and Classiq’s growing presence in Latin America and reflects the company’s expanding work with academic, research and public-sector institutions, including in health innovation. It also reinforces Chile’s emerging role in quantum computing, AI and advanced technology development.
Quantum machine learning applies quantum computing methods to machine learning problems, including classification, pattern recognition and complex data analysis. The initial project focus is on renal pathology, an area of growing public health importance in Chile and across Latin America. This includes applying quantum machine learning to computational pathology, with an initial emphasis on kidney lesion classification, automated glomerular segmentation and semantic pattern search across full histological slides.
The work will be conducted in collaboration with Dr. Luciano Rebouças and Dr. Washington Conrado, researchers at Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (FIOCRUZ) and professors/researchers at Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA) in Brazil, combining expertise in digital pathology, computer vision and biomedical data analysis using curated histopathology datasets, provided by the Brazilian institutions. The research will leverage the Classiq quantum computing software platform and the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform to leverage a seamless workflow from algorithm development through to simulation and execution.
“Latin America has the scientific talent, institutional momentum and public health needs to support this next stage of quantum computing applications,” said Nir Minerbi, CEO and co-founder of Classiq. “This collaboration brings together quantum software engineering, machine learning and biomedical data expertise in a workflow and project that can help strengthen the regional quantum ecosystem while exploring a practical research path for health.”
The project will be led by Dr. Dardo Goyeneche of the Faculty of Physics at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Dr. Goyeneche is the founder and director of QuDIT, the Quantum Development of Information Theory group at UC, which brings together more than 20 students working on quantum information theory and quantum computing. He also directs Project QuAntü, Chile’s first universal quantum computer initiative, currently under construction since December 2025 at the UC Faculty of Physics. The team also includes Dr. Daniel Uzcátegui from Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción (UCSC), Chile, whose research at the interface between machine learning and quantum information theory provides a key bridge between the two core domains of this collaboration.
“This project connects fundamental quantum research with an important biomedical challenge,” said Dr. Goyeneche. “By working with Classiq and collaborators in Chile and Brazil, we are creating a regional platform for quantum machine learning in health, while giving researchers experience with modern quantum software engineering workflows used internationally in research and industry.”
The research team will use Classiq’s quantum software platform to model, synthesize and optimize quantum convolutional neural networks, variational quantum classifiers and quantum kernel methods. Selected algorithms will be simulated on NVIDIA AI infrastructure, executed on IonQ quantum hardware, and benchmarked against classical machine learning approaches using standard computer vision metrics.
The collaboration aligns with Chile’s National Strategy for Quantum Technologies 2025–2035, a recently launched government initiative aimed at strengthening the country’s quantum ecosystem and expanding national capabilities in advanced computing, secure communications and scientific innovation. The project also supports UC’s efforts to expand quantum computing research and education as part of the Faculty of Physics’ 2025–2029 strategic plan.
About Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (UC Chile) is one of Latin America’s leading research universities, dedicated to the creation and transfer of knowledge and to providing a values-based education rooted in its Catholic tradition. With rigorous academic standards and international best practices adopted from top universities worldwide, UC Chile maintains a permanent commitment to excellence in service to the Church and society.
Ranked 116th globally and first in Chile by the QS World University Rankings 2026, UC Chile also leads the country in invention patent applications filed by academic institutions, reflecting a strong focus on research, innovation, and technology transfer. The University is made up of 18 faculties, which include 26 schools and institutes, 7 interdisciplinary institutes, the UC College program, and the Villarrica Campus, together covering all areas of knowledge.
About Classiq
Classiq is the leading quantum computing software company, providing the technology that makes it practical for enterprises and researchers to access and harness quantum computing. Classiq’s quantum software engineering platform transforms high-level functional models into optimized, hardware-ready quantum circuits automatically. This enables teams to develop algorithms faster, optimize them for cost and performance, and make quantum applications usable sooner, without deep hardware expertise.
Through partnerships with global leaders in quantum cloud computing, including major hyperscalers and hardware providers, Classiq ensures that customers including Rolls Royce, Comcast, The BMW Group, Intesa Sanpaolo and many others, can design once and deploy anywhere. Its synthesis technology workflow enables organizations to produce scalable, efficient quantum code that accelerates research and reduces execution cost.
Source: Classiq
The post Classiq and UC Chile Launch Quantum-AI Project for Biomedical Imaging appeared first on HPCwire.
Senate Republicans passed funding for the Department of Homeland Security's immigration enforcement agencies following a "vote-a-rama." The measure didn't ban the administration's "anti-weaponization" fund.
Claims of discrimination at UCLA and Yale show how laws meant to foster inclusion are being used for the opposite
The Department of Justice’s civil rights division was once known as the crown jewel of the agency, but under Trump it has become just another tool of this administration’s politicized and racialized attacks targeting Black, Latino and other people of color. The latest examples are the sham findings of discrimination the division issued against the medical schools of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and Yale University for admitting high-achieving Black and Hispanic students. The administration is cynically wielding its anti-discrimination authority to tear down civil rights advances at the cost of equal educational opportunity.
In its findings, the justice department claimed the grades and test scores of Black and Hispanic admitted applicants were less competitive than those of white and Asian admits and said the schools intentionally discriminated against white and Asian applicants. But the justice department’s conclusions overstate the difference in scores between applicants and ignore other applicant data completely, including student transcripts, letters of recommendations and essays. The differences among GPAs and test scores – one standard deviation or less – were too small to be legally or statistically significant and may be explained by random factors unrelated to race. Comparatively, two standard deviations is the commonly accepted threshold that federal courts and social scientists consider statistically significant in racial discrimination cases.
ReNika Moore is director of the ACLU’s Racial Justice Program
Continue reading...CBS California Investigates reviewed online shopping carts at three major retailers selected randomly. We found prices fluctuated significantly over a period of weeks, making it difficult to determine when the best price is.
Seven Republican senators joined Democrats to block Fisa extension amid disquiet over nomination of Bill Pulte
Seven Republican senators joined Democrats early on Friday to block the extension of a powerful government surveillance program, a rebuke to Donald Trump for choosing an inexperienced ally as the country’s top intelligence official.
The renewal had been in question amid bipartisan concern over the US president’s appointment of Bill Pulte, a major Republican donor and heir to a home construction fortune, to serve as acting director of national intelligence.
Continue reading...Average tour earnings down 45%, with nearly three-fifths of musicians saying touring in Europe is no longer viable
More than a quarter of British musicians have lost all their work in the European Union since 2021, according to new research.
The report by European Movement UK, a cross-party campaign group advocating closer UK-EU relations, found that nearly half of British musicians had experienced a reduced amount of work in the EU since 2021, while more than a quarter had stopped working there altogether.
Continue reading...
Cannabis has been legal for medical purposes in New York state since 2016, and it became legal for recreational use since then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed legislation in 2021.
Coffee, on the other hand, has been legal for centuries.
Has cannabis use in New York state caught up to coffee in just a couple years?
That’s what John Kagia, acting executive director for the New York’s Office of Cannabis Management, said in an April 2 interview with Politico, for an article marking the law’s fifth anniversary.
"The number of New Yorkers who consume cannabis daily or near daily is the same as the number of New Yorkers who buy coffee from a coffee shop daily or near daily — 1.2-plus million people," Kagia said.
Kagia’s office told PolitiFact New York that the 1.2 million figure came from the New York State Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, an annual telephone survey of adults developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The survey found that in New York, 6.7% of adults aged 21 or older reported consuming cannabis daily or near daily.
Applying that 6.7% figure to New York’s population of slightly over 20 million, and adjusting for the percentage of the population that is 21 or over, puts the figure at roughly 1.2 million.
But what about coffee drinkers? That’s less clear.
Kagia’s office told PolitiFact New York that they were relying on a 2024 study conducted by Drive Research that found that 8% of Americans said they buy coffee from a coffee shop every day.
"It’s in the same ballpark as the percentage of Americans who grab a coffee on the way to work each day," said the Office of Cannabis Management’s chief medical officer, Dr. June Chin.
But that study does not address whether New Yorkers’ coffee behavior matches the nation. If the percentage holds for New Yorkers, that means about 1.6 million buy coffee outside their home nearly every day.
Other research suggests that consumption of store-bought cups of coffee is higher than cannabis use.
A 2018 Siena College Research Institute poll found that 48% of New York state adults said they drink coffee daily (42%) or five or six days a week (6%).
That’s a rate seven times higher than daily cannabis users, according to the more recent survey. However, the Siena College question did not ask the respondents whether they "buy coffee from a coffee shop" — as Kagia’s comparison phrased it — or made their own cup at home.
In June 2025, the publication Coffee Intelligence reported that 70% of customers were brewing their own cups at home. If that percentage held for New York state, then about 14% of the Siena poll’s respondents would be drinking coffee from outside their house five to seven times a week.
That would be about 2.8 million New Yorkers, or more than twice the level of daily or near-daily cannabis use reported in the CDC-designed survey.
Separately, the National Coffee Association found a higher percentage; the group’s 2026 national study found that 66% of Americans drink coffee daily. Using the same percentage of people buying their coffee at stores as Coffee Intelligence found, that would be nearly 20% buying coffee every day, or about 4 million, more than three times as high as the rate for cannabis.
"While there may be some estimates out there, this seems like a very difficult thing to calculate," said Mason Tvert, a marijuana rights activist and a partner at the consulting firm Strategies 64 in Denver.
Ironically, Tvert said, the cannabis-coffee comparison has a long history among anti-cannabis activists, of which Kagia is not one. Cannabis critics, Tvert said, frequently claim that jurisdictions have more marijuana stores or dispensaries than Starbucks outlets as a way of saying cannabis sales have spiraled out of control.
Kagia said, "The number of New Yorkers who consume cannabis daily or near daily is the same as the number of New Yorkers who buy coffee from a coffee shop daily or near daily — 1.2-plus million people."
A 2024 survey showed that about 1.2 million New Yorkers age 21 and older consume cannabis daily or near daily. But the estimates of New Yorkers who buy coffee daily are all higher, some significantly so. In addition, estimating New Yorkers’ coffee patterns is tricky because most data is national, not state-level.
The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression, so we rate it Mostly False.
IAIFI enters its second phase with increased funding, broader ambitions, and a growing community at the frontier of AI and fundamental physics.
June 5, 2026 — The MIT-led Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Fundamental Interactions (IAIFI) has received renewed support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for an additional five years, increasing annual funding from $4 million to $4.98 million. The renewal marks a new phase for IAIFI, which has spent its first five years building a research model and an interdisciplinary community around a central premise: that AI can open new ways of doing physics, while physics can help mold better AI systems.
Launched in 2020 as part of the National Artificial Intelligence Research Institutes program, IAIFI brings together researchers from MIT, along with Harvard, Northeastern, Tufts, and Boston universities. Its work has shown that machine learning can accelerate discovery in physics, while insights from physics can make AI systems more principled and interpretable.
“From the beginning, IAIFI has been built around a two-way street: AI enabling better physics, and physics enabling better AI,” says Jesse Thaler, IAIFI’s director and a professor of physics at MIT. “We have seen this virtuous cycle play out across multiple areas of physics and AI over the past five years. The exchange is producing not just new results, but genuinely new ways of doing science.”
Research Across Physics and AI
IAIFI’s research spans particle physics, nuclear physics, astrophysics, and foundational AI, with many advances emerging from collaborations across those areas.
In particle physics, IAIFI researchers have developed AI techniques to handle the immense data rates from the Large Hadron Collider in real-time, helping turn a firehose of collision data into actionable physics. In nuclear physics, IAIFI researchers are using AI-based generative methods to model the interactions of quarks and gluons in lattice quantum chromodynamics, creating new ways to study the structure of matter from first principles. In astrophysics, machine learning is being used to uncover new cosmic phenomena and improve the sensitivity of the MIT-led LIGO gravitational-wave experiment.
At the same time, ideas from physics are informing the development of new AI methods. IAIFI researchers are developing learning algorithms and new model architectures that embed physics knowledge and best practices — including symmetries, geometric structures, exactness guarantees, and statistical methodologies — directly into neural networks, producing systems that are more reliable, interpretable, and data-efficient.
“AI has begun to transform how physicists tackle some of the field’s most challenging problems,” says Mike Williams, interim director of IAIFI and a professor of physics at MIT. “More importantly, it is starting to expand the frontier of what problems we can realistically address, making it possible to pursue questions that were once completely beyond our reach.”
Training the Next Generation
A defining feature of IAIFI is its investment in people. The IAIFI Postdoctoral Fellows program supports early-career scientists pursuing research at the intersection of physics and AI, pairing each fellow with mentors in both domains and fostering collaboration across institutions.
Eight fellows have completed the program to date. Three have secured faculty positions; others have taken research roles at leading AI companies or joined startups, reflecting how broadly the skills cultivated at IAIFI translate.
“The IAIFI Fellowship shows what can happen when early-career scientists are given the freedom and support to work across traditional boundaries,” says Phiala Shanahan, IAIFI’s interim deputy director and a professor of physics at MIT. “Our fellows aren’t just contributing to physics or to AI separately — they are helping shape a growing field at the intersection.”
IAIFI’s annual PhD Summer School has become a focal point for the growing community of “centaur scientists” with expertise in both physics and AI. For the 2026 edition, the program received nearly 600 applications for roughly 100 in-person spots, with about 300 additional participants expected to join virtually. Previous participants have strongly recommended the school to their peers for its combination of lectures, hands-on tutorials, coding sprints, and networking events.
At MIT, IAIFI has helped shape new educational pathways, including an interdisciplinary PhD program in physics, statistics, and data science — a collaboration between the Department of Physics and the Statistics and Data Science Center — which has awarded 20 doctoral degrees since 2021. IAIFI members Phil Harris and Isaac Chuang have also developed a course on computational data science in physics, offered both on campus (Course 8.16) and as a free online course through MITx.
A Growing Community
Beyond its core research and training programs, IAIFI convenes researchers through its annual summer workshop, which will be held this year at the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing building. The institute also engages the broader public through collaborations with the MIT Museum, the Museum of Science in Boston, hackathons, and widely viewed online content exploring AI and physics.
“IAIFI shows what becomes possible when researchers in physics, computation, statistics, and data science organize around shared scientific questions,” says Nergis Mavalvala, dean of the MIT School of Science and the Curtis and Kathleen Marble Professor of Astrophysics. “That kind of sustained, cross-disciplinary collaboration is essential to the future of scientific discovery.”
IAIFI is hosted in the Laboratory of Nuclear Science at MIT, led by Director Jesse Thaler (currently on sabbatical), Interim Director Mike Williams, Interim Deputy Director Phiala Shanahan, and Managing Director Marisa LaFleur, along with steering committee members Lisa Barsotti, Isaac Chuang, Will Detmold, Bill Freeman, Phil Harris, Lina Necib, Tess Smidt, and Marin Soljacic (and steering committee members from other IAIFI universities).
Looking Ahead
As a member of the National Artificial Intelligence Research Institutes program, IAIFI is part of a nationwide effort to advance AI-driven discovery and innovation.
“The connections among the NSF AI Institutes have been as valuable as the work within them and continue to grow,” says Marisa LaFleur, IAIFI’s managing director. “We’re sharing management strategies and resources for training, community building, and collaboration that make the whole network stronger.”
For IAIFI, the renewed funding is an opportunity to push deeper into what the institute calls the “physics of AI” — using physical reasoning, physical challenges, and physical tools not just to apply AI, but to understand and improve it. That agenda, along with a growing community of researchers trained to work across disciplines, is what drives the institute’s next phase.
“The first phase of IAIFI established the model: interdisciplinary research, early-career talent, and a dynamic community, organized around the idea that AI and physics make each other stronger,” Thaler says. “Now we have the foundation — and the entrepreneurial spirit of our centaur scientists — to push that model into new territory and raise our ambitions.”
Source: MIT News
The post NSF Renews IAIFI Funding to Advance AI-Driven Physics Research appeared first on HPCwire.
EU’s Maroš Šefčovič says summit will ‘probably’ be in July but sources say it could be put back as talks deadlocked
The EU has said Keir Starmer’s upcoming summit “resetting” the UK-Europe relationship may still happen in July, amid growing fears it could be postponed to the autumn as talks over youth mobility remain deadlocked.
“The summit is supposed to be mid-July but at the moment it could be put back to after the summer,” said one EU diplomat.
Continue reading...Republican states rebrand June as ‘nuclear family month’ or ‘fidelity month’ in latest attack on LGBTQ+ communities
June is widely marked as gay Pride month – when LGBTQ+ communities march to protest discrimination and celebrate their identities in the month that the modern US gay liberation movement was born out of the 1969 uprising at New York’s Stonewall Inn – although not so much in certain Republican-led states this year.
Some Republican governors have suddenly come up with alternative labels for the month, which both supporters and opponents view as counterprogramming.
Continue reading...Downing Street says it does not share state department’s view, which Lib Dems condemn as flagrant interference
No 10 has dismissed the Trump administration’s criticism of “two-tier policing” in the UK as the US state department offered condolences to the family of the murdered teenager Henry Nowak.
Downing Street said it did not recognise the state department’s position, echoing the justice secretary, David Lammy, who had earlier said it did not chime with his experience.
Continue reading...June 5, 2026 — The BSC AI Factory of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS) is extending the technological and scientific capabilities and resources of this infrastructure across the entire territory with the launch of five sector hubs (nodes).
This initiative is promoted by the Ministry for Digital Transformation and the Civil Service of the Government of Spain, through the State Secretariat for Digitalisation and Artificial Intelligence. It involves a strategic alliance of five technology centers that jointly support the activity through cross-cutting and collaborative actions, serving the entire strategic sector nationwide.
These centers are: TECNALIA from the Basque Country, coordinator of the network, which will drive the Health, Pharma, and Biotech hub; Fundación CTIC from Asturias, responsible for the Agriculture, Climate, and Blue Economy hub; Eurecat in Catalonia, for the Communication and Media sector hub; Instituto Tecnológico de Galicia (ITG), to promote the Energy hub; and the Instituto Tecnológico de Informática (ITI) from Valencia, which will manage the Finance and Legal hub. These centers are officially recognized by the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities under the RED CERVERA program, which highlights centers with high scientific and technological capacity and R&D experience.
To this end, the BSC has awarded the creation of these sector hubs to the UTE AI4ES for 2.7 million euros, which works in a coordinated manner to develop and promote technologies based on AI and data.
AI Adoption in Strategic Sectors and SMEs
The hubs are designed to support and accelerate AI adoption, development, and application of artificial intelligence in strategic sectors of the Spanish economy, especially among SMEs and representative organizations of each sector. They aim to achieve a nationwide impact by energizing the ecosystem virtually and through various events that will take place in different cities. Specifically, work will be carried out across five hubs specialized in distinct strategic sectors: health, pharma & biotech; energy; agriculture, climate & blue economy (marine and coastal industries); finance & legal; and communication & media.
The project’s objectives are to systematically analyze the needs and potential of each sector regarding AI, adapting actions on an annual and strategic basis; to promote the creation of applied AI solutions with a real impact on the processes, products, or services of the corresponding sector; and to connect sector stakeholders with the capabilities of the BSC Artificial Intelligence Factory, including its technological and scientific resources.
The first event will take place on June 16—an online workshop open to all stakeholders and companies from the various strategic sectors. It will serve to introduce the program and host a participatory dynamic to identify the initial sector challenges and needs to address. A hybrid event is also scheduled to take place in Barcelona before the end of the year, featuring online streaming and networking workshops for SMEs.
Source: BSC-CNS
The post BSC AI Factory Launches Five Sector Hubs to Expand AI Adoption Across Spain appeared first on HPCwire.
Chemists have a scale problem. It is estimated that chemical space contains as many as 10^60 small organic molecules, however, only a tiny fraction of that have ever been studied in detail. Finding useful new molecules for batteries, materials and other applications remains a slow and labor-intensive process that often relies on a combination of lab experiments and computational screening. Even using modern computing resources, exploring more than a small portion of that space is difficult.
At TPC26, University of Michigan PhD student Anoushka Bhutani discussed one possible way to speed up that search and overcome the scale problem.
Her talk focused on MIST – a family of large molecular models trained on billions of chemical structures and designed to predict a wide range of molecular properties. The goal with MIST is to help researchers point out the promising candidates before committing significant simulation or experimental resources. The real-world applications include everything from battery electrolytes to fragrance design.
Bhutani’s presentation highlighted how advances in large-scale computing and data availability are beginning to change how researchers explore the chemical space. This is making it possible to evaluate far larger numbers of candidate molecules than was previously practical.
The largest version of MIST was trained on roughly 2 billion molecules and contains about 1.8 billion parameters. With that scale in the context, Bhutani also talked about the cost of building the models.
“Training a foundation model is an extremely computationally quite expensive,” said Bhutani. “And we wanted to make sure that we were using the compute we had been given as optimally as possible. So we turned to neural scaling laws. However, neural scaling laws only account for the amount of data you’re training on and the number of parameters your model has.”
Bhutani explained, “Model performance is also sensitive to many other hyperparameters, such as learning rate or the depth of the model. So we added penalty terms to account for these. And this reduced the need for full factorial sweep over all possible hyperparameters which was done in prior scaling studies. In addition to this, we used Bayesian parameterization to fit the models, which gave us robust uncertainty estimates.”
To avoid wasting compute on extensive tuning runs, Bhutani and her team modified existing scaling law approaches to account for factors beyond model and dataset size, such as the effects of hyperparameters. The team also used Bayesian parameterization to guide the process.
Those changes reduced model development costs by roughly 10x. For academic groups trying to build large scientific models on tight budgets, that sort of impact may be just as important as the applications themselves.
The first application Bhutani highlighted was battery research. Her team focused on lithium-air batteries: a technology that has long attracted interest because of its potential for extremely high energy density.
The challenge with them is finding electrolyte materials that can survive inside the battery. Both the oxygen-related reaction products and the lithium metal anode are highly reactive, making the search for stable molecules difficult.
“These are attractive because they have extremely high energy density, because they use oxygen from the air as a cathodic reaction, so they don’t need to store the extra mass of the cathode,” emphasized Bhutani. “However, it’s also very hard to find electrolytes for which can be used in these batteries because both the oxygen intermediates formed during the reaction and the lithium metal anode are highly reactive.”
The team used MIST to fine-tune models to predict a range of properties relevant to electrolyte design. This included stability, safety and phase behavior. Candidate molecules were screened against multiple requirements at the same time. This was more efficient compared to evaluating one property at a time.
Bhutani shared that the workflow identified 139 potential electrolyte candidates after running on eight H100 GPUs for around eight hours. The results show how large molecular models can help narrow enormous chemical search spaces before researchers move to more expensive simulations.
The most unexpected results from the research came from olfaction – the sense of smell. This was a problem that Bhutani described as difficult because datasets are sparse and subjective. They are also often disconnected from molecular structure. Two molecules can look nearly identical but smell completely different – and structurally unrelated molecules can produce similar scents.
Even with those challenges, MIST performed well when it was optimized. More specifically, when it was fine-tuned for scent prediction, it was able to identify meaningful relationships between different scent categories. It was able to group similar smells together even though the task is notoriously difficult. The findings also pointed to deeper structural patterns that resemble those seen in neuroscience research on how humans perceive odors.
Bhutani’s presentation at this year’s TPC revealed how large-scale molecular models are beginning to move beyond prediction and toward discovery. This could go a long way in helping researchers navigate vast and challenging regions of chemical space that are impractical to explore through simulation or experimentation alone.
The post Foundation Models Offer a New Way to Explore Chemical Space appeared first on HPCwire.
Protesters say Mikie Sherrill has failed to address the dire hunger and labor strike at the immigration detention center
A few dozen protesters rallied outside the New Jersey statehouse in Trenton on Monday afternoon. They carried handmade signs with messages like “U made it worse” and “Gov Sherrill, stop lying about Delaney Hall”. One led a collective chant that summed up the rally’s mood: “Hey, Mikie, WTF?”
The target of their ire: the governor, Mikie Sherrill. Protesters say the newly elected Democratic governor has failed to adequately address the dire situation at the Delaney Hall immigration detention center in Newark, where at least 300 detainees are on a hunger and labor strike.
Continue reading...I’ve mentioned it before, but Chris Siebenmann is basically the Raymond Chen of the UNIX world, and today he’s filling that role perfectly once again.
I recently read Simon Tatham’s Nitpicking the shell history scene in Tron: Legacy, where one thing that surprised Tatham was the film using ‘
login -n root‘ to becomerootinstead of ‘su‘. This surprised me because I found that perfectly ordinary, and this turns up both a bit of Unix history and a difference between modern Unixes.Plain ‘
↫ Chris Siebenmannsu‘ can let you become another user, includingroot, but what it explicitly doesn’t do by default is create a new login shell for that user. If you do ‘su root‘, the new root shell normally inherits most of your environment, your current directory, and so on. Sometimes this is what you want and sometimes you really want a new login environment, and originally in Unix how you got the latter was to run ‘login‘ from your existing shell session (and this meant that login was setuid root, like su).
Unsurprisingly, this distinction has persisted to this day in various UNIX-like operating systems, but in different ways. Some maintain the explicit distinction, while others have more or less standardised on using su for both use cases. It’s an interesting bit of UNIX archeology.
Government figures show unemployment rate at 4.3% amid rising inflation and economic uncertainty from Iran war
US employers added 172,000 jobs in May while the country’s unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, a sign of a resilient labor market despite rising inflation and economic uncertainty brought on by continued conflict in the Middle East.
Economists initially predicted there would be about 80,000 new jobs and a steady unemployment rate of 4.3%. Job figures for March and April were also revised up 29,000 and 64,000, respectively, a 93,000 boost compared with initial figures.
Continue reading...The FDA is moving ahead with a safety study of the abortion pill mifepristone, a senior FDA official confirmed to CBS News, a step that could create a path for the Trump administration to restrict access to the medication.
It remains unclear how close the U.S. and Iran are to striking a deal to end the Iran war amid continued hostilities between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah.
Commentary: Google assumes all Android users are wealthy and sexy. Nice, if true.
The bipartisan Roadless Rule is under fire. It’s just one way Trump could make our public lands unrecognizable
Modern roads in the United States will last for decades. And yet the damage they cause in our national forests is immediate.
Since 2001, the Roadless Area Conservation Rule has protected more than 58m acres of national forests from development, barring road construction and timber harvests. The policy came to be with huge bipartisan support; almost 2 million people submitted comments on it, the majority of whom championed the protections.
Charles F Sams III (Cayuse and Walla Walla) was director of the National Park Service from 2021 to 2025. He is now director of Indigenous programs at the Yale Center for Environmental Justice
Continue reading...Review detects ‘forever chemicals’ in many of the state’s tested streams and rivers, including drinking water sources
Around half of California waterways tested by regulators are contaminated with pesticides considered Pfas, “forever chemicals”, a new analysis of state and federal records shows, highlighting a risk in the substances’ wide use that is only beginning to come into focus.
The pesticides are linked to a range of health problems, including cancer, and the review is the first to systematically check for the dangerous substances in streams and rivers, which include drinking water sources.
Continue reading...Powerful, rugged video doorbells don't have to empty your bank account. We've tested these budget models and like what they've got.
Cybersecurity experts say outdated router security protocols might be exposing your entire home network. Here's what to do.
I know I have to take off my footpads and after market fender, but do I need to pull off my sidekicks?
Former student Almunthir Daqamah, 21, due to appear in court on Friday while campus safety officer is in stable condition in hospital
A man has been charged with attempted murder after a staff member was shot with a crossbow at the University of Surrey.
Almunthir Daqamah, 21, a Saudi national, has been charged with attempted murder, possession of an offensive weapon, two counts of possession of a bladed article and possession of class B drugs, Surrey police said.
Continue reading...In a CBS News interview, White House border czar Tom Homan defended conditions at the Delaney Hall ICE detention center, amid intense protests over the New Jersey facility. "
President Trump, a native New Yorker and self-described Knicks fan, said he was invited to attend a Knicks playoff game by the team's owner James Dolan, who has donated to his political campaigns.
Former attorney general says expected replacement, Todd Blanche, was in charge of controversial process. Plus: why are US consumers so angry?
Good morning. Appearing before the House oversight and reform committee, the former attorney general Pam Bondi told lawmakers that Todd Blanche, the man Donald Trump has lined up to replace her, was “in charge” of the US Department of Justice’s controversial handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case. She also said she was “not certain of the extent” that Trump knew about the crimes of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell before they became public.
In her opening statement, Bondi defended the justice department’s handling of the records under her leadership and tried to distance herself from the release and review of the files, saying she did not “lead every aspect” of the DoJ’s effort, but that it was Blanche who oversaw it. If formally nominated by Trump to be attorney general on a permanent basis, Blanche would require confirmation from the US Senate.
Why is the release of the files under scrutiny? Several lawmakers as well as survivors of Epstein’s abuse, have criticized some of the department’s actions and raised concerns over certain redactions and the disclosure of sensitive personal information in the files. Bondi acknowledged “there were redaction errors” in the release, but added: “Since day one of this process, this department has been committed to accountability and transparency.”
What are the latest developments in Ukraine? In his first public letter to Vladimir Putin since the 2022 invasion, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has called for face-to-face negotiations. Acknowledging shifting US priorities while Washington remained focused on the Iran war, the Ukrainian president said it would be wrong to simply wait for the Trump administration to step in. The proposal comes as Ukraine regains some battlefield leverage through improved long-range strike capabilities, even as Moscow intensifies its deadly aerial campaign across the country.
Continue reading...The wing-back’s advanced positioning paid off against Senegal. More impressive play at the World Cup could go far for the US’s hopes and his transfer prospects
In the sixth minute of last Sunday’s friendly against Senegal, the US men’s national team were midway through what became a 20-pass sequence of sustained possession. Beginning with a throw-in along the left touchline, just inside the opponent’s half, the World Cup co-hosts tried to break down the visitors to no avail, eventually recirculating back to the center-backs to survey their next route.
Amid all that, Sergiño Dest stayed upfield to offer an outlet if a line-breaking window presented itself. Even when lined up as a nominal defender – he has logged most of his 38 international caps as a right-back or right wing-back – the 25-year-old has posed a threat with his determined dribbling and eagerness to join the attack.
Continue reading...My father joined the program when I was eight months old and retired 46 years later. He would be encouraging journalists at CBS to speak out
The end of the 60 Minutes broadcast as we know it has sickened millions of longtime viewers, colleagues, and all of us who are offended and threatened by our current administration and its cronies’ assaults on the first amendment. The news of Scott Pelley’s firing hits particularly hard. He spoke of “risking my life and the happiness of my family because of my devotion to the broadcast”.
Having literally grown up with that broadcast – my father, Morley Safer, joined the program when I was eight months old and retired 46 years later – I am acutely aware of the costs of that devotion. 60 Minutes, particularly in its early days, demanded commitments of time and travel that were keenly felt at home.
Sarah Safer is the daughter of Morley Safer, who was a 60 Minutes correspondent for 46 years
Continue reading...School of the Art Institute of Chicago professor put under investigation after a student complained about a case study
A tenured art therapy professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) was suspended from teaching and placed under investigation following a student’s complaint about an assigned case study that mentioned violence against Palestinians.
Savneet Talwar, a faculty member with the school’s art therapy and counseling program, assigned the case study in April to a class on the cultural dimensions of therapy. The assignment asked students to develop an ethical treatment plan for a hypothetical queer, Muslim woman living in the US.
Continue reading...Detainees say they’re given ‘rotten’ water and denied meals for not signing papers in English that they don’t understand
Detainees at Florida’s notorious “Alligator Alcatraz” immigration jail said guards were denying them food and fresh water on Thursday until they signed documents presented to them in English that they did not understand.
In an audio recording of a telephone call to an immigration advocacy group heard by the Guardian, more than half a dozen detainees alleged that the water given to them over the last three days was “rotten” and containing mosquito larvae, in an apparent attempt to pressure them to sign.
Continue reading...No more excuses: These workouts are at your fingertips and can be used at any time.
New York City’s new commissioner of consumer and worker protection is launching an “aggressive” campaign to fight junk fees and deceptive practices
New York mayor Zohran Mamdani’s top consumer watchdog has one gripe about New Yorkers – he would like them to complain more. “We get about 30,000 complaints a year,” said Samuel AA Levine, New York City’s new commissioner of consumer and worker protection. “I’d really like to get the number up.”
From downtown Manhattan, he has renewed a war on junk fees and deceptive subscriptions that he started in Washington DC as the Federal Trade Commission’s consumer protection director during the Biden presidency, banned hotels’ hidden charges, and cracked down on delivery companies’ “design tricks” that lower wages and predatory debt collection. Since January, his office has sued self-storage companies and won millions from Uber Eats and Amazon.
Continue reading...The National Transportation Safety Board released its preliminary report on a United Airlines plane that struck a light pole on the New Jersey Turnpike in May.
More than 1 million people advised to evacuate homes amid 80mph winds and heavy rain
Typhoon Jangmi (also known as Typhoon No 6) moved northwards over the course of this week. From Okinawa to mainland Japan, prolonged and heavy rainfall led to landslide warnings and the flooding of rivers, with Japan issuing level 4 warnings for some rivers, signalling a risk of overflowing. This level is high enough for municipalities to issue evacuation orders. Three-hourly rainfall totals on Wednesday reached 105mm in Chiyoda, Tokyo, which was a record high for the month. Sustained wind speeds of 80mph (130kph) were recorded on Monday – making it a category 1 typhoon – bringing damage and disruption to businesses, transport, infrastructure and the environment.
By Wednesday, 23 people had been injured, 17 of whom were in Okinawa. The typhoon damaged 57 homes and led to 60,000 homes losing electricity. In addition to this, 1.52 million people were advised to evacuate by authorities. The typhoon damaged the exterior wall of Himeji Castle, a Unesco world heritage site in western Japan. The maximum recorded wind speed at Himeji was 56mph, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency. The typhoon has now weakened into a tropical depression and has moved eastwards, away from the islands.
Continue reading...Apple and Google start rolling out end-to-end encrypted RCS chats in beta for iPhone owners and Android phone users.
Rules against power: Does the world need a new economic alliance to balance the US and China? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…
In this week’s episode, our experts discuss Chatham House’s latest report: Saving global economic governance from the ‘Trump shock’.
Would the world benefit from a new international alliance to stop China and the US from undermining the global rules we all depend on – a new ‘third pole’?
That’s the conclusion of a new Chatham House report published this week. How would an economic bloc like this work? Who could build it? And how would China and the US – even post-Trump – react to such a challenge to their power?
Laurel Rapp, director of our US and North America Programme, talks over an audacious plan for a new world order with the report’s author and director of our Global Economy and Finance Programme, Creon Butler. They are joined by director of our Europe and Russia and Eurasia Programmes, Grégoire Roos.
Read our report: Saving global economic governance from the ‘Trump shock’.
Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.
More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Explore our other Chatham House podcasts.
Experts say dismantling the ocean observation system will ‘severely degrade’ the accuracy of weather predictions
The Trump administration’s plan to dismantle an ocean observation system vital to understanding the climate crisis and marine ecosystems would “severely degrade” the accuracy of weather predictions and El Niño forecasts, with economic consequences for the US, European and American scientists have warned.
Decommissioning the US system, which plays a major part in a global ocean observation network, would lead to a massive increase in error in the annual estimates of ocean heating rates, according to research published last month.
Continue reading...Israel and its lobby will use section 224 of the National Defense Authorization Act to bind the US to a state that has gone rogue
Congress is considering legislation that would embed Israel’s military deeply within the US military-industrial complex. Stunned by the cratering of public support for Israeli policies in Gaza, Lebanon and the West Bank and towards Iran, Israel’s advocates are frantically seeking to preserve and even escalate US support for the Jewish state in ways that do not rely on defense of its policies or permit scrutiny of the manipulations involved.
Politically, this means avoiding public discussion of Israeli policies in Gaza, Lebanon, the West Bank or Iran and disguising the sources of massive amounts of money pouring into election races to defeat candidates raising questions about US support for Israel. The proposed legislation shows what this means bureaucratically.
Continue reading...
If Eric Murphy loses his primary election on June 9, he believes he already knows one reason why.
Last year, the North Dakota state representative, a Republican, tried to expand the window of pregnancy in which women could access abortion. The state legislature had banned it for almost everyone from the moment of conception.
Tied up in court, the ban hadn’t yet gone into effect. But Murphy wanted to lock in a less restrictive law, making abortion accessible up to 15 weeks and even later for women whose doctors deemed it a medical necessity.
To convince his fellow legislators, he read out loud from two ProPublica stories about women in Texas who died without lifesaving care. “Physicians felt compelled to follow the law,” he said in a hearing, “and both women died so that an inane law could be followed.”
A conservative colleague had warned him not to file the bill, Murphy told ProPublica, recalling the man’s words: “I can no longer protect you from who’s going to come after you.”
There was some truth to that sentiment.
At least four Republican state lawmakers who challenged severe abortion restrictions lost support from anti-abortion groups and key party allies and went on to lose primary elections, ProPublica found.
The blueprint in those races was remarkably similar. Opponents either embraced stricter abortion policies or avoided the issue altogether. Anti-abortion organizations campaigned against the incumbents, party endorsements shifted to their opponents and activists worked to turn out voters in low-participation primary elections.
In some of the races ProPublica examined, lawmakers who replaced abortion-ban reformers went on to support even stricter abortion legislation. In South Carolina, for instance, two new senators supported a bill to eliminate almost all exceptions to the state’s abortion ban. One provision of the bill would send women convicted of illegally terminating their pregnancies to jail.
Murphy is one of at least two Republican state lawmakers now facing a contested primary after trying to modify their states’ abortion restrictions. Richard Briggs, a state senator from Tennessee, is also fighting to keep his seat. In 2019, Briggs voted for the state’s so-called trigger law — a ban that would snap into place if the federal right to abortion was ever overturned.
But he had second thoughts after that actually happened. A cardiothoracic surgeon, Briggs realized the newly activated law didn’t provide adequate protections for patients having medical complications. “As a medical doctor, I drew the line,” he said in an interview. He introduced bills for a clearer medical exception and protection for doctors who intervened in cases where a fatal fetal anomaly risked the mother’s health.
The latter bill failed and now serves as ammunition for the challenger vying for his seat in the state’s Aug. 6 primary. “My opponent consistently works to weaken Tennessee’s pro life laws,” Kent Morrell says on his campaign website, noting that Tennessee Right to Life had revoked its endorsement of Briggs.
Murphy, who teaches biomedical sciences at the University of North Dakota’s medical school, ultimately did not succeed at reforming the state’s ban. His bill failed 87-6, and the state Supreme Court later reinstated the original ban, which forbids abortion from conception, with exceptions for rape and incest up to six weeks and to save the life of the mother.


The first time Murphy ran for election, his county’s Republican Party had endorsed him. Not this time. Instead, the party endorsed his two challengers, including Jill Chandler, the executive director of a “crisis pregnancy center” who believes abortion should be banned from conception.
She told ProPublica she happened to be present in the committee room when Murphy made the case for his bill. “To know that he was an endorsed Republican candidate from my district and one that I had voted for because of that endorsement was eye-opening,” she said. “I remember thinking, ‘This can never happen again.’”
It was not the first time either Briggs or Murphy had taken positions that aggravated members of their parties in legislatures that have taken sharp turns to the right. Murphy voted against book bans and private school vouchers. Briggs had urged the public to get COVID-19 shots and has said that medical expertise should trump politics in decisions that involve public health.
Briggs expressed confidence in his election chances; he feels that voters agree with the decisions he’s made and noted that his Republican colleague, Sen. Becky Duncan Massey, survived a primary challenge over her support for abortion-ban exceptions.
Murphy believes the “silent majority” supports the intent of his abortion bill, but primary races historically have low turnout. It could come down to a handful of votes, he said.
“I might lose an election over this,” Murphy said, “but would I rather win an election by not doing the right thing?”

Mary DuBuisson, a former state Republican representative in a suburb outside of New Orleans, considers herself passionately “pro-life.” Like Briggs, she voted for her state’s near-total abortion ban in 2019. Three years later, just before Louisiana’s trigger law was implemented, it came before the legislature again.
Recognizing that women would now have to live under the restriction, DuBuisson wanted to make sure victims of rape and incest could terminate their pregnancies. When her colleagues refused to include those exceptions, she became the only Republican to vote against the ban.
A year later, she caused a stir when she sponsored a bill that would have allowed women whose pregnancies were not viable to end them. “To force a woman to carry to term with zero chance of survival is heartless and cruel,” she said at the time.
She didn’t feel it would be controversial. Other Republican women in the House told her she was doing the right thing. But when it was time to vote, another female Republican state lawmaker made a motion that ultimately succeeded at killing the bill in committee. “I mean, I just couldn’t understand,” she said of all her colleagues. “What if this was you, your daughter or granddaughter?”
When she came up for reelection, her primary opponent latched onto her record. Brian Glorioso was an attorney she had handily defeated in 2018. He called her proposed legislation a leftist attempt to circumvent the state’s abortion ban and said any “pro-abortion” doctor would falsely deem a pregnancy nonviable in records just to perform the procedure.
She beat him in the Oct. 14, 2023, primary by 384 votes — not enough to avoid a runoff.
Then, he got some extra support.
On Oct. 16, Louisiana Right to Life told its followers this runoff was key. Glorioso was expected to have a 100% “pro-life” voting record, while DuBuisson’s was 77%.
On Oct. 27, the state’s new governor-elect, Republican Jeff Landry, endorsed him, citing issues other than abortion; he wouldn’t tell ProPublica whether DuBuisson’s record on it played a role. But Landry, who had defended the state’s ban as attorney general, made clear during his campaign that he was “an unwavering defender of life, especially in the face of adversity,” citing his 100% rating from a national anti-abortion group.
“I think it partially cost me my election,” DuBuisson said of her attempts to reform the ban.
History repeated itself the following year, this time in South Carolina.
Three state senators — all Republicans who consider themselves “pro-life” — worked across party lines to defeat an abortion bill that essentially banned the procedure from conception and eliminated rape and incest exceptions. At the time, the state allowed abortion up to 20 weeks.
Sens. Sandy Senn and Penry Gustafson spoke out against limitations on abortion access for victims of rape and incest. Sen. Katrina Shealy, who had the longest tenure for a woman in the state legislature, pushed for making abortion accessible up to 12 weeks and later for exceptions in cases involving rape, incest and fatal fetal anomalies. Ultimately, a six-week window with rape, incest and fatal fetal exceptions became law.

Amid the Statehouse showdown, they were nicknamed the “Sister Senators.” All lost their county GOP’s endorsement to their male opponents.
But the bigger repercussions came from anti-abortion groups that mobilized a multifront grassroots campaign against them. Students for Life Action announced that it generated “37,000 pieces of mail, almost 130,000 personal text messages, more than 51,000 phone calls and thousands of doors knocked” to unseat the trio.
“All three of them got voted out — every single one of them lost because of that decision,” said Dr. Matthew Clark, the executive director of Personhood South Carolina, which believes abortion shouldn’t exist at all and that women who have them should be prosecuted for murder.
Clark, an allergist and Presbyterian pastor, said his group’s desired legislation has a better chance to advance now that the Sister Senators have been replaced.
Matt Leber, who beat Senn, previously co-sponsored a bill as a member of the state House that would make abortion a crime equivalent to homicide. It failed to advance, and Leber withdrew his name as a co-sponsor amid a controversy surrounding it in 2023.
This legislative session, Leber and Carlisle Kennedy, who beat Shealy, supported a bill that carries misdemeanor criminal penalties for women seeking abortions, with jail time up to two years. Senate Bill 1095 passed with supermajority support out of a committee Leber sits on.
The bill died before the session, but watchers of abortion restrictions noticed it got further than any other similarly repressive legislation ever has.

The outcomes do not neatly match public polling. Surveys in states such as South Carolina and Louisiana have found that many Republican voters support at least some exceptions to abortion bans, including in cases of rape or threats to a woman’s health.
But primary elections often draw only a small share of eligible voters, giving outsized influence to highly engaged activists and organized interest groups.
DuBuisson’s runoff drew about one-third of registered voters. Participation in the South Carolina primaries was lower still. Some races were decided on tiny margins; Senn lost hers by 33 votes.
The North Dakota GOP has moved further to the right on abortion in recent years, even as polling suggested the state’s restrictions were losing support from Republican voters. At its 2026 convention, the party passed a resolution rejecting any policies that “normalize” abortion.
North Dakota is one of the few states with a multimember system, where two representatives and one senator govern together in the same district. District 43, which Murphy currently represents, is one of the only purple districts in an otherwise deeply red state. It includes part of Grand Forks, a growing college town home to the University of North Dakota.
Murphy’s fellow representative, Democrat Zac Ista, told ProPublica he hadn’t been able to make a dent in this legislature. He announced he wouldn’t be seeking reelection, opening up an opportunity for a Republican takeover of the district.
Ista said the lack of support rallying around Murphy is due to his position on abortion, as well as culture-war legislation he refused to support. “I think it’s illustrative of that schism, where at this district level, Republicans are really trying to sort of press the most extreme conservative opinions,” Ista said.
Richard Glynn, the GOP county chair in Murphy’s district, had previously supported Murphy’s abortion bill. In written testimony, Glynn shared his experience hearing about young women performing illegal abortions when he was a freshman at the University of South Dakota in 1966. Four young women who were in sororities died from using metal hangers to terminate their pregnancies, he wrote.
“These deaths were viewed as preventable if these girls could have received competent care. Unfortunately, North Dakota is going down the same path with limited access to obstetric care that negatively impacts the health of the woman,” his letter said.
When reached by phone, Glynn said delegates in the county voted and Murphy had the least amount of votes, which is why he did not receive the county’s endorsement.
Glynn declined to answer more questions before hanging up on a reporter.
One of Murphy’s opponents, Mike Holmes, has drawn a lot of excitement — and an endorsement from Gov. Kelly Armstrong — for his expertise in energy technology and industrial development. The governor said Holmes understands “what it takes to keep North Dakota’s economy strong.” Holmes has been silent on abortion and didn’t respond to ProPublica’s requests for an interview.
Chandler, who touted her “respect for life” in a campaign mailer, is favored among anti-abortion groups. “It’s a pretty stark contrast,” said Bridget Turbide, executive director of North Dakota Right to Life, who called Murphy’s proposal “the most extreme pro-choice bill we’ve ever seen.”

Citizens Alliance of North Dakota, a conservative group that opposes abortion among other causes, paid for a mailer calling Chandler a “champion of family values.” The same group marked Murphy in “bad standing” in an online roster of legislators, questioning his alignment with North Dakota values.
Murphy’s third colleague who also represents District 43, Republican State Sen. Jeff Barta, campaigned alongside him in 2022 as part of a unified Republican ticket when the primary election was uncontested.
Asked about the upcoming race and the candidates, Barta pointed to Murphy’s proposal that would have expanded abortion access in North Dakota.
“Last session, he introduced House Bill 1488, which created a little divide there,” Barta said.
Barta said Murphy has also broken with the party on other issues.
“That probably opened the door for the third candidate to run,” Barta added. Had that not happened, Murphy would have made it to the general election without having to defend his spot on the ballot.
Before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, lawmakers taking such nuanced stands on abortion bans may not have risked a career death sentence, said abortion historian and law professor Mary Ziegler.
“The kind of incrementalism that Eric Murphy seems to be doing is something from a bygone era, where people were more pragmatic in the movement and not punished for it,” she said.
The post These Republican Lawmakers Challenged Abortion Bans. Then They Faced Backlash. appeared first on ProPublica.
Some of these word and puzzle games offer a challenge, while others are more casual.
The strictly voluntary order is intended to review artificial intelligence models that could pose risks to the US.
Hundreds of detained people launched a hunger and labor strike at Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey, over Memorial Day weekend to protest inhumane conditions at the immigration detention facility run by the for-profit company GEO Group. Protesters flocked to the scene to echo detainees’ pleas for release and better conditions — and were met with brutal tactics from federal, local, and state law enforcement officials, who beat, tear-gassed, and arrested protesters.
“Detainees are raising that they have no access to quality medical care, that they’re not getting needed medications,” Andrea Sáenz, a former federal appellate immigration judge who was fired by the Trump administration last year, tells The Intercept Briefing. “They don’t have enough food to eat. The food that they are getting is spoiled. They’re facing hostility and harassment and violence from the guards.”
This week on the podcast, host Jessica Washington speaks to Sáenz and Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior policy fellow at the American Immigration Council, about the conditions at the 1,000-bed jail and other detention centers across the country. The Trump administration has restricted members of Congress and state officials from oversight of federal immigration detention centers. “ICE doesn’t want people to see the way that they’re treating human beings in these facilities,” says Sáenz.
Intercept reporter Noah Hurowitz, who covers federal law enforcement and immigration, was on the scene at Delaney Hall on Monday. He describes the violence that erupted outside of the facility between protesters and law enforcement officers.
“The ICE agents on the scene were quite willing to use violence at times against protesters,” says Hurowitz. “But from everything I saw, the Newark and New Jersey police were much more indiscriminate with their violence and much more willing to attack outright and fire tear gas and really put people in danger.”
Reichlin-Melnick says that the Trump administration’s war on immigrants should concern everyone. “We’re seeing every government database being turned into a tool of the mass deportation state, and that is something that impacts all Americans,” he adds, “because you cannot carry out a mass deportation of 4 percent of the U.S. population without fundamentally transforming the United States into more of a police state.”
For more, listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.
Jessica Washington: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing, I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.
Noah Hurowitz: And I’m Noah Hurowitz. I cover federal law enforcement and immigration at The Intercept.
JW: Noah, you were outside Delaney Hall in Newark, New Jersey, on Monday afternoon after dozens of protesters were arrested the night before after clashing with state and local police. Noah, what can you tell us about what went down and why protesters were out there in the first place?
NH: The current wave of protests outside Delaney Hall started around May 28, and it was called in solidarity with detainees inside the facility who were withholding labor and hunger striking, some of them, to protest really bad conditions inside the jail, including bad food, maggots in the food, inadequate medical care. There’s all sorts of complaints that we’re hearing from people inside. A wife of one of the hunger strikers called on local organizations to rally in solidarity.
Now, the way that it began was, for several days, there were protesters standing directly outside one of the entrances to Delaney Hall. And the way it would go for several nights was that basically after dark, the protesters would be standing along the entrance. And every time a car had to go in or out, the ICE agents who were standing outside — full kit, masks — would push out and try to clear the way for cars to come in or out.
That is usually when some of the more spectacular clashes that you may have seen took place. So they’d be swinging batons, they’d be hitting people with pepper sprays. It was pretty ugly, but it was this weird choreography of static, static, static — and then conflict when the ICE agents would attack, and then back to a sort of status quo.
But when state and local police arrived on the scene and tried to secure the area around Delaney Hall, that’s when things got really ugly. So on the night of Friday, May 29, and really on the evening of Saturday, May 30, there were these widespread scenes of disorder as police came in with riot shields and gas masks and started firing tear gas.
A number of people were injured, including a freelance photographer for The Associated Press who suffered a pretty severe injury to her leg. Everyone that I spoke to said that as rough as ICE could be — and as daunting as the image of these masked guys just taking swings at protesters was — it really got so much more chaotic when state and local police got involved.
Now, Mayor Ras Baraka declared a curfew, which is ironic because Mayor Baraka was previously arrested protesting conditions at ICE, and he’s, from the beginning, taken a stance of what’s happening at Delaney Hall is unacceptable but protesters need to be peaceful. The way that was enforced was very not peaceful.
On Sunday night, there was a curfew imposed for 9 p.m., and they had also set up a frozen zone on the industrial corridor that Delaney sits. So they had set up police checkpoints about a half mile in either direction so that protesters couldn’t even get in front of the detention facility anymore.
On Sunday night, according to a number of my colleagues who were covering it that night and other reporting that I’ve seen, after 9 p.m., when the curfew was imposed, police began to kettle protesters. They began to surround them and prevent them from leaving, saying that they were now in violation of the curfew.
They let media leave for the most part if they were able to show credentials, but a handful of more citizen journalists were arrested that night. They held dozens of protesters and a handful of reporters in jail. After a certain point, they needed to be released on Monday afternoon.
So when I arrived on the scene, late on Monday afternoon, people were just starting to get released. It was a pretty tame scene. No one was able to get close to the facility. The police had set up these free-speech zones with several dozen protesters there with signs and megaphones. There were many dozens of police and a lot of media.
When 9 o’clock rolled around, most of the protesters started to filter out, with the exception of a handful of protesters who played this brief game of cat and mouse with the police. As police were advancing, they were backing up to the supposed “free-speech zone” about 500 yards away.
There were no arrests that night that I saw. There was a number of Newark community leaders on the scene who were also trying to bring down the temperature, which protesters were not happy about because they felt like this was just an effort to diffuse things.
From what I saw, the ICE agents on the scene were quite willing to use violence at times against protesters in order to maintain that entrance. But from everything I saw, the Newark and New Jersey police were much more indiscriminate with their violence and much more willing to attack outright and fire tear gas and really put people in danger.
JW: You and I have both covered the aggressive and deadly tactics used by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis. Noah, how is what we’re seeing different in New Jersey than what we saw in Minneapolis or even Chicago last year? Or is this just a continuation of more of the same?
NH: I think it’s a continuation of what we saw in those other places with some notable differences. Minnesota and in Chicago, the police and the state and local officials there got a lot of flak from the Trump administration for speaking out against the ICE raids that were happening and for taking a step back.
“Law and order were their first priority, rather than the lawless and lack of order behavior of ICE agents and of this privately operated detention facility.”
Here, the rhetoric was there from the state and local officials. Both the mayor and the governor were speaking quite stridently against the alleged abuses at Delaney Hall and against the violence being used against protesters. But they also seemed a lot more willing to use their authority to diffuse the protests, which has led to a lot of criticism from protesters who were saying that they basically were trying to co-opt this protest, they were trying to prevent any problems for their own political calculations — that law and order were their first priority, rather than the lawless and lack of order behavior of ICE agents and of this privately operated detention facility.
JW: We’re going to get into all of that and much more in our next conversation. I speak with Andrea Sáenz, a senior counsel at Co-Counsel NYC, a nonprofit providing immigration legal services and training. She previously served as an appellate immigration judge with the Board of Immigration Appeals in the U.S. Department of Justice from 2021 to 2025.
Also joining us is Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, a senior policy fellow at the American Immigration Council, where he works to break down the complex reality of immigration law and policy to the media, policymakers, and the general public.
NH: Hell yeah, let’s get into it.
JW: Andrea and Aaron, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.
Aaron Reichlin-Melnick: Thank you for having us.
Andrea Sáenz: Thank you.
JW: Andrea, we just heard from my colleague Noah Hurowitz, who’s been reporting from Delaney Hall. Detainees have been holding hunger and labor strikes at the New Jersey detention center. What more can you tell us about the conditions at Delaney that sparked these strikes?
AS: What’s going on at Delaney is really a microcosm of what’s happening all over the country in terms of incredibly harsh and inhumane conditions in ICE detention, that don’t have any accountability.
At Delaney in particular, detainees are raising that they have no access to quality medical care, that they’re not getting needed medications. They don’t have enough food to eat. The food that they are getting is spoiled. They’re facing hostility and harassment and violence from the guards.
I’ve been really gratified to see elected officials and press and others paying attention to this. But unfortunately, it’s something that we’re seeing all over the country, from Adelanto to Dilley to Camp East Montana in Texas.
JW: So Aaron, your organization, the American Immigration Council published a report earlier this year about the Trump administration’s immigration detention expansion efforts this term. A section of the report reads, “A system of detention, which did not fully take off until the mid-1990s, is now on track to rival the entire federal criminal prison system by the end of President Trump’s second term in office. This expansion is fueled by an unprecedented increase in funding provided by Congress in President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Combined with ICE’s annual appropriations, ICE has nearly $15 billion per year to use on immigration detention through the end of fiscal year 2029.”
Aaron, what can you tell us about the scale of the Trump administration’s efforts to expand detention centers?
ARM: Since taking office, Trump expanded the scale of the detention system by 75 percent, rising from about 40,000 people in detention when he took office in 2025 to over 73,000 people in detention in January 2026. While that number has fallen somewhat in the months since “Operation Metro Surge” in Minneapolis, the Trump administration is sitting on an unprecedented pot of cash that they can use to keep expanding the system even bigger.
“The Trump administration is sitting on an unprecedented pot of cash that they can use to keep expanding the system even bigger.”
JW: Andrea, I want to bring you in. We’ve been hearing about these efforts from the Trump administration to convert warehouses to detention centers. What do we know about those plans, and what can we surmise about what those conditions could look like?
AS: What we know is that the government has spent a whole lot of money to buy large facilities without really having any plan of how they’re going to humanely keep human beings there. We know this because they haven’t even had the plans to figure out how they’re going to handle water and trash and things like that at these facilities, and that’s been the source of some lawsuits.
But I think we have reason to be incredibly worried that the government is in no position to hold a large number of human beings. Delaney is a good example because it’s the largest facility on the East Coast. It can hold up to 1,000 people. We’ve got a human rights situation going on inside, pepper-spraying a U.S. senator on the outside.
“These are preventable deaths.”
So I can only imagine if you were to try to expand the capacity of these facilities, the government just doesn’t have the infrastructure, the accountability, the oversight to care for people. As we’re seeing the numbers of deaths in ICE detention rise — I believe it’s 18 deaths just in this calendar year, which is unprecedented. What really worries me is that these are preventable deaths, and that we’re going to see more of them if the government’s permitted to keep expanding, literally warehousing human beings in this way.
JW: Aaron, obviously there’s a lot of attention on Delaney Hall, on these new makeshift warehouse detention facilities, but what do we know about what conditions are like in facilities around the country right now outside of Delaney?
ARM: ICE detention has never been great and that’s to really underplay it. At the American Immigration Council, we have filed countless complaints over the years about inadequate medical care, verbal physical abuse against people in detention, pressure on people to give up their rights rather than accept time in detention, while they’re fighting their cases. This is endemic to the system and has been something that advocates have raised attention to for decades.
The key difference now is the speed at which the Trump administration is expanding the system and the ways in which accountability has been dismantled. When Trump took office, there was the Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties inside the Department of Homeland Security, and the Office of the Immigration Detention Ombudsman as internal watchdogs. Within the first month, the Trump administration slashed their staff to the bones and has since dismantled the Office of Immigration Detention Ombudsman entirely, shutting it down despite a congressional mandate that the office remain in existence. With no internal accountability, that’s left only external accountability, and there they are trying to prevent members of Congress from going into detention centers.
The end result of this is that conditions are worsening, deaths are rising, and the need for reform is growing every day.
JW: That lack of transparency that you’ve mentioned is something that’s come up a lot in our reporting — the inability to monitor what’s happening inside of these facilities is incredibly concerning.
Andrea, I want to ask, from your perspective, what does access look like even for immigration attorneys that are trying to reach their clients?
AS: It’s a good question because there are lots of ways that we should be able to know what’s happening in the detention center. It’s not intended to be a secret.
I’ve been representing detained people for 18 years, and it’s always been part of the practice to drive out and physically see your client, have them sign papers, that their family members are allowed to visit them. And that when they have a court hearing, they’re either produced in person or they’re there on video, and observers can come and watch because it’s a public court hearing.
Right now, what we’re seeing is that all of those things are being obstructed. It’s incredibly hard to even find out where your client is anymore because they’re being transferred from state to state. They disappear off the public detainee locator. ICE is not responsive.
As Aaron mentioned, there aren’t oversight agencies to complain to, and the immigration court system is increasingly keeping out observers and press from even watching these hearings to know what’s happening.
And then, of course, on the oversight side, as we’ve been talking about, part of what’s happening at Delaney, the reason why this escalated with elected officials, is because they wanted to get inside the facilities and exercise their right to oversight. They’ve been denied that right and in New Jersey, you have state health officials who weren’t allowed to go inside and inspect. And so ICE doesn’t want people to see the way that they’re treating human beings in these facilities.
But at least I’m gratified that people from lawyers to family members to elected officials keep trying.
JW: Do we have a sense of whether or not conditions are deteriorating? Obviously, these are horrific conditions that we’re describing, but maggots in the food, lack of access to medical care, these are not necessarily new issues inside of detention facilities.
Aaron, are we seeing a much worsening of conditions, or is there just a lot more attention on this issue right now?
ARM: It’s a little bit of both. There are some issues that you’re seeing raised in the media and brought to people’s attention now that aren’t new. As you said, maggots in food, bad medical care. This is not a new problem.
When you look at spoiled food, there are DHS Office of Inspector General reports going back many years which document violations of standards at Essex County Jail outside of New York City, a jail that is no longer working with ICE. Inspectors went there in 2018 and found spoiled food, covered in mold in the fridge that was being served to people. So that’s not a new issue.
But what is new is the way in which the Trump administration has made getting out of detention more difficult so that more people are being detained there. Before last year, the Trump administration adopted the legal position saying that essentially any person who ever entered the United States across the southern border is permanently barred from seeking release on bond, even if they’ve been here for 20 years with no criminal record.
That means more people in detention, more overcrowding, and as they open up these new facilities or repurpose old facilities, like Delaney Hall, it’s clear that there isn’t enough staffing to keep these places operating at the capacity that they are operating. This is not a problem that’s also unique to immigration detention.
There is a shortage of corrections officers in jails and prisons nationwide and a shortage of prison healthcare providers. One of the biggest ones, Corizon, actually went bankrupt two years ago. Given that, it’s not a surprise that the administration is failing to meet the standards that it is legally required to meet.
“What is new is the way in which the Trump administration has made getting out of detention more difficult so that more people are being detained there.”
AS: I do think that conditions are deteriorating. And I think another factor is the increased enforcement itself is causing severe overcrowding, including in these facilities that were intended to be holding facilities. So one of the places that conditions have been the source of lawsuits is in places like the Baltimore Hold Room, 26 Federal Plaza in New York City.
These are facilities where people are supposed to be taken for an hour or two after they’re arrested by ICE, and instead people have been packed in like sardines, sleeping on the floor next to toilets, and judges have had to order that you can’t hold people overnight there. So that’s part of the problem.
A second aspect to the problem is because ICE enforcement is so indiscriminate at the moment, and, that’s gone back and forth with time, but I do think it is worse than I have ever seen it, that ICE is not holding back from arresting very young people, very sick people, very old people’s moms and dads. So you have medically vulnerable and sick people in ICE detention with these conditions, and you’re setting up a recipe for disaster.
JW: To your point, at The Intercept, we’ve covered the detention of pregnant women and postpartum women who previously have been exempted, generally speaking, from detention, who are now in these facilities, who are lacking access to medical care, water, all of these necessities you need to thrive in pregnancy.
“ICE enforcement is so indiscriminate at the moment … ICE is not holding back from arresting very young people, very sick people, very old people’s moms and dads.”
[Break]
JW: The Trump administration recently made some pretty significant changes to the green card process. Aaron, can you walk us through what they did and how it’s going to impact people applying to become permanent residents?
ARM: A couple weeks ago, the Trump administration put out a memo from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, America’s legal immigration benefits agency. That memo said that for the first time ever, adjustment of status where someone applies for a green card from inside the United States, would no longer be treated as a normal part of the legal immigration process, but would instead be treated as an extraordinary benefit and only given in an act of administrative grace.
This was particularly strange because adjustment of status is the norm by which about half of all people get their green cards. These are people who are in the United States already, living here either on a visa or seeking to change their status. So it could be anything from a foreign student who comes here, falls in love with an American at college, and applies for a green card, to someone present on an H-1B visa for 10 years who is seeking to finally get their green card and become a lawful permanent resident.
Almost immediately, this set off a lot of backlash, and the administration has had to walk this back a little bit because their initial suggestion in this memo was that potentially as many as half a million people a year would have to leave the United States and seek an immigrant visa in their home country if they wanted to get a green card that they were legally entitled to.
Silicon Valley was not happy. A lot of people were very clear that this seemed like an unnecessary process because the vetting that someone gets inside the United States is identical to the vetting that they get if they’re outside the United States seeking a visa, which means the only difference is where the bureaucrat is deciding this.
Is it a bureaucrat at a consulate abroad deciding if you get a green card, or a bureaucrat at an office in the United States? From the government’s perspective, that should make no difference, but for the immigrant themselves, this means time away from their family and home in the United States, time away from their job, and the possibility that if there’s some error or red tape, they might not be able to come back for maybe weeks, months, or longer, which just threw a wrench in a lot of people’s plans for staying in this country and being on a path to citizenship.
However, crucially, the administration, ever since they put out that vaguely worded memo, has been trying to walk it back somewhat, and is now suggesting it may apply to a much more narrow group of people, potentially people who overstayed visas years ago and are trying to get a green card through a spouse, which would be a lot narrower a group, but still impact potentially tens of thousands of people.
JW: I’m not going to lie, this does seem like quite a mess.
“There is this level of contempt and dismissiveness even for people who have forms of status.”
Andrea, are we seeing other ways that the Trump administration is targeting people with legal status?
AS: Yes. What really the big picture here is that’s alarming to me with both the green card memo and some of the decisions coming out of the Board of Immigration Appeals that I used to sit on, is that there is this level of contempt and dismissiveness even for people who have forms of status.
So it really, I think, gives lie to that idea that the administration or Republicans are only interested in illegal immigration, they’re only interested in people who are out of status. Because you’re also seeing increased targeting and detention of Dreamers, people with DACA, young people with special immigrant juvenile status who have an approved application to stay in the U.S. and are in a line to get their green cards, people who have visas for being victims of violent crimes or trafficking.
These are all kinds of status that already exist in law that Congress has created, and you’re seeing these people additionally detained and put into proceedings. And the Board of Immigration Appeals is putting out case law day after day saying, “These classes of people are not special. They’re not worthy of particular protection. They can all be denied bond. They can all be put in removal proceedings and detained.”
JW: And we’ve also obviously seen a targeting of U.S. citizens who’ve stood up for immigrants as well. Since Trump fired Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and former Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino “retired” after violent raids in Minnesota killed two American citizens, it appears the Trump administration has at least toned down publicizing these aggressive raids.
But has there actually been a shift in tactics under the new DHS secretary? Aaron, I want to start with you, and then Andrea, I want to get you in as well.
ARM: The short answer is it does appear that yes, they have pulled back from the aggressive raids that were really characteristic of the Noem term, in particular under the leadership of Gregory Bovino, a mid-level Border Patrol official who was unexpectedly elevated to the position of “commander-at-large” of DHS operations in the interior.
What we are seeing now is a return in some ways to the more traditional targeted so-called enforcement tactics, where ICE officers have lists of people that they are specifically intending to arrest, go out into the communities to arrest those specific people.
But we are seeing a major increase in so-called collateral arrests. If they arrest that one person, they also might arrest everyone else in the building who’s nearby or anyone who looks like an immigrant near there. The end result of this is that the administration is now arresting slightly fewer people than during Operation Metro Surge. Detention numbers have come down, about 10 to 20 percent from the height of that operation.
But they are building out a more robust enforcement capacity, and especially relying on state and local police who are cooperating with them through so-called 287(g) agreements, agreements that allow local law enforcement to act as ICE officers. So the Trump administration’s new plan is to gradually build up the capacity rather than rushing out to make splashy headlines, and they believe that is more sustainable in the long term, both from an enforcement perspective and also importantly from a political perspective.
AS: We are seeing not only a decrease in maybe these large-scale campaigns that have a cute nickname. We’re also seeing a decrease in courthouse arrests, partly because they were stopped by litigation. But I am continuing to see waves of street enforcement and street arrests that are often racially motivated, and I think we have to keep our eye on that.
Early on during the Los Angeles ICE surge, we saw a lot of those stories of ICE stopping people, regular people, Latino people walking down the street, going to school and work, including U.S. citizens, and that got a lot of press. I think those arrests are still happening; they’re just happening one at a time in less obvious ways.
I do a lot of habeas corpus litigation, and so I get a lot of emails and calls about who has been arrested. And, Aaron mentioned this idea of targeted arrests, which is what ICE says that they’re doing, that they’re looking for a particular person who has a criminal arrest or who has a prior deportation order.
But there are a lot of arrests in which ICE says that they’re looking for a target, and really what they have done is drive up next to a Latino person and ask them for their ID and then arrest them — when they were very obviously not the target that they were looking for. So I think we can’t let the idea of targeted enforcement cover the actual reality that people, especially people of color walking down the street, have something to fear from ICE.
I think it’s a terrible state of affairs, but I think we have to continue to be vigilant and push back on it.
JW: In that vein, how would you characterize this phase of Trump’s immigration agenda? Where is Trump in this? What is the end goal here that we can visualize at this stage?
AS: This is part of the question is, like, how much does Trump himself have to do with this as opposed to other people in the administration?
“People in the administration … are intending to decrease the amount of immigrants in the United States, both legal and undocumented.”
We’re in a transitional phase as we have new DOJ and DHS leadership. Certainly, the people in the administration like Stephen Miller, who have had an agenda all along, are intending to decrease the amount of immigrants in the United States, both legal and undocumented. And that it’s intentional to have people be scared of the kind of enforcement that I’m talking about that the administration hopes that a lot of people will get scared and frustrated and leave the United States, including through things like the green card memo, that it’s just so confusing and overwhelming and expensive to stay here that people will pick up and leave, even at incredible cost to our economy and to our fabric as a community.
What’s exactly coming next I can’t say, but I’m guessing that there is more to come. Trying to advise clients in this atmosphere, trying to advise immigrant communities is really hard. People are scared, and it’s hard to tell them not to be.
ARM: To add on to that, the administration is very clearly trying to create a climate of fear for immigrants. While they claim that they are aiming that at undocumented immigrants, fear has a splash zone. You can’t target fear on an individual level like that, and communities are frightened. But as Andrea said, this is a transition moment right now.
What we are seeing them do is attempt to take a system that was always imperfect but strived towards due process and basic principles of fairness, and turning it into an assembly line for deportations — one in which basic legal rights are tossed aside and procedures are followed potentially to the letter, but in clear violation of the spirit.
“What we are seeing them do is attempt to take a system that was always imperfect but strived towards due process and basic principles of fairness, and turning it into an assembly line for deportations.”
You see this with new policies like “mega master” calendar hearings, 100 people scheduled for a hearing with maybe 72 hours of notice, maybe sent by mail or email that they might not even know about the hearing ahead of time because they were scheduled for a hearing in 2027, and all of a sudden they’re told, “Show up two days from now in New York City. Oh, and by the way, you might not have a lawyer.”
You have no idea what’s going to happen to you. When you show up at that hearing, you’re told, “You have 20 days to get everything on file. We don’t care that you don’t have a lawyer. We’re moving forward.” If you miss that hearing, you’re ordered deported immediately.
They’re doing this even for children, and they’re firing the judges that were seen to be too liberal or too willing to grant cases, even if those cases were legally meritorious. The asylum grant rate has dropped to less than 10 percent of cases, when before it was 30 to 40 percent of cases were granted. All of this is a system that is being systematically turned against the immigrant and against the idea of a fair day in court.
However, given the scale of immigration court backlogs, there are still over 3.2 million cases pending in the system. It’s not clear whether they will actually be able to clear these backlogs by the time Trump leaves office. Crucially, all of this funding in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and the funding that Congress has been debating, the additional $70 billion for CBP and ICE that’s being debated in the most recent reconciliation bill — that is all set to expire at the end of Trump’s term, by the end of fiscal year 2029.
So we are in a situation where they may get all of this infrastructure in place, and then who controls Congress in 2029 will determine whether that infrastructure has to be slashed back and whether we can get some handle on the system and help right the ship.
JW: I want to get into control of Congress in just a moment.
But Andrea, first I wanted to ask you, because you have personal experience with being pushed out because of the perception of your views on immigration. So I’m curious, how are you viewing this effort by the Trump administration to push anyone out who could have any sympathy for immigrants in the system?
AS: So I was an appellate immigration judge on the Board of Immigration Appeals, which is the second level of the immigration court system. I was on the BIA for three and a half years during the Biden administration. Starting last year, the administration started to fire both trial-level immigration judges, and they also fired all of the remaining Biden appointees off of the BIA, which is the body that sets case law.
It’s been honestly devastating to see this happen to an administrative court system that obviously needed improvement, but was functioning and had a lot of excellent public servants that were trying to give people due process day in and day out. The Biden administration had really tried hard to put people with a variety of professional experience on the bench, both the federal bench and the immigration bench, in terms of not only having all prosecutors on the bench there because they can be good judges too, but also putting people who had been defense attorneys and civil rights attorneys, like myself. I think that had made the court system stronger and better.
One thing I can say is that when I was a judge, I didn’t have any pressure coming from the top telling me how to rule. We had training, we had expectations, we had normal job evaluations, but I didn’t have anyone looking over my shoulder and saying, “Why did you do that?” Or “You’re not allowed to do that.”
What’s coming out now is that’s exactly what’s happened to the immigration court system such that it’s no longer independent. You have leadership of the system watching which judges grant asylum too much, which judges grant bond too much. It destroys any idea that judges are being allowed to apply the law independently as opposed to enacting a political agenda.
It’s also just exhausting and confusing for the immigrants actually appearing before the court, not knowing if they’re going to get a fair day or they’re just going to be immediately deported without a chance to present their evidence. It’s a crazy time to be an immigration lawyer and have to do hundreds of hours of work not knowing if you’re going to get a judge who’s going to give you 10 minutes to present your case.
So certainly a lot of us are gearing up to do more federal court and appeals work, but the bigger issue is that the immigration court system has ceased to function in a way that lets judges make decisions independently.
JW: Aaron, I want to get back to your point about Congress and the midterms.
So we’re obviously in the middle of an election year. What are you hoping to see from candidates on immigration, and what do you hope legislators change if they actually make it to Congress?
ARM: What we need to see is a fundamental rethinking of what interior enforcement looks like inside the United States.
Polling consistently shows that the American public believes ICE has gone too far. As much as 2 out of every 3 Americans think that the Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign has gone beyond what they want. But at the same time, people still do want some form of immigration enforcement.
“Our interior enforcement system has not been updated in 30 years. We are using laws that were crafted by Congress in the height of the tough-on-crime era of the 1990s.”
So I would love to see legislators look at revamping the system towards one that embraces principles of compliance and proportionality, accountability and safety, really focusing on actual public safety threats, not people who’ve been here for 20, 30 years who’ve never had any interaction with the criminal justice system.
At the same time, help restore a system that allows judges to decide that deportation doesn’t make sense in every case. Right now, our interior enforcement system has not been updated in 30 years. We are using laws that were crafted by Congress in the height of the tough-on-crime era of the 1990s.
We live in a very different time today. Most Americans believe there should be some form of path to legal status for people who have been living here for years without getting in trouble, working hard, raising a family, and being productive members of their community. But the law just doesn’t reflect that, and so Congress really needs to sit down and think through what kind of compromise will produce a better system that helps Americans and doesn’t take us further down this path of mass deportations, which just tear communities apart.
AS: I agree with Aaron’s frame, but I also want to say that I think we have a bigger issue that we’ve spent years now hearing this administration dehumanize immigrants and talk about people who are in our neighborhoods and communities like they are less than, that they don’t care about their families the way we do, and that asylum is a fraud on the system, that people don’t deserve asylum.
Both administrations recently, frankly, have done that. So I think going forward, it’s time for us to not be afraid to say that immigrants are an incredibly important part of our communities, and also that there is a place for the United States to welcome bona fide refugees and asylum-seekers. Both the refugee program and the asylum adjudication program have been totally decimated in recent years. And of course, we need regulations on that program. We need ways to handle the backlog.
But at its core, we have to decide that the United States is a place where people who are fleeing persecution and torture can, at least in some instances, find safety here. I think that’s part of our historical heritage that we shouldn’t turn away from. I don’t think candidates should be afraid to say that, at risk of seeing “soft on immigration.”
It’s time to stand up for people who are an incredibly important part of our communities, and acknowledge their contributions, and then figure out what’s a system going forward that allows people to work and live in safety together.
JW: Just thinking about everything we’ve discussed today, there is so much happening in the immigration space, so much horror, frankly. What should people be paying attention to right now? Aaron, I want to start with you.
ARM: I think with everything else going on in the world right now, with the war in Iran, rising gas prices, and the deconstruction of the American state by the Trump administration, it’s easy to let the immigration issue fall by the wayside now that they are trying to be a little bit more quiet.
But every single day, the administration is arresting around 1,000 people, or slightly more than 1,000 people, and many of those have been members of our communities for decades. They have family members here. The climate of fear and surveillance that is being imposed on immigrants is growing.
That is something that impacts all of us. We saw this week the Trump administration say that they wanted to try to restrict undocumented immigrants from even having bank accounts. We’re seeing every government database being turned into a tool of the mass deportation state, and that is something that impacts all Americans because you cannot carry out a mass deportation of 4 percent of the U.S. population without fundamentally transforming the United States into more of a police state.
That should concern everybody, even if it’s not something that they’re seeing on the headlines because of splashy raids in American cities.
AS: A lot of this news is really sad and hard to keep reading. I feel that myself as someone who has to for my job, continue to read immigration news. I would encourage people to continue to pay attention to stories of courage and people who are bringing the conditions of detention centers and what’s happening to their families to light.
I just spoke yesterday to a client of ours who was released from Delaney Hall on Monday because of a habeas corpus petition that we won. I was asking her what people need to know, and while she was telling me about the poor medical care and the lack of food, I was just really struck by her care for the other people who were still detained there and her spirit and the way that when she was released from that facility, the protesters outside cheered and chanted her name.
There are folks inside Delaney and hunger strikers in Adelanto, people in Camp East Montana have brought a lawsuit to complain about their own conditions. And so there are a lot of examples, from Minnesota to detention of people being courageous and having hope in these times.
So that’s what I hope people can keep watching for and participating in.
JW: That’s a really beautiful message. And we’re going to leave it there, but Aaron, Andrea, thank you both so much for joining us on the Intercept Briefing.
ARM: Thank you for having me.
AS: Thank you.
JW: That does it for this episode.
This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor in chief. Maia Hibbett is our managing editor. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. William Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow. Slipstream provided our theme music. This show and your reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you.
Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join. And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. Do leave us a rating or review. It helps other listeners to find us. Let us know what you think of this episode, or if you want to send us a general message, email us at podcast@theintercept.com.
Is there an immigration detention center near you that you’re concerned about or another issue? Send us an email or leave us a voicemail at 530-PODCAST. That’s 530-763-2278.
Until next time, I’m Jessica Washington.
The post “Warehousing Human Beings” appeared first on The Intercept.

Why should Delaware care?
For years, Delaware officials have viewed Wilmington’s downtown as an economic engine, and bellwether, for the state. But weighing on the area have been largely empty buildings that are part of the Bracebridge complex. Last year, state and Wilmington officials committed nearly $25 million in taxpayer-funded incentives to support Incyte’s move into those buildings .
Less than two years after investing nearly $80 million into two downtown Wilmington office buildings, the pharmaceutical company Incyte sold the properties to the city’s most prominent developer in a deal that generated just 10 cents in real estate taxes, according to public deed records.
The tax payment suggests a sale price of $1 for each of the Bracebridge buildings that sit next to Rodney Square and once formed the backbone of Delaware’s credit card industry.
That sale price also raises the question of whether the companies involved in the transaction earlier this spring avoided what might have been millions of dollars in taxes to Delaware and its largest city.
Delaware imposes a tax on real estate transactions that amounts to 4% of a sale price, or the fair market value of the property — whichever is higher. The revenue is then split between state and local governments.
Last year, Incyte held a book value for the two downtown Wilmington properties of at least $76 million, according to a company earnings report. While a book value does not necessarily reflect what a buyer would pay in an open market, it does offer a benchmark that is difficult to reconcile with a transaction that generated only 10 cents in taxes.
By writing off the value of the buildings as a business loss, Incyte will likely be able to reduce its future taxable income. But it won’t have the tens of millions of dollars in the bank that a sale might have produced.
Beyond the tax question, Incyte’s sale of the two buildings marks the end of the company’s ambitious project – backed by nearly $25 million in taxpayer grants – to renovate the buildings for what would have been a massive expansion into Wilmington’s city limits.
Instead, the drug company now plans a scaled-back move into the city, by leasing a portion of the buildings from their new owner, the Buccini/Pollin Group.

Incyte did not reply to an emailed question about the real estate tax payments.
A spokeswoman for the Buccini/Pollin Group said in an email that the listed sale price of $1 does not reflect the entire compensation involved in the sale of the buildings.
“We aren’t able to discuss the specifics of the arrangement,” the spokeswoman Claire Nester said.
Nester did not reply to a follow-up question, asking whether the modest taxes paid on the sale were legally sufficient.
Comments from Delaware’s government officials also did not shed light on the questions around the 10 cents in real estate taxes.
A spokeswoman for Wilmington Mayor John Carney said the city has no control over “what the property sells for.”
The Delaware Department of Finance declined to comment, stating officials are barred from speaking about realty transfer taxes because of a law prohibiting them from revealing details about tax returns.
And the chief financial officer for New Castle County — which collects realty transfer taxes in northern Delaware — said only that “we’re looking into it.”
For more than a decade, Incyte has maintained its corporate headquarters just outside Wilmington’s city limits in the Alapocas community.
Buoyed largely by sales of successful cancer drugs, the company in recent years had attempted to grow the existing campus, but faced resistance from neighbors.
In light of the opposition, state and city officials began to collaborate then on a pitch to persuade the company’s leaders to instead expand downtown.
The efforts proved successful when Incyte announced in the spring of 2024 that it had purchased the pair of Bracebridge office buildings — which once served as a home for the credit card giant MBNA — for its global headquarters.
The nearly $50 million purchase was seen as a significant win for the city because the largely empty buildings had long weighed on the city’s office market.
Following the purchase, Delaware state officials awarded Incyte with nearly $15 million to help it pay for the move into Wilmington. During a meeting of the state committee that approves such subsidies, Kurt Foreman, then the head of Delaware’s public-private economic development, said the deal could lead to the creation of 866 new jobs in Wilmington’s downtown core.

