2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 12:00

A Chevron station just outside downtown charges more than $8 a gallon – nearly $3 more than the city’s average

It’s tempting to think that a gas station charging more than $8 a gallon is a glamorous Los Angeles curiosity. Sort of like shopping at Erewhon, the healthy grocery chain that wows with a premium experience – and commands up to $22 a smoothie.

But there’s no glamour at the 901 N Alameda Street station. It’s just a dingy Chevron on the edge of LA’s Chinatown, regularly featured in news stories to illustrate the high cost of fuel in California. Midday on Tuesday, the station charged $8.31 for a gallon of regular gas.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:57

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:53

US president urges nations to deploy vessels to keep key oil shipping route open amid conflict with Iran

Donald Trump has said the UK should send warships to help keep the strait of Hormuz open.

In a post on his Truth Social platform on Saturday, the US president urged the UK and other countries to deploy vessels to the strait amid the conflict with Iran.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:46

Defense secretary appeared to endorse killing prisoners, a violation of international law, during press briefing

A top Democratic lawmaker with a military background has reacted strongly to US defense secretary Pete Hegseth’s call for “no quarter” for US enemies during a Friday press briefing at the Pentagon, calling such an order – if followed by troops – a potential violation of international law.

The US senator Mark Kelly, of Arizona, posted on Friday on X that “‘No quarter’ isn’t some wanna be tough guy line – it means something. An order to give no quarter would mean to take no prisoners and kill them instead.”

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:40

U.S. Navy Seaman 1st Class Clyde C. McMeans, 26, was one of the 103 USS California crewmen killed during attacks on Pearl Harbor in 1941.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:34

The facility was attacked on Friday night, bringing the toll of medical staff to 31 killed in past 12 days

Israel killed 12 medical workers in a strike on a medical centre in south Lebanon on Friday night, bringing the toll of healthcare staff killed in the country by Israel to 31 over the past 12 days.

A primary healthcare facility in the town of Burj Qalaouiyah was struck by Israeli rockets late on Friday, setting it ablaze and causing the structure to collapse on top of the staff inside. The strike killed doctors, paramedics and nurses on duty, according to the Lebanese ministry of health, which said it “violated all international humanitarian laws” in a statement.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:34

"A new study suggests the productivity boost from AI may be far smaller than executives claim," writes Slashdot reader BrianFagioli: According to research cited in Foxit's State of Document Intelligence report, while 89% of executives and 79% of end users say AI tools make them feel more productive, the actual time savings shrink dramatically once people account for reviewing and validating AI-generated output. The survey of 1,000 desk-based workers and 400 executives in the United States and United Kingdom found executives believe AI saves them about 4.6 hours per week, but they spend roughly 4 hours and 20 minutes verifying those results. End users reported a similar pattern, estimating 3.6 hours saved but 3 hours and 50 minutes spent reviewing AI work. Once that "verification burden" is factored in, executives gain just 16 minutes per week, while end users actually lose about 14 minutes.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:30

Kharg Island is a small, heavily fortified, and strategically valuable island off Iran's northern coast.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:19

The strikes destroyed more than 90 military targets, including missile facilities, but preserved oil infrastructure, U.S. Central Command said Saturday.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:14
PintX for sale

I have a pintX for sale 554 miles. Come with-

-lifesavers and enduro installed.

-extra stock tire that came with the pintX

-small electric pump from FM (works super fast)

-2 extra carbon fiber fenders from FM

-super fast charger from FM

-assorted footpads and fangs

-all the tools you need to fix and maintain your pintX

Asking $800

Located in Hayward CA.

Thank you

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:00

Motaz Malhees is an actor in The Voice of Hind Rajab, a film about a Palestinian girl killed by the IDF in Gaza in 2024

Palestinian actor Motaz Malhees said a travel ban imposed by Donald Trump is preventing him from attending Sunday’s Academy Awards, whose nominees include a movie in which he has a starring role.

The Voice of Hind Rajab, a film about a five-year-old Palestinian girl killed by Israeli forces in Gaza in 2024, has been nominated for best international feature film.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:00

I thought Wi-Fi 7 routers were overhyped and overpriced. But after personally testing them and analyzing the data, I stand corrected.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 11:00

Stretching E Ink to the size of a monitor sounds great in theory, but the reality has room for improvement.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:55

It turns out your car's tire pressure monitoring system may be a gold mine for hackers.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:51

President Trump's comments came shortly after he said that the U.S. military had conducted "one of the most power bombing raids" on a vital Iranian oil hub.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:48

Former Oldham East and Saddleworth MP remained in Westminster for New Labour’s entire 13 years in power

The former Labour MP minister Phil Woolas has died of brain cancer, his family and close friends have announced.

Woolas, 66, was elected to parliament to represent Oldham East and Saddleworth as part of Labour’s landslide victory in the 1997 general election. He remained in Westminster for New Labour’s entire 13-year stretch in power.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:45

Founder Jonah Peretti said at SXSW that the goal is to follow Nintendo's model of creating surprising new things with existing tech.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:34

Last June Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller said in a statement that Texans "have a God-given right to know what's on their plate, and for millions of Texans, it better come from a pasture, not a lab. It's plain cowboy logic that we must safeguard our real, authentic meat industry from synthetic alternatives." But California company Wildtype sells lab-grown salmon — and is suing Texas over its ban on cell-cultivated meat, the Austin Chronicle reported this week. The company's founder says lab-grown salmon eliminates the mercury, microplastic, and antibiotic contamination commonly found in seafood. And one chef in Austin, Texas says lab-grown salmon is "awesome" and "something new"-- at the only Texas restaurant that was serving it last summer: Just two months after the salmon hit the menu, Texas banned the sale of cell-cultivated meat... A lawsuit from Wildtype and one other FDA-approved cultivated meat company [argues] it's anti-capitalism and unconstitutional... This law "was not enacted to protect the health and safety of Texas consumers — indeed, it allows the continued distribution of cultivated meat to consumers so long as it is not sold. Instead, SB 261 was enacted to stifle the growth of the cultivated meat industry to protect Texas' conventional agricultural industry from innovative competition that is exclusively based outside of Texas...." [according to the lawsuit]. It was filed in September, immediately after the ban took effect, and cell-cultivated companies are awaiting judgment. That Texas ban would last two years, notes U.S. News and World Reports, adding that Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana, and Nebraska have also passed bans, some temporary "on the manufacturing, sale or distribution of cell-cultured meat." Meanwhile, a new five-year moratorium on lab-grown meat was signed this week by the governor of South Dakota "after rejecting a permanent ban last month," reports South Dakota Searchlight: The new law bars the sale, manufacture or distribution of "cell-cultured protein" products from July 1 this year through June 30, 2031. Violations are punishable by up to 30 days in jail, a fine of up to $500, or both. "But supporters of lab-grown meat are not going down without a fight," adds U.S. News and World Reports, with another lawsuit also filed challenging a ban in Florida: When Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the ban in Florida, he described it as "fighting back against the global elite's plan to force the world to eat meat grown in a petri dish or bugs to achieve their authoritarian goals." He added that his administration "will save our beef."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:28

Jan ‘Jay’ Carey torched the Stars and Stripes to protest against Trump’s executive order banning flag burning

The prosecution of a man who burned the American flag near the White House in protest of an executive order against flag burning has been dropped by the US Department of Justice.

On Friday, the justice department moved to dismiss charges against Jan “Jay” Carey, 55, a military combat veteran who set the flag on fire in Lafayette Square in Washington DC in August, the day that Donald Trump signed a presidential order to crack down on flag burning.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:27

Closure of strait of Hormuz puts pressure on region’s economies amid growing resentment about conflict started by US and Israel

An eerie quiet hangs over Ras Al Khaimah’s industrial port. Usually a thriving maritime hub of the United Arab Emirates, now ships stand docked and silent. Not far out along the hazy horizon, a backlog of hundreds of tankers have lined up in recent days, halted along a waterway flooded with danger.

Any vessel heading past Ras Al Khaimah out to the Arabian Sea must traverse the world’s most treacherous strip of water for shipping today: the strait of Hormuz. Just over 20 nautical miles from Ras Al Khaimah, two oil tankers heading for the strait were attacked by Iranian missiles this week, one catching fire.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 10:15

EU citizens with post-Brexit settlement status in UK will not have to present British passport to airlines

British dual nationals who are EU citizens with post-Brexit settlement status in the UK will not have to use a British passport to return to the UK, the Home Office has said in a significant U-turn on its controversial dual national border rules.

The change, which critics say was “hidden away” on a government web page, comes weeks after controversy erupted over the new rules that came into effect on 25 February. They require British dual nationals to present a British passport or certificate of entitlement, costing £589, before they board a plane to the UK.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:58

Suspect Christian Barrios, 32, shot two people multiple times Friday night, St. Johns County Sheriff Rob Hardwick said.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:56

Stanley McChrystal said White House has a ‘we should do because we can’ approach to international relations

The retired US army general who once led Nato forces in Afghanistan says the bellicose foreign policy Donald Trump has pursued during his second presidency can be summed up as “we should do because we can” – invoking the lyrics of the Dolly Parton classic Jolene to emphasize the point.

Stanley McChrystal delivered those remarks on Friday at Tulane University’s New Orleans book festival during a fireside chat hosted by the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, who asked in part about US military strikes Trump has ordered in Nigeria, Venezuela and Iran since Christmas.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:50

The attack hit four districts, damaging residential buildings, educational institutions and critical infrastructure, officials said.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:43

Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best supporting actress at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:33

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:29
  • Police find suspect after incident near course

  • Third round began on time despite delays

Police have captured a man who they say killed two people on Friday night about a mile from TPC Sawgrass. The incident led the Players Championship to delay opening the gates to the public for the third round by a couple of hours.

The St Johns County sheriff, Rob Hardwick, said the suspect, whom he identified as Christian Barrios, shot two people multiple times about 10:30pm on Friday in the parking lot of Walgreens in a domestic violence situation. The store is located about a mile away from the course.

This report will update

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:26

I've been wanting to buy a Onewheel for a bit of time but they are a bit out of my budget. I would use it to get to work, and I cant substitute it for a bike or a scooter. So I was wondering if there is anyway for me to get a usable Onewheel form a reliable source. Maybe a product similar to a Onewheel. Any of them could get me to work besides the pint. All the money I can spare is $300 maybe 400. I was looking in Facebook and places like that but im not that comfortable buy form those.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:26
First real use of the wheel

Picked up Amazon packages and saved 10 percent by fetching them. All smiles here !

submitted by /u/Handsomescout
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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:24
Tire Question

I noticed my tire looked like this this week. I have been riding a lot more this year than ever. You mind looking at my tire and seeing if it's safe to ride still?

(I'm ordering a new tire right now and just want to know if I need to find a different way to commute this week? I would hate to fall at 18-20mph ever again.)

Tire info: I've done about 1000 miles on the future motion controller and recently I put about 560 miles on vesc. So there's close to 1600 miles on this original vega.

Before I get all the posts that vega tires suck and I should have done this long ago. For me I planned on upgrading to an XRV and get some miles on it, then change my tire. Future: 18s battery.

Also very nervous about my first tire change. I'm going to do it but super nervous a beed won't pop at a lower pressure or something.

submitted by /u/DaddyShreds2
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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:23

Wife of former PM also says she is mentioned in Epstein files and coverage not focused enough on victims of abuse

Peter Mandelson’s critics should remember that he is “still a human being”, Cherie Blair has said in an interview.

Blair added that the former Labour minister was “entitled to a fair trial” after he was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in a public office. He denies criminal wrongdoing and has been released under investigation.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:13

The wild boar sparked a police response that drew in officers and veterinarians equipped with a tranquilizer gun, shields and even a blowgun.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:04

Greenhouse gases dropped just 0.1% last year as environment minister criticises lack of improvement

Greenhouse gas emissions in Germany have again missed targets set by the Climate Protection Act and barely fell at all in 2025.

Emissions decreased by just 0.1% last year compared to the previous year, according to data from the German Environment Agency.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:01

Videos posted by the US president on Truth Social show strikes on the Iranian island of Kharg. The US president said on Friday that US forces had 'obliterated' military targets on the island and that crucial oil infrastructure there could be next

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 09:00

From wills and guardianship papers to advance healthcare directives, parents are anticipating dying in custody or being deported without warning

She called it the “end times”.

In a quiet living room in south Florida, a 42-year-old South American woman sat at her kitchen table signing her will. Her hands trembled, and the ink smeared when tears fell hard enough that she had to reprint the pages.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:58

Day 2 of South by Southwest delved into the ways creative people deal with fast-changing technology. Here's the latest, and what Day 3 has in store.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:56

Spencer Laird was diagnosed with colon cancer at 26. At 30, he was told it had returned and spread to his lungs, with one tumor the size of a golf ball.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:35

Demonstrators on Sunday will be arrested for expressing support for Palestine Action or for intifada chants, says Met

Police have warned demonstrators that they will be arrested for expressing support for Palestine Action or making intifada chants at a protest in London on Sunday.

About 12,000 people are expected to take part in the annual al-Quds Day rally, an international demonstration of support for Palestinian rights. The event takes its name from the Arabic version of Jerusalem and was created by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after Iran’s 1979 revolution.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:30

Jason Hughes died after falling and being struck by a car driven by a student who had just pranked the teacher

A Georgia prosecutor has decided to drop charges against a teenager who police say was driving the truck that struck and killed a beloved high school teacher when a prank turned deadly, the teen’s lawyer said. The victim’s family had urged authorities not to compound the tragedy by prosecuting the teen driver and his friends.

The 40-year-old teacher, Jason Hughes, died after slipping and falling into the street as the teens started to drive away after participating in a community tradition of pranking teachers by throwing toilet paper on to his front lawn.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:19

Not all meal kits are created equal. We compared recipes from seven leading services against supermarket prices to find out which ones are worth the cost -- and which aren't.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:03

“I always get really emotional when the pebbles go in,” said Rebecca Parr, who works for the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:01

The Pixel 10A's cameras are similar to those on the 9A, but it still performs quite well compared to other phones in its price range.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:01

We sifted through the rumors to find the upgrades most likely to make it to Apple's next smartwatch.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:00

Officials sent out repayment letters to about 1,400 people relying on discredited guidance that had been scrapped

Unpaid carers have been issued with demands to repay thousands of pounds for allegedly breaking benefit rules even though officials knew the decisions were based on unlawful and discredited policy guidance.

About 1,400 carers are understood to have been sent letters by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) in January asking them to repay sums relating to breaches of carer’s allowance earnings rules that had been scrapped four months previously.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:00

Features woven into the fabric of platforms have been central to landmark social media harm case in US. How do they work?

It was as “easy as ABC”, claimed the lawyer prosecuting a landmark social media harm case against Meta and Google which heard closing arguments this week. The defendants were guilty, said Mark Lanier, of “addicting the brains of children”. Not true, replied the tech companies. Meta insisted providing young people with a “safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work”.

Features such as autoplay videos, infinite scrolling and constantly chirruping alerts woven into the fabric of online platforms were central to the six-week trial in Los Angeles, which has been compared to the cases against tobacco companies in the 1990s. But how do these features work and what are their consequences? Are they creating addicts rather than users or are they just giving consumers more of what they want?

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:00

US workers are finding it difficult to afford basic necessities as the president claims ‘the economy is roaring back’

US workers are still struggling with the cost of living despite Donald Trump’s campaign promises to fix the US affordability crisis.

The Guardian spoke to workers as an exclusive poll showed cross-party concerns about the Trump administration’s handling of the US economy.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 08:00

Race to fill Marjorie Taylor Greene’s seat provides glimpse into midterms with Iran and immigration on voters’ minds

Earlier this week, a steady trickle of voters casting ballots in Dalton at Georgia’s City Hall offered a glimpse into what may be changing fortunes for Democrats in Marjorie Taylor Greene’s former congressional district.

The district hasn’t elected a Democrat since it was created after the 2010 Census. But the party’s candidate Shawn Harris drew the most votes district-wide – about 37% – on Tuesday and now faces Clay Fuller, a Trump-endorsed former prosecutor as his opponent in an April runoff election. The winner will finish Greene’s term until November, when a whole new election will take place.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 07:30

Alexandria airport center would hold migrant families and children inside converted barracks before deportation

The Trump administration is poised to expand immigration detention operations at a controversial site inside a rural Louisiana airport, the Guardian has learned.

The administration is seeking to establish a “first of its kind” short-term facility that would hold migrant families and unaccompanied children next to a runway that has become a central node for the White House’s mass deportation agenda.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 07:13

The State Department is seeking information on Iran's new supreme leader and nine other "key leaders" in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 07:01

Filmmaker Mode can automatically adjust your TV's picture to look better with specific content. Here's why and when you should use it.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 07:00

Apple said it's normal for your iPhone battery to drain after an update. It's also only temporary.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 07:00

To focus on sculpting, he worked nights at a Pittsburgh post office. At 92, his art career finally took off.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 07:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Meta is planning sweeping layoffs that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Meta seeks to offset costly artificial intelligence infrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers. No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said. Top executives have recently signaled the plans to other senior leaders at Meta and told them to begin planning how to pare back, two of the people said. If Meta settles on the 20% figure, the layoffs will be the company's most significant since a restructuring in late 2022 and early 2023 that it dubbed the "year of efficiency." It employed nearly 79,000 people as of December 31, according to its latest filing. The speculation follows a recent report from The New York Times claiming that Meta has delayed the release of its next major AI model after falling behind competing systems from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 07:00

First major study on ‘AI psychosis’ suggests chatbots can encourage delusions among vulnerable people

A new scientific review raises concerns about how chatbots powered by artificial intelligence may encourage delusional thinking, especially in vulnerable people.

A summary of existing evidence on artificial intelligence-induced psychosis was published last week in the Lancet Psychiatry, highlighting how chatbots can encourage delusional thinking – though possibly only in people who are already vulnerable to psychotic symptoms. The authors advocate for clinical testing of AI chatbots in conjunction with trained mental health professionals.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 07:00

Yara’s Svein Tore Holsether says it would be ‘catastrophic’ if the strait of Hormuz was closed for a year

The boss of one of the world’s largest fertiliser companies has said global food supplies could be badly damaged this year if the Iran war becomes an extended conflict.

Svein Tore Holsether, the chief executive of Norway’s Yara International, has called on global leaders to consider the impact that soaring food prices will have in some of the world’s poorest countries “before it is too late”.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 06:34

Inside the growing scientific quest to understand what creatures with the extraordinary ability to defy the ravages of time can teach us about making human aging better.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 06:21

Prosecutors intend to seek the death penalty for Tyler Robinson, 22, who is charged with aggravated murder in the Sept. 10 shooting of Charlie Kirk.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 06:10

Forces ‘obliterated’ military targets on Kharg, according to president, who warns oil infrastructure could be next

Donald Trump said on Friday that US forces had “obliterated” military targets in a raid on the island of Kharg in Iran and warned that crucial oil infrastructure there could be next, in the latest escalation of the war of words between Washington and Tehran.