Months after the state’s grant approval, Wilmington officials quietly awarded Incyte another $10 million for the expansion. The award was not publicly known until the Delaware Business Times broke the story in April.
During the remainder of 2024 and through 2025, Incyte spent nearly $29 million on a renovation of its new properties, according to a company earnings report.
Then, at the start of last winter, the work appeared to cease.
The stoppage came just months after Incyte had selected Bill Meury, a pharmaceutical executive with ties to Boston-area startups, as its new CEO, replacing longtime leader Hervé Hoppenot, who signed off on the deal with Delaware leaders. Weeks after assuming the helm, Meury stated the company would take “a fresh look” at its business, including its capital allocation, according to a report from Reuters.
In December, Incyte officials reclassified the two downtown Wilmington buildings as “assets held for sale,” according to a company earnings report.
Then they wrote off the value of the buildings on the company’s books by $76.3 million.
By February, Incyte publicly announced its scaled-back expansion plans through a series of media interviews in which officials said the company would sell the Bracebridge buildings to BPG, then lease back some of the space.
The leased space could “accommodate up to 200 employees,” company officials said.
In an earnings report released in April, the company said its sale cost it “an additional $23.2 million of expenses.”
It is not clear whether that $23.2 million relates to a portion of the taxpayer grants awarded by the city and state. When asked, a company spokeswoman said “the expenses noted in the quarterly filing are related to transitioning the project.”
Today, the status of the taxpayer grants and where that money might flow next are not immediately clear.
A spokesman for the Delaware Department of State that oversees state grants said earlier this spring that officials are “active discussions regarding this project and will reach out to you when we’re able to provide more information.”
Klinger, the spokeswoman for Wilmington, said the city and Incyte “are actively in the process of finalizing an agreement related to the $10 million incentive.”
For their part, BPG said they would not be seeking the Council on Development Finance funding that Incyte had received from the state for their plan to convert the buildings into a mix of apartments, offices and commercial space.
Reporter Brianna Hill contributed to this story.
The post Incyte’s sale of Wilmington offices generates just 10 cents in real estate taxes appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
In an increasingly technology dominated world, access to high speed internet is a priority for many Delawareans. While the state continues to roll out initiatives to expand broadband internet access in remote areas, some rural Delawareans are forced to turn to libraries and other short-term solutions for connectivity.
Despite government pushes in recent years for high-speed internet to reach more residents, some rural Delawareans feel left behind by the broadband expansions and question the state’s approach to improving connectivity.
After initially being sidelined by the Trump administration, the state announced this spring that the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program would invest roughly $100 million toward creating 4,700 new internet connections across Delaware.
The program will use a combination of federal funds and private company dollars to provide connectivity to some of the forgotten – or “last mile” – homes in Delaware, eventually aiming to reach complete high-speed internet coverage in the state by 2030.
But some experts and residents are skeptical.
Researchers who study broadband internet access say the BEAD program’s approach – prioritizing the quicker deployment of copper cables over more long-lasting fiber optic ones – is ineffective for long-term sustainability.
At the same time, some residents and lawmakers have given up hope that high-speed internet will reach rural corners of the state. Instead, they have turned to Starlink – a satellite internet service created by Elon Musk’s SpaceX – or WiFi hot spots to get connectivity.
And even when rural residents have gotten the option of broadband internet access in recent years, some say they cannot afford the cost of a internet bill. This has forced already stretched-thin independent libraries to meet community members’ needs for computers and internet hot spots, library directors said.
“I don’t think it’s gonna happen,” said Chris Sylvester, who has been asking state leaders when his western Kent County property will be connected by cabling for years. “As far as I’m concerned, we’re forgotten in rural Delaware for high-speed internet.”
Rural high-speed internet access has quadrupled nationally over the past decade, and 86% of rural households now have some form of broadband subscription, said Matt Dunne, founder of the Center on Rural Innovation, an organization that studies technology access in rural America.
In Delaware, by virtue of a small compact geography, the state already boasts roughly 98% connectivity.
But experts also say these numbers don’t tell the whole story. Some areas may be considered to have broadband access, but the cabling could already be outdated or rusting, and connection could be unaffordable to residents in an area.
“Not all broadband is created equal,” said Christopher Ali, a Penn State University professor who studies telecommunications.
Delaware initially began laying the groundwork for rural connectivity in 2015, when then-Gov. Jack Markell awarded a $1 million grant for the company Fibertech Networks to begin laying miles of fiber optic cables – widely considered the broadband option with the most longevity – in Sussex County.
In recent years, the state has mostly relied on the influx of federal funds to expand connectivity since the onset of the pandemic, said Connor Perry, executive director of the Delaware Broadband Office.
These federal funding sources together allowed the state to set up “middle mile infrastructure” closer to town centers and along roads like Routes 1 and 113 over the past decade, Perry said.
Now the state can focus on the “last mile” of harder to reach buildings, he added.
The initial plan for the BEAD program included only fiber optic technology. The Trump administration, however, changed the program to a combination of traditional copper cabling and fiber.
The program is planned to connect 425 new homes and businesses in New Castle County, 1,513 in Kent County and 2,790 in Sussex County by 2029, Perry said.
IQ Fiber, a Florida-based company funded largely by private equity, also announced this spring a $150 million project to lay more fiber connections down the length of the state, largely following the Route 1 corridor.
Perry said the state also received BEAD funding to create a census-block level map of high-speed internet rates across the state, in collaboration with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

A look at the most current version of the map, updated in December, indicates that virtually all of New Castle County has complete internet connectivity. The connection rate tends to decrease moving south, particularly toward Delaware’s western and southern borders with Maryland.
Areas where internet access is less than 25%, according to the map, include western Kent County near Felton and Harrington, the southwestern corner of the state between Laurel and Delmar and the Georgetown-Millsboro region of central Sussex County.
In rural pockets of the state, some residents say they were connected to broadband through one of the recent expansion pushes. Others, however, have resigned to never getting wiring, instead turning to newer cable-less options like Starlink.
Rachel Culver used to live in a house just a couple minutes west of Georgetown town limits, on what she described as “the rural side of town.”
Culver, who is also the director of the Georgetown Public Library, said she relied on the library’s resources, like the building’s WiFi and checking out one of the highly sought after hot spots, in order to complete computer tasks.
“It kind of really felt like we were camping,” she said.
The area by her house was just starting the process of getting cable infrastructure when she moved out in 2022, Culver said.
Chris Sylvester lives and operates a flower farm in the Sandtown area of western Kent County, near the Maryland border. He has not had such luck with progress toward connectivity.
When Sylvester and his wife first launched their business in 2022, the lack of high-speed internet on their property forced him to drive to a coffee shop or public library to upload a single photo onto their website.
The problem? The nearest public place with internet connection was a 30-minute drive away.
“When you’re a business and trying to be as efficient as possible, it becomes challenging and frustrating,” he said.
As his family was trying to scale their business and his daughter was beginning elementary school, Sylvester began contacting state lawmakers, asking when broadband internet might reach his area.
Four years later, Sylvester said he still has not gotten an answer as to whether his area is part of planned future broadband expansions.
“I think I’ll be 60 or 70 years old, and I’ll still be that little spot out in western Kent County that doesn’t have internet,” he said. “I just don’t see how it’s going to work.”
Sylvester said his family was able to set up a Starlink satellite last year, which has given them at least a short-term connectivity solution.
Community leaders working at libraries and coffee shops say they try to be the space residents need to get reliable connectivity.
The challenge, though, is that Delawareans in sparsely populated areas where internet cables do not reach also tend to be further away from these community spaces, compounding the accessibility challenges.
Culver, the Georgetown Library director, said all the libraries were given hot spots and Chromebook computers from a 2022 state grant program.
Then, when she and her staff saw “such a need” for the hot spots, they applied for a grant to get more. Since then, however, the grant has run out, and the library’s tight financial position means residents are back to having to wait multiple weeks to check out a hot spot.
Directors at other rural libraries similarly said they have a constant daily stream of visitors using their WiFi and computers. Sometimes people sit in the parking lot after hours to connect to the building’s internet, they said.
Owners of coffee shops and coworking spaces say they also strive to serve as broadband resources.

Amity Coffee Roasters, a coffee shop in Greenwood, is bustling on many days with mothers doing homeschool work with their children, pastors without internet at their churches planning upcoming sermons and Delaware Technical Community College or Salisbury University students completing assignments.
Melody Slaubaugh, Amity’s co-owner, said she and her husband made a conscious choice to “pay a lot for very powerful internet.”
She added that some of the design choices they made with the café, such as providing an outlet connector next to each table, were specifically to make it conducive to internet users.
The Mill in Seaford, a co-working space slated to open this year, is another place where developer Rob Herrera said he aims to focus on the community’s need for connectivity.
Herrera said in the process of creating the coworking space, he has heard from many Seaford-area residents who do not have high speed internet options, or their only option is “old copper and cabling lines,” so having a coworking space with fiber connectivity is appealing.
Some state lawmakers say they have been frustrated by the speed at which broadband internet access has expanded to their rural districts. Some view the emergence of Starlink satellites as a more cost-effective and accessible option.
Rep. Rich Collins (R-Millsboro) said the number of calls he has been getting from constituents about lack of internet access has steeply declined since the advent of Starlink a few years ago.
“If you really want broadband, it’s a way to have that,” Collins said.
Experts, though, say the efficacy of broadband options is a spectrum. While Starlink and the BEAD program’s cabling infrastructure are effective in the short-term, experts say they will not be a permanent solution, like a fiber optic network would be.
“Fiber to the home is the most future-proof,” said Dunne, the Center for Rural Innovation director. “As broadband speeds can be increased and the demand for them to be increased goes up, they’re able to scale with it.”
The problem, Dunne said, is that each installation of fiber is more expensive than traditional cabling. It is difficult to incentivize companies to invest in a fiber network in more rural areas, where they will reach fewer potential customers.
Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.
The post State continues broadband expansion program, sustainability in rural areas unclear appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
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Environment | Humanity can raise living standards, reduce inequality and keep global heating within a 2C rise, according to a sweeping vision for planetary survival.
Ukraine | The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has called for face-to-face negotiations in a public letter addressed directly to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin.
England news | The poorest and most nature-deprived communities in England will be further left behind in their access to green spaces if proposed changes to planning laws go ahead, a report finds.
UK news | Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor received private income from subletting three cottages on his Windsor Royal Lodge estate while paying a “peppercorn rent” to the crown estate, a report into royal property arrangements has revealed.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 5.
Do you know who you're opening your door to? A CBS News California consumer investigation uncovered food delivery drivers using rented or stolen app accounts to bypass background checks, exposing a loophole that could put customers at risk.
British Retail Consortium figures show footfall rose in May, with consumer confidence improving after spending squeeze
Greater numbers of consumers went shopping last month as spring sunshine brought welcome relief to retailers, which have faced a squeeze on spending since the US-Israel war on Iran.
Figures from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and a separate survey by the accountancy firm BDO showed a bounce-back in footfall during May, reversing a sharp decline in April.
Continue reading...CBS News obtained a brief voice memo from Iranian American journalist Reza Valizadeh, who is being detained in Iran's Evin Prison and is pleading for help for him and other American captives.
CBS News has obtained a voice memo recorded by Iranian American journalist Reza Valizadeh, who has been detained in Evin Prison for over a year.
Seth Jarvis scores 3:56 into overtime to seal win
Hurricanes erase two-goal third-period deficit
Failed Vegas challenge leads to crucial power play
Seth Jarvis scored on a power play in overtime after Carolina erased a deficit in regulation only to gave up a late tying goal, and the Hurricanes beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-3 in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup final on Thursday night to the series.
Jarvis’ heroics 3:56 into OT came after a thrilling third period that included four goals being scored and another getting called off because of goaltender interference.
Continue reading...Hey guys. I’ve been researching one wheel for quite some time now and I think I want to start with a pint x. I found one near me on marketplace for 700 with 850 miles. First owner bought it in 2022 in pretty decent condition.
Just want to know if this is worth the price and how long do I really have before I need to replace the battery or tire? I’m 42 years old and weight 195lb. I know pint would also work but I see that the pint x has a bit more power for heavier riders.
Thanks in advance.
Pontiff’s resolve to highlight plight of migrants has aligned him with Spanish PM, whose inner circle and party are mired in corruption allegations
While Pope Leo XIV isn’t due to touch down in Madrid until 10.30am on Saturday, his presence in the Spanish capital is already verging on the ubiquitous.
The smiling, avuncular face of the first US pontiff greets visitors from posters, from the sides of buses, from commemorative travel cards and even from the digital screens on the metro system, where it flickers up between adverts for sun cream and banking deals.
Continue reading...Macron, Merz and von der Leyen among those due to gather in Montenegro for talks on integration of six countries
European leaders will seek to show six western Balkan countries that they have a real chance of joining the EU one day, despite splits over how to handle enlargement of the 27-member bloc.
Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz, Giorgia Meloni and Ursula von der Leyen are among more than 30 leaders expected to gather in the Montenegrin coastal resort of Tivat on Friday for summit talks. The focus will be on integrating the six Balkan countries – among them Montenegro and Albania – more deeply into the EU single market, paving the way for them to join the bloc.
Continue reading...A risky quest for strategic autonomy in a war-torn Middle East.
Beijing’s blind spots hinder real reform.
Overseas bases make the U.S. military dominant—and more likely to blunder into war.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Bumblebees can use tools to solve a problem, according to experiments that demonstrate their remarkably advanced cognitive abilities. The bees were given an adapted version of an experiment that, 100 years ago, first demonstrated chimpanzees could work out how to retrieve an out-of-reach banana by stacking boxes. Since then, various other primates, elephants and crows have joined an elite cohort of species known to be capable of this level of insight and spontaneous problem solving. In the latest research, bees were shown to be able to roll a polystyrene ball to a specific location and climb on to it in order to access an artificial flower on a low ceiling. The findings challenge the longstanding assumption that insects operate purely on instinct and mindless trial-and-error learning. "Most people think insects are reflex-based machines," said Dr Olli Loukola, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Oulu, Finland, and senior author. "That they can't have any emotional states or feel pain. Some people don't even realize that they have brains. I hope that these results change the worldview about that." "We are not claiming that bees think like humans," added Loukola. "But our findings show that miniature brains can generate flexible solutions to novel problems in ways we are only beginning to understand." The findings are published in the journal Science.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ukrainian president proposes meeting in neutral third country as Trump says both sides have to ‘make compromises’
The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has called for face-to-face negotiations in a public letter addressed directly to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin.
The letter, the first Zelenskyy has publicly written directly to Putin since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, was a sweeping criticism of the Russian leader’s 26 years in power.
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed.
Donald Trump’s former national security adviser-turned-foe John Bolton is expected to plead guilty over mishandling classified documents, multiple outlets are reporting.
According to CNN, which first reported the news citing three sources, Bolton intends to plead guilty to one count of illegal retention of sensitive national security documents, and has also agreed to pay a more than $2m fine. The New York Times hears the same, adding that he could face anywhere from no prison time to up to five years behind bars when he is sentenced.
Continue reading...Russians are increasingly tired of the conflict and the time to end it is now, Ukraine’s president tells his Russian counterpart in an open letter
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in an open letter to the Vladimir Putin, has called for a face-to-face meeting with the Russian president to end his war against Ukraine.
The letter sets out Zelenskyy’s view of the four-year-old conflict and says that while Ukrainians’ resilience remains intact, most Russians have grown weary of its effects and are ready for peace.
Continue reading...Workers say they deserve a greater share of the windfall and want protection from ICE and invasive data collection
Workers at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, are voting on whether to authorize a strike one week before World Cup soccer games are slated to begin in the Los Angeles area.
Unite Here Local 11’s strike authorization vote comes as ongoing negotiations for a new contract with stadium operator Legends Global have stalled, with workers saying they deserve a greater share of the windfall from a packed schedule of coming mega-events that include the World Cup, the Super Bowl and the Olympics.
Continue reading...A judge has dismissed a murder charge against Aaron Spencer, an Arkansas sheriff nominee who was accused of killing his teenage daughter's alleged abuser in 2024.
US secretary of state Marco Rubio says anyone providing services to listed entities ‘is at risk of sanctions themselves’
The United States has announced fresh economic sanctions on Cuba’s president and some of his immediate family, alongside members of the Castro family, in Washington’s latest ramping up of pressure on its communist-led neighbour.
Among those targeted were the son and a grandson of former president Raúl Castro, who no longer holds an official position but remains a key figure on decisions about the future of the island.
Continue reading...Legislation would also sanction key segments of Russian economy, overriding objections from Republican leaders
The House passed legislation on Thursday that would aid Ukraine and sanction key segments of the Russian economy, overriding objections from Republican leaders who warned the bill would undermine negotiations designed to achieve a comparable but stronger result.
The 226-195 vote is a sign of impatience with Donald Trump’s approach to the war and represents the House’s second major foreign policy break with Trump this week. The day before, the House, for the first time, approved a war powers resolution aimed at halting US military action against Iran.
Continue reading...The Colorado Court of Appeals reversed the criminally negligent homicide convictions for the former paramedics in the death of Elijah McClain.
Platner says claims in New York Times article of physical misconduct and offensive remarks ‘politically motivated’
Graham Platner, a Democratic candidate for the US Senate, has rejected an explosive new report about his treatment of women, insisting that allegations of abusive behavior are “politically motivated”.
Platner, a progressive running for election in Maine, was responding to a New York Times article published on Thursday that included an interview with a Republican operative who accused him of womanizing, physical misconduct and making troubling comments about rape.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 5, No. 1,812.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 5, No. 1,090.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 5 No. 824.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 5, No. 620.
James "Weston" Higginbotham, an Auburn University student, went missing last week in Japan after his family says he went to an area near Kyoto known for its hiking trails.
The U.S. has imposed sanctions on Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, according to a filing on the Treasury Department website.
The Steam Deck dominates gaming on the go, and the Steam Machine looks to conquer the living room.
The eight-foot dinghy that Brian Hooker says he and his wife, Lynette Hooker, were aboard when she disappeared in early April was seized by U.S. Coast Guard investigators.
Mail-in ballots and security measures contribute to counting delays in California's close contests, an election expert says, and last-minute voters in the governor's race may slow things down further.
Pulte, who is the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, is a staunch loyalist of the president
Donald Trump has suggested his controversial ally Bill Pulte will investigate “rigged elections” while serving as the country’s top intelligence official, as the US president continues to make unfounded allegations about voting.
But Pulte, whom Trump appointed as acting director of national intelligence earlier this week, will only serve in the role temporarily, the president claimed on Thursday.
Continue reading...A former officer at the correctional facility where Jeffrey Epstein died testified before the House Oversight Committee that she was not the orange shape seen moving up the stairs of Epstein's cell tier the night he died.
If your produce is freezing in your fridge, this guide is for you.
Anthropic is urging leading AI labs to consider slowing development, warning that frontier models are advancing fast enough that they may soon be able to improve themselves without direct human intervention. The company says a global ability to pause or slow AI development would "likely be a good thing," citing internal data about accelerating model capabilities. From a blog post: Using public benchmarks and previously unreported data from within Anthropic, The Anthropic Institute is showing that AI is already accelerating the development of AI systems. To take just one example: today, Anthropic engineers on average ship 8x as much code per quarter as they did from 2021-2025. The technical trends discussed in this piece suggest that AI systems are going to become much more capable in coming years. These trends have huge implications. AI that can build itself would be a major development in the history of technology -- one that could bring enormous good for the world in science, healthcare, and beyond. But full recursive self-improvement also might increase the risks of humans losing control over AI systems. If systems are capable of fully building their own successors, the ways we secure them, monitor them, and shape their behavior all grow much more important. [...] If it were possible to effectively slow the development of this technology to give ourselves more time to deal with its immense implications, we think that would likely be a good thing. But if a slowdown simply lets the least cautious actors catch up technologically, it could leave everyone less safe. Without a global coordination mechanism, companies and governments will have to make difficult decisions about safety while under competitive and geopolitical pressures. We believe it would be good for the world to have the option to slow or temporarily pause frontier AI development to enable societal structures and alignment research to keep up with the advance of the technology. The Anthropic Institute will conduct research -- in collaboration with many others -- and take actions to help build the systems that a credible slowdown or pause would require. These systems would enable frontier AI developers to verify that others globally have actually stopped or slowed, and that a bad actor could not use the auspices of a coordinated slowdown to jump ahead in secret. If such systems existed, we expect that we would slow down or temporarily pause, if other developers at or near the frontier also did so in a verifiable manner...
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The subject of a recent high-profile trial filed a lawsuit against two police agencies, alleging that two officers involved in investigating her had exchanged racist and misogynistic messages.
A man who pleaded guilty to participating in the Jan. 6 riot as a 19-year-old — and later described the events of that day as a "disgrace" — now works for the Defense Department.
Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince says he didn't expect this milestone until 2027.
Blanche, whom Trump plans to nominate to replace ex-attorney general, served as Bondi’s deputy at DoJ
Former attorney general Pam Bondi told lawmakers that Todd Blanche, the man Donald Trump has lined up to replace her, was “in charge” of the US Department of Justice’s controversial handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Appearing before the House oversight and reform committee, which is investigating the late financier and convicted sex offender, Bondi also said she was “not certain of the extent” that Trump knew about the crimes of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of Epstein who is serving a 20-year sentence for sex-trafficking crimes, before they became public.
Continue reading...Jeffrey Epstein was paid extraordinary sums by billionaire Leon Black, and Sen. Ron Wyden wants to know why.
A new npm supply-chain attack has infected 36 packages with Rust-based infostealer malware called IronWorm. According to BleepingComputer, the malware "targets 86 environment variables (key-value pairs) and 20 credential files that may contain OpenAI, AWS, Anthropic, and npm credentials, vault configuration files, SSH keys, and Exodus cryptocurrency wallet files." From the report: According to researchers at supply-chain and devops company JFrog, IronWorm is written in Rust, hides behind an eBPF kernel rootkit, and communicates with the operator over the Tor network. The Rust-based malware self-propagates by using stolen credentials for publishing on npm; this includes secrets associated with npm's Trusted Publishing workflow. Once it compromises a developer or CI environment, it can publish trojanized versions of packages owned by the victim, which then infect additional developers and CI systems. This behavior is conceptually similar to Shai Hulud, which had its code published on GitHub recently. Although JFrog researchers did not find a clear connection between IronWorm and Shai Hulud, they observed the same commit names in both supply-chain attacks. This opens the possibility that the new malware is an evolution of TeamPCP's payload, since IronWorm appears to be "a custom, carefully built implant from an operation with its own infrastructure." [...] The company provides a list of all impacted package names and their versions in the report and recommends that developers upgrade to fixed releases, rotate their keys, and enable two-factor authentication (2FA) for all accounts. At the same time, Endor Labs and StepSecurity have spotted a very similar but distinct attack involving a JavaScript-based malware named binding.gyp, performing registry poisoning and GitHub Actions infection, unfolding during the same time-frame.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow criticized an economic development program during a May debate, saying the state has shelled out billions for corporate subsidies but has little to show for it.
"Michigan has spent more than $2.5 billion on incentives to companies since 2019, and so far, that fund, the (Strategic Outreach and Attraction Reserve) fund, has created zero jobs," McMorrow said during the May 28 Democratic primary debate. McMorrow supported the fund in 2021 but has since backed away from it, citing a lack of resulting jobs.
McMorrow, chair of the Michigan Senate’s Economic and Community Development Committee, is running for U.S. Senate in Michigan. Her opponents in the Democratic primary include former public health official Abdul El-Sayed and U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens.
Since Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, took office in 2019, she has focused on recruiting businesses to the state through subsidy and incentive programs. Her administration’s flagship program is the Strategic Outreach and Attraction Reserve Fund, or SOAR.
To back McMorrow’s statement, her campaign pointed to local reporting that said the state had pledged $2.5 billion of SOAR money to companies and other organizations. "SOAR cost billions and largely failed to deliver for Michiganders," McMorrow campaign spokesperson Jackson Boaz said.
Publicly available state data shows that about $2.2 billion has been approved for projects, and $1.3 billion has been spent. The state announced the first awards from the fund in 2022, not 2019. Companies self-reported creating at least 1,800 jobs; the state said it plans to verify that once milestones are reached.
State lawmakers created the SOAR fund through a series of 2021 bills and initially allocated $1 billion. Later state budgets provided more funding.
Bridge Michigan, a local news outlet, reported that $2.5 billion in spending had been approved from the program. PolitiFact was not able to independently verify that figure.
But not all of that has been spent. In 2025, state lawmakers stripped the program of future funding because of dissatisfaction with outcomes, but the previously budgeted amounts remained in place.
The SOAR funding is split into two pots: the Critical Industry Program, which pays companies to encourage hiring in Michigan, and the Strategic Site Readiness Program, which gives grants to economic development groups to prepare industrial sites. The site readiness grants aren’t paid directly to companies nor are they tied to a promised number of new jobs, but groups often have a company in mind when developing a site.
As of October 2025, Michigan officials had spent $1.3 billion between the two programs, according to a report from the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, a public-private partnership agency that administers the SOAR fund. The fund spent $720 million on company subsidies tied to promised jobs, and another $590 million on site preparation. The Michigan Economic Development Corporation declined to comment for this report.
The latest official tally of approved funding, which includes grants that have been awarded but not spent yet, sits at close to $2.2 billion, according to the development agency’s report.
Eric Lupher, president of Citizens Research Council of Michigan, a nonpartisan public policy center, said it’s reasonable to consider money committed to specific projects as money "spent" by the state. The work has been contracted, and the money will be spent when it’s complete, he said.
"One way or another that money’s going to go out the door," he said. "Some of it’s sitting in an account waiting for the check to be cut when the time is right."
But, Lupher said he’d have "some hesitancy" to judge the program’s effectiveness at creating jobs based on projects that are in progress.
"You sort of have to wait for that facility to be up and running for a few years to let the dust settle and then look at it in its totality," he said.
To receive the full awarded funding, companies have to meet certain benchmarks and hiring standards. Some deals have already fallen apart, including a deal with electric vehicle maker Gotion to build a battery factory in Big Rapids. In that case, the state attorney general is trying to claw back $23.7 million that a development group passed onto Gotion from the site selection fund.
The Michigan Economic Development Corporation’s report said companies receiving SOAR incentives reported creating 1,846 jobs by October 2025. The companies promised a combined 14,559 jobs over several years.
Most of the jobs so far came from one company, Solar Technology LLC, which is building a 1 million-square-foot factory in Saginaw County. The company reported 1,244 jobs linked to a $68 million state investment. Other projects that reported new jobs included battery factories being built by Ford Motor Co. and LG Energy.
The jobs are self-reported. Because none of the job verification deadlines under the grants have happened yet, the state-verified count of jobs is zero, the report said. The first of those milestones, with Solar Technology, is not until December 2027.
McMorrow said, "Michigan has spent more than $2.5 billion on incentives to companies since 2019, and so far, that fund, the SOAR fund, has created zero jobs."
The SOAR fund has committed more than $2 billion toward attracting companies to create jobs in Michigan; since 2022, about $1.3 billion has been spent on companies and economic development groups.
Companies reported creating more than 1,800 jobs. The state has not verified the jobs number yet.
We rate McMorrow’s claim Half True.
WASHINGTON, June 4, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) and Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), today announced an historic $1 billion strategic partnership making Japan the first international partner in the DOE’s Genesis Mission. Today’s announcement marks one of the most significant scientific and technological collaborations between the United States and Japan.
Under the partnership, eleven joint scientific teams will unite twelve DOE National Laboratories, one DOE Office of Science User Facility, and twelve leading Japanese research institutions—bringing together some of the world’s most advanced scientific facilities, computing resources, and research talent—to advance breakthroughs in quantum information science, fusion energy, biotechnology, advanced materials, particle physics, and autonomous laboratory systems.
“This partnership brings together two of the world’s great scientific powers to accelerate discovery and unlock breakthroughs that will shape the future,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science and Genesis Mission Lead Dr. Darío Gil. “For generations, DOE’s National Laboratories have set the global standard for scientific excellence, delivering breakthroughs that transformed industries, advanced human knowledge, and strengthened prosperity around the world. By combining their unparalleled capabilities with Japan’s world-class scientific institutions, we are helping define how science will be conducted in the age of AI.”
“Under Japan’s Seventh Basic Plan for Science, Technology and Innovation, we are expanding investments in science and technology, recognizing AI and computing resources as essential to both research excellence and industrial competitiveness,” said Dr. Yasuyoshi Kakita, Vice-Minister for Policy Coordination, MEXT. “Through our ‘AI for Science’ strategy, MEXT is advancing bold and timely investments in these areas. In this context, the Japan–U.S. strategic partnership will significantly strengthen research capabilities in both countries. We will continue to deepen our cooperation with the United States in close coordination with the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.”
“Japan and the United States have built a complementary partnership that leverages each other’s strengths and has driven innovation in advanced fields. We recognize that the development of next-generation computing requires close Japan–U.S. collaboration,” said Mr. Takehiko Matsuo, Vice Minister for International Affairs, METI. “Japan is strengthening its industrial base and expanding investments under the ‘Semiconductor and Digital Industry Strategy Initiatives’ and the ‘Budgetary Framework for Strengthening AI and Semiconductors’. Building on these efforts, and in coordination with MEXT, we will contribute as a trusted partner to the United States’ Genesis Mission in advancing next-generation computing and further deepen Japan–U.S. cooperation.”
The collaboration builds on the U.S.-Japan Technology Prosperity Deal signed in 2025 and establishes a long-term framework for collaboration across government, academia, industry, philanthropic organizations, and research institutions in both countries.
Early projects include planned partnerships among RIKEN, the University of Tokyo, the National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS), and DOE National Laboratories to develop the next generation of autonomous laboratories powered by AI and robotics. Additional planned collaborations involving KEK, the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization, RIKEN, J-PARC, the Japan Proton Accelerator Research Complex, DOE National Laboratories, and DOE user facilities will advance particle accelerator technologies and build upon decades of successful scientific cooperation between the United States and Japan.
The joint teams will have access to world class computing infrastructure—including the DOE’s high performance systems and Japan’s Fugaku—enabling unprecedented capabilities for AI driven research and scientific discovery.
Building on a joint Statement of Intent signed in January 2026, DOE and MEXT announced their plan to invest a combined $1 billion over five years—$500 million from each nation—to advance AI science and technology challenges and expand the computing infrastructure needed to support next-generation research, subject to the availability of future appropriations.
This historic partnership advances the Genesis Mission’s goal to double the productivity and impact of American science and engineering within a decade by harnessing AI, advanced computing, and deep international collaboration to accelerate discovery and transform how research is conducted for generations to come.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy
The post DOE Genesis Mission Adds Japan as 1st International Partner in $1B Research Initiative appeared first on HPCwire.
TACC staff and systems advance JupyterHub development while supporting Texas telescope data operations
June 4, 2026 — The Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment (HETDEX), which recently completed the largest survey ever taken of the early universe, has now released all of its immense, information-rich database to the public. Built from more than half a petabyte of raw and processed data, it will allow astronomers to study how the first galaxies formed and evolved, measure how gas and stars were distributed within these galaxies, map the large-scale structure of the cosmos, and investigate rare and unexpected objects not easily found in traditional surveys.

By mapping the distant universe one spectrum at a time (or rather, tens of thousands of spectra at a time!), HETDEX has plotted the location of over one million galaxies, back to when the universe was just 1.8 billion years old. At the center is our own galaxy, the Milky Way. HETDEX has released its extensive database of these galaxies and the space in between them to support astronomy research by scientists, novices, and artificial intelligence. Credit: E. Mentuch Cooper, S. Mukae, HETDEX.
HETDEX observations make use of a technique called spectroscopy. With it, light is broken apart into its various wavelengths: a spectrum. Astronomers examine spectra for peaks and valleys which tell them about an object’s chemistry, movement through space, and distance from Earth.
Cosmic Noon
The HETDEX database contains a whopping 600 million spectra for a period of history known as Cosmic Noon, 10 billion to 12 billion years ago.
“This is a spectral map of the universe. It turns every point of light into a barcode of physics,” said Erin Mentuch Cooper, HETDEX data manager and lead author on the paper announcing the release. “The real excitement is what happens when thousands of astronomers start exploring it.”
From 2017 to 2024, the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory surveyed a region of night sky equivalent to 2,000 full Moons, creating a map of the distant universe. HETDEX is using that map to solve the riddle of dark energy, the unknown substance causing our universe to expand more and more quickly over time. To do this, it is charting the location of over a million early galaxies. However, it has also gathered data on all of the space in between.
Surveying New Galaxies
“The survey is untargeted,” explained Karl Gebhardt, HETDEX principal investigator, chair of UT Austin’s astronomy department, and co-author on the paper. “We aren’t picking and choosing specific objects to observe. Instead, we’re pointing one of the world’s largest telescopes at the sky and seeing what’s out there. We fully expect to find some really cool, wild stuff hiding in the data.”
The database consists of 431,000 data cubes that map information into three-dimensional space. When measured on the sky, each is roughly one thirtieth the size of the full Moon. Most correspond to regions around the Big Dipper and Orion.
“HETDEX gives us an unusually wide and detailed spectroscopic view of the universe at a time when most stars were being formed,” said Gebhardt. “Because the telescope and its instrumentation can capture tens of thousands of spectra at once, we can map galaxies across enormous cosmic volumes in a way that was not possible before. There’s a lot of potential here.”
Supercomputers Ease Discoveries
In addition to raw data, the release also contains a catalog of every object HETDEX has found so far: over one million distant galaxies, half a million nearby star-forming galaxies, 18,000 supermassive blackholes, and over 150,000 stars. Scientists, students, and citizen researchers can download customized subsets of data based on sky location. Or, thanks to a close collaboration with UT Austin’s Texas Advanced Computing Center, they can perform large-scale analysis using high-performance, cloud-based supercomputing resources, dramatically lowering the barrier to entry for working with data of this scale.
Cooper has worked with TACC researchers over the years to create both an internal and now public HETDEX Jupyter Hubs. These are cloud computing platforms one can access in a web browser that have all the data and software pre-built and easily accessible, available at this link: https://jupyter.tacc.cloud.
“We have relied heavily on TACC systems to store, process, and analyze HETDEX spectrographic data, including Lonestar6, Stampede2 and Stampede3, Wrangler, and Maverick. We are incredibly thankful to TACC for these resources,” Cooper said.
While the release is based on half a petabyte of data, the team was able to process it down to a more manageable 10 terabytes. It also developed extensive tutorials and tools to help users – both human and AI – to make the most of this massive, complex dataset.
“It’s been so important for me to make it as accessible as possible,” said Cooper. “We’ve turned more than half a billion spectra into something you can actually explore. It’s like compressing a universe of information into something you can hold in your hands.”

From 2017 to 2024, the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory surveyed a region of night sky equivalent to 2,000 full Moons, creating a map of galaxies in the distant universe. A portion of that map, corresponding to a region of the sky in the direction of the Big Dipper, is shown here. It stretches back 12 billion years to an era known as Cosmic Noon, when most of the universe’s stars formed. Credit: E. Mentuch Cooper, S. Mukae, HETDEX.
Levering AI to Analyze Data
Due to the depth of the HETDEX database, AI is expected to play a major role in sorting through it all. And, in fact, AI has already been pivotal in its creation. For example, software provided by RAIC Labs automatically removed contamination from satellites and meteors crossing in front of the telescope. HETDEX also used automated methods to comb through its observations and identify possible early galaxies. In parallel, more than 24,000 citizen scientists helped confirm the presence of these galaxies through the Dark Energy Explorers program.
Today’s release marks the first time the full HETDEX dataset and survey catalog have been made available together. While the core survey is now complete, observations are ongoing, calibrations continue to improve, and supplementary releases are expected for the future.
To access the data and learn more, visit hetdex.org.
Adapted from a press release by Emily Howard, McDonald Observatory.
Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC
The post TACC: HETDEX Opens Massive Cosmic Dataset to Scientists, Novices, and AI appeared first on HPCwire.
As an Ebola outbreak continues to rage in Central Africa, the Trump administration keeps trying to blame the World Health Organization — revealing what experts say is a deep misunderstanding about global disease response.
In the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, local health workers have been battling the devastating virus without adequate supplies, testing materials, or international support. The outbreak is further complicated by the rare strain of the disease, known as Bundibugyo, that standard field tests often miss and for which there are no vaccines or therapeutics. At least 62 people in Congo and one in Uganda have died according to WHO, but experts say this is likely a significant undercount due to the outbreak emerging in a remote, war-torn region.
“The outbreak had a big head start, and we’re still behind, but under the leadership of the Government of DRC, we are catching up,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, told journalists on Wednesday, after a visit to the epicenter of the outbreak. African health officials say that it might take nine months or more to get a handle on the outbreak.
Experts say Trump administration policies — like dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development and withdrawing from WHO — have undermined global health security and negatively impacted the response to the outbreak. The U.S. had been the largest provider of humanitarian assistance and health sector support to the Democratic Republic of Congo, funding more than 70 percent of humanitarian work there, according to a 2025 report from Physicians for Human Rights which noted the aid cuts have “severely harmed” public health and humanitarian efforts, including infectious disease control. The Trump administration has reportedly even barred some U.S. health officials from communicating with counterparts at WHO.
In the face of criticism of a U.S. failure to quickly respond to the Ebola outbreak, State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott lashed out at WHO and heaped praise on his boss. “The security concerns in the area – which President Trump has taken unprecedented steps to address – and the WHO’s delay in informing the world of concerns until May 15 has had an impact,” he told The Intercept.
Public health experts say Piggot’s response exposes a fundamental confusion about how authorities combat infectious disease. “It reveals a lack of understanding about how international health regulations work and what a ‘public health emergency of international concern’ actually is,” Margaret Harris, a former senior WHO official and a medical doctor who responded to Ebola outbreaks in West Africa in the mid-2010s and Congo in the late 2010s, told The Intercept.
On May 5, WHO issued an alert of a high-mortality outbreak in Congo’s Ituri Province, which included deaths among healthcare workers. On May 14, blood samples were finally analyzed across the country, in the capital, Kinshasa. A day later, the analysis confirmed Bundibugyo virus disease, a strain of Ebola.
“We also need to remember that Ebola is only one health threat among many that these communities face.”
Dr. Mohamed Yakub Janabi, the WHO Regional Director for Africa, explained that affected nations are the lead actors. “WHO does not declare. It’s the member states who declare,” he told The Intercept on Thursday. “On the 15th, Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda declared. On the 16th, we declared the presence of Ebola, and on the 17th, Director-General Tedros declared this as a ‘public health emergency of international concern.’”
Dr. Marie Roseline Belizaire, WHO Africa’s Director of Emergency Preparedness and Response, further explained that under the well-defined protocols, states have the obligation to declare an outbreak after which the WHO informs the rest of the world and begins providing support. “There is a clear, well-defined methodology and it is clearly outlined in the international health regulations,” she told The Intercept.
The response is markedly quicker than in some previous outbreaks. During the 2014–16 Ebola crisis in West Africa — when more than 28,000 people were infected and more than 11,000 died in the largest ever outbreak of the disease — WHO became aware that Ebola was spreading in Guinea in March 2014 but did not declare a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern” until almost five months later.
Blame for any lag in response is not the fault of WHO, argued Harris, noting that USAID previously supported NGOs and healthcare workers in rural communities on the front lines of such outbreaks. “Dr. Tedros declared it without even calling the emergency committee together, so he wasted no time once they had information about the extent of the outbreak and the fact that clearly it had been running silently for a long time,” said Harris. “But the silence of the outbreak is not something you could lay at the feet of WHO. You lay that at the feet of a very fragile health system in the middle of a conflict that the rest of the world should be doing something to stop.”
The number of suspected Ebola cases in Congo has been reduced from over 1,000 last week to 116 as teams work through a backlog of tests. Experts say many suspected cases turned out to be malaria. This large number of people with untreated malaria demonstrates, they note, the chronic healthcare deficiencies in the region and a need for a comprehensive focus on public health there.
“We also need to remember that Ebola is only one health threat among many that these communities face,” said Tedros. “One of the things I heard from the community leaders is that they worry that the response to Ebola may take resources away from the health and humanitarian services they rely on for their many other needs.”
The Trump administration has faced scrutiny for pouring money into an Ebola quarantine and treatment center for infected Americans being built in Kenya, as a group of distinguished physicians, nurses, public health professionals, and humanitarian workers, including former top officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called for Americans exposed to Ebola to be brought home for treatment. “We are deeply concerned by reports that the United States government is pursuing a policy under which American citizens with Ebola exposures requiring quarantine, isolation, or medical care would be transferred to a facility in Kenya,” they wrote in a letter to Congress, noting the “profound legal, ethical, and human rights concerns associated with preventing American citizens from returning home for care or diverting them to third-country facilities.”
On Wednesday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio doubled down on plans to bar Americans with Ebola from being treated in the U.S. “We cannot and will not allow any cases of Ebola to enter the United States,” he said.
“It really sends the wrong message — that it’s a terrifying thing that you can’t possibly allow to arrive at your borders,” said Harris. Kenya has never experienced an Ebola outbreak, making it a perplexing choice of location for a treatment facility.
The U.S. could have set up a facility in Congo, Harris said, which has the most experience and expertise, having stopped 16 previous outbreaks. Or it could bring its citizens home for treatment and quarantine.
“If you’re going to not treat U.S. citizens on-site in DRC, bring them back to the U.S.” said Harris. “You’ve got one of the best health systems in the world, and you’ve got some of the brightest and best in the world in your country. So why aren’t you mobilizing them and showing that America is truly great?”
The post Trump Administration Tries to Shift Blame for Ebola Response appeared first on The Intercept.
The company reportedly keeps delaying the release of developer tools for its latest AI model.
Announcement seeks to close a difficult chapter for the company after the Guardian revealed its platform was used in mass surveillance of Palestinians
Microsoft has said it will tighten human-rights controls when working with national security agencies after an inquiry into how the Israeli military used its cloud technology for the mass surveillance of Palestinians.
On Thursday, Microsoft announced the completion of the inquiry and a series of new measures that include changes to how the company oversees employees with security clearances issued by foreign governments.
Continue reading...Announcement follows DoJ’s recent findings that medical schools at UCLA and Yale illegally used race in admissions
The US Department of Justice’s civil rights division has launched investigations into 15 medical schools over allegations of potential race discrimination in their admissions processes.
Thursday’s announcement follows the DoJ’s recent findings that the medical schools at the University of California, Los Angeles and Yale University illegally used race in their admissions.
Continue reading...Get one of the best standing desks as tested by our CNET experts.
June 4, 2026 — Data volumes are growing rapidly, AI applications are becoming more complex, and many questions in science and industry can only be addressed with specialized computing power. This is precisely where High Performance Computing (HPC) comes in. With its recently opened HPC Lab, the FHNW School of Computer Science has created an environment in which such computationally intensive applications can be developed, tested, and put into practice.
The University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (Fachhochschule Nordwestschweiz, FHNW) is strategically developing HPC expertise with the Lab. It is part of the strategic realignment of the FHNW School of Computer Science, which was founded in January of last year. In this context, labs were established as centers of excellence. They serve as open spaces for experimentation and development and promote exchange between students, industry partners, and the FHNW.
New Infrastructure for Research and Innovation
The HPC Lab was officially opened on May 28, 2026, with around 90 guests in attendance. Partners, interested parties, and employees gained unique insights into the new infrastructure, featuring high-performance GPU and CPU clusters, scalable storage solutions, and specialized software environments for AI, simulation, data analysis, and machine learning. This enables the efficient implementation of demanding applications such as training AI models, simulating physical processes, and conducting data-intensive analyses.
However, CPUs and GPUs are not the end of the road for HPC development. New computing technologies such as Dataflow, wafer-scale engines, neural processing units, and energy-efficient AI accelerators could create entirely new possibilities in computing through significantly higher speeds and lower energy consumption. The HPC Lab is a platform for experimentation and technology evaluation that focuses on practical applications of new hardware and is open to both industry and academic partners.
Responsibility and Sustainability in HPC
At the same time, the increasing importance of HPC is also bringing its ecological footprint more sharply into focus. Computing-intensive applications require considerable resources. The FHNW School of Computer Science takes this development into account and pursues the goal of using high-performance computing responsibly and in a resource-efficient manner. Topics such as efficiency, monitoring, and the sustainable use of infrastructure are therefore considered from the outset and integrated into teaching and research.
“The increased performance of HPC systems has been crucial for remarkable breakthroughs in AI. Training large language models would be impossible without fast and integrated GPU clusters,” said Prof. Dr. Tomasz Kacprzak, Head of the HPC Lab. “But this is just the beginning: In the future, more computing power will enable new inventions in the field of artificial intelligence. With the HPC Lab, we aim to be the central player in technology transfer in this development.”
From Theory to Practice
The HPC Lab is closely integrated into the curriculum of the FHNW School of Computer Science and forms a central learning environment, particularly within the AI & High Performance Computing specialization of the Bachelor of Science in Computer Science. Students acquire a solid computer science education with a clear focus on AI and HPC, applying their knowledge in practical projects from the outset. They develop and train AI models for applications in industry and research and learn to implement these efficiently on scalable infrastructures.
For example, students are working on the development and tuning of AI models for industrial applications, such as for quality control in production, for the analysis of large sensor data streams, or for predictive models in energy and climate research.
The HPC Lab also provides an important foundation for research projects and collaborations with companies. Industry partners can test new data-driven business models, develop prototypes, or improve existing processes using AI and simulation. This creates an environment in which knowledge is not only generated but also further developed collaboratively and directly applied in practice.
Learn more about the HPC Lab and the FHNW School of Computer Science here.
Source: FHNW
The post FHNW Establishes HPC Lab to Support Next-Gen AI and Scientific Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: The moderators of the biohacking subreddit say that peptide and hormone replacement therapy companies have been surreptitiously spamming Reddit in an attempt to get their posts scraped by AI chatbots. The strategy is an effort to systematically manipulate the answers provided by chatbots by manipulating the underlying source material that those chatbots will scrape -- in this case, a popular Reddit community. In a post last week, the moderators of r/biohackers said they would be banning new posts about peptides and hormone replacement therapy (HRT) because of attempted manipulation by the companies that make, market, and sell them. [...] "As AI search engines increasingly pull answers from Reddit, companies are using us for AEO. On top of that, there's been an explosion of peptide interest and AI usage flooding the sub. Together, this has put serious pressure on content quality," a post by the moderators read. [...] It has become incredibly difficult to stop Reddit manipulation, because the firms doing it are getting more sophisticated. The moderator said that there are really standard and long-running strategies where brands will hop in the comments and suggest their products: "That type of marketing has always existed and if people want to try something new because the brand resonated with them, cool. That's the way marketing should flow in my mind," they said. "But what I'm seeing that is way scarier to me is that there are companies that will reverse-engineer the actual prompt patterns that are prioritized by LLMs, and so you'll see someone post a super clickbait, high-traction, vague question like 'Is all the hype around Vitamin D actually worth it?" they added. "And that thread will do really well because everyone on biohackers actually has an opinion, so it gets engagement and prioritized by LLMs, and then brands will sneak in and they'll embed their brand mentions in those threads in the exact right places in a seemingly organic way. But none of it is organic, the entire thing is a strategy by an agency to prioritize brand mentions or a narrative within an LLM." The Reddit accounts that are doing this are "warmed up" or are made to seem human, meaning they have a posting history that is not just promotional. This makes them much harder to detect and moderate against. Some of the agencies doing this are paying real people to post promotional content, or have built communities where people are incentivized to post promotional content. The moderator said that Reddit's automated moderation tools have been helpful, but that the type of promotion happening has become so sophisticated that it has become more of a you-know-it-if-you-see it kind of thing. "A lot of it has become pattern recognition," they said. "You literally just sort of know what to look for. But the problem is you don't want to become punitive to the people who aren't doing this maliciously, and so I think the over-moderation risk is very real."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Asked if Bill Pulte has the national security experience for the job, President Trump said he does because he's "smart."
ALIYAH JACKSON
Contributing Reporter
On March 20, 2026, I got to see one of my favorite artists of all time and have been chasing that high ever since. Before I get into describing my amazing night filled with fun, high energy and great music, I have to introduce the man who made it all happen — Jordan Ward.
Jordan Ward is an alternative R&B and Hip Hop artist from St. Louis, Mo. He is known for his combination of intricate vocal performances and upbeat rapping, creating a widely-appealing and refreshing sound. At just 31 years old, he has worked very hard to make a name for himself and is steadily climbing the ranks of the music industry.
Interestingly, making music was not Ward’s initial focus. He actually began his career as a background dancer for some of the biggest names in the industry, including Justin Bieber, Usher, Janet Jackson, Prince and Beyoncé.
It wasn’t until years after I fell in love with his music that I watched Beyoncé’s “Homecoming” Coachella performance on Netflix and saw a younger Ward, with significantly shorter hair, dancing alongside her.
Despite his busy schedule as a touring dancer, Ward began to set time aside to focus on his own music career between dancing gigs. He released both his first single, “Tapas” and his first EP, “A Peak at the Summit,” in 2017. Although I still appreciate his earlier work, the songs that skyrocketed his career did not come out until the early 2020s.
His 2021 single, “Lil Baby Crush,” quickly became one of his most popular songs and launched him into the public eye. It was only up from there and Ward has been on a generational run ever since.
Between his 2023 release of what I would consider his most popular song, “WHITE CROCS (with Ryan Trey)” — which earned him a special shoutout from Tyler, The Creator — and the success of his debut album “FORWARD,” Ward quickly became a popular underdog in the music scene.
Now, we are in the midst of a new Jordan Ward era following the release of his latest album, “BACKWARD.” In my opinion, it’s the perfect continuation of the momentum he built with “FORWARD,” featuring tracks that range from upbeat hits perfect for dancing to ballads that’ll leave you teary-eyed.
While “FORWARD” broke down Ward’s roots and where he came from, “BACKWARD” allowed fans a glimpse into who he is at his core, including his insecurities, regrets and mistakes.
This brings me to his current tour — “THE APARTMENT TOUR.” The name comes from Ward aiming to make the show feel like he was inviting all of us into his apartment — a promise he definitely delivered on.
The stage was set up like a living room while Ward sang and danced around it all night like a little kid putting on a show for his family. From the minute he touched the stage to when the lights went up at the end, it truly felt like we were one big family.
The Theatre of Living Arts in Philadelphia provided the perfect intimate and cozy atmosphere to complement the homey feel of the show. Although I love my more well-known artists, I adore the closeness that comes with attending concerts held in theaters rather than arenas or stadiums.
The show was sold out and packed to the brim with attendees. The venue only offered standing and balcony options, so for less than $100 for two tickets, I got to spend my time in the pit, mere feet away from Ward with dozens of other fans.
I would say I enjoyed myself, but that would be an extreme understatement — I had one of the best nights I have had in a long time. He sounded amazing and his live vocals proved to be equally as good, if not better than his recorded ones.
His energy kept the crowd wrapped around his finger as we returned the same love we felt him pouring out to us throughout the night. Not to mention, he is probably the cutest 31-year-old man I’ve ever seen and is absolutely stunning, especially when he finally let his long dreadlocks fall out of the oversized striped beanie he wore for most of the show.
He even brought a few guests with him: his opener, Nali, whom I knew a few songs from and really enjoyed, along with surprise guest Destin Conrad, who performed his popular song, “KISSING IN PUBLIC,” as the crowd went absolutely wild.
My favorite songs of the night were “HIGH FUNCTIONING,” “Lil Baby Crush,” “TAKE-OUT,” “CHERIMOYA,” “WHITE CROCS,” “THEMSELVES,” “FAMJAM4000,” “CHAMPION SOUND” and “Y.”
Overall, Jordan Ward is an outstanding performer and puts on an amazing show. I had honestly forgotten just how much I love him and his music until he was standing right in front of me. My only regret was not getting meet-and-greet tickets when I had the chance, so that I could tell him just how much his music has helped me get through these four years of college. However, it’s definitely on my radar for next time.
I’m tempted to gatekeep so that I can keep him in my little bubble of niche artists forever, but as a huge music-lover, I can’t with a good conscience continue to let y’all miss out on such a wonderful artist. If you’re looking for a charismatic, handsome and versatile R&B artist to add to your playlist, Jordan Ward is your guy.
House Democrats voted unanimously on Wednesday against continuing the Iran war without congressional approval — but a day later, Democratic leaders helped defeat a similar measure aimed at Israel’s parallel war in Lebanon.
The second measure failed 324-92 Thursday afternoon, a day after passage of a war powers resolution focused on Iran sent a message to the Trump administration.
Ninety-one Democrats voted for the measure sponsored by Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., to block U.S. support for Israel’s assault on Lebanon. 117 Democrats voted against.
Citing a range of drafting concerns, Democratic leaders voted against the resolution but promised to support a tweaked version from Tlaib in the future.
At least some pro-Israel Democrats, however, said they opposed to anything that would tie Israel’s hands in Lebanon.
Tlaib’s measure would have halted U.S. involvement in the Israeli assault on Lebanon without further congressional approval. The Israeli attacks have claimed at least 3,500 lives, displaced over 1 million people, and left wide swaths of the country, including entire towns, in ruins.
The war in Lebanon, which Israel had continued over reported objections from President Donald Trump, is widely seen as an obstacle to a deal with Iran to end the U.S. war there. Iranian officials have excoriated the Israeli attacks and threatened to suspend talks because of them.
The Trump administration has not explained the extent of its involvement in the war being waged by right-wing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Israel says its attacks are aimed at Hezbollah fighters despite the growing civilian death toll.
There are widespread suspicions that the U.S. government has provided support for the attack in the form of intelligence sharing and other coordination. The administration has not responded to a May 4 letter from Sen. Pete Welch, D-Vt., about whether and how the U.S. is aiding Israel.
“This vote on the Lebanon war powers resolution is a clear moral choice.”
Tlaib spoke out in support of her measure during a debate on the House floor on Wednesday.
“This vote on the Lebanon war powers resolution is a clear moral choice: Do you stand with the Netanyahu government and Trump’s endless war crimes, or do you stand with human life, peace, and justice?” she said.
In response, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Brian Mast, R-Fla., accused supporters of the measure of serving as “proxies for Hezbollah.”
That kind of language was not limited to the GOP. It echoed a similar statement made by Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., on social media last month.
“Hezbollah is evil — kneecapping our ability to track and respond to their terror serves nobody except Hezbollah and its Iranian overlords,” he said about Tlaib’s resolution.
Other Democrats said they were opposed to the measure on more technical grounds. In a joint statement Thursday, House Democratic leaders said they were worried that it might prevent the U.S. from securing its embassy in Beirut or assisting the country’s official military, the Lebanese Armed Forces.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y.; Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass.; and Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., said they were opposed to the measure that was up for a vote Thursday, but would support another one that Tlaib has introduced addressing those concerns.
Hassan El-Tayyab, the legislative director for Middle East policy at the Friends Committee on National Legislation, said he was optimistic that support for halting U.S. involvement in the Lebanon war would grow in a future vote.
“If we don’t stop what’s going on in Lebanon, getting a true and lasting ceasefire with Iran is virtually impossible,” he said. “So it is critical we try to curtail U.S. involvement in any operations in Lebanon.”
The post House Dems Coming Around on Iran War — But Won’t Vote to Stop Israel’s Destruction of Lebanon appeared first on The Intercept.
RENO, Nev., June 4, 2026 — CIQ, the enterprise software company behind Rocky Linux and the Fuzzball AI and HPC orchestration platform, today announced full multi-cloud support for Fuzzball across CoreWeave, Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) and Microsoft Azure. Enterprise teams define an AI training, inference or HPC workflow once and execute it across any of these environments or on-premises infrastructure, with Fuzzball routing each job automatically to the optimal destination based on cost, performance and data locality.
Enterprise AI and HPC teams pay a compounding price for every cloud (or system) they run on: rebuilt pipelines, rewritten deployment scripts, profiling, testing and validation, before a single workload can run on a new infrastructure. That cost scales directly against the speed the business demands. Fuzzball eliminates it and completely levels the playing field.
A genomics team that validates a sequencing pipeline on AWS moves it to Azure or OCI without modifying a single line in the workflow definition. A model training job that requires H100 density routes to CoreWeave automatically, while a data-sensitive simulation stays on-premises by policy. The workflow definition, container images, data orchestration and job sequencing remain identical across every environment. Teams reach production faster, access better GPU capacity at lower cost and carry no operational overhead for every cloud they add.
“AI teams today are asked to ship faster, control costs and maintain sovereignty over their data, simultaneously, across infrastructure that was never designed to work together,” said Gregory Kurtzer, CEO and founder of CIQ. “We built Fuzzball to solve that problem at the architectural level. When your workflow definition abstracts its requirements properly, you get portable access to every GPU environment the market offers and the freedom to route to wherever the best price, performance and data policy lives. Controlling your infrastructure and workloads is what enterprise AI infrastructure requires for production, and no other platform delivers it.”
One Control Plane Across Five Clouds and On-Premises
Fuzzball’s multi-cloud architecture rests on a provider-agnostic workflow definition. The file that describes compute jobs, data movement, container images and resource requirements carries no cloud-specific logic. Fuzzball’s orchestration layer translates that definition into concrete infrastructure on whichever environment sits underneath, whether that means Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, Oracle Cloud, AWS or CoreWeave.
Fuzzball federates across all five cloud environments, alongside on-premises clusters. It simultaneously evaluates available environments at runtime and routes each job to its optimal destination. Enterprises gain the GPU density of CoreWeave, the breadth of three major hyperscalers and the sovereignty of on-premises infrastructure from one control plane, with no separate toolchains, deployment scripts or IAM models per provider.
One Security Model Across Every Environment
Each cloud deployment is provisioned through a two-phase automated process that stands up a complete, production-ready cluster without manual intervention. Fuzzball maintains one IAM model, one set of RBAC policies and one secrets management posture across every cloud it runs on. Static credentials are eliminated at every layer: Workload Identity on GCP, Managed Identities on Azure, Dynamic Groups on OCI and IAM Roles on AWS. Security and compliance posture travel with the workflow, not the cloud.
“Fuzzball turns multi-cloud from a liability into a competitive advantage,” said Bjorn Hovland, president of CIQ. “Five clouds used to mean five IAM models, five deployment pipelines and five sets of operational overhead, with complexity and risk being multiplied.”
Availability
Fuzzball’s CoreWeave, AWS, GCP, OCI and Azure deployments are available now. On-premises deployment on clusters built with Warewulf, VMware or bare metal remains a first-class target. Organizations evaluating multi-cloud AI and HPC infrastructure can request a demo at ciq.com/products/fuzzball.
About CIQ
CIQ is the founding support and services partner for Rocky Linux and a leading provider of enterprise Linux infrastructure. CIQ delivers commercially supported Linux offerings, high-performance computing solutions and AI infrastructure to enterprises, government agencies, research institutions and supercomputing centers worldwide. CIQ’s products include the Rocky Linux from CIQ (RLC Pro) family of operating systems, Ascender Pro for IT automation, Fuzzball job-based container orchestration, Warewulf cluster provisioning and Apptainer, the leading container system for high-performance computing. For more information, visit ciq.com.
Source: CIQ
The post CIQ Brings Multi-Cloud AI and HPC Orchestration to Fuzzball Platform appeared first on HPCwire.
Within the last few days, a camera trap caught images of three mule deer using structure for the first time
A trio of mule deer have already scuttled across a not-quite-finished $20m wildlife bridge in Siskiyou county, marking a triumph for the California department of transportation (Caltrans).
The bridge with its accompanying fencing over Route 97 in Siskiyou county is the first wildlife crossing constructed over a major highway in California. The project promises to both improve driver safety and reduce mortality for migrating mule deer, elk and other animal species.
Continue reading...The 12,060-piece Lego set of architect Antoni Gaudí's Barcelona masterpiece, the Sagrada Familia, is now available for preorder.
The new design is one of multiple new Cash App Tags on the way.
The National AI Research Resource (NAIRR) Pilot program has made big strides since it was founded in early 2024 to promote the study of AI for science in the nation’s 4,000 colleges and universities, and the pilot program is now transitioning into a full-blown foundation, the National Science Foundation’s Senior Advisor for Cyberinfrastructure Katie Antypas told the crowd at the Trillion Parameter Consortium’s annual all-hands meeting this week in Baltimore, Maryland.
“Over two years into the NAIRR, we’re supporting over 700 different projects, 7,000 students across all 50 states,” Antypas said during her keynote address at TPC26, which attracted nearly 400 attendees for four days of tutorials, hackathons, plenaries, and other talks about AI for science. “We are moving and transitioning this into a permanent sustainable [program]. We’re thrilled to be able to be at this stage.”
Antypas said that the NSF spent $800 million on AI research in 2025, and said the spending on AI should “significantly” increase in fiscal year 2026. As it moves into a permanent program, NAIRR stands to attract a significant chunk of that money, Antypas said. “We’ll be doubling the funding for NAIRR in this fiscal year,” she said.
The federal investment NAIRR comes against the backdrop of a major decrease in federal funding for the NSF as a whole. The Trump administration requested only about $4 billion in funding for NSF for the next fiscal year, which is about half of the current funding level. There’s also the matter of Trump’s recent firing of all 22 members of the National Science Board in April, which roiled members of the HPC community.

(Source: NSF)
NAIRR looks to be safe thanks to the Trump administration’s endeavor to bolster AI at the national level. That is also reflected in the $320 million investment the Department of Energy is making in AI for science and engineering through the Genesis Mission, which launched in November. While DOE funds AI for science research at the National Labs, the NSF uses NAIRR as a primary vehicle for contributing to the advancement of AI for science and engineering in the nation’s vast network of colleges and universities. Most of the country’s academic supercomputing centers, from the San Diego Supercomputing Center (SDSC) to the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), receive funding from the NSF.
The research done at these academic supercomputing centers is critical for achieving the nation’s goals, Antypas said. “The areas where NSF makes investments in AI is in that fundamental research, that research that is either too early or too risky for the private sector to take over and nurture along,” she said. “NSF has established a number of AI institutes that focus on different particular AI fields and cross-cutting challenges.”
The NAIRR Pilot’s goals are very much aligned with the Trump Administration’s AI Action Plan, which was first iterated in July 2025. The NAIRR Pilot also supports the administration’s broader AI goals, including the DOE’s Genesis Mission, which was launched in November 2025 (after NAIRR Pilot launched) and was the topic of the TPC26 keynote address by the DOE Undersecretary for Science Darío Gil just before Antypas took the stage.
“NAIRR is also absolutely supporting the Genesis Mission that you’ve just heard about, in that NAIRR will be nurturing and supporting those ideas that will be upwelling continuously from the education community and preparing and training the next generation that will go on to our national labs and industry, and support all of our mission agencies as well,” Antypas said.
There are four main goals of NAIRR, Antypas said, including driving AI innovation in AI-powered discovery; training the next-generation workforce; increasing the capacity, integration, and use of public and private sector resources; and advancing AI interpretability, security, and trust.
Anytpas cited two projects that demonstrate NAIRR Pilot is achieving its first and second goals.A Cornell University researcher created a three-dimensional simulation environment for spatial reasoning. Dubbed KnotGym, the project utilized the Frontera supercomputer at UT Austin and Delta at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne. KnotGym, which was highlighted in a paper at the NeurIPS conference in San Diego recently, showed AI could handle simple knots but not more complex ones.
Antypas also highlighted a NAIRR Pilot project out of the University of Rochester that involved the development of AI agents that can accelerate the pace of science by handling tasks like performing searches of scientific literature, developing hypothesis, and analyzing data. The work resulted in the development of the AVIARY and Language Decision Process (LDP), which is incorporated into a Futurehouse platform and licensed to a startup called Edison Scientific.

(Source: NSF)
There is also progress being made in achieving the third goal of bolstering capacity. The National Secure Data Service has a deep partnership with the NSF, Antypas said, while a company called LEXSE+ is helping to provide access to synthetic data for low probability events. The NSF is also working with OpenMined to provide access in the research and education community’s to privacy-preserving technologies.
The fourth NAIRR Pilot goal, advancing AI, interpretability, security and trust, is arguably the toughest. “The is by far the most challenging of the four goals of the NAIRR,” Antypas said. “How do I advance trust of a particular model or a particular output? What does it mean for an infrastructure to have a role in building trust? That’s something that our interagency steering committee has been thinking a lot about lately.”
Antypas said the NSF is prioritizing research in interpretability, security and trust areas. Specifically, the NSF is focused on developing different criteria for transparency requirements and best practices for contributed data and models. It’s also eager to make progress in benchmarking, tracking, and evaluating AI models.
As the NAIRR Pilot project approaches its third year, NSF officials have elevated the goals. The NSF seeks to create a NAIRR Foundation, which funds an “operating center” that touches 100,000 students and involves 10,000 projects, Antypas said. Finally, the roadmap calls for NAIRR to be scaled up another 10x, where it touches 1 million students across 100,000 projects.
“We’re at the next phase where we’re building that foundation,” Antypas said. “We believe we can scale to supporting 100,000 students, tens of thousands of different projects. Once we get that operating center in place and then ultimately where we go will obviously depend on the support we receive from stakeholders and Congress. But we really see that this is a platform that can scale to a million students and hundreds of thousands of projects and investigators that are really supported through the narrative.”
Over the next year, NSF expects to announce new data infrastructure and data services available through the NAIRR, Antypas said. “We continue to see that data integration data infrastructure is a key challenge,” she said. Demand is also high for education and training. NSF-sponsored workshops get filled up in just days, thanks to the huge demand for hands-on training, Antypas said.
“In summary, after two years of the pilot, I think we have many, many lessons learned,” she concluded. “One is that the public private partnership model has been really advantageous not only in expanding the scale of resources, but the variety of resources that are available to the research community. We see that demand for resources is incredibly high. That’s not really surprising.”
It’s also looking at how it can expand from the federal level to working at the state and regional level, along with tracking outcomes, such as job creation, rather than just counting the number of papers that get published.
“We need to challenge ourselves as a community to go beyond that and to really look at how this impacts regional job creation, how this how investments translate to inventions, impacts and new startups and businesses,” she said. “And so we are putting some of the collection mechanisms in place so that over the long term that we can judge these.”
The post NSF’s Antypas Reflects on Successes of NAIRR Pilot at TPC26 appeared first on HPCwire.
US president announces plans for two new coal plants, in Alaska and West Virginia, using Defense Production Act
Donald Trump is using wartime presidential authority to hand $700m to coal-fired power plants in the US, the latest move by the president to bolster what he called “clean, beautiful coal”, despite it being the dirtiest of fossil fuels.
“Today, we’re taking historic action to bring down the price of energy and the cost of living for all Americans with the power of clean, beautiful coal,” he said at xa press conference on Thursday.
Continue reading...Three GOP senators join Democrats as dispute over proposed payouts exposes party divisions
Senate Republicans on Thursday narrowly scuttled an attempt by Democrats to stop Donald Trump from creating a $1.8bn fund to pay his allies, even as signs emerged that dissent over the proposal was spreading inside the US president’s own party.
Democratic Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer had proposed inserting language barring the payouts into Republican-backed legislation to fund Trump’s mass deportation campaign through the duration of his term.
Continue reading...There's been no word yet on if the Kennedy Center plans to remain open after July 5. It was to be closed for two years for extensive repairs beginning this summer.
Despite flare-ups in Middle East violence, investors remain optimistic that the U.S. and Iran will soon end the war.
Meta has reportedly delayed the developer release of its Muse Spark AI model API multiple times, and as of Tuesday, had no scheduled launch date, according to the Wall Street Journal (paywalled). Reuters reports: A Meta spokesperson told Reuters on Wednesday that the company is already testing the Application Programming Interface (API) with some early partners and is looking forward to releasing it this month. "The muse spark API will be coming soon," Meta AI Chief Alexandr Wang announced in a post on X in April. Meta unveiled Muse Spark in April as the first model built to close the gap with rivals. Muse Spark is the first in a new series of models created by the company's Superintelligence Labs. Earlier on Wednesday, Meta unveiled an AI agent aimed at helping businesses carry out day-to-day operations, hinting at the company's ambitions to compete with rivals such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Alphabet's Google.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Sens. Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican, and Cory Booker, a New Jersey Democrat, said the anti-weaponization fund violates multiple constitutional provisions.
The money will fund new and existing coal plants, as well as an export terminal in Oakland, California.
Fan ran on to court during NBA finals opener
Knicks guard appeared upset with fans
The NBA has banned two fans for life after an incident in which a man ran on to the court to take a selfie with Victor Wembanyama during Game 1 of the finals.
In a separate case, ESPN reports that the league is investigating an incident during Wednesday night’s game when New York Knicks star Jalen Brunson became upset after an interaction with fans during the fourth quarter of his team’s 105-95 victory over the San Antonio Spurs.
Continue reading...The new paid tier adds features like longer stories and deeper metrics as Meta looks to diversify revenue beyond advertising.
Since 2015, fires have undone years of effort to reduce ozone levels, underscoring a growing public health crisis
The highly destructive wildfires that have battered the US and North America in recent years have significantly increased emissions and been linked to tens of thousands of premature deaths, but their impact on air quality is greater than previously known, according to new research.
A study published in Science on Thursday found that, since 2015, wildfires have reversed US progress toward ozone air quality standards, as the worsening pollution caused by wildfire smoke has undone years of efforts to reduce emissions. Ground-level ozone (O3) is created when pollutants from cars, refineries and industrial sources react with sunlight, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
Continue reading...A stock market boom is elevating more Americans into the ranks of the nation's millionaires, a new study finds.
As Israel’s standing in the U.S., and among liberals in particular, continues to crater, the mainstream American media is vaguely taking notice. But when they report on this increasingly potent political dynamic, national publications continue to frame it as a tension among Democratic voters — rather than a tension between Democratic voters and their party leadership.
“A Democrat’s Dodge on AIPAC Points to the Party’s Tensions Over Israel,” read one recent New York Times headline. “Tensions over pro-Israel lobbying group highlight rifts in Democratic primaries,” read another Reuters headline. “Israel’s subsequent military campaign in Gaza has driven a significant, deeper-than-ever divide among Democrats,” NBC News reported last week. “The U.S.-Israel alliance has rapidly gone from a point of bipartisan consensus to a wedge issue dividing both parties,” opined the Washington Post.
All of those were just last month, but the false equivocation goes back further. “The Democratic primary electorate,” The Hill informed readers in March, “is increasingly divided over Israel.” “Israel tensions threaten Dems’ midterm plans,” Politico announced in a January headline, which continued in the piece: “Just as Democrats are finding their footing by focusing on affordability, their differences on Israel are threatening to tear them apart.” “New York City’s annual Israel Day Parade has long been considered a bipartisan tradition — but this year, the event is becoming a symbol of the growing divide within the Democratic Party over Israel,” Sinclair’s National News Desk reported last week.
There’s only one problem with the “tensions,” “divided,” and “wedge issue” framing: It is not supported by any polls. The “divide,” such as it is, is increasingly not among Democrats or even liberals; it is between the supermajority of Democratic Party voters and party leadership. While party leaders such as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senator Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, and big Democratic donors, are pro-Israel, actual Democratic voters have moved on from Israel with remarkable speed and consistency. Let’s take a look at the polling:
To contextualize that 13 percent — which is down from 34 percent of Democrats who said they viewed Israel positively back in 2023 — it’s even lower than the number of Democrats who say they support traditional right-wing stances, such as:
The media justifiably treats all of these issues as Republican or conservative-coded views. Yet support for Israel is still treated as a mainstream, if contested, liberal value.
In reality, it’s simply not: It’s overwhelmingly a Republican, right-wing view not backed by a supermajority of Democrats. So why has this consistently misleading narrative in U.S. media been allowed to persist?
The Israel “divide,” such as it is, is increasingly not among Democrats or even liberals; it is between the supermajority of Democratic Party voters and party leadership.
There’s an obvious tension over Israel and the U.S. role in supporting it, which has been writ large in high-profile battles, from Democratic Senate campaigns to debates over the Democrats’ platform. The media has to cover that tension, but describing it more accurately — as a divide between party elites and the rank and file — is an awkward narrative, one that requires a deeper class and material analysis.
So instead, it’s just indexed under the misleading and generic label of “party divisions.” Naturally, Israel is not a 100–0 issue in favor of Palestine among voters, but no issue is that one-sided. A minority of Democrats support all kinds of relatively fringe, right-wing opinions. Here are some of them compared alongside the issue of Israel–Palestine. The percentage of Democrats who:
Polls are not a perfect snapshot of political beliefs and can be somewhat contradictory (a profile of the 2 percent of Democrats who think Israel is committing genocide and have a positive view of the country would make an interesting read). But polls over the past three years, and the last few months in particular, show a very clear trend that support for Israel is now an increasingly fringe belief among Democrats. It’s worth emphasizing that the issue of Democratic voters souring on Israel is not particularly sectarian, either, with Jewish Democrats, especially those under the age of 35, steadily abandoning Israel. A Washington Post poll from October found that among Jewish Americans ages 18 to 34, only 36 percent claimed to have an “emotional attached to Israel,” and half agree with the broad liberal consensus that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.
But if watching how Democratic leadership and the party’s funders continue to back Israel to the hilt was your only barometer, you might assume there’s been no shift in public sentiment at all.
The dynamic is playing out over efforts to push a war powers resolution to end U.S. support for Israel’s bombing and occupation in Lebanon. On Wednesday, Axios, citing “numerous” anonymous “House Democrats” and “aides,” attempted to paint a Rep. Rashida Tlaib-led bill to end U.S. support as a provocation dividing Democrats. “An impending House vote to constrain the Trump administration from joining Israel’s war in Lebanon has some Democrats fuming that one of their own members is forcing them to take an agonizing vote,” reporter Andrew Solender lamented.
But what Solender fails to note is that Tlaib’s bill is overwhelmingly the majoritarian position among Democrats. A recent Arab American Institute commissioned poll found that 62 percent of Democrats “believe the U.S. should take more steps to pressure Israel to stop bombing and leave southern Lebanon,” and only 17 percent disagree. The substance of Tlaib’s bill is the Democratic voter position by almost 4 to 1. The tension in this story, such as it is, is between anonymous “Democratic leadership” and rank-and-file Democrats. And we know this because every single source in the Axios article opposing the war powers resolution had to be anonymous, while everyone supporting it proudly put their name on their quotes. What does this tell us about how popular support for Israel’s boundless violence in the Levant is?
Democratic leadership, like its Big Donor base, is entirely out of sync with the current sentiment within the party.
Meanwhile, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and other majority pro-Israel groups are well aware of the existential shift that’s underway and have responded by intervening in primaries at an unprecedented clip. Already in this midterm cycle, as Donald Shaw at Sludge reported, “four major pro-Israel committees — AIPAC’s PAC, its outside spending arm United Democracy Project (UDP), the closely aligned Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI) super PAC, and the Republican Jewish Coalition’s Victory Fund — have poured nearly $50 million into congressional races nationwide.” Receiving money from AIPAC has become politically toxic for Democrats, so much so that the lobbying group is deploying an elaborate web of shell organizations to funnel money to their preferred candidates.
Still, AIPAC is heading into the midterms bigger than ever, and its allied super PAC has a staggering war chest of nearly $100 million on hand — up from $35 million in 2022, when AIPAC first began directing funding in congressional campaigns. Since then, it has spent over $221 million, not including the $100 million set aside for the 2026 midterms.
The two most powerful Democrats in the country, Jeffries and Schumer, are prominent and consistent backers of Israel, despite their party’s sizable shift. Jeffries was the largest recipient of pro-Israel money in the House last election cycle out of 435 voting members. And Schumer, who has explicitly said his “job” is to “keep the left pro-Israel,” spent last weekend marching in a pro-Israel parade in New York City alongside war criminals and self-identified “fascists.” Leadership, like its Big Donor base, is entirely out of sync with the current sentiment within the party.
It’s not just pro-Israel donors driving this “wedge.” Backing Israel and the endless arming of its military has been, and continues to be, a boondoggle for the broader U.S. military–industrial complex that captures the Washington consensus. Of the some $22 billion in military aid that Israel has received since October 7, 2023, roughly 75 percent has gone to U.S. arms companies that themselves employ an army of lobbyists and think tank boosters to promote Israel and its sprawling, seemingly never-ending expansionism and mass violence.
Despite 77 percent of Democratic voters saying Israel has committed genocide in Gaza, only 8.5 percent of Democrats in Congress have. Despite Democratic voters sympathizing more with Palestine than Israel at a ratio of 4 to 1, the number of Democrats in Congress who put the rights of Palestinians ahead of the interests of Israel could likely be counted on one hand. How long will our media continue to act like there is meaningful disagreement among Democrats, as such, when — among the rank and file — it’s an issue as settled as prayer in public schools, abortion, and climate change?
As the gap between the will of Democratic voters and its leadership grows more and more apparent, our media will continue to vaguely acknowledge this “division” without identifying the actual source of it. It’s not between the voters themselves, whose opinions are measurable and consistent, but between the voters and the leaders they elected — in theory — to represent their interests.
The post The Real “Divide” Among Democrats Over Israel Is Between Party Leadership and Voters appeared first on The Intercept.
Policy agreement means trans people will continue to have access to Kenwood Ladies’ and Highgate Men’s ponds in north-west London
The bathing ponds at Hampstead Heath in north-west London will remain trans-inclusive after a public consultation overwhelmingly favoured its existing rules.
There are gender-segregated ponds for men and women, with trans people able to swim in whichever they feel most appropriate, or use the heath’s mixed-gender pond instead.
Continue reading...The U.S. and its Five Eyes intelligence partners issued a joint warning (PDF) that Chinese military intelligence services are using LinkedIn and other professional networking sites to recruit people with access to government, military, foreign policy, or sensitive economic information. "These actors use an aggressive online recruitment strategy whereby intelligence officers or their affiliates pose as employees of private consultancies, think tanks or human resources firms, and place online job advertisements for foreign policy and defense analysts," the agencies said Wednesday. "China's military intelligence services ultimately seek to acquire privileged military, political and economic intelligence that can provide China with a strategic and tactical advantage over the Five Eyes." Bloomberg reports: China was targeting Five Eyes nationals with security clearance, particularly those working in foreign affairs, security and intelligence, and military personnel including people stationed in the Asia-Pacific region, it said. People with more peripheral access to government information, such as academics, journalists and think tank employees, were also being approached. The Chinese embassy in the UK strongly condemned the accusations, calling the allegation of Chinese espionage threats "entirely fabricated" and "malicious slander." The "Five Eyes" members have "engaged in unscrupulous espionage and intelligence-gathering activities around the globe. Their activities are the real threat to peace-loving countries," the embassy said in a statement Thursday. [...] According to the agencies, Chinese spies have commissioned reports to be written by those they've approached, paying them anywhere from a few hundred to several thousand dollars, with payments sometimes made in cryptocurrency. "Military members may be asked about their roles and unit activities, home base or naval vessel," the notice said. "Five Eyes agencies have identified individuals who have undertaken these activities, leading to criminal prosecutions, job losses, and security-clearance revocation," it warned.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ron Wyden tells of ‘grave concerns’ over plan, first revealed by Guardian, to hold families at sprawling Louisiana facility
The ranking member on the US Senate’s influential finance committee has demanded transparency over a proposed “first-of-its-kind” ICE family and child detention center in Alexandria, Louisiana, citing reporting by the Guardian that first revealed the Trump administration’s plans in March.
Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, has written to the project’s contractors and to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) expressing concerns over conflicts of interest, environmental contamination and “the absence of a public process” in the center’s planning.
Continue reading...
In a May 16 Truth Social post, President Donald Trump cited updated climate change scenarios to misleadingly claim that experts had “admitted” prior climate change projections “were WRONG! WRONG! WRONG!” The regularly scheduled revision reflects in part the progress the world has made on moving away from fossil fuels.
Trump was reacting to a new set of seven scenarios of emissions by the end of the century, proposed in an April 7 paper by an international group of scientists. Over time, the range of plausible scenarios has narrowed. The most pessimistic scenario now shows lower emissions than 15 years ago, when the prior scenarios were developed, and the most optimistic one now shows more.

Trump, however, used the update to cast doubt on the reality and seriousness of global warming. “GOOD RIDDANCE!” he wrote. “After 15 years of Dumocrats promising that ‘Climate Change’ is going to destroy the Planet, the United Nations TOP Climate Committee just admitted that its own projections (RCP8.5) were WRONG! WRONG! WRONG!”
RCP8.5 was the most pessimistic of four scenarios that were selected in 2007 and described in 2011. The scenarios looked at how much the climate might change by 2100, relative to the industrial revolution.
“RCP8.5 was always this low-probability, high-impact case,” Detlef van Vuuren, a climate researcher at Utrecht University and PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, told us. He helped lead the effort to develop both the new and earlier climate scenarios. As 15 years have passed and the end of the century has gotten closer, it has become clearer what emissions paths are most plausible.
It’s “useful to consider possible outcomes that are less attractive, and it doesn’t mean that you were wrong by considering those if they didn’t come true,” van Vuuren said. “Unfortunately, the overall outcome of all of this is that we are in a situation that is actually leading to quite strong climate impact still.”
Van Vuuren also clarified that Trump is incorrect to call the international group of researchers behind the scenarios “the United Nations TOP Climate Committee.” A U.N. group, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, summarizes the existing research on climate change. The scenarios are anticipated to have a “major role” in the group’s next climate assessments, he said, but it did not come up with the new scenarios.
“The paper belongs to the broader body of scientific literature produced by the international research community, under the coordination of the World Climate Research Program, not the IPCC,” the IPCC wrote in a May 20 statement.
We asked the White House if Trump was referring to the IPCC in his post and if he was suggesting that climate change is not a serious problem. In an emailed reply, White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers said that “Dumocrats” and others had for years made “bogus ‘climate change’ claims that we would destroy the planet,” leading countries that pursued energy transition policies to be “destroyed” with “blackouts and sky-high prices.”
“The rogue climate activists continue to be ‘Wrong! Wrong! Wrong!’ and President Trump continues to be ‘Right! Right! Right!’” Rogers said.
Experts said that Trump’s comments on climate scenarios misrepresented their purpose.
“Scenarios are not predictions: they are ‘what-if’ pictures of the future,” Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist and professor at Texas Tech University, told us via email.
“The highest-emission scenario serves as a basis for exploring the potential consequences of climate change if everything goes wrong,” a post on the new climate scenarios from the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, a Dutch government research institute, explained. “After all, it is important to ensure that we are also prepared for undesirable developments.”
Termed “representative climate pathways,” the older scenarios by design covered a broad range of climate trajectories, with RCP8.5 representing the 90th percentile of baseline scenarios in the literature at the time. (A baseline scenario illustrates a case where people do not take action to mitigate climate change, but there can be a range of baseline scenarios depending on other factors, such as how much fossil fuel use increases.) The most optimistic scenario, by contrast, represented below the 10th percentile of mitigation scenarios in the literature.
Van Vuuren likened the scenarios to a range of possible times a person might arrive at a destination on a drive. Initially, a person might want to consider the possibility of a traffic jam or other misadventures. But as the trip progresses, a traffic jam will or will not emerge, and the range of plausible arrival times will become narrower. In the case of the climate scenarios, the destination is the year 2100, and we are now 15 years closer to it than we were when the previous scenarios were laid out.