“For reasons of decency, I have chosen NOT to wipe out the Oil Infrastructure on the Island,” Trump wrote on social media. “However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision.”

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 06:07

Summer holidaymakers opting for ‘more familiar, easy-to-reach locations’ as travel industry counts cost of Middle East conflict

Holidaymakers who had planned to visit the eastern Mediterranean this summer are moving their trips to the west and the Caribbean because of the US-Israel war on Iran, travel companies have said.

Travellers from the UK and mainland Europe are increasingly swapping their holiday destinations away from Cyprus, Turkey and Greece towards Italy, Spain, Malta and Croatia, as the region around the Middle East grapples with flight cancellations and airspace closures.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 06:02

What I’m Discussing Today:

  • Kareem’s Daily Quote: Good going, Gandhi…whether you said it or not.

  • The “Exceptional” Pete Hegseth: He set the standard, then he ignored it.

  • The “Real” Big One? A global economy built on fragile ground.

  • Food? Drugs? Both? Neither? The choice no family should have to make.

  • What I’m Watching: Sidney Poitier is a perfect dinner guest.

  • Jukebox Playlist: Sam Cooke on repeat.

Kareem’s Daily Quote

“A nation’s greatness is measured by how it treats its weakest members.” Attributed to Mahatma Gandhi

Gandhi walks with the crowd in Boulogne. Credit: George Rinhart, Getty Images

Let’s get this out of the way first. Historians and quote researchers haven’t found this exact sentence in Mahatma Gandhi’s writings or speeches. What’s been documented is this: “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.” Which I thoroughly agree with, while admitting it isn’t quite the same thing. But he also wrote a lot about uplifting the weakest and most vulnerable among us humans, so it’s at least understandable how those two concepts were shorthanded into one. Beyond that, in 1977 Hubert Humphrey actually said, “The moral test of government is how it treats those in the dawn of life, the twilight of life, and the shadows of life.” A terrific quote, though it didn’t gain as much traction, most likely because Humphrey didn’t cut as romantic a figure as Gandhi did.

The made-up quote and the real one are both reminders that once you peel back all the politics and the noise, it really comes down to how we treat people when no one’s keeping score. It’s not fancy or complicated. It’s the same lesson most of us learned long before we could spell “policy”: you don’t walk past someone who’s struggling and pretend you didn’t see it.

When I was a kid growing up in New York, my parents didn’t have much, but they had this unshakeable belief that you look out for people. My father was a police officer, and he’d come home with stories about folks who were down on their luck—not in a dramatic, movie‑scene way, just regular people trying to get through the day. He never talked about them with judgment. He talked about them with respect. That stuck with me. Later, when I started playing ball and traveling, I saw the same thing in community centers, gyms, and schools, people doing their best in systems that weren’t built with them in mind.

A country can brag about being powerful or wealthy, but if the people at the bottom, the weakest among us, can barely hang on, what does that power really mean?

And “weakest” doesn’t mean lazy or unmotivated. It means the people carrying the heaviest loads: the elderly person choosing between medicine and groceries, the single parent working two jobs and still coming up short, the young person trying to build a future in a system that keeps moving the goalposts. These are the folks who tell you the truth about a country, not the ones on magazine covers.

Yet, it becomes ever easier to look away. We’ve gotten used to seeing struggle as background noise. Sometimes someone can be hurting right in front of us, and we treat it like a passing cloud, something unfortunate, just part of the day. But nothing about it is inevitable. It’s the result of choices. Choices about who gets help, who gets ignored, and who gets blamed for problems they didn’t create.

When I think about greatness, I don’t think about trophies or titles. I think about moments when people stepped up for someone who couldn’t give them anything in return. I think about the older woman I met at a community event who told me she skipped her medication so her grandkids could eat. She didn’t say it with anger, she said it like it was just part of life. And that’s the part that bothered me most. She had accepted a burden that never should’ve been hers to carry alone.

A nation shows its character in those moments. Not in speeches. Not in slogans. In how it responds when someone like her says, “I’m doing everything I can, and it’s still not enough.”

If we really believe greatness is measured by how we treat our weakest members, then the real question becomes simple: Are we building a country where people like her are seen, heard, and supported, or one where they’re left to figure it out on their own?

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 06:00

He is stuck in a quagmire. His goals are elusive. His bombing does not force a surrender. He has no exit strategy. Good morning, Vietnam

Donald Trump is lost in his fog of war. He compounds confusion with improvised fabrications as his naive expectation of a lightning victory has been sunk in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran, he felt certain, would easily follow the “perfect scenario” of Venezuela, accede to naming a leader who would instantly do his bidding, and there would be no disruption of the oil markets – “a strong game plan”, stated Karoline Leavitt, his White House press secretary, who defends each of his changeable excuses with equal ferocity.

There may be few if any facts underlying the delusions upon which Trump constructs his vapid explanations and evanescent strategies. The belief that coherent sense can be made out of Trump’s shuffling words is a weakness of the rational mind that refuses to accept the impulses of the inveterate demagogue for what they are. Searching for reason in the jungle of Trump’s tales may compel hopelessly sensible people to superimpose logic where there is none in order to satisfy the need for some semblance of soundness.

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Dr Brian Elmore witnessed a public health crisis unfold at the border near El Paso. He reflects on why it was like a ‘perverse Groundhog Day’

In late spring 2024, Dr Brian Elmore was working out of a mobile clinic, providing medical treatment to migrants in Ciudad Juárez, just south of the US-Mexico border wall. One of his patients, a Venezuelan man with a fractured arm and a detached left chest from his sternum and clavicle, told Elmore that Mexican immigration officials broke his arm when he first got to town, and that rubber bullets fired by Texas national guardsmen had caused his chest injuries.

The man somehow had managed to fashion a shoddily made splint for his arm, but his chest would require surgery. When an ambulance arrived, the criminal group that controlled the riverine area refused to let him leave. The Texas guardsmen looked on from the US side of the river. “It was heartbreaking,” Elmore said of the spectacle.

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Erratic rhetoric, shifting goals and mixed signals leave allies, foes and voters unsure what the president wants from war

“Mr President,” said a reporter. “You’ve said the war is ‘very complete’ but your defence secretary says, ‘This is just the beginning’. So which is it?” Donald Trump’s eyes darted left and right then down. “Well, I think you could say both,” he parried.

The confusing answer at a press conference in Doral, Florida this week did not befit a wartime leader armed with stirring rhetoric and a lucid plan. But it was entirely on brand for the 47th US president. The tumultuous style that Trump brings to election campaigns, dealing with Congress and global trade relations has now been imported to the theatre of war.

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With oil markets paralyzed by the U.S.-Iran war, the Trump administration says it could escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz — a massive undertaking that experts say could already be in the preparatory stages.

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On the day after Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey commuted his death sentence, halting his execution two days before he was supposed to die, Charles “Sonny” Burton sat in his wheelchair in a visiting room at Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore, Ala., drinking a Coke and eating a Reese’s peanut butter cup.

He could not stop smiling.

“I’m feeling wonderful,” Burton told me.

Burton, 75, wore white sneakers and a brace on his right hand, his tan quilted jacket and slacks fitting loosely over his thin frame. A tan helmet, given to him by the prison to protect from his occasional falls, sat on the table next to an array of photos taken with family earlier that day, along with a bag of quarters for the vending machines.

Burton identified the people in one of the photos for me. Several were still in the visiting room: his sister Eddie Mae Ellison, his son Charles Burton III, and his grandson Charles Burton IV. No sooner had one group of relatives left the visiting room than another showed up — a rolling family reunion.

Burton had been sitting in that same visiting room with his lawyers 24 hours earlier, on Tuesday, March 10, when his longtime paralegal Nancy Palombi got a phone call in Montgomery, 120 miles away. While the rest of the legal team was at the prison without access to their cellphones, Palombi had stayed behind to field any communications from the U.S. Supreme Court, which had just received their final filings aimed at stopping Burton’s execution.

Instead, she got a call from a reporter she knew. The reporter was screaming, “Have you heard?” The governor’s office had just sent out a press release with the subject line, “Update from Governor Kay Ivey: Charles L. Burton.” And that’s how Palombi learned that her client of 20 years would not be executed.

“I was the first member of the team to find out,” Palombi told me that morning, her voice still trembling with a mix of shock, joy, and relief.

Palombi called the prison and spoke to the warden’s secretary, who entered the visitation room with a smile on her face. She told Burton’s lead attorney, Assistant Federal Defender Matt Schulz, that he should call his paralegal right away. “And I’m like, ‘Oh my god, it happened,’” Schulz said. “But I still didn’t want to let myself believe it, because I didn’t know yet.”

Schulz rushed to his car, drove out of range from Holman’s cellphone blockers, and called Palombi. He then sped back.

Describing the scene the next day, Burton turned and pointed toward the hallway that runs along the perimeter of the visiting room. That’s where prison staff celebrated as the news spread on death row. Nurses and officers waved and gave him thumbs ups through the horizontal window slats. “Guards were saying, ‘Sonny got clemency! Sonny got clemency!’” Burton said.

A day later, everyone was still a bit shellshocked. Burton’s son, who had flown in from New York, got the news while loading up his rental car for the drive to Atmore. Burton’s sister was at the doctor’s office in Montgomery, where she saw a local news alert. She ran outside and dropped to her knees. “And then the tears just flowed,” she said.

For decades, the visiting room had been the site of agonizing goodbyes between the condemned and their loved ones in the hours before an execution. Now it was home to warm hugs and tranquil smiles, no one’s bigger than Burton’s. He invoked the famed blues harmonica player Snooky Pryor: “I’m too cool to move.”

A sign made by a daughter of Charles "Sonny" Burton, outside the governor's mansion in Montgomery, Ala. on March 9, 2026. Liliana Segura/The Intercept

Burton’s commutation was historic: the third time in the modern history of Alabama’s death penalty that a person facing execution received clemency by the governor. Ivey, a staunch Republican, has presided over 25 executions since she took office in 2017. Although she commuted the sentence of Burton’s neighbor, Rocky Myers, last year due to serious doubts over his guilt, few were optimistic that she would exercise such mercy again.

Burton would have been the ninth person executed using nitrogen gas in Alabama in just over two years. The method was adopted following complications carrying out lethal injection, a wider trend that has reshaped the landscape of executions across the country. The state’s last execution prompted a forceful dissent from Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who described the psychological torture in visceral detail. “You want to breathe; you have to breathe,” she wrote. “But you are strapped to a gurney with a mask on your face pumping your lungs with nitrogen gas. Your mind knows that the gas will kill you. But your body keeps telling you to breathe.”

Burton’s commutation also came as a searing documentary about the state prison system, “The Alabama Solution,” was in the race to win an Oscar. The film, which was produced using footage from contraband cellphones, forced politicians to acknowledge the deadly conditions and inhumane punishments inflicted on people incarcerated in their state. On the day I visited Burton, lawmakers met in Montgomery to discuss legislation to impose oversight on Alabama’s prisons.

Related

Lethal Illusion: Understanding the Death Penalty Apparatus

It was this kind of public pressure that undoubtedly saved Burton’s life. “I would have 100 percent died without it,” Burton told me. In Montgomery, activists held vigils every Monday for weeks in front of the governor’s mansion, while downtown businesses posted flyers about Burton’s case in their front windows. On the eve of Ivey’s decision, two of Burton’s daughters led a march to the state Capitol to deliver petitions to her office.

The campaign for clemency was launched by Burton’s legal team, who believed they had nothing to lose. They highlighted Burton’s remorse, his advanced age and poor health, and, above all, his lack of culpability for the murder that sent him to death row. “This is one of those cases that shocks people,” Schulz said in a clemency film produced last year. “And it shocks people in a totally different way than most death penalty cases.”

Burton was 40 years old when he led a group of younger men in an armed robbery at an AutoZone in Talladega, Alabama. A 34-year-old father and military veteran named Doug Battle walked in as the crime was underway — and one of the young men fatally shot him in the back.

At first, Burton denied any role in either the robbery or the shooting. His apparent lack of remorse helped convince jurors at his 1992 trial that he should be punished as severely as the man who actually shot Battle, a 20-year-old named Derrick DeBruce, who had already been sent to death row. After a four-day trial, Burton, too, was found guilty of capital murder and sentenced to die.

But a federal court eventually threw out DeBruce’s death sentence, finding that his lawyer failed to effectively represent him during the punishment phase of his trial. The Alabama attorney general’s office initially appealed the decision, contending that it would be “arguably unjust” to allow Burton to be executed for his co-defendant’s actions. But in 2015, the state agreed to reduce DeBruce’s punishment to life without parole. He died five years later.

“What is the execution of Mr. Burton supposed to accomplish or solve?”

The notion that Burton should now pay with his life for another man’s crime spurred outrage among people in Alabama and beyond. The campaign to save Burton was bolstered by six of the eight living jurors who voted to send him to death row, as well as by Battle’s daughter, Tori Battle, who was outspoken in her opposition to the execution. “What is the execution of Mr. Burton supposed to accomplish or solve?” she asked Ivey in a letter that was submitted as part of Burton’s 88-page clemency petition. “Is it for my father? For me? To deter crime? I honestly do not understand.”

The petition argued, first and foremost, that Burton never killed anyone. “He did not pull the trigger that killed Douglas Battle,” his lawyers wrote. In fact, he didn’t even witness the murder. “Mr. Burton was already outside of the AutoZone building where the shooting took place.” Although Alabama’s felony murder statute allows defendants to be held responsible for the actions of others, Burton was only supposed to be eligible for capital murder if he intended to take somebody’s life — and there was nothing to prove that this was the case.

The state’s star witness against Burton was a teenager named LuJuan McCants who agreed to testify in order to avoid the death penalty. He said that Burton had gathered the group with the intention of committing a robbery — and if something went wrong, “he said let him take care of it.” According to prosecutors, this directive proved that Burton intended to kill anyone who might stand in the way of the robbery. But even this weak evidence was undermined by McCants’s own testimony, as well as by an interrogation video discovered by Burton’s lawyers years after the trial. It showed McCants repeatedly telling investigators that Burton had not wanted anyone to get hurt — and that he’d been upset upon learning that DeBruce shot Battle.

Some of the jurors who spoke out against the execution said they were haunted by their decision. “I have questioned whether death is an appropriate punishment,” one woman wrote in a letter submitted with the clemency petition. “I have often thought about Mr. Burton’s mother, who was no doubt devastated by the sentence.”

But for most, it came down to the obvious unfairness of executing Burton for DeBruce’s crime. “Had I known the shooter would later be taken off death row,” one juror wrote, “I would not have voted for the death sentence.” Another juror wrote that Burton may have been the ringleader, “but if Charles Manson can get a life sentence for leading his group to kill many people, it is fair for Mr. Burton to serve life without parole.”

Charles “Sonny” Burton's daughters lead a march from the governor's mansion in Montgomery, Ala. to the state capitol on March 9, 2026, to deliver petitions urging Governor Kay Ivey to grant clemency. Photo: Liliana Segura/The Intercept

Like most people living on death row, Burton bears no resemblance to Charles Manson — or to the people Americans picture when they hear the term “worst of the worst.” His early life had many of the familiar hallmarks of those who are put to death in the United States: poverty, racism, childhood abuse, and trauma. By the time Alabama came close to executing him, he’d long since apologized for his actions and was in frequent pain from rheumatoid arthritis, unable to walk on his own.

But he was also lucky, he told me. If there was anything that sustained him during his years at Holman, it was a strong family structure, which many of his neighbors lack. Indeed, Burton’s clemency petition was filled with letters from relatives, pen pals, and advocates who described Burton as a positive and nurturing presence in their lives.

I was supposed to attend Burton’s execution — not as a media witness, but as one of the people placed on his personal list. Burton did not wish for his family to be subjected to his death, and his legal team decided that, should the killing move forward, they wanted the world to know what Alabama had done. They invited me and two other journalists to join them in the witness room.

Related

“Agony” and “Suffering” as Alabama Experiments With Nitrogen Executions

One of them, Lee Hedgepeth, had already witnessed seven executions in Alabama, including three by nitrogen gas. The last one had been the longest to date, lasting 40 minutes. Schulz had seen two of his clients killed with nitrogen. Their accounts were harrowing: Terror and panic was visible on the faces of the condemned, who gasped and thrashed on the gurney. As Burton’s execution date neared, Schulz wondered how it would compare. Would his elderly client suffer more or less due to his age and poor health? Could his more shallow breathing cause the execution to last longer? Or would the fact that he does not have as much oxygen in his lungs to begin with mean it would be shorter?

What was certain was that executing Burton would have been a horrifying spectacle. Guards would have had to lift him onto the gurney, adjusting the thick black straps to fit more tightly over his withered body, and putting a mask over his face. Witnesses would then have watched as Alabama suffocated an elderly man, who killed no one, in the name of justice.

Instead, Burton is now poised to live out the rest of his days behind bars. On the day after our visit, he was moved out of the prison where he spent more than three decades and driven up to Kilby Correctional Facility outside Montgomery, where newly incarcerated people are housed before being transferred to their designated prisons. The move is sure to be a shock to the system for a man who has hardly begun to process the trauma of his near-execution and who has spent much of the past 10 years between his cell and the prison infirmary. After age 65, Burton told me, he slowed down. “I haven’t been outside in eight years,” he said.

In a less punitive system, it would be obvious that Burton should go home to spend the rest of his life with his family. As he said, “I ain’t got much longer to live.” His relatives harbor some hope that he may some day be eligible for medical release. But for now, according to Schulz, Burton was in good spirits when they spoke on the phone from his new location. “He said he knew many of the nurses there, and that they all were greeting, and treating, him warmly,” he said.

“And he’s alive,” Schulz added. On Thursday at 6 p.m., the hour he had been scheduled to die, Burton planned to eat ice cream at the same time as his attorneys and savor the feeling of gratitude. “God has given me a second chance,” Burton told me. This, he believed, was God’s work. “He put the right people in my path.”

The post In the Room Where Death Row Prisoners Say Final Goodbyes, He Learned He Would Live appeared first on The Intercept.

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With membership soaring, the Green party is grappling with logistics, culture shifts and a flood of new activists

It is, as one Green activist put it, a never-ending series of “constantly good problems to have”. But how does a party adapt to the sudden trebling of its membership? And when a majority of people in an organisation are new, is it even the same thing anymore?

The basic facts alone are startling. Before Zack Polanski took over as leader last September, the Greens in England and Wales had around 66,000 members. They are now at 215,000, and still rising at speed.

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Amsterdam's mayor said police have CCTV footage of a person placing the explosive device against the school's exterior wall.