In recent years, the world has not followed the trajectory outlined in RCP8.5, van Vuuren said. There are lower emissions and greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere than were laid out in that scenario. This means that a new low-probability, high-impact case will “automatically” be lower than the previous one, he said.
On top of this, renewable energy became more economically competitive, he said. RCP8.5 assumed high use of fossil fuels, especially coal. When RCP8.5 was developed, “emissions had been growing relatively fast in Asia, and based on coal,” van Vuuren said. In the years since, the outlook has improved for the growth of renewables and gotten far worse for coal.
Between 2000 and 2015, “global emissions and temperature change had been reliably tracking” the RCP8.5 scenario, Hayhoe said.
But since 2015, reality diverged from the RCP8.5 scenario, due to “massive advances” in clean energy, she said, as well as climate policies that were enacted following the 2015 Paris Agreement, a major climate treaty that the U.S. has left during each of the two Trump administrations. “And that, in a nutshell, is why the higher of the new scenarios is lower than RCP8.5,” she said.
As time passed, some climate scientists began to critique the plausibility of RCP8.5, van Vuuren and his colleagues acknowledged in the new paper. Some also argued that it never was all that plausible. And some have said that researchers, policymakers and communicators have at times misused RCP8.5 by treating it as a likely outcome of the business-as-usual approach to climate change.
But Trump and his allies have overgeneralized these criticisms. We wrote in 2018, for example, that Trump administration officials had criticized the National Climate Assessment for being based on the “worst” or “most extreme” scenario, when it had used multiple scenarios.
And last year, a Department of Energy report released to justify rescinding the endangerment finding — the underpinning for greenhouse gas regulation in the U.S. — similarly used RCP8.5 in an attempt to discredit climate science. The DOE report “selectively focuses on high-end emissions scenarios, like RCP8.5, portraying them as failed predictions, to argue that the risks of climate change are exaggerated,” a comment submitted to the DOE on behalf of more than 85 scientists said. (The DOE report was written by five researchers who have long propagated contrarian views on climate change. In its final February rule rescinding the endangerment finding, the EPA stated that the agency is no longer relying on the DOE report “in light of concerns raised by some commenters.”)
“A tripling of global CO2 emissions by 2100,” as envisioned in RCP8.5, “may never have been particularly plausible even back in 2011 when RCP8.5 was originally published,” a trio of climate scientists wrote for the Climate Brink blog on May 18 on the retirement of the high-end scenario. “But a 21st century of increasing fossil fuel use leading to a doubling of emissions was within the realm of the possible.” It’s a “sign of progress” that the world is not heading toward a doubling of emissions, the researchers wrote, saying that the retirement of RCP8.5 doesn’t undermine “the edifice of all of climate science as both President Trump and some overly excited internet pundits claim.”
Trump’s post also incorrectly suggested that climate change is not a serious problem.
“For far too long Climate Activism has been used by Dumocrats to scare Americans, push horrible Energy Polices, and fund BILLIONS into their bogus research programs,” he wrote. “Unlike the Dumocrats, who use Climate Alarmism nonsense to push their GREEN NEW SCAM, my Administration will always be based on TRUTH, SCIENCE, and FACT!”
Hayhoe said that Trump’s claims follow a familiar pattern of climate denial: claiming that climate change isn’t bad or its impacts aren’t serious. But the retirement of RCP8.5 does not change the fact that consequential global warming is occurring and will continue to occur.
Van Vuuren said that “by far the most important news” from the new climate scenarios publication is that the lowest plausible emissions scenario is now higher than before, hitting 1.7 degrees Celsius “or slightly higher” — the equivalent of more than 3 degrees Fahrenheit — before falling to around 1.5 C by 2100. This would mean the world would substantially overshoot the longstanding goal of limiting warming to no more than 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels. The scenario, notably, also relies on a high degree of carbon removal, which as a technology has yet to be deployed at large scale.
“The main message is that because emissions have been increasing instead of decreasing, we have increasingly lost our sight on the climate goals, which were formulated to prevent dangerous climate change,” he said.
Currently, the world is approximately following the medium scenario, van Vuuren said, which would lead to around 2.5 C to 3 C (4.5 F to 5.4 F), of warming by the end of the century. “That will bring quite substantial climate damage,” he said. “It will mean a substantial increase in extreme [weather and climate] events, it will mean sea level rise, it will mean impacts on agricultural yields, and also substantial increase in the risk of tipping points,” or levels of climate change that significantly and often irreversibly alter systems.
The RCP8.5 scenario translated to around 4.5 C of warming by 2100, or around 8 F. The new highest scenario includes expected warming of nearly 3.5 C, or around 6 F, and temperatures would continue to rise after 2100.
The Climate Brink post also explained that for a given level of warming, certain risks have increased. “So, even if the high-end emissions in RCP8.5 won’t materialize, the damages projected in these earlier climate simulations remain very much in play,” the researchers said.
Van Vuuren added that the temperature increases in the new paper are based on a “very simple” climate model but that further climate modeling will be done to understand how conditions will affect the climate system. In the past few years, he said that “we actually saw temperature increase going up much faster than in our scenarios.” The meaning of this is not yet known, but some research has suggested that this indicates the climate system is more sensitive to greenhouse gases, he said, which could mean much higher temperatures from those gases than previously thought. If that’s the case, “the temperature rise could still easily exceed 4°C,” or more than 7 F, the PBL post said.
The positive news, Hayhoe said, is that the scenarios show people can affect the trajectory of climate change. “The most important thing that these scenarios — both the older RCP ones and this newer set — show, without a shadow of a doubt, is that WE are the biggest uncertainty in terms of future impacts.”
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The post Trump Misrepresents Climate Change Scenarios appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Mother demands overhaul of maternity care after settling case over birth at Queen’s hospital in Romford in 2019
The family of a girl left brain-damaged at birth have agreed to accept £28m in damages after the NHS trust involved admitted that its mistakes led to the tragedy.
Barking, Havering and Redbridge university hospitals NHS trust failed to monitor the baby’s heart rate while her mother was in labour or ask an obstetrician to review the case, either of which might have led to the girl being born in a healthy condition.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Greater Lincolnshire mayor walks out on cabinet minister after row over social media role in community tensions
Andrea Jenkyns walked out of a meeting with a cabinet minister and several other metropolitan mayors on Thursday after a heated discussion about the murder of Henry Nowak and the civil unrest that has followed.
The Reform mayor of Greater Lincolnshire walked out of the meeting with the communities secretary, Steve Reed, and other regional leaders after a row over the role social media has played in exacerbating community tensions.
Continue reading...The UK has banned Piker and Cenk Uygur from entry – but the objectionable things they’ve said are not more dangerous than Israel itself
This week, the British government banned Hasan Piker and Cenk Uygur, two leftwing US commentators with millions of followers, from entering the country on the grounds that their presence would not be “conducive to the public good”. It did not spell out what it meant by this very broad phrase, but Piker and Uygur have accused the government of denying them entry because of their prolific criticism of Israel. Some critics have accused the pair of antisemitism, which they deny.
A lot has been written about the Piker-Uygur ban, and I don’t think I need to litigate everything they have ever uttered here. They have undeniably said some objectionable things (Piker, for example, said some Orthodox Jews are “inbred”, which he later apologized for). What sort of speech crosses a line that makes you detrimental to the public good, is not clear, however. Conservative podcaster Ben Shapiro, for example, has said that “Arabs like to bomb crap and live in open sewage”. While he later apologized for this, he has repeatedly characterized Arabs as barbarians who “value murder”. The British government has never banned him from speaking in the UK.
Continue reading...Democratic attorney general’s office says it will continue to try to push 2020 presidential election case through courts
The Arizona supreme court has denied a prosecutor’s appeal of an order that the state’s fake elector case against Donald Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows, the former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani and others over the 2020 presidential election be sent back to a grand jury.
The decision marks another setback for the state’s Democratic attorney general, Kris Mayes, as she struggles to push the sprawling case through the courts. Mayes’s office said it will again present the case in its entirety to a grand jury rather than end the prosecution.
Continue reading...Outcomes in key races for governor and LA mayor remain unsettled as mayoral hopefuls Spencer Pratt and Nithya Raman, as well as gubernatorial candidates Xavier Becerra, Steve Hilton and Tom Steyer await their electoral fates.
Roku, the company that makes TV boxes and sells ad space based on your usage patterns, has released its remote control operating system as open source – and by remote control I don’t mean robot stuff or whatever, but actual remote controls, the thing you use to control your TV or whatever from the couch.
Roku has announced the official availability of Roku LT OS – a lightweight, highly deterministic open-source operating system that is already used in our industry-changing Roku remote controls.
[…]
In addition to high-performance automotive platforms, Roku LT OS is designed to be accessible to the broader developer community. The operating system ships with native support for the ESP32 platform, a highly popular SoC among hobbyists and makers. Because ESP32 development boards are widely available online for just a few dollars, developers can get started with Roku LT OS with minimal hardware investment.
↫ Roku’s developers blog
As far as I can tell, this operating system is entirely new and not based on Linux or something else, but the available documentation is light on details so I can’t make much more out of it. Regardless, it’s nice to have another open source embedded operating system.
Borrowers have a short window to prepare for numerous upcoming student loan changes. Here's where to start.
While huge donations are nothing new in UK politics, some fear electoral finance is distorting democracy itself
Keir Starmer may be relaxed about allowing millions from cryptocurrency billionaires to flow into Reform UK’s coffers but Labour MPs are tearing their hair out every time the quarterly data on electoral finance drops.
“I look at it through my fingers,” says one MP, as the latest figures show a further £7m went to Reform UK from just two men, Christopher Harborne and Ben Delo.
Continue reading...Investors will buy into the market-leading tech and cult of Musk despite a price that is defying gravity
“Our mission,” says the opening sentence of SpaceX’s listing document with a straight face, “is to build the systems and technologies necessary to make life multi-planetary, to understand the true nature of the universe, and to extend the light of consciousness to the stars.”
The last bit has an echo of the laughable WeWork, which was going to “elevate the world’s consciousness” via the medium of shared office spaces. But, yes, if SpaceX could tick off all the items on Elon Musk’s to-do list, one could make a case that the company should be valued at $1.77tn (£1.32tn).
Continue reading...PM says Britons are ‘reasonable, tolerant people’ and backs MP’s legal action against Grok firm over fake sexualised images
Elon Musk is “interfering in our politics” and attempting to create division, Keir Starmer has said, in a significant toughening of government language about the X owner.
The prime minister’s comments come after weeks of posts by Musk on his social media platform about the murder of Henry Nowak, many of which have used far-right themes and talking points.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: The Supreme Court sided with the Trump administration Thursday in upholding the power of federal regulators to enforce data privacy laws on telecommunications companies. The 8-1 decision (PDF) preserved one of the Federal Communications Commission's key tools, though the companies also won a concession from the Republican administration that could shift the regulatory landscape. The appeal from telecommunications giants Verizon and AT&T challenged a combined $100 million in penalties imposed after the agency determined that the companies had failed to safeguard customer location data. The companies argued that the FCC's process was unconstitutional because it gave them little opportunity to tell their side of the story in front of a jury. The administration defended the fines are an essential regulatory tool. But the government also said companies did not have to pay the penalties right away, a regulatory shift in the companies' favor. The Supreme Court agreed, affirming the FCC's power to order fines when challenges are still available. "The orders at issue did not settle the carriers' legal obligations because, stated simply, they did not create an obligation to pay," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the majority. [...] Other agencies use similar enforcement methods, so a sweeping victory for AT&T and Verizon could have had widespread effects, advocates said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Justice department filed charges against Trump’s former adviser in 2025 as part of onslaught against president’s critics
John Bolton, the former US national security adviser who left Donald Trump’s first administration and became a staunch critic of the US president, has reached a plea agreement in a case criminally charging him with mishandling classified documents, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The agreement, subject to court approval, will allow Bolton to plead guilty to one count of illegal retention of sensitive national security information and requires him to pay a $2.25m fine, the person said, and serve anywhere between no time and five years in prison.
Continue reading...Ministers should end Palantir’s contract before medical confidentiality is sacrificed to Silicon Valley’s appetite for public data
Alarm bells ought to have rung when it emerged last month that Palantir engineers could gain “unlimited access” to identifiable NHS patient data. Such sensitive medical information was only supposed to be available either to someone involved in a patient’s care or with the patient’s informed consent. NHS England’s new position appears to have changed that, extending access to private companies because it may make data processing easier. Convenience is not a basis for undermining medical confidentiality.
Nicola Byrne, the government’s national data guardian, clearly thought the NHS had broken its promise that its £330m deal with Palantir would see “identifiable patient information … limited to NHS staff with a legitimate need”. Patients tell doctors things they may tell no one else. If they think that sensitive details can be disclosed to US tech corporations, trust will suffer – and patients will say less when the truth matters most.
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Continue reading...The president’s image and name are proliferating in Washington and beyond, overturning well-advised democratic taboos on glorifying sitting leaders
One of the surest signs of an authoritarian regime is the ubiquity of its leader. Mussolini’s face was plastered across fascist Italy. In North Korea, pictures of Kim Jong-un have appeared alongside those of his father and grandfather, which are present in every home and public building. The golden statue of Turkmenistan’s leader, Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, perching on a marble cliff in the capital is one of a multitude of portrayals.
Thriving democracies spurn such displays, rightly judging it safer to laud leaders once they are out of power. The first US president, George Washington, refused to appear on currency, believing that redolent of European monarchs. The 47th has no such concerns. The administration wants a $250 bill depicting Donald Trump to commemorate the 250th anniversary of independence, though federal law does not currently allow banknotes to depict living people. His signature will soon appear on $100 bills: a first for a US president.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Andrés Manuel López Obrador says Washington is using investigations into governors and propaganda to boost rivals
Mexico’s former president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has accused US officials of trying to weaken the governing party to strengthen the opposition, amid rising tensions between the two countries over Washington’s investigations into several Mexican governors.
“Some US officials are plotting to weaken Morena and strengthen the rightwing opposition in Mexico with the aim of restoring a subservient, corrupt, mafia-like, and cruel government,” López Obrador wrote in a lengthy letter posted on X on Wednesday.
Continue reading...Beluga whales, which Marineland threatened to euthanize in 2025, will be moved to sanctuaries in Spain or across US
Canada and an embattled marine park have reached a tentative deal on the future of 30 beluga whales, ending a saga that has captivated the public and angered animal rights groups.
The federal fisheries ministry announced this week that all of Marineland’s belugas would be shipped to either Spain or one of four locations in the US, ending whale captivity in Canada.
Continue reading...Social Security could reportedly be cut by $500 per month in 2032. Here's how to increase your savings before then.
State election officials continue to sift through uncounted primary ballots, which could take days or even weeks
The California governor’s race remained unsettled Thursday, as state election officials continued to sift through uncounted primary ballots – a process that could take days or even weeks as voters eagerly await the results.
Polls indicated that British-born conservative pundit Steve Hilton was narrowly leading the race, followed by former US health and human services secretary Xavier Becerra. Billionaire Tom Steyer trailed behind the pair. Under California’s primary system, the top two vote-getters will advance to the general election.
Continue reading...Raymond Chen shares some history regarding Windows 8’s development:
During the development of Windows 8, we needed a name for “that thing we’re creating.” Not being a particularly clever bunch when it comes to code names, we just called it “the modern experience,” to distinguish it from what we had in Windows 7, which was called “the classic experience.”
And then, as Microspeak demands, we started abbreviating like mad.
↫ Raymond Chen
Basically, they added “mo” for “modern” in front of everything, so the Metro shell became “MoSh”, the Settings application “MoSet”, and so on. And yes, the code name for the Photos application was exactly what it sounds like.
Three solar flares burst from the sun this week, raising the chances of seeing the northern lights for people across the United States.
Social Security back pay comes with special protections, but unpaid debt can still create risks in some situations.
Even in today's unpredictable economic climate, retirees still have multiple ways to improve their finances.
Hair stylist Frédéric Fekkai and ex-Miami Beach mayor Philip Levine accused in new testimony, lawmakers reveal
Republican lawmakers have asked the Department of Justice to investigate sexual assault allegations involving two men made by Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime assistant.
In a transcribed closed-door interview in late May, as part of a congressional investigation into Epstein, Sarah Kellen, one of the late sex offender’s former aides, told the House oversight and reform committee she was “sexually and psychologically abused” by him during her employment – but also alleged she was sexually assaulted by the French celebrity hairstylist Frédéric Fekkai, and by Philip Levine, the former mayor of Miami Beach, in separate incidents in the early 2000s.
Continue reading...schwit1 shares a report from NJ.com: Samsung is pulling up stakes in New Jersey and heading to Texas, a move that could leave roughly 1,000 Garden State workers facing a stark choice: relocate or risk losing their jobs. The South Korean tech giant confirmed this week that it will move its US headquarters from Englewood Cliffs, NJ, to its existing campus in Plano, Texas, marking a stunning reversal less than a year after it celebrated the opening of a new headquarters in Bergen County. The relocation is expected to be completed by the end of the year, according to company statements. "Samsung Electronics America Inc. is undergoing a business transformation designed to better position our organization for long-term growth and future success. As part of this effort, we are relocating our U.S. headquarters from New Jersey to our existing campus in Plano, Texas, building on our 30-year presence in the state," said Samsung in a statement emailed to NJ.com on Tuesday. "As part of this strategy, we will be optimizing parts of the organization to ensure our roles and functions align to key business priorities. We recognize such adjustments will have an impact on our people and we will be providing support to those affected," it continued.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Country is shaken by the brutal murders of two girls, aged 14 and 17, whose bodies were discovered just days apart
Argentina has reacted with fury after the bodies of two murdered teenage girls were found just two days apart. The latest killings underscore the South American country’s enduring femicide crisis despite years of feminist campaigning, and have prompted alarm over the decision to cut support for victims of gender-based violence under the far-right administration of Javier Milei.
Police found the remains of Agostina Vega, 14, on Saturday, in a field on the outskirts of the city of Córdoba. She had been fatally strangled and her body had been dismembered, according to local media reports.
Continue reading...June 4, 2026 — When most people picture a supercomputer, they imagine endless rows of compute and storage racks, blinking lights and machines thinking faster than humans can conceive. What they don’t visualize is the system quietly working underneath it all — a complicated, choreographed dance that keeps all that processing power from turning into heat, and from heat into failure.

A complex system of cooling towers, chillers, pumps, heat exchangers, sensors and more than 2,000 feet of pipes all work together to remove heat from the liquid-cooled exascale supercomputer El Capitan. Graphic credit: Dan Herchek/LLNL.
At Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), the exascale El Capitan supercomputer — capable of over 1.8 quintillion calculations per second on real-world benchmarks — depends on a cooling system so essential that without it, the machine would shut down fast.
If El Capitan is the brain, according to LLNL systems engineer Chris DePrater, the cooling system is the cardiovascular system — moving heat the way blood moves oxygen. And just as importantly, DePrater adds, the controls keeping El Capitan from overheating act like a nervous system, sensing changes and responding instantly to keep everything in balance.
Heat generates fast at exascale. As processors and accelerators work at extraordinary densities, they create energy faster than air can reasonably carry away. Once racks exceed a certain power threshold, air becomes impractical.
To keep El Capitan from overheating like a hiker in the desert summer, its cooling system uses two loops, one with treated water, and the other with a glycol-based liquid (like antifreeze), combining efficient heat transfer with protection against bacterial growth. At El Capitan’s scale, liquid cooling isn’t just a preference; it’s the only way to operate.
“We typically stop using air cooling if the rack goes over about 25 kilowatts (25,000 watts),” DePrater explains. “With the densities on El Capitan being 400 kilowatts a rack, there’s no other option. You cannot cool that dense of a rack in that small of space.” Without liquid cooling, El Capitan simply “wouldn’t function. It would completely stop working within minutes,” he says.
DePrater uses a campfire analogy: Toss an empty plastic bottle into the flames and it melts almost immediately. Fill that same bottle with water and it takes far longer to fail, because water absorbs heat much more effectively than air. El Capitan’s cooling system uses that same principle, circulating water directly to where heat is generated and carrying it away, back to the neighboring Exascale Computing Facility Modernization (ECFM) site, before temperatures can spike.
The system itself isn’t a single machine, but an ensemble — cooling towers, chillers, pumps, heat exchangers, sensors and more than 2,000 feet of pipes all working together to remove heat from El Capitan, through the facility and out to the atmosphere. DePrater compares the coordinated effort to a symphony, with the control system playing the part of the conductor.
“The controls need to conduct the systems to play or sing in harmony with each other, so that way nothing can be out of sync,” he explains.
Those controls matter as much as the plumbing. Sensors constantly monitor temperature, flow rate and pressure, allowing the system to respond to rapid power swings as workloads change. If cooling isn’t perfectly balanced, temperatures rise quickly. Built-in safeguards allow the system to shed load or shut down safely before damage occurs.
Despite the scale — tens of thousands of gallons of water recirculating constantly through pipes large enough for a human to crawl through — the goal is efficiency, not brute force. The water used in El Capitan is warmed to about 85 degrees, rather than chilled, avoiding energy-intensive refrigeration. Heat is removed largely through evaporation at the ECFM cooling tower, one of the most efficient cooling methods available. The result is a system designed not just to support today’s world-class computing machines, but to scale for what comes next. For DePrater, success is defined by invisibility; no news is good news.
“When nobody knows who I am, that’s the best thing, because it means everything has been working fine,” he says with a laugh. Using another analogy, the cooling system is like the drummer in a band, rarely in the spotlight but impossible to replace.
By enabling El Capitan to run reliably at scale, the cooling system supports the Laboratory’s national security mission and stockpile modernization efforts, including high-resolution, 3D simulations that underpin the safety, security and reliability of the nation’s nuclear deterrent.
While the world’s most powerful supercomputer gets the headlines, beneath the floor and behind the scenes, its cooling machines do the quiet work that makes everything else possible. Without it, there is no computation, and no mission-critical science.
Source: LLNL
The post LLNL Highlights the Cooling Network Supporting El Capitan’s Performance appeared first on HPCwire.
Live from San Francisco, we compiled all the biggest news from Microsoft's annual developer conference. This is how Microsoft sees the future of AI computing.
ENSCHEDE, Netherlands, June 4, 2026 — QuiX Quantum has announced the first installation of its Feed-Forward Control Unit (FFCU), a high-performance hardware component developed for the company’s universal photonic quantum computing architecture.
The FFCU is designed to help the system respond to quantum measurements in real time, an essential requirement for photonic quantum computers that encode and process information in single photons moving through optical circuits at extremely high speeds. This capability, known as feed-forward control, is especially important for reaching universality in measurement-based quantum computing, where computation is carried out through a sequence of measurements and the outcome of one measurement can determine how later operations are performed. The FFCU performs this step at the hardware level by converting single-photon detector signals into control actions on photonic integrated circuits.
The FFCU is part of QuiX Quantum’s broader quantum computing architecture, which brings together photon generation, multiplexing, state generation, measurement, photonic assembly control and feed-forward control into a single photonic quantum computing stack. QuiX Quantum is working on its first-generation single-photon-based universal quantum computer, with the FFCU serving as one of the system-level components needed to support adaptive, programmable photonic quantum operations.
Considered a critical long-term goal by quantum hardware developers, a universal quantum computer will be able to run a broad set of quantum algorithms that can support a wider range of scientific, industrial and commercial applications.
“Universal photonic quantum computing requires more than high-quality photonic chips. It requires a complete system stack that can generate, route, measure and control photons in real time,” said Stefan Hengesbach, CEO of QuiX Quantum. “Our FFCU is a critical step in building that stack. It turns photon measurement outcomes into immediate control actions on photonic integrated circuits.”
QuiX Quantum’s FFCU combines FPGA-based digital processing with a custom analog front-end to support deterministic control of Mach-Zehnder interferometers on integrated photonic circuits. The current rack-mounted system includes two FPGA modules connected by a high-speed, low-latency bus, with 32 inputs, 32 outputs and a reported latency of approximately 150 nanoseconds from detector input signal to settled output voltage.
“Fast feed-forward is a prerequisite for universal photonic quantum computing because measurement-based architectures require the system to detect, decide and reconfigure the optical path in real time,” said Andrew Roos, vice president of R&D for QuiX Quantum. “To put that timing in perspective, in 150 nanoseconds light travels only about 30 meters in telecom fibre. That is the window in which the system has to make a decision and adapt the photonic circuit. This is not conventional control electronics — it is operating close to the physical limits at which information can move.”
The announcement comes as quantum computing gains commercial relevance, with McKinsey’s Quantum Technology Monitor 2026 reporting that more than 300 organizations are actively collaborating with quantum technology companies and estimating that quantum computing could create up to $2.7 trillion in economic value worldwide by 2035.
For that value to materialize, quantum computers must become scalable, reliable and deployable systems that can work alongside classical HPC and AI environments. That places greater emphasis on the broader system layers needed to industrialize quantum machines, including control electronics. QuiX Quantum sees the FFCU as part of this enabling control infrastructure, designed to turn photonic hardware into adaptive, programmable, and scalable quantum computing platforms.
About QuiX Quantum
QuiX Quantum is a leading provider of photonic quantum computing hardware driving innovation across Europe in the development of its Universal Quantum Computer. The first system, already sold and contracted for delivery, underscores the impact of QuiX Quantum’s market-leading hardware and renowned quality. Following its expansion across Europe and UK, QuiX Quantum pushes the boundaries of quantum technology and industry, strengthening Europe’s international competitiveness, leveraging a wide network of partners while serving a growing global customer base.
Source: QuiX Quantum
The post QuiX Quantum Installs Real-Time Control Component for Universal Photonic Quantum Computer appeared first on HPCwire.
Andrew Wilson appears in court over killing of Latoya Bulgin at protest over a police shooting days earlier
Authorities in Jamaica have taken the rare step of charging a police officer with murder after he was accused of shooting a 45-year-old woman in a case that prompted violent protests.
According to the Independent Commission of Investigations (Indecom), Constable Andrew Wilson appeared in court on Wednesday and was denied bail. Another hearing is scheduled for mid-June.
Continue reading...This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here
The commander of the Quds Force, the foreign arm of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), said Hezbollah is demanding Israel retreat to positions it held before the start of the war, according to a statement carried by Iranian media.
“Supporting the resistance in Lebanon is the duty of all of us, and removing Israel from the region is an attainable goal for Muslims,” Esmail Qaani was quoted as saying.
Staff Sergeant Milovan Jovanović, a member of the Serbian Armed Forces who was serving with the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, died this morning as a result of injuries sustained after a projectile impacted the United Nations base where peacekeeping personnel, including a part of the Serbian contingent, are stationed. Following the incident, Sergeant Jovanović received immediate medical assistance at the base hospital and was later transported by helicopter to the University Medical Centre in Beirut, where he passed away at approximately 4.00 a.m. local time.
Interior minister announces review into handling of the cases after body reportedly found in search for 11-year-old
Outrage has erupted in France after it emerged the main suspect in the case of an 11-year-old girl missing since last week had been repeatedly accused of sexually abusing children with no action taken.
A body was discovered on Thursday and formal identification was under way, an informed source said.
Continue reading...Group calls ceasefire a ‘roadmap to annihilate part of the Lebanese people’, throwing regional peace talks into doubt
Hezbollah has rejected a US-brokered ceasefire plan agreed by the Lebanese and Israeli governments, throwing the future of a truce in Lebanon and regional peace negotiations into question.
The group’s leader, Naim Qassem, called the plan a “roadmap to annihilate part of the Lebanese people” in a statement on Thursday.
Continue reading...As Iran war reshapes the Middle East, Turkey’s regional role looks set to expand Expert comment LToremark
Ankara’s deepening relations with Gulf countries and a potential rerouting of trade are among the factors likely to benefit Turkey.
The Iran war is fundamentally redefining politics in the Middle East and upending the regional status quo. It is also redefining Turkey’s role within the region, which presents both challenges and opportunities for Ankara.
For Turkey, the worst-case scenario was and is that Israel would seek to engineer state collapse in Iran, the fallout of which would consume both Iran and its neighbours for many years to come. It would pave the way for proxy conflicts, a refugee crisis and state fragmentation – and bring the Kurdish dimension of the war to the fore. This outcome would also further embolden Israel – with US backing – to continue its efforts to reshape the region on its own terms. But so far, Iran’s endurance has prevented Turkey’s worst fears from materializing.
At this stage, Turkey has two interrelated concerns. One, Turkey wants to prevent a return to war, but it is also worried about what it sees as Iran’s attempt to rewrite the rules of the game in the Gulf. For example, Iran’s new transit rules for the Strait of Hormuz could effectively give Iran significant influence over Gulf states’ security as well as their economy. Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has called for a return to the pre-war status quo in Hormuz, warning the new regulation could become a ‘new source’ of conflict. Plus, Turkey believes that Iran’s actions here will push Gulf states closer to the US and Israel.
However, the war also presents Ankara with opportunities in the shape of an expanded regional role: in defence industry and security partnerships; in regional connectivity and trade route redesign; and through regional alignments.
This war has brought the question of security to the forefront of policy conversations and considerations in the Gulf and the wider region. Although there is not yet an alternative to the US security umbrella, it has failed to provide the security that Gulf states wanted. For many countries in the Middle East – not least those of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) – the US is indispensable, but also unreliable and coercive at the same time. However, despite their mixed feelings and discontent, Gulf countries will have no choice but to double down on their relations with the US. This will only be reinforced by Iran’s actions and attempts to rewrite the rules of the game in the Gulf.
At the same time, Gulf states will also gradually seek to diversify their security partnerships and defence industry cooperation, as a hedging strategy against over-dependence on the US in this area. However, they will be cautious about engaging in such partnerships with US adversaries to avoid incurring the wrath of Washington. This is probably good news for Turkey, a country with a growing defence industry – and on good terms with the US and President Donald Trump – to further expand its security and defence industry cooperation with Gulf states. This cooperation is unlikely to be confined to purchases of Turkish weapons or drone systems; it will likely also include joint production agreements, joint investments, and technology and knowledge transfers.
The Hormuz crisis has brought the question of rerouting trade corridors and redesigning connectivity to the top of regional and international agendas. Turkey is well-positioned to benefit from such shifts. The wider Middle East and beyond have seen an increasing number of connectivity projects aimed at rerouting trade and redesigning supply chains, such as China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) – whose prospects are dimming following the Gaza and Iran wars – and the now-defunct Eastern Mediterranean Pipeline project. Turkey already plays a central role in two such projects: the Iraq Development Road project and the Middle Corridor. These strategic connectivity projects are not only redesigning supply-chains and rerouting trade, but they also redefine the geopolitics of the concerned regions.
Turkey and its partners should consider ways to further boost the prospects of Ankara-supported connectivity projects. For example, bringing Syria on board with the Iraq Development Road project would provide an even shorter route to the Mediterranean, while bringing Armenia on board with the Middle Corridor would strengthen the ongoing normalization process between Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia. In the post-Iran war era, Turkey and regional states are likely to engage in even more dialogue on trade corridors and transport connectivity. For example, the Hejaz Railway project – a prospective land corridor between the Gulf and Europe, which will connect Turkey, Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, – is already attracting interest.
The Iran war is also triggering or accelerating the formation of new regional alignments and groupings. The quartet comprising Turkey, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt is a case in point, although it is more of a platform than a pact. Ankara wants it to remain open to including more countries to avoid counter-alignment groups from forming, which can lead to more regional rivalries and fragmentation. Although individual members of this group, such as Pakistan and Turkey, have assumed active roles to find a diplomatic settlement to end the war, the quartet itself is primarily designed to address post-war regional geopolitics and security.
The heads of OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind and more signed an open letter raising concerns about the rising biosecurity risks posed by better AI models.
A federal grand jury indicted John Bolton, former national security adviser to President Trump, on 18 counts last year.
Federal authorities have busted what they say is a $30 million fraud conspiracy involving billing for children's behavioral health services that were never provided, officials announced.
One person died and three others, including a child, were injured in a shooting Wednesday night at a high school graduation in Northern California, officials said.
Iran says there's been no progress in talks with the U.S. after tit-for-tat strikes, as Hezbollah rejects new Israel-Lebanon ceasefire.
The races for governor and Los Angeles mayor are among the most closely watched contests yet to be decided in California's primary elections.
The $100 accessory includes a snap-on battery and large grips, but it makes the Switch 2 a bulky boy.
joshuark shares a report from The Verge: Apple will introduce age verification in the App Store for users in Texas starting on Thursday, June 4th. The move, as spotted by MacRumors, comes just days after a federal appeals court allowed Texas' App Store Accountability Act to go into effect while a lawsuit against it proceeds. People in Texas who are creating a new Apple account will need to verify they're over 18 using a credit card or government ID. Apple may also automatically verify users' age using the age of their account and whether they have a credit card on file. Despite Apple's attempts to push back on app store-level age verification, the company has announced plans to implement age checks to comply with laws in places like Utah, Louisiana, Brazil, Australia, Singapore, and the UK. Google is required to make similar changes to the Play Store and is also introducing age-checking tools for developers. Last December, a judge blocked the App Store Accountability Act (SB 2420) from taking effect, but an appeals court has now reversed this decision -- at least while the court figures out whether the law is constitutional. Even if this law gets struck down in Texas, a federal version with the same name is still making its way through Congress and could impose age verification at the app store nationwide.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Republican-led states growing renewable capabilities at faster rate as Texas emerges as clean-energy leader
Democratic-led states are eroding their climate policies, as red states are scaling up their clean energy deployment.
California on Friday scaled back its cap-and-invest program, offering more than $3bn in free pollution allowances to polluting companies. Earlier the same week, New York weakened its groundbreaking climate law, delaying a plan to regulate carbon from 2024 until 2028 and reducing emissions-slashing targets. Rhode Island’s governor, meanwhile, is attempting to roll back aggressive clean-energy programs.
Continue reading...Climbing support team rescue Hillary Dawa Sherpa almost a week on from when he was last seen
A Nepali guide who was believed to have died on Mount Everest has been found crawling to base camp a week after going missing – and after his funeral rites had begun.
Dawa Sherpa, also known as Hillary Dawa Sherpa after the famous climber Edmund Hillary, was last seen on 29 May but did not reach base camp with other climbing groups.
Continue reading...Can cities and states lead the shift to climate resilience? 24 June 2026 — 17:00 TO 18:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Hear from mayors, governors and regional leaders driving climate action and resilience from the ground up.
Hear from mayors, governors and regional leaders driving climate action and resilience from the ground up.Cities, local and regional governments are playing an increasingly decisive role in delivering practical solutions on climate action. Their proximity to communities, infrastructure systems and local economies enables faster, more targeted responses to flooding, heat, energy insecurity and economic disruption.
But subnational leadership is not only about implementation. Local government and regions often control the policy levers, regulatory frameworks and long-term planning needed to scale resilience and accelerate the transition to clean energy systems. Together with cities, they are shaping new models of climate governance that are more connected to economic delivery, public services and regional development.
This event will discuss:
If your wages are garnished, your employer plays a role — but how involved can they actually be in the process?
Summer is the time to enjoy live music, indoors and out. Scroll through our gallery of some of 2026's leading musical acts, featuring images by CBS News photojournalist Jake Barlow and photographers Ed Spinelli and Kirstine Walton.
June 4, 2026 — Scientists envision batteries will play a central role in improving the security and cost-effectiveness of America’s energy systems. But achieving this requires solving numerous technical challenges, such as designing high-performance battery materials and understanding how batteries degrade. This is no easy task.

Batteries are envisioned to play a central role in improving the security of America’s energy systems. AI can help achieve this vision by solving numerous technical challenges with batteries. Image credit: Shutterstock.
Could artificial intelligence (AI) help overcome these challenges? A team of researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory has outlined an ambitious technical roadmap to accelerate battery breakthroughs with the use of AI tools known as large language models (LLMs).
The lab is also advancing AI for research through DOE’s Genesis Mission, a historic national effort to transform American science and innovation through the power of AI, strengthening the nation’s technological leadership and global competitiveness.
“Argonne offers a rare combination of leading battery researchers and data scientists working under the same roof,” said Khalil Amine, Argonne Distinguished Fellow and leader of Argonne’s Battery Technology Development group. “They have collaborated to conduct a comprehensive review of emerging LLM applications in the battery field. The review presents short- and long-term objectives to harness the enormous potential of LLMs to revolutionize battery research.”
LLM Agents and Self-Driving Laboratories
LLMs are remarkably versatile machine learning tools. They can be trained on large, varied datasets to perform a broad range of tasks. For example, in response to human prompts, they can answer questions, write or summarize articles and translate languages. LLMs like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini have already transformed how industries work.
While the use of LLMs in academia, industry and research institutions is growing, their potential is largely untapped in battery research. The Argonne review discusses potential LLM applications, exploring how to expand their use and improve their effectiveness.
A few examples of applications: LLMs could text mine hundreds to millions of battery research papers, extracting critical insights, identifying knowledge gaps and proposing new research directions. They could analyze battery performance datasets to identify failure mechanisms and mitigation strategies. They could even monitor and optimize battery operations in the field and provide personalized training for early-career battery researchers.
The Argonne review articulates a vision of coordinating activities among multiple LLM “agents.” These advanced AI systems use LLMs to analyze information, make decisions and employ tools. Agents specializing in different battery subject areas perform various research tasks while collaborating to achieve shared goals.
“LLMs can be integrated with existing battery research tools, such as simulation software and material property databases,” said Guiliang Xu, the review’s corresponding author and an Argonne chemist. “This can help scientists create AI-powered, self-driving laboratories that accelerate the research process through automation.”
Self-driving laboratories could have a significant impact on the discovery of new battery materials. Traditionally, this type of research has been performed through trial and error. Scientists manually test one material or synthesis parameter at a time.
A self-driving laboratory could speed this process by continuously executing an iterative experimental cycle. It would review literature, screen databases of material properties and propose promising new battery chemistries. Next, it would direct robotic devices to fabricate and characterize the materials. Then, it would analyze the experimental data and use the results to refine hypotheses, methods and experiments.
The benefits go beyond speed and efficiency. Automating research can also reduce errors and make experiments more reproducible.
Successfully implementing these AI systems will require extensive collaboration among battery researchers and LLM experts.
“Battery researchers can inform LLM experts on the most important research questions while LLM experts can inform battery researchers on the most appropriate models and techniques to address those questions,” Xu said.
Knowledge Bases, Data-Sharing and Adaptability
The paper points to technical challenges that must be addressed before the potential of LLMs can be fully realized. When selecting existing LLMs or developing new ones, researchers need to carefully consider their computational efficiency and adaptability to specific battery research tasks. For critical applications like predicting battery failures, it is important to use LLMs that can explain the step-by-step reasoning behind their conclusions. Protocols must be developed for effective collaboration among LLM agents.
A high-quality knowledge base is needed to train LLMs. This would be built from existing published literature and diverse battery datasets. Significant work is required to standardize the formats of datasets, and consortia are needed to share datasets across industry and research communities.
“Traditionally, researchers only publish data on successful results,” said Huihuo Zheng, one of the review’s authors and a computer scientist at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF), a DOE Office of Science user facility. “For LLMs to work optimally, they also need to be trained on failure data, such as battery materials with poor experimental performance. Industry and academia need to implement new ways to make this data easily accessible.”
Battery and data scientists will need to regularly evaluate the capabilities, performance and usability of LLMs — and make improvements as needed. This might involve activities such as testing the LLMs’ ability to interpret data and retraining them on newly published literature.
What might battery research look like in the future if these challenges are addressed?
“Soon, most battery scientists will also be AI experts, and LLMs will serve as their smart research assistants,” said Wenhua Zuo, one of the review’s authors and an Argonne postdoctoral researcher. “Scientists will spend much less time reading papers, sifting through data and performing experiments. This will allow them to spend more time developing ideas and strategic research planning.”
The review was published in the Aug. 20, 2025, issue of Joule.
Other Argonne contributors to the review include Tanjin He, Venkatram Vishwanath, Maria Chan and Rick Stevens.
The review was supported by DOE’s Transportation Technologies Office through the Advanced Battery Materials Research Program, including the Low-cost Earth-abundant Na-ion Storage Consortium. It used the resources at the ALCF and is based on research supported by the DOE Office of Science, Advanced Scientific Computing Research Program.
The work is also funded, in part, by the Energy Storage Research Alliance, an Energy Innovation Hub funded by the DOE Office of Science, Basic Energy Science (BES). Work performed at the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a DOE Office of Science User Facility, was also supported by BES.
Source: Michael Matz, Argonne
The post Argonne Roadmap Explores LLMs and AI Agents for Battery Research appeared first on HPCwire.
US president alleges there is ‘big cheating’ in elections for governor and Los Angeles mayor as results are pending
Donald Trump has alleged without evidence that Democrats are cheating in California’s primaries and claimed in a late-night social media post that the US attorney’s office in Los Angeles was investigating.
As counting continues in the most populous state in the US, the president’s unfounded remarks are likely to further alarm election observers, who have warned of the risk of escalating misinformation in the absence of a final result.
Continue reading...Justices uphold FCC authority to impose in-house penalties, rejecting AT&T and Verizon jury trial claims
The US supreme court backed the Federal Communications Commission’s system for levying fines, ruling on Thursday against wireless carriers AT&T and Verizon in their challenge to the agency and handing a win to Donald Trump’s administration.
The ruling was 8-1. At issue in the legal dispute was whether the agency’s in-house proceedings for imposing the penalties deprived the companies of their right to a jury trial under the US constitution. Trump’s administration defended the FCC’s system for assessing financial penalties, known as forfeiture orders.
Continue reading...CALGARY, Alberta, June 4, 2026 — CoolIT Systems (CoolIT) has announced that it developed the first 15kW coldplate design. Delivering nearly four times the performance of earlier single-phase direct liquid cooling (DLC) coldplate designs, this breakthrough demonstrates that single-phase DLC can scale to meet the thermal demands of future ultra-high-density GPUs and AI accelerators.
“Single-phase DLC is already cooling millions of AI accelerators today. This achievement shows it is also the architecture to cool AI infrastructure well into the future,” said Kamal Mostafavi, CTO of CoolIT Systems. “With validated performance at 15kW, CoolIT has proven that single-phase DLC is not only practical to cool millions of the most advanced AI chips today – but ready to cool the coming generations of GPUs and AI accelerators.”
CoolIT’s 15kW design delivers more than 10x the cooling capacity required for the current generation of AI GPUs and nearly 4x that of the then groundbreaking 4kW coldplate design the company announced in March 2025.
The 15kW coldplate uses CoolIT’s Split-Flow microchannel architecture and was validated with a standard water-glycol coolant at 1.2 L/min/kW, with system-level thermal performance suitable for 45°C warm-water cooling environments.
“AI accelerator innovation depends on cooling architectures that can keep pace with rising circuit density and packaging complexity,” said Dylan Patel, CEO of SemiAnalysis. “CoolIT’s work demonstrates that single-phase DLC has a clear path forward, giving both the semiconductor and data center industries greater confidence in the cooling architectures they can invest in.”
The announcement reinforces the continued momentum of single-phase DLC across the AI infrastructure ecosystem. NVIDIA has publicly highlighted single-phase DLC with 45°C supply temperatures as part of its next-generation AI platform direction, underscoring the importance of warm-water liquid cooling and advanced coldplate technologies in factory-integrated systems.
CoolIT is also advancing component coldplates and server architectures to extend the performance envelope of single-phase DLC. These efforts include cooling additional peripheral components to increase total heat capture, while developing coldplate designs capable of targeting the most intense hot spots within advanced AI chips.
About CoolIT Systems
CoolIT Systems is a global leader in liquid-cooling solutions for AI and high-performance computing. CoolIT designs, manufactures and services liquid-cooling hardware for global server, cloud service provider (CSP) and data center markets. The company’s single-phase direct liquid-cooling (DLC) technology is used in high-density, high-efficiency computing environments, and advanced AI infrastructure. CoolIT’s DLC systems are used in seven of the top 10 supercomputers and many hyperscale CSP sites. In 2026, Data Center Magazine named CoolIT as #1 direct to chip cooling company and in the top three cooling companies worldwide.
Source: CoolIT Systems
The post CoolIT Systems Demonstrates 15kW Coldplate, Extending Single-Phase DLC Roadmap Far Beyond 2030 appeared first on HPCwire.
Daniel Frost admits throwing bins at police and Matt Styler pleads not guilty to assaulting officer
A man has admitted throwing bins at officers and arming himself with a makeshift knuckle duster during the disorder in Southampton after the sentencing of a man for the murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak.
Daniel Frost, 44, from Southampton, admitted violent disorder and possession of an offensive weapon when he appeared before a district judge on Thursday.
Continue reading...Deliveries in 30 minutes or less coming to Manchester and Birmingham and fresh groceries service to start in London
Amazon is expanding fast-track deliveries in the UK, including adding fresh fruit and vegetables to same-day services, after closing its standalone grocery stores.
The firm said it would expand Amazon Now, its ultra-fast delivery service that already delivers goods in less than 30 minutes to parts of London, to also serve Manchester and Birmingham this year.
Continue reading...Nothing does more for your ego than realising you can make a better decision than a bot with all of human knowledge at its digital fingertips
I am not, by nature, an early adopter. There comes a point in our lives where change becomes more irritating than exciting and, I suspect, I reached it sooner than most. But when a workplace recently tasked me with exploring practical applications for AI, I spotted an opportunity to cast off my luddite inclinations.
It turned out AI was very good at mimicking most of the things I could already do. Irrespective of quality, it could churn out articles, reports, presentations, fiction, even podcasts with stammering hosts. That was no use to me. What I wanted help with was all the stuff I was useless at. There was an obvious target: DIY.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: UK regulators today ordered (PDF) Google to put clearer attributions and links to publishers' content in its AI-generated search features. The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) also said Google must give publishers a way to opt out of AI features in search. "In a world first, publishers will now have effective tools to prevent their content being used to power AI features in search, such as AI Overviews," the CMA said today. "This will put publishers, like news organizations, in a stronger position to negotiate content deals with Google. To boost consumer trust, Google is also now required to make sure that publisher content is properly attributed, using clear links, in AI-generated search results." The CMA ruled that Google may not penalize publishers for opting out of AI, meaning that Google can't downrank opted-out publishers in general search results. The CMA said Google will have nine months to comply with all requirements but that the agency "expects important parts of the controls to become available to publishers well before that deadline. Google will also be required to submit and publish compliance reports, supported by key data and metrics, explaining changes it has made and how it has complied." [...] The CMA applied the rules to Google after determining that it has "strategic market status" in general search services, and has ongoing investigations into Apple and Microsoft. Google today said it will comply with the CMA decision. The News Media Association, a trade group in the UK, said that "the legally enforceable Conduct Requirements for Google Search published today are a significant step towards leveling the playing field and building a fair, transparent digital economy where premium content is properly respected and fairly compensated." The group called on the UK to implement "robust enforcement."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Deletion of the bureau’s website content is just the most recent part of a larger plan to ‘undermine an agency that’s helped people’
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau deleted at least 2,200 webpages from its website last month, a move advocates say is part of the Trump administration’s latest effort to dismantle the federal consumer finance watchdog.
The removed content was all published before Trump’s second term, and includes press releases, consumer advisories, congressional testimonies, speeches and blog posts. Some of the material dates back to as early as 2010, when the agency was formed.
Continue reading...Republican lawmakers asked the Justice Department to investigate allegations raised by Jeffrey Epstein's longtime assistant that she was abused by two men.
The history, team and contact information for "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," America's premier Sunday morning public affairs program.
IPO could raise up to $75bn, giving SpaceX market value of $1.77tn as it sets up Musk for extraordinary wealth
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is looking to raise $75bn (£55bn) from its blockbuster stock market listing next week as the rocket company aims for the largest initial public offering ever.
If the stock market launch – primed for 12 June – goes as planned, founder Musk, the world’s wealthiest person, could make history as the first trillionaire.
Continue reading...“We have given no commitment to anyone,” the Iranian-backed militant group's leader said after Israel and Lebanon announced a new U.S.-mediated agreement.
Jesse Calhoun's defense attorney entered a not-guilty plea on his behalf in a Portland courtroom.
The former Seahawks quarterback won a championship with Seattle and was a 10-time Pro Bowler. That doesn’t mean he’s seen as an all-time great
When a quarterback makes 10 Pro Bowls, wins the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award and leads his team to one Super Bowl win and (almost) another, you’d expect his Hall of Fame discussion would be fairly uncomplicated.
But in the case of one Russell Carrington Wilson, who appeared to announce his retirement on Wednesday after 14 seasons to join CBS Sports as an analyst, that discussion is multi-layered – much like Wilson’s career and legacy.
Continue reading...‘Retail theft ring’ stole goods from logistics sites in Pennsylvania, Virginia and New Jersey and sold them in New York, officials say
Eight people were indicted this week in New York in connection with what prosecutors describe as a “wide-ranging retail theft ring” that stole nearly $5m worth of goods – from steaks to cheeses to copper wiring and cigarettes.
The Manhattan district attorney’s office announced charges against the eight individuals on Wednesday, accusing them of “conspiring to impersonate shipping carriers in a wide-ranging retail theft ring throughout the north-east”.
Continue reading...The Climate Briefing: What does AI mean for the climate? Audio thilton.drupal
Anna and Bhargabi speak to Boris Gamazaychikov (CEO and Co-Founder of the Sustainable AI Group) and Chatham House’s Rowan Wilkinson to discuss AI’s environmental impacts and the urgent need for better governance.
Attention is increasingly turning to artificial intelligence as its capabilities and influence permeate nearly every sector. AI’s growth raises important questions about its environmental footprint; risks associated with future scale, and how such a globalised industry can be effectively governed.
This episode of the Climate Briefing explores:
To discuss this, co-hosts Anna and Bhargabi are joined by Boris Gamazaychikov (CEO and Co-Founder of the Sustainable AI Group) and Rowan Wilkinson (Research Associate, Digital Society Programme at Chatham House).
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
Want to spend less time on your phone? We asked psychotherapists, professors and specialists for practical (and achievable) ways to cut down
• The best screen-free activities
Everywhere you look, people are glued to their smartphones. If you haven’t noticed this phenomenon, it’s likely because you, too, are glued to the little dopamine-deliverer.
In March, Meta and YouTube had to pay a combined $6m after a US court found that the tech companies’ platforms were designed to be addictive. Put such tempting apps in a device that’s carried everywhere, and that’s a recipe for compulsive behaviour.
Continue reading...The ceasefire has held just enough to prevent a return to all-out war, but neither side is close to achieving peace
The US-Iran ceasefire is entering yet another round of escalation since it came into effect on 8 April. This week, there have been further strikes on Iran by the US, and Iranian retaliation on Kuwait and Bahrain, alongside Israeli escalation in Lebanon. Earlier flare-ups over the past two months were quickly contained. Both sides have tried to keep the balance between no war and no peace. But as this ceasefire drags on it risks becoming yet another Middle East stalemate, albeit one with international economic and political consequences.
Four obstacles are preventing progress. The first is trust. Iran does not believe Donald Trump can deliver a deal, much less stick to one. The fear is not only that Washington will walk away again but that the goalposts will keep moving, where first nuclear limits are imposed, followed by missiles, then regional policy and finally further political concessions dressed up as security guarantees.
Sanam Vakil is the director of the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham House
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Here are some highly rated films to try -- plus a list of new additions to the streamer in June.
LONDON, June 4, 2026 – OQC, JPMorganChase and AMD have announced a research collaboration leveraging a new and dedicated Quantum-AI Data Centre, built by OQC in London. JPMorganChase researchers will test near-term quantum and hybrid quantum-classical computing applications via a secure enterprise environment to examine how quantum computing, AI and high-performance classical infrastructure can work together on complex financial services challenges.
The partners will use the platform to conduct research on the application of near-term quantum and hybrid quantum-classical computing including areas such as portfolio optimization and expanding explorations around quantum machine learning, while also developing specialized AI models to improve quantum circuit performance. The partners also plan to investigate how these quantum-enhanced AI models can accelerate the discovery of novel algorithms purpose-built for financial use cases, and the role of classical compute toward scalable fault-tolerant quantum algorithms.
JPMorganChase will be OQC’s first dedicated user of the U.K. platform, which is expected to be fully operational within 12 months. The environment will physically integrate the OQC GENESIS quantum system with AMD-supported AI and classical compute, high-performance computing resources and application-level tooling for simulation, optimisation, AI model development and benchmarking. AMD compute technologies will provide infrastructure to support the AI and classical compute layer of the platform. By placing quantum hardware inside a secure enterprise compute environment, the platform is designed to let JPMorganChase test hybrid quantum-classical workflows for performance, scalability and reproducibility against the operational standards used in financial services.
“Quantum computing has to move from isolated experiments into the secure compute environments where enterprises actually work,” said Gerald Mullally, CEO of OQC. “That is what we are building with JPMorganChase’s quantum research expertise: a dedicated quantum-AI platform for financial services that combines quantum hardware, AI and high-performance computing to support serious technical research and move the industry closer to practical quantum applications.”
“The financial services industry depends on understanding complexity, managing risk and making decisions with speed, security and confidence,” said Lori Beer, global chief information officer of JPMorganChase. “Through this partnership, our teams will have a dedicated environment to research the near-term utility of hybrid quantum-classical computing in finance and assess how quantum, AI and high-performance computing can work together to address real-world challenges.”
“Advancing quantum-AI research will require tightly integrated compute platforms that bring together quantum systems, AI infrastructure and high-performance classical computing,” said Mark Papermaster, executive vice president and chief technology officer at AMD. “AMD is pleased to support OQC and its dedicated environment, which will explore hybrid quantum-AI workflows for financial services and evaluate their performance, scalability and reproducibility in a secure enterprise setting.”
The project marks a shift from experimental quantum access toward secure, integrated infrastructure designed for real enterprise workflows, starting with financial services.
More from HPCwire: Oxford Quantum Circuits Raises $350M to Expand Enterprise Quantum Computing Footprint
About OQC
OQC is a UK-headquartered company building quantum computers and a secure, scalable Quantum-AI Data-Centre platform for enterprise and government customers. The platform integrates quantum computing with trusted infrastructure and AI supercomputing to accelerate customer breakthroughs across science and industry. Learn more at www.oqc.tech.
About JPMorganChase
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) is a leading financial services firm based in the United States of America (“U.S.”), with operations worldwide. JPMorganChase had $4.9 trillion in assets and $364 billion in stockholders’ equity as of March 31, 2026. With approximately 65,000 technologists globally and an annual tech investment of $19.8 billion, JPMorganChase is dedicated to improving the design, analytics, development, coding, testing and application programming that goes into creating high quality software and new products. Under the J.P. Morgan and Chase brands, the Firm serves millions of customers in the U.S., and many of the world’s most prominent corporate, institutional and government clients globally. Visit http://www.jpmorganchase.com/tech for more information.
About AMD
AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing. Learn more at www.amd.com.
Source: AMD
The post OQC, JPMorganChase and AMD to Explore Hybrid Quantum-Classical Computing in Finance appeared first on HPCwire.
Prosecutors say they intend to try all five killings together next year after brief arraignment in Portland
An accused serial killer in Oregon was arraigned on Wednesday for the murder of a fifth woman.
A lawyer for Jesse Calhoun, who was already facing charges in the deaths of four women whose bodies were discovered in 2022 and 2023, entered a not guilty plea for the second-degree murder of Ashley Real, a 22-year-old who previously alleged he had choked her.
Continue reading...The parasite was found in a 3-week-old calf decades after it was largely eradicated in the U.S. Authorities said the risk to humans is low.
For the past few years, Microsoft has been phasing out NTLM in Windows in favor of Kerberos-based alternatives. Starting with the next versions of client and server editions of Windows, Microsoft will also be disabling the legacy authentication protocol by default. In the latest security baseline package for Windows Server 2025, the company is already allowing customers to audit incoming configurations. Now, it has announced a wave of changes to further reduce dependencies on NTLM.
With an upcoming Insider release of Windows 11 client and server, certain scenarios which previously required NTLM will be able to fall back on Initial and Pass-Through Authentication using Kerberos (IAKerb) and Local Key Distribution Center (LocalKDC).
↫ Usama Jawad at Neowin
I’m sure this is very important to “IT Pros”.
The first game in the franchise in seven years includes loads of modernization changes -- including adding social media misinfo to fighter plane fantasy.
BROOMFIELD, Colo., June 4, 2026 — Quantinuum Inc. has announced the pricing of the upsized initial public offering of 28,000,000 shares of its Class A common stock at a price to the public of $60.00 per share. Quantinuum has granted the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 4,200,000 shares of its Class A common stock to cover over-allotments at the initial public offering price, less underwriting discounts and commissions.
The shares of Class A common stock are expected to begin trading on the Nasdaq Global Market on June 4, 2026 under the ticker symbol “QNT.” The offering is expected to close on June 5, 2026, subject to customary closing conditions.
J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley (in alphabetical order) are acting as joint lead active book-running managers for the offering; Jefferies and Evercore ISI are also acting as active book-running managers; BofA Securities, UBS Investment Bank, Cantor, Mizuho, Needham & Company, Societe Generale and TD Cowen are acting as joint-book running managers; and Craig-Hallum and Rosenblatt are acting as co-managers for the offering.
A registration statement relating to this offering was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 3, 2026. The offering is being made available only by means of a prospectus. Copies of the prospectus, when available, may be obtained from: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, c/o Broadridge Financial Solutions, 1155 Long Island Avenue, Edgewood, New York 11717 or by email at prospectus-eq_fi@jpmchase.com and postsalemanualrequests@broadridge.com; Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC, 180 Varick Street, 2nd Floor, New York, New York 10014, Attention: Prospectus Department or by email at prospectus@morganstanley.com; Jefferies LLC, Attn: Equity Syndicate Prospectus Department, 520 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10022, by telephone at (877) 821-7388 or by email at Prospectus_Department@Jefferies.com; or Evercore Group L.L.C., Attention: Equity Capital Markets, 55 East 52nd Street, 35th Floor, New York, New York 10055, by telephone at 888-474-0200 or by email at ecm.prospectus@evercore.com.
This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy these securities, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction.
More from HPCwire
About Quantinuum
Quantinuum is a leading quantum computing company offering a full-stack platform designed to make quantum computing deployable in real-world environments. The company has commercially deployed multiple generations of quantum systems built on the well-established QCCD architecture, which it has implemented with novel designs and capabilities to achieve the industry’s highest accuracy levels based on average two-qubit gate fidelity as of December 31, 2025. Quantinuum has active engagements with market leaders across pharmaceuticals, material science, financial services, and government and industrial markets. Quantinuum’s headquarters is in Broomfield, Colorado, with additional facilities across the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, Qatar and Singapore.
Source: Quantinuum
The post Quantinuum Announces Pricing of Upsized Initial Public Offering appeared first on HPCwire.
Scientific AI may be advancing rapidly, but its biggest challenge is not capability. It is trust. That was the view of Thomas Zacharia, Senior Vice President for Global Public Sector at AMD and former director of Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Speaking at TPC26 in Baltimore, MD, Zacharia warned that the reliability of AI systems still trails performance. In his view, that limits how far AI can be trusted on its own in scientific research.
Describing a better model, he presented his vision for the “continuous discovery engine,” which brings together AI, HPC, data systems and human expertise within the same scientific workflow.
The concept is becoming more central to the Genesis Mission – a DOE initiative designed to build the next generation of scientific infrastructure and extend the lessons learned from the exascale era into the age of agentic AI.
For Zacharia, the Genesis Mission is less about replacing exascale and more about building on everything the community learned from it. He reflected on the decades of work that led from Jaguar and Titan to Frontier and El Capitan, noting that none of those achievements came from hardware alone.

Thomas Zacharia speaking at TPC26.
Those were some of the leading supercomputers that marked different generations of HPC. They required years of software development and application readiness. But they also needed public investment and close collaboration between laboratories and industry.
“Exascale was successful because it is not simply a hardware project. It was a co design effort that brought together all of us application scientists, software developers, system architects, vendors, etc … That is a very successful model and I think it’s really important to ground that in our thinking as we look to the future.”
He warned against abandoning those lessons as attention shifts toward AI.
According to Zacharia, Genesis should be viewed as the continuation of that same effort. The design model that powered exascale to a new generation should be applied to scientific discovery systems.
He said that at its fullest realization, Genesis has the potential to connect computing, AI and scientific infrastructure into what could become the world’s most powerful scientific instrument.
Zacharia also urged caution when evaluating today’s AI systems. While autonomous agents are becoming more capable of handling increasingly complex tasks, he argued that scientific standards remain far higher than most performance benchmarks suggest.
“I’m not saying that we cannot do amazing things with the technology, but I’m here to tell you that at the level of maturity, yes, we should dream about the possibility. It’s exciting, but I’m in science. If you can only get the answer 50% of the time accurately, or 80% of the time accurately, then we have a long way to go.”
During the presentation, Zacharia emphasized that scientific discovery depends on results that can be validated and reproduced. In his view, that requirement becomes even more important as AI takes on a larger role in scientific research.
The increasing complexity was another issue highlighted by Zacharia. He emphasized that future scientific workflows will increasingly rely on a combination of AI, simulation, data infrastructure and emerging technologies such as quantum computing. While that offers advantages, there are also some risks that come with it.
He argued that if this inevitable heterogeneity is managed properly, it can become more of a burden for researchers rather than an advantage.
According to Zacharia, scientists should not have to spend their time managing complex technology stacks. Open software and common standards can help keep the focus on discovery.
Not all AI workloads are the same. Zacharia argued that scientific research has different requirements than consumer applications. Researchers need systems that go beyond answering questions. They must be able to work with simulations, code, experimental data and scientific literature. “The future of scientific discovery will not be determined only by the largest model,” he said.
He also pointed to an often overlooked challenge. “The hardest part is change management,” he said. Titan, one of the first major GPU powered supercomputers, was approved by just one vote after a lengthy debate. At the time, many researchers questioned whether GPUs had a place in scientific computing. Today, GPU acceleration is a standard part of modern HPC systems.
The post From Exascale to Genesis, Building the Infrastructure for Scientific AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Criticism comes from across political spectrum after blow to Friedrich Merz’s government
Germany’s unprecedented failure to win one of the rotating seats on the UN security council has prompted an intense round of soul searching in Berlin, and raised questions about its claims to international leadership under Friedrich Merz.
The council vote on Wednesday, which elected Austria and Portugal to a two-year term along with Trinidad and Tobago and Zimbabwe, was a blow to Merz’s struggling government, which has sought to position itself as a leading European voice on the world stage.
Continue reading...Google's Android settlement would resolve the lawsuit and change its terms of service, but not all users will get payouts.
Check out some old classics and great new releases on Netflix now.
USDA confirms first case of New World screwworm fly in cattle in six decades, posing threat to livestock industry
A flesh-eating parasite rarely seen in the US in six decades has been found in a calf in Texas, agriculture officials said, in an alarming development for the country’s cattle industry.
The New World screwworm fly (NWS) was confirmed in the animal in the south of the state, about 50 miles from the Mexico border, Brooke Rollins, the agriculture secretary, said late on Wednesday.
Continue reading...New four-part documentary reignites criticism of Operation Peyzac, in which officers posed as music industry figures to gather intelligence
It was the undercover police operation that led to 37 people being jailed after officers set up a fake recording studio and record shop on a north London housing estate.
Now, a four-part television documentary has brought Operation Peyzac back under the spotlight, prompting renewed scrutiny of the tactics used by undercover officers and calls for the operation to be examined by the UK’s ongoing spycops inquiry.
Continue reading...Lebanese government agrees ceasefire with Israel but Israeli drone strikes continue. Plus the story of the man who launched Cuba’s first independent magazine
Good morning.
Israel and Lebanon have agreed to implement a ceasefire to end hostilities, the Trump administration has announced – but it comes with caveats. Not only is the deal contingent on a complete cessation of fire from the Iran-aligned Hezbollah armed group, and on the evacuation of all its fighters from the area south of the Litani River, but Hezbollah has not been part of the talks.
Where has Israel been targeting? William Christou in Beirut reports that three hospitals in southern Lebanon have been attacked by Israel in under a week, wounding more than 150 people and killing nine. Analysts and human rights experts have said the attacks on healthcare facilities were aimed at degrading the conditions for life in south Lebanon.
What did Israel say about it? The military said it had struck “Hezbollah infrastructure in the area of Tyre” and acknowledged a hospital was “affected incidentally”. It accused Hezbollah of “taking over” one of the hospitals it struck.
Is that number significant? Yes, the 90-day threshold is important because the 1973 War Powers Resolution lays down that a president must seek congressional approval to continue waging war after hostilities have continued that length of time. Trump’s White House has rejected that argument, citing a temporary ceasefire that has been in place since 8 April – although it has been broken several times by the US, Israel and Iran.
Continue reading...A Sherpa guide was found crawling to base camp on Mount Everest a week after he went missing.
Plan departs from policy of bringing CDC staff back to US for treatment and offering support to all health workers
Former top US officials and other experts are urging the Trump administration to abandon plans for an Ebola quarantine and treatment centre in Kenya, as the union for workers with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) calls for Americans exposed to Ebola to be brought home for treatment.
Soon after the US revealed it was setting up a field hospital in Kenya for the Ebola quarantine and treatment of Americans, the Kenyan high court blocked the order – but the Kenyan and US governments moved forward anyway, with the first American responders reportedly landing at the Laikipia airbase on Saturday.
Continue reading...The New York Knicks are fighting history as well as the Spurs. On Wednesday night in San Antonio, they took a crucial step towards defeating both
It is uncommon to begin counting down after the opening game of an NBA finals, but these are uncommon times in New York, and the Knicks have been counting since Richard Nixon was president, their coach, Mike Brown, was three years old, and their opponent, the San Antonio Spurs, played in the American Basketball Association as the Dallas Chaparrals. After the Knicks took Game 1 105-95, the anticipation in New York rose to yet another level.
Game 1 was not a good game, but it was a great game. The first quarter was ragged. So was the second. Neither team could shoot from distance – the Knicks shot 31% from three, the Spurs 26%. The Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama, the sport’s heir apparent, made his finals debut with six turnovers, 6-for-21 shooting from the field, defensively alive but never transcendent. Both Wembanyama and Jalen Brunson, the Knicks’ superb, always underestimated engine, took nine three-pointers. Each made two.
Howard Bryant is the author of 11 books, including The Heritage: Black Athletes, A Divided America, and the Politics of Patriotism and Kings and Pawns: Jackie Robinson and Paul Robeson in America.
Continue reading...Recently we held our leader elections and after a lively discussion period on the (internal) mailing lists and voting phase with two candidates Levente "anthraxx" Polyák was re-elected as Arch Linux Project Lead.
As per our election rules he is re-elected with the term lasting two years.
The role of of the project lead within Arch Linux is connected to a bunch of responsibilities regarding decision making (when no consensus can be reached), community leadership, Code of Conduct enforcement, handling financial matters with SPI and overall project management tasks.
Congratulations to Levente, thank you for stepping up to serve this community and all the best wishes for another successful term! 🥳
The private meeting will take place in Downing Street
Kemi Badenoch has posted a message on social media saying she met Henry Nowak’s father, mother and stepmother this morning. She praises their courage, and says:
Henry’s family do not want anger to tear communities apart. They are a family who have friends across faith and race, and so did Henry. His family want his memory to help bring our society together.
Everyone knows I have strong views about how we should deal with equality under the law. What the family agreed with me on is that we need to bring common sense back, and that is what we should all be fighting for.
At “best” Jenrick is a political chameleon. Others words beginning with C might also be appropriate. I still remember him begging for my vote in the leadership (he called me on the day of the last MPs round) when he described Kemi as being too of the right & he was the moderate
Continue reading...President Trump is expected to nominate Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche to serve in the role permanently, several sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.
The USDA said the only animal affected was a 3-week-old calf in Zavala County, Texas, after larvae were identified in its umbilical area.
Motorola's new Ultra is a lot like last year's model but its $1,500 price is $200 more. It's not the slam dunk that it should be, even though I like it.
The 2026 Razr Ultra is available in a Pantone orient blue color and with an Alcantara back. And it is gorgeous.
I knew the minute I put it on my finger that the sleek new ring was going to be a game changer. And that's before any of the health tracking.
The 2026 Razr Ultra has the same cameras as the 2025 version. But there's a new LOFIC image sensor on the main camera, which I tested around San Francisco.
White House says caps will lower tuition costs, but critics say they will exacerbate the country’s nursing shortage
While the Trump administration has argued that new restrictions on the size of federal student loans will lower tuition costs, public health officials and Democrats say the measures will exacerbate the country’s serious nursing shortage.
As such, a group of 24 Democratic-led states and the District of Columbia recently sued the federal government seeking to block the new rule, which is set to take effect on 1 July.
Continue reading...Violence flares before protests on Thursday over president’s decision to remain in office after his term expired
Fierce clashes have taken place between government troops and militias allied with the opposition in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, damaging property and forcing some civilians to flee.
In the runup to the fighting, which started on Wednesday afternoon, opposition leaders embedded with militias set up positions in their clan strongholds the city.
Continue reading...The floor of the US House of Representatives broke out in cheers after lawmakers voted to oblige Donald Trump to seek approval from Congress to continue the Iran war or withdraw troops. A small group of Republicans voted with the Democrats for the resolution, which now passes to the Senate. It was the fourth attempt to vote on reining in Trump's powers to continue the conflict. The resolution rejected the White House's argument that it does not need to abide by a legal requirement to seek congressional approval to continue the war beyond 90 days because a ceasefire was agreed in April
Continue reading...Registrations are up 7% in May, with battery electric vehicles recording the fastest growth and Tesla jumping 45%
British car sales rose in May to their strongest level for the month since before the Covid pandemic, driven in part by strong growth from the Chinese manufacturers BYD and Chery.
Car registrations rose 7% to 160,662 during the month, according to figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), a lobby group.
Continue reading...Israel and Lebanon agreed Wednesday to renew their fragile ceasefire and create a number of "pilot" security zones inside Lebanon where Hezbollah would be banned.
Catholic archbishop of US capital says Mgr Stephen Rossetti’s statements ‘gravely undermine’ church teaching
The Catholic archbishop of Washington DC on Wednesday removed a well-known priest as an exorcist of the archdiocese after he made public comments suggesting that UFO sightings were the work of demons.
Cardinal Robert McElroy said the archdiocese also was cutting ties with the St Michael Center for Spiritual Renewal, a Washington-based non-profit headed by the priest, Monsignor Stephen Rossetti.
Continue reading...Wildlife experts backed by a sniffer dog and a thermal-imaging drone operator are searching for the "extremely shy" marsupial, officials said.
Hungary agreed to drop its opposition to opening the formal access talks but is still opposed to the fast-track membership process that Ukraine says it needs as protection from Russia.
Polish, Spanish and French populists focus on clips of teenager’s dying moments and accuse UK of descending ‘into depths of the earth’
Polish far-right politicians have claimed that the murder of Henry Nowak symbolises “Britain’s descent into the depths of the earth” as populists from France, Spain and Japan focused on harrowing clips of his dying moments.
Despite pleas from Nowak’s family for people not to exploit the killing for political gain and to focus on cutting knife crime, their comments have focused on race and immigration.
Continue reading...Polish, Spanish and French populists focus on clips of teenager’s dying moments and accuse UK of descending ‘into depths of the earth’
Polish far-right politicians have claimed that the murder of Henry Nowak symbolises “Britain’s descent into the depths of the earth” as populists from France, Spain and Japan focused on harrowing clips of his dying moments.
Despite pleas from Nowak’s family for people not to exploit the killing for political gain and to focus on cutting knife crime, their comments have focused on race and immigration.
Continue reading...At least 207 people have been killed since the Trump administration began targeting those it calls "narcoterrorists" in September.
SpaceX says it plans to raise up to $75 billion when it goes public this month in what could be the largest stock market debut ever, and it would put Elon Musk on course to becoming the first trillionaire.
Exclusive: Analysis shows resort has yet to recoup Disney’s investment despite record revenue and 16m annual visitors
Disney has still not recouped $4.2bn of its investment in Disneyland Paris after more than 30 years, even though the resort is now its best-performing international outpost, according to an analysis of recent filings.
The sprawling theme park complex swung open its ornate iron gates in 1992 and now attracts about 16 million visitors every year. It is wholly owned by Disney and is home to two theme parks – the fairytale-inspired Disneyland and Disney Adventure World, which launched its largest-ever expansion in late March. The lavish land, themed to the hit animated movie Frozen, is part of a $2.5bn (€2bn) investment by Disney, and its new chief executive, Josh D’Amaro, was on hand for the opening alongside Emmanuel Macron.
Continue reading...While his bosses look (to varying degrees) like bumblers, cowards or corporate tools, Pelley will be remembered as a beacon of integrity
Journalism is supposed to speak truth to power, as when Walter Cronkite reported, on the CBS airwaves, that the Vietnam war was not progressing as the US government was claiming, or when the Washington Post revealed, through its Watergate reporting, that the Nixon administration was corrupt.
Truth to power. Or, as the New York Times motto has it, telling it straight, “without fear or favor”.
Continue reading...We’d like to hear about your frustrations with companies, from difficulties getting a refund to bad customer service
Polls show US consumers are angry and we’d like to understand more about the reasons why. Perhaps you have spent hours trying to replace a shoddy product, get a refund, or just force a company to fulfil a contract or promise? Or did you hit a customer service dead-end or get caught in an endless runaround, especially when it comes to something essential for day-to-day living?
We would like to hear about your experience and it would be helpful if you could include specifics such as dates and dollar amounts. A Guardian reporter may get in touch for more information.
Continue reading...There’s a stew of factors at work behind the rise in consumer rage – but there are potential solutions, too
American consumers are angry. Nearly 80% of Americans had a service or product problem in 2025, and about two-thirds of those felt “rage” about it, according to the “National Consumer Rage” survey.
Many consumers feel they are constantly fighting against an onslaught of overcharges, customer service hassles, shoddy products and billing mistakes that always seem to go in the company’s favor. All of this comes against a background of soaring prices and rising inflation.
Continue reading...Loti AI CEO Luke Arrigoni breaks down the world of deepfakes -- of celebrities and beyond -- and some of it sounds a little dystopian.
NASA has officially ended the MAVEN mission after the Mars orbiter stopped responding in December, apparently after an unexpected spin drained its batteries and knocked out communications. Launched in 2013 and orbiting Mars since 2014, MAVEN spent more than a decade studying how the planet lost its atmosphere and helped explain how Mars transformed from a potentially habitable world into the cold, dry planet seen today. The New York Times reports: The NASA spacecraft MAVEN, short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution, had been orbiting around the Red Planet since 2014. NASA last received a signal from MAVEN on Dec. 6, shortly before the spacecraft passed behind Mars. Then the spacecraft stopped responding. A review board found that MAVEN began unexpectedly rotating, causing its batteries to drain too quickly and resulting in a loss of power to the communications system. "The team is certainly broken up about this," said Shannon Curry, the principal investigator of the mission and a scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder, at a news conference on Wednesday. "But at the same time, we are incredibly proud of the science we've accomplished over the last decade." NASA officials declined to speculate on the root cause of the mishap. A final report is expected to be released later this year.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
After the dramatic termination of Scott Pelley, four of the show’s seven full-time correspondents are out under Bari Weiss’s leadership
For many years now, CBS News employees entering the network’s New York headquarters have walked by a poster showing the seven correspondents who have helped keep 60 Minutes the most-watched show in news for 52 straight television seasons: Lesley Stahl, Scott Pelley, Bill Whitaker, Anderson Cooper, Sharyn Alfonsi, Jon Wertheim and Cecilia Vega.
Over the last tumultuous week, three of those correspondents – Pelley, Alfonsi and Vega – have been fired. Cooper – who is also a CNN primetime anchor – announced in February that he was leaving the show. Amid the most significant uproar in the show’s lengthy history, CBS News staffers and 60 Minutes veterans now have two central questions: who will be left to make the show’s 59th season, which begins in September? And will it still feel like 60 Minutes?
Continue reading...If everyone is spending like there won’t be a tomorrow, there probably won’t be a tomorrow
Doom is the prefix du jour. Doomscrolling, doomposting, doomsplaining, doomspreading. Doom joins other recent suffixes -maxxing, -pilled, and -slop – giving discussions about contemporary life an overtly negative cast. Doomspending, in particular, is a new term for spending frivolously with no concern for future financial consequences. It has become synonymous with the declining fortunes of young westerners.
A survey by Credit Karma, a consumer fintech company, published in the fall of 2024, introduced the concept and the general parameters around it. Chronically online youth had begun coping with anxiety about the economy and world events with retail therapy. They claim 27% of Americans doomspend to deal with stress. The numbers rise to 37% of gen Z and 39% of millennials.
Continue reading...Scientists praise moves to investigate, retract or remove controversial studies. The authors stand by their work
Three scientific papers that raised questions about vaccine safety and were used by the Trump administration to justify controversial changes to US vaccine policies have over the last two months been removed, retracted or placed under investigation by the journals that published them.
In some cases, the actions occurred years after scientists first raised alarms about the studies’ scientific merits.
Continue reading...Commentary: Before he bows out after an undeniably successful tenure at Apple's helm, there's one final thing Cook will want to tick off his to-do list.
Bill Pulte, President Trump's pick for acting director of national intelligence, is being met with some skepticism on Capitol Hill.
The Israeli and Lebanese governments have agreed to implement a ceasefire, after weeks of deadly fighting between Israel and Hezbollah had imperiled broader negotiations between the U.S. and Iran to end their conflict.
The Southern Poverty Law Center asked a judge to consider sanctioning federal prosecutors, after the DOJ shared an unsigned and unstamped copy of a superseding indictment with members of the media.
"Chelsea Jane Doe," who was found brutally murdered in Massachusetts in 2000, has been identified as Tiffany Bradley of Allentown, Pennsylvania.
Will Peru’s booming economy survive its latest election? Expert comment jon.wallace
The Keiko-Sánchez contest in this Sunday’s runoff election could tip the country into a deeper crisis.
It’s commonly noted that Peru has had eight presidents in the past 10 years. That neat data point, though, obscures the political and structural reasons behind the constant upheaval. And it raises another remarkable fact: despite continuing political turmoil, Peru’s economy has grown at an average 5.5 per cent between 2002 and 2022 (excluding the 10 per cent contraction during the COVID 19 pandemic).
This year’s 7 June second-round elections between conservative, perennial also-ran candidate Keiko Fujimori and outsider leftist candidate Roberto Sánchez may well mark the moment that the balance between political crisis and economic growth finally breaks.
In 1990 Alberto Fujimori, father of Keiko, handily beat Peru’s Nobel Prize laureate Mario Vagas Llosa in the presidential election.
During his presidency Peru’s party system evaporated, with Fujimori ruling effectively as a dictator from 1992 until 2000, when he fled the country under a cloud of scandal.
Every presidential election since 2000 has been a cliff hanger. Each has seen voter preferences swing wildly from month to month in the lead up to the elections. Each has gone to a second round. And every election has raised fears that the country’s booming economy might not survive the fury of increasingly polarized politics.
Sunday’s second round elections are no different. But this time, there are reasons to believe that Peruvian democracy and stability may finally have reached a tipping point.
Keiko Fujimori finds herself in a familiar though potentially humiliating position. Keiko – as she is popularly known – has now run for the presidency a total of four times since her father’s resignation via fax in 2000. Each time she made it past the first round only to lose in the second.
In those past four first-round elections, who opposed Keiko has depended more on timing than loyalty to any one candidate, let alone party. In each contest, an eye watering list of candidates and what a friend once called ‘Toyota parties’ – so called because all their supporters could fit into a Toyota – jockeyed for fickle popular support.
This year’s first round ballot in April counted 32 candidates, one of whom unfortunately was dead by the time the voting took place but remained on the ballot. Most people thought the two winners would be Keiko and the former mayor of Lima, the tough on-crime, Trump adjacent, Rafael López Aliaga.
But in a surprise and contentious finish, Lopez-Aliaga lost to leftist congressman Sánchez by 21,000 votes, after logistical problems extended the elections. Lopez-Aliaga contested the results, but lost. He may yet use electoral confusion and his narrow loss to rally support against whoever wins the second-round vote – especially if it’s Sánchez.
Sánchez is an ally of former president Pedro Castillo, who was removed from office by Congress after he attempted to impose a state of emergency in 2022. Last November, Castillo was sentenced by a Peruvian court to 12 years in prison for rebellion and conspiracy against the state.
Peru’s fractious party system has made governing a challenge, even when there has been relative consensus over the country’s macro-economic stability. The last president to complete his term was Ollanta Humala who finished his term in 2016, though he too is now in prison after being sentenced for corruption.
Since Toledo, congressional impeachment and removal of presidents – elected and interim – has become a political tradition of sorts. The pattern of congressional obstinance, and outrage over cases of alleged corruption large and small, have often been led by Keiko’s ‘Fuerza Popular’, the party with the largest plurality in the national legislature.
The fractiousness of the single unicameral legislative body – in which 12 parties were represented in the last single chamber National Assembly – was a consistent challenge.
But the constitution was reformed in 2024, re-creating a two-chamber system, adding a Senate. And a per cent floor was placed on parties’ popular vote, intended to reduce the number of parties. It worked: as a result of the congressional elections in April, only six parties will now be seated in the lower Chamber of Deputies.
But that may not be enough to bring stability. The smorgasbord of parties in the Congress remains an issue. And Peruvian politics have become a blood sport, fuelled in part by the Fuerza Popular and Keiko’s singular desire to occupy the presidential palace – and in part by a rudderless, all-consuming obsession over even a whiff of corruption.
Some of the congressional charges have been merited. But others were just a pretext to hamstring and eventually remove a non-Fuerza Popular president.
An exception was the case of Pedro Castillo. The former president drew support from the rural interior of Peru – comprising jungles and mountainous, often indigenous communities – that have large been under-represented in national politics.
Many of them are on the frontlines of the country’s booming legal – and illegal – extractive economy. But after confronting an obstinate, opposition Congress and impeachment efforts, Castillo attempted to dissolve the legislature. That led to his removal and imprisonment, sparking social protests – primarily in the interior.
Sánchez may have learned from that experience, going big and going hard in his campaign. The surprise first-round winner has taken to wearing the large white sombrero worn by Castillo and has called for a constituent assembly to rewrite the constitution.
He is also running on greater state intervention in the economy, including in Peru’s all-important mining sector – which accounts for 9.5 per cent of GDP and has driven its booming economic growth over the past decade and a half. Those promises, and a pledge to raise taxes on the wealthy and use international reserves to boost government spending have worried investors and the local business community.
Keiko’s platform is more modest and traditionally conservative. It includes promises to get tough on Peru’s rising crime rate and maintain macro-economic stability. But her and her party have alleged links to corruption, and it is their scorched earth policy that has taken down multiple presidents. That raises doubts about both their commitment to combatting corruption and to civic, democratic discourse.
Farage’s party brings in £9m largely from crypto billionaires in three months, more than twice that of Labour and Tories
• UK politics live – latest updates
Reform UK is raising millions more than the other political parties from private donations, bringing in £9m largely from cryptocurrency billionaires in the first three months of the year.
Nigel Farage’s party took a £3m donation from the cryptocurrency and aviation investor, Christopher Harborne, who is a British-Thai dual citizen, and £4m from the cryptocurrency entrepreneur Ben Delo, who is relocating to the UK from Hong Kong.
Continue reading...Click your way through the group stage and the knockouts to crown champion
Continue reading...
They were pillars of their church, congregants in a little-known denomination that sets itself apart from the world and teaches that even the most unconscionable acts can be wiped away — not just forgiven, but forgotten and never spoken of again.
So it went in a rural Wyoming church, where a man was accused of sexually abusing young girls hundreds of times in the pews during Sunday services. Though the preacher knew of the abuse, he never reported it to police, local prosecutors said. Instead, he told the man to seek therapy.
In Minnesota, a man from the same faith admitted that he began entering the bedrooms of his daughter and son at night around the time each of them turned 12. He and his siblings grew up in the church and were sexually abused themselves, and then he repeated the abuse with his own children.
And in Washington state, preachers knew a member of their congregation had sexually abused several young boys. Instead of reporting him to police, they allowed him to ask for forgiveness, according to a family member, and he continued to sexually abuse children. He was later found guilty of raping the 9-year-old son of a church member and sentenced to life in prison.
The abusers and victims all belonged to the Old Apostolic Lutheran Church, or the OALC, a Scandinavian-rooted revivalist church that teaches its followers that heaven is reserved just for them. To get there, according to current and former members, they must follow a strict doctrine, which emphasizes asking for forgiveness for their sins and says that being forgiven by a fellow church member washes away those sins.
What’s more, the church teaches that once a perpetrator is forgiven, anyone who speaks about the wrongdoing — including the victim — can be accused of harboring an unforgiving heart. Those who have left the church, as well as some who are still with it, say this means the burden of sin shifts from the person who committed the act to the person who refuses to let the matter rest.
Sexual abuse survivors say these rituals have created a culture where allegations of abuse are resolved outside of the criminal justice system and the victims must bear their pain alone or risk going to hell. In some families, sexual abuse stretches across generations, ensnaring a parent, child and grandchild.
“This is what I would call institutionalism of abuse of young women and children,” said DaNece Day, the prosecuting attorney for Crook County in Wyoming, whose office has charged two OALC members in the past two years.