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The former No 3 overall NBA draft pick opens up about addiction, homelessness and redemption in a candid memoir revisiting basketball’s cocaine era

When the Golden State Warriors drafted Chris Washburn with the No 3 pick in 1986, it should have been a dream come true. Instead, it might have been the worst thing that could have happened for the 6ft 11in NC State prospect.

“I put on a smile because they were paying me to be out there,” Washburn, a former three-time high school All-American, tells rhe Guardian. “But I felt alone.”

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As top teams land in New York for world sevens this weekend, the Olympic star discusses her uniquely American story and her sport’s search for the spotlight

On Saturday, World Rugby’s HSBC SVNS lands in New York – well, New Jersey – for two days at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, a short ride from downtown Manhattan. The governing body will be watching keenly, as two days of traditional warm-weather sport are held at the end of a north-eastern winter. In New York/New Jersey on Thursday, it snowed.

The men’s US Eagles are not playing, having lost their place at the top table. But the Eagles women have hopes of a home-soil win after a third-place finish last week in Vancouver, beating France in a thriller after a narrow loss to New Zealand. Coach Emilie Bydwell’s team are third in the season standings, set for Championship tournaments in spring and summer.

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On the afternoon of Sept. 9, 2024, Cherise Doyley was in her 12th hour of contractions at University of Florida Health in downtown Jacksonville when a nurse came in with a bedsheet and told her to cover up. A supervisor brought a tablet to Doyley’s bedside. Gathered on the screen were a judge in a black robe and several lawyers, doctors and hospital staff.

“It’s a real judge in there?” Doyley asked the nurse at the beginning of what would be a three-hour hearing. “Now this is the craziest thing I’ve ever seen.”

Doyley hadn’t asked for the hearing. The hospital had sought it. Doyley had mere minutes to prepare. She had no lawyer and no advocate — no one to explain to her what, exactly, was going on.

Judge Michael Kalil informed her that the state had filed an emergency petition at the hospital’s behest — not out of concern for Doyley, per se, but in the interest of her unborn child. He described the circumstances as “extraordinary.”

The hospital and state attorney’s office wanted to force Doyley to undergo a cesarean section. Doyley, a professional birthing doula, didn’t want that and had been firm about it. She’d had three prior C-sections, one that resulted in a hemorrhage, and hoped to avoid another serious complication and lengthy recovery. She was aware that doctors were concerned about the risk of uterine rupture, a potentially deadly complication for her and her baby. She would say during the hearing that she understood the risk to be less than 2% and didn’t want to agree to a C-section unless there was an emergency.

But the choice would not be hers. The judge would decide how she would give birth.

Watch How a Court Hearing Was Convened in Cherise Doyley’s Hospital Room

Obtained by ProPublica

Mentally competent patients typically have the right to choose their medical care — or refuse it. But there is one notable exception: pregnant patients. That inconsistency is particularly striking in Florida, a state that has pushed to expand medical freedom for those who wish to avoid vaccines or fluoridated water, while constricting the rights of people in various stages of pregnancy.

“There aren’t any other instances where you would invade the body of one person in order to save the life of another,” said Lois Shepherd, a bioethics expert at the University of Virginia School of Law.

In Florida and many other states, court-ordered medical procedures are just one of the ways pregnant patients’ rights are restricted. The effort to chip away at those rights is rooted in the concept of fetal personhood — that a fetus has equal and, in some cases, more rights than the woman sustaining it.

The link between fetal personhood and court-ordered C-sections dates back to the 1980s, when courts started ruling that hospitals can override patients’ decisions in favor of the health of unborn children.

In the years since, proponents of fetal personhood began to push for even broader legal protections. In 1986, Minnesota was the first state to recognize fetuses as victims in homicide cases. Some states have imprisoned pregnant women for exposing their fetuses to drugs. Nearly 30 states have passed laws that allow hospitals to invalidate pregnant patients’ advance directives, which outline the kinds of life-sustaining treatment a person wants after a catastrophic illness or accident. At least one, Alabama, extended the concept of personhood all the way to the earliest stages of fertilization and conception by giving frozen embryos the same legal status as children, though the Legislature later said the law couldn’t be enforced.

And the fetal personhood movement has accelerated in the past several years, supercharged by the U.S. Supreme Court decision to reverse the abortion rights that had been protected by Roe v. Wade.

Florida has long been at the forefront of fetal personhood policies. The state was one of the first in the country to prosecute a woman for “delivering” drugs to her fetus during pregnancy in 1989, although the Florida Supreme Court later overturned her conviction. And after advocates twice failed to get a fetal personhood amendment on the state ballot, the Legislature is now considering a bill that would enshrine the concept in state law by giving embryos and fetuses the same legal status as people in wrongful death suits.

For women in labor, the potential impact of the bill is clear: Experts anticipate their medical needs could be further diminished in favor of the fetuses’.

Several legal experts told ProPublica they are alarmed by Doyley’s case and the legislation’s potential to allow for more court interventions during childbirth. Lawyers who represent women in fetal personhood cases already have identified a higher number of forced C-sections in Florida than other states.

The state attorney’s office for the 4th Judicial Circuit declined to comment on Doyley’s case, saying a response would violate her medical privacy. But in an email, a spokesperson noted why, in general, the office would intervene: “The courts have held that the State has a compelling interest in the preservation of the life of an unborn child and the protection of innocent third parties who may be harmed by the parental refusal to allow or consent to life-saving medical treatment.”

C-sections account for nearly a third of all deliveries in the United States. They can be necessary when babies are breech, or in the wrong position for birth, as well as in cases of maternal or fetal emergency. But in other cases, such as slow laboring or prior C-sections, the need for the surgery is less clear.

Surveys have found that more than 10% of women feel pressured into C-sections and other procedures by doctors worried about injuries to the baby. Patients generally don’t challenge doctors who say they’re necessary, and it is uncommon for someone to hold out and for the hospital to turn to the courts.

It is so rare, in fact, that advocates for the rights of pregnant women were shocked to discover that the same thing that happened to Doyley had happened to another Florida woman just a year and a half earlier.

The similarities in their cases were striking. Both women had three prior C-sections. They had questioned the need for their previous surgeries and arrived prepared to fight for vaginal births. And both women are Black.

They had argued that compelling them to have C-sections violated their rights to make medical decisions. Hospital staff said their medical decisions threatened the health of the fetus. It would be up to the courts to decide which one mattered more.


Asked to consider the constitutionality of court-ordered C-sections, the U.S. Supreme Court declined in 1994, leaving a patchwork of decisions that vary by state.

In the early 1980s, a hospital in Georgia won a court order to force a woman with a dangerous pregnancy complication to have a C-section. Then, in 1987, a judge in Washington, D.C., approved a request to perform surgery on a pregnant woman dying from cancer without her consent. Later, a higher court reversed that ruling and held that hospitals should not override medical decisions. An Illinois appellate court in 1993 refused to order a woman to undergo a C-section.

Not long after, a patient named Laura Pemberton, who did not want a C-section, left a hospital in Tallahassee, Florida, against medical advice. A local judge sent law enforcement to her house to bring her back. Once she returned to the hospital, the judge ordered her to have a C-section, which doctors carried out. She later sued in federal court and lost. The 1999 decision by a federal district judge found that the state had a right to override her wishes.

“Whatever the scope of Ms. Pemberton’s personal Constitutional rights in this situation, they clearly did not outweigh the interests of the State of Florida in preserving the life of the unborn child,” the decision said. The decision marked a legal turning point in prioritizing fetal rights over the religious freedom and bodily autonomy of the mother.

In 2009, Samantha Burton arrived at the same hospital at 25 weeks pregnant, after going into premature labor. Doctors told her she needed to remain on bed rest, but she wanted to leave and go home to her children. The hospital got a court order for her to remain in the hospital and undergo any treatment doctors deemed necessary to save the fetus. She had an emergency C-section, and the baby was stillborn.

She appealed the ruling granting the emergency order, and a Florida appeals court ruled in her favor. They said the circuit judge should have required the hospital to prove the baby was viable before imposing unwanted treatment, but the court stopped short of saying it was unacceptable to override the medical decisions of pregnant women in all situations.

Pregnancy is the only condition where Florida courts have ruled that a patient can be forced to undergo unwanted treatment. Even a state prisoner on a hunger strike has more rights to make medical decisions.

Those rulings give the state vast control over pregnant women.

“All of it essentially is about the state’s ability to decide that a fetus, at any point during a pregnancy, is more important than the person who’s pregnant,” said Rutgers University law professor Kimberly Mutcherson.

A child wearing a red shirt and blue shorts runs with her arms out past a red trampoline, a football and a television set inside of a dimly lit, tidy room.
Bennett’s 2-year-old daughter, Aubree, pretends the floor is lava.

In March 2023, more than a year before Doyley’s court-ordered C-section, Brianna Bennett arrived in labor at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital — the same hospital where the women in the 1999 and 2009 lawsuits had given birth.

Over the preceding years, Bennett had come to question the medical reasoning behind her three prior C-sections. Each recovery had been harder than the last, leaving her so incapacitated after the third that for two weeks she couldn’t even go to the bathroom without help.

At the time Bennett went into labor with her fourth, her mother’s hip problems had gotten so bad that she needed a wheelchair and required some help from Bennett to function. Bennett did not think she could care for all her family members while in recovery from abdominal surgery, so she insisted on trying for a vaginal birth.

A woman looks directly at the camera wearing a red floral dress and earrings. She sits on a dark leather couch.
Bennett researched and weighed birthing options before going into labor.

Tallahassee Memorial Hospital had specialists on staff and a neonatal intensive care unit equipped to serve critically ill babies. Bennett believed it offered the kind of support she needed to be able to follow her birth plan. The hospital has handled a lot of high-risk pregnancies.

As Bennett’s labor stretched past 24 hours, a doctor confronted her about agreeing to a C-section, Bennett said. She continued to refuse, so the hospital reached out to the state attorney. In an email, Jack Campbell, state attorney for the 2nd Judicial Circuit, responded that the court needed to act quickly.

“I plan to file an emergency motion with the Court to allow TMH to take whatever steps medically necessary to protect the life of the child and mother,” he wrote.

Two children eat pasta while sitting at a table. In the background a woman and another child look at the kitchen counter and another child reaches for a bowl.
Bennett, in the red dress, prepares lunch with her children, from left, Alannah, 16, Aubree, 2, Ayden, 11, and Ava, 7. After her three prior C-sections, she was worried about recovering from a fourth while taking care of a newborn and other family members.

During the hearing, 15 to 20 people squeezed into Bennett’s hospital room. As would later happen with Doyley, she found herself in front of a tablet with a judge on the screen.

Bennett said she found it offensive that so many people were concerned about the method of her delivery without taking into consideration how difficult it would be to take care of both herself and her baby while recovering from a C-section. “Are any of you gonna help me bathe or shower? Are you gonna help change my pad? Are you gonna help lift the baby out of the bed and put me in the bed because I can’t lift my legs? Is anyone going to help me?”

Campbell told ProPublica that he felt the hearing was necessary to save two lives, Bennett’s and her baby’s. “I’m real comfortable with what we did here,” Campbell said. “I hate the fact that she’s upset about it.”

A spokesperson for Tallahassee Memorial Hospital declined to comment on Bennett’s case, even though she signed a waiver allowing the hospital to do so. “We will not be able to discuss specific patients or cases,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. The hospital did not respond to questions about its history of seeking court intervention in multiple women’s medical decisions while giving birth.

Bennett said she tried to remain calm, but inside she was panicking. During the hearing, her baby’s heart rate spiked. The judge ordered her to have a C-section, and doctors wheeled her into surgery. The operation lasted two and a half hours and the surgical team had to cut around existing scar tissue and avoid her bladder. Her incision looked like an upside-down T and required a wound vac, a portable machine that helps incisions close more quickly.

She said a doctor who visited her room during recovery told her she should never get pregnant again, according to a civil rights complaint filed with federal regulators.The complaint is still under investigation, but lawyers for Bennett said they haven’t heard from investigators in more than a year. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services did not comment on the complaint.

“I cried every single day,” Bennett said. “I felt like I was supposed to be happy. I’m supposed to be thankful that I have a new life and that the Lord has blessed me to see this new baby. And I’m not even happy.”


A year and a half later in Jacksonville, Doyley faced a situation eerily similar to Bennett’s.

She noted as her hearing began that she was the only Black person on the screen. About a dozen faces, most of them white, had gathered to challenge her medical decisions. She said it made her feel as if her race had something to do with the fact that she was thrust into the intrusive hearing.

“I have 20 white people against me, and because I am informed and I am making an informed decision, they are trying to take my rights away from me by force,” Doyley told the people on the screen, requesting a Black nurse or doctor.

“I don’t find that race really has much to do with this, ma’am,” the judge responded.

Dr. Erin Burnett said during the hearing that she did not think Doyley could successfully give birth vaginally because she had a history of stalled labors. A long labor after prior C-sections could increase the risk of uterine rupture, which could kill Doyley and the child, she said.

She said the baby’s heart rate showed some signs of distress and told Doyley it would be better to have a C-section before it became an emergency. If the baby’s heart stopped or if she lost oxygen during delivery, the baby could suffer a brain injury or death.

Dr. John Davis, the chair of the obstetrics and gynecology department, testified that the hospital had been recognized for its low C-section rate and did not perform unnecessary surgeries. Doyley’s condition required intervention, he said.

Burnett and Davis did not respond to requests for comment, and the hospital declined ProPublica’s requests to interview them and others involved in Doyley’s care. Doyley signed a waiver allowing the hospital to discuss her case with ProPublica, but a spokesperson for University of Florida Health in Jacksonville would not comment, citing patient privacy. Nor did the hospital respond to questions about Doyley’s claim that race played a role in the decision to involve the court.

The research on the risks of uterine rupture after prior C-sections is unclear. Studies have found that 0.15% to 2.3% of these labors resulted in a rupture, depending on a number of factors such as body mass, a history of successful vaginal births and whether the labor was spontaneous or had to be induced.

Doyley, who felt comfortable with her odds and wanted to continue laboring, argued during the hearing that C-sections carry their own dangers — including a risk of death.

“A lot of that comes from medical negligence and medical racism, where we have a group of white doctors that think that they know what is best for Black bodies and Black babies,” Doyley said in the hearing.

Three children sit outside in plastic chairs in an open wooden structure. In the background are trees and a camping tent. One of the children holds a baby in her arms and kisses her.
Doyley’s children — from left, Aganju, 7, Akilah, 11, and Arewa, 1 — sit on the porch at their home.

Both the doctors and Doyley mentioned recommendations from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. However, neither one cited the organization’s stance on court-ordered C-sections, which the group has deemed to be “ethically impermissible.”

After three hours of testimony — all while Doyley lay in her hospital bed — the judge ruled that she could keep laboring unless there was an emergency. If that happened, the hospital could operate, whether she wanted it or not. The judge would reconvene the hearing in the morning.

In response to questions from ProPublica, Kalil wrote in an email that the judicial code of conduct prohibits judges from commenting on cases. “These ethical standards exist to protect the integrity of the judicial process, ensure fairness to all parties, and preserve the Court’s neutrality,” he wrote.

Overnight, doctors said the baby’s heart rate dropped for seven minutes. Doyley woke to her hospital bed being wheeled into surgery. She called out to her sister who was asleep in the hospital room.

“I had to tell her, ‘Hey, wake up,’” Doyley said. “‘Something is going on.’ She’s trying to put on her shoes. I’m like, ‘Girl, leave the shoes. Let’s go.’”

Doyley recalled reciting a short prayer as her sister scrambled into the operating room. The baby was delivered by C-section. Although Doyley’s daughter was initially limp, she perked up and became responsive within a few minutes. Doctors took her to the NICU while Doyley went to recover. And to get ready to face the judge again.

At the 8 a.m. hearing, Doyley looked pained and groggy. She told the judge she still hadn’t been allowed to see her daughter and asked if he could help. A doctor testified that the baby had been brought to the NICU in respiratory distress and placed on a continuous positive airway pressure machine to help with her breathing.

Kalil said he couldn’t order the hospital to do anything. The matter he had been appointed to hear involved only her unborn baby. He had no authority over the child in the nursery.

Kalil wished her well and quickly closed the case.

A woman wearing a floor-length black sleeveless dress stands in an open doorway with her hands on the doorframe. A clear porch roof overhead lets light stream in.
Doyley in her home. In Florida and many other states, court-ordered C-sections are just one way in which pregnant women’s rights are eroded.

The post They Didn’t Want to Have C-Sections. A Judge Would Decide How They Gave Birth. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 05:00

The long-running British period gangster series gets its own movie, starring Cillian Murphy and Barry Keoghan.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 05:00

The Kremlin hopes the Trump administration’s move to contain oil prices sent soaring by the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran will lead to further relief.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 05:00

Some Iranians living in Dubai say their families celebrated the death of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but the war could leave Iran in a worse situation than before.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 05:00

Lawyers’ pleas for extensions reveal post-DOGE staffing woes at federal agencies’ Freedom of Information Act offices.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-14 05:00

Few Chinese laborers have spoken out about the abuses they allegedly suffered while toiling abroad. Until now.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 04:57

Mayor condemns ‘cowardly act’ on south side of city that caused limited damage and no reported injuries

An explosion has damaged a Jewish school in Amsterdam in what the city’s mayor described as “a deliberate attack against the Jewish community”.

The explosion early on Saturday in a residential neighbourhood on the south side of the city caused limited damage, the mayor, Femke Halsema, said in a press release, as police and firefighters arrived at the scene quickly.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 03:00

Carmaker’s decision to drop NissanConnect EV app on relatively recent cars fuels warnings from experts

Owners of some Nissan Leaf electric vehicles are angry after the carmaker announced it would shut down an app that lets them remotely control battery charging and other functions.

Drivers of Leaf cars made before May 2019 and the e-NV200 van (produced until 2022) have been told that the NissanConnect EV app linked to their vehicles will “cease operation” from 30 March. This means they will lose remote services, including turning on the heating, and some map features.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 03:00

High-net-worth residents of UAE heading to Ireland and France to wait out missile attacks before tax year ends

Wealthy UK nationals fleeing war in the Gulf are seeking sanctuary in countries such as Ireland and France to avoid hefty tax bills back home.

In the face of possible demands from HM Revenue and Customs, high-net-worth individuals who had been living in the United Arab Emirates and neighbouring countries are hoping to wait out the missile and drone attacks elsewhere rather than return to the UK.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 03:00

Longtime Slashdot reader tsuliga writes: Two new episodes of Doctor Who that were previously lost have been found. The original Doctor Who episodes were wiped or deleted by the BBC because they were not aware of the future use of re-runs of these shows. Ninety-five of the 253 episodes from the program's first six years are currently missing. How many more episodes are out there waiting to be rediscovered? "The main broadcasters in the UK in the 1960s, 70s, up to the 80s really, junked quite a lot of content," said Justin Smith, a cinema professor at England's De Montfort University and film archivist. "In some ways finding missing 'Doctor Whos' is the holy grail" of classic TV discoveries, Smith said. The two episodes were "The Nightmare Begins" and "Devil's Planet," both of which aired during the show's third series in 1965. It features William Hartnell as the Doctor in a story involving archvillains the Daleks -- pepperpot-shaped metal aggressors whose favorite word is "Exterminate!" Smith said that for fans of the show, "it's got it all, it really has. It is intergalactic, it's got some great performances. It stands up really, really well."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 02:00

Need something brilliant to read this weekend? Here are six of our favourite pieces from the last seven days

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 02:00

Treasury minister Spencer Livermore trails new strategy as chancellor pins hopes on benefits of AI amid global uncertainty

The NHS and Ministry of Defence will be urged to buy British tech, as the government pins its hopes on the benefits of artificial intelligence to kickstart growth in the face of the Iran crisis, Treasury minister Spencer Livermore has said.

The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will restate her economic strategy in a high profile lecture on Tuesday, just as rocketing oil prices have raised fears of higher inflation and weaker growth.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 02:00

Refusal to kowtow to US president has won public backing – and left Badenoch and Farage playing catch-up

It is not often that Keir Starmer’s allies believe he has Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch on the run – but on Iran, they think he is on the right side of history and public opinion.

“It could be the making of him,” said Emily Thornberry, the Labour chair of the foreign affairs committee, who was first out of the blocks to say she thought Donald Trump’s strikes on Iran were illegal. “You’ve not had a British prime minister say no to an American president since Vietnam. This is a big deal.”

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 02:00

Datacentre investment boom is one of the biggest infrastructure gambles of this era, and Britain may be uniquely exposed

Stargate was to be the world’s biggest AI investment: a $500bn infrastructure project to “secure American leadership in AI”. Never shy of hyperbole, its key backer, the ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, promised “massive economic benefit for the entire world” with facilities to help people “use AI to elevate humanity”.

Now, OpenAI appears to be dropping out of a part of the deal – the expansion of a flagship datacentre stretching across a swathe of land in Abilene, Texas, which has become one of the most visible manifestations of a frenzy of investment in the chips and power plants required to build and run AI. There has been a breakdown in negotiations over project financing, as well as the timeline of when the expanded capacity might come online.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 01:00

Iran is trying to create wedges between Gulf states and the US, but Trump is very comfortable on the ‘escalatory ladder’

Middle East crisis – live updates

In its current phase, the Israeli-US war against Iran and its proxies has become a proving ground for two competing concepts of military escalation, each of which threatens to become a trap.

On one side, Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu have failed thus far in their ill-defined and shifting strategic aims. Despite killing Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, and other key leaders in the opening salvo of the campaign, the clerical regime remains and Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium is unsecured. Airstrikes are intensifying and hitting a greater number of targets.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-14 00:48

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 23:59

Iranian military said in a statement that oil and energy infrastructure belonging to firms that cooperated with the US would ‘immediately be destroyed’

Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry is saying that two drones have been intercepted and destroyed in the eastern region.

More now after reports of explosions in Dubai on Friday morning: thick black smoke rose over the financial hub’s skyline after what authorities described as a fire in an industrial area of the city-state.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 23:38
  • Judge keys early surge as US top Canada 5-3

  • Americans advance to face Dominican Republic

  • Miller fans side in ninth to seal quarter-final

Aaron Judge doubled and Pete Crow-Armstrong and Brice Turang each had two hits as the United States beat Canada 5-3 on Friday night to reach the World Baseball Classic semifinals.

The US squad rebounded after an 8-6 loss to Italy in pool play left them needing help to advance to this round.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: A top Senate administrator on Monday gave aides the green light to use three artificial intelligence chatbots for official work, a reflection of how widespread the use of the products has become in workplaces around the globe. The chief information officer for the Senate sergeant-at-arms, who oversees the chamber's computers as well as security, said in a one-page memo reviewed by The New York Times that aides could use Google's Gemini chat, OpenAI's ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot, which is already integrated into Senate platforms. Copilot "can help with routine Senate work, including drafting and editing documents, summarizing information, preparing talking points and briefing material, and conducting research and analysis," the memo said. The document later added that "data shared with Copilot Chat stays within the secure Microsoft 365 Government environment and is protected by the same controls that safeguard other Senate data." It's unclear how widely AI is used in the Senate or how widespread it might become, as individual offices and committees set their own rules. The chamber has also not publicly released comprehensive guidance on chatbots, the report notes. In contrast, the House has clearer policies allowing the general use of AI for limited internal tasks but restricting it from sensitive data or for being used for deepfakes and certain decision-making activities.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 23:26

Jan Carey was facing two misdemeanor criminal counts in Washington, D.C., federal court.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 22:25

Sprawling compound, including mock-up banks and police offices, uncovered by Thai military during border clashes

It is as if you have walked into a branch of one of Vietnam’s banks. A row of customer service desks, divided by plastic screens, with landline phones, promotional leaflets and staff business cards. A seated waiting area and a private meeting room. All of it features the OCB bank’s logo, or its trademark green colour.

This is not a genuine bank branch, however. It’s one of various “mock up” rooms inside a sprawling compound on the Thai-Cambodian border, where criminal groups are accused of using elaborate and industrial-scale fraud schemes to trick victims into handing over money.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 22:14

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 14.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 22:08
new gt i got today

my pint broke cause i drove it under a metal door schooched the front pad . getting it fixed tomorrow but after 120 miles i needed more so voila !

much more stable and 18mph is a breeze

float on

submitted by /u/Handsomescout
[link] [comments]

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 22:05

This blog has now closed. Follow our Middle East blog here

Both Pete Hegseth and Dan Caine were asked today about energy secretary Chris Wright’s comments to CNBC on Thursday, where he said that the US Navy cannot escort ships through the strait of Hormuz now but it was “quite likely” that could happen by the end of the month.

Gen Caine appeared to agree with Wright’s assessment, calling the waterway a “tactically complex environment”.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 22:05
Charge plug XRC issue

Really hard to show y'all, but my connection was not working when trying to charge my board, I looked inside & the whole entire connection has just fallen inside the board. What kind of B's is this?!?!!?

What should I do?

submitted by /u/ThisWurk
[link] [comments]

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 22:04

Defense secretary offers alternative TV headlines to reporters to more favourably reflect US military campaign in Iran – key US politics stories from 13 March 2026

Pete Hegseth has used a press conference at the Pentagon to criticize journalists over their coverage of the war in Iran, at one point proposing alternative TV headlines.

The US defense secretary claimed Iran had been left without a functioning air force, navy or missile defense network after 13 days of strikes, and said the combined US-Israeli air campaign had hit more than 15,000 targets since the war began.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 21:47

Loving the power. When riding on pavement, it feels there is a slight vibration past 10mph. The tire and rim seem true. When I engage it with my hand with the wheel off the ground I get a vibration as well. Again, tire and rim seem to be good. Maybe it’s normal and just the powerful motor? Anyone else experience this?

submitted by /u/DutchN8G8
[link] [comments]

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 21:46

The suspect, who was killed following the shooting, had previously been imprisoned for several years for trying to support ISIS, the FBI said.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 21:04
Nylon Carbon Fiber Skid plates

Found the short one then extended it half thick and velcro taped the extended section. The 2 screws is to apply some pressure against the walls where it slides into the board's bottom.

submitted by /u/OutlandishnessLong28
[link] [comments]

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:55

Sources tell Reuters layoffs could affect 20% or more of company as plans reflect broader tensions within big tech

Meta is planning sweeping layoffs that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Meta seeks to offset costly artificial intelligence infrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers.

No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:55

The analysis by researchers at Oregon State University provides one of the most comprehensive pictures to date of the structures that have been hit since the start of the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:54

The attacker rammed a vehicle into Temple Israel in West Bloomfield and opened fire, but he was the only one killed, law enforcement officials said.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:50

Clinton, New Jersey, is known primarily for its old grist mill, its quaint downtown, and its historic resident, "Dave the Rave."

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:39

Nine defendants were on trial on charges related to the July 4 attack on the Prairieland ICE detention center in North Texas.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:37

XR+ 4213 with 1020 km, stock besides a new tirE. A couple of months ago I pulled it off the charger, brought it outside and it wouldn't move. Turned on fine with no error codes but the motor wouldn't balance, no noise, no effort, nothing. I tried again later that day and it worked fine. A couple weeks later it happened again and this would repeat randomly over the next few months. Now it seems permanent.

I've left it plugged in for 3 days with no success, it stays at 99% with zero range and I'm not sure where to go from here. Am I looking at a new battery now? Any other suggestions or fixes I can try?

submitted by /u/ToastersInTheShower
[link] [comments]

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 20:29
  • Leafs lose American star for rest of NHL season

  • Toronto star suffered Grade 3 tear of left MCL

  • Radko Gudas could face suspension after hit

Toronto Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews has a torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee and will miss the rest of the NHL season.

The team provided an injury update Friday night, a little under 24 hours since Matthews was knocked out of a game against Anaheim on a knee-on-knee hit from Radko Gudas.

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2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 20:04

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-14 05:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 14, No. 1,729.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-14 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 14, No. 1007.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-14 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 14, No. 741.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 20:29

The stolen gun used in the Old Dominion University was sold this week to the shooter for $100, according to a federal law enforcement affidavit.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-14 10:31

A security detail has been requested from the federal health department's inspector general for top federal housing official Bill Pulte.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 23:40

Ayman Mohamad Ghazali made two purchases at a Phantom Fireworks store in Livonia, Michigan. He told the store staff the fireworks were for the end of Ramadan.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 20:00

The Trump administration's Medicare boss reacts to CBS News investigation into California's hospice fraud problems.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:49

SMF is the illumos system for managing traditional Unix services (long-lived background processes, usually). It’s quite rich in order to correctly accommodate a lot of different use cases. But it sometimes exposes that complexity to users even when they’re trying to do something simple.

[…]

In this post, I’ll walk through an example using a demo service and the svcprop(1) tool to show the details.

↫ Dave Pacheco

Soalris’ system management facility or SMF is effectively Solaris’ systemd, and this article provides a deeper insight into one of its features: properties. While using SMF and its suite of tools and commands for basic tasks is rather elementary and easy to get into – even I can do it – once you start to dive deeper into what is can do, things get complex and capable very fast.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:37

Google has announced that it will release Chrome for Linux on ARM64 in the second quarter of this year.

Launching Chrome for ARM64 Linux devices allows more users to enjoy the seamless integration of Google’s most helpful services into their browser. This move addresses the growing demand for a browsing experience that combines the benefits of the open-source Chromium project with the Google ecosystem of apps and features.

This release represents a significant undertaking to ensure that ARM64 Linux users receive the same secure, stable, and rich Chrome experience found on other platforms.

↫ The Chromium Blog

While the idea of running Linux on Arm, only to defile it with something as unpleasant as Chrome seem entirely foreign to me, most normal people do actually use Google’s browser. Having it available on Linux for Arm makes perfect sense, and might convince a few people to buy an Arm machine for Linux, assuming the platform can get its act together.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 19:32

The 1960s episodes featuring the first Doctor William Hartnell will air in the UK in April.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 19:20

President thanks Grenell for ‘outstanding work’ and says Matt Floca, vice-president of operations, will take over

Donald Trump has announced that Ric Grenell, the longtime Republican foreign policy adviser who oversaw far-reaching changes at the Kennedy Center, which prompted many artists to abandon the performing arts venue, will be replaced by Matt Floca, vice-president of operations at the center.

Trump made the announcement on social media that he has replaced Grenell, thanking him for the “outstanding work he has done”. Floca was photographed in December personally overseeing the addition of Trump’s name to the center’s facade. Grenell’s departure comes as the Kennedy Center prepares to close this summer for a two-year renovation.

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2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:19

Former US senator’s admission comes after Heather Ammel sued her under North Carolina’s ‘homewrecker’ law

Kyrsten Sinema, a former US senator, admitted in court filings to having a “romantic and intimate” relationship with a married man who was a member of her security detail during her final year in office – but argues that his estranged wife should not be able to sue her over it.

The admission to the multi-state affair came in response to a lawsuit filed by Heather Ammel, who accused the former Arizona senator in federal court of breaking up her marriage under North Carolina’s so-called “homewrecker” law.

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2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:17

In a first-ever case, most of the nine defendants were convicted of providing support to terrorists. Only one defendant was convicted of attempted murder of a police officer.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:13

I will not pass up an opportunity to make you talk about Plan 9, so let’s focus on Acme.

Acme is remarkable for what it represents: a class of application that leverages a simple, text-based GUI to create a compelling model of interacting with all of the tools available in the Unix (or Plan 9) environment. Cox calls it an “integrating development environment,” distinguishing it from the more hermetic “integrated development environment” developers will be familiar with. The simplicity of its interface is important. It is what has allowed Acme to age gracefully over the past 30 or so years, without the constant churn of adding support for new languages, compilers, terminals, or color schemes.

↫ Daniel Moch

While the article mentions you can use Acme on UNIX, to really appreciate it you have to use it on Plan 9, which today most likely means 9front. Now, I am not the kind of person who can live and breathe inside 9front – you need to be of a certain mindset to be able to do so – but even then I find that messing around with Plan 9 has given me a different outlook on UNIX. In fact, I think it has helped me understand UNIX and UNIX-like systems better and more thoroughly.

If you’re not sure if Plan 9 is something that suits you, the only real way to find out is to just use it. Fire up a VM, read the excellent documentation at 9front, and just dive into it. Most of you will just end up confused and disoriented, but a small few of you will magically discover you possess the right mindset.

Just do it.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:09

As small-scale attacks target houses of worship, law enforcement and religious leaders are prepared but anxious about what’s next.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 19:00

Meta plans to remove end-to-end encryption (E2EE) from Instagram direct messages by May 8, 2026. "Very few people were opting in to end-to-end encrypted messaging in DMs, so we're removing this option from Instagram in the coming months," says Meta. "Anyone who wants to keep messaging with end-to-end encryption can easily do that on WhatsApp." The Hacker News reports: The American company first began testing E2EE for Instagram direct messages in 2021 as part of CEO Mark Zuckerberg's "privacy-focused vision for social networking." The feature is currently "only available in some areas" and is not enabled by default. Weeks into the Russo-Ukrainian war in February 2022, the company made encrypted direct messaging available to all adult users in both countries. Last week, TikTok said it would not introduce E2EE, arguing it makes users less safe by preventing police and safety teams from being able to read direct messages if needed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 18:57

A suspect in an attack on a synagogue in the Detroit area is dead after ramming a vehicle into the building and being confronted by synagogue security, Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 18:10

Arrest of asylum seeker Elvis Joel TE and his two-year-old, without a warrant, had sparked widespread outrage

A federal judge ruled on Friday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) must release a Minneapolis man and asylum seeker who has been unlawfully detained for 50 days.

The man, identified as Elvis Joel TE in court filings, was arrested on 22 January at the height of ICE’s aggressive raids in Minneapolis. The case sparked widespread outrage as Elvis TE was detained with his two-year-old daughter while they were returning home from the store, and ICE quickly flew both of them to Texas despite a court order barring their transfer out of Minnesota.

Continue reading...

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 18:03

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 18:00

Iranian drone strikes shut down a major helium facility in Qatar, removing about 30% of global helium supply and raising concerns for the semiconductor industry, which relies on the gas for chip fabrication. "QatarEnergy declared force majeure on existing contracts on March 4, freeing it from supply obligations to customers," reports Tom's Hardware. The industry outlet Gasworld reports that no imminent restart is planned. From the report: Helium consultant Phil Kornbluth, speaking at a Gasworld webinar on March 4, said that if the outage extends beyond roughly two weeks, industrial gas distributors could be forced to relocate cryogenic equipment and revalidate supplier relationships, a process that could stretch over months regardless of when Qatari output resumes. South Korea is among the most exposed countries, which, according to the Korea International Trade Association, imported 64.7% of its helium from Qatar in 2025. The country relies heavily on helium imports to cool silicon wafers during fabrication and is understood to have no viable substitute. The country's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources has reportedly launched an investigation into supply and demand for 14 semiconductor materials and equipment types with high dependence on Middle Eastern sources, Nikkei reported on Wednesday. Bromine, which is used in circuit formation, is another big concern, with South Korea sourcing 90% of its imports from Israel, also party to the ongoing conflict in Iran.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 17:43

When one child told the toy, "I love you," it responded, "As a friendly reminder, please ensure interactions adhere to the guidelines provided."

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 17:32

I’m feeling kind of nostalgic today so I thought I’d write Hello, world! in Z80 assembly for the ZX Spectrum! The last time I wrote any Z80 assembly was when I was 14 so around 36 years ago! I may be a little rusty!

↫ Old Man By the Sea

It’s easy to tell the world hello in BASIC, but a bit more involved in Z80 assembly.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 17:30

A model unit of the T1 seen by The Verge shows specs and pricing that don't match what's advertised on the Trump Mobile website.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 17:27

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 537 for Saturday, March 14.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 17:25

A federal jury handed prosecutors a mixed victory in the trial of nine protesters for their roles during or after a chaotic demonstration outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility last July, convicting eight defendants of terrorism charges but sparing some of them on attempted murder counts.

The widely watched trial could serve as a bellwether as President Donald Trump’s administration seeks to crack down on left-wing groups — and the convictions could encourage prosecutors to bring more such charges. A top FBI official said in December that the agency is now treating “antifa” as a major domestic terror threat.

“This is a sham trial, built on political persecution and ideological attacks coming from the top.”

In a statement posted online, a support group for the defendants said, “Everything about this trial from beginning to end has proven what we have said all along: this is a sham trial, built on political persecution and ideological attacks coming from the top.”

The Trump administration celebrated the verdict.

“Antifa is a domestic terrorist organization that has been allowed to flourish in Democrat-led cities — not under President Trump,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi. “Today’s verdict on terrorism charges will not be the last as the Trump administration systematically dismantles Antifa and finally halts their violence on America’s streets.”

The court case centered on a nighttime July 4, 2025, protest outside ICE’s Prairieland Detention Facility that started with demonstrators shooting fireworks and spray-painting cars in the parking lot.

Signal messages obtained by the government showed that the demonstrators believed that less confrontational protests against ICE — such as one that had occurred earlier in the day at the same facility — were ineffective. Some of the protesters had brought guns, which is legal in Texas. A police officer responding to the scene was shot in the neck by one of the protesters, Benjamin Song, who had brought an AR-15 with a trigger modified for a higher rate of fire.

The defendants said the protest was a peaceful demonstration meant to show solidarity, pointing to the megaphone that one member of the group brought to shout slogans to detainees. Prosecutors pointed to the guns, ballistic vests, and trauma first-aid kits they brought as evidence of malicious intent.