Day and other prosecutors said one of the biggest obstacles to breaking the cycle is the way church members move among congregations spread across the U.S. and Canada, often hundreds of miles apart but tightly bound by large, multigenerational family networks.
Last fall, ProPublica and the Minnesota Star Tribune reported that preachers in Minnesota had known for years about allegations that one of its members, a man named Clint Massie, had sexually abused young girls in the congregation. But instead of reporting it to police, church leaders urged some of the victims to take part in sessions where they were brought face-to-face with Massie and encouraged to forgive the abuse.
Now, new reporting by the two news organizations shows how the sexual abuse of children in the OALC, as well as the failure by church leaders to report it to authorities, is a persistent and national problem.
Some current and former OALC members are calling on elders from what the church regards as its mother congregation in Sweden — where the church originated — to intervene. In fact, those elders, who don’t have authority over the American church but wield considerable influence, are coming to the U.S. and Canada this summer to meet with congregations. What they’ll find are a growing number of criminal cases against church members and increasing legal scrutiny of leaders for failing to report allegations of sexual abuse to police.
In a statement, representatives from the Swedish church said the cases are isolated incidents and they didn’t “observe any pattern” among the tens of thousands of members in 34 OALC congregations in the U.S. and Canada. They said sexual abuse should be reported to authorities and that it was possible “some matters have been handled improperly or without sufficient knowledge.” And they acknowledged that church guidelines “are being reviewed with the American missionary pastors in order to ensure compliance.”
Representatives of the OALC in the U.S. and Canada said in an email that they also “do not perceive there to be a general pattern of behavior,” describing sexual abuse as a serious and persistent problem across society. They acknowledged that bringing a victim to face their abuser, as a pastor for the OALC church did with Massie, can be traumatic. But they defended the church’s doctrine of forgiveness, saying it was not a means to conceal wrongdoing or to shield offenders from legal consequences, and no one is coerced to forgive or to ask for forgiveness. If those teachings had been misapplied or misunderstood in some cases, they said, it “does not reflect an error in our doctrine.”
ProPublica and the Star Tribune interviewed 20 people who said they were sexually abused, almost all as children, in OALC communities, along with parents of victims as young as 3. Reporters also traveled to OALC churches around the country and reviewed court and police documents from at least eight cases, along with victims’ statements to local authorities.
Their abusers were family members, other children or men who were trusted to be alone with children because they are part of the same insular faith community. Some victims spoke anonymously for fear of retribution from the church or their own families. Others identified themselves as well as their abusers publicly, unafraid of the repercussions.
Many of those victims said church leaders pressured them to keep quiet. In Minnesota, police records describe a woman telling a young girl that her abuse, which began when she was around 5 or 6 years old, was not a big deal and she “needed to get over it.” In Washington state, a police report notes a woman told law enforcement that her preacher had, for “spiritual reasons,” discouraged her from contacting authorities after her daughter told her she’d been raped by three men from church.
“We’re always told that what the preachers tell us, that’s coming from God,” explained one woman, who said she, too, was told not to speak of her abuse. “Who’s going to argue with that?”

Sexual abuse in the OALC has sometimes been a legacy passed from one generation to the next — hidden, quietly endured, repeated. Lorie Peldo was sexually abused for eight years by her older brother, starting when she was only 2, she said in an interview. A quarter century later, after the memories began to resurface during therapy, Peldo’s mother told her that she’d known about the abuse. But on the advice of her preacher in Battle Ground, Washington, her parents didn’t report the crimes to the police. Instead, they took her brother to a doctor, she said.
Peldo said she eventually confronted her brother, who said that it had haunted him his entire life. She tried to forgive him, she said, but the weight of what he’d done did not lift. She fell into such deep despair that she tried to commit suicide. She said she ended up in a psychiatric hospital. Her brother later died; her parents are also deceased.
It didn’t stop there. On a church road trip, Clint Massie — who was sentenced for child abuse in Duluth, Minnesota, last year — sexually abused Peldo’s daughter, Tonya, when she was 11 and he was a teenager, according to Tonya Peldo’s statements to law enforcement. Peldo’s case was included in the police file involving Massie, but it wasn’t charged criminally, according to a prosecutor, because the statute of limitations had run out. Massie has not responded to repeated requests for comment.
Tonya Peldo told investigators from the St. Louis County Sheriff’s Office in Duluth that she didn’t see Massie again until some two decades later, after she moved to the city and recognized him passing out candy to kids at the church.
She said she told the pastors about what he’d done to her, yet one of the preachers told her to ask Massie for forgiveness, as if she had wronged him. “I was like, ‘No. No!’” she said in an interview. It would be more than a decade before Massie was charged with sexual abuse crimes.
In 2019, Tonya’s daughter was also sexually abused, making her the third generation of Peldo girls to be victims. The daughter was 14 when a 25-year-old relative, Blake Nelson, bought her a pack of cigarettes and then invited her into his trailer in Clark County, Washington, so that he could teach her how to give a massage, according to court records.

Nelson pleaded guilty to charges of communication with a minor for immoral purposes and fourth-degree assault in the case involving Tonya Peldo’s daughter. At his sentencing, Tonya told the judge how church leaders had tried to keep her daughter from reporting the abuse to police. Nelson’s own lawyer, Michele Michalek, said the pastors repeatedly called her law office to insist the case should be handled internally.
“They think that law enforcement shouldn’t be involved,” Michalek said.
A judge in Minnesota commented on the cyclical nature of abuse in 2023, when a man from an OALC family turned himself in to police after repeatedly abusing his son and daughter. At his sentencing, the judge took into account that the man and his siblings, who grew up in the church, had also been victims of child sexual abuse. She said she found it “almost incomprehensible” that the adults in his life didn’t know about the abuse he and his siblings had suffered as children.
“All I can see are the ripples of consequences for you and all of your siblings, who were abused or abusers, and then for your children,” the judge said.

The OALC church is a branch of a broader faith called Laestadianism, a conservative Christian revival movement that began in the mid-1800s in northern Scandinavia. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, as millions of Scandinavians migrated to the U.S., some followers of the Laestadian movement brought with them more than language, traditions and religious devotion.
Alongside the faith came a deeply insular church culture shaped by strict obedience and a doctrine of forgiveness that critics and former members say enabled the concealment of wrongdoing.
One of them was Eija Marttinen. A photo in a newspaper in 1951 shows Marttinen as a little girl wearing a Finnish sailor suit and braids, standing alongside 14 family members and several large suitcases. Her family had just arrived in Nova Scotia from Finland, and they would soon launch Canada’s first Old Apostolic Lutheran Church. In the photo, Marttinen is smiling brightly toward the horizon, as if spellbound by the endless possibilities of a new world.
But even then, at age 9, Marttinen harbored a secret that would be the source of a lifetime of emotional pain. Now 84 and living in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, she said in an interview that her older brother sexually assaulted her starting when she was 5. Another brother soon started abusing her, too, she said. Both brothers are now dead.
Years later, Marttinen said she came to learn that there were other predators in the church. She kept silent about her abuse for most of her life, fearing she would be forced to forgive and still live with the stigma if she came forward. She only told her own daughter about the extent of the abuse in recent months, after reading the ProPublica and Star Tribune stories.
“They can do whatever they want and you have to forgive them. That’s not right. But you go along because you were brought up in it.
“I wish I wasn’t,” she added.
The Laestadian churches in Scandinavia have faced their own reckonings. From 2009 to 2011, a Finnish child welfare scholar, Johanna Hurtig, documented widespread sexual abuse cases among Finnish church members and found that the concept of forgiveness of sins had been warped into a tool to silence victims.
At first, church leaders were defensive, according to news reports. But they later acknowledged “serious mistakes” in how the church handled sexual abuse, including pressuring victims to forgive offenders instead of reporting them. They urged members to report abuse to police and child welfare authorities.
Several men were convicted in Finnish courts and sentenced to long prison terms.
In 2017, Norwegian police documented 151 cases of rape and abuse, many with child victims, in a remote northern village of some 2,000 people. Following a newspaper investigation, the police said they tied many of the cases to members of Laestadianism, with some incidents dating to 1953. The police found the practice of forgiving and forgetting often led to abuse being considered “settled” internally, effectively silencing victims and protecting perpetrators.

The church’s emphasis on large families has created booms in places like Minnesota, Wyoming and southern Washington. Families rely heavily on one another socially, financially and spiritually while keeping their distance from what members often call “the world” — outsiders and secular influences viewed as dangerous or corrupting. Even ordinary activities like watching TV and dancing are treated as transgressions that must be confessed. One abuse victim said she felt anxious every time she turned on her car radio, fearing that if she listened to a pop song and died in a crash before asking forgiveness, she could go to hell.
Some church members hope the Swedish elders address sexual abuse during their visit, including the mother of a 15-year-old girl who revealed in May 2025 that her father had been abusing her for years. It happened both in Minnesota and after they moved to Washington, according to court records. The mother, according to child protection services reports, said she told her preacher about the abuse.
Authorities did not learn of the allegations until August, when her daughter saw a therapist after weeks of her mother trying to get help through church channels, according to the reports. That visit triggered an investigation by child protection authorities in Washington, who substantiated the complaint. Prosecutors in Minnesota charged the father with criminal sexual conduct, but he hasn’t been charged in Washington. The father has asked the court for a public defender and has not yet entered a plea. He did not respond to voice and text messages seeking comment.
Asked why church officials did not immediately contact law enforcement, a spokesperson for the church declined to answer, saying the case was “complex” and in authorities’ hands. However, he said that, in general, spiritual advisers need to use counselors and other professionals “to determine if there is a reasonable cause to report as dictated by law.”
But the mother said it was she — not the church — who set up the therapy session.
“Their job is to pick up the phone and say, ‘Hi, I’ve got some confusing, conflicting information but I’m concerned for the safety of this person,’” she said. “They don’t have to be investigators, all they need to do is tell somebody.”
The mother said she plans to raise the church’s failure to notify police with elders when they visit this summer. Nonetheless, she plans to remain in the church. Asked why, she said, “Because I want to go to heaven.”

Last summer, in the rural expanse of eastern Wyoming, Moorcroft police drove up the long dirt road leading to the OALC church, a large brick building on the edge of town with a white cross emblazoned under the eaves.
The investigators were looking for records that could verify the membership of a man who several children said had abused them during services. His name was Charles Massie — the brother of Clint Massie, who had pleaded guilty to similar crimes in Minnesota months earlier.
Over 10 years, authorities alleged, Charles Massie had sexually abused at least seven girls. Some of the abuse occurred at his house and some at his businesses, where young girls worked part time. But the vast majority of the abuse occurred at church, according to court documents. Investigators tallied 832 incidents where Massie sat near the girls’ parents, allegedly fondling the girls’ genitals and breasts. One victim, who told the police she was 5 or 6 years old when she was abused by Massie, said that he “raped me with his fingers.”
Wyoming has charged Charles Massie with nine counts of sexual abuse and sexual battery. He is being held in jail in Nebraska, where prosecutors also have charged him in connection with sexual assaults. He has pleaded not guilty in both states. He could not be reached for comment.
When investigators in Moorcroft contacted families of the victims, they learned that the families already knew about the abuse. One had learned of it three years earlier, according to charges. But according to court records, none of them had told the police. Instead, the charges say, the father of some of the victims had told their preacher, David Lindberg, about the abuse in 2024. Charles Massie would later turn himself in, but not for another year.
Day, the top prosecutor in Crook County, Wyoming, said there was “no support” for victims and the church did nothing to punish Charles Massie. “There are no consequences for him,” she said. “He’s allowed to sit in church with them every Sunday, even after they’ve come forward and said, ‘This man has been hurting us.’” She said Charles Massie turned himself in to the Moorcroft police after he admitted to a mental health provider that he had abused children; the provider told him that they would report Massie if he didn’t go to police.
Lindberg disputed the characterization that he did not act when Charles Massie confessed to him. “All I can say is, when I first heard about it, he came to me and he had a problem, so I told him he needs to go get therapy and turn himself in to the police,” Lindberg said. “And he did.”
He referred additional questions to a church spokesperson, Troy Massie, who is a relative of Charles and Clint Massie. In written responses, Troy Massie said the church told Charles to stop attending services after he confessed to Lindberg, though he could listen to services on the phone.
“We continue to improve our efforts as needed to protect all children,” he wrote.
The Wyoming church isn’t the only one to face accusations that it failed to report abusers. In southwestern Washington in 2017, a jury convicted church member Carsie Tikka of raping a 9-year-old boy. But one woman, who was a member of the church at the time, said that years before he was charged, Tikka had assaulted her stepchildren and the leaders had done nothing to stop him. Instead, Tikka asked her family for forgiveness.
After Tikka was convicted at trial, a court-ordered psychiatrist wrote in a report that Tikka had “a history of offending 29 males,” an allegation that Tikka denied in court. At his sentencing, Tikka said his conscience was clean. He said he had already “received the testimony of sins forgiven” by one of God’s disciples.
“You clearly by your statement here are not remorseful,” the judge remarked before sentencing him to life in prison without parole. “You put the blame on everyone else.”
Then Tikka illustrated the central problem facing prosecutors and victims alike — a powerful religious culture that prioritizes spiritual absolution over secular justice — with his final, defiant words:
“My sins have been forgiven,” Tikka told the judge. “Have yours?”
The post In This Church, Child Sexual Abuse Has Gone Unchecked for So Long That It Spans Generations appeared first on ProPublica.
We've tested smart sprinklers: Here's why you should have one, and which models proved the best.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Almost a year after Delaware’s first-in-a-generation property reassessments sent shockwaves through the state, and particularly New Castle County, lawmakers are still dealing with the fallout. Legislators, after months of anticipation, will introduce a slate of bills today meant to ease taxpayer concerns. But the decision to extend a controversial policy combined with the little amount of time in this year’s legislative session could create roadblocks to enacting the reforms.
Editor’s Note: This story, originally published before the General Assembly’s slate of property tax bills were officially released, has been updated to include tracking numbers for each of the bills filed and clarify details about the legislation.
The biggest legislative controversy of last summer is back before the General Assembly.
Lawmakers introduced a bill Thursday that would indefinitely extend New Castle County school districts’ controversial ability to tax commercial and residential properties at different rates.
Authored by Rep. Kim Williams (D-Stanton), the bill was filed among a slew of property tax-related proposals by lawmakers who took part in the Delaware General Assembly’s months-long committee investigation into the fallout from last year’s first-in-a-generation property reassessments.
Enacted last summer as a one-time fix, the separated tax rates – sometimes called split rates – were meant to provide residents with temporary relief from the post-reassessment tax bill sticker shock.
While the split rates reduced some homeowners’ property bills by several hundred dollars, they also sparked outcry from small business owners and spurred a months-long legal challenge by landlords and hotel operators in Delaware’s northernmost county.
Regardless, the ability for school districts to levy different tax rates for residential and non-residential property will expire on June 30 unless legislators act.
If Williams’ bill is enacted, commercial properties in New Castle County could continue to be taxed at a higher rate than their residential counterparts, but that potential increase would be slightly lower than currently allowed.
Commercial properties in New Castle County currently can be taxed at a rate up to two times higher than residential properties. Williams’ proposal would lower that multiplier to 1.85.
She said the decrease was meant to show small business owners that lawmakers were making a “good faith” effort not to overtax them while also ensuring residents can afford to pay their bills.
“It’s a balancing act,” Williams said.
A handful of other property tax-related bills and resolutions were filed today along with the split rate extension.
If passed, the bills could work in tandem to make immediate changes to address short-term concerns and create new working groups to investigate long-term solutions.
Whether the General Assembly will pass the package in its entirety during the final 10 working days of the legislative session remains to be seen.
Six pieces of property tax legislation were introduced today in the House of Representatives: Five bills and two resolutions.
Rep. Cyndie Romer (D-Newark) authored two of the bills and one of the resolutions.
Her most sweeping proposal – House Concurrent Resolution 150 – would create a stakeholder working group to develop statewide standards for conducting property assessments. Those standards could include establishing requirements for how property data is collected and maintained, among others.

According to HCR 150, the legislation developed by Romer’s working group could prevent counties from certifying their tax rolls should their assessments not meet the to-be-determined state standards.
While Romer said she usually bristles at the idea of creating working groups that can prolong direct action, she realized there is not a quick fix to address the multiple issues that occurred during New Castle County’s property reassessment.
Those issues led to results that confounded Romer. Those included the results of a Spotlight Delaware analysis that found properties in some of Wilmington’s poverty-stricken communities saw some of the largest percentage increases in median property value across the state.
So she set out to correct the assessment process, and to ensure the new property reassessments do not create the same fallout as their predecessors.
“I didn’t feel like we could do nothing,” Romer said. “We needed to fix this problem, even though we realized it was going to take time to truly fix it.”
Along with Romer’s statewide standards resolution, another resolution aiming to address longer-term property tax policies was also introduced today.
While Romer’s is geared more toward establishing standard operating practices for assessments, the other — House Concurrent Resolution 151 — would create a working group to investigate other potential policy levers the state or its three counties could employ to ease the property tax burden on residents.
The legislature’s joint property tax committee discussed some of these policy levers, such as homestead exemptions and circuit breaker programs, during hearings last fall.
Meanwhile, State Sen. Dan Cruce (D-Wilmington) is set to introduce a bill he hopes will help counties and municipalities create additional revenues “not off of our small businesses and not off of our neighbors.”
Cruce declined to comment on the specifics of his bill ahead of it’s official filing, but he called it a “specific” proposal that relates to the state’s telecommunications tax cap.
Currently, Delaware counties can include the value of a telecommunication company’s poles, cables, wires and more when calculating its annual property tax bill.
But state law limits how much those companies can be taxed to their 2015 levels. That means telecommunications companies are being taxed based on property valuations from more than a decade ago.
Cruce previously filed Senate Bill 338 late last month which would remove this tax cap, but it is unclear what his new bill would specifically do.
An examination of the legislation included in Thursday’s official filing revealed Cruce did not file any new bills. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thursday afternoon about whether he will file new legislation.
Along with Romer’s assessment standards resolution, she also penned two bills for the property tax package.
One of those bills, House Bill 460, would require the city of Wilmington to share its permitting data with New Castle County, closing an information sharing gap that led to fingerpointing last fall about who was to blame for some of the most widely criticized assessment issues in northern Delaware.
Romer’s second bill, House Bill 461, would allow New Castle County school districts to reset their property tax rates this summer, following the conclusion of an ongoing review of the most recent assessment and the possible enactment of Williams’ split rate extension.

Williams also wrote a second bill for the package. That legislation would raise the income limits for seniors to qualify for New Castle County’s school property tax exemptions, building upon her previously passed House Bill 159.
Today’s slate of bills comes on heels of another property tax bill working its way through the legislature from Senate President Pro Tempore David Sokola (D-Newark).
Senate Bill 322 would rescind school districts’ current ability to automatically implement a 10% tax increase after property reassessments, instead allowing them to seek additional funding without holding a referendum vote.
Instead of taking an automatic 10% hike, districts – should they meet certain criteria – would be able to implement an up to 2% tax increase each year without seeking approval from voters. That approach mirrors the process in many other states.
Lawmakers must pass each of the bills included in the forthcoming property tax package in both the House and Senate before the General Assembly gavels out for a final time on June 30. Any bills that fail to pass by that date will effectively be dead in the water.
The package will now join a growing list of legislation – including next year’s nearly $7 billion state budget, healthcare reforms, banking code modernizations, hemp regulations and more – that lawmakers have only 10 working days left to address.
Julia Merola contributed to this report.
The post Lawmakers look to extend NCC split property tax rates, advance reassessment reforms appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
High rents have been a consistent problem in Sussex County, especially near the beaches. A program meant to encourage developers to build more affordable housing has not produced enough new housing, so the county council will soon vote on whether to ease requirements to join it.
Sussex County Council will likely vote next week on whether to allow higher rents and more density in the county’s affordable housing program.
This would be the second time the council loosened restrictions on the Sussex County Rental Program in hopes of encouraging more participation.
Only two projects have used the program since its creation in 2008. Housing developers say that’s because the rent caps are too low and the density incentives are too small for any housing projects to be financially feasible.
County Administrator Todd Lawson said the county worked with housing developers when drafting the reforms.
“The developing community was saying what we all know to be true… If you continue to keep the regulations that you have today, we’re probably not going to build any more [affordable homes],” Lawson said.
Lawson said the council will likely vote on the reforms at the next council meeting. In the meantime, residents can submit comments about it online.
Get Involved
The Sussex County Council is scheduled to meet at 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday inside the Sussex County Administrative Office Building.
For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.
The county is facing pressure from the state to address the growing affordable housing shortage around the county’s popular beaches. Next week’s vote could be the first major action the county has taken on the issue in years.
Jon Horner, president of the Delaware Homebuilder’s Association, said he thinks the reforms do not go as far as he would have liked, but that they will help make the program more economically viable to join.
“I think you’ll see new [housing] projects immediately,” Horner said.
Sussex County has a projected need of 2,643 affordable rental units by 2030, according to the Delaware State Housing Authority’s 2023 Housing Needs Assessment.
At the meeting, council members Jane Gruenebaum and John Rieley appeared to support the proposed reforms, while Councilman Matt Lloyd expressed concern that they don’t go far enough.
Councilman Steve McCarron’s comments appeared to be neutral, and Council President Doug Hudson did not make any comments.
The few public comments about the proposal from Tuesday’s meeting and the last county council meeting were generally supportive.
Former Sussex Preservation Coalition President Jill Hicks said at the last meeting that she supports the changes but wants the council to take out the part of the program that lets affordable housing projects bypass public hearings.
“Public hearings don’t only allow the public to express its views. It gives the public the opportunity to witness and understand the process and justification of government decisions,” said Hicks, who is also running for county council this year.
Currently, in order for a housing development project to qualify for the Sussex County Rental Program, 25% of its housing units need to have a maximum rent of $810 for a one-bedroom, $970 for a two-bedroom and $1,120 for a three-bedroom.
Those rents are meant to be affordable to households making half of the county’s median income, or $48,750 a year.
The proposed reforms would keep that 25% threshold and add a tiered approach that raises the rent caps.
The rents would have to be between $970 and $1,295 for a one-bedroom apartment, between $1,165 and $1,550 for a two-bedroom and between $1,345 and $1,790 for a three-bedroom.
Lower priced apartments would count as more units for the purpose of reaching the 25% threshold.
For example, a housing developer would be able to charge a higher rent if a quarter of the units were rent-restricted. But they could decide to make only 15% of the units rent-restricted if they charged a lower rent on those apartments.
The proposed reforms are less sweeping than what was originally recommended by the Sussex County Land Use Reform Working Group.
The County Council formed the working group after three newcomers won seats on the elected body by beating incumbents in the November 2024 elections. The victories largely were fueled by resident anger over how the five-person council had previously handled development.
The working group recommended the council raise the rent caps to be affordable for households making 80% of the area median income and lower the threshold to 15%.
Councilman Matt Lloyd said he wanted the council to pass something closer to what the working group recommended, but Council Vice President John Rieley said the reforms would make the program flexible enough to still attract more projects.
“That’s what they said the last time,” Lloyd responded, referring to the council’s previous unsuccessful attempt to reform the Sussex County Rental Program.
Horner, who was a member of the working group, said the changes are not likely to convince every housing developer to join the program, as he had originally hoped.
But he said the reformed program would work well for properties outside of the prime real estate markets of downtown Lewes and Rehoboth Beach.
“It’s certainly far better than what it was,” he said.
The post Sussex County Council to vote on affordable housing reforms next week appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
The convergence of HPC and AI is reshaping the future of supercomputing. Traditional modeling and simulation systems are now blending with AI, driving massive changes in infrastructure, processing capabilities, and physical data center design.
Converged HPC/AI workloads require an architecture that bridges high-precision scientific computing with high-throughput, low-precision AI training and inference. To make the leap, organizations are pursuing heterogenous compute which delivers exceptional performance and raw acceleration, while maintaining optimized operational efficiency. Selecting the right solution stack is critical to meet today’s evolving supercomputing challenges and evolve for what comes next.
The HPE Cray Supercomputing GX5000 (HPE Cray SC GX5000) is a next generation unified supercomputing solution for the converged HPC and AI era, designed for organizations that depend on supercomputing-scale HPC and AI to achieve their greatest objectives. The new flagship HPE Cray SC system will replace the HPE Cray SC EX4000 that has achieved many historic firsts—like being first to break the exascale barrier and first to power 7 of the top 10 most powerful supercomputers in the world. [i]
The HPE Cray SC GX5000 will deliver improvements across software, compute, interconnect, and storage layers:
What sets the HPE Cray SC GX5000 apart is its ability to deliver exceptional performance and optimized price/performance for physics-driven HPC modeling and simulation as well as data-driven AI. The system can run both workloads separately or simultaneously at peak performance to predict joint outcomes.
How does the HPE Cray SC GX5000 meet these requirements?
1. One of the highest performance densities in the industry.
MI430X GPUs per rack2. A unified HPC/AI architecture for next generation systems.
3. Maximum performance for your budget.
HPE and AMD are trusted partners for building next generation supercomputers, all the way to quantum. Our commitment to converged HPC/AI as the engine of global scientific discovery sets us apart in this dynamic industry. Our solutions fuel progress with an unstoppable combination of ultra-dense compute, the most comprehensive multivendor HPC/AI software stack for CPUs and GPUs, and global services that make your transformation turnkey.
HPE and AMD have built some of the world’s most powerful supercomputing systems, and the list is growing.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory is launching a new supercomputer in 2028, based on the new HPE Cray SC GX5000 and next generation processors and accelerators. The new Discovery supercomputer will deliver enhanced computing speeds and bandwidth to supercharge scientific discoveries—including AI modeling for nuclear energy, AI-driven digital twins for precision medicine, and shorter aerospace design cycles.
The HPC Center at University of Stuttgart has announced an upcoming system built on the same HPE and AMD foundation. The new Herder supercomputer will offer a major increase in performance and energy efficiency for advanced computational applications such as simulation, AI, and converged computing.
HPE invites you to explore the future of supercomputing solutions at ISC High Performance 2026. Join us in Hamburg, Germany from June 22nd–26th to experience the latest innovations. Plan to visit HPE at booth C10 and AMD at booth X03 to talk with our experts, experience demos, and much more.
The HPE Cray SC GX5000 demo will showcase HPE’s next generation supercomputer. Learn how this breakthrough system will transform HPC and AI workloads for years to come, and check out a model of the HPE Cray SC FX250 Compute Blade.
Discover how HPE and AMD are redefining AI-era supercomputing with open, scalable infrastructure for converged HPC and AI.
[i] Top500 List top500.org/lists/top500/2022/06/
[ii] “Build your next‑generation supercomputer on HPE Cray Supercomputing GX500,” HPE 2025 paths.ext.hpe.com/c/a50014207enw?x=_asidn
[iii] “Hot water, cold water,” Data Centre Dynamics Ltd. 2024
The post Discover the Unified Supercomputing Solution for Converged HPC and AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Cenk Uygur was due to appear at SXSW alongside streamer Hasan Piker but Home Office cancelled travel authorisation
A leftwing US political commentator has described the UK government’s decision to ban him from entering the country as “haunting and hilarious” and “Kafkaesque”.
Cenk Uygur, the founder and a host on Young Turks, a well-established progressive media outlet, was banned earlier this week from entering the UK to attend a speaking engagement alongside Hasan Piker, a Twitch streamer who has become a popular figure on the US political left.
Continue reading...The Center for Photography at Woodstock (in Kingston, New York) recently opened the first-ever New York Upstate Photography Biennial, featuring the work of 39 artists who live and work across the Hudson valley and beyond. The show, co-curated by Marina Chao and Adam Giles Ryan, highlights the diverse work of photographers in the upstate region. Their images will be on view until 6 September 2026
Continue reading...We look at Mikel Arteta’s next steps, Liverpool potentially missing out on an old flame and Anthony Gordon’s move to Barcelona
The margins were so narrow that Arsenal might have finished Saturday as European champions had Gabriel Magalhães not skied his penalty in the shootout. Similarly, the Champions League trophy may have ended up in their grasp had Cristhian Mosquera stopped himself from tripping Khvicha Kvaratskhelia to give Paris Saint-Germain a way back after the Gunners had taken an early lead.
Continue reading...
I was a new reporter at KQED in 2021 when former elementary teacher Joseph Brian Houg was sentenced to more than three decades in prison for sexually abusing 10 students. He’d taught at the same San Francisco Bay Area school for more than two decades. Were there warning signs?
I soon discovered parents on social media saying they had complained to school administrators for years about Houg. I also knew that schools could release such complaints if they were substantiated or if teachers were disciplined. So I filed public records requests with Houg’s school — something anyone can do.
I received 43 pages of records within a few months showing that parents had reported Houg to the principal at least four times since 2009. They complained about him for asking students to strip down to their underwear in his classroom in order to try on costumes for a play he was directing, and for coming into their changing room. They also complained about his touching boys’ chests or stomachs and tapping one boy on the butt. I learned that the principal had twice warned Houg to stop touching students. But he was allowed to keep teaching. (The principal said in a deposition that while Houg’s actions crossed professional boundaries, they were not reported to her as sexual.)
Over the next two years, I reported on similar cases of teachers remaining in the classroom after complaints of unwanted touching. Another Bay Area elementary school, in Benicia, reported a teacher to the state’s licensing body after he resigned due to accusations of misconduct. He was hired by another school, and his educator license remained in good standing until he was criminally charged. (He is currently fighting those charges.)
This raised a whole different set of questions for me: Should these teachers have been allowed to keep teaching in new schools? How much about a teacher’s disciplinary history did potential employers know? And what was the state’s responsibility for acting on, and sharing, the information it had about these teachers?
After I entered journalism school at the University of California, Berkeley in 2023, I wanted to investigate how common it was for teachers to continue working with kids after schools found that they had committed misconduct. California law bars the teacher licensing agency from releasing disciplinary records to the public, so my classmate and I requested records from the 300 largest school districts in California. We asked for complaints of teacher sexual misconduct made to schools in the five previous years. We also asked for any reports sent by schools to the state’s teacher licensing agency, which are required to be filed when public school educators are fired or resign due to alleged misconduct.
Dozens of districts responded within two months. We began building a spreadsheet of teachers against whom complaints were raised. Getting the records was slow: California requires public agencies to determine whether they have records to disclose within 10 days, and to release them promptly, but most dragged their feet. Whenever schools stopped responding, I copied school board members and attorneys on my emails, citing the law. By the time I graduated more than a year after filing the records requests, I had received more than 350 complaints, which I used in my recent investigation with KQED and ProPublica.
To this day, Los Angeles Unified, the largest school district in California, still has not released any records pertaining to teacher misconduct cases that it reported to the state. Instead, the district said it would charge me $8,000 ($100 an hour for 80 hours of work) for it to “investigate approximately 2,500 potentially responsive personnel files.” The First Amendment Coalition, a California nonprofit that advocates for free speech and government transparency, is representing me in a lawsuit filed in May. We argue that the Los Angeles school district is violating public records laws with its failure to release documents pertaining to alleged educator misconduct. A Los Angeles Unified spokesperson told me in a written statement this week that its policies balance the public’s right to access records with “responsible stewardship of public resources” and the law.
Districts slow-walking their responses isn’t the only obstacle to getting records from schools. Districts typically notify teachers before releasing complaints to give them the opportunity to block the documents’ release. The former Benicia teacher who was criminally charged with sexually abusing students in 2024 sued to block the release of complaints made against him at two school districts. The First Amendment Coalition represented me in that case, too, and we won. It took nine months to get the records. In another case in which I had requested records, the court granted an injunction preventing release of the teacher’s records, but the legal filings contained the details of the allegations against him, so the nature of the complaint became public anyway.
At least four teachers have called or emailed me directly to ask why I’m requesting their disciplinary records. They wanted to share their side of the story, which I was more than happy to hear, and some argued that their cases were not worth my time. One asked me to retract my request. (I did not.) Another sent a 1,700-word email saying that the allegations were only partially true and lamented that he did not have the money to defend himself.
While I appreciated the complexity of individual cases, I believed that those misconduct complaints might contain important truths. Undeterred by school districts’ recalcitrance, I followed the public record-seekers’ mantra: If you can’t get records from one agency, the answers you’re looking for may exist somewhere else.
Records of state disciplinary hearings are presumed public when teachers object to their dismissals by school districts or appeal the suspension or revocation of their licenses. And those records reside in the Department of General Services, a state agency that houses another agency responsible for convening administrative hearings of public employees.
This agency proved helpful with the case of Jason Agan, a San Francisco Bay Area math teacher who KQED and ProPublica reported on last month. Agan had been fired for sexually harassing high school students but went on to teach at two more schools, even after an independent panel convened by the Office of Administrative Hearings deemed him “unfit to teach.” Because he had asked for an outside hearing after the district moved to fire him, I requested those records.
I got them the next day. The documents contained summaries of testimony from students, administrators and Agan himself at his dismissal hearing. Agan, who has not been accused of a crime, admitted to touching students’ shoulders but denied any sexual motivation, stating during his dismissal hearing that he did so to offer them support and encouragement. He maintained his teaching license.
Getting a response from the Department of General Services was like discovering a secret portal to obtaining records quickly and easily.
So I requested five years’ worth of decisions about other teachers by independent panels from this agency, in search of further insights into how the state’s teacher disciplinary system works and where it falls short. I obtained a gold mine of documents in less than a week.
I had learned some important lessons: What seems to be secret isn’t always so. Sometimes you just need to know who to ask, and for what.
If you have experience with the state’s opaque teacher disciplinary process, KQED and ProPublica want to hear from you.
The post I Got Access to Hundreds of Teacher Misconduct Complaints in California — and You Can Too appeared first on ProPublica.
Authorities have been largely successful at erasing the massacre of protesters who fought for democratic reforms, but the facts are emerging in often unexpected ways.
While wealthy Americans hail a booming stock market, the rest of us worry about rising inflation and people struggling to make ends meet
In case you’re not familiar with the concept of the K-shaped economy, it’s an important idea that captures a lot about Trump’s America. Wealthy Americans are represented by the line of the K that angles sharply upward to the right, while the line of the K that dips downward represents non-rich Americans and the difficulties they face.
The economy’s K-shape has been growing worse in recent months, in large part because of Donald Trump’s policies. The wealthy people’s line is climbing further upward, while the line for the non-wealthy – the vast majority of Americans – has fallen further.
Continue reading...Millions of fans have watched videos of Ronaldo the dog, named after soccer great Cristiano Ronaldo, playing goalkeeper.
Everything you need to know (and more) about every squad member. Click on the player pictures for more information
Continue reading... | I just upgraded my xr classic recently with wtf rails and mte cast 5 inch hub and kush wide footpad. It has been amazing and working perfectly but I have this clicking noise. It only happens when I do this or when I first start accelerating when riding so I assumed it would be axel bolts needing tightening but I’ve got them so tight now. However I didn’t put any thread locker but I’m assuming that shouldn’t be the reason as I just tightened yesterday. Please give me any suggestions. Thanks [link] [comments] |
Who is winning the battle to be top scorer at the World Cup? Live and updated throughout the tournament
The Golden Boot is awarded to the World Cup’s top goalscorer, with assists used as a tie-breaker if two or more players finish level. The 2026 tournament has three former Golden Boot winners taking part: Kylian Mbappé of France (eight goals in 2022), England’s Harry Kane (six goals in 2018) and James Rodríguez of Colombia (six goals in 2014).
Mbappé and Kane are among the pre-tournament favourites to finish top scorer in North America, alongside Norway’s Erling Haaland – making his World Cup debut – and Argentina’s Lionel Messi, who is playing in his seventh World Cup and finished second-highest scorer in Qatar with seven goals.
Continue reading...Business secretary to meet European counterpart on Friday as EU industry leaders worry about retaliatory measures by UK
The UK business secretary, Peter Kyle, is to raise concerns about EU plans to dramatically reduce tariff-free imports of British steel with its trade commissioner, Maroš Šefčovič, in Brussels on Friday.
The UK steel industry has previously warned of “devastating” consequences from the new quota system being planned by the EU, which will cut overall tariff-free imports from non-EU countries by 47% on 2024 levels from 1 July.
Continue reading...Amazon has reportedly killed its planned new Stargate series despite giving it a series order in 2025. According to Variety, studio executives were worried it would only appeal to longtime fans. ScreenRant reports: Reports of what became Gero's Stargate series started in 2022, after Amazon acquired MGM Studios. Dean Devlin, who co-wrote the 1994 Stargate movie with Emmerich, was another executive producer for the Amazon show, as were Joby Harold and Tory Tunnell via Safehouse Pictures. The project also had Brad Wright and Joe Mallozzi as consulting producers, with both having had extensive history working within the Stargate franchise. On X, Michael Shanks, who played Daniel Jackson in Stargate SG-1, posted in response to the news that: "Yep. They did that." Mallozzi was resistant to the idea that the series was being geared toward diehard fans: "Nope. No. Sorry. Gonna have to push back on this. We were ever mindful of creating a show that would have broad appeal." In an additional post, Mallozzi went into further detail about why the cancellation is so disappointing: Before the new series was canceled by Amazon, Stargate began with Emmerich and Devlin's movie starring Kurt Russell and James Spader. This paved the way for 10 seasons of Stargate SG-1, followed by five seasons of Stargate Atlantis. There has also been the two-season Stargate Universe, the one-season animated show Stargate Infinity, the web miniseries Stargate Origins, and the 2008 direct-to-video movies Stargate: The Ark of Truth and Stargate Continuum, along with numerous games.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
For context, I have thousands of miles under my electric longboards, cruising at around 30-35km/h. I regularly ride it to work which is about a 10km roundtrip. This takes me about 10 - 12 minutes.
I recently got a used PintX and has been enjoying the agility and intuitiveness of Onewheels. They're very fun and solves my main gripe with esk8s: their terrible turning radius. I've had the PintX for about a week now, riding consistently for an hour or two every day. Today, I've finally felt comfortable enough to attempt my regular commute and honestly, I was a little disappointed. The ride itself was boring due to the lack of speed and long straight paths. By the time I finished my ride and arrived at work, my hips were sore and my feet and calves were hurting. I cruised between 16-20km/h which I figured should give me enough headroom to reduce the likelihood of a nosedive. My trip took about 17 - 20 minutes each way.
My question: is this a skill issue, as in maybe I can push the board a little further? Is the pain in my feet a result of bad form and technique as well as undeveloped muscles? Or is the platform just inherently uncomfortable for longer, non-stop rides? I've been eyeing the PintV upgrade for the Pint X. What kind of speed increase do I expect from the kit? Will it allow me to cruise at 30km/h with a descent amount of headroom?
Honestly, I'm torn. The board is so fun when I'm out for a ride just to have fun (carving, hopping around, listening to music). However, after my commute, I feel that it's more of a toy than a fun mode practical of transportation.
I appreciate your thoughts, thanks so much!
Edit: Wow! Thanks so much for the advice and pointers! I'll try to respond to everyone one by one but I'm not sure if I'll have time to. I'll ride the board for another week since I think one data point isn't enough to come to a conclusion on the board's viability for my commute.
A couple of things I'll keep in mind: Carve carve carve - Admittedly, I wasn't carving very much when I was riding the board, partially because I have to ride on tiny sidewalks but mostly due to negligence of its importance. I'll try to carve more today.
Foot stance - I will try a more alpine stance and less perpendicular foot position relative to the board's travel. I tried to do this more and more but the board's footpads feel so tiny.
Shoe choice: I currently ride with the black and white Vans ComfyCush Old Skool. However, they are used and abused daily and the padding on them are probably very compressed by now. I'll try a different pair. Maybe it'll also reduce the likelihood of the "mount of shame".
Speed - I weigh 145lbs. and has been riding to my perceived limit of the board. Turns out, maybe I can push it a little more. Today, I'll try riding closer to 24km/h (15mph) as I develop the feel for haptic buzz and pushback. My main source of caution is mostly from the board nosediving without warning as I heard sometimes it does happen. Also, I hit haptic buzz at around 12mph when I first got the board but that was when I was in Redwood Mode.
I'll keep this thread updated throughout the week to see if things improve. Thanks so much, I'm glad to be a part of such an awesome and welcoming community!
Edit 2: I've tried to push the board a bit more and was cruising at about 22 - 25km/h and has shortened my commute by 4 minutes! I feel that I am now limited by my ability to keep the board stable rather than my perceived limitation of the board. I've also tried to carve more, however I can definitely do more. The hips and calve pain was considerably lesser today. My enjoyment of my commute has definitely improved and I am more willing to stick with the board more.
I'm definitely eyeing that PintV + Chi-VE 84v upgrade later on as I improve my stability and push for more speed, as well as a different tire when the time comes.
Sultanate says talks with Tehran are limited to lawful management of waterway, but Washington has doubts about neutrality
Oman is resisting US pressure to break its links with Iran, and insists it has only been negotiating with Tehran on a future management system for the strait of Hormuz that would be compliant with international law. The aim would be to implement any regime after consulting the UN’s International Maritime Organization (IMO).
Traditionally Oman, a longtime US ally that shares stewardship of the strait, has adopted the role of a back-channel mediator allowing it to remain neutral in disputes that have led to fissures in other parts of the Gulf.
Continue reading...Conservation groups say work has begun in protected coastal area, while prime minister insists project will bring jobs and investment
Protests in Albania over a proposed luxury resort backed by Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, are set to intensify after opponents rejected an offer from the country’s prime minister “to discuss solutions”.
Thousands took to the streets of Tirana for a third straight day on Wednesday, some of them brandishing inflatable flamingos in a nod to feared environmental damage, amid mounting calls for the project to be blocked.
Continue reading...Islamic State-linked militia blamed for raids in North Kivu as governor says three patients with disease fled clinics
Rebel attacks around a town that is one of the centres of the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo have left more than 30 people dead over the past few days, complicating the response to the disease.
At least 10 people were massacred in raids on three villages around the city of Beni, in North Kivu, in the early hours of Wednesday morning.
Continue reading...In 2025, the tech journalist invited artificial intelligence to do nearly everything for her, including editing the book she was writing about the experiment. Some of it was useful, some not – but it was her time with a chatbot companion that really shook her
For a year, Joanna Stern decided to turn herself into a “lab rat” – the object of her own experiment. Throughout 2025, she invited artificial intelligence into “every corner” of her life. She let AI answer her texts, decide what she ate and cooked, mow her lawn, fold her washing, drive her places, parse her mammograms and even, in the darkness of a burner phone, be her lover. The resulting book, I Am Not a Robot: My Year Using AI to Do (Almost) Everything, asks all the big questions, including: what happens when AI can do everything humans can do? And what comes after that?
If anyone can produce answers, surely it’s Stern. Last February, she ended a 12-year stint as a personal technology columnist at the Wall Street Journal. During her tenure, she won an Emmy for her short documentary E-Ternal: A Tech Quest to “Live” Forever, which explored digital legacies, and built a reputation for product reviews that were outlandishly creative and fiendishly stringent. She once took an Apple watch jetskiing on the Hudson river to evaluate its connectivity.
Continue reading...The Pentagon needs both quantity and quality to win modern conflicts.
Stronger checks likely to be needed in England to safeguard reputation of GCSEs and A-levels, says Ian Bauckham
Cheating in exams could be magnified by the new generation of wearable hi-tech devices such as smartglasses or invisible earpieces, according to England’s qualifications watchdog.
Ian Bauckham, the head of the Office of Qualifications and Examinations Regulation (Ofqual), also revealed that GCSEs and A-level courses in England were being scrutinised over potential AI use in students’ coursework, after teachers said they were struggling to detect it.
Continue reading...The crisis between Washington and Europe may be a blessing in disguise.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 4.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: The secondary market for decades old, low-tech John Deere tractors has been booming for years as farmers have sought reliable tractors that they can actually fix without having to deal with John Deere's repair monopoly. A Canadian company has seen that demand and came up with a radical thought: What if they made a new, repairable, "no-tech" tractor to solve what has become a gigantic pain point for farmers? Alberta's Ursa Ag says that it has been inundated with demand after announcing its tractor, which costs roughly half as much as a Deere and has the benefit of not being a repair nightmare. [...] Ursa Ag markets its tractors as "no frills" and "built to last." Ursa Ag's Doug Wilson told me that the company designed the tractor because of a need in the marketplace for a new machine that isn't loaded with tech and is easy to maintain. The company follows in the footsteps of consumer electronics companies like Fairphone, which makes a repairable smartphone and Framework, which makes modular, repairable laptops. The demand Ursa Ag has seen is part of the backlash to manufacturer repair monopolies and the injection of technology and internet-connected sensors and terms of use into even the most basic of gadgets. "I talk to farmers every day and I hear from farmers every day about how they went out and bought machinery from 1987 so that it wouldn't have a computer on it," Wilson said. "All of this came from a simple discussion with a customer who wanted to be able to turn [the tractor] on at the start of the day, to use it, and shut it off at the end of the day. It needed to work, so that's what we built." Ursa Ag's tractor has been hyped in agriculture circles after Wilson showed the tractor off at a Canadian farm show and it was featured by Farms.com. Wilson said more than a thousand farmers have contacted him after that show, from roughly 30 countries. "I got a handwritten letter from a farmer in France who doesn't own a computer and wanted us to mail him information about the tractors," he said. He said the company has thus far made a couple fewer than 100 tractors but is working on tripling its production capacity and has seen a lot of demand over the last few months. "Given the number of my customers that carry flip phones, I would say there is consumer pressure to back away from some of the technology that is unnecessary to perform everyday tasks," Wilson said. "So that is definitely transferable to dishwashers and washing machines, refrigerators. Refrigerators that have screens on them that'll tell you what's inside. It's a little crazy." "That high-tech stuff, the million-dollar John Deere tractor has a place. It has technology that is well worth the money," Wilson said. "But that technology is needed for 5 percent of what a farm does. There are so many applications for tractors on farms that don't require technology. The technology that goes into even a calculator is not required for most farming applications."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
This blog is now closed. See our full report on the latest Middle East news
The Kuwaiti defence ministry said it intercepted 13 ballistic missiles and 17 drones launched by Iran today.
A drone and missile attack on Kuwait’s international airport killed one person, which Kuwaiti authorities identified as an Indian national. It is the first reported death in a Gulf state since the US and Iran agreed to a ceasefire in April.
Continue reading...The school has fought lawsuits in federal court since 2018 brought by former student athletes against the university over its failure to stop abuse by Dr. Richard Strauss.
Load Floaty or Float Control logs and generate a video overlay file:
ESC Log Video
You can export GPX files from Float Control, Insta360 knows to match up the data with the right videos based on the timestamp data, for an example see Cameron’s Reel:
Hey! I’m from Virginia and will be riding around Boston tomorrow. Starting in Cambridge around 3:30. If anyone has tips or even willing to meet up let me know.
A possible case of the flesh-eating New World screwworm is being investigated in Texas, the USDA reported Wednesday.
This live blog is now closed.
Iowa voters cast their ballots in yesterday’s heated primaries, setting up for months of fervent campaigning ahead of the November midterms in contests that could determine the balance of power in Congress.
A red state that the GOP has dominated for the past decade, Democrats believe they can be competitive in three of its four House races, its Senate election, and the contest to replace Kim Reynolds, the retiring Republican governor.
Continue reading...SwitchBot's new E Ink display offers a complete weather hub, smart calendar support and even travel recommendations.
Attack brings death toll to at least 207 since administration began targeting people it calls ‘narcoterrorists’
The US military attacked a boat accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Wednesday, killing two men, as the Trump administration wages a months-long campaign against alleged traffickers in Latin America.
The latest attack brings the number of people who have been killed in boat strikes by the US military to at least 207 since the administration began targeting people it calls “narcoterrorists” in early September.
Continue reading...Vote sends resolution to the US Senate, where the chamber must promptly take up the measure under law – key US politics stories from Wednesday, 3 June at a glance
The US House of Representatives delivered a stunning rebuke to Donald Trump over his war on Iran on Wednesday, as representatives backed a move to force him to seek approval from Congress or withdraw US forces.
The House voted 215 to 208 in favor of the war powers resolution, as four Republicans voted with Democrats. The dissident Republicans were Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Warren Davidson of Ohio and Tom Barrett of Michigan.
Continue reading...Incumbent leads in primary, but with less than 50% of votes must face either Spencer Pratt or Nithya Raman
Los Angeles’s high-profile mayoral contest remained unsettled on Wednesday evening as the city waited to learn who will join incumbent Karen Bass in November’s general election.
Bass came out ahead in Tuesday’s heated primary but, after securing less than 50% of the vote, she will have to defend her seat against either Spencer Pratt, a former reality TV star, or progressive city council member Nithya Raman. As of Wednesday evening, with more than 60% of votes counted, Pratt had secured just under 30% of the vote, while Raman had won nearly 23%.
Continue reading...Silicon Valley is fighting against AI regulation and taxation and will benefit from having political leverage
Silicon Valley had a big night in California’s primary election, proving that the tens of millions of dollars funding candidates across the state was money well spent. While the tech industry’s preferred candidate for governor came in a scant sixth place, donations to smaller elections proved to be a successful strategy.
Tech billionaires have in past months thrown their full weight into politics as the industry fights regulation and taxation, while promoting the unfettered growth of artificial intelligence. Getting the right candidates in office, especially in its home turf of California, is existential. With favorable candidates, tech companies can gain both political and regulatory leverage to maintain their dominance in business.
Continue reading...Apple's first folding phone may be just a few months away. Rumors point to a September introduction, a $2,000-plus price and a possible new name: the iPhone Ultra.
Inventor Steven Cheng is developing prototypes for a mobile bug-zapping defense system.
I love how my Pint rides. I dont necessarily want a bigger board, but id like to go faster and have some more range. In turn I think a bigger board is pretty much unavoidable right? I know the pint X and S exist but I dont want to outgrow that one kinda like whats happening with my current board. The boards im considering are the Pint X , the XR Classic and the Fungineers funwheel X7. I feel like if I upgraded to the XRC or the X7 and the board loses that playful fun feeling at lower speeds I will be disappointed. Does the bigger tire and board ride drastically different than the smaller wheel on the pint? Id love to hear peoples experience with choosing their 2nd board. Thanks everyone.
Beginning in July, you won't be able to edit or create files in Office 2019 for Mac. The company blames this on an expiring digital certificate.
Measure in Amazon and Microsoft’s backyard expected to succeed next week as backlash grows amid AI boom
Seattle’s city government is on the verge of passing a year-long ban on the construction of new datacenters, the largest city yet in the US to consider such a moratorium as nationwide backlash grows.
Four companies sought to build five large datacenters in areas serviced by Seattle’s public utility; if approved, they would have consumed approximately a third of the city’s current daily demand for electricity.
Continue reading...The Middle East is Japan’s main source of crude oil, from which naphtha is extracted and used to make items including printing ink and plastics
Takeaways, supermarkets, and bakeries in Japan are running out of plastic bags, trays and food service gloves amid widening shortages of the key plastic ingredient, naphtha, due to the Middle East crisis.
The food sector accounts for nearly one-third of Japan’s annual plastic use of more than 8m tonnes, and price rises and shortages are hitting hard across the industry and beyond. Some outlets have begun offering perks to customers who bring their own bags, plates or containers.
Continue reading...Stunning rebuke to president as lawmakers vote 215-208 for measure forcing him to seek congressional approval
The US House of Representatives delivered a stunning rebuke to Donald Trump over his war on Iran on Wednesday, as representatives backed a move to force him to seek approval from Congress or withdraw US forces.
The House voted 215 to 208 in favor of the war powers resolution, as four Republicans voted with Democrats. The dissident Republicans were Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Warren Davidson of Ohio and Tom Barrett of Michigan.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 4, No. 1,811.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 619 for Thursday, June 4.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 4, No. 823.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 4, No. 1,089.
First, he invented the web. Now Tim Berners-Lee is reinventing the AI agent to work for us.
El Dorado blaze that burned 22,744 acres and claimed the life of a firefighter was ignited by an illegal device
Nearly six years after a couple’s gender-reveal stunt sparked a deadly wildfire in southern California, the companies that sold the pyrotechnic device have agreed to a multimillion-dollar settlement.
The Hubbard, Ohio-based Wholesale Fireworks Corp and its subsidiary American Fireworks Wholesale LLC have agreed to pay more than $4m, the US attorney’s office in the central district of California announced on Tuesday. A third company, the Miami-based Pink or Blue Gender Team Inc, agreed to pay $50,000.
Continue reading...The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene early Wednesday morning, the Bakersfield Police Department said.
In May, the Senate advanced a similar measure to force the president to end the prolonged conflict with Iran.
Tip-off at 8.30pm ET for opener at Frost Bank Center
Email beau.dure@theguardian.com with your thoughts
The waiting is the hardest part
The last time the Spurs won the NBA championship, Kawhi Leonard was the Finals MVP. The team had veteran leadership in Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. The No. 1 song was Happy, by Pharrell Williams. Others in the top 10 included John Legend, Katy Perry and Ariana Grande.
Continue reading...By combining streamlined quantum ‘snapshots’ with classical data analysis, a new hybrid framework helps today’s early-stage quantum computers probe complex molecular energy states with far fewer computational resources.
June 3, 2026 — Quantum computers offer a powerful tool for discovering new materials and chemical processes. But hardware limitations have largely confined computational studies of molecules to their most basic, resting states. Berkeley Lab researchers have now developed a highly efficient hybrid framework called multiobservable dynamic mode decomposition (MODMD) to tackle this central challenge.