Song was convicted of one count of attempted murder for shooting the officer, but acquitted on two other counts of attempting to shoot at two correctional officers. Song was also found guilty of discharging a firearm during a violent crime. Four other people accused of attempted murder counts were acquitted on those charges. Song faces up to life in prison.

Related

Wearing All Black at Protests Makes You Guilty of Terrorism, Prosecutors Tell Jury

In a significant victory for the government, jurors convicted eight defendants on material support for terrorism charges for wearing black clothes to the late-night demonstration. That use of “black bloc” clothing was an antifa tactic that assisted in the shooting of the officer, prosecutors said during their closing arguments.

The defendants convicted of providing material support to terrorists were Song, Autumn Hill, Zachary Evetts, Savanna Batten, Megan Morris, Maricela Rueda, Elizabeth Soto, and Ines Soto. They face up to 15 years in prison on that count.

The same defendants were also convicted of riot and two explosives charges related to the fireworks. Hill, Evetts, Morris, and Rueda were acquitted on attempted murder charges that would have carried sentences up to life imprisonment.

Rueda and her husband, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, were convicted of conspiracy to conceal documents. That charge centered on Sanchez’s movement of boxes containing radical pamphlets after her arrest. Sanchez was also convicted of corruptly concealing a document.

The prosecution of the Prairieland defendants represented the federal government’s first use of the material support charge against alleged antifa members accused of domestic terrorism.

The prosecution was the government’s first material support for terror charges against alleged antifa members.

The verdict came after 10 days of testimony inside a Fort Worth courtroom packed with family members of the defendants, law enforcement officials, and journalists.

Prosecutors called the wounded police officer and detention center guards to describe what it was like on the receiving end of a barrage of bullets, as well as four cooperating defendants who pleaded guilty before trial.

Another significant witness was a researcher at a right-wing think tank who said the tactics used by the demonstrators that night, including “black bloc” clothing and the encrypted messaging app Signal — the latter of which the witness said he also used — were typical of antifa.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

The post Anti-ICE Protesters Convicted on Terrorism Charges for Wearing All Black appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 17:17

Matt Floca will be the new CEO and executive director of the Kennedy Center, President Trump announced.

2026-03-13 20:04
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Korey LaVergne, 37, of the Lafayette diocese, charged with three counts of felony indecent behavior with a juvenile

A Roman Catholic priest in the south-west Louisiana diocese where the US church’s clergy abuse scandal effectively started decades ago has been formally charged with three counts of felony indecent behavior with a juvenile.

A bill of information from the district attorney for Acadia parish charges 37-year-old Korey LaVergne with three counts of felony indecent behavior with a juvenile who was 15 at the time of the alleged offenses.

Continue reading...

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In an interview at SXSW, the director of the upcoming sci-fi film Disclosure Day discussed aliens, social media, AI in film and more.

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AI services may not stay cheap for long, as companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are currently subsidizing usage to rapidly grow market share. As these companies move toward profitability and potential IPOs, Axios reports that investors will likely push them to increase prices and improve margins. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from the report: Flashback: Silicon Valley has seen this movie before. The so-called "millennial lifestyle subsidy" meant VC money helped underwrite cheap Uber rides and DoorDash deliveries. Before that, Amazon built its base with low prices, free shipping and, for years, no sales tax in most states. Eventually, all of these companies had to charge enough to cover costs -- and make a profit. Follow the money: The current iteration of AI subsidies won't last forever. Both OpenAI and Anthropic are widely expected to go public. Public investors will demand earnings growth and expanding margins. Even as chips get more efficient, total spending keeps rising. Labs need more capacity, more upgrades and more supply to meet demand. The bottom line: The costs of AI will keep going down. But total spend from customers will need to keep going up if AI companies are going to become profitable and investors are ever going to get returns on their massive investments.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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2026-03-13 16:57

The Food and Drug Administration on March 10 changed the approval for a version of the prescription drug leucovorin to include people with a very rare genetic condition. FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary had previously implied that the drug’s new label would cover a much broader group of people with autism, saying that “hundreds of thousands of kids” would benefit. 

The condition targeted in the FDA approval is a genetic version of cerebral folate deficiency, caused by mutations in a folate receptor gene. People with CFD — whether from genetic or other causes — have low levels of folate in their cerebrospinal fluid, which leads to reduced folate in the brain. This affects brain development. Patients with genetic CFD can experience developmental delays, movement disorders and seizures. Some behaviors are similar to those with autism.

However, this form of genetic CFD is estimated to occur in 1 in a million people, according to the FDA. That would translate to around 70 kids in the U.S. — far from “hundreds of thousands of kids.” Leucovorin had already been used for decades to treat genetic CFD via off-label prescribing, a common practice when evidence shows a drug approved for one condition improves another.

Makary speaks during a Sept. 22 press conference on autism. Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images.

Despite this limited approval, Makary had initially implied a more substantial change. “Today the FDA is filing a Federal Register notice to change the label on an exciting treatment called prescription leucovorin so that it can be available to children with autism,” Makary said in a Sept. 22 press conference. “We are going to change the label to make it available,” he went on to say. “Hundreds of thousands of kids, in my opinion, will benefit.”

This was the same press conference in which President Donald Trump and others touted an unproven link between autism and the use of Tylenol, or acetaminophen, during pregnancy. 

Makary later referred to a subset of people with autism with antibodies that block their own folate receptors, called autoantibodies. Some researchers have hypothesized that a subset of people with autism have CFD caused by these autoantibodies, but this is not well-established, as we will explain.

The FDA “is approving prescription leucovorin for treatment of autistic children,” Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said at the same event. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said the treatment “may benefit large numbers of children who suffer from autism.” He had previously vowed by September to identify “what has caused the autism epidemic.” 

The Federal Register notice Makary referred to described data on the rare genetic form of CFD, however. The notice also stated that data on leucovorin for people who have symptoms with “autistic features” along with antibodies targeting the receptor “is limited” and that “additional studies are needed.” 

The then-head of the FDA’s drugs division, Dr. George Tidmarsh, also subsequently clarified that the new indication was the rare genetic one. “We’re not proposing to approve leucovorin for [people with] the diagnosis of autism,” he told the autism publication the Transmitter in an interview for a story published Oct. 2.

When asked this week about the discrepancy between Makary’s earlier comments about broad benefits for kids with autism and the ultimate FDA approval for a rare genetic condition, a spokesperson from the Department of Health and Human Services told us that Makary previously had been talking about an antibody-related form of CFD, and not the rare genetic disorder.

“Dr. Makary was referring to cerebral folate deficiency — which can be caused by antibodies blocking folate receptors — rather than cerebral folate transport deficiency, which is caused by a specific genetic mutation,” the HHS spokesperson wrote in an email. 

However, as we’ve said, the idea that a large subset of people with autism have CFD and can benefit from leucovorin has not been well-established.

“There is no substantive evidence that cerebral folate deficiency (CFD) plays a role in the pathogenesis of autism,” two researchers with expertise in folate and cancer treatment wrote in a January perspective in the New England Journal of Medicine. They also said that despite claims that antibodies against folate receptors play a role in autism, most experts consider this conclusion to be “inconclusive.” They added that the presence of the antibodies doesn’t necessarily mean that folate is low in the cerebrospinal fluid, which is the defining feature of CFD.

The new approval was for GSK’s Wellcovorin, a brand-name version of leucovorin that has long been off patent and that is no longer made by the company. Leucovorin remains available in generic versions. It is mainly used for cancer patients alongside certain chemotherapy regimens to reduce toxicity or to improve effectiveness. 

Unsupported Claims About Broad Benefits in Autism

While clarifying that Makary’s remarks about broad benefits applied to a different form of CFD, the HHS spokesperson also said that the rare genetic form of CFD “was the focus of the September announcement about this drug.” 

But during the Sept. 22 press conference and subsequent media appearances, Makary repeatedly emphasized potentially sweeping benefits of the new leucovorin label.

“​​For many kids with autism, it will provide some improvement in their symptoms, and for some subset, marked improvement,” Makary said in a Sept. 22 NewsNation interview, urging people to talk to their doctors. “There are 2.5 million kids suffering, and I hope hundreds of thousands of them will see some improvement with this new treatment that we’re going to approve in about two to three weeks,” he went on to say.

“I think the biggest story today was that the FDA is taking action to make leucovorin available to kids with cerebral folate deficiency,” he told ABC News that same day. “That may be 20% to 50% of kids with severe autism, and they have a clinical improvement in studies.” In a Sept. 25 interview on C-Span, he gave an even larger estimate, saying “we are going to approve a drug called leucovorin for the treatment of autism” and that it “may help 50% or 60% of kids with autism.”

There is very limited evidence to support the assertion that wide groups of kids with autism could benefit, as we wrote in September. David S. Mandell, a psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and director of the Penn Center for Mental Health, told us then that the evidence on leucovorin “as a treatment for autism is very weak.”

Other researchers told the Transmitter in September that the literature on autism and leucovorin was “meager” and that it would be “extremely premature” for the administration to recommend the treatment for autism.

“These leucovorin studies are small, lack validated biomarkers or outcome measures, and certainly are not generalizable to all children with autism,” Dr. Shafali Jeste, a neurologist at UCLA, told the Transmitter. “The over-simplified conclusions and media hype from these studies take advantage of vulnerable families who are searching for answers and hope.”

At the time, this evidence included a small collection of studies that looked at the impact of leucovorin on communication and other characteristics in children with autism. One of these studies — among the largest, with 80 participants recruited — has since been retracted due to concerns about its data and statistical analysis, according to a notice on the journal website. Another of the studies had been terminated for “investigator non-compliance,” although the authors still published results.

“Larger, well-designed, multisite trials using objective outcome measures are necessary to determine whether leucovorin is safe and effective in autism and in which subgroups it may be most beneficial for,” says an FAQ page from the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Despite these uncertainties and the lack of a broad approval, people appear to have heeded Makary’s advice to talk to their doctors about leucovorin. New outpatient prescriptions of the drug increased by 71% in children ages 5 and older in the first couple of months following the September announcement, according to a study published March 5 in the Lancet.


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 No Broad Autism Approval for Leucovorin, Despite FDA Commissioner’s Prior Suggestions appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 16:45

Trump DoJ’s investigation was purportedly about the management of the central bank’s renovation

A federal judge on Friday blocked the justice department from serving subpoenas to Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell in an inquiry purported to be about the management of the central bank’s renovation.

Powell disclosed the surprise investigation on 11 January, and described the move as a threat to Fed independence and part of the Trump administration’s attempts to pressure the Fed to cut rates.

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2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 16:45

Here's how to tell the old and new AirTags apart, and how the second generation improves on the original.

2026-03-13 20:04
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The site, which features 40 dedicated channels, attracted 10,000 users on its first day.

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TSA employees have been working in US airports without pay since the partial shutdown began in February

A rising number of US airports are asking for donations to support employees affected by the partial government shutdown with airport security officials missing their first full paychecks Friday.

Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees have been working in airports around the US without pay since a shutdown began in February after Republicans and Democrats failed to reach a funding agreement. Democrats have since refused to support a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security, the TSA’s parent agency, without first receiving guaranteed immigration enforcement reforms.

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2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 16:29

The 2024 lawsuit alleged that Adobe's confusing and costly cancellation process violated consumer protections.

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Some airports have been warning fliers to arrive four hours early because of long security lines.

2026-03-13 20:04
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The latest release of oil follows historic withdrawals from the Biden administration to combat gas prices from the Ukraine war.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 16:16

U.S. gas prices are surging as the Iran war drives up the global cost of oil. But what exactly accounts for what you pay at the pump?

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 16:07

Kenya Chapman was arrested for allegedly selling firearm to Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, who killed one person on Thursday

The US Department of Justice on Friday charged a man who authorities say sold a gun to the Old Dominion University (ODU) shooter despite the gunman’s previous conviction in a terrorism case.

Kenya Chapman is facing federal charges in connection to the sale of the weapon to Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, a former army national guard member who yelled “Allahu Akbar” before he opened fire in a classroom at the Virginia school on Thursday, according to authorities.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 19:28

Tehran residents report relentless bombing with US and Israeli planes launching wave of attacks

Donald Trump has said Iran will be hit “very hard” in the coming days, describing leaders of the regime as “deranged scumbags” who it was a “great honor” to kill, as Tehran residents reported relentless bombing and violence continued to spiral across the Middle East.

The US president’s comments, which signaled an intensification of the US-Israeli campaign, came as Israeli and US warplanes launched successive waves of attacks on the Iranian capital and elsewhere on Friday. One strike reportedly hit close to a square near Tehran University where crowds were gathered in support of Iran’s regime. The area is home to many government buildings.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 20:31

The Kennedy Center is set to close for two years on July 4.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 20:54

Richard Kahn, who worked closely with Epstein for more than a decade, testified before the Oversight Committee on Wednesday.

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On March 12, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave his first press conference since the U.S. and Israel first attacked Iran. Some social media users doubted the authenticity of the video address, and led them to question whether Netanyahu was still alive.

"Rumors swirling that the Prime Minister of Israel - Netanyahu - is dead after this video has been released of him LIVE on TV," one March 13 X post read. "Look at the 6 fingers."

"Breaking: Latest video released by the israeli government shows that it was ai generated because netanyahu has 6 fingers," read another March 13 X post. "Is Netanyahu dead?"

In the image, Netanyahu is pointing with both hands, and social media users said his right hand appears to have six fingers. 

But upon closer look at the video, Netanyahu’s hands looked normal. A trick of light likely made part of his palm appear to be an extra finger.

(Screenshots from the Israeli Government Press Office YouTube video)

The full press briefing can be found here. There are no other indications that it was altered or generated with artificial intelligence. Netanyahu interacted with reporters over video conference. He gestured with his hands a lot and no irregularities appeared.

Several news outlets reported on Netanyahu’s press briefing.

A video of Netanyahu’s press conference doesn’t prove he is dead. We rate this claim Pants on Fire!

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sdinfoserv writes: After running a Reddit clone for a couple of months, the Digg beta shut down again. The website is a splash memo from CEO Justin Mezzell, blaming the latest "Hard Reset" on bots. "Building on the internet in 2026 is different," writes Mezzell. "We learned that the hard way. Today we're sharing difficult news: we've made the decision to significantly downsize the Digg team..." The decision was made after struggling to gain traction and an overwhelming influx of AI-driven bots and spam. "When the Digg beta launched, we immediately noticed posts from SEO spammers noting that Digg still carried meaningful Google link authority," says Mezzell. "Within hours, we got a taste of what we'd only heard rumors about. The internet is now populated, in meaningful part, by sophisticated AI agents and automated accounts. We knew bots were part of the landscape, but we didn't appreciate the scale, sophistication, or speed at which they'd find us." "We banned tens of thousands of accounts. We deployed internal tooling and industry-standard external vendors. None of it was enough. When you can't trust that the votes, the comments, and the engagement you're seeing are real, you've lost the foundation a community platform is built on." Despite the setback, Digg plans to rebuild with a smaller team, with founder Kevin Rose returning to work full-time on a new direction for the platform. "Starting the first week of April, Kevin will be putting his focus back on the company he built twenty+ years ago," writes Mezzell. "He'll continue as an advisor to True Ventures, but Digg will be his primary focus." Slashback: The Rise of Digg.com

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 16:04
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A federal judge has quashed a pair of grand jury subpoenas sent to the Federal Reserve Board as part of a criminal probe by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro's office.

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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, speaks to members of the media outside a Gang of Eight briefing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, March 2, 2026. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US military would step up its military attacks against Iran, a stark warning after two days of strikes across the country that the Trump administration says took out its leadership targeted its ballistic-missile program. Photographer: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., speaks to members of the media outside a Gang of Eight briefing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on March 2, 2026. Photo: Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Key Democrats in Congress are, once again, vaguely opposing a war instead of forcefully opposing it on moral or ideological grounds. Just as Democratic leadership slow-rolled a war powers vote for two weeks after President Donald Trump began amassing his armada to attack Iran, and four days after the bombing was underway, Democrats are refusing to speak out clearly against the war, instead resigning themselves to process-based criticism and demands for “more information” and “plans.” 

With strong indications that Trump may soon send ground troops, we are long past the time for begging to see the “plans.” Democrats need to forcefully call for an end to this war now.

Still, this “We need to see Trump’s plans for Iran” talking point has taken hold, either through top-down messaging discipline or a very unfortunate series of coincidences. Democrats in the House and Senate have been echoing some version of this line for the past week:

This messaging often comes after closed-door briefings with Congress, followed by a consternating Democrat in front of a camera lamenting a lack of a “plan” or “exit strategy.” Let us examine this clip, for example, of Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., as he “demands answers” and does a lot of posturing and Plan-Mongering but, strangely, never actually says the war is wrong and should end immediately. 

On Thursday, Democratic Reps. Yassamin Ansari, Sara Jacobs, and Jason Crow released a 1,100-word letter to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth demanding accountability for war crimes committed in Iran that makes no demand to end the war causing the war crimes.

Similar to the Biden White House’s strategy of demanding Israel “allow in more aid” in Gaza while continuing to arm and fund the destruction of Gaza, there’s a surplus of performative outrage and handwringing over the logical outcome of the war without opposing the war causing the war crimes in question. Countless other Democrats are repeating this script with varying degrees of normative content, but typically without much at all, instead keeping the conversation purely in the realm of process and strategy.

“[President Trump has] not shown us any plans for what he wants to do for the day after,” Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-N.V., told reporters earlier in the week. “We have to have a plan,” Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., said to NOTUS on Tuesday. “I’m still not convinced that the administration has a plan to execute the rest of the war and have an exit strategy.”

Some of those pushing this line may argue that we can make process criticisms and demand an end to the war. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with this approach –– and some have done it –– for the vast majority, this is simply not the case. The only message that’s pushed out to the public is the how and when of the war, not the fact of it. 

An extension of this messaging is a call for “hearings” or “investigations” on the war. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is aggressively pushing this line, telling reporters earlier this week that “the story from the administration changes by the hour.”

“When it comes to sending our service members into harm’s way, the American people need to understand why,” he said. “But right now, they don’t even have a ‘why.’ … That needs to change. We need testimony. We need accountability.”

This war is not an abstract policy proposal up for debate at the Oxford Union Society that requires further deliberation.

It’s unclear why anyone needs “testimony.” The war is illegal, immoral, killing countless Iranians, and needs to end immediately. The implication in this constant Plan-Mongering is that some brilliant Aaron Sorkin speech from Hegseth or Marco Rubio in front of Congress would somehow change these underlying basic facts. This is a criminal war being carried about by openly violent racists and needs to stop at once. It is not an abstract policy proposal up for debate at the Oxford Union Society that requires further deliberation.