This schematic illustrates a hybrid workflow that efficiently calculates the fundamental energy levels of complex systems by dividing the computational labor between quantum and classical computers. It pairs noise-resilient quantum measurements of a system’s time evolution with an advanced classical data-processing algorithm—dynamic mode decomposition—to extract precise energy estimates using near-term quantum hardware. Credit: Yizhi Shen, Berkeley Lab.
By effectively calculating both the resting “ground” state and the “excited” energy states of quantum systems, this approach opens a practical route to spectral and dynamic information at the heart of molecular behavior. It achieves this quick, error-aware analysis using a fraction of the usual computing power. This marks a key step toward making today’s quantum computers useful for real-world chemistry and physics.
To understand how new materials behave or how complex chemical reactions occur, scientists need to calculate the various energy levels of a quantum system. While quantum computers are generally effective at simulating the lowest, most stable energy level, calculating the higher, “excited” energy levels remains extremely challenging. Traditional quantum methods require running long, continuous operations that easily overwhelm the limited capabilities of current, noise-prone quantum hardware. Finding a way to capture this vital spectral information without rapidly increasing computing time is a major roadblock for advancements in materials science and quantum chemistry.
The MODMD framework overcomes these hardware limitations by creatively combining a data-analysis technique used in fluid dynamics with a highly efficient quantum measurement strategy. Instead of running many quantum simulations to map out the energy states one by one, researchers use a quantum computer to take very quick, randomized “snapshots” of a system as it evolves over time. These snapshots probe shorter quantum evolutions and require much less measurement overhead, therefore significantly reducing the burden on quantum hardware while preserving rich information. The data is then handed off to a classical computer, which stitches the signals together to accurately predict multiple energy levels and related properties of the system. By shifting the complex data analysis to classical computers, this method bypasses the resource-draining optimization bottlenecks that bog down other quantum algorithms, allowing researchers to extract a wealth of information using a fraction of the usual resources.
Co-authors: Yizhi Shen (Berkeley Lab), Alex Buzali (Harvard), Hong-Ye Hu (Harvard), Katherine Klymko (Berkeley Lab), Daan Camps (Berkeley Lab), Susanne F. Yelin (Harvard), and Roel Van Beeumen (Berkeley Lab).
Publication:Efficient Measurement-Driven Eigenenergy Estimation with Classical Shadows
Funding: Department of Energy Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) Exploratory Research for Extreme-Scale Science
User Facilities: This research used computing resources of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC).
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’s MODMD Approach Advances Quantum Simulations Beyond Ground States appeared first on HPCwire.
The images won't show real products you can buy, but they will illustrate general terms such as "cowl neck" or "rattan."
Ring's face-detecting AI is problematic, but it's far from the only security brand to use it.
Scheme aims to help 18-year-olds in England who lack support after leaving system to find trusted people with whom they have lost touch
Growing up and leaving the care system is daunting enough, but for 22-year-old Hannah, from Hertfordshire, the biggest anxiety was the sudden reality of no longer having a crowd in her corner.
Turning 18 as a care leaver in England has been described as a “cliff edge” at which young people lose access to their social worker and support staff who provide day-to-day advocacy and help in a crisis – a reassuring and constant adult presence.
Continue reading...Research suggests NHS trusts with higher empathy ratings also benefit financially and have improved staff wellbeing
Patients and staff fare better at hospitals that rank highly on empathy, research suggests, with institutions also benefiting financially by spending less on agency staff, locums and consultants.
The finding comes from the first study to rate NHS trusts in England according to an empathy score that is drawn from information on the organisation’s culture, leadership behaviour and practitioner empathy, among other factors.
Continue reading...Lord Mann’s review prompts new training for health bosses and restrictions on political symbols on uniforms
The NHS is taking action to tackle antisemitism after a government-ordered report found that Jewish patients and staff face “routine ostracism” in the service.
Anti-Jewish hatred in the NHS means some patients hide their identity and staff “suffer in silence”, a review by Lord Mann, the government’s adviser on antisemitism, has found.
Continue reading...Elahere is first new drug for chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancer to be approved by NHS for 20 years
Hundreds of women with hard-to-treat ovarian cancer can now be offered a new life-prolonging treatment, after NHS England approved its introduction. It is the first new drug for resistant ovarian cancer to be approved for more than 20 years.
Ovarian is the 18th most common type of cancer globally, affecting more than 300,000 women a year. More than three-quarters of patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage, making it harder to treat.
Continue reading...Darren Jones’s messages include requests for advice on the reshuffle and remarks about former business secretary Jonathan Reynolds
The prime minster’s close ally Darren Jones sent his commiserations to Peter Mandelson after he was sacked as US ambassador in messages that were not disclosed as part of the humble address release.
Jones’s texts also included requests for advice on the reshuffle and disobliging comments about the then business secretary Jonathan Reynolds and the influence of trade unions.
Continue reading...BrianFagioli writes: Fedora Linux 43 users upgrading to the latest Dovecot mail server discovered something rather unsettling: some older Microsoft Outlook configurations may have been silently ignoring SSL/TLS settings for POP3 email connections for years. According to a Fedora community blog post, affected Outlook clients reportedly continued using insecure port 110 connections even when encryption was enabled in the application settings. The issue surfaced after Dovecot 2.4 disabled plaintext authentication on non secure connections by default, causing Outlook users to suddenly lose mailbox access after the Fedora 43 upgrade. The report suggests the behavior may date back as far as Outlook 2007, although modern Outlook builds were not fully tested. Fedora admins stress that the problem could be limited to legacy account configurations rather than current versions of Outlook itself. Still, the discovery has sparked discussion among Linux admins and security folks because many users likely assumed their email traffic was encrypted simply because Outlook claimed SSL/TLS was enabled. The incident also highlights how stricter defaults in modern open source infrastructure can expose ancient assumptions and questionable behaviors that quietly survived for decades.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I have a onewheel Gt. I have never downloaded haptic buzz update. I am curious should I or do people still think it’s better not too?? Everytime I use the app it pops up to update. So I just turn off cellular. So unless I’m home the message to upgrade doesn’t show up.
Thanks
To any reasonable person, a ceasefire is exactly what it sounds like: It is the total cessation of military attacks to end a war. But to the mainstream American media outlets covering the U.S.–Israel war with Iran, what constitutes a “ceasefire” is a rhetorical exercise.
Today, Iran launched missiles at the international airport in Kuwait. As the New York Times reported: “The barrage was one of the biggest attacks on a Gulf nation since the U.S.-Iran cease-fire took effect in April.” ABC News’s live update coverage ran with the breaking news headline “Iran targets US forces, Kuwait airport amid ceasefire.” Over at CNN, the headline was “Kuwait’s airport attacked as fresh Iran-US strikes strain ceasefire.”
Of course, Iran’s latest campaign didn’t come out of nowhere: It comes two days after the U.S. announced that it had bombed radar and drone sites in the country, and one day after Israel bombarded south Lebanon with airstrikes and artillery yet again, reportedly killing at least four people across two towns.
All that bombing, and all of its attendant death and suffering, sure doesn’t feel like a “ceasefire” in any real sense. Still, the Times, along with other national news outlets, continues to spin the fantasy that the ceasefire is intact — only now it’s increasingly “fragile” or “tested.” The paper of record has gone so far as to say that it “hangs in balance.”
In a piece of news analysis in the Times last week — on the heels of the U.S. bombing Iran for the second time in three days — the paper made the case that “a truce isn’t necessarily doomed if the missiles are still flying.” It also argued that while a ceasefire might sound like an end to the bombing, the geopolitical definition hinges on whether both sides agree that a “ceasefire” remains in effect.
If government officials call it a ceasefire, who is The New York Times to question it?
If government officials call it a ceasefire, who is the New York Times to question it?
For many months, another ceasefire in name only has been touted in Gaza. What that’s looked like in practice is Israel relentlessly bombing the Palestinians on a near-daily basis. Al Jazeera reported that since the “ceasefire” in Gaza was announced in October 2025, Israel has killed at least 922 people and injured 2,786.
To the people of Gaza and of south Lebanon, there is no ceasefire. Continuing to carry water for the idea that we’re no longer at war, or that there’s been any meaningful progress made to end this war, is to provide cover for the U.S. and Israel, the countries that launched this war of aggression and continue to execute it. It also provides President Donald Trump with the political cover he so desperately desires as he realizes that he’s powerless to end the deeply unpopular war he started with Israel, and that no number of testy phone calls will move the needle if our ally won’t agree to a true ceasefire.
The mainstream media is perfectly comfortable spinning the fiction that we’re currently in a gray zone somewhere between war and peace because the stakes are an abstraction. To them, blindly supporting American imperialism and Israeli aggression are baked-in ideological assumptions, not matters of life or death. It’s no coincidence that the New York Times has done more than any other media organization to massage the language around Israel, Gaza, and Iran to an extreme degree.
But words like “ceasefire” matter a great deal, which is why it’s critically important for the media to call out acts of war for exactly what they are. In this way, the brutal fact of war is black and white: Your country is either killing people with the bombs it’s dropping, or it’s not. Failing to acknowledge that reality is worse than dishonest — it is to irrevocably deprive those paying the highest price of their humanity.
The post Stop Calling It a Ceasefire appeared first on The Intercept.
At its Build conference, Microsoft announced coreutils for Windows.
Coreutils for Windows is a Microsoft-maintained set of UNIX-style command-line utilities that run natively on Windows — the same commands and pipelines you use on Linux, macOS, and WSL. It ships as a single multi-call binary that exposes each utility under its standard name (
cat.exe,grep.exe,find.exe, and so on), giving you the everyday tools developers already use on other platforms to script, automate, and process text. For the full list, see Commands.The goal is to remove friction when moving between Linux, macOS, WSL, containers, and Windows. The same commands, flags, and pipelines work the same way, so existing scripts and habits carry over without translation. Each command supports the standard
↫ Windows Developer Tools website--helpflag for full syntax and options.
It’s a port of the Rust-based rewrite of the GNU coreutils, findutils, and grep. There are a few caveats though, since these ports have to deal with a number of Windows-isms. The first thing that comes to mind for most of us are path separators; these ports will handle both the correct and incorrect Windows/DOS one, but since some tools may output only the incorrect one this may affect piping. You should also take into account things like Windows’ ACLs vs. POSIX permission bits, the lack of /dev/null, and a few other oddities.
Furthermore, there are a bunch of commands that rely on POSIX-only concepts, so those aren’t included, and a few other commands that aren’t useful on Windows are excluded as well. Since a number of commands conflict with built-in commands from cmd.exe and PowerShell, which commands run will depend on the shell, the PATH order, and PowerShell’s alias table.
Everything’s in preview, and installable through WinGet.
The Trump administration says it’s working to reduce the amount of fraud in federal government programs. However, fiscal experts have said that those reductions alone won’t “save” the Social Security program or result in “a balanced budget,” as President Donald Trump has falsely suggested.
That’s because fraudulent overpayments in Social Security are a small fraction of that program’s total costs. Likewise, the most recent federal budget deficit was about 240% more than the highest federal estimate of annual spending due to fraud.
Yet during a May 27 meeting with members of his Cabinet, the president talked about his administration’s efforts to root out fraud and what it could mean for the future of Social Security and the government’s finances.
“Under the leadership of Vice President JD Vance — very proud of this — the White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud is waging war on waste, fraud, theft and abuse like nobody’s ever seen before,” Trump said at the White House. “And they’re finding billions and billions and billions of dollars.”
“And if he does really great,” Trump said of Vance, “we’ll have a balanced budget without having to do anything. This is the kind of money they stole.” Later in his remarks, the president said, “And I think we have a chance to save Social Security without doing anything to it, by just the numbers of fraudulent people on Social Security — people that are 115 years old, 125 years old, getting payments.”
But even if all fraud in government spending was eliminated, it wouldn’t save nearly enough money to accomplish those two budget goals, experts say.
When we asked about the president’s claims, the White House didn’t provide supporting evidence. Instead, Kush Desai, a White House spokesman, said: “Every day, President Trump’s Fraud Task Force is uncovering levels of fraud across various federal programs that were previously inconceivable to government forecasters and working Americans alike. President Trump pledged to slash the pervasive waste, fraud, and abuse in government spending, and from cracking down on Medicaid fraudsters to right-sizing federal employment levels, the Administration is focused on delivering record results for American taxpayers.”
Social Security is in jeopardy of running out of money to pay full benefits in less than 10 years.
In a 2025 report, the program’s trustees said that, together, the Social Security trust funds – one to pay retirees or their survivors, and the other for disabled individuals – are projected to become insolvent in 2034. At that point, money from the payroll taxes that fund Social Security would only be enough to cover 81% of scheduled benefits.
Without adjustments, the trust fund for retirees, specifically, will be depleted a year earlier, with the ability to pay just 77% of benefits, the report said. That trust fund has dwindled because its reserves have been tapped to help pay beneficiaries, since Social Security’s expenditures began to exceed its payroll tax revenue more than a decade ago.
Social Security paid out almost $1.5 trillion in 2024, both for the retirement and disability programs, which was more than the programs’ income of about $1.4 trillion.
The combined trust funds face an estimated shortfall of about $25 trillion over 75 years, through 2099, according to last year’s annual trustees report. (However, the disability insurance trust fund on its own won’t become depleted during the 75-year window.)
That imbalance can’t be fixed simply by going after fraud.
“The scale of fraud and overpayments is tiny relative to the program’s finances,” Gopi Shah Goda, the director of the Retirement Security Project and a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, told us in an email.
She noted that in a February 2025 report, the Social Security Office of the Inspector General reported that, between fiscal years 2020 and 2023, overpayments of retirement and disability benefits totaled roughly $13.6 billion, or about $3.4 billion per year on average. Most of the overpayments were attributed to beneficiaries not reporting information that affected their benefits.
The IG report said that 3% of the overpayments went to “beneficiaries who fraudulently obtained benefits or were noncitizens … who did not report to SSA they had been living outside the United States for longer than 6 months.” The report also said that 4% of the overpayments were attributed “to payments issued after a beneficiary’s death or from family members or representative payees who did not timely report the beneficiary’s death.”
But there shouldn’t be any such payments to anyone 115 or 125 years old, as Trump claimed. Since September 2015, the Social Security database has been set to automatically terminate benefits to individuals listed as 115 or older.
Last year, Trump claimed that millions of people over the age of 100 could be wrongly receiving Social Security. But as we reported in February 2025, the Social Security Administration distributed a total of $158 million in benefits to about 89,000 individuals aged 99 or older in December 2024. Internal audit reports indicated that only a small portion of the payments were likely disbursed to dead Americans wrongly recorded as alive in the Social Security database.
“Even if one were to wave a magic wand and eliminate SSA’s entire administrative cost budget while preventing all overpayments, the total ‘savings’ would amount to only about $10.2 billion per year — equal to just 2.5 days’ worth of benefits, or about 2.7% of the annual amount needed to close the 75-year actuarial deficit,” Goda said.
She said that the projected 75-year funding gap is the kind “that can only be closed through major policy changes — raising taxes, adjusting benefits, or some combination of both.”
In an August 2025 explainer answering common questions about Social Security, Emerson Sprick, director of retirement and labor policy at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said, “Minimizing fraud is a vital aspect of good governance, but eliminating fraud would not fix Social Security’s underlying fiscal challenges.”
The same thing could be said of fraud and the federal budget in general.
“Looking beyond Social Security to government programs, there is actually a lot more fraud,” said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. He told us in an email that, compared with Social Security, “it’s much easier” to defraud programs such as Medicare and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps.
“Nonetheless, there is nowhere close to enough fraud to balance the budget,” he said.
As we wrote in February — when Trump made a similar claim about balancing the budget by finding fraud — the Government Accountability Office estimated in a 2024 report that the federal government “could lose between $233 billion and $521 billion annually to fraud.” Meanwhile, the federal budget deficit was almost $1.8 trillion in fiscal year 2025, and the Congressional Budget Office has projected that the deficit will approach $1.9 trillion in fiscal years 2026 and 2027 — before rising to more than $2 trillion in 2028 and subsequent fiscal years.
So, the annual imbalance between federal outlays and receipts is currently more than three times higher than the highest federal estimate of government money lost each year to fraud.
The CRFB is “very supportive” of efforts to address waste, fraud, errors and abuse, “but again, they are not gonna balance the budget,” Goldwein said.
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 Stopping Fraud Won’t ‘Save’ Social Security, Create ‘Balanced Budget,’ as Trump Suggests appeared first on FactCheck.org.
With colorful signage depicting corporate greed and pollution, AI data center protesters staked out Microsoft's annual Build conference.
June 3, 2026 — The agentic AI moment has arrived, but delivering on its promise requires more than good models. It also takes fast hardware, secure runtimes, a responsive data layer and models tuned for long-running reasoning. NVIDIA and Microsoft are bringing that full stack to developers across Windows devices, Azure cloud and local deployments.
At Microsoft Build, NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang joined Microsoft chairman and CEO Satya Nadella’s keynote via livestream from Taipei to discuss the expanded partnership: NVIDIA RTX Spark and DGX Station for Windows, NVIDIA GPU-accelerated Microsoft Fabric, NVIDIA open models on Microsoft Foundry, the NVIDIA OpenShell secure runtime in GitHub Copilot and the next generation of NVIDIA-powered AI factories.
Reinventing Windows for Agents: From RTX Spark to DGX Station for Windows
NVIDIA and Microsoft are reimagining Windows PCs for the age of AI agents. With RTX Spark laptops and small desktops, and DGX Station for Windows deskside AI supercomputers, developers can build, tune and run agents natively on Windows.
RTX Spark is a new beginning, powering the world’s first Windows PCs purpose-built for personal agents, with 1 petaflop of AI performance, up to 128GB of unified memory, all-day battery life, and full AI and graphics performance unplugged. Bringing over 30 years of NVIDIA innovation, including CUDA, RTX, DLSS and TensorRT, systems arrive this fall from Microsoft Surface, ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo and MSI.
DGX Station for Windows is the most powerful deskside AI supercomputer for building and running agents on Windows enterprise applications and workflows. Powered by the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip with up to 748GB of coherent memory and 20 petaflops of FP4 performance, it runs frontier models of up to 1 trillion parameters for always-on enterprise agents. Systems are expected from ASUS, Dell, GIGABYTE, HP, MSI and Supermicro in Q4. Both products run NVIDIA OpenShell, a secure-by-design runtime for autonomous agents.
Powering Agentic Workflows at Enterprise Scale With NVIDIA Open Models on Microsoft Foundry
Agentic AI runs on a system of models. With NVIDIA, Anthropic and OpenAI models — plus Hermes special agents — now on the hosted agents in Foundry Agent Service, enterprises can bring agentic systems to life on Azure with built-in identity and governance. Anthropic’s Claude models now run natively on NVIDIA GB300 Blackwell Ultra systems on Azure, with customer availability in the weeks ahead.
NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Ultra, a new open frontier reasoning model for long-running agents across coding, research and enterprise workflows, is available this month on Foundry managed compute, alongside Nemotron 3.5 ASR for speech recognition and Nemotron 3.5 Content Safety. Developers can compose Nemotron alongside frontier and local models, optimizing cost and quality for each workflow.
NVIDIA’s open model portfolio on Foundry now spans agentic, physical and scientific AI. NVIDIA Cosmos 3, the first fully open omnimodel for physical AI, brings vision reasoning, world simulation and action generation. NVIDIA Earth-2 AI weather models are available through Microsoft Planetary Computer Pro and Foundry for enterprise forecasting and risk analysis.
NVIDIA Agent Toolkit and NVIDIA NemoClaw blueprints give developers an open source platform to build production agents on Foundry. NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries including cuDF, cuOpt, AI-Q and NeMo are now accessible to agents as domain-specific skills.
Accelerating Enterprise Data Warehouses for the AI Era
Data fuels agentic AI, and fast access to it is critical.
NVIDIA accelerated computing is now built into Microsoft Fabric Data Warehouse, with Microsoft’s internal benchmarking delivering SQL execution up to 6x faster than the CPU-powered baseline and up to 7x faster than three other leading cloud data warehouse providers for high-concurrency workloads.
The enterprise data layer can now keep pace with AI agents that continuously query and reason over data, the result of years of deep engineering collaboration between NVIDIA and Microsoft, from research to production.
Advancing Physical AI and Autonomous Systems
Physical AI is the next frontier for agents.
Microsoft is integrating NVIDIA’s open source physical AI skills and tools with Azure and its Physical AI Toolchain. Developers get a unified platform, powered by Cosmos 3’s mixture-of-transformers architecture, to simulate, train and deploy autonomous systems, including robots, autonomous vehicles and industrial systems that can perceive, reason, plan and act in the physical world. Cosmos 3 ranks first among open models on key benchmarks for vision reasoning, world generation and action generation.
Enhancing Azure Local and Foundry Local With NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition and Nemotron Models
Agentic AI is moving beyond the cloud.
Microsoft is bringing Foundry Local on Azure Local to the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition platform. Paired with the NVIDIA Nemotron open model family, enterprises can run high-performance AI workloads where their data resides, whether in on-premises, hybrid or sovereign environments, without sacrificing performance or governance.
Foundry Local on Azure Local now supports multinode deployments and the vLLM runtime, scaling inference for manufacturing, energy, sovereign data centers and other latency-sensitive scenarios.
Bringing Secure Agent Development to GitHub Copilot With NVIDIA OpenShell
As agents move from coding assistance to autonomous execution, they need real capability without real credentials.
NVIDIA OpenShell, now integrated into GitHub Copilot, solves this: Each agent runs isolated in its own sandboxed container, and every outbound call is evaluated against policy before it can reach files, networks or credentials. Policies are written as code, versioned in the repository and updatable on the fly. OpenShell is open source under Apache 2.0, model-agnostic and spans on-premises, hybrid and cloud environments.
Fairwater Wisconsin Goes Live, Validated for NVIDIA Vera Rubin
Microsoft’s Fairwater Wisconsin AI factory is now live, ahead of schedule, running hundreds of thousands of NVIDIA Grace Blackwell systems as a single AI factory, and connected with a similar AI factory in Georgia to deliver a scalable and distributed AI system for the most demanding frontier models. Through joint engineering on power, cooling, NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet and the new Multipath Reliable Connection (MRC) transport protocol, Microsoft’s Fairwater AI data center designs are optimizing token economics.
In addition, Microsoft has already validated the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform, now in full production, for deployment across Azure data centers.
Vera Rubin slots in alongside Blackwell with no retrofits, delivering up to 10x inference throughput per megawatt and reducing cost per agentic token by an order of magnitude. Built-in NVIDIA Confidential Computing protects models and data as agents reason at scale. The NVIDIA Dynamo inference framework extends those gains into software, accelerating model cold starts on AKS and bringing Kubernetes-native distributed inference orchestration via NVIDIA Grove.
Source: Dave Salvator, NVIDIA
The post NVIDIA and Microsoft Expand Partnership to Build the Full Stack for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Ancient Slashdot reader whitroth shares a report from Politico, with the caption: "shutting down Microsoft Office for the International Criminal Court (ICC) was clearly a wake-up call." From the report: The EU is moving to counter American dominance in technology by reaching for one of the oldest tools in its arsenal: industrial strategy. As the European Commission unveiled a plan Wednesday to reduce Europe's reliance on the foreign technology providers that underpin the modern economy, it was careful to stress that it was not picking a fight with U.S. digital giants. Instead, the tech sovereignty package -- motivated in no small part by U.S. President Donald Trump's weaponization of Europe's dependence on American firms -- takes a longer-term view: boost the continent's players so they can eventually challenge their U.S. rivals. [...] If adopted, the package will direct public money toward products that contribute to Europe's economy and independence from foreign firms; cut red tape for data centers; beef up research and innovation through "leadership initiatives"; incentivize countries to share digital capacities in a new "Eurocloud" forum; and require EU governments to come up with national strategies to boost the adoption of cutting-edge tech, including AI. The package will also seek to ramp up the bloc's demand for advanced chips -- a response to criticism by the industry -- with a series of industrial initiatives to revise a 2023 chips law. [...] As part of its proposal to keep a list of trustworthy countries, the Commission would require EU governments to run a so-called "sovereignty risk assessment" for every digital service they rely on, measuring foreign control, potential access to sensitive data and the risk of operational disruption. Within a year, they would have to determine the appropriate level of protection for each public sector and procure digital services accordingly -- unless they can prove doing so would come at a "disproportionate cost," the proposal reads. However, the Commission reserves the right to overrule their assessment in future legislation if it believes they downplayed the risks. The Commission estimated that just one percent of Europe's public services are so sensitive that they would be required under the proposed certification scheme to rely on the strict level that totally excludes foreign technology. "We cannot afford to depend on others for the technologies that keep our hospitals running, our energy grids stable and our services secure," Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement. "This is about protecting our citizens, defending our interests and making our own choices."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
President likens South Lawn setup to Eiffel Tower
Area will stage Freedom 250 fight card on 14 June
Donald Trump has floated the idea of permanently keeping the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) arena that is being constructed on the White House South Lawn for a series of fights later this month.
In a video posted on his official TikTok account on Tuesday, the president likened the structure to the Eiffel Tower.
Continue reading...NASA officials said the $582 million MAVEN orbiter could not be recovered after a problem on the far side of Mars late last year, and that its extraordinarily successful mission was at an end.
On the Vogon forums, user MarkDastedt posted an interesting bit of source code he discovered on an old company DVD: a very basic, very rudimentary implementation of multicore support for DOS. Another user, dartfrog, took a closer look and had this to say:
Interesting stuff nonetheless. A worker core is running with no interrupt handlers, no page tables, no memory protection, and no OS. That’s about as close to bare metal as you can get, meanwhile the other core is still running DOS. Fascinating.
↫ MarkDastedt at the Vogon forums
It’s effectively a simple demo, but according to other users in the thread, it fits in neatly with sporadic other attempts to bring some form of SMP or multicore-awareness to DOS. For instance, Michael Chourdakis worked on something similar to this demo for a series of articles now only available on the Wayback Machine. It makes for a cool demo, but moving from this to something robust and usable in DOS is not an easy task.
Still, the possibilities are definitely there, even if you don’t implement full, modern SMP or multicore support. You could have specific DOS applications offloading dedicated tasks to different cores, but as others in the same thread note, individual cores are already stupidly powerful for anything DOS can do, making the use case for additional cores rather moot.
Partnership paves the way to pair AI-enabled semiconductor design with GF’s U.S. manufacturing platform to bridge the gap from research to prototype for next-generation computing initiatives
MALTA, N.Y., June 3, 2026 — GlobalFoundries today announced a strategic partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Genesis Mission, the department’s initiative to accelerate scientific discovery through artificial intelligence and advanced computing.
Through the agreement, GF will open its U.S. manufacturing platform and design enablement resources to Genesis Mission researchers — giving the nation’s National Laboratories, universities, industry partners and startups a direct path from AI-enabled chip design to working prototype silicon. GF Labs, the company’s frontier research and development organization, will lead collaboration with the Genesis Mission.
Progress in AI and advanced computing depends on more than algorithms and ideas; it depends on the ability to turn them into devices. As a semiconductor manufacturing engine accelerating America’s technology leadership, GF brings the manufacturing capacity and design enablement that connect three communities — the National Labs, universities and industry — around a shared path from concept to silicon.
“American science is generating extraordinary ideas in AI and advanced computing. What’s been missing is the bridge from lab to fab,” said Tom Caulfield, executive chairman of GlobalFoundries. “By bringing our U.S. manufacturing platform, our PDKs and our multi-project wafer program to the Genesis Mission, we can give researchers a real path from concept to working silicon — and help the National Labs, universities and industry pull in the same direction.”
Areas of Collaboration
Working through GF Labs, the partnership contemplates cooperation in several areas of mutual interest, including:
About the Genesis Mission
The Genesis Mission is a U.S. Department of Energy initiative, led by the Under Secretary for Science, to accelerate scientific discovery through artificial intelligence and advanced computing. Industry partners contribute technical expertise, capabilities and infrastructure to advance the mission’s objectives in partnership with the national laboratories and the academic research community.
About GF
GlobalFoundries (GF) is a leading manufacturer of essential semiconductors, enabling AI at scale from the cloud to the physical world. Through deep partnerships with customers, GF delivers differentiated, power-efficient and high-performance solutions for automotive, aerospace and defense, data center, smart mobile devices, internet of things and other high-growth markets. With global manufacturing operations across the U.S., Europe and Asia, GF is a trusted and holistic technology partner for customers around the world. GF’s talented, global team remains focused every day on security, longevity and sustainability.
Source: GF
The post GlobalFoundries Joins DOE’s Genesis Mission as Industry Partner appeared first on HPCwire.
June 3, 2026 — Commercial artificial intelligence (AI) development is progressing at a breathtaking pace. Yet many of the most consequential AI challenges for national security remain underexplored because they lack immediate commercial applications and are not the primary focus of private industry. There is a critical need to bridge the gap between commercial AI innovation and the unique requirements of national security.
To this end, DARPA and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) have jointly developed a research and development program called AI Forge to catalyze breakthroughs in AI for national security, working in close collaboration with the Center for AI Standards and Innovation (CAISI) at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. AI Forge aims to accelerate progress towards AI that is significantly more reliable and predictable in high-stakes settings, understandable to its operators, and secure in contested environments. It also envisions building a durable research ecosystem around priority AI challenges and enabling a more robust exchange of talent and ideas across universities, frontier AI companies, and government than is possible today. AI Forge is strategically aligned with America’s AI Action Plan.
The program convened representatives from frontier AI companies, chief AI officers from more than 15 Department of Defense and Intelligence Community agencies, and other government stakeholders to explore and reach consensus around core AI challenges for national security. These challenges comprise the newly released AI Forge Critical AI Challenges for National Security report, which will serve as a roadmap to focus research under the program.
The report synthesizes insights from experts across industry and government into 15 research challenges in three thrust areas for which university-led teams will develop aligned ideas and research proposals. The thrust areas are:
The program hypothesizes that pre-competitive AI research in these thrust areas can accelerate the adoption of AI innovations by industry and federal agencies. To reflect the fast-changing technical AI research landscape, the challenges will be revisited every six months during the program.
A Call for Bold Thinking
AI Forge is calling upon the university research community to share their capabilities to conduct research on the challenges described in the program’s Critical AI Challenges for National Security report. University researchers interested in submitting their capabilities are encouraged to do so through the AI Forge Request for Information. Responses to this RFI will be used by the program stakeholders to establish a repository of U.S. universities interested in accelerating next-generation AI research to solve national security challenges. Responses are due by June 22.
A Forum for Unlocking National-Security Focused AI iInnovation
Moving forward, the program will establish a forum comprised of universities, industry, and U.S. government representatives to fund, guide, and manage fast-paced, university-led research projects. The forum aims to combine academic talent with frontier-scale compute, models, and expertise to address mission-driven challenges informed by national security AI leaders from across the DOD and IC.
“We’re taking a unified approach to create breakthroughs in AI for national security,” said Matthew Marge, DARPA program manager for AI Forge. “The frontier AI companies build and commercialize massive, high-capability models and compute. Universities are engines of deep, foundational research and, importantly, they cultivate our nation’s future talent. At the intersection is high-risk, high-reward research that requires both massive scale and deep, mission-driven work – something that is difficult to pursue in either environment alone. With AI Forge, we’re looking to build an ambitious new ecosystem that bridges this gap.”
“NSF is excited to partner with DARPA, working alongside CAISI, on this groundbreaking effort to catalyze AI innovation for national security” said Erwin Gianchandani, NSF Assistant Director for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships. “By linking the rapid advances of frontier AI companies, the research and talent at universities, and the use cases surfaced by the intelligence community, AI Forge will propel advancements in AI capabilities for the benefit of U.S. national security and, ultimately, all Americans.”
The forum will be administered by a nonprofit and will launch in summer 2026. More details will be available in the coming weeks.
Source: DARPA
The post DARPA and NSF Launch AI Forge to Advance National Security AI Research appeared first on HPCwire.
The string of sewer episodes has baffled New Yorkers and spurred speculation online about what the subterranean explorers are doing underground.
My GT with 1000 miles is doing Pushback noise over 5-6 mph. Is it likely the battery needs replacing?
According to supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple has reportedly doubled 2026 MacBook Neo production from 5 million to 10 million units after stronger-than-expected demand for its $599 budget laptop. MacRumors reports: On an earnings call in late April, Apple's CEO Tim Cook said that customer response to the MacBook Neo was "off the charts," and the popularity of the laptop has reportedly led the company to significantly boost production. [...] Apple was very optimistic about the MacBook Neo before announcing it, but the company still "undercalled" the level of enthusiasm that the laptop would generate, according to Cook. He said that MacBook Neo demand exceeded Apple's expectations and helped to drive a record number of first-time Mac buyers last quarter. New figures from market research firm IDC support Apple's claim that the MacBook Neo is selling well, and the Windows PC industry has taken notice. For example, Dell recently introduced a redesigned XPS 13 laptop from $699 and said it has features "you won't find on a MacBook Neo," such as a touch screen and a backlit keyboard. "Apple's MacBook Neo is a capable machine, and its arrival confirms that there's real appetite for premium quality at accessible prices," admitted Dell.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Senate Republicans moved forward with a package to fund the Department of Homeland Security's immigration agencies Wednesday.
Fears that push for ballroom spending could jeopardize $70bn funding for immigration enforcement
Senate Republicans on Wednesday formally dropped their attempt to spend $1bn on security improvements for Donald Trump’s White House ballroom, as it became clear the president’s demand for the money could jeopardize long-term funding for immigration enforcement.
The Senate judiciary committee had last month included funding for security improvements related to the new ballroom in a broader measure that would authorize $70bn in spending for agencies involved in Trump’s mass deportation campaign through the duration of his term.
Continue reading...American Airlines said it is temporarily cutting six routes amid rising jet fuel costs, including several flights to Los Angeles.
Order strips job protections from workers earning up to about $200,000 a year and deemed to be ‘influencing’ policy
Donald Trump has signed an executive order making it easier to fire thousands of the best-paid workers in the US government aspart of a broader drive by his administration to overhaul the federal workforce.
The order, released by the White House and the office of personnel management (OPM) on Wednesday, strips job protections from a mostly senior group of federal workers – about 8,000 employees – earning up to almost $200,000 a year, and who are deemed to be “influencing” government policy.
Continue reading...Guardian sources say Ernst Tanner has not rejoined the club after he was found to have violated league policies
Despite being eligible for reinstatement, former Philadelphia Union sporting director Ernst Tanner has not resumed duties with the club, multiple sources with knowledge of the situation said this week, in part because he has yet to complete his league-ordered restorative practices training.
Tanner was suspended through 1 June by Major League Soccer after a league-ordered investigation found he had violated “policies and standards of professional conduct required of League and Club leadership”. That investigation, which concluded in March, was the league’s second inquiry into alleged misconduct by Tanner; he had previously been investigated after an MLS Players Association complaint alleged multiple instances of racist, sexist and homophobic behavior.
Continue reading...Nations in the Five Eyes intelligence partnership warned that fake profiles and job offers are targeting military officers, spies, and others with access to classified or sensitive information.
Safety watchdog said seat belts in certain Ford Expedition and Lincoln vehicles may inadvertently lock, preventing them from functioning properly.
Beneficiaries would continue receiving payments if Social Security's trust fund is depleted, but checks could shrink by about 24%, according to a new report.
Google has launched Gemma 4 12B, a 12-billion-parameter open AI model designed to run locally on your laptop without depending entirely on cloud infrastructure. WION reports: According to Google, the new model delivers performance close to much larger AI systems while requiring significantly less memory. The company says Gemma 4 12B can run locally on devices equipped with just 16GB of VRAM, making advanced AI more accessible to developers, researchers and businesses. The launch highlights a growing trend across the AI industry: bringing powerful AI models directly to personal computers instead of relying solely on remote data centers. Gemma is Google's family of open AI models built using technology and research from its Gemini program. The new Gemma 4 12B model contains 12 billion parameters and has been designed to handle multiple types of information, including text, images and audio. Unlike traditional AI systems that focus only on text, Gemma 4 12B can understand visual content, process audio inputs and perform advanced reasoning tasks. This makes it suitable for a wider range of applications, from software development and content creation to research and automation. Google says the model is available under the Apache 2.0 licence, allowing developers and organizations to use, modify and deploy it with relatively few restrictions. [...] One of the most significant technical changes in Gemma 4 12B is its new unified architecture. Traditionally, multimodal AI systems use separate components known as encoders to process images, audio and text before combining the information. Google says Gemma 4 12B removes the need for separate multimodal encoders. Instead, the model processes different types of information through a unified architecture. According to the company, this helps improve efficiency while reducing memory requirements and computational overhead. The result is a model that can deliver advanced multimodal capabilities while remaining small enough to run locally on modern hardware.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
German director says he recognises actor should have been better protected during filming of Wrong Move
German director Wim Wenders has withdrawn from circulation his 1975 film Wrong Move, because of a scene featuring a child actor topless who was 13 at the time of filming.
The director said in a statement released on Wednesday: “Streaming, TV and distribution partners have been instructed to no longer make the film publicly accessible.”
Continue reading...A hobby operating system, not written in Rust, not targeting Qemu, not targeting a Raspberry Pi. Yes, it still happens.
Serena OS is what you get when modern operating system design and implementation meets vintage hardware like the Amiga computers. It is based on dispatch queues rather than threads, supports multiple users, is inspired by POSIX, yet retains its own character, is strongly object-oriented in terms of design and implementation and prepared for a cross platform future.
↫ Serena OS GitHub page
Serena OS supports most (all?) of the classic Amigas, but the 500, 600, and 2000 need at least 1MB of RAM and a 68020 accelerator. It has code privilege separation between kernel and userspace, basic memory management, its own custom file system, drivers for input devices and graphics, an interactive console with VT52 and VT100 support, and much more. It also comes with a C99-compatible libc, and has its own shell.
Note that “AI” chatbot Claude is listed as a contributor to the project.
@lia
Not bad at all, just got to get used to a bit of tail dragging where it didn't before.
Seems good for carving but disadvantaged when going down steep slopes.
Enjoying the change none the less. 👍
TAIPEI, Taiwan, June 3, 2026 — ASRock Rack Inc., a leading innovative server company, has announced its latest portfolio of AI-native infrastructure designed for the era of agentic AI. Showcasing at COMPUTEX 2026 (Booth No.: R0514), ASRock Rack is introducing the new 2UXGM-VERA2 system powered by NVIDIA Vera CPU. The company is also presenting its next-generation AI platform portfolio for AI factories, inference cloud deployments, and edge AI applications, delivering a unified vision for the next wave of AI computing at every scale.
Accelerating the Era of Agentic AI
The AI industry is undergoing a fundamental transformation as scaling laws move beyond model size into the era of agentic AI. This shift from “human talking to AI” to “AI talking to AI” has placed CPU execution on the critical path. To enable this next wave, ASRock Rack is introducing the 2UXGM-VERA2, powered by NVIDIA Vera CPU, a processor purpose-built for the age of AI. Combining custom-designed NVIDIA Olympus cores with high-bandwidth LPDDR5X memory and NVIDIA Scalable Coherency Fabric, Vera delivers a unified compute architecture that completes complex agentic and reinforcement learning workloads 50% faster than traditional CPU infrastructure.
“The AI industry is entering a new frontier where systems move beyond generating responses to executing autonomous actions,” said Weishi Sa, President of ASRock Rack. “NVIDIA Vera is the CPU for the age of AI, providing the high-speed execution layer that turns model reasoning into autonomous action at the speed of the AI factory. To power this next frontier, ASRock Rack is planning a comprehensive new lineup of AI servers powered by NVIDIA Vera, ranging from standalone CPU servers to scale-up AI servers incorporating NVIDIA HGX Vera Rubin NVL8 for every type of AI factory and data center deployment.”
Driving the AI Computing Wave at Every Scale
At COMPUTEX 2026, ASRock Rack is showcasing AI server platforms integrated with advanced liquid-cooling solutions from ecosystem partners. The company’s exhibit highlights the NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72, cooled with a double-rack-width liquid-to-air coolant distribution unit (CDU) for next-generation AI factory environments. Also on display are liquid-cooled systems incorporating NVIDIA HGX Rubin NVL8, including the fully liquid-cooled 2U16X-GNR2/DLC and the 5U16X-GNR2/DLC, which combines liquid cooling for CPU and GPU with sufficient airflow for flexible integration of other key peripherals. The company is also demonstrating rack-scale liquid-cooling solutions with in-row CDU for high-density AI deployments.
In addition to its rack-scale solutions, ASRock Rack will demonstrate a diverse lineup of MGX-based servers for enterprise and edge environments. This includes the 6UXGM-GNR2/DLC, supporting up to eight liquid-cooled NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs to accelerate enterprise AI and visual computing. Also featured is the 4UXGM-GNR2 CX8, a NVIDIA RTX PRO Server optimized for inference cloud environments. Bridging to the industrial edge, the 2UXGI-Thor, built on NVIDIA IGX Thor platform, showcases capabilities for Physical AI, enabling real-time sensor processing and functional safety for next-generation autonomous robotics and medical applications.
For more information, please visit https://www.asrockrack.com.
About ASRock Rack Inc.
ASRock Rack Inc., established in 2013, specialized in the field of cloud computing server hardware. While inheriting ASRock’s design concepts, “Creativity, Consideration, Cost-effectiveness,” the company is dedicated to bring the server industry out-of-the-box thinking with the passion to innovate. Leveraged by ASRock’s growing momentum and distribution channels, this young and vibrant company targets booming market of cloud computing, and commits to serving the market with user-friendly and eco-friendly do-it-yourself server hardware, featuring flexible and reliable products.
Source: ASRock Rack
The post ASRock Rack Unveils Next-Gen AI Infrastructure Powered by NVIDIA Vera CPU at COMPUTEX 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.
Democrats are hoping to pick up the open seat. GOP Rep. Ryan Zinke is retiring at the end of his term.
While many US city councils have passed moratoriums, Monterey Park is first where residents have voted on a ban
Residents in Monterey Park, California, became the first in the US to vote on a permanent ban on datacenters on Tuesday, and early results indicate a resounding victory for the prohibition.
While many cities and counties have already passed temporary or indefinite moratoriums via their local governments, Monterey Park would be the first to do so through a ballot initiative.
This article was amended on 4 June 2026. An earlier version referred to Monterey Park as Monterey county in one instance. The former is in southern California, the latter in northern California.
Continue reading...EMERYVILLE, Calif. and LOS ANGELES, June 3, 2026 — Anyon Technologies, a vertically integrated superconducting quantum supercomputing company founded by pioneers from Caltech and UC Berkeley, and Q-CTRL, a global leader in quantum infrastructure software, today announced a strategic partnership to bring full autonomy to Anyon’s tightly GPU-coupled quantum supercomputing systems for data center deployment at scale.
As quantum computing transitions from research labs toward early enterprise adoption, systems need to mature to meet the expectations for modern data center environments. Today’s machines are highly manual, with bootup, calibration, and maintenance handled by specialist teams over lengthy cycles. The impact on deployment cost and uptime makes this model untenable at scale.
By integrating Q-CTRL’s Boulder Opal intelligent autonomy into Anyon’s modular quantum architecture, the partnership delivers intelligent, data center-ready quantum infrastructure that automatically boots up and maintains its operational state, without constant specialist intervention.
Q-CTRL’s technology delivers autonomous calibration and maintenance, making it possible to embed quantum systems as a stable, on-demand hardware accelerator, ready for quantum workloads. By maximizing system uptime with sustained, peak performance and eliminating the need for expert manual intervention, Boulder Opal improves the usability and stability of Anyon Technologies systems, making quantum computing suitable for data-center deployments.
“Anyon’s modular quantum supercomputers, tightly coupled to NVIDIA GPUs via NVQLink, have been specifically architected for data center deployments, but the operational demands of quantum have been a continuous pain point for our customers,” said Dr. Roger Luo, Co-Founder and CEO of Anyon Technologies. “The partnership with Q-CTRL means our users can take full advantage of our hardware from day one and accelerate their quantum projects without having to worry about low-level quantum calibration processes.”
“Quantum computing won’t scale through manual calibration and specialist operation—it requires systems that run themselves,” said Dr. Michael J. Biercuk, CEO and Founder of Q-CTRL. “Enterprise deployments depend on stable modular hardware paired with autonomous operational software. Anyon’s vertically integrated superconducting platform provides that foundation, and with Boulder Opal, we’re turning quantum computers into mature systems that maintain peak performance without constant human intervention.”
Contact Anyon Technologies to learn more about this integration or to place an order for Anyon’s modular quantum supercomputers integrated with Q-CTRL’s Boulder Opal.
About Anyon Technologies
Anyon Technologies (also known as Anyon Computing Inc.) is a quantum computing company that provides superconducting modular quantum supercomputers tightly coupled to NVIDIA GPUs via NVQLink for data center deployment at scale. Anyon was the first to commercially deploy NVIDIA NVQLink in a data center and is among the first four QPU backends integrated with NVIDIA CUDA-Q. Founded in 2021 by pioneers from Caltech and UC Berkeley, the company operates across the United States and Asia. Learn more at https://www.anyoncomputing.com.
About Q-CTRL
Q-CTRL is the pioneer in AI-powered infrastructure software for quantum technology, offering a hardware-agnostic software platform that makes quantum machines thousands of times more powerful. This opens many parallel market verticals in computing, sensing, and health, making Q-CTRL a ubiquitous quantum company based on a single unique technology.
The company’s marquee product is an unjammable, unspoofable, undetectable quantum navigation system that works when GPS is unavailable, is 100x better than the best alternative, and is being deployed on commercial aircraft with Airbus, in defense with Lockheed Martin, and on unmanned drones.
The company’s breakthroughs have been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and Newsweek. Founded in 2017 by Professor Michael J. Biercuk, Q-CTRL operates globally from offices in Sydney, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Huntsville, Berlin, and Oxford.
Source: Q-CTRL
The post Anyon and Q-CTRL Bring Self-Calibrating Quantum Systems to Enterprise Data Centers appeared first on HPCwire.
Ric Grenell, the former president of the Kennedy Center, gave a victim impact statement in court about the threats.
Republican Steve Hilton and Democrat Xavier Becerra lead the field as votes continue to be counted
The key race for California governor was deadlocked as vote counting continued on Wednesday following primary elections to decide who would run in several critical districts in the US House and Senate in November.
With nearly 60% of the votes counted, Steve Hilton, a Republican, former UK political operative and Fox News host, was narrowly ahead. Xavier Becerra, a Democrat and the former health secretary who led the field after a tumultuous campaign, was in second place while Tom Steyer, a billionaire environmental activist running as a progressive, trailed in third.
Continue reading...Businessman and self-described outsider Toby Doeden and incumbent Gov. Larry Rhoden will advance to a runoff for the GOP nomination for South Dakota governor, CBS News projects.
Consumer advocates decry Democrat Jared Polis for ‘choosing to side with dominant corporations’ over workers
Colorado’s governor vetoed a bill on Tuesday that would have banned companies from using surveillance pricing to set workers’ wages and prices for consumer goods.
The measure would have been the strongest in the nation against algorithmic pricing. While Maryland became the first state to approve a law banning surveillance pricing in grocery stores in April, Colorado’s proposed measure was more expansive.
Continue reading...Democrats say appointment of Bill Pulte could doom bipartisan agreement to renew section 702 of Fisa
Donald Trump’s appointment of a close political ally with no intelligence experience to lead the nation’s spy agencies has thrown last-ditch efforts to renew a powerful surveillance program into doubt.
Bill Pulte, now head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) and a major Republican donor and heir to a home construction fortune, was tapped by Trump to serve as acting director of national intelligence days after Tulsi Gabbard departed the role.
Continue reading...Funding through the latest NCRIS rounds will support Pawsey’s ongoing operations and include $1.5 million for its quantum computing program.
June 3, 2026 — The Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre has welcomed continued investment from the Australian Government’s Department of Education through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS), supporting Pawsey’s role in enabling Australian research and innovation.
Pawsey was among a group of national facilities to receive support under the National Research Infrastructure (NRI) strategy. The funding includes allocations through the NCRIS 2025 Step Change Funding Round and the NCRIS 2026 Capability Gap Funding Round.
The outcome reflects the important role national digital research infrastructure continues to play in supporting Australia’s scientific capability. The funding will contribute to Pawsey’s ongoing operations and its support of researchers across a broad range of scientific and technology domains, including health, climate and materials sciences, for the coming year.
Pawsey also welcomes $1.5 million investment in its quantum computing program. This builds on previous NCRIS support for the program and will contribute to Pawsey’s continued delivering innovation in this emerging field.
Two Pawsey-led collaborative initiatives were also successful as part of the Step Change Funding Round. The Australian Federated Data Infrastructure (AFDI), developed in partnership with the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI), the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC), AARNet, and the Australian Access Federation, received $30.3 million. This investment will help maintain critical national data storage capacity at a time of increasing demand and rising infrastructure costs.
A second initiative, Research Infrastructure Connected, secured $2.2 million to strengthen collaboration and connectivity across Australia’s research infrastructure landscape and researchers.
Pawsey supports Australian researchers to develop solutions to some of Australia’s most pressing scientific and technological challenges of today. Pawsey also acknowledges the broader NCRIS community supported through this funding process, including the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) and the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC). Together, these organizations form part of the critical digital infrastructure ecosystem that supports essential research and scientific discovery across Australia.
Further details regarding the broader NCRIS funding announcement are available on this link via the Australian Government’s Department of Education website.
Source: Gerard Gommeaux-Ward, Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre
The post Pawsey Welcomes Continued Australian Government Investment Through NCRIS appeared first on HPCwire.
Defense secretary’s latest interposition resulted in all-male, overwhelmingly white picks for promotion to admiralty
The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, stripped nine navy officers including women and Black service members from a promotion list last month, according to a person familiar with the matter, resulting in an all-male, overwhelmingly white slate of 22 advancing as nominees to become one-star admirals.
Hegseth’s unusual intervention violated promotion rules designed to be merit-based and apolitical, the New York Times said on Tuesday, and extended the Trump administration’s push to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in the military.
Continue reading...Sling and YouTube TV help you cut the cord, but what do they offer?
Google has released (PDF) technical specs and 2D CAD drawings for the Fitbit Air to encourage users to make their own accessories. "These CAD drawings include crucial mating dimensions, tolerances, and mating force specifications -- including attach and detach force -- to help you build a high-quality accessory band," Google says on a store page listing. 9to5Google reports: Noting how the "community has already come up with innovative and creative new ideas to make the Fitbit Air [their] own" since launch last month, Google is "officially releasing the hardware specifications and accessory design guidelines for the Fitbit Air tracker to the public." For example, owners have already found their own bicep band solutions. This information would typically just be available for third-party accessory companies, but Google wants to open things up to "independent designers and artisan makers." The Google Store page also lists other things developers should keep in mind, such as sensor clearance, sensor pressure, secure retention, and skin-friendly materials.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
While president’s last-minute endorsement of Randy Feenstra failed, he has enjoyed successes in Texas, Indiana and Kentucky
Zach Lahn’s victory in Iowa’s gubernatorial primary on Tuesday is a rare instance of Republican voters rejecting Donald Trump, who has used his endorsement to elevate proteges and oust rivals nationwide ahead of the November midterm elections.
In the race to replace Kim Reynolds, Iowa’s Republican governor, who is not seeking re-election, the president had given Randy Feenstra, a congressman, his “Complete and Total Endorsement”, which would normally be enough to see him to victory. Instead, Lahn, a farmer and businessman, won Tuesday’s Republican primary with 38% of the vote to Feenstra’s 37.2%, according to the Associated Press.
Continue reading...Not every savings account is suitable for retirees looking to protect $20,000 now. Here are two that are worth it.
Operation will use specially built container to protect fragile 11th-century embroidery
As the Bayeux tapestry wends its way across the Channel in a top secret operation there will be no jolts, no bumps, no shakes or vibrations – unlike the voyage of William the Conqueror whose 1066 victory at Hastings the artefact recounts.
“Nothing has been left to chance,” Catherine Pégard, the French minister of culture, told a gathering to mark the historic loan, which will be physically achieved with the tapestry, which is really an embroidery, transported in a specially constructed cradle within a container, the minister said.
Continue reading...As graduation season takes place in the US, some speakers are being told they can no longer give their address at commencement ceremonies because of opinions they have voiced. The Guardian spoke to PEN America’s director of campus free speech, Kristen Shahverdian, who said the cancellations were sending a very troubling message
Continue reading...Strava is adding an incentive to get you moving -- but don't wait, it's only for one day, June 3.
The Points Guy's annual ranking gives extra weight to affordability this year as higher fuel costs and airline fees squeeze travelers.
File detailing security mitigations is among those withheld at the request of the Metropolitan police
Ministers have faced renewed cross-party pressure in parliament over documents missing from a 1,500-page release of papers about Peter Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador to Washington.
Despite the volume of information published on Monday, crucial documents were withheld at the request of the Metropolitan police on the grounds that they could “potentially prejudice” an investigation. They include a document summarising the vetting process, which concluded with officials recommending Mandelson not be given security clearance.
Continue reading...Keir Starmer says Younger led an ‘exemplary life’, while foreign secretary says country owes him ‘an enormous debt of gratitude’
Alex Younger, the former head of MI6, has died at the age of 62 after being treated for cancer.
Younger led the Secret Intelligence Service, the agency also known as MI6, between 2014 and 2020.
Continue reading...Microsoft's new MAI-Image-2.5 model bested Google's Nano Banana 2 on an important benchmark. But does that make it the right choice for you?
The fire started in the ground floor restaurant of an India hotel popular with patients at a nearby healthcare facility.
Ben Black’s lawyers deny relationship with disgraced financier, but DoJ records reveal years of interactions
Ben Black, the head of a little-known government investment agency funded by billions of dollars from US taxpayers, had personal and business ties to Jeffrey Epstein, according to emails and business filings released by the Department of Justice.
His father, Leon Black, had once been the disgraced financier’s highest-paying client – calling on the convicted sex offender for tax advice and to orchestrate payments to women, according to the New York Times and Bloomberg.
Continue reading...Analysis of evidence and interviews with experts suggests focus by rightwing critics on race misses reality of police failures
As the row over the police handling of the stabbing of Henry Nowak by Vickrum Digwa continues, critics on the right have suggested that a preoccupation with anti-racism played a significant role in the failure by officers at the scene to properly assess what had happened – and resulted in the appalling treatment of Nowak as he lay dying.
Criticisms have focused in particular on a document published by the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) last year, the police anti-racism commitment. Critics have also claimed that there is a broader sense that the police’s instincts are now to side against white people whenever there is any doubt.
Continue reading...There are some timely mortgage interest rate mistakes that borrowers will want to avoid making this June.
North Carolina judge said Levi Mendez-Maldonado failed to show up in court – even after being told he had died in 2024
An immigration judge in Charlotte, North Carolina, recently ordered the deportation of a young man who was killed in 2024, citing his failure to appear in court.
Judge Amy Lee ordered the removal of Levi Mendez-Maldonado in absentia on 21 May. Mendez-Maldonado, originally from Honduras, came to the United States as an unaccompanied minor at age 17 and was murdered in a shooting in November 2024.
Continue reading...Andrew Tridgell, developer of rsync, has published a blog post addressing the massive surge in “AI” code submissions and the string of regressions supposedly caused by them. He explains rsync was flooded with “AI”-generated security reports, and he couldn’t handle the volumes anymore.
As this flood started to get more intense I realised I needed to raise the defences on rsync a lot — we needed much more thorough test suites, code coverage analysis, CI testing on a lot more platforms, deliberate and thorough scanning for possible security issues (so I find at least some of them before other people!) and the addition of a whole lot of defence-in-depth hardening techniques. This is all a huge amount of work. I’m retired (though my wife may dispute that!) and I’d rather be out sailing than working on rsync security issues, so I have reached for several AI tools to help with what needs to be done. I have absolutely no regrets about doing that, although from the storm of anti-AI rage it’s clear that many people think I should be hung up by my toe nails and flogged for even considering doing this.
↫ Andrew Tridgell
The entire rsync codebase is around 65k lines, and the recent flood of “AI”-generated submissions amount to +16k/-6k lines of code within a few weeks. That’s an absolutely insane amount of changes in a really short time to a project that most people deemed stable and “done”. If you take a look at the activity graph, it’s clear that a project that was silently and carefully doing its job is seeing a massive amount of changes, almost exclusively generated by “AI”, all in recent weeks. It’s no surprise, then, that people get annoyed when something they deemed “done” and stable is suddenly causing issues for them because its maintainer decided to open the slopgates.
Tridgell is, of course, an incredibly accomplished and capable programmer, but so is Kent Overstreet and he thinks his “AI” girlfriend is sentient and conscious, he reprogrammed it1 after someone convinced his “AI” girlfriend was lesbian and trans, and he thinks that he gave his “AI” girlfriend an orgasm2, so being an accomplished and capable programmer doesn’t mean you’re immune from “AI”-hyperbole, or worse, “AI”-induced psychosis.
Tridgell’s blog post already has all the usual talking points from “AI” techbros about how the tools sucked last [year][month][week] but they’re good now, trust me I know how these tools work, humans are actually the same as these “AI” tools, really what is intelligence anyway, and yeah we got a whole slew of new issues caused by the “AI” code but more “AI” code will surely fix that, and so on. There’s some red flags that give me the ick, because I’ve seen them all before from people entirely losing themselves in “AI” hype.
Tridgell also takes pot shots at openrsync, a reimplmentation of rsync developed by the OpenBSD team, also shipped by default on macOS. Openrsync has nothing to do with any of the current issues rsync is facing, as the project was started way back in 2018 or so. Taking pot shots at this project in this particular blog post feels childish and unnecessary, and reeks of insecurity; focus on the issues your own project is facing before attacking some other project. This feels like another red flag.
Quite a few people have experienced regressions with rsync in recent weeks, but it seems like more are going to come as the slopgates will remain open, and will probably be opened even further. For such a cornerstone open source project, that raises a lot of questions, and I’m sure there’s quite a few people pondering if they should, perhaps, switch to openrsync – just like Apple did.
COLUMBUS, Ohio, June 3, 2026 — CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society specializing in scientific knowledge management, today announced CAS Connections, a new integration framework that embeds the CAS Content Collection and CAS Newton, a recently launched agentic AI, directly into the R&D tools researchers already use. Initial collaborations with Albert Invent, Sapio Sciences, Inductive Bio, Scilligence, and Wolfram Research bring CAS content and capabilities into their platforms, putting trusted scientific information where discovery happens.
R&D teams rely on a portfolio of powerful digital platforms to move science forward. CAS Connections enhances those platforms by infusing more than 150 years of CAS-curated scientific knowledge and the conversational intelligence of CAS Newton directly into the tools researchers already trust. Integrated access to verified scientific information drives greater confidence in AI-generated answers and a more streamlined research workflow.
“With CAS Connections, scientists evaluating a new compound no longer need to leave their research platform to search CAS for prior art, safety data, or synthesis routes,” said Tim Wahlberg, Interim President, CAS. “Integrations with these platforms rapidly extend the value CAS provides within digital R&D workflows, putting authoritative scientific knowledge where researchers already work.”
CAS collaborations with Albert Invent, Sapio Sciences, Inductive Bio, Scilligence, and Wolfram Research represent the first phase of CAS Connections integrations. Additional collaborations will be announced throughout the year.
CAS Connections supports deployment within secure environments via API, Model Context Protocol (MCP), and AI platform integrations for tools such as Anthropic’s Claude and Microsoft Copilot. Researchers can combine CAS data and the capabilities that power CAS SciFinder and CAS BioFinder with their organization’s proprietary internal resources in their chosen portfolio of workflow platforms. With CAS Newton integration, aligned with the CAS Ethical Approach to AI, they can conduct conversational, multi-step research that returns cited, verifiable answers.
“We’re building a future where chemists spend their time inventing, not fighting their tools,” said Nick Talken, CEO and Co-Founder, Albert Invent. “By embedding CAS scientific and structured data directly into Albert OS, scientists can start with their intention and let the right data come to them, without jumping between systems or manually transferring information.”
Efficient discovery depends on scientists having seamless access to reliable data and insights at each phase of the innovation process. CAS Connections delivers this directly within the tools scientists are already using, reducing context-switching and keeping research moving.
“CAS has built one of the most comprehensive maps of scientific information,” said Josh Haimson, CEO and Co-Founder, Inductive Bio. “Their database of reactions, known transformations, and chemical data surfaced by Inductive Bio’s AI chemistry assistant can inspire compound designs grounded in synthetic precedent, incorporate collective SAR knowledge, and assess novelty and FTO at the design stage, all within a single platform.”
For more information about CAS Connections, visit www.cas.org/solutions/cas-connections.
About CAS
CAS connects the world’s scientific knowledge to accelerate breakthroughs that improve lives. We empower global innovators to efficiently navigate today’s complex data landscape and make confident decisions in each phase of the innovation journey. As a specialist in scientific knowledge management, our team builds the largest authoritative collection of human-curated scientific data in the world and provides essential information solutions, services, and expertise. Scientists, patent professionals, and business leaders across industries rely on CAS to help them uncover opportunities, mitigate risks, and unlock shared knowledge so they can get from inspiration to innovation faster. CAS is a division of the American Chemical Society.
Source: CAS
The post CAS Connections Brings Trusted Scientific Data and AI to Leading R&D Platforms appeared first on HPCwire.
Across Europe and around the world, governments and research institutions are racing to build sovereign AI infrastructure, investing heavily in GPU superclusters, AI factories and national-scale HPC infrastructure designed to keep AI innovation under local control.
But as the HPC community prepares for International Supercomputing Conference (ISC) in June, it is becoming increasingly clear that sovereign AI is not simply about sovereign compute. It is about maintaining sovereign control over the data powering modern AI and HPC workloads.
And today, that data is fragmented across NAS systems, parallel file systems, object stores, and cloud environments. Years of infrastructure expansion have created isolated silos that make data difficult to discover, govern, and operationalize for distributed AI and HPC workflows. It also creates bottlenecks between storage and accelerated compute infrastructure, reducing GPU utilization and impacting pipeline performance.
This ‘data fragmentation’ has emerged as one of the biggest barriers to AI at scale, and it makes data governance and sovereignty especially difficult. The challenge becomes even more acute when considering hybrid-cloud and multi-cloud environments, which have become a common operating model for many institutions that want to leverage cloud GPU resources.
In Europe especially, these challenges are intensified by growing concerns around digital sovereignty, regulatory compliance, and geopolitical control over critical AI infrastructure. National AI initiatives increasingly require guarantees around where data resides, who can access it, and how it moves across borders and cloud providers.
Buying a new storage system does nothing to solve these challenges.
Adding another NAS platform, object store, or cloud storage service often creates yet another silo that must be managed independently. Traditional approaches focus on expanding storage capacity, but sovereign AI requires a fundamentally different architecture: one capable of enforcing governance and sovereignty policies consistently across distributed infrastructure.
This is forcing a shift toward a different architectural model: a unified data layer operating independently from the underlying infrastructure..
Rather than binding governance policies to individual storage platforms, organizations increasingly need a unified data layer that spans heterogeneous infrastructure through a global namespace. In this model, governance, orchestration, and data access operate consistently across sites, clouds, and storage systems instead of being managed separately within each silo..
Instead of forcing users and applications to navigate fragmented storage environments, distributed datasets can be accessed and governed consistently regardless of where the underlying data physically resides.
More importantly, governance and sovereignty policies can be defined and enforced directly at the data layer itself.
Organizations can define policies governing where data is allowed to reside, how it is replicated, which users or applications can access it, and whether it can move between geographic regions or cloud providers. These policies persist consistently across heterogeneous environments, including node-local NVMe storage, commodity storage servers, existing NAS systems, object storage, and cloud storage.
This becomes especially important for hybrid-cloud and multi-cloud AI and HPC workflows, where data, users, and compute infrastructure are inherently distributed
AI training and inference pipelines frequently require data to move dynamically between on-premises clusters, sovereign cloud environments, and specialized GPU infrastructure. Research institutions may need to collaborate internationally while maintaining strict control over sensitive datasets. National laboratories may require data residency guarantees while still leveraging compute resources across multiple locations.
In these environments, organizations cannot depend on manually copying datasets between environments – it introduces too much operational complexity and risk.
Instead, data orchestration becomes a foundational operational requirement.
A modern data layer can orchestrate data placement dynamically around available compute resources while continuously enforcing governance and sovereignty policies as data moves across environments. That reduces copy sprawl, improves access to distributed datasets, and enables organizations to scale AI initiatives without sacrificing operational control over the data itself.
As the HPC community gathers at ISC, the conversation around sovereign AI is increasingly shifting beyond compute performance alone. The next phase of AI infrastructure will not be defined simply by who deploys the largest GPU clusters, but by who can operationalize data across the fragmented environments where modern AI and HPC workflows actually operate. That requires a new data layer architecture capable of delivering high-performance access, orchestration, governance, and sovereignty consistently across sites, clouds, and storage systems.
Because ultimately, sovereign AI starts with sovereign data infrastructure.
If you would like to learn more, come visit us at booth A20 at the International Supercomputing Conference in Hamburg June 22 – 26.
The post Sovereign AI Must be Built on Sovereign Data Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Microsoft's Build developer conference kicked off today, and as with almost everything the company has done in the last few years, Microsoft's opening keynote focused overwhelmingly on AI and other closely related technologies. [...] On the hardware front, we didn't get any updates for existing Surface devices (not counting yesterday's Surface Laptop Ultra announcement), but we did get something new: the Surface RTX Spark Dev Box is "a compact developer PC" built around Nvidia's new RTX Spark chip with up to 128GB of built-in memory. The Dev Box looks a little like a cartoon anvil or piano fell onto an Xbox Series X and flattened it. Its aluminum casing was designed "to double as a heatsink," and its preloaded version of Windows 11 Pro will include a "purposeful" set of developer-centric default settings and preinstalled tools. This is a follow-up of sorts to the Windows Dev Kit 2023, also known as "Project Volterra." This Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3-powered PC was essentially the system board from a Surface Pro tablet stuffed into a plastic box, and it was introduced alongside Arm-native versions of several Microsoft developer tools. It helped to set the stage for the Arm-based flagship Surface devices that launched the next year, which benefitted from a better and faster x86-to-Arm code translation technology called Prism and a greater number of Arm-native third-party apps that didn't need to be translated in the first place. Microsoft didn't announce pricing or specific specs for the RTX Spark Dev Box, but you can probably expect it to cost quite a bit more than the $600 that Project Volterra did. Hopefully, Microsoft can keep the price at least somewhat lower than the $4,699 asking price for Nvidia's similarly specced DGX Spark box. On the software side, several developer-centric changes are coming to Windows 11, particularly for users of the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL). Microsoft is introducing a Windows-native version of the coreutils command line tools, so that commands or scripts made for Linux work within Windows and the other way around; the ability to run WSL inside of containers, said to be arriving in "the coming months"; and something called Windows Developer Configurations that uses the WinGet tool to quickly set up "a distraction-free dev environment with VS Code, GitHub Copilot, WSL, PowerShell 7 and developer-optimized settings with one command on any Windows 11 device." Microsoft also introduced Microsoft Execution Containers (MXC), as "enterprise-grade sandboxed environments" that let AI agents like OpenClaw operate on Windows without getting unrestricted access to the whole system. In theory, MXC could let organizations enforce agent-specific limits, such as blocking access to personal accounts, separating work and personal data, or requiring permission before deleting files. The MXC GitHub repo also notes support for "multiple containment backends," meaning the same sandboxing concept could apply beyond AI agents to other plugins, tools, and workloads. Further reading: Microsoft Unveils Scout, an Autonomous AI Agent Built On OpenClaw
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Police said suspect, who had a bomb strapped to his body, was shot dead by FBI early Wednesday morning
A man who barricaded himself inside a bank in the southern California city of Bakersfield on Tuesday has been shot and killed by the FBI, police said on Wednesday.
The suspect, who remains unidentified, was holding an unknown number of people hostage inside in a standoff that stretched over roughly 12 hours. Police say all the hostages have been released and none were harmed.
Continue reading...June 3, 2026 — The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) has launched EuroIHPCSS, a new project supporting Europe’s continued participation in the International HPC Summer School (IHPCSS).
From 2026 to 2029, the project will coordinate the European contribution to four editions of the school, supporting European students, instructors and mentors while strengthening Europe’s role in international high-performance computing (HPC) education and training. This initiative contributes to EuroHPC JU priorities in advanced digital skills development, exascale readiness and emerging HPC technologies.
Building on more than 15 years of success, the program will facilitate four annual summer schools (2026 to 2029) co-organized with leading international partners from the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Japan, South Africa and the United States. Each year will bring together graduate students and early-career researchers from all over the world for an intensive week of advanced training in high-performance computing (HPC), AI-enabled computing, data-intensive methods and related technologies. The program combines technical lectures, hands-on training on leading HPC systems, mentoring activities and international networking opportunities..
Through this initiative, EuroHPC JU will support the annual participation of up to 40 early-career researchers from participating states, while ensuring strong European representation among tutors, mentors and governance structures. The selection process will promote broad geographical participation and diversity across Europe while maintaining an emphasis on excellence. The program will offer a balanced curriculum combining theoretical foundations with hands-on training on leading HPC systems, delivered by internationally recognized experts in the field.
The 2026 summer school will be held between July 12-17, in Perth, Australia and will contribute to strengthening Europe’s global leadership in HPC education, promoting diversity and inclusion, and enhancing the global visibility of European HPC expertise. Structured mentoring activities and networking opportunities will support participants’ career development and foster long-term alumni engagement and international collaboration across the global HPC community.
EuroHPC JU funding of up to EUR 1 000 000.00 will support the European contribution to the organization of the summer schools, including participant support, mentoring, coordination, evaluation activities and travel and subsistence for selected European participants and contributors.
A strong emphasis will be placed on continuous improvement and knowledge sharing. Annual evaluation activities and annual European reports will support refinement of future editions, while an “IHPCSS Implementation Handbook” will document organizational experience and best practices to support long-term sustainability beyond 2029.
The project will work in close coordination with key European initiatives, EVITA and other training actions supported by EuroHPC JU, ensuring broad dissemination of results and synergies across the European HPC ecosystem. Dedicated communication strategies, including websites and social media campaigns, will further enhance the program’s visibility and outreach.
Source: EuroHPC JU
The post EuroHPC Extends Europe’s Commitment to International HPC Summer School with New EuroIHPCSS Project appeared first on HPCwire.
Jess Asato was portrayed wearing a bikini in Grok-generated images after she criticised creation of such non-consensual pictures
A Labour MP has taken legal action against Elon Musk’s xAI company after saying its Grok tool helped a user produce fake sexualised pictures of her, part of a wave of such images that flooded the social media platform X earlier this year.
Jess Asato, the MP for Lowestoft, said in January that seeing herself portrayed by the AI tool as wearing a bikini without her consent was “violating”.
Continue reading...Air traffic control also referred to the pilot of a small plane as "Mad Max."
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says the virus ‘had a big head start’ but that the response was catching up
The Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo could have begun as early as January, the head of the World Health Organization said, giving the virus “a big head start”.
Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also said the response was being hindered by blanket travel restrictions and highlighted high levels of community mistrust and low levels of contact tracing as key concerns.
Continue reading...Shirley Chisholm was in Congress, Led Zep played Madison Square Garden and fans took seats out of Yankee Stadium
Continue reading...The discovery comes in the midst of a U.S.-backed military crackdown on the organized crime gangs in Ecuador.
Clear-up has begun but psychological impact likely to last much longer, as community reels from riots over Henry Nowak case
The cleanup was quick. The day after an anti-police demonstration turned violent in the Portswood area of Southampton, workers cleared up broken glass and fixed fences that had been torn down to use as missiles against officers.
But the psychological impact is likely to last much longer.
Continue reading...A Virginia woman alleges she suffered serious injuries after slipping on what appeared to be mashed potatoes at an Outback Steakhouse.
Recent talk about the idea of expanding the Supreme Court after mid-term elections has resurfaced an old debate about the separation of powers under the Constitution.
On May 21, 2026, a House Judiciary subcommittee heard testimony from four witnesses about “Court Packing: A Threat to the Supreme Court's Legitimacy.” The hearing came after several high-profile opinion pieces debated the idea of adding more members to the Supreme Court bench for various reasons.
During the House hearing, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D- Md,) offered one rationale for the change. “There are 13 federal circuits in America, and traditionally, the Supreme Court has been made up of the number of justices equal to the number of circuits. And we got 13 circuits, but we only have nine justices,” he told the committee. He also pointed to the failed nomination of Merrick Garland and other successful confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett as politicizing the Court nomination process.
On May 31, 2026, the editorial board of The Wall Street Journal disagreed with Raskin. “It’s true the justices once spent part of each year traveling a judicial circuit to hear cases, but this practice of ‘riding circuit’ effectively ended in 1891,” it commented. “Democrats are telling the public they are plotting one of American history’s most destabilizing power grabs, by degrading the third branch of government.”
To be sure, there is no shortage of political controversy about the subject, which has its roots in the very formation of the Constitution in 1787 and the concept of an independent judiciary and Supreme Court.
The Judicial Branch and its independence
At the Constitutional Convention, the delegates decided to leave the details of how the judiciary system would be structured to Congress. “The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish,” reads the opening sentence of Article III of the Constitution. Article III also states that the justices would serve as long as they showed “good behavior” in office and could only be forcibly removed through the impeachment process. (Article 1, Section 8 also gives Congress the power “to constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court.)
In our Interactive Constitution, scholars Richard W. Garnett and David A. Strauss explain how concerns about potential conflicts between state courts and federal courts led to the creation of the federal judiciary. “The compromise was that, just as the Constitution and federal laws would be the ‘supreme Law of the Land,’ there would definitely be a Supreme Court—so a court created by the federal government, with judges appointed by the President, would get the last word, in case state courts did something that was too threatening to the new nation.”
The Judiciary Act of 1789 established the first Supreme Court, when Congress decided that six Justices should be on the Court. In 1801, President John Adams and a lame-duck Federalist Congress passed the Judiciary Act of 1801, which featured the first debate over the number of Justices on the Court. The act reduced the Court to five Justices to limit incoming President Thomas Jefferson’s appointments. However, Jefferson and his Democratic-Republicans soon repealed that act, putting the Court back to six Justices.
In 1803, the Supreme Court reinforced its importance as a separate branch of government when it decided Marbury v. Madison. The Court’s decision in Marbury confirmed the principle of judicial review, including the power to declare laws passed by Congress and signed by the president as unconstitutional.
The number of justices on the Court would change from 1802 to 1869 for various reasons. In 1807, Jefferson and Congress added a seventh Justice when Congress added a seventh federal court circuit. In early 1837, President Andrew Jackson was able to add two additional Justices after Congress expanded the number of federal circuit court districts.
Under different circumstances, Congress created the 10th Circuit in 1863 during the Civil War, and the Court briefly had 10 justices. Congress then passed legislation in 1866 to reduce the Court to seven justices. That only lasted until 1869, when a new Judiciary Act sponsored by Sen. Lyman Trumbull put the number back to nine Justices, with six required at a sitting to form a quorum. (President Ulysses S. Grant eventually signed that legislation and nominated William Strong and Joseph Bradley to the newly restored seats.)
FDR’s controversial court packing plan
Since then, and even with President Franklin Roosevelt’s ill-fated threat in 1937 to add new justices who sympathized with his policies to the Supreme Court, the number of justices on the Court has remained stable at nine.
In 1935, Roosevelt was particularly upset by the Court’s decision in Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States. The unanimous decision invalidated a key part of the National Industrial Recovery Act, one of the New Deal projects passed during FDR's 100-day program in 1933. “You see the implications of the decision. That is why I say it is one of the most important decisions ever rendered in this country,” Roosevelt told reporters on May 31, 1935. “We have been relegated to the horse-and-buggy definition of interstate commerce.”
As Roosevelt started his second term, he used one of his fireside chats in March 1937 to make his case to the American people for changing the Supreme Court. “This plan of mine is not attacking of the court; it seeks to restore the court to its rightful and historic place in our system of constitutional government and to have it resume its high task of building anew on the Constitution ‘a system of living law.’ The court itself can best undo what the court has done,” Roosevelt said.
The legislation struggled to gain traction, and it was opposed not only by Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes but also by Justice Louis Brandeis and members of Roosevelt’s Democratic Party. Soon, changing voting patterns on the Court along with vacancies made the court-packing plan a moot point.
Court expansion and the separation of powers
In recent years, talk of adding more members to the Supreme Court or changing eligibility requirements became active in public discourse after the failed Garland nomination. In 2019, Sen. Marco Rubio proposed a constitutional amendment to permanently fix the number of justices on the Court at nine, in response to reports that some Democrats were considering adding more justices after the 2020 elections if they had the power to do so.
In 2021, a presidential commission established by President Joe Biden on the Supreme Court took no position on the issue of court expansion. “The Commission as a whole takes no position on the validity or strength of these claims. Mirroring the broader public debate, there is profound disagreement among Commissioners on this issue,” its report said.
Bills proposed since the 2020 election to alter the Supreme Court have faced several challenges in addition to a lack of support in Congress. Among the direct powers delegated by the Constitution to Congress is the ability to change the number of justices on the Court, as established by precedent. Other changes such as imposing term limits based on years served and retirement age limits on the justices would likely require a constitutional amendment.
However, some members of Congress in recent years have introduced legislation to place an 18-year limit on Supreme Court service with exemptions for current justices. The Congressional Research Service remarked in 2023 that it was likely “that imposing term limits on new justices would also violate the Good Behavior Clause.” In that case, it could be up to the Supreme Court to decide the dispute in an interesting test of the separation of powers doctrine.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
Giving news websites the power to block their content from being used in AI summaries will have global ramifications
The UK’s competition watchdog has ordered Google to change how it uses publishers’ content in its AI-powered search results, in a move that will have global ramifications.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is using powers that allow it to set bespoke rules for major tech firms that it deems to have “strategic market status”. Google, the world’s largest search engine, is one of those companies.
Continue reading...Meta is scaling back parts of its employee tracking initiative after staff objected to software that collected mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and other actions for AI training data. According to Reuters, the company will now let workers pause collection for up to 30 minutes and request exemptions. Reuters reports: [Stephane Kasriel, a vice president in Meta's AI model-building Superintelligence Labs unit] said the team behind the software had also introduced "several optimizations" to reduce its impact on computer battery life, after employees complained it was consuming so much data it was causing their home internet usage to spike. "While we remain confident in the privacy protections we put in place at launch, which went through several layers of risk review, we have heard your concerns about personal data on work devices, battery life, and wanting more control over when capturing happens," Kasriel said in the memo.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US and Iran exchange more strikes but Trump says he is not looking to escalate and there is no need for boots on the ground
Kuwait’s military said Iranian strikes that hit a terminal at its international airport killed at least one person and wounded 63 in the first deadly attack in the Gulf since a ceasefire on 8 April came into effect.
The US and Iran also exchanged fresh missile and drone strikes, further jeopardising efforts to secure a new ceasefire agreement between Washington and Tehran.
Continue reading...a year ago i asked you guys what board i should get and you guys said get a used model, the good news is that i made my decision on getting an xr. i managed to find an xr on e bay, costs an arm and a leg, 1729. should i get it? Onewheel XR Classic XRC by Future Motion with Treaded Tire 770-ish Miles | eBay
I just gotta get my money right to get it
A new batch of A24 films, including The Whale, Uncut Gems and more arrive this June on free streaming services.
With peace talks stalled, the U.S. and Iran traded strikes in one of the most intense bouts since the increasingly tenuous ceasefire between the two countries began in April.
Airstrikes in south of country kill nine people and wound another 150, most of them medical staff
Three hospitals in southern Lebanon have been attacked by Israel in under a week, wounding more than 150 people and killing nine, according to Lebanon’s ministry of health.
Israel carried out an attack in the immediate vicinity of the public hospital in Tebnine on Wednesday, just days after strikes next to the Hiram and Jabal Amel hospitals in Tyre. The attack next to Jabal Amel on Monday killed four people and injured 127 – most of whom were medical staff.
Continue reading...Microsoft says its new Majorana 2 quantum chip is 1,000 times more reliable than its predecessor, with qubits lasting about 20 seconds instead of milliseconds, and claims it could have a commercially useful quantum machine by 2029. The BBC reports: "We will have a quantum machine in 2029 that can solve commercially viable, reasonable problems," said Zulfi Alam, corporate vice president of Microsoft Quantum. That would still require huge further advances as such a device would require millions of qubits - the current chip, Alam said, has 12. Assessing the firm's claims are difficult because it does not release the full details of what it has discovered publicly, citing commercial confidentiality. Microsoft has spent 20 years pursuing an approach to quantum computing known as "topological." The firm's approach to this is based on exploiting the properties of a so-called quasi-particle, which had existed only in theory, since it was first predicted in the 1930s by Italian physicist Ettore Majorana. To do this it had to exploit a novel state of matter - different from the three familiar states of liquid, solid or gas. Paul Stevenson, a physics professor at the University of Surrey, said the tech giant's timeline sounded plausible - if its research lived up to its claims. "Microsoft appears to have made a leap in their attempt to produce viable topological qubits," he said. "If they succeed, they will leap from being a player with no production quantum computer, to being a serious player in the race to make the next generation of fault-tolerant machines."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Osmo 360 is a worthy competitor to Insta360 and GoPro, but the FCC's ruling on drones makes a straight-up recommendation more complicated.
Hearing in New York state case over shooting of healthcare executive sealed at short notice ‘at request of the defense’
Luigi Mangione’s New York state case in the killing of the healthcare executive Brian Thompson descended into secrecy on Wednesday when Judge Gregory Carro held sealed proceedings despite press objections.
Mangione’s state trial for allegedly shooting dead Thompson on a Manhattan Street in late 2024 is scheduled for 8 September. Mangione also faces a federal trial in relation to Thompson’s killing. The murder triggered an intense manhunt but also prompted an outpouring of public rage against the practices of the for-profit US healthcare industry.
Continue reading...Veteran journalist says executives pushed unverified claims and gave politicians a say in interviews
The longtime 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley, who was fired by CBS News on Tuesday after clashing with the network’s new management, issued a public statement accusing the network’s new executives of silencing employees and claiming they instructed him “to inject falsehoods and bias” into his reporting.
“‘60’ has been the number-one program in America for decades because our beloved audience finds integrity, quality, and humanity in our stories,” Pelley wrote in the lengthy statement he shared on social media on Wednesday morning.
Continue reading...Reform leader jeered in parliament as he is urged to condemn violence
Zia Yusuf, the Reform UK home affairs spokesperson, told Sky News this morning that he thought the treatment of Henry Nowak did justify his party’s claim that two-tier policing operates in the country. He said:
Having watched that footage [of Nowak’s arrest] … it’s hard to escape the conclusion that it is a demonstrable example of structural two-tier policing that is embedded in Hampshire police force and forces across the country.
People can go to Hampshire police’s website and read their race action plan that was brought about under a Tory government.
We understand and appreciate as police officers that we are accountable for our actions. What we ask, however, is that those actions are judged through fair and transparent processes. In this case, that process is already underway with the IOPC conducting their independent investigation.
What we, as a society, cannot accept is the violent scenes we saw in Southampton last night.
I know that since the release of the body-worn video footage from the night of Henry Nowak’s murder, there is a desire for answers and accountability but that must be done in the right way and not used as an excuse to threaten and intimidate my officers and bring violence to our streets causing fear and harm to those living and working in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight.
Continue reading...Wondering if an unpaid nursing home bill will impact your Social Security check? Here's what federal law allows.
PC, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch, Nintendo Switch 2, Xbox; Yacht Club Games
This brilliant adventure creates a whole world from one character with a unique ability
You could mistake Mina the Hollower for something found on the liquid-crystal display of a Game Boy Color around the turn of the millennium. Like the pocketable Zelda and Pokémon games of the time, it presents a kind of snow-globe reality that you peer into from above, relying on imagination to decipher each two-colour clump of pixels into a tree, or a skeleton, or a cloaked mouse wielding a hammer twice her size.
This is Mina, our hero: she jumps, she moves at a clip, and she can delve downward into the soil or floorboards, tunnelling underfoot for a moment or two before popping back up, like an inflatable forcibly submerged in a swimming pool. This is her signature move, perfectly elastic in sensation – the way the released button springs back against your thumb! – and in application. The burrow-jump is an excavation tool, unearthing any treasure you happen to dig through, and a navigational one, used to hop over gaps, reach high-up spots and nose into tiny hidden spaces, where more treasure almost invariably awaits.
Continue reading...Christi Hill and male police officer misidentified in Vickrum Digwa case on AI platforms including Grok
A former police officer has been forced to flee to a safe space after she was falsely accused online of being involved in the Henry Nowak murder.
Christi Hill, who served as a police constable for 12 years, has criticised social media and AI platforms, including Elon Musk’s Grok, for spreading the false claim that she was one of the officers who arrested Nowak as he lay dying after being stabbed by Vickrum Digwa.
Continue reading...Have we reached a point where AI agents can reliably function as scientific collaborators? Can they go one step further and work as autonomous scientists?
Stevens is an Associate Laboratory Director for the Computing, Environment and Life Sciences (CELS) Directorate at ANL and a Distinguished Fellow at the laboratory. He is also a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Chicago.
At his TPC26 keynote, he outlined how he used large-scale experiments involving scientific paper replication and model benchmarking to better understand what it would take to accelerate scientific discovery using autonomous AI agents.
Stevens not only wanted to measure the model performance, but also gauge the practical requirements of deploying AI agents at scale. This includes testing the coordination mechanisms and the resources needed to support increasingly complex scientific workflows.

Rick Stevens Keynote at TPC26
One of the most ambitious parts of his experiment was teaching AI agents how to replicate scientific papers. While reproducing existing research may sound less exciting than making new discoveries, Stevens argued that replication provides a practical way to measure both the capabilities and limitations of today’s AI systems.
“The basic goal here is to hand the paper to the agent and tell it to do everything it can to replicate the paper. So read the paper, build a table of what the principal ideas were, the principal tools, the hypotheses, the assumptions, and then do a parallel implementation.”
“And this was this is pretty interesting to see how this fails, how it works and how it fails, but it’s also a basic building block of doing science, right? And we’re trying to collect information on the throughput and resources needed to do this and what kind of resources are needed.”
The project now includes approximately 100 papers and requires agents to understand scientific methods, identify the necessary tools and datasets, and reproduce published findings. Along the way, the agents are generating new research questions and helping Stevens estimate what it might take to eventually scale AI driven science beyond replication and toward original discovery.
One of the most important findings from the project was that AI agents proved capable of reproducing a meaningful portion of scientific work. Stevens’ experiment evaluated each replication attempt using measures such as coverage and agreement with the original results. Across the papers evaluated so far, agents achieved average scores of roughly 7.5 for coverage and 8 for agreement. More than half scored above 8 on both measures.
Performance varied significantly depending on the type of research. Mathematical papers, theoretical derivations, and studies built around open source software and accessible datasets generally produced the strongest results. In some cases, agents were even able to improve upon published findings by achieving lower error rates than those reported in the original work.
Stevens said the strongest predictor of successful replication was whether authors made their code publicly available.
The project also revealed important limitations. Agents struggled when papers relied on proprietary software and inaccessible datasets. They also did not do well with poorly documented methods or physical experiments.
Stevens observed that many scientific papers contain tacit assumptions that are never explicitly documented, making them difficult to reproduce accurately.
Despite those challenges, the results were encouraging enough to push the project beyond simple replication. The agents are now generating follow up research questions from the papers they analyze and laying the groundwork for future experiments focused on original scientific discovery.
The results also allowed Stevens to begin estimating the resources required to scale AI driven scientific workflows. What started as an experiment in paper replication quickly evolved into a broader effort to understand the infrastructure needed to support large numbers of scientific agents.
“That’s really interesting because it allows us to project the resource requirements that we’re gaining from the replication project into, if you wanted to accelerate science to new and open problems, how much resource might be needed.”
The project was also used to estimate what it would take to scale agent based science further. Replicating 1,000 scientific papers in 10 days would require hundreds of parallel agents, roughly 200,000 GPU hours, millions of CPU hours and hundreds of terabytes of storage. He described the exercise as a way to understand the infrastructure requirements for future AI driven scientific discovery.
Stevens said the team is using replication as a baseline to estimate the effort required for original research. Early results suggest that pursuing new discoveries may require 10 to 30 times more resources than reproducing existing work – depending on the complexity of the problem.
If replication is the first step toward autonomous discovery, Stevens’ project offers an early glimpse into both the promise and the hurdles of building AI systems capable of accelerating science.
The post Can AI Agents Replicate Science? Argonne’s Rick Stevens Puts Them to the Test appeared first on HPCwire.
Non-binding agreement to start building vehicles in 2027 would safeguard jobs at UK’s largest car factory
Nissan has agreed to look at building cars in northern England for Chinese manufacturer Chery, in a move that would secure jobs at the UK’s largest car factory.
The Japanese carmaker on Wednesday said it had signed a non-binding agreement and that discussions were ongoing over contract manufacturing by Nissan for Chery, which is part-owned by the Chinese state.
Continue reading...Global trade imbalances have changed since the 2008 financial crisis. Now they reflect new risks Expert comment thilton.drupal
Economists and policymakers are increasingly concerned about deep imbalances in the global economy. These reflect US-China rivalry and shifting geopolitics rather than the financial excess that led to the 2008 crash.
The issue of global imbalances will be high on the agenda when G7 leaders gather in Evian-les-Bains this month. They are right to be concerned. The build-up of imbalances was also a defining feature of the years preceding the 2008 global financial crisis.
But this is not a repeat of those dynamics. Today’s imbalances are less about debt-fuelled consumer excess and more about geopolitics, industrial competition and the shifting balance of global economic power.
The concept of ‘global imbalances’ might seem abstract, but the idea is relatively simple: it refers to persistent gaps between countries’ current account positions. This is the part of the balance of payments that covers trade in goods and services as well as investment income. Because the balance of payments must sum to zero globally, large surpluses in some economies are necessarily mirrored by large deficits elsewhere.
Imbalances are not inherently problematic. Indeed, some degree of imbalance is both natural and economically efficient. Capital should flow to economies where returns are highest. Because the capital and current accounts of the balance of payments must necessarily balance, these countries run current account deficits (since they have a surplus on the capital account). Similarly, those exporting capital run current account surpluses.
But problems arise when these imbalances become large and persistent. This is especially true for deficit economies, which depend on continued capital inflows to finance spending that exceeds their productive capacity. A reversal in these flows can create difficulties servicing external liabilities and force a painful adjustment in domestic demand.
History offers plenty of warnings. The most notable example is the 2008 crash. But large external imbalances contributed to a series of emerging market crises in the 1980s and 1990s. Intra-eurozone imbalances also culminated in the early-2010s sovereign debt crisis there.
Today’s pattern of imbalances differs in important ways from that of the early 2000s. Back then, large surpluses in China, Germany, Japan and the major oil exporters were mirrored by substantial deficits in the US and parts of Europe, notably the UK, Spain and Greece.
While the US remains the world’s principal deficit economy, its external shortfall has narrowed relative to global GDP. Its current account deficit peaked at 1.6 per cent of global GDP in 2006 but was ‘only’ 0.9 per cent last year. Part of the reason is the transformation of the US into a major energy producer, which has cut energy imports and boosted energy exports. The US private sector deficit has also contracted, reflecting the fact that, unlike during the mid-2000s property bubble, American households are in aggregate no longer living well beyond their means.
But while the US’s external deficit has decreased in global terms, China’s surplus has increased, and now exceeds its pre-2008 crisis peak relative to world output. According to an adjusted measure, China’s current account surplus reached 0.8 per cent of global GDP last year, above the 0.7 per cent peak recorded in 2008.
This raises an obvious question: how can the world’s largest surplus economy (China) now run a larger surplus relative to global GDP, while the world’s largest deficit economy (the US) now runs a smaller one?
The answer lies in what has happened elsewhere. Surpluses among oil exporters, most notably Saudi Arabia, are much smaller than in the mid-2000s, partly because of the shift in the US energy balance. However, China has also moved up the value chain, taking market share from other export-oriented economies – most notably Germany and the rest of the eurozone, but also Japan and South Korea. As a result, their surpluses have diminished relative to the mid-2000s.
The risks associated with imbalances have therefore changed since the mid-2000s. For deficit economies, the risk of a sudden stop in capital inflows appears less acute than in the past. External deficits are generally smaller than they were in the mid-2000s and there are fewer signs of private sector financial excess.
Instead, attention has shifted away from financial vulnerabilities in deficit countries and more towards the economic implications of China’s growing export dominance and continued large surplus. Two issues stand out.
The first is the growing pressure on other surplus economies from intensifying competition with Chinese firms. Europe is particularly exposed. The loss of global export share shown in the second chart above has come across a wide range of industries, including vehicles, machinery and metals. The challenges for German industry are becoming especially pronounced.
The second concerns the geopolitical dimensions of imbalances. The backdrop today is very different from the era of globalization that defined the 1990s and 2000s. Multilateralism and integration have given way to increasing geopolitical rivalry between the US and China.
China’s growing dominance in sectors such as electric vehicles, batteries and advanced manufacturing raises questions that extend beyond economics into national security and industrial resilience. The efficiency gains from trade must now be weighed against concerns over supply-chain security and technological dependence.
Exchange rate adjustments have a role to play in narrowing trade imbalances. China’s real exchange rate appears undervalued, perhaps by around 10 per cent. Any successful attempt to reduce global trade imbalances is likely to require an appreciation in China’s real exchange rate. But currency moves alone are unlikely to deliver sustained rebalancing without deeper structural changes.
In China’s case, that would require a shift away from high savings and investment towards stronger household consumption. For now, there is little evidence of such a transition. China’s policy priorities remain focused on expanding industrial capacity and achieving technological self-sufficiency. While the IMF expects China’s surplus to narrow over the coming years, I suspect it is more likely to rise than fall.
But surplus economies cannot bear the burden of adjustment alone. Deficit countries must also adjust by bringing spending more closely into line with productive capacity. For the US, that ultimately means reducing the federal budget deficit through fiscal consolidation. This marks another important difference from the mid-2000s. Back then, the roots of US overspending were primarily in the private sector. Today, they stem primarily from the public sector.
An independent company called Supernatural Health is making a new app. It sounds like good news for Supernatural fans like me.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from 9to5Google: Phone by Google wants to combat the "growing threat of impersonation scams" and protect Android users against "sophisticated, AI-powered deepfake attacks" with fake call detection. [...] Fake call detection requires that both parties are on Android and use the Phone by Google app, while Google Messages and Google Contacts also have to be installed. When a contact calls, their phone "sends a silent confirmation signal in real time to your device to verify the call is legitimate and truly coming from the contact's device." This digital handshake uses end-to-end encrypted RCS (Rich Communication Services). If you're being scammed by an impersonator, your phone will notice that the "initial confirmation signal will be missing," and ping the contact's real device to double-check. If their real device says, "I'm not making a call right now," you'll get a warning on your screen advising you to hang up immediately. This feature will be available globally on Android 12+ phones starting with Pixel devices this month. Fake call detection is enabled by default but can be turned off at any time. Google says it's "possible for other apps and device manufacturers to adopt this technology" given the RCS underpinnings. You can learn more about fake call detection in Google's blog post.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

President Donald Trump recently celebrated what he called an "extremely good" medical examination.
In a May 31 Truth Social post, Trump wrote:
"The results of my Physical Examination, taken at Walter Reed Military Medical Center, and just released, were extremely good. Unlike other U.S. Presidents, none of whom have ever taken an approved, high difficulty, Cognitive Test, I scored a perfect 30 out of 30, considered ‘extreme intelligence.’ Are the Dumocrats really surprised? In fact, this is my fourth such test, all PERFECT or, 120 correct answers out of 120 questions asked! It is very rare that anyone gets a Perfect Score, especially when achieved four times in a row. All people running for President and Vice President should be forced to take high difficulty Cognitive Tests. Congress, and the Dumocrats, should demand it! President DONALD J. TRUMP"
We’ll have to take Trump’s word for it that he scored a 30 out of 30 on the test, which medical experts believe — based on Trump’s own descriptions — is the Montreal Cognitive Assessment. (When we asked the White House whether that was the test Trump took, a spokesperson did not dispute it.) Trump reportedly also took the test in 2018 and twice in 2025.
But medical experts said Trump inaccurately described the test as measuring intelligence. Instead, it aims to detect signs of cognitive impairment; if the score is low enough, then further testing is recommended.
"The test measures cognition," including attention, concentration, language, memory, abstract thinking and calculation skills, said Ziad Nasreddine, a Quebec-based neurologist who created the 10-minute Montreal Cognitive Assessment in 2005. "Cognitive function is correlated with IQ. But the test was not designed to detect the genius level of cognitive performance. It's meant to reassure that cognitive functions are normal."
Patients might have to read a list of words and recall them; repeat a list of numbers forward and backward; subtract a one-digit number repeatedly starting from 100; repeat a sentence; draw comparisons between two objects; and know the time of day and their location.
Trump garnered attention in 2020 when he told Fox News, "It's like you'll go: Person, woman, man, camera, TV. So they say, ‘Could you repeat that?' So I said, ‘Yeah. So it's person, woman, man, camera, TV.’ ‘Okay, that's very good. If you get it in order, you get extra points.’" (Nasreddine has said that the test has never included that series of words, nor another example Trump has cited involving a giraffe, tiger and whale.)
Scores from 26 to 30 are considered normal. Scores below 26 are considered to reflect some form of cognitive impairment, with the degree of impairment increasing as the score drops.
This is not the first time Trump has boasted about having high scores on the test. He mentioned it in several speeches and interviews earlier this year. In December 2025, after he said he took the test for the third time, Trump posted, "I have been told that few people have been able to ‘ace’ this Examination and, in fact, most do very poorly, which is why many other Presidents have decided not to take it at all."
Neither Nasreddine nor Ishani Ganguli, a Harvard Medical School associate professor of medicine and a primary care physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, said they would describe the test as "high difficulty," as Trump did.
"A 30/30 score would suggest normal cognitive function, meaning no evidence of cognitive impairment or dementia," Ganguli said.
Neither expert offered specific data on whether a 30 out of 30 is "very rare," but from their own experience, the frequency of a 30-point score is somewhere between "relatively uncommon," as Nasreddine estimated, and "somewhat common," as Ganguli said.
"It has to be sufficiently hard to detect early-stage cognitive disorders, and not too hard to decrease the risk of false positives," Nasreddine said.
Trump said his cognitive test results showed he has "extreme intelligence."
Medical experts have said Trump is describing the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, which is designed to detect cognitive impairment, not intelligence. A 30 out of 30 score shows that a patient has normal cognitive function, not high intelligence.
We rate the statement False.
WinUtils started in 1996-1997 as a way to build my programming chops. I was poking around the Windows 95 shell APIs, found the file operation functions, and thought it would be cool to have CLI tools that called them instead of doing raw file I/O. The payoff was practical: because the operations went through the shell, the same confirmation prompts, progress dialogs, and Recycle Bin behavior you got from Windows Explorer came along for free.
↫ Code Naked
Code Naked – their alias, not mine – recently dug these old executables and code back up, and published them on GitHub. Back then, though, there were no centralised distribution platforms, so they just uploaded them to various download and shareware websites and kept track of the download tickers. Very neat little tools, and fun to have them immortalised.
BOULDER, Colo., June 3, 2026 — Atom Computing today announced the industry’s first full demonstration of quantum error correction using a toric code. The results show that the company’s neutral-atom system reduces errors as larger numbers of qubits are used in computations, placing Atom Computing among only two companies that have demonstrated many rounds of sustained quantum error correction and marking the first time this has been achieved using neutral atoms. It represents a strong validation of Atom’s approach and positions the company at the forefront of the race toward fault-tolerant quantum computing.
“This is a historic moment for quantum computing,” said Dr. Ben Bloom, CEO and Founder of Atom Computing. “Today, we have shown that practical quantum error correction can be achieved with our neutral-atom technology. This is the clearest demonstration yet that neutral atoms are highly competitive with superconducting systems and other approaches for building scalable logical qubits. We’ve reached this milestone faster and with greater capital efficiency than larger players in the industry, and we’re excited to build on this progress and share more results later this year.”
Quantum error correction is essential to unlocking the full potential of quantum computing. Quantum systems are sensitive to noise and errors, which must be detected and corrected repeatedly across many rounds of operations to ensure reliable results. A key requirement for effective error correction is that the error rates of logical qubits decrease as the system scales up. Atom Computing’s results demonstrate that its neutral-atom systems meet this requirement, accelerating the path to utility-scale quantum computing.
Atom Computing’s unique architecture and proprietary technologies were critical to achieving these results. For example, its ability to dynamically rearrange qubits enables all-to-all connectivity, removing the constraints of fixed hardware layouts found in other modalities. The system’s zoned architecture supports highly parallelized operations enabling faster overall computation, and Atom’s nuclear-spin qubits exhibit record-breaking coherence times, which are essential for running deep, complex algorithms. Together, these features enable fast algorithm execution and greater flexibility in algorithm design, crucial to achieving this milestone in neutral atom computing.
“This looks like exciting progress toward fault-tolerance for neutral-atom quantum computers — specifically, in repeatedly refreshing the atoms in a way that preserves the logical information. Congratulations to Atom Computing on its accomplishment,” said Dr. Scott Aaronson, Professor of Computer Science at the University of Texas at Austin and Director of its Quantum Information Center.
The technical achievement directly supports Atom Computing’s expanding commercial footprint. Last year, the company sold the world’s first commercial quantum computer with logical qubits to QuNorth, a Nordic quantum initiative funded by EIFO and the Novo Nordisk Foundation. Currently being installed in partnership with Microsoft, the on-premises quantum system, Magne, is paving the way for advanced regional collaborations.
“Demonstrations like this of increased fidelities through quantum error correction are important proof points that we’re on the right trajectory toward utility‑scale quantum systems,” said Dr. Matthias Troyer, Technical Fellow and Corporate Vice President at Microsoft Quantum. “Microsoft is proud to partner with Atom Computing to bring even greater capability to QuNorth and the Nordic quantum ecosystem through Magne.”
With this milestone, the company’s participation in stage B of the DARPA Quantum Benchmarking Initiative and having recently signed a Letter of Intent with the U.S. Department of Commerce for $100 million of funding, Atom Computing continues to push the boundaries of quantum technology, bringing reliable, utility-scale quantum computing closer to reality.
Learn more about the research here.
About Atom Computing
Atom Computing is developing large-scale quantum computers to enable companies and researchers to achieve unprecedented computational breakthroughs. Utilizing highly scalable arrays of optically trapped neutral atoms, the company has developed systems with over 1,000 qubits, featuring advanced capabilities towards fault-tolerant quantum computing. Atom Computing’s on-premises systems provide customers with new computational tools and logical qubit capabilities to address increasingly complex applications and to grow their quantum ecosystem.
Source: Atom Computing
The post Atom Computing Reports Neutral-Atom Quantum Error Correction Milestone Using Toric Code appeared first on HPCwire.
SAN FRANCISCO, June 3, 2026 — The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, today announced the intent to launch the Tokenomics Foundation, a new foundation that will focus on establishing open industry standards, benchmarks, and best practices for the economics of AI infrastructure. The Tokenomics Foundation will operate in close partnership with the FinOps Foundation, extending the discipline of variable technology spend into the era of token-based AI.
“As enterprises move generative and agentic AI workloads from pilot to production, tokens have become the new unit of technology spend,” said Jim Zemlin, CEO of the Linux Foundation. “Measuring and benchmarking token efficiency across different models and vendors is critical to how organizations make business decisions, but until now, there was no neutral home to develop the standards needed to measure token economics transparently across the entire supply chain. The Tokenomics Foundation provides that neutral home, ensuring these standards remain open and community-driven.”
The Tokenomics Foundation arrives at a defining moment for the global technology economy. While per-token costs fell heavily during 2023-2025 they have leveled off – and new model token prices are rising – making AI the largest and fastest-growing line item on enterprise technology budgets. Research from Goldman Sachs shows global token usage is to multiply 24x between 2026 and 2030 to 120 quadrillion tokens per month.
Industry analysts now forecast more than $1 trillion in AI infrastructure investment through 2027, the largest concentrated capital buildout in the history of computing, with the inference market alone projected to expand from approximately $106 billion in 2025 to $255 billion by 2030.
“Token costs and efficiency have become a CEO-level concern, not an engineering footnote” said J.R. Storment, Executive Director of the FinOps Foundation. “But naming the problem isn’t solving it. The Tokenomics Foundation gives the industry a neutral home to define the standards, the specifications, and the discipline that will determine how much companies benefit from the inference era. In the same way FinOps created a shared discipline for cloud spend, Tokenomics will do it specifically for AI and related token costs.”
The Foundation will serve both sides of the AI economy: the buyer side, made up of enterprises operating at scale that need transparent, vendor-neutral standards for the economics of AI token consumption, and the supplier side, including frontier model providers, NeoClouds, and the broader token factory supply chain.
The Tokenomics Foundation Governing Board will help set industry direction and deploy funds to support the project. A Technical Committee will develop open specifications, benchmarks, and frameworks, and the Foundation will jointly fund and support the FOCUS (focus.finops.org) specification’s expansion into token based spending models.
Organizations who have expressed initial support for the Tokenomics Foundation include Accenture, Booking.com, Flexera, Google Cloud, IBM, JPMorgan Chase, KPMG, Microsoft, Oracle, Salesforce, SAP and ServiceNow.
To learn more about the Foundation, visit TokenEconomics.com. Attend FinOps X on June 8-10, 2026 in San Diego for the latest announcements from the Tokenomics Foundation, including the technical roadmap, initial working groups, upcoming conferences, and partnerships.
About the Tokenomics Foundation
The Tokenomics Foundation, a Linux Foundation program focused on the best practices and standards for managing the production, consumption and monetization of tokens to generate business outcomes and AI value.
About the Linux Foundation
The Linux Foundation is the world’s leading home for collaboration on open source software, hardware, standards, and data. Linux Foundation projects, including Linux, Kubernetes, Model Context Protocol (MCP), OpenChain, OpenSearch, OpenSSF, OpenStack, PyTorch, Ray, RISC-V, SPDX and Zephyr, provide the foundation for global infrastructure. The Linux Foundation is focused on leveraging best practices and addressing the needs of contributors, users, and solution providers to create sustainable models for open collaboration. For more information, please visit us at linuxfoundation.org.
Source: Linux Foundation
The post Linux Foundation Launches Tokenomics Foundation to Standardize AI Infrastructure Economics appeared first on HPCwire.
Bank apologises after IT update caused problems with Lloyds, Halifax and Bank of Scotland apps
Lloyds Banking Group has apologised after thousands of its customers were unable to make payments or send money due to another IT glitch.
According to Downdetector, a website that lets people track real-time service issues and outages, customers started noticing problems shortly after 11am on Wednesday, with issues affecting many of the group’s brands: Lloyds Bank, Halifax, Bank of Scotland, Scottish Widows and MBNA.
Continue reading...Joint bank accounts are convenient, but they may also create Social Security benefit risks that retirees overlook.
CARLSBAD, Calif. and LOS ALAMOS, N.M., June 3, 2026 — MaxLinear, Inc., a leading provider of high-performance storage accelerator SoCs, and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) today announced a collaboration to enable hardware-accelerated OpenZFS File System storage for large scale, high-performance computing (HPC) environments.
Los Alamos National Laboratory and MaxLinear have jointly developed a hardware-accelerated OpenZFS storage architecture designed to improve performance and storage capacity for next-generation NVMe flash-based storage infrastructure.
“Los Alamos’ Direct I/O support and Z.I.A. (ZFS Interface for Accelerators) work were developed to accelerate performance for the ZFS-using community,” said Gary Grider, Senior Director for Computing Technologies at the Laboratory. “In this collaboration, MaxLinear demonstrated hardware-offloaded ZFS operations with reported speedups of approximately 39x for writes and 7x for reads. These results illustrate the potential for accelerator-based approaches to reduce host CPU involvement while maintaining the data-protection benefits associated with ZFS.”
“Los Alamos National Laboratory has been at the forefront of advancing storage architectures for high-performance computing,” said Vikas Choudhary, Executive Vice President of Connectivity & Storage at MaxLinear. “By enabling hardware-accelerated ZFS with Panther Storage Accelerators, we deliver deep data compression, data protection services, and multi-hundred gigabit scalability—while preserving the data integrity guarantees that ZFS is known for.”
LANL has decades of experience in operating ZFS at scale and has led to the development of key filesystem extensions, including Direct I/O support and ZIA (ZFS Interface for Accelerators)—a structured framework for introducing hardware acceleration into the ZFS data path without modifying core filesystem semantics.
MaxLinear contributes the Panther family of Storage Accelerator SoCs and Storage Software Development Kits, providing high throughput, low latency execution of ZFS data path services using a domain-specific high-performance SoC architecture. Panther provides deep data compression, encryption, deduplication, and data protection services executed inline in hardware, delivering high throughput and low latency while significantly reducing host CPU overhead.
Through this collaboration, Panther is integrated with ZFS as a Data Processing Unit Services Module (DPUSM) provider, enabling inline hardware acceleration of selected CPU‑intensive operations such as data compression and checksum generation to increase storage capacity, improve file I/O performance, and reduce host CPU utilization. This combined hardware‑software approach preserves ZFS ordering, consistency, and data integrity guarantees while enabling efficient compute offload and scalable acceleration.
This collaboration integrates LANL’s advancement in Direct I/O and ZIA framework with MaxLinear’s Panther Storage Accelerator.
Key capabilities include:
For more information on MaxLinear’s Panther Storage Accelerator, visit https://www.maxlinear.com/panther.
About MaxLinear, Inc.
MaxLinear, Inc. (Nasdaq: MXL) is a leading provider of radio frequency (RF), analog, digital, and mixed-signal integrated circuits for access and connectivity, wired and wireless infrastructure, and industrial and multi-market applications. MaxLinear is headquartered in Carlsbad, California. For more information, please visit https://www.maxlinear.com.
About Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos National Laboratory is a federally funded research and development center with priorities set by the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration (DOE NNSA) and key national strategy guidance. We execute work across all of DOE’s missions: national security, science, energy, and environmental management. Scientific and engineering capabilities developed through LANL’s stockpile research are part of what makes DOE and NNSA a science, technology, and engineering powerhouse for the nation.
Source: MaxLinear
The post MaxLinear and LANL Jointly Advance High-Performance File System Acceleration for HPC Storage appeared first on HPCwire.
The first heatwaves of the season reveal how ill-prepared governments across the continent are to protect people from increasingly dangerous temperatures
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Meteorological summer has begun, ushered in with scorching heat that struck before spring was up. Although western Europe is now mostly free from last week’s heat dome – which shattered temperature records for May in the UK and Ireland – it is already bracing for yet another sweltering summer. Oppressive days, restless nights and furious fires are brewing. On Tuesday, the World Meteorological Organisation warned us all to prepare for the imminent return of the warming weather pattern El Niño.
Scientists have not worked out how many people died during this latest bout of hot weather, but one environmental epidemiologist’s early modelling pegged it at 250 extra deaths in the UK alone on the weekend before temperatures peaked. The full death toll is likely to be particularly high because the heat struck before people had properly adjusted their behaviour to stay safe in the heat.
Continue reading...Google is adding a switch to allow website owners to opt out of being featured in their “AI” overviews and related slopsearch results.
With this new toggle in Search Console, website owners can decide if they want their site to appear in and help ground responses in our generative AI Search features (like AI Overviews, AI Mode or AI Overviews in Discover). Sites that opt out will not receive traffic or impressions from our generative AI features. This control will not be used as a ranking signal for search results outside of these generative AI Search features. This work builds on our long history of designing tools, like snippet controls and Google-Extended, that give websites more choice.
↫ Mrinalini Loew at Google’s The Keyword blog
While it’s nice of Google to offer such an opt-out to website owners, their claim that opting out won’t effect your regular search ranking rings hollow to me. I simply just do not trust Google in any way, shape, or form to not weaponise their “AI” against anyone who doesn’t want to be sucked up, regurgitated, and spat out in one of their slopsearch tools. On top of that, regular Google Search is dead anyway, so even if they keep their promise, it’s moot because Google users are going to be force-fed the slopsearch tools instead of the regular Google Search.
I honestly have no idea how much traffic OSNews gets from Google at this point, and while I can look it up, I just don’t really care, and think it’s probably not that much. I could opt us out, but the real problem is that such an opt-out won’t stop Google’s slopbots – or anyone else’s slopbots – from taking our writing and training their “AI” tools on it, so what’s the point of going through the effort?
I doubt Google is relevant enough for us.
Fewer than one in 10 SEW customers satisfied with firm’s handling of supply crisis, which left tens of thousands without water
South East Water failed to adequately communicate with customers during outages last winter that left tens of thousands of people without water, a report has concluded.
Fewer than one in 10 SEW customers were satisfied with how the company handled the water supply crisis that stretched across parts of Kent and Sussex last winter, the Consumer Council for Water (CCW) said. The independent body’s report found communication was the company’s greatest failing.
Continue reading...VANCOUVER, British Columbia, AUSTIN, Texas and SCANDIANO, Italy, June 3, 2026 — Inspire Semiconductor Holdings Inc. will be exhibiting at the annual RISC-V Europe Summit in Bologna Italy from June 8-12, 2026. In conjunction with strategic partner E4 Computer Engineering, the company will share more details on its upcoming Thunderbird “supercomputer cluster-on-a-chip” accelerated computing platform.
InspireSemi and E4 Computer Engineering have been collaborating to bring leading-edge HPC-AI technologies based on the open standard RISC-V instruction set architecture (ISA) to the European market. The combined focus has been on optimizing workload performance while delivering best-in-class energy efficiency and the lowest Total Cost of Ownership (TCO).
InspireSemi and E4 have worked side-by-side for the last four years to refine the specs of the all-CPU Thunderbird compute accelerator. Each Thunderbird chip has 1,536 64-bit CPU cores, all supporting the double precision math that most HPC applications require (i.e.- native FP64). These are InspireSemi-designed high performance, low power, superscalar RISC-V CPU cores, all interconnected by an innovative, patent-pending, low latency on-chip network fabric. Thunderbird was designed from the beginning to support an open software stack, including the ability to run Linux, Zephyr RTOS, and support the OpenMP offload model.
Initial deployments planned for Q4 2026 will be Thunderbird PCIe server-class add-in cards with 4 devices, delivering a remarkable 6,144 CPU cores each. That is the equivalent of an entire rack of x86 servers, greatly reducing cost, power, cooling, complexity, and points of failure.
E4 has been preparing for Thunderbird PCIe server-class add-in cards at the system-level targeting their innovative servers designed to scale to the needs of compute-demanding HPC & AI customers. E4 is planning to integrate Thunderbird in its product line and deliver Thunderbird-powered servers and is a strategic InspireSemi go to market partner.
In addition to delivering on this, the companies will continue to collaborate on their mutual roadmaps to continue to deliver on the best HPC-AI solution, including future mixed-precision workloads.
About InspireSemi
InspireSemi provides revolutionary high-performance, energy-efficient accelerated computing solutions for High-Performance Computing (HPC), AI, graph analytics, and other compute-intensive workloads. The Thunderbird I ‘supercomputer-cluster-on-a-chip’ is a disruptive, next-generation datacenter accelerator designed to address multiple underserved and diversified industries, including financial services, computer-aided engineering, energy, climate modeling, cybersecurity, and life sciences & drug discovery. Based on the open standard RISC-V instruction set architecture, InspireSemi’s solutions set new standards of performance, energy efficiency, and ease of programming. InspireSemi is headquartered in Austin, Texas.
Source: InspireSemi
The post InspireSemi and E4 Showcase Thunderbird RISC-V Accelerator for HPC and AI at RISC-V Europe appeared first on HPCwire.
Faculty who support Palestinian rights are applying for compensation, claiming they faced harassment as Jews for their positions
When Columbia University reached a settlement with the Trump administration last year, the deal included a $21m fund to compensate Jewish employees for an allegedly hostile work environment due to heated protests against Israel’s war in Gaza.
This week, as the window to file claims with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission came to a close, several Jewish faculty members filed claims to say they had experienced harassment as Jews on campus – but probably not on grounds Trump’s EEOC intended.
Continue reading...Hisense has released the RGB Mini-LED UR8, which promises brighter colors than before.
DfE plans to withdraw funding for assistive software, saying it is now rarely needed due to ‘widely available free tools’
Disability campaigners have called on the government to halt plans to cut funding for specialist tech support for tens of thousands of disabled students in England.
Almost 10,000 people have signed a petition opposing Department for Education (DfE) proposals to withdraw funding for specialist assistive software available as part of the Disabled Students’ Allowance (DSA).
Continue reading...You can tap into several new features while watching the tournament.
Early results show Steve Hilton, Xavier Becerra and Tom Steyer emerging in front, with many ballots to be counted
The high-stakes gubernatorial race in California remained too close to call on Wednesday morning, with early results showing a tight contest in the crowded race.
With many ballots still left to be counted, three candidates emerged at the top: the Republican Steve Hilton and the Democrats Xavier Becerra and Tom Steyer. Hilton was leading the field, with 28%, trailed closely by Becerra.
Continue reading...Two-time Grammy winner was best known for songs from Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin
Peabo Bryson, the R&B singer best known as the voice behind the Oscar-winning Disney film duets Beauty and the Beast with Celine Dion, and A Whole New World with Regina Belle from Aladdin, has died. He was 75.
His family said in a statement that Bryson, who won two Grammy awards, died on Tuesday, days after having a stroke.
Continue reading...The director defends investment in and use of AI-generated storyboards, saying the immediacy of communicating his vision to cast and crew is ‘creatively freeing’
Martin Scorsese’s announcement that he has invested in an AI company and uses the technology to create storyboards has triggered a backlash from fellow members of the film industry.
The New York Times reported that Scorsese had been appointed in 2025 as a partner and adviser to Black Forest Labs, a German-based venture that specialises in text-to-image generative AI.
Continue reading... | Wanted the rails in pink so I gave the OG white a paintjob. My roommate was kind enough to add some graphics while I wrestled the lifesavers on the rim (honestly such hard work, I hate that part). Put everything back together and now it's time to explore again. Edit: I also applied some protective foilcover over the rails. Those where designed for cars and I don't think they'll hold up. But the process was very manageable and I'll probably try a MTB product next. [link] [comments] |
How global rules can curb illicit gold trade flows 15 June 2026 — 12:30 TO 13:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Discover how the trade operates and what policy options governments have to counter its rapidly evolving influence.
Discover how the trade operates and what policy options governments have to counter its rapidly evolving influence.Gold underpins global finance, but illicit trade channels link mining to criminal economies. These flows expand across borders, exposing gaps in regulation and data.
Weak oversight allows criminal networks to persist, highlighting the need for coordinated policy responses to protect markets and limit illicit financial activity.
This event discusses:
More than 5,300 years ago, Oetzi the Iceman was strolling through the Alps on the border of Austria and Italy when he was killed by an arrow in the back.
Prosecutors seek to try 17-year-old as adult after animals injured at major barrel racing event
A teenage girl who allegedly stabbed three show horses at a weekend rodeo in Las Vegas, Nevada, is a “crazy, obsessed stalker” who waited in a darkened barn to commit the attacks, the owner of one of the animals has said.
The Nevada city’s police department arrested a 17-year-old female on Saturday for the incidents at the National Barrel Horse Association’s supershow, a competition for the sport’s top riders at the South Point equestrian arena on the Las Vegas strip.
Continue reading...The search giant also plans to give publishers more information about the ways their content shows up in AI Overviews and AI Mode.
Commentary: With Siri expected to take the spotlight, where does WatchOS 27 fit in? Here's everything we're expecting, hoping for and firmly opposed to.
Commentary: Glasses, camera-enabled AirPods, a pendant and perhaps major Apple Watch updates all need a Gemini-powered AI revamp that isn't here yet. WWDC should be where that journey begins.
New Linux Foundation and first open-source metadata server advances parallel file system design with an elastic architecture for AI and HPC storage at scale
MANCHESTER, England, June 3, 2026 — PEAK:AIO, a leader in high-performance storage for artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC), today announced Lattice, the industry’s first open-source pNFS metadata server. Developed through a long-term engineering collaboration between PEAK:AIO and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), Lattice introduces a new distributed metadata architecture designed to eliminate one of the most persistent constraints in large-scale AI and high-performance computing infrastructure.
The announcement comes as AI infrastructure demands reshape the storage market. AI workloads, including training large models, running inference at scale and serving agentic AI applications, require ultrafast, parallel access to massive datasets continuously and reliably. GPU compute has scaled dramatically, but the storage layer feeding it, and particularly the metadata architecture coordinating it, has not kept pace. Average GPU utilization across 23,000 production clusters is 5%, not because the hardware is inadequate, but because the software feeding it cannot keep up. The metadata bottleneck in parallel storage systems has become a critical constraint on AI workload performance.
Lattice resolves this architectural limitation. Built as a Linux-based, user-space pNFS metadata server designed for scale, modularity and distributed coordination. Open-source, community-supported and launched under the Linux Foundation, Lattice separates the metadata control plane into four distinct layers: Protocol State Plane, Lattice Core, MD Catalog Authority and Data Server Control Plane. This architecture makes metadata services truly elastic for the first time, allowing them to spin up dynamically on commodity hardware whenever and wherever needed, from a single server to more than 1,000 metadata servers.
The announcement will be formally presented at the International Conference on Massive Storage Systems and Technology – MSST 2026 in Santa Clara, California. Lattice is being launched in collaboration with the Linux Foundation as an open-source project intended to accelerate community innovation around scalable AI and HPC storage infrastructure.
“PNFS-Lattice is unique in that it is an open-source, user-space, scalable PNFS metadata server, from the ground up, by leveraging the concept of separating the PNFS metadata service from the Metadata Store (catalog),” said Gary Grider, HPC Division Leader at Los Alamos National Laboratory. “Since the service is separate from the persistent metadata and it runs in user space, it is well poised to be an ephemeral service that could be resized on the fly. Further, since it is open-source and user space, it lowers the bar for community participation, encouraging more innovation driven by AI, HPC, and other community needs.”
Performance testing conducted during the collaboration demonstrated gains from 70 GB/s to 400 GB/s. On existing production hardware at LANL, standard Linux NFS configurations delivered between 3 GB/s and 7 GB/s throughput, while the pNFS Lattice architecture achieved 40 GB/s on identical servers. Additional testing conducted with a Tier 1 technical university demonstrated metadata-heavy workload improvements exceeding 300% compared with conventional approaches.
Performance work is continuing to push new boundaries, but even at this early stage, Lattice is showing the scale of the breakthrough. In standard metadata benchmarks such as MDtest, early testing has demonstrated up to a 10x improvement over standard Linux KNFSD, while Lattice’s advanced features have delivered more than 300% improvement in traditionally difficult metadata-heavy workloads. When combined with its elastic, ephemeral metadata scaling model, where metadata services can be added dynamically as demand grows, Lattice moves beyond the limits of conventional high-performance data designs and creates a new foundation for metadata performance, resilience and scale in open pNFS and parallel file system design.
“AI infrastructure markets are approaching an inflection point where scaling compute alone no longer delivers any meaningful efficiency gains,” said Roger Cummings, President and CEO of PEAK:AIO. “Our collaboration with Los Alamos National Laboratory was built around the idea that if AI infrastructure is to scale efficiently, metadata must become elastic, distributed and open. Lattice represents that transition, and we’re excited to build it with the Linux and HPC communities beside us.”
Additionally, PEAK:AIO will also offer PEAK:AIO pNFS, a commercially supported superset of Lattice, for organizations that want enterprise SLAs and a full feature set without managing the open-source stack directly. This model mirrors the relationship between Lustre and its commercial distributions, while maintaining a fully open standards-based foundation.
“The key innovation behind Lattice is that it breaks apart what has traditionally been locked inside a single metadata server into four distinct layers: the Protocol State Plane, the Lattice Core, the MD Catalog Authority, and the Data Server Control Plane,” said Mark Klarzynski, CSO and Co-Founder of PEAK:AIO. “That separation unlocks intelligent scale in a way traditional storage architectures were never designed to support. Metadata and data services can now become distributed, elastic participants that scale, fail over and adapt around the workload, rather than remaining fixed appliances or static MDS pairs. This is a fundamental step forward for pNFS and parallel file system design for ultra-high-performance storage, allowing metadata to move beyond the limitations that have constrained scale-out storage for decades.”
About PEAK:AIO
PEAK:AIO is a Manchester UK-based software-defined AI storage company. Its platform delivers high-performance AI storage from a single server to exabytes on any industry-standard hardware. PEAK:AIO is deployed at Los Alamos National Laboratory, NHS AIDE, Oxford Robotics Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, University of Liverpool, University of Strathclyde MediForge Hub, and Zoological Society of London. Learn more at https://peakaio.com.
About Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos National Laboratory is a multi-program, federally funded research and development center for the National Nuclear Security Administration of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Laboratory’s priority roles are serving as a nuclear weapons design agency and a nuclear weapons production agency; addressing nuclear threats; and performing national security science, technology, and engineering.
Source: PEAK:AIO
The post PEAK:AIO and LANL Advance AI Storage with Open-Source Lattice Metadata Server appeared first on HPCwire.
DAEJEON, South Korea, June 3, 2026 — Qunova Computing, a pioneering maker of software for quantum computing, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with JHPC-quantum (Japan High-Performance Computing), a landmark Japanese national computing initiative funded by NEDO (New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization) under Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. The agreement designates Qunova as an official participant in the JHPC-quantum Test User Program, following a formal selection process that evaluated proposals based on scientific merit, technical feasibility, and the promise of hybrid quantum-HPC applications.
The agreement grants Qunova no-cost access to the JHPC-quantum hybrid platform, combining the supercomputer Fugaku with an IBM Quantum System Two, representing one of the world’s most powerful integrated quantum-classical computing environments. Just 21 organizations have been selected for the program, and Qunova is one of only two non-Japanese organizations participating, reflecting international confidence in its advanced quantum chemistry expertise, especially related to materials science.
“It is a true privilege to be included in JHPC-quantum alongside many of Japan’s most distinguished research institutions and prominent corporations,” said Kevin Rhee, CEO of Qunova Computing. “The fact that Qunova is one of just two non-Japanese organizations participating in this program speaks volumes about the power and maturity of our HI-VQE algorithm. Japan has assembled some of the finest minds in quantum and high-performance computing under this initiative, and our inclusion reflects the confidence those institutions have in our hybrid approach to tackling some of the most complex problems in chemistry. This partnership gives us access to world-class infrastructure and positions us at the forefront of the global effort to achieve industrial quantum advantage.”
JHPC-quantum is now midway through its five-year R&D mandate running from November 2023 through October 2028. Partners are now integrating multiple supercomputers and quantum computers, including simulators. Upon completion, the platform is designed to support commercial deployment of hybrid quantum applications. For Qunova, the MoU opens direct access to Japan’s growing ecosystem of industrial quantum end users and accelerates the company’s path to demonstrating and commercializing industrial quantum advantage in real-world chemistry applications.
Led by RIKEN and SoftBank, the project’s mission is to build and operate an integrated national computing infrastructure that connects supercomputers and quantum computers through advanced system software. The program’s 21 participating organizations, piloted by the RIKEN Center for Computational Science, span multiple industries such as materials science, drug discovery, logistics, finance, manufacturing, and natural sciences.
Qunova is the global leader in developing hybrid quantum-classical algorithms that combine the strengths of conventional supercomputers with the unique capabilities of quantum processors to solve computationally intractable problems in chemistry and materials science. Under the MoU, the company will apply its proprietary HI-VQE (Handover Iterative Variational Quantum Eigensolver) algorithm to some of quantum chemistry’s most demanding open problems. One such problem is the iron-sulfur cluster, a benchmark with major implications for both materials science and drug discovery, and a key test case for demonstrating industrial quantum advantage.
The JHPC-quantum platform includes a superconducting quantum computer installed in Kobe (IBM Quantum System Two “IBM Kobe”) and a trapped-ion quantum computer in Wako (Quantinuum “Reimei”), making it one of the most comprehensive hybrid quantum-HPC environments in existence.
More from HPCwire: SoftBank and RIKEN Move Japan’s Quantum-Supercomputer Project into Test-User Phase
About Qunova Computing
Founded in 2021, Qunova Computing builds algorithms designed to bring quantum advantage to early adopters of quantum computing. These algorithms have been tested with leading quantum hardware companies and research institutes around the world, and results indicate Qunova can deliver a quantum advantage for users, even using Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum computers. By using a hybrid approach and algorithms which provide a high level of accuracy, the company is unlocking the tremendous potential of quantum computing for industrial users, reducing the large number of trials required to develop new materials with specific properties. This will allow users to significantly reduce the time and expense related to industrial R&D processes, enabling them to bring new products to market more quickly and at a lower cost. For additional insight into our groundbreaking work, please visit qunovacomputing.com.
Source: Qunova Computing
The post Qunova Tapped as One of Two International Participants in Japan’s JHPC-quantum Project appeared first on HPCwire.
About a month after ejecting during the friendly-fire incident, the pilot was on a mission over Iran when his jet was hit by a surface-to-air missile, prompting a daring rescue operation.
Plumes of thick black smoke rose over St. Petersburg, President Vladimir Putin's hometown, as the Kremlin welcomed international guests for an event often described as Russia's Davos.
Petrol station attack in Calabria throws spotlight on widespread exploitation of foreign farm labourers
The exploitation of farm workers in Italy has come under the spotlight again after four men – three Afghans and one from Pakistan – were allegedly burned alive in a car at a petrol station in Calabria.
The attack was captured by a surveillance camera at the garage in Amendolara, close to Cosenza. Two Pakistani nationals have been arrested on charges of aggravated murder, according to public prosecutor Alessandro D’Alessio.
Continue reading...Funding to help accelerate OQC’s U.S. expansion as the company scales quantum infrastructure for enterprise and government customers
NEW YORK, June 3, 2026 — Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC) today announced the close of a $350 million Series C financing, the largest Series C round completed by a quantum computing company globally.
The financing marks a major milestone for OQC and for the quantum computing sector, as investor attention shifts from long-term research toward commercial deployment, infrastructure scale and enterprise adoption. The round positions OQC among the best-capitalized private quantum computing companies in the world and provides the company with significant new capital to accelerate its expansion in the United States and other priority global markets.
The round, led by Bullhound Capital, includes a mix of strategic, institutional and venture investors, including Chevron, the British Business Bank and Oxford Science Enterprises (OSE), alongside other leading international venture capital firms.
Founded in the United Kingdom, OQC builds superconducting quantum computers designed for real-world enterprise and government use. The company has developed a global deployment model focused on bringing quantum computing into secure, commercial infrastructure environments, including data centers and cloud-connected platforms.
Expanding OQC’s U.S. presence is a central part of its next phase of growth. The company plans to expand its commercial and operational footprint in the United States, where demand for advanced computing infrastructure is increasing across financial services, security, defense, AI and advanced manufacturing. Its current installation in New York City and expansion in the American market places OQC closer to major enterprise customers, investors, infrastructure partners and technology ecosystems that play a central role in quantum adoption.
The new funding will support OQC’s next stage of growth, including the development of next-generation quantum systems in their roadmap, additional infrastructure deployments, expanded U.S. commercial operations and deeper engagement with enterprise, government and technology partners.
“Raising the largest quantum Series C globally is a clear statement of intent,” said Gerald Mullally, CEO of OQC. “OQC was founded in the U.K., but the opportunity ahead of us is global and the United States is central to that opportunity. We are building quantum computing infrastructure where customers need it: close to the data, networks and enterprise systems that power the global economy. This financing gives us the capital to accelerate our U.S. expansion, deepen our technology leadership and scale OQC into one of the defining companies in the quantum era.”
The financing comes amid intensifying competition among the United States, Europe and Asia to lead in quantum technologies, a sector increasingly viewed as strategically important to economic competitiveness, national security and long-term technology leadership.
About OQC
OQC develops and operates quantum computers designed for enterprise, government and research applications. Founded in the United Kingdom, OQC builds superconducting quantum systems and deploys quantum infrastructure across global markets, with a growing presence in the United States, Europe and Asia. OQC is focused on making quantum computing accessible through secure, scalable infrastructure capable of supporting real-world use cases across industries including financial services, security, energy and advanced manufacturing.
Source: Oxford Quantum Circuits
The post Oxford Quantum Circuits Raises $350M to Expand Enterprise Quantum Computing Footprint appeared first on HPCwire.
US president says ‘I think he will’ when asked if the acting attorney general would take on a permanent role
Donald Trump said he believed he would make acting attorney general Todd Blanche permanent as the top US law enforcement officer.
Asked in an interview broadcast Wednesday on Pod Force One if Blanche would be US attorney general, Trump said: “I think he will.”
Continue reading...Voters in San Francisco on Tuesday advanced San Francisco Supervisor Connie Chan and state Sen. Scott Wiener in the race to succeed former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in California's 11th Congressional District, CBS News projects.
CBS News has fired longtime 60 Minutes correspondent and former "CBS Evening News" anchor Scott Pelley one day after he had a tense and confrontational exchange with new 60 Minutes executive producer Nick Bilton.
As younger generations spend less time on screens, Polaroid's Go Generation 3 lets you capture moments in real time, offline.
We want to know what you really think about your TV.
In Winooski, Vermont, where more than a third of children are English learners, a school superintendent is taking a stand to protect immigrant students
On an April morning at Winooki high school, the day started with a writing prompt: Do you feel safe in school? Why or why not?
The students – whose families hail from across the globe and speak Arabic, Nepali, Spanish, Somali and more – wrote their responses before reading them aloud.
Continue reading...Commentary: Android foldables are everywhere, but Apple's is still nowhere to be seen. That might be a problem.
Celebrate the occasion by scoping out one of these treadmills.
Got an older family member or friend with a smartphone? Anyone 55 and older can save money by choosing from these special plans.
Mixed picture emerges from races across the US, as Trump’s pick fails in Iowa. Plus: Jill Biden speaks about her husband’s decision to drop out of the 2024 election
Good morning. It has been an evening of drama as crucial election results have unfolded – or not – across the US.
In California, the crucial race for governor remains too close to call. With mountains of ballots left to count, the Republican Steve Hilton was leading the field with the Democrats Xavier Becerra and Tom Steyer following. A quirk of the state’s political system means the top two candidates face off in the general election regardless of which party they belong to.
Where else were primary elections held? In many other states. Many eyes were on Iowa, where Josh Turek, backed by millions in outside spending, clinched the state’s Democratic primary, defeating the state senator Zach Wahls, who had pitched himself as an anti-establishment outsider. On the Republican side, Randy Feenstra’s second-place finish in the gubernatorial race ended Donald Trump’s perfect endorsement streak, which had held strong since March.
When will we know the full results? Voting experts say it could take weeks to finalize the tightest races.
What was Pelley said to have done? In an email, the newly appointed executive editor, Nick Bilton, claimed Pelley had “hijacked my first meeting … to disparage me, my qualifications, and my intentions with remarkable incivility and contempt”. In a message to staff he said that after repeated, failed attempts to find common ground over the weekend, “we have parted ways with Scott Pelley”.
Continue reading...Protesters angry over the murder of Henry Nowak and the way he was treated by officers after being fatally stabbed clashed violently with British police.
Many of the Democrats who won their primaries are new to the national political scene – here are the names to know
A host of Democrats, many new to the national political scene, won their primaries on Tuesday, from a navy veteran in New Jersey, to a Paralympian in Iowa, to an auto shop owner in California.
The candidates were running in all types of races – toss-up districts, safe seats expected to stay in Democratic hands, and red states that, however, seem more in play for the left than ever in a midterm elections year that is expected to broadly favor the Democrats. Here are some names to know.
Continue reading...Starmer says information will be shared as soon as possible as emergency services attend scene in Sourton Down, near Okehampton
A Royal Navy helicopter has crashed into a field in Devon, police have said.
Emergency services are at the scene of the incident at Sourton Down, near Okehampton. Several road closures are in place around the A386 and A30 Sourton Cross slip and services area.
Continue reading...The PS5 era has been in some ways disappointing for Sony – on Tuesday, the company revealed a slate of games they hope will change that
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PlayStation’s future has looked a little uncertain these past few years. Although the PS5 has sold well and been very profitable, the brand is far from the runaway market leader it was in the PS2 days. Earlier this week, Game File dug into Sony’s most recent earnings reports to illustrate how PlayStation has been selling fewer and fewer of its own flagship games since a peak during the pandemic. About 54.1m copies of games either developed or published by Sony were sold in the 2018 financial year; in 2025, it sold 32.1m.
Sony has put out some great homegrown games since the PS5 was released in 2020, from Astro Bot to Ghost of Yōtei, but it has also had some expensive and very public failures and cancellations; PlayStation boss Jim Ryan, who retired in 2024, placed big bets on live-service games and only a few panned out (hello, Helldivers). Sony also seems to have rolled back on releasing its single-player PS5 games on PC after a polite interval of time, suggesting it wants to preserve what advantage and exclusivity it has.
Continue reading...Home Office barred Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker on grounds their visit was ‘not conducive to the public good’
Two leftwing US political commentators who were banned from entering the UK will still speak at the Oxford Union via livestream.
The Home Office told Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker their presence in the UK was “not conducive to the public good” when they attempted to come to London to attend this week’s SXSW London event.
Continue reading...Iowa GOP Senate candidate Rep. Ashley Hinson acknowledged the U.S.-Iran conflict could become a "political liability" if it stretches beyond the next few weeks, according to audio obtained by CBS News.
A Virginia man is suing Amazon over Ring's "Familiar Faces" feature, alleging the technology violates people's privacy.
Commentary: Apple's next iPhone could learn a lot from these powerhouse Android camera phones.
While the technology is set to play a growing role in modern warfare, there remains an unresolved ethical challenge
Should the AI-powered drones of the future have a licence to kill? The question is becoming ever more pressing as governments and the defence industry acknowledge that drone systems will play an increasingly crucial role in future warfare.
With drones being deployed in huge numbers in the Ukraine war and AI being used to assist bombing missions in the Iran conflict, there is an expectation among some observers that weapons will have to operate with increased operational autonomy, which means they will need something approximating a moral framework.
Continue reading...New proposal quietly published last week would amount to ‘devastating blow’ for science, experts warn
A set of sweeping policy changes unveiled by the White House would leave officials appointed by Donald Trump vetting every public grant issued to universities and nongovernmental organizations on the basis of their fidelity to “American values”, as defined by the president, triggering widespread concern.
All federal grants approved by Trump’s political appointees must “demonstrably advance the president’s policy priorities”, according to a lengthy proposal published by the office of management and budget (OMB).
Continue reading...The 25th edition of the film and media festival opens on Wednesday, showcasing more than 100 world premiere documentaries and narrative features, as well as short films, live music, podcasts and conversations with leading entertainment figures.
fjo3 shares a report from Defense One: A small but growing number of European officials and analysts are saying what four years ago was unthinkable: Ukraine isn't just surviving its grueling war with Russia, it is in some ways thriving and may even be on a path to victory. This isn't yet captured in headlines -- for example, about last weekend's barrage of Russian drones and missiles around Ukraine -- but in the details, like how some 90 percent were intercepted. Several long-term trends have shifted in Ukraine's favor, and the core reason is its fierce focus on AI and robotics. In the crucible of war, Ukraine has developed drones and ground robots that can hold territory -- even take it back. Some are fully controlled by humans, like supply robots and medical-evacuation vehicles. But an increasing number are controlled in at least some aspects by dozens of AI products, from guidance packages on aerial drones to decision aids at the highest levels. [...] Just as important as the tech are the new tactics. Given unusual latitude to experiment, Ukrainian fighters began to develop robot-forward infantry concepts, like combined-arms attacks by airborne and ground systems, "more than a year ago. Right now, we're massively starting to implement this," said Davyd Aloian, deputy secretary of the National Security and Defence Council of Ukraine, the coordinating body on domestic and international security, in an interview. Ukraine and its partners are also steaming ahead on new concepts for highly autonomous defenses against Russian drones, combining ISR sensors and AI to detect and identify enemy drones in less time and with more certainty. "All of the systems are being linked with each other and with people" to create a distributed network with interceptor drones at various locations to be activated when needed, Aloian said. "One day we will have only like 10 guys who are just going to be responsible for approving interception. And it will automatically go direct to the target." The human operators will be dispersed as well. "Everything can be controlled from Kyiv, Lviv, from cities in other countries," he said. "It's not what happened to Ukraine" (referencing Russia's barrage of Shahed drones) that "should scare us in Europe," said Swarmer CEO Serhii Kupriienko. It's how quickly Ukraine's "middling" military evolved to counter Russia's invasion. "We are behind by literally 10 years or 20 years" in some defense-technology areas, such as satellite imagery, Kupriienko said, and yet his country has climbed a capability curve that just two years ago seemed insurmountable. So could others, he said. "The answer is always AI solutions and integrating the AI into even the daily routine work within the bureaucracy," he said. "We have evolved since 2022, the industry has and our defense has as well. Right now we are able to provide not only [large quantities of drone] assets but everything what is needed to build out the ecosystem," including parts and production, training, modification, etc. Aloian said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
With corrupt police on the streets and shopkeepers forced to pay gangs, president has vowed to tackle crime that now affects all parts of society
It was about 11pm and Luis* was about to get into an Uber to go home when the police car pulled up. One of the officers frisked him and produced two plastic bags with what looked like drugs: one contained some sort of powder, the other little crystals. Luis had never seen them before.
Luis, who asked not to use his real name for fear of reprisals, insisted that the drugs weren’t his, but the officers didn’t seem to care. They shoved him into the back of the police truck and drove into the night.
Continue reading...Peabo Bryson, a two-time Grammy-winning singer and songwriter known for Disney movie hits "Beauty and the Beast" and "A Whole New World," has died at age 75.
Republican Sen. Joni Ernst is not running for reelection, and Democrats have been increasingly bullish about their chances of flipping the seat in recent months.
Exclusive: Research showing Andy Burnham holding slim lead finds honesty in politicians and immigration also rank as important
Voters in Makerfield rank the cost of living, declining high streets and public services as among the most important issues locally, with many also disillusioned by the political system and distrustful of politicians, according to new research.
The findings come from a focus group, shared exclusively with the Guardian, which was commissioned by 38 Degrees and carried out by JL Partners. The fieldwork took place roughly two weeks ahead of the byelection on 18 June, when the Greater Manchester mayor, Andy Burnham, is hoping to see off a challenge from Reform UK.
Continue reading...The killings took place in the restive Bajo Aguan region of Honduras where rival gangs have fought over control of palm farms and drug trafficking routes.
Proposal for 10-12.5% levies, to also include EU, Taiwan and Australia, would allow US president to skirt court-imposed limits
Donald Trump has threatened tariffs of between 10% and 12.5% on 60 trading partners including the UK, the EU and Australia over alleged forced labour failures, in the latest attempt to revive his signature trade policy.
The EU immediately hit back, saying it expected the US to respect the tariff deal it entered into last July and arguing that stealth tariffs breached the spirit of that agreement.
Continue reading...With rivals racing to market to raise ‘eye-popping sums’, the spotlight is now on the AI sector’s one-time ‘poster child’
A year is a long time in AI. Just 12 months ago, Sam Altman was predicting his company OpenAI would build a super intelligence and fundamentally remake society. Now the boss of the ChatGPT developer is walking back those ideas after failing to make money from ads and erotic chatbots.
Meanwhile, rivals are storming ahead with plans to expand and go public on the stock market, in what is widely expected to be a season of record-setting initial public offerings (IPOs).
Continue reading...MAHA-aligned Republican Zach Lahn will face Democrat Rob Sand in this year's race for Iowa governor, setting up what could be an unusually competitive contest in a red-leaning state.
Commentary: What wicked smart genre mashup blends the sensibilities of Stephen King, Parks and Recreation and Jaws? Widow's Bay is the answer, and now's the perfect time to catch up.
According to chief economic adviser Kevin Hassett, living in the world’s richest superpower and witnessing food, electricity and housing become luxury items is a good thing
God, I love paying high prices at the supermarket, don’t you? I walk outside with a bag of basics that cost approximately 500% more than they did a few years ago and it makes me feel so optimistic about life. What a wonderful thing to live in the US – the world’s richest superpower – and witness food, electricity and housing become luxury items.
Donald Trump’s chief economic adviser, Kevin Hassett, knows what I mean. On Sunday Hassett went on Fox News to inform the US public that high prices are good, actually. Trust him – he’s an economist. Yes, it’s true that last month the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index dropped to its lowest point since the survey began in 1952 and Americans are feeling grim about the economy. But as Hassett explained, “The Michigan survey no longer has anything to do with the economy … it’s just a place where Democrats get to register how angry they are at President Trump.”
Continue reading...New Jersey police must not deny streamers press freedoms
The line of New Jersey state police blocked every exit on the street. Clear plastic riot shields covered helmet to knee.
A few dozen people were stuck inside their formation, known as a kettle. Some were protesters defying a curfew order, which was intended to quell demonstrations at a nearby ICE detention facility. But most appeared to be journalists who were just there to do their job.
Continue reading...Anthony Odiong was sentenced to life in prison for sex crimes against his congregants in Texas
A Louisiana church where a Roman Catholic priest served as pastor before being recently convicted in Texas of criminal clergy sexual assault and sentenced to life in prison has been criticized by his victims and their supporters for soliciting prayers on his behalf in a parochial bulletin published after his guilty verdict – which neglected to mention the survivors.
One of the two women whom Anthony Odiong was convicted of assaulting in Waco, Texas – identified in court proceedings as Mary Doe – issued a statement on Tuesday encouraging St Anthony of Padua’s community in the New Orleans suburb of Luling, Louisiana, to pray for his victims, too.
Continue reading...Smart locks are powerful, connected and help keep you safer. We tested models to find the best.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Although Delaware’s homeless population has grown in recent years, the availability of resources and affordable housing has not. Last week, lawmakers included in a state budget a new initiative that would pay for 50 families with school-age children to move out of motels or shelters, and into rental housing.
Lawmakers on Delaware’s powerful Joint Finance Committee included an $800,000 line item into the state’s supplemental budget last week that would pay for homeless Delaware families with school-aged children to move into stable housing.
The introduction of the item – pushed by Rep. Kim Williams (D-Stanton) – followed an announcement last month from Delaware budget forecasters that the state would collect nearly $200 million more in revenue during the next fiscal year than previously estimated.
It also follows news from earlier this spring that Williams could face a primary election challenge from progressive Will Imbrie-Moore, whose platform calls for increases in affordable housing spending. Imbrie-Moore launched his candidacy in March, but has not yet officially filed as a candidate.
Williams said she decided to push the initiative forward after the nonprofit Action for Delaware’s Children reached out to her.
“These children and families often do not have a strong voice in the legislature, and we need to help them be that voice,” Williams said last month.
The newly budgeted housing money would help 50 Delaware families move out of shelters and motels and into rental housing. Lawmakers will pass the state’s operating, capital and supplemental budgets later this month.
More than 4,400 children in Delaware experienced homelessness during the 2022-23 school year, according to data from the Delaware Department of Education.

For Karen Eller, who teaches at the Maurice Pritchett Academy in Wilmington, the money is much needed today. During a press conference announcing the funding last month, she said Delaware teachers have seen an increase in homeless students in their schools.
The funding proposal, which would focus on housing support rather than shelter access, “helps to ensure students have a bed of their own at night to sleep in, so they no longer have to come to school hungry and exhausted to our classrooms,” she said.
Delaware’s State Rental Assistance Program currently provides housing vouchers for families who have been referred by state agencies, such as the state’s Department of Health and Social Services or the Delaware Department of Services for Children, Youth, and their Families.
The Delaware State Housing Authority (DSHA) also offers housing subsidies to eligible low-income families in Kent and Sussex counties. The New Castle County Housing Authority also administers a federally funded housing choice voucher program.
Still, advocates say those programs do not provide enough homes to meet the growing size of the state’s homeless population.
Eller – who advocates for homeless families, in addition to teaching – noted that motel stays often split up larger families because they have to stay in multiple rooms.
New Castle County Community Services’ General Manager Carrie Casey also works with the county’s voucher program. During the May press conference, she said the county’s voucher program waiting list has been closed for four years.
“We have 8,000 people on the waiting list, so we need these tools, we need these subsidies,” Casey said during the event.
Families will not need referrals from state agencies under the new program. Instead, school districts and individual schools can make referrals to the Delaware State Housing Authority.
The state’s housing authority will also establish a set of criteria for voucher eligibility, such as a requirement that the head of the family have a job, or be actively seeking work or actively training for work.
Ellers noted that the budget item will not solve “the whole problem” but called it a “big step forward” for Delaware families experiencing homelessness.
The vouchers will be good for one year.
The post Delaware budgets new dollars for homeless families appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
In survey of more than 300 fired probationary employees, 95% reported continuing mental health effects
US federal workers laid off by the Trump administration say they are experiencing mental health effects, including PTSD-like symptoms, from losing their jobs, according to a new survey.
More than 300 fired probationary employees were surveyed, with 95% reporting ongoing mental health effects, according to 27UNIHTED, a network of former National Institute of Health (NIH) employees. Nearly half said they were experiencing PTSD-like symptoms, and a quarter are taking new medications to manage symptoms.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Dover City Council’s decision to fire City Manager Dave Hugg earlier this spring revealed messy disagreements between city officials. Now, Hugg’s decision to file a discrimination complaint could add costly layers of litigation to the saga in a city that is already stretched thin financially.
Former Dover City Manager Dave Hugg filed an age-based employment discrimination complaint against the city this spring in the midst of his contentious removal from the city’s top administrative position, marking his first step toward suing over his firing.
Hugg, 83, submitted the complaint to both the state Department of Labor’s office of anti-discrimination and the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), a city official with knowledge of the situation told Spotlight Delaware.
Once investigators conclude their inquiry into Hugg’s complaint, the former city manager will then be required to file a lawsuit against the city – regardless of whether investigators uphold his complaint.
Hugg originally accused Delaware’s capital city in mid-March of discrimination and wrongfully placing him on administrative leave under both state law – the Discrimination in Employment Act – and the federal Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the Daily State News first reported on June 2.
He then amended the complaint to wrongful termination based on age-based discrimination following a public hearing and subsequent vote by the Dover City Council to remove him in mid-April, the city official said.
Hugg and his attorney, Anthony Delcollo, did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment.
Hugg’s complaint, and the lawsuit that will follow, could represent yet another costly hurdle for the city of Dover, which recently had to raise property taxes to close a $7 million budget shortfall heading into the 2027 fiscal year.
The city has faced one controversy after another over the past year, including an attempt by the Dover Police Department to oust its chief, continued acrimony among city council members over a panhandling ordinance, and attempts to shut down one of the city’s few homeless shelters.
Dover City Attorney Dan Griffith confirmed the municipality had received the EEOC complaint.
He also said the city hired Keri Morris-Johnston, an attorney with the law firm Marshall Dennehey, to represent the city against Hugg’s complaint. Morris-Johnston declined Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment.
Hugg and Delcollo did not explicitly mention the EEOC complaint during the mid-April public hearing in which Hugg was formally fired.
However, during his testimony before the city council, Hugg suggested his age was the reason city council members wanted him gone.
“In writing, they really had no firm reasons, but it was very clear that they wanted me out,” Hugg said. “And the only thing I could think of was, ‘Dave, you’re old. It’s time for you to go.’”
Spotlight Delaware first reported the Dover City Council unanimously voted to place Hugg on leave in mid-March as a first step toward firing him.
Hugg, who spent 14 years as Smyrna’s town manager before coming to the city of Dover to work in the planning department in 2017, had been serving as the city manager since 2022.
The Dover City Charter requires the city manager to be given a public hearing, if they desire, and a written statement of reasons for their removal before city council can take a final vote on firing them.
Hugg accepted the option of a public hearing – the first time the city had held one of its kind, city leaders said at the time.
At the April 14 meeting, Delcollo, Hugg’s attorney, conducted an hours-long, trial-like presentation to make the case that the former city manager should keep the job.
Delcollo’s primary argument for Hugg to remain city manager included that the letter city council members wrote explaining the reasons for his removal lacked specific details or concrete evidence of the errors they alleged Hugg had committed.
He also tried to refute claims that Hugg had fostered a hostile work environment. He brought up a number of witnesses to testify to the former city manager’s character, including Mayor Robin Christiansen, state Rep. Bill Bush (D-Dover) and Kent County Levy Court President Joanne Masten.

Hugg said during the hearing he was called into a meeting in early February with City Council President Fred Neil, and Council Members Andre Boggerty and Gerald Rocha, in which they told him he could either retire, resign, or be fired.
“It’s pretty obvious to me that there was an effort being made to push me out the door, get me to leave and claim it was my decision,” he said.
City council members largely did not react to Delcollo and Hugg’s argument laid during the hearing, but ultimately voted to fire Hugg.
One exception was Neil, who said before casting his vote to fire Hugg that Neil himself is 92, so “age was not a factor.”
When asked about their reaction to Hugg’s discrimination complaint, city council members stood by their decision to fire the former city manager.
Christiansen, however, said he has concerns about the city council’s handling of the situation, and the “financial repercussions” for the city.
Councilman David Anderson said the city handled Hugg’s removal in the best way possible under the circumstances.
“My only reaction is that I think it’s unfortunate, and I think the city’s position will prevail,” he added.
Councilwoman Julia Pillsbury similarly said she believes it was time for Hugg to step down from the position, and “the time had come” for Assistant City Manager Sharon Duca – now the acting city manager – to take over.
Pillsbury added that Hugg accused her, specifically, of age-based discrimination when she told him in the past that Duca should take over as city manager. But she said her criticism of Hugg was purely about making way for another qualified candidate, and not a reflection of his age.
Duca has been serving as the acting city manager since Hugg was first placed on leave in March. The city posted a job listing for the city manager position on its website in April, but has since taken the posting down.
Christiansen, who testified on Hugg’s behalf during his public hearing, told Spotlight Delaware that city council members should have done a better job of discussing their concerns constructively with Hugg, instead of moving to a public hearing and removing him so quickly.
“I have great concerns about the liability that the city’s going to have in this matter,” Christiansen said. “Our budget is not in the greatest shape that it should be, so I think there was perhaps another way to handle this.”
Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.
The post Fired Dover city manager files discrimination complaint, first step toward lawsuit appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

No state has taken over as many local public school districts as Texas. Just since 2020, the Texas Education Agency has installed its own hand-picked leaders in eight districts. Four of those came this spring. At least another 10 are at risk of takeover, including, as of last week, the Austin Independent School District.
And to lead some of these districts, Texas is turning to a cadre of officials with ties to Mike Miles, the man the education agency chose in 2023 to oversee the Houston school district, the state’s largest. Miles is also a close ally of Mike Morath, Texas’ powerful education commissioner.
Already, at least two of these new district leaders have started to adopt policies similar to the contentious reforms Miles has pursued in Houston. He has touted improved test scores under his charge. Houston ISD had no F-rated campuses and fewer D-rated campuses in the state’s latest ratings compared with previous years. But Miles has also sparked widespread protests in response to the district’s rigid adherence to scripted lessons and repetitive testing, the firing of principals and teachers, mass school closures, and the conversion of schools into charters.
Miles did not respond to requests for comment from the Texas Observer. Houston ISD officials, in a statement to the Observer, said the district did not achieve better ratings by maintaining the status quo but “made difficult decisions” to improve academic performance, noting the majority of its campuses are now rated A or B.
These school districts whose new leaders have connections to Miles should prepare for “upheaval and chaos,” warned an elected Houston school board member.
“If anything doesn’t align with improving test scores, it will be taken away,” said Maria Benzon, who was elected in November to the Houston ISD board but is not permitted to serve under the ongoing state takeover. Under Miles, for example, Houston ISD eliminated librarian positions and turned some libraries into what Benzon called “detention centers,” because they are being used, in part, for students with behavioral issues. Morath, the TEA commissioner, has said the centers are used for more than just punishment.
Texas law allows the TEA to take control of districts with multiple failing school ratings or governance issues and to replace their superintendent and elected boards.
The recent takeovers include Beaumont, Lake Worth and Connally independent school districts, whose new superintendents worked under Miles when he was superintendent in Dallas ISD; two of them also worked for him in Houston. In Fort Worth ISD, one of the state’s largest districts, the new state-appointed superintendent chose Daniel Soliz as his second-in-command, another person who worked under Miles in Houston ISD. Soliz did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

At least two of the state’s new superintendent appointees — Sandi Massey, who now helms Beaumont ISD in southeast Texas, and Ena Meyers, TEA’s appointee for Lake Worth ISD, a small district near Fort Worth — also worked for the controversial Colorado-based charter network Third Future Schools, which Miles led prior to becoming superintendent in Houston. In April, the Observer revealed that Miles had an ongoing $120,000 annual consulting contract with the charter network, an arrangement that likely violated a new statewide ban on public school administrators’ moonlighting. After questions from the news organization, Miles canceled the contract. The district said Miles “remains fully focused on leading Houston ISD and delivering results for students.”
Third Future’s charter network is expanding around the state as districts turn campuses over to the nonprofit’s Texas subsidiary, often as a means to delay possible state takeover. The nonprofit did not respond to the Observer’s request for comment.
School district takeovers often involve layoffs, school closures and an increase in charter schools, as has happened in Houston, said Domingo Morel, an associate professor of political science and public service at New York University, who found Texas has had more district takeovers than any other state since 1989.
What’s unique to Texas, Morel said, is that the low bar required to take control has led to more takeovers. Since 2015, five consecutive failing state ratings at just one school can trigger a takeover, as occurred in Houston, which has 273 campuses.
Texas has also made it harder for districts to appeal these seizures. The Legislature passed a law in 2021 that barred districts from using public funds to challenge the education commissioner’s “final and unappealable” decision to take them over. The threshold that defines a failing school was also lowered. Then, in 2025, the state passed another law restricting districts from using public funds to sue the state when challenging its accountability ratings.
The state “is the player, the referee, the coach, the scorekeeper,” when it comes to rating schools and deciding when to seize control, said Steven Nelson, an associate professor of education policy and leadership at the University of Nevada who’s been studying school takeovers for more than a decade. He said he suspects the TEA-appointed leaders connected to Miles will also focus on standardized testing, which will result in “a narrow curriculum when all is said and done.”
The acceleration of takeovers, and the state’s increasingly stringent rating system, comes just as Texas rolls out a school voucher program that will, in most cases, award parents $10,000 in state funds to send their children to private schools. State accountability standards do not apply to private schools, where students don’t have to take the standardized tests required in Texas public schools.
TEA spokesperson Jake Kobersky said the agency does not expect the four school districts that have recently been taken over to adopt the same reforms that Miles implemented in Houston. “During an intervention, state law requires the agency to appoint a new superintendent and a board of managers. All other staffing and operational decisions are made locally by the district,” Kobersky said.
But last August, Morath told lawmakers other districts “should be copying the changes that we see in Houston.”
Massey, the new superintendent in Beaumont, has also cited the changes in Houston ISD as a blueprint.
“The model that we are implementing here is a very similar model to Houston. And why? Because of the success that Houston has had,” Massey said at a May 21 board meeting, referring to her time working with Miles at Houston ISD, where he selected her to be chief of schools.


Under Massey, the newly appointed board of managers voted at their first meeting to temporarily suspend a number of policies related to governance and hiring practices, including employees’ rights to present grievances to the board and principals’ ability to approve new hires without district permission. Board of managers member Jeff Wheeler said at the meeting, “We are requesting that they be suspended until the board can move, can more fully evaluate our local policies.”
The board has taken other steps that mirror what happened in Houston after the takeover there: On May 14, the district announced it was cutting 34 positions that support student mental health, and on May 21, it announced a high school would close.
Massey did not respond to the Observer’s requests for comment about whether she’s following the Houston playbook. Jackie Simien, a spokesperson for Beaumont ISD said, “Massey has worked alongside successful educational leaders with demonstrated results in improving systems, instruction, and student performance.”


Benzon, the elected Houston ISD board member, said Miles is sidelining parent and teacher voices in her district, and they are leaving in droves as a result. “They are trying to escape the New Education System and Miles’ bad policies,” Benzon added, referring to a program Miles transplanted from his former charter school network that is characterized by scripted lessons and repetitive testing. The Houston Chronicle reported the district “is losing students at an accelerated pace” under the takeover, spurring the district to shutter 12 schools ahead of the next school year.
In its statement to the Observer, Houston ISD cited a survey of families reporting a “favorable perception” of the district and said it retained many exemplary teachers.
Nelson and Morel said they believe the ultimate objective of any takeover is to disenfranchise local communities. Black and Hispanic students make up the majority of the population at all four of the districts now headed by Miles’ associates.
“It all begins at the school board level to then completely disempower the community,” Morel said.
On April 23, Houston ISD moved to fire a veteran teacher and president of the Houston Education Association teachers union after she protested requirements to comply with Miles’ New Education System.
Meyers, the new Lake Worth superintendent who at the time was Houston ISD’s deputy chief of strategic initiatives, testified in favor of the teacher’s termination.
“We do not allow our staff to make decisions about curriculum in a New Education System school or in Houston ISD,” Meyers said, according to a transcript of the hearing. “If they are not following expectations, we would not allow them to stay in HISD as an employee.”
Since taking over in Lake Worth, Meyers and the board of managers have temporarily suspended board policies related to governance procedures, hiring and employee assignments and schedules, similar to what Massey and her board did in Beaumont.
In response to the Observer’s inquiries about replicating Houston ISD’s reforms in her new role, Meyers wrote in an email that “Lake Worth ISD is very different from Houston ISD. We are a district of five schools serving a much smaller community, so our approach must reflect the unique needs of our students, staff, and families.”
Her email continued, “I believe educators should learn from successful practices wherever they exist.”
As in Beaumont and Lake Worth, the takeover in Fort Worth ISD has been characterized by swift changes. After less than a month under the new leadership, the 68,000-student district has suspended local board governance and hiring policies and has cut dozens of staff positions, including those supporting English-language learners.
Parent organizer Zach Leonard said a new instructional model Fort Worth ISD is rolling out in 19 schools, called “Elevate,” is essentially the same as what Miles has done in Houston, an assertion district spokesperson Tierney Tinnin refuted.
Leonard, along with other parents with his organization, notes the similarities between the programs: “scripted slide-by-slide lessons, rigid timed instruction, and ‘demonstrations of learning’ reduced to data points.”
“This isn’t education reform,” Leonard said, referring to Miles’ model of learning being transported to Fort Worth. “It’s a franchise being handed to our children without a vote.”
The post Texas State Takeover of Local School Districts Expands, Raising Concerns appeared first on ProPublica.
If you want to monitor your distance, calories burned, heart rate, sleep or stress, these fitness trackers have got you covered.

A group of lawmakers demanded answers from the White House this week following a ProPublica investigation revealing that a top aide to the president intervened to secure a $620 million Pentagon loan to a startup linked to the president’s eldest son.
ProPublica’s reporting “reveals a staggering level of corruption and influence peddling that superseded this process, enriching the President’s son at the expense of U.S. national security and taxpayer dollars,” wrote the group of Democratic lawmakers, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Mazie Hirono of Hawaii as well as Reps. Jason Crow of Colorado and Mike Levin of California.
Last year, the Pentagon announced the loan to Vulcan Elements, a small North Carolina startup, about three months after Donald Trump Jr.’s venture capital firm took a stake of undisclosed size in the rare-earth magnet company.
Interviews and Defense Department records reviewed by ProPublica show that the request to lend to the firm was made by Peter Navarro, who serves as the president’s senior counselor for trade and manufacturing and is a friend of Trump Jr.’s.
Of the dozens of companies the Pentagon was considering funding at the time, Vulcan’s was the only deal initiated by a top aide to the president, an official at the Pentagon who was not authorized to speak publicly told ProPublica.
After defense officials got the White House request, they asked Pentagon staff to move at an unusually rapid pace, said another person who was involved in the deal at the Pentagon but not authorized to speak about it.
“The call came from the White House: We have to get this done,” the person said.
In their letter, addressed to White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, the lawmakers asked a series of questions about Navarro’s involvement in the deal, including whether he intervened at someone else’s direction, if the president was aware or involved, and who Navarro communicated with at the Pentagon.
They also asked more broadly about whether White House officials have communicated with federal agency officials about other companies linked to the Trump family.
“The American public — and service members that are in harm’s way — expect that the DoD contracting process is fair, unbiased, and competitive to ensure that only the best companies, providing only the best products, receive taxpayer dollars,” the lawmakers wrote.
Navarro, who served as trade adviser in the president’s first term, and Trump Jr. have formed a close bond in recent years. The president’s son visited Navarro in prison while he served time for defying a subpoena from lawmakers investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. Trump Jr. was one of the small group of people Navarro dedicated his latest book to for having “my back when it was against the wall.” And a week before the Vulcan deal was announced, Trump Jr. hosted Navarro on his streaming show, encouraging his nearly 2 million subscribers to buy Navarro’s book. That interview was not long after word came down from Navarro to Pentagon staff to make the massive loan to Vulcan, one of the defense officials involved in the deal said.
Asked to respond to the lawmakers’ allegations and ProPublica’s reporting, Navarro in a text message wrote “Staggering level of hyperbole. More fake news” but did not elaborate. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.
Navarro did not respond to questions from ProPublica sent to him directly before the initial article was published. But in a post on X afterward, he called the story “fake news on steroids.”
Vulcan has not commented. A White House spokesperson had said in a statement that the administration is working “in the best interest of the American people,” adding, “The President’s entire team, including Senior Counselor Navarro and officials at the Department of War, is working together and with private industry to secure America’s critical mineral supply chain at Trump Speed.” Trump Jr.’s spokesperson said last week that the president’s son does not discuss companies he has invested in with federal government officials and did not speak to Navarro about Vulcan. He “has no knowledge about how this deal came together,” the spokesperson said. A spokesperson for 1789 Capital, the venture firm where Trump Jr. is a partner, said it also played no role in Vulcan getting the loan and did not learn about the deal before it was public.
“No company receives preferential treatment,” a Pentagon spokesperson said. “Outside affiliations, investors, or political connections play absolutely no role in the Department’s funding decisions.”
The loan was part of the Pentagon’s effort to fund companies that could help the U.S. reduce dependence on China’s critical mineral supply chains. It represented a big win for Vulcan and its investors. Estimates of the company’s valuation grew tenfold after the deal was announced.
The deal is one of many actions by the administration of President Donald Trump that have helped companies in which his family holds stakes. Government contracts and other benefits have gone to various Trump-linked companies. But ProPublica’s reporting on the Vulcan loan represented the first time the awarding of a contract from a federal agency was directly linked to White House intervention.
A number of other lawmakers also criticized the Vulcan deal following ProPublica’s investigation.
Sen. Raphael Warnock, a Georgia Democrat, called it “corruption to the highest degree,” alleging on X: “They are looting this country. Dismantling it, selling it for parts, and lining their own pockets.”
Sen. Patty Murray, a Washington Democrat, called for a congressional investigation. “It’s just nonstop corruption from this White House, and Republicans in Congress are content to twiddle their thumbs and look right in the other direction,” she posted on X. “Congress should be investigating and putting a stop to this kind of crooked self-dealing—not enabling it.”
The post Lawmakers Demand Answers After the White House Initiated a $620M Loan to a Firm Tied to Donald Trump Jr. appeared first on ProPublica.
Trade minister says Australia has ‘robust, comprehensive and world-leading legislation addressing forced labour and modern slavery’
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Australia is among dozens of countries facing a 12.5% trade tariff from the Trump administration for allegedly failing to prevent imports of goods made by slave labour.
The US trade representative, Jamieson Greer, listed Australia among 54 economies that “failed to impose and effectively enforce a prohibition on the importation of goods produced with forced labor” following an investigation into their practices.
Continue reading...Energy and military sites targeted as guests gather for economic forum where Putin is due to speak on Friday
Ukrainian drones hit energy and military sites in St Petersburg early on Wednesday, hours before international guests gathered for the city’s flagship economic forum, in a blow to Vladimir Putin.
Several long-range drones crashed into oil storage facilities after Russian air defences failed to shoot them down. There were loud explosions and black smoke rose high above the city from the blazing oil terminal.
Continue reading...Global cooperation on nuclear disarmament looks even further away Expert comment jon.wallace
The Iran war inhibited progress at the Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference. But so did P5 countries’ resistance to talking seriously about disarmament.
The 2026 Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) Review Conference concluded on 22 May without a consensus outcome document. It is the third time in a row that states parties have failed to agree on a review of the treaty’s implementation and progress, or to set out a plan to support and strengthen the treaty’s implementation. However, this failure was different from the last.
In 2022, it was Russia alone that blocked agreement, following its invasion of Ukraine. This year, multiple countries were prepared to hinder progress. The fractures ran across the ‘P5’ – the UN Security Council permanent members, all of whom are classed as ‘nuclear-weapon’ states and are the only countries permitted to possess nuclear weapons under the treaty. (Other nuclear armed countries are not parties to the treaty).
But what happened in New York was not a targeted disruption. It was the latest sign of a non-proliferation system under strain in an increasingly dysfunctional environment.
The primary cause of failure was the Iran conflict. Countries could not agree on adding a paragraph addressing Iran’s non-compliance with its NPT obligations and stating that Iran could never acquire nuclear weapons. That remained bracketed in the final draft outcome document, meaning consensus had not been reached.
Conference President Đỗ Hùng Việt, whose management of an extraordinarily difficult process deserves credit, chose not to force states into a public confrontation on the issue. When he asked the conference to adopt at least a procedural consensus on strengthening the review process, Russia, China, and Iran blocked that too.
Even if Iran had not been the breaking point, something else might have been. Other fault lines were close to the surface: Russia pushed for the deletion of text on North Korea’s weapons programme, prompting South Korean objections. Disputes over language on Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, still under Russian occupation, remained unresolved.
A pattern is emerging, where review conferences become a forum for airing regional and bilateral grievances. That reflects a broader shift in how the major nuclear powers approach multilateral institutions.
When powerful states believe that their security interests are better served by bilateral leverage than by collective frameworks, consensus-based multilateral processes become difficult to sustain.
The failure to agree a final document obscured another serious problem. Even the draft that was on the table represented a significant weakening of prior commitments.
New START, a US–Russia nuclear arms control agreement, expired in February with nothing to replace it. That leaves the world’s two largest nuclear arsenals without any agreed limits for the first time in over fifty years.
China’s nuclear build-up is accelerating. The US has threatened to resume nuclear testing and has accused both Russia and China of conducting tests. France has announced an expansion of its nuclear programme.
In this environment, the five recognized nuclear weapon states arrived in New York and set about forcing the removal of language calling on them to begin negotiations on disarmament – or even to pursue discussions urgently.
Nuclear weapons states removed even more mild requests from the outcome document – for more transparency and accountability on their part. The final draft vaguely called for constructive dialogue that might facilitate future progress. Many non-nuclear weapons states will interpret this as a signal – that beyond ensuring other countries do not acquire nuclear weapons, the P5 are no longer committed to the wider NPT regime.
The grand bargain at the heart of the NPT – that non-nuclear states forgo nuclear weapons in exchange for progress on disarmament by the P5 – is under severe strain, and the cracks are showing.
There were still meaningful signals from the wider membership. Countries pushed back against weakened disarmament language. There was strong opposition to any resumption of nuclear testing, with many states defending the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. The fact that so many non-nuclear states remained engaged and vocal matters. But collective engagement can only do so much if the P5 are not listening.
The next NPT Review Conference is in 2031. The risk is that the underlying conditions deteriorate further during the intervening five years, proliferation pressures mount, and the case for investing political capital in the NPT becomes progressively harder to make.
Avoiding that outcome requires a practical assessment of what went wrong and what can be done differently.
An important lesson is that review conferences cannot be the primary forum for adjudicating active crises. When countries demand that a consensus-based multilateral process takes sides on contentious regional issues like the wars in Iran or Ukraine, deadlock is almost guaranteed.
An alternative is possible. In the leadup to the 1985 Review Conference, nuclear arsenals were almost at their Cold War height, Israel had destroyed a safeguarded nuclear reactor in Iraq, and there were serious non-proliferation concerns relating to several non-parties (such as South Africa and Brazil).
In this unsecure environment, the United States and Soviet Union famously set their differences aside and focused on strengthening the system by cooperating to reach consensus, rather than weaponizing it. That was a long time ago, but it is a reminder that cooperative behaviour during times of high geopolitical tension is possible.
The P5 need to strengthen engagement with one another on nuclear risk reduction through the ongoing ‘P5 process’ – a diplomatic forum between the countries. Dialogue has stalled in recent years. But this is a crucial route for progress on even modest confidence-building measures on doctrine, on new technologies, and on crisis communication.
The P5 demonstrating a willingness to engage in good faith, and treating the NPT as worth preserving, would itself send a signal. Seriously engaging with transparency and accountability initiatives put forward during the review conference would be a good start and is relatively low pressure and low-hanging fruit in terms of compliance.
Flat-top grills and griddles can do things most standard grated grills can't. I asked an expert if going flat lives up to the hype.
Son of deposed shah forced to distance himself from once-dreaded Savak as some of his ‘fascistic’ supporters glorify it
For decades, the Savak was seen as the most hated symbol of repression that kept Iran’s last shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, in power – and a main driving force behind the revolutionary fervor that toppled him in 1979.
Now the deposed monarch’s son, Reza Pahlavi, has been forced to distance himself from the once-dreaded security agency after some of his most vociferous supporters glorified it as the defining emblem in their drive to install him on the throne in a royal restoration.
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On any given night, thousands of people sleep on the streets in Portland, Oregon. They seek shelter in tents, bushes and overpasses in a city that has struggled with one of the worst housing crises in the country.
Portland, like many cities, has raced to increase its supply of affordable housing by turning to a federal program that’s existed since the 1980s: the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. It provides up to $15 billion worth of tax credits a year nationally to help developers build apartments. Portland supplemented the federal construction money with local dollars, creating incentives that were hard to turn down.
But to meet the affordability requirements, all the developers needed to do in most cases was put rents within reach of someone earning 60% of median income, an earnings threshold that equates to about $75,000 annually for a family of four. It turns out that this amount of rent is now close to what the typical Portland landlord charges without any subsidy.
The result of the federal tax credit has been a glut of apartments costing renters on the order of about $1,400 a month for a one-bedroom. That’s a manageable outlay for a family making $75,000 but nearly half the monthly income of someone who earns $35,000 at the local minimum wage.
Nearly 2,000 of Portland’s subsidized units sat vacant and unused at last count, as The Oregonian and Willamette Week have reported. The same situation has repeated from Seattle to the San Francisco Bay Area to Denver.
Economists and other academic researchers have been warning for decades that this was precisely the sort of problem that the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit was likely to create.
Studies have concluded that the program, which currently supports nine out of every 10 subsidized units built in America, is an expensive and ineffective way to house people who can’t afford it. Researchers have said it doesn’t subsidize housing deeply enough to reach truly low-income renters, so it produces housing in markets and at income levels that already have a surplus instead of filling a shortage.
Independent researchers have found little evidence it’s expanded the overall housing supply beyond what the market would have produced without it. Its complexity has birthed an industry of affordable-housing-focused developers, investors, lawyers and accounting specialists who profit off the tax credit. Between 1991 and 2024, a dozen studies concluded that many more people could benefit if the money were spent on rental vouchers, which let consumers, rather than the government, decide which landlords get tax subsidies. Estimates went as high as twice the impact for the dollar.
“The evidence is telling us this program is lacking its reason to exist,” said Kirk McClure, an emeritus professor of urban planning at the University of Kansas and a leading critic of the tax credit. “We should reform the program to make it work better.”
McClure and others have brought their concerns to Congress. He recommended diverting the money into rental vouchers for tenants, or else changing the tax credit’s rules to reward only developers who build units in genuinely short supply: those affordable to people at the very bottom of the income ladder.
The ideas never went anywhere. Instead, money for the tax credit has grown at a much faster rate than rental assistance vouchers since 2000, data from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. Treasury shows. Rock-solid support from industries that benefit from the tax credit and both parties in Congress has made it the linchpin of U.S. housing policy.
“The program leverages housing market forces, entrepreneurial innovation and private accountability to increase housing supply,” former HUD Secretary Ben Carson told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in 2025.
Among the tax credit’s other prominent backers are two Northwest Democrats on the Senate Committee on Finance, Ron Wyden of Oregon and Maria Cantwell of Washington. Cantwell has introduced bills to increase funding for the existing tax credit, and Wyden has proposed expanding the target of the credits to benefit not just low-income families, but also middle-income households — the opposite of what McClure says needs to happen.
Both Wyden and Cantwell say Congress should hold more hearings to ensure the program is run efficiently, but they also defended it in written statements to Oregon Public Broadcasting and ProPublica.
“There isn’t any silver bullet to the housing crisis in Oregon and around the country,” Wyden’s statement said, “but the low-income housing tax credit has been the most successful federal housing construction program on the books for decades and is the only housing program Republicans haven’t tried to gut.”

Indeed, President Donald Trump has sought to cut housing programs such as rent assistance. But as part of his spending package last year, Congress approved the biggest expansion of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit in decades.
“That’s a mistake,” McClure said.
It won’t alleviate homelessness or the housing shortage for people at the lowest incomes, he said. It will just create more buildings that compete with the market and with one another for the same pool of renters.
McClure recounted seeing a brand-new affordable housing complex near his home in Kansas not long ago with a sign enticing tenants of another government-backed complex down the street, promoting newer units at the same price.
“So the taxpayers of the United States subsidized the creation of this new property to help bankrupt another federally subsidized property,” he said. “That is stupidity 101. We have got to be better stewards of the American taxpayer’s dollar.”
Oregon’s affordable housing production has skyrocketed in recent years. So have rents and homelessness.
Over the past decade, Oregon lawmakers doubled funding for the state’s affordable housing tax credit and started offering low-interest and deferred loans for construction.
Voters in the Portland area, meanwhile, passed housing bonds totaling more than $900 million. Developers can use that money to secure federal housing tax credits. The state went from building about 1,800 affordable units a year pre-pandemic to nearly 5,000 last year.
Industries that benefit from the tax credit say it’s the engine that makes that kind of building boom possible.
The Affordable Housing Tax Credit Coalition, representing lenders, developers and others in the industry, has called the program “the most effective tool we have to meet the affordable housing needs in rural, suburban, and urban areas.”
Jennifer Schwartz, director of tax and housing advocacy for the National Council of State Housing Agencies, which advocates for the tax credit and other housing programs administered by states, said the housing market by itself won’t produce a big enough supply of housing within reach for low-income renters. That goes for even those who receive federal rent vouchers, she said.
“It costs too much to build housing to turn around and rent it to households who are low-income households,” Schwartz said, “unless you have some sort of incentive like the housing credit.”
But in Portland, all that new construction hasn’t made a dent in the city’s affordability crisis. A report from the Portland Housing Bureau in 2025 found that rent and home sale prices were growing faster than incomes, even as the city’s vacancy rate was also rising.
The vacancy rate was roughly 7.6% as of May, according to Aaron Kirk Douglas, director of market intelligence at the Portland-based brokerage HFO Investment Real Estate. Vacancies are even higher for ostensibly affordable units: 11%, leaving nearly 2,000 units unused. Housing industry experts consider 5% vacancy to be a baseline for ordinary turnover.
The time it takes to verify that a tenant’s income meets the tax credit’s requirements and prep units for move-in played a role in the struggle to fill vacant units built with the federal subsidy. But housing advocates say the biggest barrier is price.
The gap between market-rate rents and affordable housing rents has shrunk, and not just in Portland.
By one industry estimate, in more than a dozen U.S. cities at least 40% of affordable housing was competing with market-rate buildings rates in 2025.
In the Portland suburb of Gresham, federal rules cap a two-bedroom apartment built with the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit at $1,675 a month. Zillow puts the equivalent market-rate apartment at $1,525.
Operators of a new $53.8 million development in northeast Portland, built with the tax credit and the local housing bond, had trouble filling studio and one-bedroom apartments whose affordable rents were near market rate. They began offering a month of free rent for new tenants, according to a March report from the committee that oversees the region’s housing bond.
Affordable housing providers, which in Portland are predominantly nonprofit organizations, are also increasing their marketing budgets to attract renters away from market-rate buildings.
“The idea that we’re competing with the market would have been unfathomable a few years ago,” said Margaret Salazar, CEO of Reach Community Development Corporation, one of Portland’s largest affordable housing providers.
Salazar, who led Oregon’s state housing agency during the COVID-19 pandemic and later worked as a regional director for HUD, is a longtime proponent of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. But she said the people who can afford to rent apartments the tax credit has produced would rather move into a market-rate apartment for similar money and with fewer rules and restrictions.
“It’s becoming a slimmer and slimmer slice of residents” that Reach can serve, she said. “Suddenly we’re competing for this little slice of people.”
Meanwhile, a substantial group of Portland-area residents remain priced out.
HUD data shows more than 90,000 households in Multnomah County earn less than the 60% of median income that a family would typically need to afford a federally subsidized unit. (The precise number of families who can’t afford “affordable” units is unclear because it depends on variations in household size, actual rent levels and other subsidies that might reduce rents further.)
Salazar said that right now Reach can rent to people at lower income levels only if it can find additional subsidies such as housing vouchers — and funding for vouchers is so limited that only 1 in 4 people who qualify are able to get them.
Despite the convergence of rent levels in market-rate and subsidized housing, supporters of the tax credit say it remains valuable because the units it subsidizes are constrained from raising rents faster than incomes — and there’s no guarantee market-rate rents will remain at this level in the future.
But Steve Rudman, who ran the local housing authority in the Portland area for more than a decade, said the fact that the tax credit is now delivering market-rate housing rather than housing for the poorest households raises an existential question for the federal program.
“What is this thing really doing?” Rudman said. “What is the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit?”
Criticism of the federal construction credit has been a near constant since it began.
In the Reagan era, housing experts began to worry rents would become unaffordable amid deep cuts to housing programs and the drafting of the Tax Reform Act, which eliminated several tax shelters for real estate.
McClure, an economist for the city of Boston at the time, worked with others to design a tax credit that would reward affordable housing production.
“It was meant to be a three-year stopgap until we came up with something better,” he said.
The idea was to incorporate low-income housing into market-rate housing construction that was already taking place. Developers could receive a tax credit if they capped rents for a certain portion of the apartments in their building, and they could continue to rent the rest at any amount they chose.
McClure crafted letters for Boston’s mayor to send Congress in support of the idea. His analysis helped decide the subsidy amount. Developers could offset 70% of the cost of new builds or 30% of the cost of a rehab. Congress signed off in 1986.
Almost immediately, the program diverged from the outcomes McClure had envisioned.