“Senate Democrats vow to force Iran war votes if Republicans don’t hold hearings,” an exclusive from Semafor informed us on Tuesday. “Senate Democrats are threatening to force repeated votes on President Donald Trump’s war with Iran unless Republicans agree to hold committee hearings about the ongoing war,” the report continued.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., did make a clear statement in the Semafor article against the war, saying, “Now is the time for Democrats to use all the leverage we have to try to stop this unnecessary war.” But this is an outlier in these Plan-Mongering PR roll outs. Indeed, the entire premise that Democrats would force more war powers votes unless “Republicans hold hearings” is nonsensical. If the war powers votes are meaningful leverage, why not use them to make a clear, consistent moral case to the public, rather than indulge the idea this is an unsettled debate to be hashed out in drawn-out hearings? What more is there to learn? The war is illegal, unjust, and immoral. What functional purpose would hearings serve, other than to mine for viral content of Dems Owning Trump Administration Officials? 

It’s true that every Democrat in the Senate — save for Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman — supported a war powers resolution on March 4. And while this would have triggered congressional authority to vote for or against war with Iran, it is not, itself, a vote against war — it is an assertion of Congress’s authority to decide the matter. This conditional element, combined with the fact that its failure in both the Senate and House was likely a fait accompli, permitted Democrats to be on the record as appearing to oppose the war without running afoul of the pro-war, pro-Israel lobby.

The Plan-Mongering strategy is being promoted by centrist, corporate, and billionaire-funded groups like Third Way.

It’s telling that the Plan-Mongering strategy is being promoted by centrist, corporate, and billionaire-funded groups like Third Way, who released talking points detailing how Democrats should talk about the war on the first day of the bombing, the substance of which is an almost carbon copy of how top Democrats have subsequently spoken about it.

“President Trump is refusing to answer a number of grave and urgent questions,” leads off the memo, which proceeds to lay out the familiar talking points: Is Iran truly an imminent threat? (The answer, one assumes, is TBD.) Why did Trump tell us in an address to the nation in June that Iran’s nuclear assets had been “completely and totally obliterated”? Is this a “Wag the Dog” war? Is this a war for regime change? (Again, the normative substance remains elusive.) Why has Congress been bypassed? The memo ends with this muddled statement of support but skepticism about process: “We strongly support our troops and hope this mission succeeds. But these unanswered questions mean we don’t know what success looks like, and that should deeply worry every American.”

What’s missing is a clearly articulated message against the war, or any demand to end it now. Instead, a “hope the mission succeeds,” and a lot of hand-wringing, deflections, and concerns that Congress is being left out of the war. The influential liberal group National Security Action released similar, if marginally better, process-focused talking points last week in their “messaging guide.” While the guide conditionally opposes new funding, it still makes no demand to end the war immediately, instead suggesting Democrats should refuse to fund it until “Donald Trump makes clear how and when we are getting out of this reckless war.” 

What’s missing is a clearly articulated message against the war, or any demand to end it now.

Rather than a clear objection to funding this illegal and immoral war in any form, these talking points continue to leave open the possibility Democrats could support it, if only there was an acceptable “plan.” Central to this incoherent messaging is the implication that there exists a “plan” Trump could proffer that would satisfy Democrats. And if that’s the case, after the 900th demand by Democrats that he produce one, one is left wondering: Why don’t the Democrats provide one, or at least a rough outline? What would a good “plan” for a surprise and unprovoked attack on Iran look like, exactly? What’s to stop Schumer’s office from offering one? What’s left unsaid is that there’s no plan in the universe that would justify this war of aggression that’s already killed over 1,300 civilians, including 200 children

Those pushing this argument would likely make a pragmatism defense: These types of process critiques play better with the public, they might insist. But it’s unclear on what basis this could be said, as the war is already historically unpopular. Polls show the public overwhelmingly wants the war to end; they are not asking for more refined “plans” or “explanations” or “hearings.”

Related

It’s a War With Iran, Not an “Intervention”

The real reason why this line is popular is almost certainly because it creates the appearance of unified party opposition while permitting those who soft-support the war to find something to criticize, namely the lack of a sufficiently good “plan.”

This focus on process criticism — which defined Democratic leaders Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries’s superficial response to the war in the immediate lead-up and first days of the war — does not build any moral narratives, or undermine the logic of regime change, which remains the bipartisan consensus, or run afoul of AIPAC and other major pro-Israel Democratic donors. But it may help placate Democratic voters who are overwhelmingly opposed to the war to the tune of 89 percent. When Democratic message-shapers are tasked with opposing a war without opposing the moral logic of the war, confusing and often contradictory process criticism is all they have left. 

Democrats, as a minority party, could not unilaterally end the war if they wanted to, but this appeal to their powerlessness doesn’t tell the whole story. When the House voted on a separate war powers resolution the day after the Senate’s failed, four Democrats — Reps. Henry Cuellar, Jared Golden, Greg Landsman, and Juan Vargas — broke ranks and opposed it. Had they voted the party line, it would have passed due to two Republicans joining the effort, and the war would have likely ended — at least until a subsequent authorization vote took place.

When is Jeffries, the supposedly anti-war House minority leader, going to discipline these four pro-war Democrats who ruined the party’s nominal opposition to this war? So far, there have been no reports of any such measures, so we’re left to understand that opposing the war is important, but it’s not important-important. A potential upcoming vote on supplemental war funding should be more clarifying, with the potential to differentiate between real opposition and senators Who Just Want to Look Outraged. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., indicated he will oppose any more funding, while others, such as Sens. Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., have not ruled out more funding, ostensibly to “support the troops.” Jeffries, true to form as a party leader, refuses to say what he’ll support.

What generic Plan-Monger language does is permit seemingly genuine antiwar voices like Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., to run the same basic script of AIPAC stalwarts like Booker and Schumer. The “No Plan” sandbox provides cover for Democrats with a record of supporting Israel and being “tough on Iran” to appear anti-war without all the mess of saying anything substantive against the war.

A party that built its message around a strong, firm, and unequivocal case to end this war now would very suddenly draw attention to the undoubtedly dozens of congressional Democrats who would not echo this line. So what we get instead is limp process critiques, demanding pointless hearings, and bizarre attacks that Trump is not doing regime change fast enough. Polls repeatedly show the most common criticism of Democrats is not that they are too far left or too anti-war, but that they are too weak, that they don’t stand for anything.

Centering criticism of a deeply unpopular war on those carrying it out for not filling out the right paperwork or producing a satisfactory slideshow — rather than making clear, normative objections to a war of aggression — feeds directly into this perception. But perhaps it’s a perception Democratic leaders, and the pro-war, pro-Israel donors who fund their political careers, would prefer over the alternative.  

The post Why Dems Keep Saying Trump Has “No Plan” Instead of Calling to End the War With Iran appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:47

Guide to where you can watch CBS News in your area.

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President Donald Trump claimed that Iran essentially shutting down the Strait of Hormuz “doesn’t really affect” the United States the way it does “other countries.” It’s true that a small share of U.S. oil imports comes from the Persian Gulf. But the U.S. has been affected by the global increase in the price of oil.

Since the waterway has been effectively closed – significantly reducing crude oil exports from the Persian Gulf region – oil prices have increased by double-digit percentages, which has contributed to a 50-cent-plus spike in the average price of a gallon of gasoline in the U.S.

“The US is definitely affected,” Mark Finley, the nonresident fellow in energy and global oil at Rice University’s Baker Institute, told us in an email. Because it’s a global oil market, “if something goes wrong anywhere, the price goes up everywhere,” he said.

Iran has blocked the flow of oil and other goods through the strait in retaliation for joint U.S. and Israeli airstrikes that began on Feb. 28. Iran has threatened to shoot or bomb vessels that attempt to pass through the narrow body of water that separates Iran from Oman and connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea.

A satellite view of the Persian Gulf and the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint in the global energy supply chain. Photo by Gallo Images/Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2025.

About 20 million barrels per day of crude and other oil products were transported through the strait in 2025. That has slowed “to a trickle” since the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran began, according to the International Energy Agency.

In a March 9 press conference, Trump talked about offering “risk insurance” to oil tankers operating in the region, possibly by having U.S. Navy ships escort the tankers, “because you have to keep the straits flowing.”

But then he said, “With all of that, it affects other countries much more than it does the United States. It doesn’t really affect us. We have so much oil. We have tremendous oil and gas, much more than we need.” And he added, “I mean, we’re doing this for the other parts of the world, including countries like China. They get a lot of their oil through the straits. So, we’re doing this.”

Compared with some other nations, the U.S. does get just a fraction of its crude oil from Middle Eastern countries for whom the strait is the primary route of exporting oil products.

Last year, the U.S. imported approximately 490,000 barrels of crude oil per day from countries in the Persian Gulf, which include Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. That was about 8% of the almost 6.2 million barrels per day the U.S. imported in total, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. (Canada and Mexico were the source of roughly 70% of U.S. crude imports last year, with Canada alone accounting for a little more than 63%.)

Meanwhile, “About 80% of oil and oil products transiting the Strait in 2025 was destined for Asia,” the IEA has reported – with China, India and Japan being the main importers in the region. China, which Trump mentioned by name, receives between 45% and 50% of its imports through the strait, according to the Center on Global Energy Policy.

But it’s not accurate to claim that Iran’s blockade on the strait “doesn’t really affect” Americans, as Trump claimed. The fact that the U.S. is the world’s leading producer of crude oil, and relatively little of its imports come from the Persian Gulf, doesn’t mean that Americans won’t feel any pain.

“It insulates us in the sense that we’re not going to have a hard time finding supply, but the prices are global, so prices go up anyway,” Abhi Rajendran, director of Oil Markets Research at Energy Intelligence, told us in an interview.

As we’ve reported, the U.S. still relies on some imports because much of the crude oil produced domestically is lighter, or less dense, while many refineries in the U.S. were long ago configured to use the heavier crude oils produced in other parts of the world, such as Canada. That’s also why the U.S. exports a lot of the oil produced in the States.

Trump wrote on social media that higher oil prices are actually a positive thing. “The United States is the largest Oil Producer in the World, by far, so when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money,” the president said.

In his email, Finley told us that “US oil companies, their employees, and the states where they operate benefit from higher prices.” As for consumers, including households and businesses, he said they “bear the burden of higher prices at the pump” as well as on “everything that uses oil.”

He noted that the price of gasoline, diesel fuel and other petroleum products in the U.S. “have gone up sharply” since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran. 

In a February update, the IEA said, “With around 25% of the world’s seaborne oil trade transiting the Strait, and options to bypass it being limited, any disruption to flows through the Strait would have huge consequences for world oil markets.” It warned that a prolonged disruption of shipments would lead to oil supply shortages and make price increases inevitable.

As we’ve written, most of the cost of gasoline is determined by the price of crude oil, which refiners use to make gasoline and other petroleum products. The price of crude oil is set internationally and is largely based on supply and demand factors around the world.

Since the airstrikes on Iran began, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. benchmark, has increased about 41% to almost $95 a barrel, and the price of Brent crude, the international standard, rose about 32% to just over $94 a barrel, according to the Energy Information Administration. As a result, as of the week ending March 9, the average U.S. price for regular grade gasoline had increased to $3.50 per gallon – up by about 56 cents, or roughly 19%, since the week ending Feb. 23, which was five days before the fighting with Iran began, EIA data show.

On March 11, “to address disruptions in oil markets stemming from the war in the Middle East,” the 32 nations that are members of the International Energy Agency — which include the U.S. — announced that they collectively would make 400 million barrels from their oil reserves available for purchase “over a timeframe that is appropriate” for each country. 

For the U.S., the Department of Energy said that Trump had authorized the release of 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve over several weeks.

Experts have said that whether the releases help stabilize oil markets and lower prices depends on how fast the crude can be shipped and how much longer the fighting lasts.

“I think it will help,” Rajendran told us about the planned releases. But he added this caveat: “as long as the conflict doesn’t drag on past early to mid-April.”

Beyond that point, he said, countries would likely have to keep drawing more from their oil reserves or start making other adjustments to address demand.


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 How Iran Blocking the Strait of Hormuz Affects the U.S. appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:38

Planning a trip? Travel experts recommend booking your flight soon as the Iran war drives up airline and ticket costs.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 15:36

The Hall County district attorney has dismissed all charges for the five teens arrested in the death of their teacher during a prank gone wrong.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 15:32
  • He shoots 66 to make cut at Players Championship

  • Rory McIlroy squeaks into third round with strong finish

Keegan Bradley has admitted to still being “heartbroken” by his American Ryder Cup team’s loss at Bethpage last year. Bradley is also keen to retain the US captaincy at Adare Manor next September, should Tiger Woods knock back the opportunity.

Luke Donald and Europe were set for a Bethpage rout before a rousing US recovery on day three. The visitors still won the trophy for a second time in succession. Bradley, who has returned to playing duties on the PGA Tour, remains wounded by the event and, as is the case with all Ryder Cups, the losing captain has been subject to heavy criticism.

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2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 15:20

Alicia Keys was on hand to help celebrate.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:10

Concerns with Ozaki Scheme emulation have led AMD chip designers to conclude there’s currently no substitution for raw FP64 performance. To ensure the accuracy of traditional modeling and simulation workloads, AMD Fellow Nick Malaya tells HPCwire the company intends to keep pushing the envelope on native FP64 performance with its upcoming HPC-focused GPU, the Instinct MI430X, which will power the Discovery supercomputer going into Oak Ridge National Lab in 2028.

The Ozaki Scheme is a promising new emulation technique that is intended to enable scientists to perform high-precision matrix multiplication math using lower-precision hardware, traditionally on INT8 cores, but also on FP8 compute, as Katsuhisa Ozaki and two other Japanese researchers showed this week in a new paper. The scheme has been presented as a method to run traditional modeling and simulation workloads that would ordinarily require lots of FP64 performance instead to utilize the lower-precision performance that’s abundant as result of the AI boom.

While Ozaki theoretically sounds good, the current implementations of Ozaki-I and Ozaki-II have limitations that preclude its use in the real world, said Malaya, who is AMD’s technical lead for exascale application performance.

The Ozaki scheme has two main problems, Malaya said. First, the software is not IEEE compliant, and it does not provide the same answer as running the codes on actual FP64 hardware.

“In some cases, that’s okay,” he said. “But in a lot of matrices that are common that we’ve observed, the accuracy implications are pretty profound. In fact, you can give it matrices that differ by a few orders of magnitude in terms of the elements in the matrix…Ozaki has accuracy problems.”

Ozaki emulates higher-precision math using lower-precision cores (Shutterstock)

The second big problem with Ozaki revolves around its expectation for square matrices. If the HPC workload does not have square matrices, then the performance drops below native FP64 hardware, Malaya said.

HPC applications traditionally use vector computations as opposed to the tensor and matrix math that dominates AI. But fewer than 10% of HPC applications in the real world have made the changes to the double-precision general matrix–matrix multiplication (DGEMM) instructions that would let them benefit from Ozaki.

“You can’t, to my knowledge with Ozaki-I or Ozaki-II or any of the methods out there, apply that to the vector instructions,” Malaya said. “That’s a key nuance I think the community is missing, which is they say, ‘Oh, well, there’s a lot of compute in the DGEMM instructions. You can use Ozaki for it.’ Sure. That’s great. We have software that does that as well. There’s limitations to Ozaki, but it doesn’t address 90% of the HPC apps. That’s the big gap.”

AMD is going to support Ozaki emulation on its chips, Malaya said. “There’s no reason not to. It’s software. We can release it and support it. And you can have libraries that allow you to dynamically switch between the native and the Ozaki method and probably estimate it,” he said. “But we’re not finding it compelling as, ‘You can replace all the hardware pipes.’ You need those FP64 pipes to fall back onto.”

At the end of the day, Ozaki does not present a workable alternative to native FP64 performance, Malaya said. “I have serious concerns it is ready for a production-level HPC code,” he said. “I’m not the only one in the community saying that.”

AMD’s FP64 Hardware

Ozaki concerns have led AMD to the conclusion that there’s no substitute for native FP64 performance, at least for the foreseeable future. The company is currently developing the MI430X, which is a specialized version of its next-generation GPU, the MI450, that will feature a significant amount of native FP64 capacity, Malaya said.

AMD expects to ship the MI430X with the launch of Discovery in 2028 at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Source: AMD)

Exactly how much FP64 capacity isn’t something that AMD is ready to share yet. However, Malaya said that it will feature substantially more FP64 capacity than its current data-center GPU, the MI355, which delivers 77 teraflops. That is actually down from its previous GPU, the MI325, which delivers 81.7 teraflops of FP64 capacity.

All of these chips–from the MI325 to the MI430–will have more FP64 capacity than Nvidia Blackwell, which offers 40 teraflops, or the upcoming Rubin GPU, which will offer 33 teraflops of FP64. Nvidia is leaning on Ozaki emulation to boost the FP64 capability of Blackwell to 150 teraflops and Rubin to 200 teraflops.

Nvidia justifies its reliance on Ozaki emulation by saying that adding more native FP64 capacity won’t actually speed up scientific applications, since they are bottlenecked by registers, caches, and HBM rather than raw compute.

“A balanced GPU design therefore provisions sufficient FP64 resources to saturate available memory bandwidth, avoiding over-allocation of compute capacity that cannot be effectively utilized,” the company wrote in a January blog post.

Rubin will deliver up to 22 TB per second of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) bandwidth, which is a 2.8x increase from Blackwell, which offers 8 TBps. AMD’s current MI355 GPU offers 8 TBps of HBM bandwidth, while the MI430X will have 19.6 TBps, Malaya said.

While Nvidia is offering much more HBM bandwidth rather than higher FP64 performance, AMD is taking a different approach. According to Malaya, it’s best to increase HBM and flops in lockstep.

ORNL’s Frontier uses AMD EPYC CPUs and MI250X GPUs.

“It’s really the byte-to-flop ratio that matters. From our perspective, we think you need to maintain a much closer ratio to what you’ve seen on current products,” he said. “You’d need to be a lot closer to that ratio in terms of increasing FP64 to keep the roofline profile, as they call it, the arithmetic intensity, the same.”

Since AMD will deliver a 2.5x increase in HBM bandwidth from the MI355 to the MI430X, a similar 2.5x increase in FP64 flops would also be warranted. Some simple arithmetic shows that, based on that 2.5x growth factor, the MI430X could sport anywhere between 192 teraflops and 204 teraflops of FP64 performance, depending on whether the newer MI355 or the faster MI325 is the baseline. This is just speculation, of course, as the company has not yet said how much FP64 capacity it will deliver in the new chiplet-based design.

FP64 Helps AI, Too

FP64 is “very important” to the Genesis Mission, Department of Energy’s Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil said in an interview with HPCwire last month.