He and other drafters of the tax credit had thought developers would use it to offer deep discounts on a small number of units, allowing them to charge market rate on the rest. But developers found it more profitable to subsidize 100% of their units at the smallest allowable discount, a rent affordable to households at 60% of median income.
In 1992, as lawmakers considered making the 6-year-old Low-Income Housing Tax Credit permanent, an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office declared the program “unlikely to substantially increase the supply of affordable housing” and “more suited to the needs of investors than poor renters.”
For one, the tax credits cost a lot to administer, congressional economists said. They also pointed to evidence that subsidized housing production dampened market-rate construction.
Congress was preparing to give developers $3 billion through the tax credit as of 1992. Putting that money into housing vouchers instead, the CBO concluded, would help 550,000 households, more than twice as many as would benefit from the construction tax credit. The numbers echoed findings from an earlier HUD evaluation of tax credits vs. vouchers.
Congress made the tax credit permanent a year later.
As time wore on, McClure’s emerging doubts about a program he originally expected to be temporary only deepened.
When the Fannie Mae Foundation hired him in 1997 to analyze how the tax credit was doing, he concluded it was a “very inefficient subsidy delivery mechanism” that didn’t produce as much housing as it should have.
Other studies came to similar conclusions as McClure, HUD and the Congressional Budget Office. At least five found the tax credit does little to increase the overall housing supply.
The Government Accountability Office noted problems with the program in 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018, finding it lacked basic oversight to show the federal funds worked as intended. A 2017 investigation by NPR and Frontline documented numerous examples of waste and fraud, including one developer pocketing tax credits without building the required housing.
“Given the available evidence on program performance, we should certainly not expand the tax credit program,” Edgar Olsen, professor emeritus of economics at the University of Virginia, wrote in a 2017 article for the American Enterprise Institute. “The existing evidence argues for terminating it.”
There are some critics within Congress. Rep. Glenn Grothman, a Republican from Wisconsin, introduced a bill to kill the program last year, calling it a “cash grab for developers and banks.” But the bill went nowhere.
Olsen, like McClure, remains adamant today about what he considers the tax program’s uselessness. In a recent interview, he told OPB and ProPublica that he’s urged policymakers, in academic articles and in testimony, to re-examine whether the program has any value at all.
“How often do they talk to people like me or like Kirk McClure? The answer is almost never,” Olsen said. “What they hear from are people who represent the financial interest of the industry, and so they want more money to be spent on this.”
The post A Low-Income Housing Program Is Pouring Billions Into Housing Many People Can’t Afford appeared first on ProPublica.
Come January, pregnancy care physician billing codes will change from a bundled system to an à la carte one.
Records show that Trump's first administration opted not to save DMs in its library archives, raising questions about compliance with the Presidential Records Act.
Even for nonbelievers like me, the pope has become a reassuring – and all too rare – voice of moral clarity
Do you remember the early 2000s, when Silicon Valley buzzed with idealism and tech bros told us they were going to save the world? “Don’t be evil” was Google’s unofficial motto; its 2004 IPO prospectus declared that doing “good things for the world” was more important than “short term gains”. Mark Zuckerberg similarly wrote in Facebook’s 2012 IPO letter that the social network was “built to accomplish a social mission – to make the world more open and connected”.
As was obvious to anyone paying attention, this was all performative bullshit. Nevertheless, it’s hard not to feel nostalgic about that period of time – which came to a definitive end in 2018, with the Cambridge Analytica scandal. By and large, billionaires and CEOs still cared what the hoi polloi thought of them. They were self-aware enough to realize that, even with all their billions, there’s a lot more of us than there are of them.
Continue reading...Will New York end their long wait for a title? Our contributors pick the winner, key players and dark horses before the season’s grand finale tips off
Where to even begin? Victor Wembanyama, the brightest young star in the NBA, appears on the biggest stage imaginable (in this galaxy, at least ... I’m not sure how big the stages are where he comes from), while one of the most storied franchises in American sports has its return to relevance cemented. And, maybe most importantly of all, The Garden, baby! CDL
Continue reading...Watchdog makes ruling on search summaries after publishers complain about drop in click-through traffic and revenue
Online publishers and news organisations are now able to block their content from appearing in Google’s AI summaries in UK search results, the British competition watchdog has announced.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said the new requirement would “put publishers, like news organisations, in a stronger position to negotiate content deals with Google”.
Continue reading... | Hey guys! I’m looking to sale my GT S that I had since March this year. I never have time to ride as much as I would like so I only have 9 miles one it. It comes with the Full Send bundle and original box. I’m located in the Northern Virginia area for a local meetup or could ship it if that’s preferred. Asking $2500 plus shipping and comes with everything below. - Hyper charger [link] [comments] |
The economy was slowing even before the Middle East conflict and interest rate hikes started to bite, while the boom in datacentres was a rare bright spot
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The economy slowed sharply in early 2026 and Australians’ living standards are once again going backwards.
At the risk of upsetting the treasurer by “talking down the economy”, as he put it, there wasn’t all that much to love in the latest national accounts.
Continue reading...With many votes still to be counted in California and little certainty in most of Tuesday’s closest-watched primary elections, one early pattern is taking shape: Progressive candidates for Congress across the state are failing to top their more moderate Democratic opponents.
In the race for Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s seat in San Francisco, the YIMBY state Sen. Scott Wiener secured a comfortable victory with more than 40 percent of the vote, according to The Associated Press, which made the early call. Local politician Connie Chan earned the second spot, leaving Saikat Chakrabarti, a prominent figure in national progressive politics, off the general election ballot in November.
In Los Angeles, AIPAC-backed incumbent Rep. Jimmy Gomez easily won a spot on the November ballot, according to a call from the AP. Despite the election-day revelation of a House Ethics Committee investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against him, Gomez fended off a challenge from the progressive insurgent Angela Gonzales-Torres by a wide margin. Results are still coming in, but Gonzales-Torres appears likely to face off against Gomez again in the general election thanks to California’s “jungle primary” system, in which the top two candidates move on to a runoff.
Meanwhile in Sacramento, longtime establishment Democrat Rep. Doris Matsui is currently leading progressive City Councilmember Mai Vang, though that race remains too close to call.
In these three solidly blue districts, each race has been viewed as part of a wider battle for control between a Democratic establishment seen as faltering in the face of the second Trump administration and a progressive wing that has grown in influence in the decade since the 2016 presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. — and argues the establishment strategy gave rise to Trump in the first place.
Chakrabarti, Gonzales-Torres, and Vang all had the backing of Justice Democrats, a group that supports progressive challengers in primary elections and helped elect members of the Squad in Congress. Earlier in the evening, Justice Democrats notched a victory when Dr. Adam Hamawy, a former combat surgeon who volunteered in Gaza and faced a barrage of attacks that often peddled in Islamophobic tropes, comfortably beat a crowded field of Democrats in New Jersey’s 12th Congressional District.
Justice Democrats had hoped to elevate Chakrabarti, one of its co-founders, to Congress. After earning his fortune at the tech firm Stripe, the centimillionaire worked on Bernie Sanders’s 2016 presidential campaign and became chief of staff to New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Chakrabarti grew to become an influential activist in progressive politics, but he was often a divisive figure, known for riling Democrats online and antagonizing Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who he hoped to succeed. Pelosi, who won her last reelection with 82 percent of the vote in her district, ultimately endorsed Chan, a San Francisco Board of Supervisors member. When The AP called the race for Chan, she held a lead of 13 percent over Chakrabarti.
Chakrabarti, Chan, and Wiener all jockeyed to be seen as the progressive in the race: All three campaigns call for Medicare for All, the overturning of Citizens United, and abolishing or defunding Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Yet differing views on Israel’s genocide of Palestinians and wealth taxes on billionaires, which Wiener and some of his richest tech-and-development-friendly backers oppose, became notable wedge issues.
While Wiener and Chan have come to embrace placing conditions on offensive weapons to Israel, Chakrabarti advocated for a total arms embargo on the country. Wiener’s previous support for pro-Israel bills in the state legislature and his earlier opposition to a ceasefire in Gaza drew intense scrutiny during the race, and anti-genocide and anti-Zionist protesters at times disrupted his events on the campaign trail.
The weekend before the primary election, the race was jolted with final-hour reporting from Drop Site News that revealed the pro-Israel lobby giant, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, and its offshoot, Democratic Majority for Israel, had been funneling money into a super PAC supporting Chan. Chakrabarti used the revelation to claim that AIPAC had attempted to keep him out of the general election because of his support for Palestinian human rights, suggesting a degree of collusion between Chan and AIPAC.
Chan, in turn, rejected Chakrabarti’s claims as “absurd and laughable.” She restated her campaign pledge against accepting AIPAC donations and her advocacy for Palestinian rights.
In Los Angeles, Gonzales-Torres, a community organizer, also made her opposition to the pro-Israel lobby and Israel’s genocide in Gaza a major part of her platform against Gomez. Despite the incumbent’s earlier vows that he would try to rid his fundraising of corporate backers in favor of grassroots support, Gomez’s previous two reelection bids in the 34th Congressional District have been fueled by special interest groups, such as the cryptocurrency industry and AIPAC and DMFI.
AIPAC has continued to support Gomez in the current election cycle, pouring nearly $150,000 into his 2026 run, according to Federal Election Commission filings. Gomez has consistently voted to send military aid to Israel.
The race was rocked after CNN reported Tuesday that Gomez was under investigation by the House Ethics Committee over allegations of sexual misconduct against Gomez. The news came months after the New York Post alleged Gomez, who is married, was spotted kissing the staffer of another member of Congress in 2023 at a party hosted by then-Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif. Swalwell resigned from Congress and ended a California gubernatorial campaign earlier this spring after reporters unearthed allegations of sexual assault from a former staffer, as well as accusations of sexual misconduct from other women, which he denies.
Gonzales-Torres had previously called into question Gomez’s close relationship to Swalwell and asked whether Gomez, who backed Swalwell’s campaign for governor, had knowledge of the incidents at the time. On Tuesday, she wrote on X that if Gomez “has nothing to hide, he should have no concern. But if there was any criminal behavior that he witnessed, participated in, or helped conceal, we will find out and we will help ensure accountability and justice.”
Gomez, in a statement to CNN, admitted to “personal mistakes outside my marriage that have caused real pain to my wife and family,” but insisted he did not break the law or House ethics rules.
Gomez has thrice fended off another progressive challenger, attorney David Kim, who in 2020 trailed by 6 percentage points in the November general election and came only 3 points from winning in the 2022 general election. Gonzales-Torres, who had previously volunteered for Kim’s campaign, believes her campaign can build on that success and defeat Gomez.
In California’s 7th Congressional District, Vang is facing off against a powerful Democratic family. Matsui has held her House seat since 2005, winning after the death of her husband, Bob Matsui, who had represented Sacramento in Congress since 1979.
Vang’s campaign criticized Matsui’s acceptance of corporate donations and painted Matsui as out-of-touch with a transforming Democratic voter base. Vang championed policies that have animated the left, such as Medicare for All, abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Green New Deal. At the time of publication, Vang is in a tight battle with a pro-Trump Republican candidate, Zachariah Wooden, a student at California State University, Sacramento.
Many primaries across the state, such as the Matsui–Vang contest, remain too close to call, with huge numbers of votes left to count and final positions far from settled. That includes the race for California governor, where moderate Democrat Xavier Becerra and Republican commentator Steve Hilton are neck-and-neck, with billionaire Tom Steyer, around whom progressives had coalesced, trailing in third at the time of publication. In the LA mayor’s race, incumbent Mayor Karen Bass secured her spot in a November runoff, with reality TV personality Spencer Pratt leading Nithya Raman, a progressive councilmember.
Other progressive candidates led their races on Tuesday, including Jane Kim, who is running for the state’s insurance commissioner with the endorsement of Sen. Bernie Sanders. In Los Angeles, city attorney candidate Marissa Roy, who drew support from the city’s progressive base, is ahead of the incumbent, Hydee Feldstein Soto, who caught heat for defending LAPD’s brutal tactics against protesters and for deciding not to charge members of a Zionist mob that attacked UCLA’s pro-Palestine encampment.
This is a developing story and will continue to be updated.
The post Establishment Dems Stave Off the Left in Key California Congressional Primaries appeared first on The Intercept.
Prospects for a U.S.-Iran deal appear to be dimming as the war between Israel and Hezbollah grinds on despite Trump saying they agreed to stop fighting.
GRENOBLE, France, June 3, 2026 — Quobly, a French quantum computing company, today announced the closing of a €115 million Series A financing to accelerate the industrialization of its silicon-based quantum computers and bring its first commercial product to market by the end of 2026.
The round is led by Bpifrance, SEALSQ and STMicroelectronics, with participation from the European Innovation Council (EIC), Blast, ALIAD (Air Liquide Venture Capital) and existing investor Innovacom, bringing together leading industrial, sovereign and deeptech investors. Existing shareholders also include the CEA, CNRS, Quantonation and Supernova Invest. Long-time investor Bpifrance is participating through the Deep Tech 2030 fund, managed on behalf of the French government as part of the France 2030 initiative.
This financing will support continued R&D, industrialization efforts and international commercial expansion. Quobly, bringing semiconductor-grade manufacturing and industrialization to quantum computing, plans to deploy its first commercial quantum computer through the cloud by the end of 2026 under its Alloy product line.
From Technology Validation to Commercial Deployment at Scale
This Series A marks a key step in Quobly’s roadmap to industrial-scale quantum computing, transitioning from early validation to the production of its first commercial systems.
Alloy Pioneer, the first computer in Quobly’s Alloy product line, is designed for early adopters in high-performance computing and research environments. The system will be accessible through the cloud in 2026, before deployment within HPC infrastructures in 2027.
Quobly’s quantum computers are designed to integrate into existing HPC and data-center infrastructures, with a compatible footprint, power supply and utility requirements, enabling straightforward deployment. Alloy Pioneer is accessible through Alloy Forge, Quobly’s quantum application development environment, enabling users to develop and validate applications under realistic hardware constraints.
The company will in particular:
These efforts will be supported by the continued expansion of Quobly’s hardware, control electronics and software stack, in line with its system-level co-design approach.
This Series A follows Quobly’s €19 million seed phase (2023-2025), during which the company demonstrated the feasibility of developing silicon qubits within semiconductor manufacturing processes, and established a system-level architecture integrating device, control and software layers.
Scaling Quantum Computing Through Semiconductor Manufacturing
Quobly’s approach is based on the use of FD-SOI technology on 300 mm wafers, leveraging established semiconductor manufacturing processes to address key challenges in scalability, yield and reproducibility. The company develops silicon qubits designed for dense integration and compatibility with industrial fabrication standards.
As part of this strategy, Quobly leverages semiconductor-grade capabilities across the broader semiconductor ecosystem through strategic partnerships with industrial leaders including STMicroelectronics, Air Liquide, Soitec and Orano. These collaborations accelerate the transfer of Quobly’s quantum technologies into advanced manufacturing environments and support the industrial integration of process control, materials engineering, cryogenics and yield optimization from the earliest stages of deployment.
This industrial-first approach sets Quobly apart by prioritizing manufacturability and technology-system co-development.
“This financing marks a transition from technology validation to industrial execution,” said Maud Vinet, Quobly CEO and co-founder. “Over the past two years, we have demonstrated that silicon qubits can be developed within semiconductor manufacturing processes and integrated into a system architecture. With this Series A, we are accelerating the deployment of our first commercial systems and building a quantum computing platform designed to integrate into existing computing infrastructures. Our objective is to make quantum computing deployable, scalable and usable within real industrial environments.”
Advisors
Financial advisors to Quobly were Avolta and Rochefort & Associés. Legal advisors to Quobly were Goodwin and Kelten. Legal advisors to investors included Bignon Lebray, Jones Day and Rimon Law. Financial advisory support was provided by Forvis Mazars. Bank financing partners included BNP Paribas, Bpifrance, Caisse d’Epargne Rhône-Alpes and Société Générale.
About Quobly
Quobly is a quantum computing company developing silicon-based quantum computers using proven semiconductor manufacturing processes. Founded in 2022 in Grenoble, France, the company is focused on making quantum computing scalable, manufacturable and deployable to grow the quantum computing market. The company has strategic partnerships within the semiconductor industry (STMicroelectronics, Air Liquide, Soitec and Orano) to accelerate the industrialization of its silicon quantum chips in advanced semiconductor manufacturing environments. With 100+ collaborators, Quobly is headquartered in Grenoble, France, with offices in Singapore and Canada.
Source: Quobly
The post Quobly Raises €115M Series A to Industrialize Silicon Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
Policy forum lays out ‘prolonged disruption’ scenario in which world’s GDP falls to 2.1% this year from 3.4% in 2025
If the Middle East conflict drags on into next year it would hit global growth hard, driving some economies into recession and causing energy shortages, according to forecasts from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
In its latest Economic Outlook, the Paris-based club of industrialised countries lays out a “prolonged disruption” scenario, in which there is no agreement between the US and Iran until 2027.
Continue reading...The Trump administration is moving to dismantle the National Science Foundation's $368 million Ocean Observatories Initiative, a network of more than 900 deep-sea instruments used to monitor ocean currents, marine ecosystems, carbon absorption, heat waves, fisheries, coastal flooding, and climate change. The NSF said it would send ships in June to begin the removal of the instruments anchored off Oregon, Washington, Alaska, North Carolina, and an area between Greenland and Iceland known as the Irminger Sea. The New York Times reports: The ocean observation system began operating in 2016 and was expected to continue for 25 years. Jim Edson, a marine meteorologist who led the Ocean Observatories Initiative, called it "the world's most advanced continuously operating ocean observing systems." When it was first proposed, the science foundation said it was important to have a long-term presence at scientifically important sites in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Removing the instruments could take 15 months. Seismic instruments positioned around an active underwater volcano off Oregon will continue operating until 2028. Each observation station consists of several moorings that secure long arrays of devices connected to wires. The devices measure ocean currents as well as chemical and biological conditions from the water's surface down thousands of feet. The instruments were hardened to resist the pressure of the deep ocean, corrosive seawater as well as marine plants and animals that can foul electronics. Remotely controlled robotic vehicles and gliders around the moorings collect and transmit data to research laboratories. It cost $48 million annually to operate the network. The Trump administration repeatedly tried to shutter it, proposing to cut its funding by 80 percent in both 2025 and again in 2026. Congress pushed back, restoring the money. To try to reduce costs, managers turned off some of the instruments and collected less data, according to a December 2025 presentation about the observatories at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union, a nonprofit organization of scientists. Still, the science foundation moved ahead to decommission the observatory network.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Trump administration has unveiled proposed tariffs of 10% or more on dozens of countries accused of failing to crack down on forced labor, including some of the U.S.'s largest trading partners.
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Voters in Maine won’t head to the polls until next week, but the state’s primary election has been shaken up by recent news about Senate hopeful Graham Platner.
According to information his wife shared with his campaign last year, Platner exchanged sexually explicit texts with other women during his marriage, the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal reported, and which the Guardian has confirmed.
Graham Platner met on Tuesday with Democratic leaders in Washington DC as the embattled Maine Senate candidate contends with yet another revelation threatening his campaign, which is at the center of his party’s hopes of regaining control of Congress.
Platner did not respond to questions from reporters and quickly entered a waiting car as he exited the meeting, which stretched for more than an hour and a half at the headquarters of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC). A spokesperson for the DSCC did not respond to a request for comment.
Continue reading...Disgraced former congressman said to have put bet on whether he would be at Trump’s State of the Union speech
Federal authorities are investigating whether George Santos, the disgraced former Republican congressman from New York, engaged in insider trading by betting on a prediction market on his own attendance to the State of the Union address, multiple news outlets reported on Tuesday.
Santos allegedly placed a bet on Kalshi, a popular online prediction market, over whether he would be in attendance at Trump’s State of the Union address in February, according to NPR, which first reported on the investigation citing anonymous sources.
Continue reading...Perplexity is shifting how some sensitive AI data is stored, balancing processing between local silicon and cloud servers.
With the constant risk of being recorded, many young people are afraid of showing enthusiasm – let alone doing something so potentially embarrassing as dancing in public. Is there a way to set themselves free?
In a video posted to TikTok, where Katie Whitney has 2.5 million followers, she says to camera, bluntly: “This video is for Cynthia Erivo. If you’re not Cynthia Erivo … you can keep on scrolling.” Her demeanour then shifts, her voice becomes softer; more the way a person might talk to their puppy: “Hi Cynthia. Hi baby. Hey baby. How are you?” It’s toe-curling – or, in modern parlance, cringe – to watch. “I feel traumatised,” says one commenter. Others post photos of a stunned-looking Erivo and imagine: “What if the Wicked star were to actually watch this video?” Cringe!
Now 25, but having started making this kind of content – “weird skits” – at 20, Whitney is part of what is known online as CringeTok, a subsection of the internet that deals in content designed to make your toes curl. It’s in many ways a reaction to a fear of being “cringe”, which is seeping into all parts of life – from social media to classrooms to the workplace.
Continue reading...It should have taken years, but Ash Koosha made a drama about Iran’s anti-government protests in weeks – and now it’s the first AI-made movie to screen at a major film festival. It could transform indie film-making, claims the director
Next week a breakthrough 75-minute drama about the brutal crackdown in Iran on anti-government protesters in January will premiere at the Tribeca film festival in New York. It is called Dreams of Violets and is based on journalism, video footage and eyewitness accounts. “I would say 80% of it is a recreation of events that actually happened,” says its Iranian-British director Ash Koosha. But Dreams of Violets is a work of fiction, not a documentary: a drama following a group of strangers caught up in the protests, who meet by chance in an alleyway. How on earth has Koosha managed to pull together a drama about the killings in less than six months?
The answer, it turns out, is by using artificial intelligence. Every image and character in Dreams of Violets is AI-generated. Koosha says he created the characters by describing their physical appearances, using people he has known in the past as references. It would be too dangerous to base characters on living people in Iran, he says. “Because of the security issue, it would not be safe for the characters to even remotely resemble someone.”
Continue reading...How a remade Islamic Republic will reshape the Middle East.
Why Putin can’t end the conflict.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 3.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from GeekWire: A team inside Microsoft has been quietly building a platform for devices that run AI agents instead of apps, based on Android instead of Windows, with two working hardware designs so far, and an initial set of big-name companies lined up to run pilots. The platform, dubbed "Project Solara," is Microsoft's bet that AI will open up entirely new scenarios for computing -- using agents to avoid the constraints of traditional software, and off-the-shelf components to develop new devices quickly and inexpensively. [...] The company unveiled Solara on Tuesday at its Build conference in San Francisco, describing it as a new platform that spans from chip to cloud. GeekWire got a behind-the-scenes look at the project during a briefing last week in Redmond, including demos of the first two concept devices based on the platform: - A desktop hub that sits beside a PC and responds to voice commands, signs users in using facial recognition, and surfaces the day's most pressing items. With a monitor attached, it becomes a full Windows machine running in the cloud. - A wearable badge that reimagines the standard employee ID card. A fingerprint button wakes an agent in one press; a single tap records and transcribes a conversation; and a built-in camera lets the agent act on what the user sees. Microsoft says it won't ship these devices itself. Instead, it envisions hardware makers and other industry partners turning the reference designs into implementations of their own, each intended for a specific industry, company, or scenario. For example, in one demo shown by the company, the high-tech badge ran on agents designed for use by a health-care worker, including the ability to scan a patient's QR code, record and transcribe the visit, log vitals, and start a prescription. In another application of the same badge, the built-in camera scanned a brainstorm board with ideas for an office revamp, and made a suggestion: add some plants. The two devices are a starting point. The bigger opportunity, the company says, is all the tasks and workflows where a PC or phone gets in the way or isn't practical to use. [...] In the coming months, companies including AccuWeather, Best Buy, CVS Health, Levi's, and Target are expected to begin pilots of devices based on the reference designs. The operating system is the Microsoft Device Ecosystem Platform, or MDEP, an enterprise version of Android that Microsoft developed for devices including Teams meeting-room hardware. The company says it chose MDEP over Windows deliberately, to run on smaller, lower-power devices while keeping the management and security features IT departments expect: patch and over-the-air updates, device integrity, Microsoft Defender, Intune, and Entra ID sign-in. While the project is still in the early stages, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella encouraged the team to show it at Build sooner than the company would normally show its work in public. "That underscores just how competitive and fast-moving the AI world is right now, but it also illustrates the pace that the new technologies are enabling," reports GeekWire. The report notes that the business model for the platform still needs to be worked out. The devices run on Microsoft's Azure cloud, but beyond that, "the economics are still taking shape." Qualcomm and MediaTek have been chosen as the first chip partners. "The badge runs on a new Qualcomm wearable chip; the desk hub runs on MediaTek IoT silicon," reports GeekWire. "Both are off-the-shelf, not custom, which is central to how Microsoft plans to keep devices cheap and fast to build."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hertl scores winner as Vegas steal Game 1 road win
Hurricanes squander early two-goal lead in Raleigh
Knights move three wins from second Stanley Cup
Tomas Hertl scored to break a third-period deadlock and give the Vegas Golden Knights a 5-4 victory over the Carolina Hurricanes in the opener of the Stanley Cup Final on Tuesday in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Shea Theodore scored once in a three-point performance for the Golden Knights in the comeback win. Brett Howden tallied once and added an assist, and Ivan Barbashev and William Karlsson added singles.
Continue reading... | Howdy! I love my Pint dearly and I am sad to part with it, but since graduating college I've switched to a bicycle. It's in good condition, but has the cosmetic scuffs of a well loved board. The battery may not last quite as long as a new board but I haven't tested that. Bought new in 2021. Comes with the Pint, the included charger, a fast charger, the fender, as well as the original fender plate. Still have the original box and happy to ship but if you're in LA or Socal local pickup is also an option. Asking $700 plus shipping, or best offer. (Also so sorry if this kind of post isn't allowed in this sub) [link] [comments] |
The superseding indictment does not contain any new charges or name new defendants from the original version, which was returned in April.
The Supreme Court cleared the way for Alabama to use a House map that is more favorable to Republicans, despite a lower court finding that the plan intentionally discriminated against Black voters.
South Korea’s Kospi stock market has hit record highs thanks to AI, but experts urge caution over boom-bust cycles and a heavy reliance on two chipmakers
South Korea has leapfrogged India to become the world’s sixth largest share market, leaving equity markets in the UK, Germany and France trailing in its dust. But despite the runaway success, some are raising concerns that the Kospi index is too dependent on two freshly minted trillion-dollar chipmaking companies.
Chip company SK Hynix last week claimed a seat in Asia’s trillion-dollar company club, alongside South Korean compatriot Samsung Electronics and Taiwan’s TSMC. Explosive demand for chips used in AI has propelled the trio past the valuation threshold.
Continue reading...Bohannan has lost to the Republican incumbent twice, but narrowed the margin to 799 votes in the 2024 election.
Move comes after meeting in which Pelley said network chief Bari Weiss was ‘murdering’ news show
Scott Pelley, one of the most well-known and respected journalists in broadcast journalism, has been fired by CBS News after clashing with network brass over last week’s severe round of cuts at 60 Minutes, the show he has worked on since 2004, the Guardian confirmed.
While changes were long expected at 60 Minutes, CBS News management shocked staffers last week by firing the network’s executive producer, executive editor and two correspondents, Cecilia Vega and Sharyn Alfonsi, without giving a specific reason for their terminations.
Continue reading...A former U.S. Army combat surgeon with backing from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, streamer Hasan Piker, and an anti-AIPAC super PAC won a New Jersey primary on Tuesday despite last-minute negative attacks.
Adam Hamawy beat a crowded field of Democrats in the state’s 12th Congressional District. The winner of the primary is expected to coast to victory over Republican Gregg Mele in the November general election.
His victory came despite a flurry of right-wing media reports that sought to tarnish the progressive candidate as an Islamic extremist because of his 1995 trial testimony for a religious leader convicted of plotting terror attacks.
Hamawy said he was being targeted with outdated “tropes” as a Muslim in politics. His campaign, which was supercharged by an ad campaign from the independent super PAC American Priorities, demonstrated the growing influence of pro-Palestine donors in contested Democratic primaries.
Hamawy stood out among the 13 candidates in the race vying to replace retiring Democratic Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman because of his compelling backstory and the large ad spend on his behalf by American Priorities, the super PAC founded to counter AIPAC’s influence in Democratic politics.
Working as a combat surgeon in Iraq in 2004, Hamawy helped save the life of Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., when her helicopter was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade, which led to the loss of both her legs. In 2024, he also went to Gaza to provide medical aid to Palestinians wounded by Israeli forces and was temporarily trapped there after Israel closed the Rafah border crossing. When the crossing was reopened, Hamawy was among a small group who refused to leave on demands that more medical workers be let in.
Pointing to his experience as a physician, Hamawy staked out policy positions that included support for Medicare for All, abolishing ICE, and opposing military aid to Israel. He drew endorsements from Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC, and the Sunrise Movement, in addition to Ocasio-Cortez.
In a joint statement, two progressive, pro-Palestine groups hailed Hamawy’s win. The Institute for Middle East Understanding Policy Project and Justice Democrats said they spent a combined $200,000 in support of his campaign.
“Voters were drawn to Dr. Hamawy’s candidacy because he knows firsthand the reality of Israel’s genocide in Gaza like few do — having worked to save the lives of Palestinian children under bombardment and unimaginable conditions,” the groups wrote. “His experience is necessary in Congress now more than ever, as too many of the people meant to represent us continue to look the other way while our tax dollars fund injustices here and abroad.”
Trailing Hamawy was East Brunswick Mayor Brad Cohen, a centrist with the backing of his county party who ran as a pro-Israel candidate.
Hamawy competed for the progressive vote against Sue Altman, a longtime activist in New Jersey who served until recently as the state director for Democratic Sen. Andy Kim. Her endorsements included former Sen. Bill Bradley and the New Jersey Working Families Party, which she previously led from 2019 to 2023. She ran far behind Hamawy.
Hamawy’s win was a notable accomplishment for American Priorities, which only launched in February. The group’s first major pick, Nida Allam, fell just short of toppling incumbent Democratic Rep. Valerie Foushee in North Carolina. It had better luck in Pennsylvania, where progressive state Rep. Chris Rabb won his district’s Democratic primary last month.
Hamawy’s campaign represented an even bigger test for American Priorities, since he was a first-time politician with a relatively low profile before launching his campaign. The group said at the end of April that it was planning to spend $2 million to boost Hamawy.
Hamawy was polling at only 5 percent of the electorate in a March 30–April 1 poll sponsored by his campaign. By the first week of May, however, the outside support helped power him to first place, with 19 percent support compared to Altman’s 12 percent, according to another poll sponsored by his campaign.
The wide-open nature of the primary and large number of undecided voters helped make it hard to gauge who had the edge. Further complicating matters was a surge of negative press focusing on the brief testimony Hamawy, then 26, gave at the 1995 trial of Omar Abdel-Rahman, commonly known as the “The Blind Sheikh,” who was convicted of planning terror attacks.
Hamawy said he had known Abdel-Rahman as a leader in the Egyptian community in New Jersey and condemned extremism of all stripes. He noted his own long service for the U.S. military as well as his experience as a first responder during the September 11, 2001 attacks. “Any Muslim is going to be called a terrorist at some point, and these tropes are outdated and worn. Unfortunately, they continue to be used right now,” Hamawy told the New Jersey Monitor. “These are not serious arguments, and they’re getting old.”
This developing story has been updated.
The post Adam Hamawy, Doctor Who Volunteered in Gaza, Poised to Become Pro-Palestine Rep. From New Jersey appeared first on The Intercept.
Context: haven’t used my Pint X in about a year, decided to take it out again today and it rode fine, just zipped around my neighborhood and hit some of the trails behind the houses and buildings
All of a sudden my board starts doing the buzz and the bar went red, and I got a notification from my onewheel app saying that “it needed more juice”, but when I actually checked the battery level it was still at 50%
I hope the battery hasn’t gone bad because they’re so expensive to replace, but I don’t know what else to do
UPDATE: I let it charge for about a day and was able to ride it down to zero with no problems, there was some small stuttering of the motor during and right after trail riding, so I’m just gonna leave it on for 48 hours to absolve any remaining battery imbalance
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 3, No. 618.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 3 No. 822.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 3, No. 1,088.
From God of War: Laufey to Wolverine, Sony's biggest reveals pointed to a shift in priorities.
According to an official familiar with the investigation, new digital forensic evidence appears to undercut Brian Hooker's account of his wife's disappearance, although they did not specify how.
Ocean Observatories Initiative, $368m network that has provided crucial climate data, latest victim of Trump cuts
The Trump administration plans to dismantle a $368m deep-sea observation system that has for more than a decade provided crucial data on ocean systems and climate change.
In a notice, the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced that it had “initiated descoping of the Ocean Observatories Initiative” (OOI), a vast ocean observation network comprising more than 900 instruments that collect data on ocean health, including current patterns, climate variability and marine biodiversity.
Continue reading...A former professional MMA fighter from Chicago came to the rescue when an unruly passenger tried to open a Frontier Airlines door mid-flight on Sunday while the plane was headed to O'Hare International Airport.
The New Jersey congressman last voted on March 5.
Enables hyperscalers to scale with high-bandwidth, low-latency, power-efficient optical connectivity
SAN JOSE, Calif., June 2, 2026 — Ayar Labs today announced it has joined the NVIDIA NVLink Fusion ecosystem, and making its products optically and electrically compatible with NVIDIA optical and SerDes technologies. This allows hyperscalers and system innovators to build optically-connected AI infrastructure around NVIDIA’s NVLink Fusion platform and partner ecosystem.
As AI factories scale to larger GPU counts and increasingly heterogeneous architectures, data movement and power are turning into critical bottlenecks. System designers must rethink how compute elements are connected, how bandwidth scales over distance, and how power is allocated across the rack.
Ayar Labs’ CPO solution is designed to address scaling limits by bringing high-bandwidth, low-latency, power-efficient connectivity to NVLink Fusion architectures, helping customers expand design headroom as bandwidth requirements grow and electrical constraints tighten. By putting optics where it matters most, Ayar Labs’ CPO enables flexible system architectures and efficient AI scaling beyond the limits of copper.
“AI infrastructure is being co-designed from the ground up, and customers need more options to scale performance efficiently as bandwidth continues to rise,” said Mark Wade, CEO at Ayar Labs. “By joining the NVIDIA NVLink Fusion ecosystem, we’re introducing co-packaged optics as a foundational building block for customers deploying heterogeneous compute in NVIDIA AI factories.”
“NVLink Fusion, combined with Ayar Labs’ CPO technology, gives customers more options to build heterogeneous AI factories,” said Ashish Karandikar, Vice President at NVIDIA. “By expanding the NVLink Fusion ecosystem with Ayar Labs’ optical connectivity, innovators can scale bandwidth and bring heterogeneous AI infrastructure to market faster.”
The collaboration is designed to help customers deploy heterogeneous compute, including custom silicon, within NVIDIA rack-scale platforms while preserving NVLink-based architecture investments. NVLink Fusion provides a path for integrating custom CPUs and XPUs into NVIDIA’s rack-scale architecture and ecosystem, enabling customers to move faster from system concept to deployment at scale.
Ayar Labs’ CPO solutions complement NVIDIA’s broader AI factory stack by pairing NVLink Fusion with NVIDIA’s end-to-end networking platform. Together, these technologies support next-generation AI factories as they scale within and across racks, where bandwidth density, latency, and power efficiency directly impact utilization and total cost of ownership.
Ayar Labs will work with customers and ecosystem partners to align CPO integration with NVLink Fusion deployments, including system architecture, validation requirements, and platform timelines.
Today’s announcement builds on Ayar Labs’ successful close of its $500M Series E funding, which included participation from NVIDIA.
More from HPCwire: Ayar Labs Closes $500M Series E, Accelerates Volume Production of Co-Packaged Optics
About Ayar Labs
Ayar Labs is transforming AI infrastructure with the industry’s first proven co-packaged optics (CPO) solution manufactured in partnership with the world’s leading semiconductor ecosystem. By unlocking performance gains and reducing workload costs in power-constrained environments, Ayar Labs’ optical engines are key to enabling next-generation AI scale-up. Founded in 2015, Ayar Labs is funded by domestic and international venture capital firms, as well as strategic investors including AMD, Applied Ventures, MediaTek, NVIDIA, and VentureTech Alliance. For more information, visit www.ayarlabs.com.
Source: Ayar Labs
The post Ayar Labs Joins NVIDIA NVLink Fusion Ecosystem to Bring Co-Packaged Optics to AI Factories appeared first on HPCwire.
American military forces carried out strikes on Iranian targets after attempted Iranian drone and missile attacks, U.S. Central Command said Tuesday, in the latest clash.
I’ve had my one wheel Pint X for a few days now, and put around 15 miles on it now. I’m still getting comfortable riding, I still have simple stop on.
But I’ve been riding and I can’t seem to surpass 7MPH. Idk if I’m scared of nose diving or what it is, but I can’t pass 7 for the life of me.
Also, how soon do you think I should disable simple stop? It’s very odd using no simple stop but don’t want to create any bad habits.
Any tips or things I need to know while still a noob?
Genesis Mission started about six months ago as a United States-based effort to accelerate AI for science and engineering in the US. However, the effort has turned global in recent months as the country’s allies have signed onto the ambitious plan. The shift toward international cooperation and away from individual sovereignty was palpable at the TPC 26 meeting taking place this week in Baltimore.
The Department of Energy allocated more than $320 million to the Genesis Mission since it launched the effort in late November. Hundreds of researchers at dozens of national labs, universities, and other institutions have submitted applications to pursue research in manufacturing, biotechnology, critical materials, as well as energy-related topics like advanced nuclear, fusion, and grid modernization projects. Some of these Genesis Mission projects could also lead to time on one of the new DOE supercomputers that are expected to start coming online this month.
There is an undeniable American flavor to Genesis Mission and its plan to achieve “energy dominance” in the United States. But at the same time, the DOE is welcoming other countries to participate in the program, and some of them are jumping at the chance.

Satoshi Matsuoka speaking at TPC26
One of them is Satoshi Matsuoka, the Japanese computer scientist and the head of the Riken Center for Computational Science (R-CCS). During a presentation June 1 at TPC26, Matsuoka said Japan needs to join the Genesis Mission if for no other reason than to get access to more computing power.
“We’re in serious shortage in terms of GPUs,” said Matsuoka, who calculated that the country would need about 30,000 GPUs, or six or seven additional exascale supercomputers, to provide suitable HPC for AI resources for about 3 million scientists on the island country of 123 million people.
“We have to go well beyond the fragmented sovereign AI efforts,” said the member of the HPCwire 35 Legends list. “We need to share the resources. We need to share the models. We need to share the software. We need to share the data.”
Many other countries around the world are pursuing AI sovereignty, showing their distrust of the American cloud and AI giants, many of which now have–or soon will have–market capitalizations in excess of $1 trillion. Matsuoka wants none of it.
“This idea again of a single country trying to do everything by itself is a very inefficient,” he continued. “So we have to sell a community like this [TPC], where we have to get together and to really come to the idea that sovereignty is not so much about a single country. Sovereignty is achieved by unifying cultures of multiple countries in order to achieve this so-called global commons.”
Matsuoka has a supporter in DOE Underscretary for Science Darío Gil, who is heading up the Genesis Mission. During a panel discussion on Monday, Gil applauded the notion that science can be done for science’s sake, and that humans’ innate curiosity is a worthwhile endeavor to support with the AI-for-science effort.
But Gil also took issue with the idea that taxpayers in the United States or Japan should be banking on scientists making serendipitous discoveries using the AI-for-science apparatus that improve their security, health, and well-being.

(Credit: DOE)
“I love the aspect of serendipity,” Gil said. “But $1 trillion a year is not just the story of serendipity. We have built an enormously complex and sophisticated R&D ecosystem in our countries, [including] Japan. But the story is the same in the United States. What possibilities do we have to outcompete innovation in China if it is just a numbers game? On average, we will end up being what, a third or a fourth as productive?”
The best path forward to achieve broad, population-improving results with AI-accelerated science and engineering is through making targeted investments, Gil said. In addition to aiming high and working hard to hit the target, Gil lauded international cooperation as a mechanism to achieving the big goals.
“Unless we have a shared vision as to where we’re going and what kind of scientific infrastructure we need to build, and how are we going to work with one another so that it’s interoperable, then it’s going to be very hard to execute,” Gil said. “How many times have we all witnessed partnership between country A and country B gets announced as an MOU, somebody sits behind a stage and you sign something and it’s like, great, scientists are going to get together and like, what happens?
“There’s a big difference between that and saying, we’re going to build infrastructure together. We’re going to interoperate, we’re going to do this together at scale, and we share a vision,” Gil said. “So I think if, in this moment, we’re not able to agree that AI is going to transform science, what is so obvious next item in the agenda that we’re all going to work together on? By no means am I saying that this should be the only national and international effort in which we should collaborate. But if we cannot agree on this one, what’s so easy on the other ones?”
The post Why International Cooperation Is Critical to Achieving Genesis Mission’s Goals appeared first on HPCwire.
Members of Jalisco New Generation cartel used fake retail store in San Diego as front for trafficking drugs, officials say
Federal prosecutors have charged four suspects with trafficking more than one ton of cocaine for the Jalisco New Generation cartel using a fake retail store in San Diego as a front for a sophisticated tunnel that ran across the border to Tijuana, Mexico.
The defendants include two Mexican nationals and two Americans charged with conspiring to traffic drugs across the US-Mexico border. The suspects, who range in age from 18 to 32, all face sentences that could put them in prison for life. One of them, Gregorio Epifanio Hernandez Lopez, also faces the charge of “constructing, financing or using unauthorized tunnels”.
Continue reading..."We are not moving forward with the fund. Period," Blanche told House lawmakers.
Economists at the New York Federal Reserve say they've identified the main reason some recent college grads are having trouble landing a job.
Faye is having her own adventure without Kratos.
NHS bosses giving evidence to public accounts committee admit current position is unacceptable
GPs in England are so “overloaded” that they cannot help older people who are at risk of falling in what NHS bosses accept is an unacceptable failure of care, the House of Commons’ public accounts committee has said.
Pressure on GPs’ time has intensified as a result of the government’s decision to give patients online access to their services, according to a report by the influential cross-party group of MPs.
Continue reading...Bank of England says updated imagery will celebrate native wildlife while bolstering anti-counterfeit features
Puffins, dolphins and bumblebees are among the wildlife that could feature on new banknotes in the UK as the Bank of England announces its shortlist.
There has been controversy over the decision, with figures including Nigel Farage criticising the Bank for, he claimed, wanting to replace Winston Churchill with a beaver. The Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, said it was “a silly thing to do”, and Reform UK’s Farage called it “absolutely crackers”. In the end, no beaver appeared on the shortlist. Mammal options include bottlenose dolphins and red foxes.
Continue reading...A new Leiden Declaration, endorsed by the International Mathematical Union and published on June 2, 2026, warns that AI could undermine mathematics by flooding the field with plausible but flawed proofs, weakening attribution, shifting incentives, and giving tech companies too much influence over research priorities. "Mathematicians should find it quite striking that tech companies are suddenly interested in their work," said Kevin Buzzard, a mathematician at Imperial College London, in a statement. "The Leiden Declaration is a well-thought-through response to what is currently happening, as AI continues to disrupt this space." Ars Technica reports: The Leiden Declaration, which has already drawn hundreds of signatories, warns that recent AI developments are threatening "characteristic values" of mathematical research, "often in ways that disproportionately affect students and early-career mathematicians, and hence the long term future of the discipline." First, it points out how AI models can "produce plausible but unreliable (or even incorrect) arguments which are difficult to distinguish from correct mathematical proofs." Such developments put reviewers under increasing pressure and are "jeopardizing our ability to implement traditional standards for the correctness, transparency, and independent verifiability of proof," the declaration warns. "Inaccurate AI-generated drafts are cheap to produce, and there is a risk of cluttering the literature with claimed results that are simply wrong," said Leslie Ann Goldberg, head of computer science at the University of Oxford, in a statement. "Once that happens, the errors are likely to propagate as new results are built on faulty foundations." Second, the declaration highlights how "models trained on published works frequently return outputs that do not properly cite the human works they synthesize," while also pointing out that many current AI models were trained on data obtained through "exploiting licenses and access arrangements" or "simply violating copyright protections." Third, the declaration describes how the use of AI "may become incentivized for its own sake, disrupting our mechanisms for hiring, funding and recognition" while leaving out researchers who lack access or are "unwilling to use technologies controlled by organizations whose values they do not share." Fourth, the declaration warns against mathematics research "communicated through informal channels such as press releases or blog posts, often without any research paper or other disclosure of information necessary for scientific evaluation." Such communication strategies can lead to "oversimplification" in media reporting that overemphasizes AI tools' significance at the expense of prior human contributions, and "misleadingly uses specific mathematical tasks as metrics for the general reasoning capacities of commercial products." Fifth, the declaration describes "increasing involvement of technology companies in mathematical research" as threatening the "autonomy of mathematics," especially as university budgets are under pressure and researchers may feel greater professional incentive to collaborate with technology companies on "asymmetric terms." This also raises the risk that mathematics research questions amenable to AI-driven techniques may be prioritized. What can mathematicians do about this? The Leiden Declaration urges them to treat AI as a tool, not a substitute for human responsibility. Individual mathematicians should disclose AI use, remain accountable for the correctness of their work, continue crediting human authors, and use AI tools only when they align with the declaration's values. It also warns that mathematics can be applied to "warfare, oppression, mass surveillance, and the undermining of democracy," so mathematicians should weigh the ethics of tech-industry partnerships carefully. Professional organizations are encouraged to develop AI-use guidelines for publication and review, protect researchers from having their work used as training data without consent, support peer-reviewed publishing, and "actively prepare to become involved if major mathematical results are claimed using unconventional means." For policymakers, the recommendations are blunt: "protect the rights of authors," "regulate the artificial intelligence industry," and "invest in public computational infrastructure." The declaration also urges people to "don't believe the hype," warning that tech companies have "a strong commercial incentive... to overstate the capabilities of their products."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Democratic candidate already cites PTSD for racist, sexist, homophobic online posts and has covered up Nazi tattoo
Graham Platner met on Tuesday with Democratic leaders in Washington DC as the embattled Maine Senate candidate contends with yet another revelation threatening his campaign, which is at the center of his party’s hopes of regaining control of Congress.
Platner did not respond to questions from reporters and quickly entered a waiting car as he exited the meeting, which stretched for more than an hour and a half at the headquarters of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC). A spokesperson for the DSCC did not respond to a request for comment.
Continue reading...Alarm after Elias Irizarry is hired to position in office that manages highly classified military operations
The Pentagon has appointed a rioter convicted for his role in 6 January, 2021 insurrection to a sensitive national security role dealing with counterterrorism, overriding insiders’ concerns about his past record.
Elias Irizarry, who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge in connection with the storming of the US Capitol, has been appointed to a position in the US Department of Defense’s special operations and low intensity conflict office which manages highly classified military operations, causing alarm among Pentagon officials.
Continue reading...Patients with knee arthritis who took medications for at least three years at reduced risk of needing surgery
Taking weight-loss drugs for at least three years could prevent thousands of knee replacements a year, research suggests.
Globally, more than 500 million people have osteoarthritis. Knee arthritis is the most common form, affecting about 14 million people in the US and more than 5 million in the UK. Many will require knee surgery. In the UK more than 120,000 knee replacements are carried out every year.
Continue reading...Wolverine is going to be a lot of bloody fun.
| Are there any other big tires for 6in hubs out there that will fit on the XL or does TFL have any plans? [link] [comments] |
June 2, 2026 — Microsoft today unveiled Majorana 2, its newest topological quantum chip featuring a next-generation materials stack and qubits that are 1,000 times more reliable than their predecessors. With this progress, the team now expects to achieve a scalable quantum computer by 2029, cutting its original timeline in half.

Majorana 2’s new features include a new materials stack enabling a 1,000-fold improvement in reliability over the prior generation of qubits, with a mean qubit lifetime of 20 seconds and instances lasting as long as one minute. Credit: Microsoft.
By applying recent advances in agentic AI specially designed to speed the scientific process and accelerate collaboration, Microsoft’s quantum team is overcoming key barriers in reliability, speed and size that have limited the application of quantum computing to real-life scenarios.
For instance, the new chip’s qubits can maintain their quantum state 1,000 times longer than the first generation, enabling more reliable computation. While other common approaches measure a qubit’s “lifetime” in microseconds, Majorana 2 offers a mean qubit lifetime of 20 seconds, with some instances lasting as long as one minute. That improvement is roughly comparable to inventing a phone battery that instead of dying in a day could last for nearly three years on a single charge.
This exceptional reliability, fast speed (one microsecond operations) and small qubit size (1/100th of a millimeter) have put the team on a path to achieve a scalable quantum computer that is commercially valuable by 2029. Such a machine could tackle intractable problems in global health, food supply, sustainability, energy production and more, the company said.
“We need to make improvements each year that will get us closer to delivering a computer that we believe will have massive commercial and societal value,” said Chetan Nayak, Microsoft technical fellow. “We’ve got to keep marching to that roadmap to accomplish that, but where are we relative to last year? We’re 1,000 times better.”
Now, others searching for scientific or engineering breakthroughs can leverage the same agentic AI expertise that Microsoft’s own quantum team is using in its Majorana program.
The company also announced today the general availability of Microsoft Discovery, its comprehensive platform for organizations to embrace Frontier R&D. This combines specialized AI agents for scientific research and development, a Discovery Engine that drives research and reasoning workflows, plus enterprise-level security, governance and transparency.
Microsoft also introduced in early preview a Microsoft Discovery app with core capabilities that individuals can download for free and run locally on their computers with a GitHub Copilot account, lowering the barrier to entry for advanced AI-driven research.
Microsoft Discovery allows researchers to deploy autonomous agent teams, guided by human expertise, that can reason over large amounts of knowledge, generate hypotheses, optimize experiments, validate theories and learn in a continuous loop. Built-in controls help ensure that the research remains aligned with priorities, security and compliance standards, and safety requirements.
“In the year since we launched, we’ve seen customers light up use cases across critical industries like life sciences, chemicals and materials, energy, manufacturing and consumer goods,” said Aseem Datar, corporate vice president, product innovation for Microsoft Discovery. “With companies like Syensqo developing next-generation fluids for semiconductor manufacturing, the opportunities for impact are vast.”
The quantum team’s own scientists and engineers have been using the agentic AI capabilities in Microsoft Discovery to manage workflows, automate measurements, optimize fabrication, pinpoint previously unnoticed flaws and propose new solutions.
“Agentic AI has permeated almost everything we do—it’s just become kind of a very natural part of our workflow,” Nayak said.
“The agents can really accelerate things as much or as little as you want. It can be as little as pulling information together and summarizing it, or it can go further down the road of synthesizing it more or generating an interesting hypothesis. I think that’s extremely powerful right now.”
Agentic AI Can Help Find New Materials
Majorana 1, introduced just last year, was revolutionary because it employed a topological superconductor, a special category of material that can create an entirely new state of matter that allows for more stable quantum computing. To improve on the original proof of concept, the team revisited the materials stack.
The original Majorana superconductor used aluminum, but Majorana 2 uses lead, which is commonly used to shield people and equipment from radiation in hospitals and industrial settings. In a quantum computer, a lead superconductor helps shield fragile qubits from cosmic disturbances that can make them unstable—but it took years to figure out how to overcome other tradeoffs. “That was actually a fairly large change, and it led to big, big improvements in device quality,” Nayak said.
While this line of materials research began long before the advent of agentic AI, the team used it to help manage the manufacturing of the new device, and Microsoft Discovery is being used more extensively for future Majorana materials work.
Critical parts of the Majorana quantum devices are designed atom by atom. To keep each atom in its correct spot, another material, an impurity, may be added to the crystalline structure. But adding too much or in the wrong way disturbs it, so it’s a difficult balance to strike, said Zulfi Alam, corporate vice president for quantum at Microsoft.
“Finding the exact recipe, the right amount to put to get the desired energy structure, requires a lot of experimentation in the old world order. In the new world order, through simulations, you can see where the highly probable target is. And then with that knowledge, you ideally only have to experiment once,” he said.
Agentic AI Can Analyze Information at Scale
The quantum computing project has many moving parts—software, architecture, design, the materials stack, fabrication processes, measurements and so on. A change in one area has ramifications that may require compensating elsewhere. AI agents help the team keep track of such complex, interrelated connections, Nayak said.
The quantum project also has huge quantities of data—nearly two decades’ worth, in many different formats. Before AI, the data was stuck in silos. “As you run AI agents on this data, they’re able to essentially resynthesize and make correlations that we as humans cannot see because no single individual has that much vision across that much data,” Alam said.
In addition, the quantum team is spread across multiple countries, with very different specialties, such as physics, mechanical engineering and process engineering. It’s impossible for any one person to be expert in everything. It’s a common problem in interdisciplinary scientific research, which is why Microsoft’s quantum team created an AI agent for organizing and analyzing information and making it easier for others to find.
“The AI is able to synthesize knowledge from all these different disciplines,” Alam said, saving everyone the time and hassle of interviewing the specialists or of reading up on another subject. The agentic AI can “parallel process so much information in super short time to give you a recommendation,” he said. The AI only offers guidance; it doesn’t decide. “It’s always ‘scientist in the loop’.”
Agentic AI Can Speed Experiments
Creating a topological state requires setting hundreds of parameters. Then measurement, which is the key to performing quantum computations, can start. When done by a person, these processes each take weeks. In fact, measurement is so difficult and time consuming that the team had tried to automate it a few years ago using earlier forms of machine learning, but it wasn’t possible, Alam said.
Using agentic capabilities available in Microsoft Discovery, the team was able to create an AI agent specialized for this job, which cut the cycle time by orders of magnitude, he said.
AI’s pattern-recognition abilities helped with the difficult task of measuring what state the qubit is in and detecting whether there’s an even or odd number of billions of electrons on a semiconductor wire. AI agents run the process automatically and continuously, building a 3D map of the conditions that a single scientist would never be able to do in the same way, Alam said.
“Using agentic AI to automate the measurements was a game changer,” he said. “It goes through some math and starts saying, ‘Hey, where do I find the lowest point where everything sort of works?’ And it can do all these voltage adjustments in parallel, which a human cannot do. The way our minds work, we are more linear.”
Agentic AI Can Quiet the Noise
Data isn’t information—it needs to be filtered, analyzed and put into context to have meaning. For example, the team developed an AI agent that was able to combine physics, device and institutional knowledge to filter raw data from the quantum team’s fabrication process and sniff out an uncalibrated temperature sensor reading that was throwing things off.
Alam compares the process to the AI summary of a Teams call, which skips over friendly banter to list the three or four key points. “That’s exactly what the AI is doing on a grander scale when science is involved,” he said.
Microsoft Discovery was built as a platform that pairs AI with the scientific method, and many of the agentic AI tools that the quantum team is using are transferable and relevant to scientific exploration in other domains.
This fundamentally new type of Frontier R&D lets a scientist “be the anchor point and look at many, many different disciplines all at the same time with a very high fidelity and be able to draw correlations from that,” Alam said. “It is the essence of what every single high-performance, cutting-edge team wants to do.”
Source: Catherine Bolgar, Microsoft
The post Microsoft Unveils Majorana 2 Quantum Chip, Targets Commercial-Scale Quantum Computing by 2029 appeared first on HPCwire.
Blanche confirms fund set up to compensate president’s allies will not go ahead after fierce backlash and court setbacks
In six months, Adam Hamawy has gone from a political nobody to, deemed by most measures, the frontrunner in a crowded race, endorsed by prominent progressive and Democratic figures including Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar and Tammy Duckworth.
His work history has driven him to call for Medicare for All, advocating for sanctions and an arms embargo on Israel, and the abolition of ICE – and to say openly he cannot support the Democratic leaders Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer.
CALIFORNIA: Vote today for Steve Hilton for Governor. He will work with me and the Federal Government, the money will flow because I have confidence in him (but not any of the others!), and we will MAKE CALIFORNIA GREAT AGAIN. Steve Hilton will NEVER let you down. VOTE NOW!
Continue reading...Meta has since fixed the exploit, but it's yet another example of AI doing it worse than humans.
Experts say deluge of last-minute absentee ballots and notoriously slow system could delay results in tightest races
California’s primary elections, including its fiercely fought gubernatorial contest, will be at the mercy of a notoriously slow vote-counting system after the polls close on Tuesday, and it could be days or even weeks before the outcomes of the tightest races become clear.
Voting experts expect the state’s 58 county elections offices to be deluged with last-minute absentee ballots, as they have been in the last few election cycles, and spend weeks undertaking a painstaking ballot-by-ballot verification process.
Continue reading...After Alyssa Burkett was murdered in broad daylight in Carrollton, Texas, Andrew Beard, the father of her child, became a suspect. Investigators would eventually discover a twisted murder plot they say was orchestrated by his fiancée, Holly Elkins.
The European Parliament is replacing Google with French search engine Qwant as the default on in-house computers, citing digital sovereignty and privacy concerns. Politico reports: As of Thursday June 4, "Qwant will replace Google as default search engine on European Parliament computers," officials told lawmakers in an email seen by POLITICO. The change is being made "in line with the Parliament's commitment to digital sovereignty and the protection of users' personal data." The search-engine switch comes as Brussels doubles down on its push for tech sovereignty. The European Commission will on Wednesday unveil its long-awaited tech sovereignty package aimed at reducing dependence on foreign technology providers and boosting European alternatives. The email described Qwant as a "privacy-focused European search engine" designed to avoid tracking users or collecting personal data. Founded in 2013, Qwant markets itself as a privacy-first alternative to Google. Searches conducted through the address bar in Firefox and Edge browsers will automatically be routed through Qwant, although lawmakers will remain free to use competing search engines or change their default settings.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
"It will be a very long, multi-month to multi-year process for things to fully normalize," GasBuddy's Patrick De Haan said.
Harry Potter fans can earn a badge for listening to the whole wizarding world book series on Audible.
Demonstration follows family’s plea for death not to be used to create division
Hundreds of people gathered outside a Southampton police station to protest against the murder of Henry Nowak and dozens clashed with police close to the home of his killer, Vickrum Digwa.
The far-right activist Tommy Robinson was among speakers who addressed the crowd outside Southampton central police station at the “Justice for Henry Nowak” protest.
Continue reading...The hit summer reality show returns to screens today.
Russia's FSB claims foreign intelligence services compromised smartphones belonging to senior Russian officials, allegedly turning them into surveillance devices capable of stealing data, recording conversations, and activating microphones or cameras. "This software is used to steal existing data, eavesdrop on ongoing conversations, and conduct covert acoustic and video monitoring of the environment near electronic devices, all aimed at obtaining sensitive information," the FSB said. The Register reports: The agency said it had opened a criminal investigation into illegal access to computer information and the distribution of malicious software. It did not identify the alleged intelligence service responsible, disclose how many officials were affected, name the malware involved, or provide any technical indicators that would allow independent verification of the claims. As things stand, the FSB has revealed the accusation but not the proof.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
However, Todd Blanche said the IRS will still be prohibited from auditing Donald Trump, his family and related entities
The federal government is abandoning an effort to create a $1.8bn secretive fund to compensate Donald Trump’s allies, but is maintaining an agreement that prohibits the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) from auditing Trump, his family and related entities, the acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, said on Tuesday.
“We are not moving forward with the fund, period,” Blanche said during a House appropriations committee hearing on Tuesday. “The reasons for the fund is something that President Trump talked about for a long time, which is the fact that there were a lot of people in this country who had their government weaponized against them. The reasons for the fund, I think, remain as important as they were before, but we are not moving forward with the fund.”
Continue reading...New York police are investigating a bizarre mystery involving groups of people emerging from the city’s manholes in recent weeks. Video recorded on 29 May shows seven people climb through a manhole at the intersection of Bedford Avenue and Lynch Street in Brooklyn.
“The NYPD, to make sure there was not a threat to the public, sent their highly trained Emergency Services Unit officers into the sewer system to make sure nothing nefarious had been left behind by the individuals – nothing was found,” the New York City police department told NBC in a statement on 1 June
Continue reading...MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., June 2, 2026 — Alphabet Inc. has announced equity offerings totaling $80 billion, in expected aggregate amount, as part of its plan to fund investments in its world-class AI compute infrastructure to meet its unprecedented customer demand.
These offerings consist of:
Private Placement
In addition, Alphabet has reached an agreement to sell $10 billion of stock to Berkshire Hathaway Inc. in a private placement, comprised of $5 billion in Class A Common Stock at a price of $351.81 per share and $5 billion in Class C Capital Stock at a price of $348.20 per share.
This investment by Berkshire Hathaway adds to the position it has built since Q3 2025.
Use of Proceeds
Alphabet intends to use the net proceeds from the concurrent underwritten public offerings and the concurrent private placement for general corporate purposes, including capital expenditures to scale AI infrastructure and global compute. A portion of the net proceeds from the depositary share offerings, specifically, will be used to pay the cost of the related capped call transactions described below. Alphabet intends to use the net proceeds from the ATM program primarily to facilitate, for a period of time, an administrative change to how it meets tax obligations associated with vesting of employee equity awards. The company expects approximately $30 billion of ATM program proceeds will be used to meet these 2026 calendar year tax obligations. Any additional proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes.
Investing in a Balanced Way
AI is driving an expansionary moment for Alphabet. The company is experiencing strong demand for its AI solutions and services from enterprises and consumers, at levels that are exceeding the company’s available supply. By scaling its investments, the company seeks to expand its foundational infrastructure to support the significant growth opportunity ahead.
During its Q1 2026 earnings call, Alphabet announced that its 2026 capital expenditures are expected to be $180-$190 billion, and that it expects 2027 capital expenditures to significantly increase compared to 2026.
This equity offering is part of Alphabet’s plan to fund its investments in a balanced way while retaining a healthy balance sheet. Alphabet’s other sources of funding include:
Alphabet’s AI Momentum
Alphabet’s planned investments will support its business momentum, including:
Underwritten Offerings
The $30 billion aggregate underwritten offerings consist of a total of $15 billion of Class A Common Stock and Class C Capital Stock, split evenly between the two classes, and a total of $15 billion of two series of depositary shares, split evenly between the two series. Each series of depositary shares will represent interests in a newly issued series of mandatory convertible preferred stock, and each series of mandatory convertible preferred stock will be mandatorily convertible after approximately three years into a variable number of shares of Class A Common Stock or Class C Capital Stock, depending on the series, based on the applicable conversion rate.
Alphabet expects to grant to the underwriters of the Class A Common Stock and Class C Capital Stock offerings 30-day over-allotment options to purchase up to an aggregate total of $2.25 billion of additional shares, split evenly between Class A Common Stock and Class C Capital Stock. Alphabet also expects to grant the underwriters of its depositary share offerings over-allotment options to purchase up to an aggregate total of $2.25 billion of additional depositary shares, split evenly between the two series, within a 13-day period beginning on, and including, the date Alphabet first issues the depositary shares.
Each of the proposed underwritten offerings, including the size and terms, is subject to market conditions and other factors. The underwritten depositary share offerings are not conditioned upon the underwritten stock offering or any sales under the ATM program, and the underwritten stock offering is not conditioned upon the underwritten depositary share offerings or any sales under the ATM program.
ATM Program
In addition to these underwritten offerings, Alphabet has entered into an equity distribution agreement with Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC as managers in connection with a newly established ATM program, pursuant to which Alphabet may sell, from time to time through or to the manager, Class A Common Stock and Class C Capital Stock, up to a maximum aggregate offering amount of $40 billion. Such sales are not expected to commence until the third quarter of 2026, subject to market conditions and other factors. Sales under the ATM program are not conditioned upon the underwritten offerings.
The ATM program is intended primarily to facilitate, for a period of time, an administrative change in how Alphabet meets tax obligations associated with employee equity grants. This approach will mimic a “sell to cover” model: upon vesting of restricted stock units, shares will still be delivered to employees net of taxes, and the company will use corporate cash to settle taxes on behalf of employees. The company intends to issue stock for equivalent proceeds through its ATM program.
Terms of Depositary Shares and Underlying Mandatory Convertible Preferred Stock
Each depositary share of each series that is offered in the public underwritten offering and the concurrent private placement will represent a 1/20th interest in a share of the corresponding series of preferred stock. The preferred stock is expected to have a liquidation preference of $1,000 per share. Holders of the depositary shares will be entitled to a proportional fractional interest in the rights and preferences of the preferred stock of the corresponding series, including conversion, dividend, liquidation and voting rights, subject to the provisions of the applicable deposit agreement.
Unless earlier converted, each share of preferred stock will automatically convert, for settlement on or about May 15, 2029, into a variable number of shares of Class A Common Stock or Class C Capital Stock, depending on the series, based on the applicable conversion rate, and each depositary share will automatically convert into a number of shares of Class A Common Stock or Class C Capital Stock, depending on the series, equal to a proportionate fractional interest in such shares. The dividend rate, conversion terms and other terms of each series of preferred stock will be determined at the time of pricing of the offerings. Currently, there is no public market for the depositary shares or the preferred stock of either series. Alphabet intends to apply to list each series of the depositary shares on The Nasdaq Global Select Market under the symbols “GOOGM” and “GOOGN.”
Underwriters
Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC are acting as joint book-running managers for the underwritten offerings.
Placement Agent
Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC is acting as placement agent in relation to the private placement.
Capped Call Transactions
For more on Capped Call Transactions, see the full announcement here.
About Alphabet Inc.
Alphabet is a collection of companies, the largest of which is Google. Larry Page and Sergey Brin founded Google in September 1998 and the company is headquartered in Mountain View, Calif. Billions of people use its wide range of popular products and platforms each day, like Search, Ads, Chrome, Cloud, YouTube and Android.
Source: Alphabet Inc.
The post Alphabet Announces $80B Capital Raise, Including $10B Berkshire Hathaway Investment appeared first on HPCwire.
Even the best Wi-Fi routers struggle to travel through walls and floors. A mesh system uses multiple routers in tandem to create a seamless network throughout your entire home.
Prime minister echoes family’s plea that case should not be used to target communities
Politicians and community leaders have called for calm amid fears that the populist right is using the murder of Henry Nowak by a Sikh man to whip up racist resentment against minority ethnic Britons.
After Nigel Farage called for the public to respond with “pure, cold rage”, Keir Starmer condemned the Reform UK leader, saying Nowak’s family had explicitly asked that the case not be used to target particular communities.
Continue reading...Are there any options for battery replacement that don’t cost $500
Prosecutors have accused Cole Allen of attempting to assassinate the president when he allegedly attacked the White House Correspondents' Dinner on April 25.
A musical concert series has become a point of political contention, with performers dropping out of the series.
Travel experts say to be prepared for potential disruptions as countries implement the new Entry/Exit System now in place across the EU and other countries.
Russian missile, drone strikes kill at least 22 people across Ukraine, authorities say, after President Zelenskyy warned Moscow was planning a "massive new strike."
Voters in Maine expressed dismay at the latest revelations to engulf the campaign of Democratic Senate hopeful Graham Platner but few said the news would change their vote.
Microsoft Office 2019 and 2021 for Mac will reportedly drop into "reduced functionality mode" on July 13, 2026, when a license-validation certificate expires, leaving perpetually licensed apps able to open files but not edit or save them. Slashdot reader joshuark shares a report from OSnews: "Microsoft Office 2019 and 2021 for Mac view-only conversion (2026) is a scheduled remote degradation of perpetually-licensed Microsoft Office software for macOS and iOS, set for July 13, 2026 when a license-validation certificate used by the Office apps expires," reports the Consumer Rights Wiki. "After Office 2019 for Mac reached end of support in October 2023, Microsoft assured customers their installed apps would 'continue to function.' The July 13, 2026 conversion instead drops the apps into a Microsoft-defined 'reduced functionality mode,' in which files can be opened and viewed but not edited or saved. By May 30, 2026, the original 2023 end-of-support page had been re-dated and rewritten on Microsoft's site; the 'continue to function' clause was removed." Microsoft's advice to the users they're stealing from is to keep using the applications as mere viewers, switch to the free Office 365 web applications, pay for a 365 subscription, or buy a brand new regular copy of Office 2024. None of these make any sense, and clearly, all of this should be illegal, but it's not because the software industry is a clown show.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 3, No. 1,810.

Why Should Delaware Care?
For decades, elected officials have tried to build a medical school in Delaware, with often little success. But a recent influx of federal cash has paved the way for the state to open its own medical training program as it faces healthcare provider shortages. With that medical school on the way, the whole state’s healthcare ecosystem is poised to get a piece of the pie, with one major exclusion.
Delaware officials announced Tuesday that the state’s first medical school, funded by hundreds of millions of federal dollars meant to bolster rural healthcare, will be run by Philadelphia-based Thomas Jefferson University.
Jefferson beat out three other bidders – the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM), Puerto Rico-based Ponce Health Sciences University and consulting giant PriceWaterhouseCoopers – to win the medical school contract.
Jefferson’s plans include collaborating with almost all of Delaware’s higher education and healthcare institutions to bring a medical school to fruition — with one glaring exclusion: ChristianaCare.
The state’s largest healthcare system had initially attached itself to PCOM’s failed bid to run the Delaware medical school. It remains unclear, however, if the hospital system – which has an existing partnership with Jefferson – will join in on the new venture at a later date.
Gov. Matt Meyer said during a press conference the medical school will “initially” be located at the University of Delaware’s main campus in Newark, and students in the first cohort who commit to practicing in rural Delaware will receive a free medical education.
Dr. Said Ibrahim, dean of Jefferson’s Sidney Kimmel Medical College, said the college will now seek out accreditation for the Delaware campus through the Liaison Committee on Medical Education program, which vets programs leading to medical degrees. He added the new medical school would place rural health at the core of its curriculum.
“More importantly, it will create a stronger, more durable pipeline of physicians who are trained in Delaware, who are connected to Delaware, and committed to serving Delaware’s communities,” Ibrahim said.
Officials aims to open applications for the first cohort of students in early 2027. Accepted students would then begin classes in the summer of 2028.
Tuesday’s announcement marks a historic moment for Delaware, as the state’s first medical school is a project that has eluded leaders for decades.

As part of Jefferson’s announcement, officials said the new medical school would work with a dozen Delaware education and healthcare institutions like the University of Delaware, Delaware State University, Bayhealth and Beebe Healthcare, among others.
Susan Aldridge, the president of Thomas Jefferson University, said this “consortium” of higher education groups and healthcare providers would work with Jefferson to provide its medical education and place students in clinical rotations.
Notably sidelined in that list is ChristianaCare, which already has an agreement with Jefferson where third- and fourth-year students work for the healthcare giant.
When asked about ChristianaCare’s absence from the new consortium, she said the hospital is more than welcome to join. She did not answer whether an invitation was extended or if the hospital declined to be a part of the group.
“We have an inclusive approach to the medical school and to the consortium that we have established here, so if Christiana chooses to join the consortium, they’ll be more than welcome,” Aldridge said.
Christen Linke Young, secretary for the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services, said ChristianaCare was attached to PCOM’s bid.

Since the state selected Jefferson, there was “no universe” where it would have been involved in Tuesday’s announcement, she added. Still, Young said the door is wide open for the hospital to be a part of the consortium.
“I think we have no reason to think that they won’t be a part of the process,” Young said.
While Jefferson and state officials signaled their willingness to have ChristianaCare as part of the program, the hospital struck a more defiant tone in a statement to Spotlight Delaware on Tuesday afternoon.
In a joint response from PCOM and ChristianaCare, the two said while they respect the state’s decision, they are disappointed not to be “part of the solution to create Delaware’s medical school.”
The two also said the success of the medical school is not just tied to the higher education institution, but also a “true and committed partnership with its clinical partners.”
“The path forward raises genuine questions about whether the school’s goals can be fully realized without ChristianaCare’s meaningful participation in its clinical training mission,” the statement said.