“In discussions I’ve had with both [AMD CEO] Lisa Su and with [Nvidia CEO] Jensen [Huang], they have expressed a strong commitment for FP64, that it will continue,” Gil said. “For us, it’s very important, because we don’t view this [as a] substitution.

FP64 is critical to supporting modeling and simulation workloads, not just to further traditional scientific exploration but also to provide the data feedstock for training emerging AI models, Gil said.

“You have the high-fidelity simulation codes that run with high precision. You use those, once validated, as the basis to generate training examples with which you train a surrogate model that you end up running on an AI supercomputer,” Gil said. “You end up with benefits in terms of productivity, in terms of time to solution, often 10x, 20x, 100x.”

AMD Fellow Nick Malaya is the exascale lead for application performance

The new generation of Department of Energy supercomputers, like Discovery, will feature a mix of FP64 and lower-precision capacity, Malaya said. Discovery is the new leadership-class supercomputer that the DOE announced in October. It will be a warm water-cooled HPE Cray GX5000 system that includes MI430X and “Venice” EPYC CPU, use an HPE Slingshot interconnect, and connect to the Cray K3000 storage system, which will use DAOS and Lustre parallel file systems.

“There’s always a balance how much FP64 do you need versus FP16,” Malaya said. “The contention from AMD is we need to support a range of data types based on their needs. It’s not going to just be everyone needs FP64 and that’s enough for everybody. It won’t work.”

While AI generally is happy with lower precision capacity, there are exceptions. Malaya points to AI-based protein folding simulations, like AlphaFold and Openfold, which use FP32. Meanwhile, some traditional HPC workloads, like molecular dynamics, don’t need the double precision of FP64.

But at the end of the day, there is still plenty of unmet demand for FP64, he said.

“For HPC, we think that they’re going to still need a lot of FP64,” he said. “There’ll be some codes that are just totally memory bandwidth [constrained] and they don’t need that much. But there’s ones like computational chemistry codes and some of these others that actually have a lot of arithmetic intensity and they’ll use it.

“It’s definitely something that’s going to depend on the basket of apps you care about,” Malaya continued. “And the thing that we find though is that you can get it wrong. If you under provision compute, you’ll be compute-bound when you’d otherwise not be. And that can really limit your performance.”

Related Items:

Genesis Mission Will Lean Heavily on Ozaki Scheme for FP64 Capability

Nvidia Says It’s Not Abandoning 64-Bit Computing

Have You Heard About the Ozaki Scheme? You Will

The post AMD Hints At Big FP64 Increases in MI430X GPU As Ozaki Underwhelms appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:02

The announcement appeared to tacitly acknowledge a growing body of evidence that U.S. forces, not Iran, were responsible for the deadly attack.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:00

Crisis in the Middle East, Ramadan in Gaza, the Milano Cortina Winter Paralympics and Paris fashion week – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:00
Gina Gruwell

GINA GRUWELL
Staff Reporter

Iconic artists like Taylor Swift and Shania Twain go from country to pop and make history. In more recent years, there has been a shift in the media, where pop artists are adding a little twang to their traditional tunes.

Freshman cognitive science major Evangelia Papadopoulos feels that artists having a background in country and folk helps strengthen their music because of the powerful lyrics. 

“Normal country songs are like folk songs — telling stories. I feel like now [Swift] is bringing that into her pop music,” Papadopoulos said. 

One artist’s recent change from pop music to country has taken the world by storm. Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” album created controversy after winning the most coveted award of the Grammys, Album of the Year. 

Mia Hanson, a freshman communication major, adored the album.

“I think that her take on country [music] was different from what people would have expected, but I loved it and I think it can apply to a lot of different people,” Hanson said. 

She also mentioned that Beyoncé has been doing country for a while. The singer has a history with the Country Music Awards (CMAs), as she was blacklisted from the show after performing with The Chicks, formerly known as The Dixie Chicks, in 2016.

She most recently won Album of the Year at the CMAs with “Cowboy Carter.”

“She had country [music] on ‘Lemonade’,” Hanson said. “‘Daddy Lessons’ is country tones like New Orleans music. She is from Houston, Texas. That is her roots. Winning it at the CMAs was a big deal.”

On the other hand, freshman sports health major Alanorah Kels had a different opinion, believing that Beyoncé’s win was “biased” because of her popularity.

“She just won because she’s Beyoncé,” Kels said.

Not only has Beyoncé made a change in her music, but several up-and-coming artists such as Sabrina Carpenter and Chappell Roan have made country tunes as well. With hits such as “Please, Please, Please” by Carpenter featuring Dolly Parton and “The Giver” by Roan, the pop radios have dialed into guitars and yeehaws. 

Papadopoulos believes that pop artists should be branching out, while remaining true to themselves.

”When someone is an artist, they have their own sound, their own vibe,” Papadopoulos said. “And if they completely change that it’s unethical.”

Several pop artists have also gone out of their way to collaborate with country artists to expand their sounds and their fan bases. Country artist Morgan Wallen recently worked with Tate McRae on a single titled “What I Want.”

According to Billboard, the hit was one of Wallen’s 41 chart-placing titles. The single also reached the No. 1 slot the week of its debut. 

Hanson stated that she has listened to the duet from McRae and Wallen exclusively on the radio.

“I think they were fine because I like Tate McRae, so I’ll listen to the song,” Hanson said. “But I don’t think I would listen if they weren’t collabing with those people.”  

The debate of whether pop is turning into country or vice versa is one for the ages. The question of where music is going in the future is up in the air. 

“I like going back in time,” Papadopolus said. “Do whatever you want to, but the future of music is that it is all out there. People [are taking] influence from the ‘70s and the ‘80s. They’re bringing back the funk.” 


Blending the genres of pop and country music was first posted on March 13, 2026 at 2:00 pm.
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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 15:00

BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: Cloud storage company Backblaze has partnered with StorageReview to make a massive dataset containing 314 trillion digits of Pi publicly accessible. The digits were calculated by StorageReview in December 2025 after months of heavy computation designed to stress modern hardware. The dataset now hosted in the cloud weighs in at over 130TB, while the full working dataset used during the calculation reached about 2.1PB when intermediate checkpoints were included. The report notes that the Pi digits have been broken into roughly 200GB chunks to make it more practical for researchers or enthusiasts to download. Here's what StorageReview founder Brian Beeler said about the project: "Pushing [Pi] to 314 trillion digits was far more than a headline number. It was a sustained, months-long computational challenge that stressed every layer of modern infrastructure, from high core-count CPUs to massive high-speed storage, and it gave us valuable insight into how extreme, real-world workloads behave at scale. Making this dataset available in the Backblaze cloud takes the project a step further by opening access to one of the largest raw outputs ever generated in a single-system calculation. Hosting multi-petabyte files for the broader community is no small feat, and we appreciate Backblaze stepping up to ensure researchers, developers, and enthusiasts can explore and build on this record-setting achievement."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:51

The U.S. military participated in a multi-national exercise in Alaska and Greenland in the austere conditions that officials say military forces need to train in more regularly for the future.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-13 14:50

Trade body attends meeting with Rachel Reeves, hours after saying it was pulling out over suggestions of price gouging

Watchdog puts UK fuel retailers ‘on notice’ over profiteering from Iran war

The trade body for the UK’s petrol station industry has got into a row with the government after claiming the “inflammatory language” used by ministers to describe rising pump prices may have incited abuse against forecourt staff.

The Petrol Retailers Association (PRA) said ministers had for several days suggested that forecourts might be “price gouging” and “ripping off” motorists as global oil markets have surged in response to the war in Iran.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:37

Bolivian interior ministry says Sebastián Marset is being extradited to US, where he’s wanted for money laundering

Sebastián Marset, an alleged Uruguayan drug trafficker and one of South America’s most wanted criminals, has been arrested in Bolivia.

Marset, 34, is accused of trafficking tonnes of cocaine from South America to Europe, and also of having ordered the murder of a Paraguayan prosecutor who was shot dead as he honeymooned on a Colombian beach in 2022.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:33

German chancellor says decision is wrong and that pressure on Putin over Ukraine war should be increased

European countries have pushed back against Donald Trump’s decision to ease some US sanctions on Russian oil amid Iran’s blockade of the strait of Hormuz, insisting the international community should maintain pressure on Moscow over its war against Ukraine.

The UK has joined Germany, France and Norway in rejecting the move, with the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, decrying what she said was Russia and Iran’s attempt to “hijack the global economy”.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:31

Exclusive: Chancellor plans help for vulnerable and low-income customers due to conflict in Middle East

Rachel Reeves will set out extra support next week for households across the UK facing a surge in the cost of heating oil due to the conflict in the Middle East.

The chancellor is expected to set out plans to assist those on low incomes or with other vulnerabilities, particularly in rural areas. The help will be delivered in England via councils using the new crisis and resilience fund.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:29

Oscar, Ana and their children fled violence for safety in the US. Now Oscar, afraid and alone, is back in Honduras – ‘at the mercy of God and his will’

As soon as Oscar’s deportation flight landed at the La Lima airport in Honduras, he put on his baseball cap. On the airport shuttle toward the terminal, he pulled his cap even lower – trying to obscure his face at various police checkpoints.

His parents picked him up in a car, and drove him to a lodging they had arranged for him – miles away from his family home. He has hardly stepped outside since. “Because I can’t trust anyone – not the authorities, not the government, not a police officer,” he said. He has visited his mother a handful of times since the US deported him three weeks ago, and only under the cover of night. “They will kill anyone here. There is death everywhere.”

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:18

Why Should Delaware Care?
Spotlight Delaware’s Breaking Bread Tour, launched this year, gives residents a chance to speak directly about issues affecting their communities. By bringing neighbors together around the same table, the discussion allows residents to highlight concerns that might not always appear in local government meetings or policy debates.

On Monday evening, more than 75 New Castle County residents gathered in the basement of a Wilmington church to eat a meal and discuss what they thought were the most pressing challenges for their community. 

Their answers spanned a range of recent headline-grabbing issues, including affordable housing and homelessness; education funding; civic engagement and transparency in government; new federal policies under the Trump administration; and tax increases following Delaware’s recent property reassessment. 

The event, hosted by Spotlight Delaware as part of its “Breaking Bread” tour, occurred at the Jefferson Street Center, located within Hanover Church building in Wilmington’s Baynard Village neighborhood.  

The attendees shared a meal of spaghetti and meatballs while chatting in small groups. Each group was then asked to identify the issues that generated the most discussion at their tables.

For a group that included Wilmington resident Thea Lopez, the salient issues up for discussion stemmed from national actions by the Trump administration. She later told Spotlight Delaware that people in the state should break out of their different groups to address those themes. 

“We all understand that there are all these different issues going around, but yet we still work in silos,” Lopez said. 

On Monday evening, more than 75 New Castle County residents gathered in the basement of a Wilmington church to eat a meal and discuss what they thought were the most pressing challenges for their community. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

During the dinner, the structure around Delaware’s schooling system was also discussed. One high school senior said frequent teacher turnover, a lack of challenging Advanced Placement courses and limited opportunities for student input negatively affects their learning environments.

Homelessness and the need for better coordination of services was another major topic. Some participants said that while churches and nonprofits regularly provide meals and shelter for the unhoused, there is no centralized system coordinating those efforts in Wilmington. 

In the past, Wilmington officials have asserted that creating homeless shelters is a job for the state government, stating that the city’s main interventions are “law enforcement-based.” 

Participants also raised concerns about transportation reliability, particularly changing bus routes that make it harder for residents to get to work, as well as challenges facing small businesses in areas such as Wilmington’s Hilltop where parking can limit access for customers.

The Breaking Bread tour aims to encourage community dialogue and identify the issues that matter most to residents. Spotlight Delaware will host additional Breaking Bread events in Kent and Sussex counties later this year.

The post At Wilmington dinner, residents share concerns about housing, schools and government transparency appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:08

Double standards in Europe and elsewhere are laid bare by the muted response to US and Israeli aggression and the killing of civilians

When Russia launched its full scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the international condemnation from Europe and elsewhere was loud and clear. Leaders did not expect legal threats to shift Vladimir Putin or end war crimes by his troops. But they understood the importance of naming what had happened as an illegal act of aggression, and of seeking to hold those responsible accountable.

The same countries have been strikingly muted since the US and Israel launched their war on Iran. This too was an act of aggression. Spain’s Pedro Sánchez has been lonely in his forthright condemnation, though Norway and others also pointed to the breach of international law. Meanwhile, Australia’s prime minister, Anthony Albanese, offered unreserved support and Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, declared that it was “not the moment to lecture our partners and allies”.

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.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:01

Notorious Latin American narco trafficker Sebastian Marset, who eluded police for years, was handed over to U.S. authorities after his arrest Friday in Bolivia.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 14:00

Meta has delayed the release of its next major AI model after internal tests showed it lagging behind competing systems from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. The New York Times reports: The model, code-named Avocado, outperformed Meta's previous A.I. model and did better than Google's Gemini 2.5 model from March, two of the people said. But it has not performed as strongly as Gemini 3.0 from November, they said. As a result, Meta has delayed Avocado's release to at least May from this month, the people said. They added that the leaders of Meta's A.I. division had instead discussed temporarily licensing Gemini to power the company's A.I. products, though no decisions have been reached. [...] It takes time to improve A.I. models, and Meta can still catch up to rivals, A.I. experts said. But a longer timeline has set in at the company, with Mr. Zuckerberg tempering expectations for Avocado in the past few months. "I expect our first models will be good, but more importantly will show the rapid trajectory we're on," he said on a call with investors in January. A Meta spokesperson said in a statement: "As we've said publicly, our next model will be good but, more importantly, show the rapid trajectory we're on, and then we'll steadily push the frontier over the course of the year as we continue to release new models. We're excited for people to see what we've been cooking very soon."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:59

These debt relief companies could help you slash your debt, but there are some things to know before signing up.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:51

White House contends with reality of shoddy preparations for war and unclear conditions for victory

As US and Israeli jets descended to deliver the opening salvos of the war in Iran, Donald Trump’s back-of-the-envelope plan for regime change in Tehran was about to run into the reality of the largest US intervention in the Middle East since the start of the Iraq war in 2003.

That reality came quickly.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:36

Trump has warned that Cuba is next in line after Venezuela and Iran, saying that the Havana regime is in its “last moments of life.”

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:35

The wrong gold IRA company can cost you more than you bargained for, so make sure you know what to look for.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:25

Saturday quiz | Avoiding AI | Size matters

It was lovely to read Sabrina Olson’s letter (6 March) on the quiz as it has been a family ritual for us for years. It kept us all connected through our children’s time at university, then moving into their own homes, and in some cases working abroad. It kept us going through the enforced separation of Covid and became a rite of passage for any new partners who joined our family group, especially as our winner is expected to do a “creative” dance of victory. Two lovely daughters-in-law are now regular quizzers.
Angela Barker
Rottingdean, East Sussex

• I have found that chatbots are easily circumvented when, asking to state the problem, I write or spout gibberish (The AI assistant was offering me any help I needed. All I wanted was a living, breathing human, 11 March). It seems to be the fastest way to be put in contact with a human being.
Dr Peter Glanvill
Chard, Somerset

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:18

Two weeks in, it’s increasingly clear that the US-led war has taken every problem it aimed to solve – and made it worse

It’s not easy, but let’s try to look at this war in the best, most charitable light. Let’s try to see the US-Israel conflict with Iran as its prosecutors and advocates would want us to see it.

They would say that it has two aims, both legitimate. The first is to weaken if not remove a regime that has done terrible evil to its own people. Who could mourn the supreme leader of a government that, according to one report, gunned down 30,000 of its citizens on the streets in just two days on 8 and 9 January? Listen to those Iranians who long ago reached the glum conclusion that the only way they could be rid of their tormentors was through external military action. As one exiled Iranian put it to me this week: “The Iranian people have been begging the world for help for so many years. They tried voting for change in 2009; they were killed. They tried protesting in 2019, 2022 and this year; they were massacred in the tens of thousands … They were out of all other options.”

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:05

The Israeli government is blocking medical workers from entering or leaving Gaza, twice canceling the departure of seven U.S.-based physicians on a medical mission there, according to a group of doctors in Gaza who spoke to The Intercept. 

The temporary suspension of travel is the latest in a crushing set of restrictions that Israel has used to sever Gaza’s contact with the outside world, compounding food, fuel, and medical care shortages for a population subjected to more than two years of genocide. Large backlogs of patients in Gaza need specialized treatments and surgeries, so volunteer medical specialists come with much-needed supplies to relieve some of the demand.

“When you do something like this, it throws all of that to the wayside and we struggle with our ability to treat those patients,” said Dr. Thaer Ahmad, a Chicago-based physician who has previously volunteered in Gaza. “This continues to have really profound implications on Gaza’s most vulnerable people.” 

Related

With World’s Eyes on Iran, Israel Locks Down the West Bank

Ahmad, who volunteered in early 2024 at Nasser and Al-Aqsa hospitals, has witnessed similar restrictions at other moments of high tension — past Israeli offensives against Iran, the collapse of past ceasefire deals, or the Israeli military’s siege of Gaza City last September. He has been denied entry into Gaza by the Israeli government four times since his medical mission, including in May 2024, when he and other doctors were turned away in Egypt as the Israeli military took over the Rafah border. 

The restrictions in Gaza are set to be lifted next Tuesday, according to messages United Nations aid coordinators sent Wednesday announcing the blockades to dozens of NGOs, two of which confirmed to The Intercept the border closures were affecting their medical teams. Physicians who remain trapped inside the territory have cast doubt on whether the dates will be honored given the multiple postponements. 

“There’s uncertainty around when we’re going to leave, are we going to leave? Are they going to try to push the dates even further?” said Dr. Salman Khan, an infectious diseases physician at Columbia University, who is among the trapped doctors.

Khan and six other American doctors were scheduled to return to the U.S. on March 10 following a two-week medical mission at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis. The group has been blocked twice from leaving the territory, with Israel’s border security officials citing a “security assessment” without further explanation. The physicians also expressed frustration with the World Health Organization, noting that the international body was partly responsible for coordinating the doctors’ safe passage.

Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories, or COGAT, the Israeli military unit that controls the borders between Palestine and Israel, confirmed it had closed crossings into Gaza “due to the ongoing missile threat” and said the restrictions are temporary and meant to protect people’s safety. It refuted claims that it was blocking doctors from leaving Gaza to harm its civilian population.

The World Health Organization did not immediately respond to The Intercept’s request for comment. 

Related

“A Purely Manmade Famine”: How Israel Is Starving Gaza

Since the start of Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, the military has weaponized blockades, preventing aid from entering the Strip, including food and medical supplies. In addition to systematically killing and imprisoning aid and medical workers throughout the war, the Israeli government has also blocked the movement of international medical missions, further straining an already decimated economy and health care system. Palestinians in the West Bank have also seen similar wartime blockades, including the lockdown of entire cities. 