The state announced in November it would fund 15 programs with money from the Rural Health Transformation Program. The federal program was created to court Republican senators hesitant to support more than $900 billion in cuts to Medicaid, which could disproportionately impact rural communities and their healthcare facilities.
In February, Meyer’s office released an initial batch of requests for potential vendors to carry out programs that will be funded by the federal grant aimed at improving rural health across the country. Some of those bid requests included funding the new medical school, creating a “Food is Medicine” program, as well as operating rural health hubs in Sussex and Kent counties.
It came weeks after the state received its first award from the federal government totaling more than $157 million. The full RHTP award amount for the state remains unclear, but Delaware will receive at least $500 million from the multi-year program.
In plans submitted to the federal government, Delaware budgeted more than $100 million to run its medical school for five years. But Neil Hockstein, chair of the Delaware Health Care Commission, said the signed contract allows Jefferson to run the school for $78 million.
Asked how the state is required to spend the remaining funds, he said Delaware is allowed to reallocate those funds to any of the other 14 programs.
Hockstein added the state intends to spread those leftover funds across multiple different programs instead of reallocating them to just one initiative.
Additionally, Hockstein said when the federal money runs out for the medical school, it would be “self-sustaining without an influx of state dollars.” Still, he said he hopes the state’s philanthropic ventures would help to support the medical school’s future.
“Anything we can do to partner with our philanthropic organizations to make this one of the most cost-effective medical educations, so it doesn’t burden students and families, would be an amazing opportunity to ensure that we attract the best talent,” he said.
When Gov. Matt Meyer outlined a $1 billion proposal last November to expand rural healthcare access, building a medical school in the First State was a pillar of his plan.
He said the state would seek out competitive bids from universities to ultimately operate Delaware’s first medical school. But a signed agreement from October indicated Delaware was already in talks with Thomas Jefferson University, home to one of Philadelphia’s premier medical schools.
University and Delaware leaders, including Meyer, signed the non-binding agreement two weeks prior to the governor’s announcement that the state hoped to build a medical school.
The agreement, called a memorandum of understanding, was not publicly available prior to the state’s announcement.
In the October agreement, Jefferson said it hopes the partnership will improve access and quality of healthcare in Kent and Sussex counties. The agreement also says the university hopes to build a branch campus of its Sidney Kimmel Medical College somewhere in the state.
“The goal of this collaboration is to establish a phased approach leading to the creation of a four-year medical school in Delaware,” the agreement said.
The agreement, dated Oct. 29, 2025, said Delaware will “provide all necessary and appropriate financial resources for the development, implementation, and sustainability of the branch campus.”
Additionally, the agreement says Delaware will lead development and planning of the school in tandem with other universities and hospital systems.
Jefferson already has a sizable footprint in Delaware’s medical education landscape with clinical and educational relationships with ChristianaCare, Beebe Healthcare and Nemours Children’s Hospital in Wilmington through the Delaware Institute of Medical Education and Research, a program that has connected Delaware medical students with Jefferson and PCOM to receive educations largely in Philadelphia for decades.
At the press conference on Tuesday, Meyer said as the state put together its application for the rural health funds, it had to show the federal government the medical school was more than just an idea. So, it sought out a university to sign onto a non-binding agreement, something he said had “had absolutely no bearing” on the competitive bidding process.
David Lenihan, CEO of Tiber Health, the parent company for Puerto Rican-based Ponce Health Sciences University, said he was disappointed to have not been selected but that he hopes there’s a part for the university to play in the future.
“While we would have liked to win, we’re happy that someone’s going to carry the ball forward, and Thomas Jefferson is obviously a great university,” he said.
The post Thomas Jefferson University picked to run Delaware’s first medical school appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
MALTA, N.Y., June 2, 2026 — GlobalFoundries (GF) today announced the completion of its previously-announced acquisition of Synopsys’ ARC Processor IP Solutions business. Combined with MIPS, by GF, the acquisition establishes GF as a technology partner offering customers a software-to-silicon capability purpose built for Physical AI. Synopsys retains and continues to expand its broad portfolio of interface and foundation IP, while GF assumes ownership and stewardship of the ARC processor IP business. MIPS combined with ARC brings together RISC-V processor IP, software tools, custom design and advanced manufacturing into a single offering, while also expanding GF’s engineering depth with world-class processor and AI talent to accelerate innovation.
“Physical AI is driving tighter integration of compute, software and process technology and customers need a partner who can support them across all three together,” said Sameer Wasson, CEO of MIPS, by GF. “With MIPS and ARC united, GF delivers the software, IP and custom silicon capabilities our customers need to build differentiated, application-specific solutions across automotive, industrial robotics and embedded systems, enabling us to operate as a holistic technology partner and engage throughout the design cycle.”
Agentic AI is rapidly extending beyond the data center into the physical world, driving new physical AI and autonomous platforms across automotive radar and advanced driver-assistance systems to industrial robotics, smart factories and the next generation of IoT devices. These systems must now sense, think, act and communicate in real time under tight power and latency constraints, making differentiated silicon spanning compute, AI acceleration, sensing and connectivity, critical to performance and adoption.
“As automotive and industrial systems become increasingly real-time and AI-driven, we need a technology partner that can bring together standards-based IP and optimized silicon design at scale, with the supply resilience our industry now requires,” said Thomas Schneid, VP of Automotive Software and Ecosystem, Infineon. “GlobalFoundries’ combination of MIPS and ARC processor IP with its manufacturing scale provides companies strong end-to-end foundation to build differentiated, power-efficient solutions for next-generation intelligent systems.”
With the transaction complete, the ARC processor IP business becomes part of GF’s expanding Physical AI portfolio within MIPS. Together, MIPS and ARC form a world-class RISC-V processor IP suite spanning high-performance, mid-range and ultra-low-power compute and AI cores, backed by more than 150 patents and a global ecosystem of over 300 IP customers. The acquired portfolio also includes the application-specific instruction set (ASIP) processor tools, ASIP Designer and ASIP Programmer, empowering customers to design and program custom processors tailored to their specific workloads. Paired with GF’s design enablement, custom silicon capabilities, advanced software tools and global manufacturing footprint, customers gain a single partner from architecture to silicon, enabling early engagement, differentiated product development and faster time-to-market.
GF is working closely with Synopsys to ensure a smooth transition for employees, customers and partners. For more information about MIPS ARC processor solutions, visit mips.com/arc.
About GF
GlobalFoundries (GF) is a leading manufacturer of essential semiconductors, enabling AI at scale from the cloud to the physical world. Through deep partnerships with customers, GF delivers differentiated, power-efficient and high-performance solutions for automotive, aerospace and defense, data center, smart mobile devices, internet of things and other high-growth markets. With global manufacturing operations across the U.S., Europe and Asia, GF is a trusted and holistic technology partner for customers around the world. GF’s talented, global team remains focused every day on security, longevity and sustainability. For more information, visit gf.com.
Source: GlobalFoundries
The post GlobalFoundries Completes Acquisition of Synopsys’ Processor IP Solutions Business appeared first on HPCwire.
Tom Kean has been out with health issue since March. Democrats are sharpening their knives for general election
On the day Donald Trump endorsed him as a tireless advocate for New Jersey’s seventh district, the representative Tom Kean Jr was, as he has been since early March, nowhere to be found.
Kean, a New Jersey Republican, was last seen when he cast a House floor vote on 5 March, and he is running unopposed in Tuesday’s Republican primary. The Democratic race in his district, meanwhile, has attracted multiple candidates and ample fundraising.
Continue reading...Damage to Blue Origin's lone launch pad in the wake of last week's spectacular explosion was not as severe as initially feared, the company said.
Find relief from back pain and muscle tension with picks our contributors love, like slip-on shoes and thick cushions
Seven essential gadgets to live with when you have back pain, from grabbers to lap desks
Sign up for the Filter US newsletter, your weekly guide to buying fewer, better things
In another world, pressing play on a “heal overnight manifestation” video or taking a nice hot bath would be enough to relieve our tech necks and tense muscles. Instead, we usually need real, everyday support.
At the Filter, we’ve tested a lot of gadgets to soothe our own achy bodies: eight seat cushions, 18 massage guns and countless products for sleep aid. Below we’ve selected six practical items from our coverage that may help ease your aches and pains.
Continue reading...In the first of a new series of dispatches, fans in US, Mexico and Canada tell us that they want visitors to have a good time but are angry about ticket prices, Fifa’s priorities and a lack of long-term thinking from politicians
The 2026 World Cup features 104 matches in 16 cities across Canada, Mexico and the USA, from Vancouver to Mexico City and San Francisco to Boston. Before, throughout and after the tournament we’ll be hearing from fans in those cities about their experiences – some shared and some different – in our “My World Cup” series. Here some of our correspondents share their first thoughts.
Continue reading...Microsoft has unveiled Scout, an experimental always-on AI "autopilot" agent for Microsoft 365 that can operate across Teams, Outlook, OneDrive, SharePoint, calendars, contacts, browsers, and external apps via MCP. "Autopilots stay active in the background, understand how work gets done across your apps and systems, and take action without needing to be prompted each time," said Omar Shahine, a Microsoft veteran who recently announced he is leading a new team to bring OpenClaw-based personal assistants to Microsoft 365 apps. Computerworld reports: Shahine said Scout can reduce mundane tasks that office workers face, such as coordinating and scheduling meeting times with colleagues, or blocking times in a user's calendar based on upcoming work commitments. "It can also spot risks, like stalled decisions, so you can address them before they become blockers," he said. It's available as an "experimental release" to customers of the company's Frontier program, Microsoft said, and will require Intune policy configuration and "opt-in attestation." [...] It's not clear whether Scout will be included in Microsoft 365 Copilot subscriptions or charged separately. Microsoft did not immediately provide additional details about pricing.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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US claims world’s 10th-biggest economy engages in ‘unreasonable’ trade practices that ‘restrict US commerce’
The Trump administration proposed 25% tariffs on imports from Brazil, charging that the world’s 10th-biggest economy engages in trade practices that are “unreasonable’’ and that “burden or restrict US commerce”.
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said he received the decision “with indignation”. The Brazil president also blamed the decision by the US administration on his rival in October’s elections, Flávio Bolsonaro, the senator who visited Washington last week. The senator is the son of former president Jair Bolsonaro, once nicknamed “the Trump of the Tropics” by his allies.
Continue reading...Need a private student loan? These lenders offer smart perks, flexible terms and standout borrower benefits.
Bill Pulte, who does not have any national intelligence experience, is nicknamed ‘Little Trump’ among some
Donald Trump’s decision to appoint Bill Pulte as the acting director of national intelligence has set off alarm bells in Washington, as a staunch Trump loyalist with little government experience who has shown an eagerness to retaliate against the president’s political rivals will now sit atop the US intelligence apparatus.
Pulte, whose grandfather started PulteGroup, a major residential homebuilder, had no government experience before Trump appointed him to lead the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), an under-the-radar regulator that oversees the government lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Shortly after arriving at the agency, he began to gut it, firing sizable chunks of the boards of both and appointing himself as chair. Pulte had no government experience before being appointed to the role and does not have national intelligence experience.
Continue reading...Politicians’ statements reflect difficulty facing pro-Israel Democrats as voter support for country falls
Several prominent New York Democrats who participated in the city’s annual Israel Day parade on Sunday have condemned the participation of Bezalel Smotrich, the far-right Israeli finance minister and a leading figure in the Israeli settler movement, in the event.
Smotrich was among several Israeli lawmakers and cabinet officials who marched in the parade on Sunday. His appearance marked his first trip to the US in more than a year, and came less than month after he said the international criminal court (ICC) was seeking an arrest warrant against him.
Continue reading...DENVER, June 2, 2026 — QStar Technologies today announced integration between QStar Network Migrator and the BeeGFS parallel file system, enabling organizations to reduce primary storage costs through intelligent policy-based archiving for HPC, AI, analytics and research environments.
BeeGFS is a high-performance parallel file system widely used in HPC, AI, analytics and large-scale research applications that require fast, scalable access to shared data. QStar Network Migrator is an enterprise-class hierarchical storage management (HSM) solution that automates the migration of infrequently accessed files using policy-based data management to lower-cost archive storage, including tape, cloud and object storage platforms.
The integration uses the BeeGFS Data Management API (DMAPI) to provide QStar Network Migrator with direct access to file metadata without requiring traditional file system scans, significantly reducing scan times and minimizing performance impact on primary storage systems.
Organizations can define migration policies using metadata attributes such as last access time, file ownership, group membership, size or file type. Files may be copied or migrated transparently while maintaining user access through lightweight links or stubs to one or more NFS archive destinations.
These archive destinations are commonly managed by QStar Archive Manager, which provides NFS-based archive gateways with intelligent caching and support for tape libraries, cloud platforms and object storage systems. Replication options allow organizations to protect archived data across multiple tape libraries or combinations of tape, cloud and object storage for enhanced resilience and long-term retention.
As AI, analytics and HPC environments continue to generate unprecedented volumes of data, organizations are increasingly seeking scalable solutions that balance high-performance storage with cost-efficient long-term retention.
“BeeGFS delivers exceptional performance for demanding HPC and AI workloads, and QStar extends that value with intelligent lifecycle management for inactive data,” said Riccardo Finotti, CEO of QStar Technologies. “Together, we help organizations optimize storage infrastructure, reduce costs and implement scalable long-term archive strategies.”
“Modern HPC and AI infrastructures require storage solutions that can scale efficiently while supporting diverse data management strategies,” said Frank Herold, CEO of ThinkParQ. “The integration with QStar gives BeeGFS customers greater flexibility to manage long-term data growth while maintaining the performance and scalability required for active workloads.”
QStar Technologies will feature its intelligent archiving software at ISC2026 in Booth B20, June 23 – 25, in Hamburg, Germany. The BeeGFS parallel file system will be featured at the Fraunhofer ITWM Booth L40.
About QStar Technologies
QStar is the leading global provider of enterprise-class archive and data management software solutions. Our software virtualizes any archive technology behind a file system or S3-compatible interface, making the entire archive appear as one or more NAS disks or cloud buckets. Archived data is easily accessible and secure for years to come.
About BeeGFS
BeeGFS is one of the leading parallel cluster file systems, developed with a strong focus on performance and designed for very easy installation and management. If I/O-intensive workloads are your problem, BeeGFS is the solution. For more information, visit www.beegfs.io.
Source: QStar
The post QStar Integrates with BeeGFS to Reduce Storage Costs Through Intelligent Archiving appeared first on HPCwire.
Anthony Odiong faced up to life in prison for exploiting his spiritual authority as a clergyman for sex with his congregants
A Roman Catholic priest who was convicted recently of criminal clergy sexual assault in Texas has been sentenced to 99 years in prison.
Anthony Odiong, 57, received the punishment from a jury at a state courthouse in Waco on Tuesday after some witnesses described his sexually inappropriate behavior going back more than a decade. Character witnesses on behalf of Odiong, meanwhile, advocated for him to get probation, saying he could follow such an arrangement’s rules – such as living near Waco and not committing additional crimes – despite feloniously breaking his priestly vows of chastity.
Continue reading...Google's Pixel Watch 5, expected to be released later this year, was reportedly lost at sea before it was returned to the owner.
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Chip to Rackscale AI Solutions Delivered to Customers with the Help of Strategic Industry Partners
TAIPEI, Taiwan, June 2, 2026 — Today at Computex 2026, Intel unveiled new innovations that address customers’ chip-to-systems-level AI needs with solutions tailored to address their specific industry challenges, including:
New rackscale AI infrastructure: Intel announced rackscale AI infrastructure for customers interested in scaling their inference and agentic workloads based on Intel Xeon processors and SambaNova SN-50 Reconfigurable Dataflow Units (RDUs).“For more than five decades, Intel, its ecosystem partners, and Taiwan have brought the world the foundational technologies for the PC, Internet, and now AI eras,” said Lip-Bu Tan, CEO of Intel. “Today, with the rise of inference, agentic, and physical AI, Intel is poised to bring the world new innovations from the chip to systems level that promise to transform industry and society for the better. We are proud to join all our partners in building great products that will delight customers and bring the power of AI to more people as we create a brighter future together.”
Rackscale AI Infrastructure for Inference and Agentic Workloads
As the training of AI models has matured, and more AI applications have moved into production, the industry has witnessed an exponential rise in the demand for cost-effective and power-efficient AI inference. With the emergence of agentic AI, the growing demand for AI inference is changing the balance of power in the data center, returning the CPU to a position of prominence.
According to Creative Strategies CEO and principal analyst Ben Bajarin, while “the training-era world looked closer to a one-CPU-per-four-GPU relation in AI deployments, agentic inference changes that relationship to roughly a one-CPU-to-one-GPU (or less) ratio.”
Seeking to capitalize on this trend at a systems level, Intel, SambaNova, and Foxconn today announced their intent to build rackscale AI infrastructure for data center, hyperscale, and intelligence center deployments—built on Intel Xeon processors.
The companies are demonstrating production-ready racks that combine Intel Xeon processors with SambaNova SN-50 RDUs, which together are designed to deliver high performance AI inference with improved cost and power efficiency. As part of the collaboration, Foxconn will provide system integration capabilities for the new rackscale AI infrastructure. Foxconn also plans to manufacture a CPU-dense variant of the rackscale infrastructure for workloads that do not require additional acceleration, including cost-optimized inference, data processing, and hybrid AI.
Agentic Cloud Offering for Fully Disaggregated Inference
Vector Core Compute, a new purpose-built enterprise inference cloud formed by Vista Equity Partners and Cambium Capital, unveiled fully disaggregated inference. Running onstage at Computex, Intel, SambaNova, Vista Equity Partners and Cambium Capital showcased the first real-world demonstration of a disaggregated inference system, using Intel Xeon 6 processors for orchestration and execution, SambaNova SN40 RDUs for decode, and NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs for prefill—operating from a Vector Core Compute data center in Los Angeles, California.
Together.ai is the first commercial customer running workloads on Vector Core Compute’s agentic cloud, which delivered the fastest enterprise inference on the MiniMax 2.5 model of any architecture to date. Vista Equity Partners has secured early access to the company’s high-quality, low-cost inference solutions for its 90+ portfolio companies which serve more than 2.5 million enterprise customers and 750 million users worldwide.
Industry Specific Solutions Based on Intel Processors and Purpose-built Silicon
It is often stated that AI is transforming every industry. It is also true that the computing needs of specific industries vary widely due to differences in their business environments, processes, workflows, and customers.
Today, Intel announced several strategic partnerships designed to co-develop industry-specific vertical solutions based on Intel processors and purpose-built silicon, including:
Intel Xeon 6+ Processors for Next Generation Data Centers
Extending this week’s announcements from data centers and racks down to chip-level innovations, Intel announced the availability of Intel Xeon 6+ processors, which provide greater performance density, power efficiency, and operational scale for cloud-native, agentic AI, and network-intensive workloads.
Built on Intel 18A—its first use in a data center CPU—Xeon 6+ is engineered for sustained performance under real-world power constraints—addressing the orchestration, concurrency, and data movement demands of emerging agentic AI.
Xeon 6+ can be configured for AI rackscale infrastructure purpose-built for hosting agents at maximum density. For example, a single liquid-cooled rack can deliver 36,864 cores using 32U of compute space, which provides the highest agent density available (at approximately 100-kilowatt rack power compute).
Optimized for environments where watts per rack, throughput per core, and latency predictability are critical, Xeon 6+ emphasizes scale-out performance—making room for new AI workloads without requiring disruptive data center redesign.
Series 3 Scale and Momentum
Core Ultra Series 3, built on Intel 18A, continues to experience strong customer uptake for a platform that now powers more than 325 consumer and commercial PC designs. Leveraging the same advanced IP as Ultra, the recently launched Core processors are enabling a new class of thin, sleek, powerful, and efficient PCs at affordable price points. Series 3 also pushes into the growing market of handheld gaming with the new Intel Arc G-series processors, which will be available starting this month. The expansion of the Series 3 processor family is being accelerated by increased 18A yields and strong customer and partner engagement.
Beyond the PC, Intel has powered edge devices in manufacturing, robotics, retail, and smart cities for decades. For the first time, the latest Series 3 IP scaling in the PC ecosystem will deploy in parallel to thousands of edge customers globally. Over 130 customers have already chosen Series 3 to power edge AI and robotics designs.
About Intel
Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) designs and manufactures advanced semiconductors that connect and power the modern world. Every day, our engineers create new technologies that enhance and shape the future of computing to enable new possibilities for every customer we serve. Learn more at intel.com.
Source: Intel
The post Intel Announces New AI Innovations at Computex appeared first on HPCwire.
Prime minister under pressure to show his campaigns against Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran have brought results as he faces elections with his political survival at risk
If there is to be a peace deal between the United States and Iran, it will have to go through a familiar obstacle: Benjamin Netanyahu. Israel’s military operations in Lebanon have become a sticking point in the talks for a potential opening of the strait of Hormuz – once again testing the volatile alliance between Donald Trump and Netanyahu.
This time, the Israeli prime minister is under exceptional pressure to show that his campaigns against Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran have brought results as he faces elections with his political survival at risk.
Continue reading...Trump, who was swiftly evacuated from April gala after incident, confirmed his attendance at summer event
The White House correspondents’ dinner will be rescheduled for 24 July after the Washington event was abruptly cancelled this spring following a shooting.
Donald Trump, who was swiftly evacuated from the gala after the incident on 25 April, has pledged to attend a rescheduled event.
Continue reading...People from town of potential site for US citizens exposed to Ebola say it puts them at risk in country with no known cases
People from a town in central Kenya where the US wants to set up an Ebola quarantine facility for its citizens have strongly criticised the plan, saying they fear it will expose them to the virus and that it is indicative of double standards on the part of the US.
“Everybody should be quarantined in their home country. We shouldn’t allow foreigners to bring us diseases,” said Charles Mathenge, a taxi driver who lives near Laikipia Air Base, the proposed site in Nanyuki, 120 miles from the capital, Nairobi. “Kenya is our country, and we should be careful with it.”
Continue reading...Warplanes carry out dozens of airstrikes and Israeli army issues evacuation warning for city of Nabatiyeh
Israeli warplanes have launched dozens of strikes across southern Lebanon despite a new agreement supposedly brokered by Donald Trump aiming to bolster the tattered ceasefire in Lebanon.
The US president said on Monday that he had stopped an imminent Israeli strike on Beirut and that he had spoken to Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and representatives of Hezbollah and both agreed that “all shooting will stop”.
Continue reading...RA’ANANA, Israel, June 2, 2026 — DriveNets, a leader in large-scale networking solutions, has announced it has completed a $410 million Series D financing round, reaching $1 billion total capital raised. With more than $1B in secured business and having been cash-flow positive since 2025, the company will use the additional funding to scale inventory to support its growing AI fabric pipeline and expand its Heterogeneous AI infrastructure solutions. The funding round was led by Bessemer Venture Partners and Atreides Management. New investors, AMD and Red Dot Capital, joined alongside existing investors Pitango and D1 Capital Partners.
Since the company’s founding ten years ago, DriveNets’ Network Cloud has become the network of record for the world’s largest telecommunications companies. Built on the same engineering foundation, DriveNets’ Ethernet-based AI fabric supports large-scale AI infrastructures built by foundation labs, hyperscalers, NeoClouds, and large enterprises. The company is now working with leading AI vendors such as AMD, Broadcom, and others to tighten the integration between networking and compute in multi-vendor AI environments, maximizing cluster performance and GPU utilization to substantially improve token economics. It is also partnering with Dell, Supermicro, and other systems partners on go-to-market activities.
“This financing round marks a pivotal step in scaling our company to meet the surging demand for large-scale AI infrastructure,” said Ido Susan, CEO and Co-Founder of DriveNets. “The most expensive idle asset in the world right now is a GPU waiting on the network. We’re applying a decade of high-performance networking expertise to enable our customers to achieve higher utilization, reduce cost per workload, and scale their AI operations efficiently — on any AI accelerator they choose.”
“AI infrastructure is entering a new era of open, integrated systems where compute, networking, and software scale together,” said Vamsi Boppana, senior vice president of AI at AMD. “Our support of DriveNets’ Series D reflects a shared commitment to scaling AI workloads efficiently with AMD Instinct accelerators and DriveNets’ high-performance fabric on open infrastructure, advancing open, standards-based AI data centers.”
Addressing the Most Expensive Idle Asset Problem – a GPU Waiting on the Network
DriveNets’ AI fabric solutions are based on standard Ethernet and support scale-up, scale-out, and scale-across architectures, along with front-end and storage connectivity for large-scale AI clusters. They address two fundamental constraints in AI infrastructures today: large GPU clusters operating below peak efficiency due to network bottlenecks and reliability challenges, and slow cluster bring-up time (‘idle Capex’), especially in multi-vendor environments.
DriveNets’ high-performance AI Fabric eliminates networking bottlenecks by performing end-to-end networking optimizations across the entire AI stack, including collective communication libraries, transport protocols, NICs, the network fabric, and system-level orchestration. Some of these optimizations are developed in collaboration with leading AI accelerator vendors, such as the recently published validated reference architecture for AMD-DriveNets-based clusters that maximizes GPU utilization, reduces cost-per-token, and enables rapid deployment and efficient end-to-end scaling.
“As AI systems reach unprecedented scale, the performance of the underlying network fabric has become a primary driver of AI economics,” said Charlie Kawwas, President, Semiconductor Solutions Group, Broadcom. “Broadcom’s AI semiconductor and Ethernet switching solutions, combined with DriveNets’ high-performance fabric, deliver the scale and efficiency that modern AI workloads demand. This collaboration reflects how open Ethernet is becoming the foundation of the next-generation AI data center.”
“AI networking is on track to surpass $200 billion by the end of the decade, driven by the shift from single-vendor stacks to multi-vendor and later heterogeneous AI infrastructures. DriveNets enters this phase with a strong combination — tier-one service provider reliability, validated AMD reference design, and the inventory position to deliver into a supply-constrained market. That positions the company well as open Ethernet becomes the foundation of next-generation AI infrastructure,” said Alan Weckel, Founder and Technology Analyst, 650 Group.
DriveNets – a Foundational Player in Heterogeneous AI
The recent AI infrastructure spending shift from training to inference is expected to drive the adoption of Heterogeneous AI architectures that bring infrastructure costs down and optimize power utilization.
Heterogeneous AI architecture uses multiple AI accelerators from multiple vendors within the same cluster, each best for a different stage or task within the AI training or inference process. The compute resources in the cluster are orchestrated to provide the best overall performance and power utilization, to reduce cost per million tokens and maximize tokens per watt.
DriveNets’ AI fabric is uniquely positioned to support Heterogeneous multi-vendor AI environments due to its ability to perform full-stack optimization for any AI accelerator in the cluster, maximizing the performance and utilization of the entire cluster.
“Every shift in compute produces a new networking giant. Cisco wired the internet. Arista wired the cloud. NVIDIA wired single-vendor AI. DriveNets is wiring what comes next: Heterogeneous AI,” said Adam Fisher, Partner, Bessemer Venture Partners. “This is why BVP led DriveNets’ $410M Series D, an existing portfolio company we’ve backed since its Series A.”
About DriveNets
DriveNets is a leader in large-scale networking solutions for AI infrastructure and service providers. The company’s disaggregated networking architecture transforms the economics of large-scale infrastructures while maximizing performance, utilization, and operational efficiency. Its high-performance AI fabric maximizes GPU utilization and accelerates deployments by optimizing the AI stack end-to-end, resulting in higher tokens-per-second and lower cost-per-token. DriveNets’ solutions power production networks for global tier-1 operators like AT&T and Comcast, and scale multi-vendor AI infrastructures at foundation model labs, NeoClouds, and enterprises. Learn more at https://www.drivenets.com.
Source: DriveNets
The post DriveNets Raises $410M Series D to Scale Ethernet AI Fabric and Heterogeneous AI Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.
ICC’s decision comes amid growing concerns the team is being influenced by members of a notorious gang in India
Cricket’s international governing body has suspended Canada over what it described as “serious breaches of its membership obligations”, dealing the latest blow to an organization that critics say has become a “laughing stock” within the sport.
The suspension also comes amid growing concerns that one of Canada’s fastest-growing sports is being influenced by members of a notorious gang that operates with impunity from an Indian prison cell.
Continue reading...With KDE Plasma 6.7 almost ready for release, developers have moved on to working on 6.8, and with that release comes probably one of the biggest deprecations in KDE’s history: as of today, the X11 session is gone from KDE. Of course, this change won’t make it to people’s computers until 6.8 actually releases, but as far the code goes, the X11 session is gone. Once 6.8 is actually released, you will only be able to log into a Wayland KDE session.
This won’t affect KDE applications running in other X11 desktop environments, and of course, X11 applications will keep working in KDE as well thanks to XWayland. It’s also important to note that this won’t affect anyone sticking to older versions of KDE Plasma; it’s not like X11 session support will be yanked retroactively. From here on out, a lot of X11 code will be removed from KDE, and developers will be able to focus on just one code path, instead of accommodating the lowest common denominator in X11.
Our internal metrics within KDE show that over 95% of users of Plasma 6.6 are on Wayland, with a gradual increase every release. The metrics also show that basically no one is testing or developing Plasma on X11 anymore. The platform was already, for all intents and purposes, abandoned by KDE contributors.
↫ David Edmundson
The transition from legacy X11 to Wayland has been a long, painful journey, but I’m glad we’re finally reaching the destination. If you’re still having issues with KDE on Wayland, be sure you’re using an up-to-date distribution – not an LTS one – and see how that goes for you.
The student loan rulebook is being rewritten, and making a few quick moves now could spare you a costly surprise.
Google's latest features are designed to bring an added layer of safety and personalization to your phone.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order asking artificial intelligence companies to provide models to the federal government to assess their capabilities ahead of a full release. The order asks companies, on a voluntary basis, to participate in a benchmarking process to assess a model's "advanced cyber capabilities" and determine whether it should be considered a "covered frontier model." It then asks for access to those models up to 30 days before the companies plan to release them more broadly, and enables the government to help select the "trusted partners" that will receive early access. "Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize the creation of a mandatory governmental licensing, preclearance, or permitting requirement for the development, publication, release, or distribution of new AI models, including frontier models," the order said. Trump signed the order in private, just weeks after he postponed a signing ceremony with prominent tech CEOs because he "didn't like certain aspects of it," he told reporters at the time. [...] Trump's AI order outlines several timeframes to develop directives and other guidance, specifically calling on the Department of Defense to prioritize the cyber defense of its information systems.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A mortgage interest rate lock before the June Federal Reserve meeting starts may make sense for borrowers. Here's why.
Updates to the Dell AI Factory with NVIDIA span accelerated computing, networking, storage, enterprise software, digital twins and robotics, giving enterprises a unified infrastructure foundation for agentic AI at scale
TAIPEI, Taiwan, June 2, 2026 — Dell Technologies has announced updates to the Dell AI Factory with NVIDIA, adding Dell PowerEdge servers built with NVIDIA Vera CPUs to the industry’s broadest AI infrastructure portfolio.
AI has evolved from generating content to performing work. As organizations deploy AI agents that reason, plan, use tools and execute complex workflows, infrastructure requirements are growing. These server platforms give enterprises a single, validated path to building and operating agentic AI at scale.
Bringing NVIDIA Vera CPUs to Dell AI Factory with NVIDIA
The Dell PowerEdge R9822 and M9822 servers bring NVIDIA Vera CPUs to a broad range of deployments. The air-cooled, expandable 3U PowerEdge R9822 addresses use cases ranging from agentic sandboxes and analytics to general-purpose CPU infrastructure in any standard data center environment. The 100% direct liquid-cooled PowerEdge M9822 also uses the Vera CPU, enabling dense compute for agentic AI and HPC workloads that demand maximum performance and efficiency at scale.
Together, Dell and NVIDIA Power AI
NVIDIA Vera CPUs join Dell’s lineup of NVIDIA technologies that are already working to serve enterprises, including:
“As AI moves from experimentation to impact, every organization faces the same challenge. Move fast or fall behind,” said Michael Dell, chairman and chief executive officer, Dell Technologies. “Together with NVIDIA, we’re helping customers turn data into AI fuel and build infrastructure they control, with the security, governance and efficiency they need. The Dell AI Factory with NVIDIA makes it easier to go from pilot to production.”
“Agentic AI is becoming the operating system of every enterprise,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO, NVIDIA. “Vera is the CPU built for the age of agents. Together with the Dell AI Factory and Dell’s unmatched enterprise scale and global reach, we are bringing NVIDIA Vera Rubin—the next generation of AI infrastructure—to organizations everywhere.”
Availability
Dell PowerEdge M9822 and R9822 will be globally available in September.
About Dell Technologies
Dell Technologies (NYSE: DELL) helps organizations and individuals build their digital future and transform how they work, live and play. Dell offers customers one of the industry’s broadest technology and services portfolios for the AI era.
Source: Dell Technologies
The post Dell Adds NVIDIA Vera CPUs to AI Factory Portfolio for Agentic AI and HPC appeared first on HPCwire.
It looks like it'll be a hit for students.
Former US first lady says she has sat ‘at every powerful table’ and not met a single white man with such doubts
White men do not have to worry about impostor syndrome, according to Michelle Obama, who said she had sat “at every powerful table there is” and not found one who admitted feeling such self-doubt.
The former US first lady told SXSW London that she wanted to “demystify” what it was like to sit in elite meetings, which she said were often populated by people from diverse backgrounds who felt like outsiders.
Continue reading...As ethnonationalist far right drives racist agenda, Reform UK leader felt need to weigh in on murder of Henry Nowak
The full horror of Henry Nowak’s last moments was only just sinking in on the morning after the release of police footage showing him pleading for help when Reform UK served notice that its leader would be making an “emergency address”.
Appearing via a live stream from a location with fields in the background, Nigel Farage paid tribute to the “extraordinarily dignified” response of the Nowak family, before wading in with remarks of his own.
Continue reading...Helen Spree, 63, headed prison watchdog and was said to have become besotted with killer Dylan Westall, 35
A corrupt prison watchdog boss who billed herself “the prisoners’ Deliveroo” has been jailed for five years after admitting sending sexual messages to a killer inmate and smuggling drugs.
Helen Spree, 63, was the head of the independent monitoring board (IMB) for HMP Liverpool when she engaged in illicit chats with prisoners over a 20-month period. Spree was said to have become besotted with Dylan Westall, 35, who was serving a life sentence for manslaughter for shooting a teenager in the head.
Continue reading...Please drive responsibly when Mario Kart World music is blasting through your car.
Investigation follows circulation of videos showing groups climbing out of sewer systems across the city at night
New York police are investigating a bizarre mystery involving groups of people emerging from the city’s manholes in recent weeks.
The investigation follows the circulation of multiple social media videos showing people climbing out of sewer systems across the city, all in the middle of the night.
Continue reading...The US president seeks to curb Israel’s intensified offensive as he looks for an exit from war with Iran, but turmoil in the Middle East will not easily be ended
“Let’s see how long that lasts,” Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social on Monday night, addressing his attempts to de-escalate in Lebanon following Israel’s intensified military campaign. Within hours, Israeli drone strikes had killed eight people in the south, including a father and his two children, and damaged a hospital. Hezbollah continued launching rockets and drones.
Anxious to escape the illegal war that he launched on Iran, and with Tehran threatening to suspend peace talks over the Israeli offensive, the US president reined in Benjamin Netanyahu – for now – in what was described as an expletive-laden phone call. Mr Trump’s post, despite its unusual admission of doubt, still oversold the agreement. He claimed that Hezbollah and Israel had agreed to “stop all shooting”. Lebanon’s presidency suggested a more limited deal: Israel would not strike Beirut’s southern suburbs if Hezbollah did not launch attacks against Israel.
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...The secretary of state is testifying publicly to Congress for the first time since the war began, as the regional conflict worsens and lawmakers’ patience runs thin.
Witness B said in police interview that she pretended to be asleep when allegedly abused as a child
A jury in Northern Ireland has heard details of the alleged rape of a child by the former Democratic Unionist party (DUP) leader Jeffrey Donaldson.
A police interview with the complainant was played to Newry crown court in Northern Ireland on Tuesday on the sixth day of the former MP’s trial for alleged sex offences.
Continue reading...Many TV broadcasts are only 720p. Some TVs are 8K. There's talk of even greater resolutions. Here's what you need to know.
FOSTER CITY, Calif., June 2, 2026 – ZutaCore, a leader in waterless, direct-to-chip, two-phase liquid cooling, today announced its $100 million Series C funding round. The round includes investment from Mitsubishi Electric, Carrier Ventures, and Samsung Electronics (via its CVC arm, Samsung Ventures), alongside additional investors.
The funding supports global commercialization expansion as ZutaCore scales to meet rapidly growing bookings and deployments driven by surging demand for AI and high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure. It will also advance, R&D to address the evolving thermal requirements of next-generation chip architectures – driving innovation in in-package thermal management enabling seamless two-phase integration with existing air and single-phase systems, and supporting megawatt-class deployments. ZutaCore’s waterless two-phase cooling platform is designed to support next-generation AI and HPC processors exceeding 4,000 watts, enabling higher compute density and sustained performance at scale
This milestone reflects strong market confidence in ZutaCore’s technology and vision, fueling continued global expansion, product innovation, and large-scale customer adoption.
ZutaCore has achieved more than 75 deployments worldwide, across the Americas, Europe and Asia, demonstrating the growing adoption of two-phase, direct-to-chip liquid cooling in production environments.
The company continues to collaborate with leading global partners to deliver advanced thermal management solutions, helping remove critical roadblocks in next-generation chip roadmaps and accelerate time to market.
Scaling Leadership to Match Market Demand
To support its accelerating global momentum, ZutaCore is expanding its leadership team and international presence—recruiting top talent and building the infrastructure needed to enable worldwide deployments, strategic partnerships, and deep technical collaborations with leading industry players. To support this growth, ZutaCore has expanded its executive team with four key strategic hires:
These leaders join Erez Freibach, Chairman and CEO, Brian Lillie, President and Chief Revenue Officer, My Truong, Chief Product and Technology Officer, and Susan Mor, Chief of Staff – forming a seasoned leadership team focused on scaling execution and delivering next-generation cooling infrastructure to hyperscalers, neoclouds, data center operators, and other demanding enterprise compute environments.
A Year Of Landmark Innovations and Accelerating Growth
With AI workloads surging and data center power densities climbing into the multi-megawatt range, operators require scalable, energy-efficient solutions that can handle extreme heat loads at scale. Waterless two-phase, direct-to-chip liquid cooling has become a critical enabler of this shift, positioning ZutaCore at the forefront of this transformation.
To support this transition, ZutaCore established a 2MW End-of-Row emulation platform at its facility in Israel. This platform replicates real-world thermal and facility interactions without relying on production IT equipment, enabling validation of performance, stability, and integration requirements at multi-megawatt scale while significantly reducing deployment risk for customers.
In parallel, ZutaCore continues to introduce highly innovative solutions, including its OmniTherm cold plate, which enables waterless two-phase cooling for the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition in a single-slot PCIe form factor, supporting full-power operation in standard enterprise and AI cloud server environments.
ZutaCore continues to advance its platform to meet the rapidly evolving requirements of AI-driven data centers.
Erez Freibach, Chairman and CEO of ZutaCore, said: “$100M of funding reflects strong validation from leading global partners and growing demand for our technology. AI is fundamentally reshaping data center infrastructure, and traditional approaches are no longer sufficient. With our expanding leadership team and continued innovation, we are well positioned to support the next generation of high-performance, sustainable data centers.”
Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC is serving as exclusive placement agent to ZutaCore in connection with its Series C capital raise.
About ZutaCore
ZutaCore’s waterless two-phase direct-to-chip liquid cooling delivers unrivaled performance, eliminates water risk, and cuts energy use in half. Proven at scale in the world’s most demanding data centers, it is the clear choice for AI, cloud, and enterprise leaders. Learn more at www.zutacore.com.
Source: ZutaCore
The post ZutaCore Raises $100M Series C to Scale Waterless Cooling for AI and HPC Data Centers appeared first on HPCwire.
Under new rules, tech companies will be asked to share AI models with government for review before public release
Donald Trump signed an executive order to create a voluntary framework for the federal government to vet powerful new AI models before they are released. Tuesday’s highly anticipated order represents an attempt by the president to tighten his grip on cybersecurity and national security threats posed by AI, tacking against his earlier deregulatory stance. But the voluntary nature of the framework shows that, while Trump has toed a more cautious line on AI than when he first took office last year, he is still reluctant to impose regulations on the tech industry.
Under the new guidelines, tech companies would be asked to share their AI models with the government for a voluntary review, up to 30 days before a public release. The Trump administration says doing so will allow them to improve national security, particularly with regards to cybersecurity.
Continue reading...If your phone can't recharge after a deep battery drain, this update is for you.
June 2, 2026 — The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) has announced four new calls to accelerate quantum technologies, enhancing Europe’s capabilities in navigation, computing and standardization.
Grand Challenge on Quantum Sensors for Inertial Navigation
Through this call, HORIZON-JU-EUROHPC-2026-NGC-04, the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking aims to advance the development of quantum-enabled navigation systems for use in GNSS-denied or contested environments. The action will be implemented in a two-phase competitive structure, supported by Horizon Europe and in close collaboration with the European Investment Bank.
In Phase 1, proposals are expected to establish a comprehensive technical and financial roadmap demonstrating the potential of the proposed quantum inertial navigation system while delivering evidence-based design and benchmarking packages. Proposals should target systems that are already sufficiently mature and include analyses of investor-readiness and supply-chain sovereignty. Over the course of Phase 1, projects will be given the opportunity to liaise with EIB advisory services to prepare and strengthen their financial viability plans preparing for potential investments from the EIB in Phase 2. Following full due diligence successful projects will qualify to receive convertible loans from the EIB in two separate installments during Phase 2.
The total indicative budget available for this call is EUR 2 Million, funded under the Horizon Europe program. The expected duration of the Grand Challenge is 6 months. The call opens today, June 2, 2026, with a submission deadline of January 14, 2027 at 17:00 CET (Brussels time).
Relevant details and information concerning this call are available on this dedicated call page.
Large-Scale Photonic Quantum Computing Platform Technologies
The action, HORIZON-JU-EUROHPC-2026-PQC-06, aims at establishing a strategic European initiative to develop scalable, modular, and interoperable photonic quantum computing platforms.
Proposals are expected to address and provide credible solutions to at least two major technical roadblocks, currently limiting progress in photonic quantum computing.
The first roadblock is the lack of deterministic, high-efficiency photonic entanglement and loss-tolerant architectures suitable for fault-tolerant scaling.
The second is the absence of a standardized, integrated control stack combining photonic hardware, firmware and system software with reliable benchmarking across platforms.
It is expected that by 2028, the selected project will demonstrate a photonic NISQ processor with ≥ 100 photonic qubits and by 2030 to deliver a full-stack, high-connectivity photonic quantum computer with modular scalability.
Proposals are expected to be led by a startup with demonstrated expertise in photonic quantum computing. The startup should collaborate with relevant academic, industrial, research and technology partners to ensure both technological depth and market orientation. The consortium should also include at least one major end-user whose operational requirements will guide the platform design and whose infrastructure will host the field demonstration of the project’s results.
The total indicative budget available for this call is EUR 10 Million, funded under the Horizon Europe program. The expected project duration is three years. The call opens today, June 2, 2026, with a submission deadline of January 26, 2027 at 17:00 CET (Brussels time).
More details and relevant documents concerning this call are available on this dedicated call page.
Standards for Quantum Technologies
Through this action, HORIZON-JU-EUROHPC-2026-STAND-05, the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking aims to support and accelerate the development and adoption of European and international standards for quantum technologies. This will enhance interoperability, quality and reliability assurance, and trust in quantum systems.
It will strengthen Europe’s leadership in the global quantum standardisation landscape and ensure that European industrial and research priorities are well represented and integrated into emerging standards.
Expected outcomes from the call include the delivery of concrete, EU-relevant pre-normative standards and technical specifications across quantum computing, communication and sensing.
The selected proposal will help promoting cross-sectoral interoperability through standardized interfaces, control protocols and benchmarking methodologies, reducing market fragmentation and technical barriers.
By doing so, it should also create practical support tools such as user guidelines, training modules and best practices to accelerate the uptake and implementation of quantum standards.
The total indicative budget available for this call is EUR 1 Million, funded under the Horizon Europe program. The expected project duration is three years. The call opens today, June 2, 2026, with a submission deadline of January 19, 2027 at 17:00 CET (Brussels time).
Further details on this call can be found on this dedicated call page.
Quantum Machine Learning
The action, HORIZON-JU-EUROHPC-2026-QML-07, for Quantum Machine Learning, aims to advance research at the intersection of quantum computing and artificial intelligence, with the objective of unlocking new capabilities for data processing, optimization, and modeling.
By combining quantum processors with classical HPC systems, hybrid approaches are expected to address computational bottlenecks while maintaining scalability and robustness.
Proposals for this call should contribute to the development, validation, and demonstration of Quantum Machine Learning (QML) methods, including novel quantum, quantum-inspired, or hybrid algorithms, performance benchmarking, and noise-aware strategies.
Particular emphasis is placed on scalable solutions capable of handling large and complex datasets, as well as on the development of quantum-native learning models that can demonstrate clear advantages over classical approaches.
The total indicative budget available for this call is EUR 6 Million, funded under the Horizon Europe program. The expected project duration is four years. The call opens today, June 2, 2026, with a submission deadline of January 28, 2027 at 17:00 CET (Brussels time).
Consult relevant details of this call on the dedicated call page.
Source: EuroHPC JU
The post EuroHPC Launches 4 New Calls to Boost Quantum Innovation and Standardization in Europe appeared first on HPCwire.
ARMONK, N.Y., June 2, 2026 — IBM has announced plans to invest more than $10 billion in quantum computing over the next five years. The investment will span research and development, capital expenditure, manufacturing scaling, ecosystem partnerships, and M&A. Together, these areas are designed to accelerate IBM’s quantum roadmap beyond delivering the world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer in 2029, and advance quantum leadership anchored in the United States.
It builds on the broadest quantum foundation in the industry, including the largest fleet of quantum computers across the globe, the most widely used quantum software, and a client and partner network of more than 340 organizations running real workloads today. This investment funds the next stage of that foundation, carrying IBM’s lead from today’s commercial quantum computers towards fault-tolerant scale systems.
“The quantum era is no longer ahead of us, it has started. Our clients, partners and users around the world are tapping into IBM quantum computers to do work that was impossible a few years ago,” said Arvind Krishna, Chairman & CEO, IBM. “The pace of discovery with quantum computers is accelerating rapidly and this investment powers our ability to deliver the next generation of quantum hardware, software, and manufacturing.”
IBM’s Quantum Leadership Today
This investment reinforces IBM’s mission to bring useful quantum computing to the world and builds on the most advanced quantum program in the industry:
More from HPCwire: Commerce Takes Portfolio Approach with $2B Quantum Investment Initiative
About IBM
IBM is a leading provider of global hybrid cloud and AI, and consulting expertise. We help clients in more than 175 countries capitalize on insights from their data, streamline business processes, reduce costs, and gain a competitive edge in their industries. IBM’s breakthrough innovations in AI, quantum computing, industry-specific cloud solutions and consulting deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM’s long-standing commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity, and service. Visit www.ibm.com for more information.
Source: IBM
The post IBM Unveils $10B Quantum Investment Plan to Scale Hardware, Software and Manufacturing appeared first on HPCwire.
Four people were arrested and charged with trafficking more than $45 million in cocaine through the 2,000-foot-long tunnel complete with reinforced walls, ventilation and a rail system.
Durvalumab shows promising results in trial led by London-based Institute of Cancer Research
Doctors are hailing a drug that spares bladder cancer patients “life-changing” surgery and stops tumours coming back.
Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer in the world. Advanced or aggressive forms are often treated with surgery to remove the entire bladder, with patients left having to find alternative ways to pass urine for the rest of their life.
Continue reading...A suite of web APIs built for AI agents that helps them scour the web faster for search results is already being used by Copilot, ChatGPT and "many others."
Longtime Slashdot reader Matt_Bennett shares a blog post from Adafruit: Adafruit received at 10:38 p.m. ET on May 22, 2026 a letter from former FBI chief of staff, Jonathan F. Lenzner, and partner at Fenwick & West LLP, counsel for Flux, demanding, among other things, that Adafruit refrain from publishing an article addressing what the letter characterizes as false and potentially defamatory claims about Flux, including statements about Flux's intellectual property, commercial traction and user base. The letter further asserts claims under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Adafruit accessed only information that Flux's own systems made publicly available through a server misconfiguration. Adafruit's reporting concerns a matter of public security interest and was conducted in the ordinary course of responsible disclosure. Although Adafruit vigorously rejects the assertions made in Flux's May 22, 2026 demand letter, we have temporarily stopped publishing on the Adafruit blog while we consider our response and next steps. We will update the community as appropriate. For context, Adafruit is a major open-source hardware company and electronics retailer known for its maker-focused boards, components, tutorials, and community publishing. Flux.ai is relevant because it is building an AI-assisted circuit-board design platform aimed at changing how engineers create and collaborate on PCB designs. "Adafruit probably did a review of AI PCB tools," writes HN user karmicthreat. "I've used Flux.ai before; it was a pretty bad experience. After about 50-100$ in tokens a couple of times, I couldn't get more than a couple of simple components on the schematic. And not in sensible positions..." Redditor AlexTaradox adds: "Nothing was published as far as I know. I assume they did review of AI tools and likely contacted flux with some preliminary results, but flux saw where it is going and decided to block them from publishing any results. Flux is garbage and they obviously know it, but they need to hold for some time until some other scam acquires them. Doing anything with them is just asking to be screwed..." Further discussions are taking place on Reddit and Hacker News.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Secretary of state appears before Congress and repeats Trump administration’s claims that a deal is within reach
Iran has agreed to negotiate aspects of its nuclear program that it had refused to discuss even a month ago, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has claimed, even as Tehran announced it was halting peace talks and moving to fully close the strait of Hormuz.
Appearing before the Senate foreign relations committee for the first time since the Trump administration launched the war against Iran – which was pitched as a short, weeks-long war, in February – Rubio repeated the Trump administration’s claims that a deal was within reach.
Continue reading...Moscow has intensified aerial bombing of Ukrainian cities as its battlefield advances have stalled.
The order asks AI companies to share previews of powerful new models with the government before they are released to the public.
The US secretary of state added that Iran must also commit to specific negotiations on the disposition of highly-engaged uranium.
Israel’s weapons exports has reached an all-time high for a fifth year running, according to the country’s defence ministry.
In a statement, it said: “Israel’s all-time defence export record has been broken for the fifth consecutive year, with $19.2bn in 2025 – a nearly 30% surge compared to the previous year, more than doubling in five years and quadrupling in a decade.”
Continue reading...A fugitive who lived for more than 40 years under the stolen identity of a University of Arkansas graduate has pleaded guilty to fraud, among other charges.
Federal jury convicts the securities analyst and trader, who could face a maximum penalty of 25 years in prison
A federal jury in California has convicted short seller Andrew Left of securities fraud.
Left, who was a securities analyst, trader and guest commentator on television channels including CNBC and Fox Business, was charged in July 2024 with one count of engaging in a securities fraud scheme, 17 counts of securities fraud and one count of making false statements to federal investigators. As a short seller, Left would make money betting that stocks would fall.
Continue reading...The United States is feeding Pentagon propaganda to internet users in Latin American countries using a new AI-laden content mill, an investigation by The Intercept has found.
La Tilde quietly began development early this year and appears to still be a work in progress, pitching itself as a modern media brand for Latin American audiences with articles published in both Spanish and English. Its name references the accent mark emphasizing vowels in Spanish; “news with an accent” is the site’s catchphrase.
“The tilde is not an ornament. It is a millennial arrow designed to provide direction, save space, and turn up the volume,” a narrator states in a promotional video for the site bearing telltale signs it was AI-generated, such as a newspaper whose sloppily rendered headline reads “SO THEE HOUTIERRER TO TO GHAHOBATEE,” followed by imagery of two medieval monks. “That is why we place the accent on what matters. From the regional pulse and your well-being, to the big ideas and the global context.”
So far, La Tilde’s coverage amounts to an unusual blend of personal finance tips (“Why instant payments matter so much for your business and your wallet”) and articles extolling the value of U.S. military operations in Latin America (“Operation Absolute Resolve: The mission that captured Nicolás Maduro and set a new standard for precision and coordination”).
Its article on the U.S. abduction of the Venezuelan president praises the mission in Trumpian prose, calling it “The Perfect Operation – Coordination, Timing and Precision at an Unprecedented Scale,” and “a military operation of coordination and accuracy never seen before.” Citing “information obtained exclusively by La Tilde,” it describes the operation’s tactical brilliance, flawless execution, and incredibly precise coordination of military assets in the air and on the ground.
If this reads like Pentagon a press release, that’s because it is. An explanation for its glowing coverage of the U.S. military can be found after clicking a small link tucked at the bottom of the site. “La Tilde is a product of an international media organization publicly funded from the budget of the United States Government,” its About page reads.
This easily missed disclosure language is identical to two other Pentagon-sponsored propaganda sites recently revealed by The Intercept.
Targeting audiences, foreign or domestic, with state-run information campaigns remains a politically sensitive topic, and a token disclosure that La Tilde is a U.S.-funded platform allows the American government to say it technically informed readers about the actual source of the information.
According to a defense official familiar with U.S. information operations, La Tilde is operated as a military messaging platform for U.S. Special Operations Command South, or SOCSOUTH, which executes special forces missions throughout South and Central America as well as the Caribbean. When asked about SOCSOUTH’s role behind La Tilde, spokesperson Trevor Wild replied with the text of the site’s About page noting that it’s a government operation, but declined to comment further.
U.S. Southern Command, or SOUTHCOM, which is broadly responsible for coordinating military assets in the countries La Tilde targets, denied involvement. SOUTHCOM “does not fund, operate, or have any official association with La Tilde,” according to spokesperson Steven McLoud, who did not respond to further questions.
Unlike most news websites, La Tilde carries no bylines, masthead, or mention of actual staff of any kind. Although the site claims it employs “dozens of freelance reporters and content creators,” at least some of the site appears to have been generated by a large language model. Running articles through Pangram, an AI-text detection service, produced multiple hits for both English and Spanish writing either partially or entirely written by machines (though such tools are known to deliver false positives).
Emerson Brooking, a fellow with the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab and former Pentagon cyber-policy adviser, told The Intercept he was struck by site’s shoddiness, describing it as “AI all the way down.”
Despite the low quality of AI-generated articles, this approach could help the Pentagon spin up propaganda efforts faster than in the past. “If you can generate new content and even news fronts at the flip of a switch, your influence operations can shift target and focus much more quickly,” Brooking said. “That seems to be the thinking behind recent AI-powered Russian and Chinese networks, for instance.”
An analysis of subdomains hosted on LaTilde.co reveals the site plans to launch bespoke versions for readers in Ecuador, El Salvador, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Panama, and Peru.
Some pro-U.S. content is clearly tailored to these national audiences. An article filed to the site’s “In Good Hands” section highlights the benefits of U.S.–Panamanian joint jungle warfare training exercises, regaling readers with how “temperatures and heart rates climb at the Cristóbal Colón Naval Air Base as Panamanian security forces push forward through the ‘Green Mile,’ the demanding final test of the Combined Jungle Operations Course.” Such joint initiatives are, according to La Tilde, a bulwark against China’s efforts to engage in similar joint exercises in Latin America. Rather than engage with “Beijing’s predatory practices,” the article suggests countries should follow Panama’s lead and “seek training opportunities closer to home or with longstanding partners such as the United States.”
The article makes no mention of the controversy surrounding PANAMAX, a joint military exercise between SOUTHCOM and the Panamanian forces that has sparked increased protest on the grounds it violates national sovereignty. Permanent U.S. military installations in Panama were shuttered in 1999 as part of a 1977 treaty between the two countries; Panamanian opposition parties decried the reestablishment of an American military presence under the guise of joint exercises as a “camouflaged invasion.” Participants in the 2025 PANAMAX exercise La Tilde is pushing include the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, previously known as the School of the Americas, a Pentagon training institute whose graduates included thousands of Latin American death squad gunmen and dictator Manuel Noriega.
The importance of military and intelligence-sharing compacts with the U.S. is a recurring theme. “Far from weakening sovereignty, this kind of cooperation can strengthen it,” one article says.
Other stories from La Tilde argue the American side of Latin American controversies, similarly downplaying issues of national sovereignty. One piece describes how the U.S. abduction of Maduro “has reawakened a long-contained hope among millions of Venezuelans inside and outside the country.” Another alleges Ecuador is a nexus of the international cocaine trade, echoing claims the Trump administration has used to expand Operation Southern Spear, SOUTHCOM’s Caribbean airstrike campaign that has killed more than 200 civilians to date.
It’s unclear who exactly is operating the site on a day-to-day basis. A similar network of military propaganda pages, descendants of an Obama-era information warfare program called the Trans-Regional Web Initiative, appears to be administered by military contractor General Dynamics Information Technology. Renée DiResta, who co-authored a 2022 report on online propaganda efforts backed by U.S. Central Command, told The Intercept that the TRWI successor websites share a common Google Ads identifier code owned by General Dynamics, according to a recent comprehensive analysis of the network she conducted. La Tilde also runs a legal disclosure with identical language as those sites.
General Dynamics did not respond to multiple requests for comment about La Tilde.
Halcyon Group International, another information warfare contractor that operates Diálogo Américas, a similar pseudo-news site backed by the Pentagon, told The Intercept it was not involved with La Tilde.
Design of the La Tilde website was subcontracted to Antpack, a Colombian digital marketing firm. Multiple files hosted on the site created by the AI image-generation service Midjourney contain the word “Antpack” in their name. The Intercept signed up for a user account on La Tilde, part of planned functionality that will let readers comment and save articles for later. Once registered, The Intercept was able to view comments left on a non-public version of the site used by its developers, who posted under names corresponding to LinkedIn profiles of Antpack employees. Antpack did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
U.S. Special Operations has a long record of leading the American internet propaganda efforts, ranging from high-tech efforts to less-sophisticated projects like phony online newsrooms. SOCOM has since 2018 operated the Joint Military Information Support Operations Web Operations Center, which coordinates information warfare and online psychological operations.
The Intercept reported in 2023 that SOCOM was working on acquiring state-of-the-art “deepfake” video fabrication technologies to “generate messages and influence operations via non-traditional channels,” according to procurement documents. La Tilde appears to be using low-effort AI tools rather than anything cutting-edge. Art accompanying its stories often includes portion of the prompt used to quickly generate the image in the file name, and shows mixed results, such as a rendering of the White House portico missing several of its columns or a diploma with garbled text. Photographs illustrating pro-SOUTHCOM messaging, however, are drawn from the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service, an official Pentagon media library.
“The intent is probably to fill these sites with generic material, build an audience base, and then slip in more pieces of explicit propaganda, like that rather fulsome recounting of the U.S. attack on Venezuela,” Brooking said. “This is how you build these sorts of networks. But the content is lazy, the AI is bad, and the required disclosures make the whole thing a farce.”
The post The Pentagon Is Running an AI Propaganda Mill Targeting Latin America appeared first on The Intercept.
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My husband gifted me Beats Studio Pro over-the-ear headphones instead of Apple's. I'm not mad about it.
Mirra Andreeva routed Sorana Cirstea, Marta Kostyuk overpowered Elina Svitolina and Alexander Zverev saw off Rafael Jodar, all three winners moving into the last four
A majestic, mature performance from Andreeva, locked-in from the start and ruthless to the end, a forehand winner to the corner securing the win. She’s into her second grand slam semi and will face the winner of our next match between Svitolina and Kostyuk.
Cirstea knows the jig is bust, going for everything because what else can she do. But an error hands over 15-30 and a backhand winner down the line raises two match points.
Continue reading...SAN JOSE, Calif. and TAIPEI, June 2, 2026 — Super Micro Computer, Inc. today announced a new class of AI-centric solutions featuring Arm AGI CPUs. The increasing compute demands of modern agentic AI require a new class of rack-scale infrastructure that maximizes compute performance within the power envelopes and physical footprints of enterprise data centers. Supermicro’s new solutions are built to support the rapid growth of agentic AI, delivering performance, efficiency, and density that maximizes the economics of rack-scale deployments backed by Supermicro’s, end-to-end DCBBS capabilities reduce time-to-online.
“Supermicro continues to lead the industry when it comes to deploying new and innovative rack-scale solutions that maximize performance and efficiency,” said Charles Liang, president and CEO of Supermicro. “Our DCBBS technology stack delivers end-to-end data center solutions of any size, which combined with the new density and efficient performance optimized Arm AGI CPU microarchitecture, helps enterprises realize significant TCO savings on their agentic AI infrastructure investments.”
“Agentic AI is driving a fundamental shift in infrastructure requirements, where efficiency, scalability, and orchestration performance are becoming just as critical as raw compute,” said Mohamed Awad, Executive Vice President, Cloud AI Business Unit, Arm. “By combining Arm AGI CPUs with Supermicro’s rack-scale system expertise, we’re enabling infrastructure designed to deliver higher AI throughput, maximum compute density, and improved data center economics at scale.”
Supermicro’s new computing platforms consist of air-cooled dual-socket 2U compute-optimized and 5U GPU-optimized rackmount servers, as well as a liquid-cooled multi-node solution designed specifically for rack-scale agentic AI deployments. Combining Supermicro’s proven modular, high-density architectures with the energy-efficient Arm Neoverse CSS V3-based CPUs enables scalable, flexible infrastructure that maximizes performance-per-watt and dramatically lowers energy demand to accelerate AI adoption across modern data centers.
When deployed in Supermicro solutions, the Arm AGI CPU can deliver over 2x performance per rack compared to traditional architectures and help enterprises save up to $10 billion in CAPEX per Gigawatt of AI data center capacity based on Arm’s estimates. Building on Supermicro’s industry-leading rack density and performance-per-watt, these solutions help ensure maximum utilization of data center space and power resources.
Arm AGI CPU boasts a dense 136-core microarchitecture purpose built for performance, minimizing legacy overhead and completing more work per cycle for sustained, unthrottled performance. 6GB/s memory bandwidth per core and latency-optimized memory access support linear scaling, while expanded memory capacity and flexible I/O provides energy-efficient, scalable agentic AI infrastructure to orchestrate thousands of parallel tasks across distributed infrastructure.
With over 6,000 cores in a single air-cooled rack, enterprises can efficiently deploy numerous dedicated systems for a high volume of agentic AI tasks.
The Supermicro lineup of Arm-based servers includes five models:
2U Hyper Server – Optimized for agentic AI, Cloud, and memory-intensive workloads
5U GPU Server – GPU-dense configuration for AI training and inference
2U4N Liquid-Cooled Server – For OCP ORV3 environment
2U Hyper-E Server – Single-socket edge-optimized architecture with front I/O
1U 4N in an OCP ORW rack – Massive Compute Density
Supermicro continues to lead the industry with its comprehensive portfolio of AI infrastructure solutions, enabling organizations worldwide to deploy scalable, efficient, and environmentally responsible AI data centers.
The latest rack-scale solutions will be on display at the Supermicro booth at Taipei Nangang Exhibition Center Hall 1, 4F, N0602, offering attendees a first-hand look at their design and capabilities.
About Super Micro Computer, Inc.
Supermicro (NASDAQ: SMCI) is a global leader in Application-Optimized Total IT Solutions. Founded and operating in San Jose, California, Supermicro is committed to delivering first-to-market innovation for Enterprise, Cloud, AI, and 5G Telco/Edge IT Infrastructure. We are a Total IT Solutions provider with server, AI, storage, IoT, switch systems, software, and support services. Supermicro’s motherboard, power, and chassis design expertise further enables our development and production, enabling next-generation innovation from cloud to edge for our global customers. Our products are designed and manufactured in-house (in the US, Taiwan, and the Netherlands), leveraging global operations for scale and efficiency and optimized to improve TCO and reduce environmental impact (Green Computing). The award-winning portfolio of Server Building Block Solutions allows customers to optimize for their exact workload and application by selecting from a broad family of systems built from our flexible and reusable building blocks that support a comprehensive set of form factors, processors, memory, GPUs, storage, networking, power, and cooling solutions (air-conditioned, free air cooling or liquid cooling).
Source: Supermicro
The post Supermicro Debuts Arm-Based Rack-Scale Platforms for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Researchers observed unavailable female dolphins – those that were older, or with calves – did not show the same avoidant behaviour
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Female dolphins identify males by their unique calls and keep track of their past behaviour, choosing to avoid the most aggressive males during mating season, new research suggests.
Bottlenose dolphin society is complex, and male and female dolphins often know each other for decades, said Prof Stephanie King, an expert in animal behaviour at the University of Bristol.
Continue reading...US president says head of Federal Housing Finance Agency will serve as acting director days after Gabbard exits role
Donald Trump has tapped a close ally to serve as the country’s top intelligence official, days after Tulsi Gabbard announced her exit from the role.
The US president said that Bill Pulte, head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), and heir to a home construction company fortune, will serve as acting director of national intelligence.
Continue reading...PRINCETON, N.J. and ESPOO, Finland, June 2, 2026 — IQM Finland Oy, a global leader in full-stack superconducting quantum computers, and Real Asset Acquisition Corp. (Nasdaq: RAAQ), a special purpose acquisition company, today announced an additional PIPE commitment from Ilmarinen in connection with the previously announced business combination between IQM and RAAQ. Ilmarinen’s new commitment comes alongside commitments from other leading institutional investors in the previously announced $134 million PIPE.
The incremental PIPE provides additional funding on top of the previously announced $134 million in PIPE financing proceeds to be used to accelerate IQM’s technology and commercial development towards fault-tolerant quantum computing, further advancing its position as a leading provider of quantum computers.
Headquartered in Finland, IQM plans to list its American Depositary Shares on the Nasdaq Stock Market in the U.S. and its ordinary shares on the Helsinki stock exchange in connection with the completion of this transaction. Ahead of the listing, investment exposure to IQM is available to the public by investing in its special purpose acquisition company partner, Real Asset Acquisition Corp.
IQM is a quantum computing company that builds full stack, open-architecture quantum computers that can be deployed on-premise or accessed via the cloud. IQM operates a vertically integrated business model, boasting a unique combination of proprietary infrastructure from their own chip design tool and software developer platform, to a quantum chip fab, assembly line and data center, allowing the company to accelerate its innovation cycles, deliver best-in-class quantum computing to its customers and enabling the quantum ecosystem to grow.
Jan Goetz, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, IQM, said: “We’re pleased to see such strong investor demand, particularly with the addition of Ilmarinen. This upsized commitment from one of Finland’s largest private earnings-related pension insurance companies underscores confidence in our technology roadmap and the progress we’re making with our Production Quantum – a model where our customers own the system, operate it, and grow with it. This commitment signals that the market recognizes our product readiness and the real value we’re delivering to customers tackling some of the world’s most complex problems.”
Peter Ort, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Chairman, Real Asset Acquisition Corp, said: “We reopened the PIPE because the demand is there from institutional investors who recognize what IQM has built — operational quantum computers, active customer deployments, and a commercial foundation that most of the quantum sector has yet to achieve. This capital positions us to scale aggressively into that lead.”
The securities being sold in the PIPE financing have not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or applicable state securities laws and accordingly may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration with the SEC or an applicable exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act and such applicable state securities laws.
This announcement does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy the securities, nor shall there be any sale of the securities being offered in any state or other jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to the registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or other jurisdiction.
More from HPCwire: IQM and Real Asset Acquisition Corp. Announce Public Filing of Form F-4 Registration Statement
About IQM Quantum Computers
IQM Finland Oy (IQM Quantum Computers) is a global leader in superconducting quantum computers, delivering full-stack quantum computers and cloud platform access to research institutions, universities, high-performance computing centers, national laboratories and enterprises worldwide. IQM’s on-premises deployment model gives customers direct ownership and control of their quantum infrastructure. Founded in 2018, headquartered in Finland, it has over 350 employees. IQM operates across Europe, Asia, and North America. IQM has filed an F-4 registration statement to the SEC with the intention to become the first publicly listed European quantum company on Nasdaq Global Exchange in the U.S by merging with Real Asset Acquisition Corp. (Nasdaq: RAAQ).
About Real Asset Acquisition Corp.
Based in Princeton, NJ, Real Asset Acquisition Corp. is a Nasdaq-listed (Nasdaq: RAAQ) special purpose acquisition company formed for the purpose of effecting a merger, share exchange, asset acquisition, share purchase, reorganization, or similar business combination with one or more businesses. The RAAQ team includes seasoned quantum computing experts with deep technical and industry experience.
Source: IQM Quantum Computers
The post IQM Secures Additional PIPE Investment to Advance Fault-Tolerant Quantum Roadmap appeared first on HPCwire.
State attorneys general argue $1bn deal to terminate major offshore wind lease off the coast of New York is unlawful
Six states sued the Trump administration on Tuesday over its decision to cancel a major offshore wind lease off the coast of New York.
In March, federal officials announced they would pay nearly $1bn in taxpayer dollars to French energy firm TotalEnergies in exchange for the company killing plans to erect two offshore windfarms off New York and North Carolina. TotalEnergies agreed to terminate the projects and pledged not to develop any new offshore wind projects in the United States, while investing hundreds of millions of dollars in oil and gas projects.
Continue reading...Can AI help science move faster without sacrificing openness and collaboration? How to measure ROI in AI for science? What are some of the most effective strategies for collaboration among national and regional initiatives? Those questions were at the center of a discussion at the TPC26 panel featuring senior representatives from some of the world’s leading research and computing organizations.
The session brought together Dario Gil of the Department of Energy, Katie Antypas of the National Science Foundation, Rick Stevens of Argonne National Laboratory, Satoshi Matsuoka of RIKEN, and Per Oster of IT Center for Science. Debra Goldfarb from AWS served as the moderator.
Over the course of the discussion, panelists explored how AI is changing the economics of scientific research. This includes the growing importance of international partnerships and the challenges of balancing collaboration with national interests. They also debated how governments and research organizations should measure the impact of billions of dollars in scientific infrastructure investments as AI becomes increasingly central to scientific discovery.

TPC26 panelists discuss the challenges and opportunities of applying AI to scientific research at scale.
Measuring AI’s impact on scientific research and discovery was one of the first themes to emerge during the discussion. While publications and scientific breakthroughs remain central indicators of success, the panel argued that they no longer provide a complete picture of the value created by large research programs.
As public investments in AI and advanced computing continue to grow, governments increasingly want to understand how those programs contribute to innovation and socio-economic competitiveness. However, the challenge is that those outcomes often take years to materialize.
That task may become even harder as AI spreads across education and industry. The broader the technology’s influence becomes, the more difficult it may be to quantify its impact using traditional measures.
The conversation then shifted from measuring scientific impact to actually improving it. The speakers argued that AI’s greatest contribution to science may not be any single breakthrough – but its ability to make researchers more productive and help them solve complex problems faster.

(Digineer Station/Shutterstock)
That theme was also clear in discussions about national competitiveness.
As populations age and research talent becomes increasingly scarce in some countries, simply adding more scientists to the workforce may no longer be enough to maintain innovation. AI could help researchers accomplish more with existing resources.
Productivity gains emerged as one of the most important benchmarks for evaluating the technology’s long-term impact. However, how to measure the true impact?
The panel suggested that success in AI for science should ultimately be measured by whether AI allows scientific challenges to be solved faster, at lower cost, with higher quality results, or other meaningful outcomes.
The discussion naturally evolved from productivity to collaboration. While AI may help researchers accomplish more with existing resources, panelists argued that many of the most important scientific challenges will still require countries to work together.
Participants also highlighted several factors driving the need for greater international collaboration. This includes the growing cost of AI infrastructure, the increasing complexity of scientific research, and the need for specialized expertise across multiple disciplines. These factors are making international collaboration less of an option and more of a necessity.

(Shutterstock AI Image)
Some of the examples discussed during the session included European initiatives, such as the EuroHPC, designed to coordinate investments across national programs while maintaining close ties to local research communities.
The conversation also focused on partnerships between the U.S., Europe, and Japan. The panelists admitted that competition remains an important driver of innovation. However, they argued that future success will depend on the ability to share expertise and build research capabilities together. They highlighted a key element for this to happen – alignment of priorities.
The speakers emphasized that meaningful collaboration requires more than state-level agreements and formal partnerships. It requires a more open system – one with shared infrastructure and interoperable systems.
When asked about how they see the landscape changing by 2030, the panelists shared that they envision a future where AI is far more deeply embedded in scientific research. And the only way that will happen is with broader access to advanced computing resources and stronger global partnerships.
A key theme with the panel was that AI has the potential to transform the way science is conducted, and in many ways it already is. However, measuring and improving the impact of AI and international collaboration will become even more important as the technology scales.
The post TPC26 Panel Explores AI’s Impact on Science, Productivity and Global Collaboration appeared first on HPCwire.
All England Club to confirm prize fund details on 11 June
Year-long dispute over increased pay at grand slams
The world’s leading players told Wimbledon officials that they expect a substantial increase in prize money at this year’s championships at a meeting at Roland Garros on Monday.
The All England Club is due to confirm details of this year’s prize fund at a press conference on 11 June, with the players calling for a bigger rise than the 7% increase last year as part of their push for the grand slam events to match the 22% of tournament revenue paid by the men’s Association of Tennis Professionals and the Women’s Tennis Association.
Continue reading...You can still earn plenty of interest with a CD account this summer, whether or not CD rates increase.
There's a fresh way to browse book-inspired movies and shows on the streaming service.
Markets take note as world’s biggest equity fundraiser bids to garner more money than three biggest-ever IPOs combined
Google’s parent company, Alphabet, has said it plans to raise up to $80bn (£59bn) in equity to fund its vast artificial intelligence infrastructure investments, raising further questions over the economics of the AI boom.
The move, the largest equity fundraising ever according to analysts, includes a $10bn share sale to the US investment group Berkshire Hathaway, which was led until last year by Warren Buffett.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
The growing homelessness crisis – and how best to address it – has spurred particularly heated debates across the state over the last year. But inconsistencies when completing this year’s annual homeless population point-in-time count have raised questions about the true size of Delaware’s homeless population. Those questions could lead to policy roadblocks for lawmakers seeking to address the growing crisis.
An inconsistency in the counting methods for this past winter’s annual homelessness survey leaves Delawareans without a conclusive way to compare the current number of unhoused people in the state to that of previous years.
The annual Point-In-Time (PIT) Count – an attempt to tally up all the homeless people in the state on one winter night – normally includes data for both people staying inside shelters and those sleeping outside. This year’s Delaware PIT count, however, only counted sheltered individuals.
The count also normally occurs in January, but a severe winter storm when the survey was originally scheduled forced organizers to push the date back to late February.
A representative from the Housing Alliance of Delaware, the organization coordinating the annual count, said she “can’t remember exactly” why the organization did not count people outside. There was a blizzard warning days before the rescheduled count, which made traveling around the state to deliver supplies and prepare for the survey much more difficult, the representative said.
“It was like, ‘Oh my god, this just isn’t meant to be this year, we just need to let it go,’” Rachel Stucker, director of the Housing Alliance of Delaware, said of rescheduling and weather-related obstacles.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) requires that each state complete a PIT count every January, but the count of individuals living outside only needs to be administered bi-annually. So Delaware is still in compliance with federal guidelines despite having missed the unsheltered count this year, Stucker said.
Despite the Housing Alliance’s data snafu, this year’s PIT count comes amid a period of amplified controversy over the state of homelessness in Delaware. Elected officials and residents alike, from Wilmington to Georgetown, have spent the past year debating the state’s homelessness crisis and the most effective ways to combat it.
Outdoor homeless encampments in Wilmington and Georgetown have drawn particular attention over the past year, but it is unclear whether the actual number of people in those encampments has increased.
And experts say the implications of this year’s missing numbers mean that specific trends about homelessness in 2026 remain hairy. Lawmakers also will be forced to make policy decisions based on outdated information.
Steve Metraux, a University of Delaware professor who studies homelessness, said he will not try to interpret the 2026 numbers, or use them to assess whether residents’ notion that homelessness is increasing in Delaware is true.
“You really can’t use it to say homelessness went up or homelessness went down, or different things like that,” Metraux told Spotlight Delaware.
The number of homeless people staying in shelters across the state recorded in the 2026 PIT count – 1,378 – decreased slightly from last year’s 1,418 counted shelter inhabitants. Notably, when the PIT was completed this year on Feb. 25 and 26, temperatures had begun to rise after a frigid January, reaching highs in the 50s, according to Accuweather.
While not counted this year, the number of unsheltered individuals has hovered between 150 to 250 people in recent years.
Last year’s PIT count was the highest on record since the survey began in 2008, excluding the COVID pandemic.
The count is often criticized as random and unrepresentative of the true number of homeless people, but is also considered the primary means of tracking homelessness across the country each year.

In addition to capturing the raw number of sheltered homeless individuals in Delaware, the PIT count collects demographic data about the individuals included in the survey.
These data points, such as age, gender, race and veteran status, remained fairly consistent from the 2025 count to this year.
Some of the more striking demographic takeaways from the 2026 count, Stucker said, include that 41% of adults surveyed reported having a disability and roughly half of respondents were either under 18 or over 55 years old, which is higher than previous years.
Black people tend to experience homelessness at disproportionately high rates in Delaware, according to the PIT count – they represented 65.5% of surveyed individuals, but just 24% of the state’s population.
Metraux, the UD professor, helps conduct the PIT count every year. But he also is open about some of the survey’s shortcomings and the difficulty in locating homeless people in wooded or remote areas. Metraux also said he does not draw specific conclusions about the demographic breakdowns from the PIT count because of the flaws in its methodology.
He will, however, compare “general trends” from the survey with other homelessness studies to assess their accuracy.
The distribution of the homeless population among Delaware’s three counties shifted slightly southward from New Castle County this year.
The percentage of homeless people counted in New Castle County decreased from 61% last year to 55% this year, while Kent and Sussex County saw slight increases from 17% to 20%, and 23% to 25%, respectively.
It is unclear how much of these percentage shifts can be attributed to the absence of the unsheltered count this year.
A look at the specific types of shelters shows there are far more year-round beds available in New Castle County, whereas most of the beds in Kent and Sussex counties are seasonal or overflow beds that are only an option during the cold weather.
In response to claims from Wilmington Mayor John Carney that other cities – most commonly Philadelphia – are sending homeless people to Delaware, the PIT count organizers added a question this year about where unhoused individuals in Wilmington are from.
The results, Metraux said, “pretty much debunked” Carney’s assertion that Philadelphia is sending homeless people on buses to Wilmington.
Of the 182 people surveyed at the Sunday Breakfast Mission, an overnight shelter in downtown Wilmington near the Christina Park encampment, only four people said they were homeless in Philadelphia before coming to Wilmington.
Forty-five percent of the individuals said they grew up in Wilmington, and another 24% reported becoming homeless after moving to Wilmington.
About one-third of the people said they moved to Wilmington while already experiencing homelessness – among that group, the majority moved from somewhere else in New Castle County or the southern part of the state.
“Even with the limitations of the data, it was still pretty unequivocal – homelessness in Wilmington is a problem that originated in Wilmington,” Metraux said.
When asked about the PIT count indications that few homeless people are coming from Philadelphia, a spokesperson for Carney’s office defended his stance.
“This data only captures a portion of the unhoused community in Wilmington and is particularly likely to focus on a more localized population,” Caroline Klinger, the spokesperson, said.
Klinger added that people at a shelter, like the Sunday Breakfast Mission, are more likely to have been in Wilmington long enough to be connected to emergency housing as opposed to individuals who have just arrived in the city and may still be living unsheltered – and thus were not included in the count.
The PIT count this year only asked the question about where people are from in Wilmington, but organizers said they would like to extend it across the state next year.
A survey conducted last fall by Metraux and Judson Malone, the director of Springboard Delaware – a homelessness service provider in Georgetown – suggested similarly that the majority of unhoused people in the Sussex County seat were from Georgetown or another location in southern Delaware.
Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.
The post Delaware homeless count snafu muddles true population size appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Saudi–UAE tensions: Implications for the regional order 10 June 2026 — 14:00 TO 15:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Online
Experts discuss divergences in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi’s strategic outlooks and how the relationship will continue to shape the region.
In this webinar, a panel of experts examine how recent developments underscore broader divergences in regional outlook that had been developing between Abu Dhabi and Riyadh in recent years. Panellists discuss how the war has influenced Saudi and Emirati strategy, and how the relationship will continue to shape Gulf dynamics and the wider regional order.In the final days of 2025, tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), once key partners in the Yemen coalition, became more visible as differences over the conflict’s endgame resurfaced, and the UAE announced a full withdrawal from Yemen. Two months later, the US and Israel launched their war on Iran. The war has further stressed the UAE-Saudi relationship and highlighted divergences over their long-term strategies.
The UAE has taken a stronger stance against Iran, aligning more closely with US and Israeli positions than with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. In April, the UAE withdrew from OPEC, further reflecting divergences between Abu Dhabi and Riyadh’s strategy and vision.
In this webinar, a panel of experts examine how recent developments underscore broader divergences in regional outlook that has been developing between Abu Dhabi and Riyadh in recent years. Panellists discuss how the war has influenced Saudi and Emirati strategy, and how the relationship will continue to shape Gulf dynamics and the wider regional order.
Is the Middle East splitting into rival blocs? 10 June 2026 — 14:00 TO 15:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Online
Discover how the Iran war is reshaping rivalries across the Middle East.
Discover how the Iran war is reshaping rivalries across the Middle East.The Middle East is undergoing a realignment as rivalries intensify and new fault lines emerge. This event examines how the Iran conflict is reshaping regional relations and what these shifts mean for wider stability and the political and security order.
This event will discuss:
Americans speaking out against artificial intelligence data centers on social media are falling under police surveillance, a confidential law enforcement bulletin obtained by The Intercept reveals.
A fusion center in Philadelphia combed through spicy internet comments from AI critics and concluded there is a growing risk of physical violence against data centers from “domestic violent extremists,” ranging from white supremacists to anarchists.
“Domestic violent extremists (DVEs) are likely interested in targeting artificial intelligence (AI) data centers, posing a physical and cyber threat to infrastructure in the Philadelphia regional area,” the Delaware Valley Intelligence Center wrote in a December alert.
The fusion center distributed its warning, marked “for official use only,” through the national fusion center network of state, local, and federal police agencies.
Like many of the reports produced by fusion centers, the bulletin points to news reports and social media posts, but cites little in the way of tangible threats. It acknowledges “a lack of specific information on plans to target AI data centers in the Philadelphia area,” but warns law enforcement that three planned data center facilities in the region could become targets of future protests.
Some of the anti-AI posts included in the document reflect hyperbolic anti-AI rhetoric that is widespread across social media, including an unnamed internet user who “indicated a desire to ‘burn down’ data centers.” Other examples of potentially terroristic posts included references to a fictional anti-robot movement in the science fiction novel “Dune” and a Facebook meme.
The fusion center, housed inside the Philadelphia Police Department, warned that “disruptive First Amendment activity” is an “indicator” of risk from “Domestic Violent Extremists,” an expansive term favored by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies.
Fusion centers, which sprouted up across the country after the September 11, 2001, attacks, have long been criticized for doing little to thwart actual terror plots and too much to subject lawful protesters to suspicion and surveillance. They have previously warned local cops about the supposed threat from Black Lives Matter protesters and Keystone XL to Line 3 pipeline opponents.
Pennsylvania has its own history of counterterror agencies targeting advocacy groups. In 2010, then-Gov. Ed Rendell apologized for the state Department of Homeland Security contracting with a private firm to produce fearmongering reports on groups including anti-fracking activists.
When it came to the recent data center activist report, longtime Philadelphia civil rights lawyer Paul Hetznecker said he was troubled by the fusion center’s association of AI skeptics with terrorists.
“Those are legitimate, popular political concerns that are raised by local communities.”
“Those are legitimate, popular political concerns that are raised by local communities,” Hetznecker said. “This particular report from [the Delaware Valley Intelligence Center] reflects a very dangerous attempt to characterize that protected First Amendment activity — activity which is fundamental to our democracy — as something other, something more dangerous, a breeding ground for something more sinister.”
In response to questions emailed to the Philadelphia Police Department and the Delaware Valley Intelligence Center, a spokesperson responded with a statement asserting that the center “recognizes and respects the rights of individuals to lawfully express opinions, engage in peaceful advocacy, and participate in protected First Amendment activities.”
“Fusion centers exist to help stakeholders understand emerging threats and hazards that could impact public safety, critical infrastructure, major events, government facilities, businesses, and the communities we serve,” said Sgt. Eric Gripp, a spokesperson for the Philadelphia Police Department. “These assessments cover a wide range of topics and are designed to provide situational awareness, not to characterize lawful activity or constitutionally protected speech as criminal conduct.”
The Intercept obtained the Philadelphia report as part of a larger cache of such documents from local fusion centers. It adds to growing evidence that counterterror officials are putting data center skeptics under a microscope. Last week, Wired magazine reported on other notices from local intelligence agencies warning about “anti-tech extremism.” Journalists Ken Klippenstein and Dan Boguslaw also reported on a document from the U.S. Capitol Police Intelligence Services Bureau warning of the potential for anti-data center violence.
The reports are tied to a genuine upswell in popular pushback against data centers. The opposition extends well beyond the mishmash of far-right and far-left groups identified in the Philadelphia fusion center’s report. Seven out of 10 Americans oppose having data centers as neighbors, a recent Gallup poll found.
The fusion center report frames the outcry as a potential first step toward violence, telling local police with jurisdiction over the roughly 16 data centers near Philadelphia that they should be aware of angry online posts.
The report warns about posts on an “anti-capitalist blog that remains popular amongst local anarchist extremist collectives.”
Under a title urging “Butlerian Jihad Against AI” — a reference to a book in the Dune science-fantasy series about humans revolting against their intelligent computer overlords — a post on the Philly Anti-Capitalist blog said “only we can decide to smash the screens that are brainwashing us into submission. The time is now, the day is here, ATTACK! ATTACK! ATTACK!”
The post was unattributed, did not include targets for attack, and included a cartoonish sketch of an old-fashioned computer struck by arrows. Nevertheless, local intelligence analysts appeared to take the threat seriously.
The bulletin also ticked off other signs of anti-data center furor. There was a meme post on shared on a local Facebook account with text reading: “I cannot escape the feeling that I am morally obligated to sabotage AI data center infrastructure.” Commenters on the post had discussed a proposed Amazon data center near Berwick, Pennsylvania, as a “potential target,” according to the report. The Intercept was able to find other versions of this meme posted to Facebook and Instagram unrelated to the targeting of specific, physical data centers.
The fusion center bulletin also said that white supremacists and members of the dark online subculture dubbed “nihilistic violent extremism” by the FBI had agitated online against data centers.
The document also mentioned a DHS report highlighting a thread on an online image board where users discussed using magnets, explosives, or even — in an idea that reflected a sci-fi movie trope — an electromagnetic pulse weapon to take out data centers.
The fusion center analysts appeared to take seriously other rhetoric proposing dramatic attacks. “In addition to general anti-AI data center rhetoric, online users have recently discussed tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) for carrying out attacks varying from simple swatting and hoax threats to property damage, arson, and even the use of chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) material,” the report said.
“That appears to be an effort by law enforcement to hype up the threat where there may be no threat at all.”
Hetznecker, the civil rights lawyer, said the idea of a nuclear threat raised concerns for him about the quality of the fusion center’s sources and its conclusions.
“That appears to be an effort by law enforcement to hype up the threat where there may be no threat at all,” he said. “To increase scrutiny on First Amendment activities by lumping in those activities with the most extreme, possible scenarios one could imagine that have no factual basis.”
The Philadelphia fusion center report specifically warned authorities of the likelihood that new local data centers could be the target of protest.
“There is potential for significant pushback to the three newly proposed AI data centers in the Philadelphia area. Indicators of an increased threat in the short term may consist of more disruptive First Amendment activity in opposition to AI data centers, small acts of vandalism, online calls for action to boycott and or protest local AI data centers in the Philadelphia area, and extensive criticism of higher utility bills resulting from AI data centers,” the report said.
The mention of boycotts, criticism, and other activities protected by the First Amendment raised red flags for Hetznecker.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if we see heightened law enforcement scrutiny on legitimate expressions of AI data center concerns, and I hope that would not chill the appropriate dialogue that needs to occur on the impact of data centers on local communities,” he said.
Update: June 1, 2026, 11:01 a.m. ET
The article was updated with a statement from the Philadelphia Police Department received after publication.
The post Philly Cops Admit That They’re Tracking “First Amendment Activity” Critical of AI appeared first on The Intercept.
New advocates and the future of international human rights 15 June 2026 — 16:00 TO 17:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
As governments and multilateral institutions retreat, a new generation of advocates is reshaping the debate and proposing reform.
As governments and multilateral institutions retreat, a new generation of advocates is reshaping the debate and proposing reform.As governments and multilateral institutions retreat from human rights leadership, new actors are stepping forward. Opening with remarks from Binaifer Nowrojee, President of the Open Society Foundations, this event explores who is defending human dignity today, how they are reshaping practice, and what this shift means for the future of international human rights frameworks.
This event will discuss:
In the face of growing AI cyber threats, do middle powers have agency? Expert comment thilton.drupal
Leaps in AI models are making middle powers anxious about their cybersecurity. But previous cyber crises teach us that they are stronger working together than apart.
Earlier this week, US president Donald Trump signed an executive order on AI and cyber defence. It asks AI developers to voluntarily allow US government agencies to test their models for 30 days before release. And during last month’s Trump-Xi summit in Beijing, the US and China said they would reopen intergovernmental dialogue on AI safety, paused since 2024.
These major developments on safety come after the recent limited release of AI models with advanced cyber capabilities, especially Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview, which sparked global cybersecurity concerns.
These cyber-AI models could strengthen cyber defence. The networks and systems digital societies depend on are filled with holes. Models such as Mythos might autonomously fill these holes much quicker than human teams could.
But they also pose risks. In the wrong hands and with the right resources, powerful AI could be used to supercharge cyberattacks. Google recently reported that a criminal group used AI to find a flaw in their software. More cyber-criminal exploits are undoubtedly coming.
Anthropic – which announced plans for an IPO in the US this week – claims Mythos can find and exploit undiscovered flaws, known as ‘zero-day’ vulnerabilities, in ‘every major operating system and every major web browser when directed by a user to do so’. This includes the digital infrastructure underpinning governments, companies and societies, which makes Mythos too unsafe to release to the public – yet.
Enter the Anthropic-led Project Glasswing, which grants access to Mythos to 12 partners – mainly US technology companies and banks – and over 40 other unnamed organizations to secure their critical systems. The US government and agencies have access too.
The UK’s AI Security Institute (a government directorate that researches advanced AI) also received access and shared a public evaluation in April of Mythos’s performance in simulated cyberattacks. In mid-May, Anthropic reportedly agreed to brief the Financial Stability Board (the world’s financial regulator, tasked with handling complex financial risks). And the EU has recently said Anthropic has offered Mythos access after talks.
OpenAI also provided a limited release of its cyber model, GPT-5.5-Cyber, shortly after Mythos. OpenAI has decided to grant access to the European Commission, and offered ‘trusted access’ to verified cybersecurity defenders.
But the rest of the world is excluded from access to these powerful capabilities. This has stoked concerns about a global gap, in which most governments, central banks and organizations could become dependent on US firms for cybersecurity. This gap matters for global cyber defence. Experts are split on the scale of the threat – and what to do about it.
Cyber incidents with global impacts are nothing new. Networks of interdependent systems – many urgently needing updates – mean a small attack can snowball into a bigger one. This becomes a major problem in critical sectors like healthcare.
The UK knows this well. In 2017, a hacking group’s bad code (known as a ‘worm’) disrupted hospitals across England as it accidentally wreaked havoc on over 200,000 computer systems globally until a young researcher found a kill switch. Just weeks later, more bad code – traced to a Russia-backed cybercriminal group – triggered the ‘most devastating cyberattack in history’, throwing companies and governments into meltdown.
Crises like these provide critical lessons for countries today: technical authority, trusted information and backchannels (between countries, and between states and companies) are essential. A well-navigated crisis might even generate promising governance changes, like new institutions, better public-private information-sharing and cross-border rapid response.
Crises have improved global cyber resilience, and old fears of an inevitable global cyber catastrophe are less prevalent. But with the advent of AI cyber capabilities, most decision-makers (except the select few with access to the most powerful models) lack the right data, tools or networks to prepare for the next potential crisis.
As the US-China AI race intensifies, regulators in the rest of the world understandably struggle to keep pace. Preventing them from understanding AI’s new cyber capabilities does little to address this uncertainty.
Falling behind yet another leap in AI capabilities, middle powers must take a moment to assess their options for security. Two paths are apparent: alignment or coordination. Both are born from constraint, but only one leads to agency.
Middle powers could feasibly choose to align with either the US or China. Individual countries could offer up various incentives (including public data, energy resources, preferential treatment) to whichever US or Chinese AI company could grant them access to cutting-edge capabilities or support the build-out of their AI infrastructure.
Alignment has merit. After all, middle powers will not shatter superpower dominance in AI. The next Mythos or GPT-5.5 level of advancement in cyber capability is unlikely to come from outside the US or China. There is an argument for other countries to seek ‘protection’ through close access to US or Chinese technology.
For some countries, full alignment with one superpower is unacceptable, and a threat to sovereignty. For others, this bargain brings security and domestic benefits. For example, US OpenAI’s global initiative offers various incentives to partner countries, like nationwide chatbot access in the United Arab Emirates.
But picking sides does not provide an automatic shield to disruption. While alignment may provide benefits, it does not guarantee access to the most cutting-edge models in a crisis. The link between building out AI infrastructure and cyber defence is weak.
It will take years for cyber defence to catch up with evolving AI threats. And middle powers cannot pre-emptively regulate themselves out of an AI cyber crisis. They must explore other options.
There is another path: coordination. The reaction to Mythos has opened a rare window for developing crisis-ready international policy. This window reflects the combination of policymaker awareness, a visible threat, companies open to collaborating, trusted technical authorities and public outcry. It is too good an opportunity for middle powers to miss.
This approach recognizes that middle powers can achieve more on AI and cybersecurity together than alone. It has three components, underpinned by information-sharing: institutions, interests and diplomacy.
Middle powers already have a loose institutional network for sharing information about AI risks. This network – which includes the EU, UK, Kenya, Japan and others – is not designed for political action. But like other technical governance forums, it creates a platform for coordination.
This network should be strengthened for international crisis response: to share information about threats, and to support cross-border rapid response teams. Cyber and intelligence agencies already produce joint international guidance. These connections should be leveraged for sharing best practices.
On paper, the US is part of this network. Federally and at a state level, US policymakers are worried about cyber-AI models. Yet tech companies have influence and some reportedly lobbied against an earlier version of Trump’s executive order, which allowed for a longer period of pre-release safety tests.
In defending his record on measles, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. twice said during a recent Senate hearing, “We promote” the measles vaccine. While it’s true that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention continues to recommend the shot, Kennedy has rarely made an unequivocal endorsement of it, even as the nation has seen an alarming rise in measles cases.

Over a series of seven congressional hearings in April, Kennedy, who previously led a nonprofit that has spread vaccine misinformation, was quizzed about his views on the measles, mumps and rubella, or MMR, vaccine and his response to the many large outbreaks of measles over the last year and a half.
Experts blame the outbreaks on a decline in the vaccination rate, particularly in some areas of the country where vaccine coverage is especially low, which allows introductions of the disease to spread and grow. The U.S. eliminated the disease in 2000, meaning there hadn’t been continuous transmission of measles for more than a year within U.S. borders. With few exceptions, the U.S. has seen no more than a few hundred cases annually for many years. But since January 2025, there have been more than 4,200 cases and the first measles deaths since 2015.
When asked by a senator on April 22 what he was doing to reduce the number of measles cases and improve the MMR vaccination rate, Kennedy responded, “Improve the MMR. We promote the MMR. We have advised every child to get the MMR. That’s what we do.”
In the same hearing, Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado similarly asked, “Are you taking the position, as your CDC director has taken, that the measles vaccine is vital to keeping American children healthy in this country? Are you taking that position today? That has not been your position.”
“That’s my position. I — we promote the measles vaccine,” Kennedy said. “The measles vaccine prevents measles in 97% of the people who take it. I’ve always said that. That’s what the science says.”
Kennedy had often noted the MMR vaccine’s effectiveness. But prior to last month, we could not find a single instance in which Kennedy offered vigorous, unqualified support for the vaccine, without including or later adding inaccurate or misleading information that might cause someone to rethink vaccination.
We reviewed his statements, focusing on the last year and a half, to put his claim in context. In the interactive timeline below, we identify Kennedy’s most significant remarks with respect to measles or the MMR vaccine.
For example, in an April 2025 X post that was widely covered by the press and angered some of his anti-vaccine supporters, Kennedy accurately stated that the MMR vaccine is the “most effective way to prevent the spread of measles.”
Later the same day, however, Kennedy posted again, writing that two local doctors “have treated and healed some 300 measles-stricken Mennonite children.” He cited two drugs that don’t have evidence to support them as a treatment for the disease.
Measles is a highly contagious viral illness that has no cure or specific therapies. While vaccination or immunoglobulin shortly after exposure can be effective, once someone is sick, physicians can only treat symptoms.
In much of his messaging, Kennedy was willing to say the vaccine works. But he also emphasized parental choice and spoke of vaccine safety concerns.
“We should have informed choice, and — but if people don’t want it, they shouldn’t be — the government shouldn’t force them to do it,” Kennedy said of vaccination in a March 11, 2025, interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, a little more than a month into a measles outbreak in West Texas. “There are adverse events from the vaccine. It does cause deaths every year. It causes — it causes all the illnesses that measles itself causes, encephalitis and blindness, etc. And so, people ought to be able to make that choice for themselves. And — and what we need to do is give them the best information, encourage them to vaccinate. The vaccine does stop the spread of the disease.”
The MMR vaccine is a very safe vaccine, and there isn’t evidence it causes deaths “every year.” While serious side effects can occur, they are rare. Because the vaccine contains a live but weakened virus, it can in extremely rare cases lead to a measles infection that can be severe or fatal in someone who is severely immunocompromised. For this reason, the vaccine is not supposed to be given to anyone who has a serious immunodeficiency. The Infectious Diseases Society of America notes on its website that there have been “no deaths shown to be related to the MMR vaccine in healthy people.”
Even when Kennedy has said that he recommends the vaccine — usually only when asked directly or pressed to do so — he limited the endorsement to certain groups or undercut it by offering other inaccurate information that could discourage vaccination.
In his first non-Fox network TV interview as secretary, Kennedy did say when asked that it was his position and the federal government’s position that “people should get the measles vaccine.”
“But,” he added, “the government should not be mandating those.” He went on to misleadingly say that the risks of vaccines are unknown because they are not adequately safety tested. (It is up to individual states to determine the vaccinations required to attend school; while all states as of 2025 require the MMR vaccine, it is not mandated at the federal level.)
Earlier in the interview, Kennedy baselessly claimed that the two children who died of measles in Texas actually died of other things (the state health authorities have said both deaths were caused by measles). He also wrongly implied that measles outbreaks were occurring “because the vaccine wanes very quickly.”
In each of these appearances, even if Kennedy did briefly say that the vaccine was being recommended, the overall takeaway for viewers may not have been to go out and get the vaccine.
Dr. David Gorski, a professor of surgery and oncology at the Wayne State University School of Medicine who blogs about vaccine misinformation and has been following Kennedy for more than a decade, told us that he had observed a nuanced shift in Kennedy’s language since becoming health secretary.
Kennedy has “toned down” his rhetoric, “but without really changing the overall message,” he said. “RFK Jr.’s and CDC’s messaging has basically been, ‘You can take the MMR if you want to and it’ll prevent measles, but measles isn’t so bad.’”
Kennedy, as far as we can tell, did not say the MMR vaccine was safe until his congressional testimony on April 16, when Rep. Madeleine Dean, a Democrat of Pennsylvania, asked him — yes or no — if the MMR vaccine is “safe and effective.” He said, “Yes.” But even then, he qualified the statement, adding, “It’s safe for most people.”
Other HHS officials have made stronger endorsements of the MMR vaccine.
“There is no cure for measles, which is why prevention is so critical,” Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, National Institutes of Health director and then-acting CDC director, said in a March 2 video posted to X. “The MMR vaccine remains the most reliable and effective way to prevent it. Two doses are 97% effective at providing lifelong protection against measles and its complications. Vaccination protects not only individuals but entire communities.”
Dr. Mehmet Oz, who heads the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, told CNN on Feb. 8, “Take the vaccine, please. We have a solution for our problem.”
We reached out to HHS to ask for comment and also to identify positive remarks Kennedy has made about the MMR or measles vaccine. We didn’t get a response. Previously, the agency has told other news outlets that HHS leadership “has consistently said that the MMR vaccine is the best way to prevent the spread of measles and protect public health.”
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The post A Timeline of RFK Jr.’s Mixed Messaging on the Measles Vaccine appeared first on FactCheck.org.
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