Despite the October deal between Israel and Hamas, the Israeli government has continued to impose limits on food and medical supplies from entering the Strip. In February, the government reopened its Rafah border crossing into Egypt, allowing some Palestinians to seek medical care outside of Gaza. 

Once the U.S. and Israel began their war on Iran, the Israeli government once again shut all aid crossings into Gaza. Food has been allowed through a single border entry point — the Kerem Shalom crossing — but the amount of aid allowed in is well below what is needed, according to the United Nations. The Israeli government had already barred some NGOs earlier this year, such as Doctors Without Borders, from accessing Gaza after the organization refused the government’s new requirements of handing over lists of Palestinian employees due to concerns the government would target the workers. 

Dr. Mimi Syed, an emergency room physician based in Olympia, Washington, also knows these restrictions firsthand. In August 2025, she was prevented from entering Gaza while waiting for approval in Jordan for her third medical aid trip. During her previous medical trips to the Strip, she witnessed entire convoys of international doctors who were barred from leaving Gaza. 

The unpredictable and indefinite nature of the Israeli government’s restrictions hamper future medical missions, Syed said. 

“Healthcare workers like myself have jobs in the US that are full-time and we have to get back to our jobs/families,” Syed told The Intercept. “It creates another form of logistical difficulties and prevents and discourages many of us from returning or even attempting to go in.”

The Palestinian American Medical Association, which is facilitating Khan’s trip to Gaza, and Humanity Auxilium, a Texas-based NGO that also organizes medical missions, told The Intercept the recent border closures have hurt their ability to move medical supplies and teams in and out of the territory.

“It really puts us in a limbo in figuring out when to deploy surgeons who cannot take off for weeks,” said Faiza Hussain, executive director of Humanity Auxilium.

Khan, who remains inside Gaza, said he’s had to cancel his patients’ appointments at Columbia’s Irving Medical Center in New York due to the delays. 

“I was supposed to be back at work at my hospital today,” Khan said. “This is impacting people on the other side of the world.” 

Khan added that some of his colleagues were anxious to return to their children. One of them was running low on their personal medications, having only packed enough for two weeks. The group of doctors includes anesthesiologists Ashraf Abou El-Ezz of Indiana and Anas Rahim of Texas, neonatologist Ahmed Faisal Saleem of Arizona, emergency medicine physician Aizad Dasti of Maryland, and vascular surgeon Asad Choudhry of New Jersey. One other physician did not wish to disclose their identity. They are continuing their volunteer work at Nasser Hospital as they wait out the blockade.

Although Israel’s attacks on Gaza have slowed since the start of the war on Iran, the Israeli military continues to launch strikes in the territory, in violation of the so-called ceasefire deal. In the first week of Khan’s medical mission, he recalled receiving trauma patients from an Israeli bombing on an encampment one mile from Nasser Hospital. A four-year-old girl died at the hospital from her wounds, he said.   

After urging from Khan and advocates, the U.S. State Department had arranged flights for the doctors from Tel Aviv’s airport on Friday, Khan said, but has yet to clear a way for them to leave Gaza to make the flight. 

The State Department did not respond to requests for comment. 

Update: March 13, 2026, 3:15 p.m. ET

This story has been updated to include the names of more doctors stranded in Gaza.

The post Israel’s Deadly Blockade Traps 7 U.S. Doctors in Gaza appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:02

Trio captured relaxing around a wooden table in photo believed to have been taken on Martha’s Vineyard

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson have been pictured in bathrobes alongside Jeffrey Epstein, in the first known photograph of them together.

The trio were captured relaxing outside at a wooden table with mugs decorated with the American flag in the newly unearthed photograph believed to have been taken on Martha’s Vineyard, an island off Cape Cod in Massachusetts that is favoured by the wealthy.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:00

Here's what to know if you pay to remove ads on Prime Video.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:00

Avocado, code name of Meta's next-generation foundational AI model, might not be released until May.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:00

On stage at SXSW, Spotify Co-CEO Gustav Söderström announced a new feature that lets you shape your own Taste Profile.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 13:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Pitchfork: Earlier this week, the U.S. Department of Justice and Live Nation reached a settlement in the DOJ's antitrust lawsuit against the concert giant. During the trial, which lasted only a week, representatives for Live Nation had moved to exclude a collection of Slack direct messages from 2022 between two of the company's regional directors from the evidence presented to the jury. Bloomberg and a number of other publications have, as of today (March 12), successfully petitioned New York federal judge Arun Subramanian to release the chats. The conversations are between Ben Baker, now head of ticketing for Venue Nation, and Jeff Weinhold, currently a senior director in the ticketing department. Baker and Weinhold joke about overcharging and price-gouging fans -- "Robbing them blind, baby," Baker brags in one exchange pertaining to a Kid Rock show in Tampa Bay -- as well as being able to raise prices on ancillary services such as parking seemingly at will. "These people are so stupid," Baker writes. "I almost feel bad taking advantage of them BAHAHAHAHAHA." Live Nation described the messages as "off-the-cuff banter, not policy, decision-making, or facts of consequence." In a statement the company has since added: "The Slack exchange from one junior staffer to a friend absolutely doesn't reflect our values or how we operate."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:54

Temple Israel Rabbi Josh Bennett and staff member Cassi Cohen say their security training prepared them to respond quickly when a man rammed a vehicle into their synagogue.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:42

Mayor says he will encourage Met to scale down his official vehicle alongside plans for new charges for big cars

The London mayor, Sadiq Khan, has said he would be encouraging the Met to abandon his armoured car in favour of a smaller vehicle as he signalled a clampdown on driving SUVs in London.

Khan and Transport for London are considering options including additional charges on outsize vehicles to tackle the increasing numbers of SUVs on London’s roads, primarily to address road safety but also to address concerns about parking and congestion.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:40

The prime minister issues the statement after a fuel trade body earlier withdrew from a meeting with the chancellor today

Even before Donald Trump’s Operation Epic Fury on Iran unleashed higher oil prices, threatening the outlook for growth and inflation, the UK economy was flatlining.

That’s the bleak message in the latest data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which showed zero GDP growth in January.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:37

The move, which lowers fees to 25%, is a breakthrough for Chinese developers Tencent and ByteDance

Apple announced late on Thursday it would lower the commission fees collected in its App Store in mainland China. The move follows pressure from regulators in the tech company’s second-largest market, as well as global scrutiny of its payment requirements.

Fees for in-app purchases and paid transactions will be lowered to 25% from 30% starting on Sunday, Apple said in a statement on its blog for developers.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:36

US defense head is eager to frame operation as a success – and slam journalists for not portraying it in a positive light

Pete Hegseth on Friday again claimed the US military campaign against Iran has been an unprecedented success, using a Pentagon press conference to accuse journalists of downplaying Washington’s supposed gains on the battlefield.

Speaking alongside the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, the US defense secretary claimed Iran had been left without a functioning air force, navy or missile defense network after 13 days of strikes, and said the combined US-Israeli air campaign had hit more than 15,000 targets since the war began.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:24

Alireza Askari, 42, sentenced for killing Paria Veisi after she left him, and aunt Maryam Delavary jailed for helping bury her

A man has been jailed for at least 26 years for the “cold-blooded murder” of his ex-wife and the burying of her body in his garden.

Alireza Askari, 42, admitted killing Paria Veisi, 37, at the property they previously shared in Penylan, Cardiff, in April last year.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:23

Every voter would be affected by the Save America act, as people would face more barriers to voting: ‘It’s a recipe for disaster’

Donald Trump has vowed that he will not sign any other legislation until Republicans’ massive voting bill, the Save America act, is passed. The bill would upend voting for all Americans in the middle of a federal midterm election year and create costly, chaotic changes for elections workers.

The Senate is set to consider the legislation next week, though Senate leaders say they don’t have the votes to get over the filibuster hurdle, essentially dooming the bill for failure.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:18

Negotiations aimed to ‘find solutions to the bilateral differences’ between the countries, Miguel Díaz-Canel said

Cuban officials have held talks with the US government, the country’s president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, confirmed on Friday, amid growing pain inflicted by a punishing US fuel blockade and frequent power failures.

“These talks have been aimed at finding solutions through dialogue to the bilateral differences we have between the two nations,” Díaz-Canel said in a prerecorded statement to senior Communist officials.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 14:36

Gretchen Whitmer says ‘community is on edge’ with fear of increased violence amid escalating US-Israeli war on Iran

Gretchen Whitmer, Michigan’s governor, said Jewish Americans were “a community on edge” on Friday after security staff thwarted an attack on a Detroit-area synagogue and preschool by a man driving a truck containing explosives.

Whitmer, a Democrat, called Thursday’s assault at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield township the latest episode in the “ancient and rampant evil” of antisemitism, and urged politicians and others to lower the political temperature.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 14:33

Ayman Mohamad Ghazali, who was born in Lebanon and became a naturalized US citizen, lost two brothers, a niece and a nephew in the airstrike

The armed suspect who drove a vehicle into the hallway of a large Michigan synagogue complex that includes a school had lost four family members in an Israeli airstrike in his native Lebanon just last week, an official said on Friday.

A potential mass-casualty event was averted when security guards already in place at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township on the outskirts of Detroit killed the driver before any harm could come to the synagogue’s staff, teachers and 140 children at the early childhood center there on Thursday afternoon.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 20:16

The U.S. military has confirmed that all six crew members were killed when an American KC-135 refueling plane taking part in the Iran war crashed in western Iraq.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 12:28

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Dan Caine briefed on Operation Epic Fury in Iran Friday.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-14 11:02

A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 12:00

While the interest earnings each account offers may be similar, there's more than that for savers to consider now.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 12:00

Apple will cut its App Store commission in China from 30% to 25% starting March 15, with small-business and mini-app rates dropping from 15% to 12%. AppleInsider reports: Chinese regulators have been back and forth with Apple in recent years over the 30% App Store commission. The latest publicly known pressure occurred after President Trump slammed the country with seemingly random and outrageous tariffs in 2025. While nothing much else has happened in the public eye in the year since, Apple has announced a new commission rate via its developer blog. The new rates go into effect on March 15. The current standard 30% rate is dropping to 25% for in-app purchases and paid app transactions. The Small Business Program and Mini Apps Partner Program will see rates drop from 15% to 12%. That lower rate applies to auto-renewals of in-app purchase subscriptions after the first year. Mini Apps are for transactions found in super apps like those popularized in China. [...] Developers will need to sign the updated terms, but the new rates are applied automatically. It is unclear if these new changes will prevent regulatory action from China.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-13 12:00

Candidates in both parties – but mostly Republicans – are seeing cash infusions after merely indicating support

With the first primaries of the US midterm elections now under way, the cryptocurrency industry is injecting millions of dollars into congressional races across the country, with particular emphasis on Illinois, which has attracted the bulk of the campaign financing. Arkansas, Alabama and Texas have also drawn the industry’s donations.

Crypto Pacs, firms and investors have already spent $32m supporting industry-friendly candidates and opposing its detractors, according to Federal Election Commission data, building on the industry’s expansive spending in the 2024 presidential election.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 11:59

It's a month for every type of gamer, with titles including Dredge Plus, Unpacking Plus and My Very Hungry Caterpillar Plus becoming available.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:56

Chapter 13 bankruptcy can help borrowers reorganize debt, but it also comes with some trade-offs to understand.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:46
Update about previous post on potential water damage

I listened to some of the advice I got and left it alone for about 2 days. After turning it on it was like a miracle, and everything worked perfectly no hiccups… for about 4-5 miles. After that, it didnt throw me off, just started turning its nose up, I restarted and tried a couple more times with the same issue. Anyone know Whats going on, or what I should do next?

I know buying new parts would be the safest most obvious answer, but I’m not sure exactly what would need to be repaired, I am also on a very tight space financially.

Given the good luck with its previous go earlier, I’m hopeful something can be done to cheaply fix it, but please let me know.

Thank you for any advice!

submitted by /u/Snoo_36463
[link] [comments]

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:45

Exclusive: Government’s work tsar warns that having young people not in work will create ‘long-term scarring effect’

Mayors across England should be given greater powers to tackle the youth unemployment crisis and avoid the “long-term scarring” of regions outside London, the government’s work tsar has said.

Alan Milburn, who is leading a major review into increasing inactivity among Britain’s young people, said the issue could not be solved by Whitehall alone.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 11:44

Campaigners welcome Keir Starmer’s backing of ‘Philomena’s law’ to protect payments for those who accept compensation

Survivors of Ireland’s mother and baby homes can continue to receive benefits in the UK after Downing Street agreed to protect payments.

Keir Starmer bowed to pressure from campaigners to back a bill known as Philomena’s law, which would ringfence survivors’ benefits if they accepted compensation from Dublin.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:43

The head of an advocacy group said 21 people were facing charges under the UAE's cybercrime laws as of Thursday, including a 60-year-old British tourist.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:33

Longer sentences, overcrowding and inexperienced staff cited as factors in ‘rising tensions’ in prisons

Notorious prisoners such as the Soham killer Ian Huntley are facing increasingly violent attacks from inmates with “nothing to lose”, the head of the Prison Governors’ Association has said.

Tom Wheatley, the president of the PGA, which represents governors in England and Wales, said those serving lengthy sentences or whole-life tariffs in high-security institutions had “no fear” of being given additional time in prison, and could earn status by singling out famous child murderers and paedophiles.

Last week, a 20-year-old sex offender who had recently moved to my son’s prison was ‘kettled’. In prison, that means boiling water, mixed with a bit of sugar, was thrown into his face. He has been scarred for life.

This is the kind of threat that my son and every sex offender has to live with every day when they are in prison.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:14

With the Iran war prompting oil transport blockages in the Middle East that are pushing up oil and gasoline prices, Energy Secretary Chris Wright has become a public face of the Trump administration’s efforts to calm consumers.

In a March 12 interview on Fox News, Wright downplayed the impact on the U.S. from stalled traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, through which about one-fifth of the world’s oil traffic flows.

"The United States — we produce more oil than we can consume. We’re a net oil exporter," Wright said.

This comment misses some important context. 

Some metrics show the U.S. as a net exporter, but for crude oil — the material that’s refined into gasoline — the U.S. is a net importer. 

Also, a net exporter status wouldn’t help keep gasoline prices down for consumers in a situation like the blockage in the Strait of Hormuz.

Net exporter status "has essentially no impact on the prices Americans pay at the pump," said Clark Williams-Derry, an energy finance analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. That’s because gasoline prices are set internationally, so U.S. consumers inevitably get hit if the price goes up elsewhere, he said.

Is the U.S. a net oil exporter?

In 2020, the U.S. became a net exporter of "crude oil and petroleum products" for the first time in decades, and it has remained that way, with some blips.

This is not the same thing as saying the U.S. is a net exporter of crude oil, which is the material that gets refined into gasoline and that motorists buy at the gas station. Crude oil can be refined into many other products, including kerosene and plastics.

Looking solely at the U.S. trade in crude oil, the balance reverses: The U.S. is a net importer of crude oil. In 2025, the U.S. imported 6.2 million barrels a day in crude oil and exported almost 4 million barrels per day of crude oil.

The reason has to do with a refinery mismatch. Crude is graded by its weight and its "sweetness," a measure of the oil’s sulfur content. Most U.S.-produced oil is "light" and "sweet;" some U.S. refineries can process it, but many cannot. 

These other refineries are built to process heavier, less sweet crude (also called heavy, sour crude) from the Middle East and other overseas suppliers. That’s a holdover from past decades, when the U.S. was primarily importing its crude.

The mismatch keeps the U.S. from simply using its own crude production to serve all its domestic needs. Changing the mix of refineries to accommodate U.S.-produced crude oil would be expensive and take years to complete.

In a statement to PolitiFact, the Energy Department said the distinction between the two statistics isn’t relevant and that Wright didn’t say the U.S. is a net exporter of crude oil only. 

"Oil is consumed in the form of processed crude oil known as crude products, be it jet fuel, diesel, vehicle gasoline, kerosene, etc.," the department said. "When people think of American oil exports, they associate fuels like gasoline into that equation. It doesn’t matter what form the oil is in — America is a net exporter."

Does the U.S. produce enough crude oil to cover its needs?

Even if the refinery mismatch could be solved, it’s not clear that the amount of crude oil the U.S. is producing today would cover the country’s entire needs. 

The U.S. Energy Information Administration does not directly measure U.S. crude oil consumption, which makes it difficult to definitively answer this question.

However, the agency’s "petroleum product supplied" measure offers a rough datapoint. 

Since January 2025, the amount of petroleum product imported to the U.S. has consistently been about 7 million barrels a day higher than the amount of crude oil the U.S. produces. That gap is roughly equivalent to the amount of U.S. crude oil imports, which provides support for this calculation.

"At the very least, I would not say that we produce more oil than we consume," said Hugh Daigle, a University of Texas-Austin petroleum and geosystems engineering professor. 

Why these comparisons aren’t really on point

Even if the U.S. could fulfill its crude oil needs domestically, that would still not keep U.S. motorists from feeling pain from the blockage of oil traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, experts said.

Unlike, say, North Korea — which is largely cut off from global trade — the U.S. has chosen to participate in the global market for crude oil. This enables the U.S. to sell some of its product to other countries, but it also leaves the U.S. dependent on global price-setting for oil. In times of inexpensive oil, this is good; in times of a regional crisis it’s not.

"For decades, the bipartisan consensus among energy policymakers has been to cede production and pricing decisions to ‘the market,’" Clark Williams-Derry, energy finance analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, said. "This means, in effect, that oil and gas companies decide how much Americans pay for fuel. We don't have a policy to reserve fuel for domestic markets to keep price spikes in check."

For American consumers worried about how much it costs to fill up the tank, he said, "the focus on our status as a ‘net exporter’ is an irrelevant distraction."

Our ruling

Wright said, "The United States — we produce more oil than we can consume. We’re a net oil exporter."

The U.S. is a net exporter of "crude oil and petroleum products." In the narrower measure of crude oil by itself, the U.S. is a net importer. Crude oil on its own is the most important factor for setting gasoline prices.

The U.S. produces a lot of crude oil, but it’s not clear that the U.S. could meet its own consumption needs. And because the U.S. participates in the international trading system, prices at the pump for U.S. motorists would still be greatly influenced by international events.

The statement is partially accurate but ignores important context, so we rate the statement Half True.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 11:04

Number of American troops killed in war on Iran after incident in western desert now stands at 13

All six crew members onboard a US military aircraft that crashed in western Iraq were killed, the US military has said.

The KC-135 military refuelling plane crashed in western Iraq on Thursday, in an incident the military said involved another aircraft but was not the result of hostile or friendly fire.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:02

The FBI is investigating the Michigan attack as a “targeted act of violence against the Jewish community.”

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:01

Since the start of the Iran war, 13 American service members have been killed.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 11:00

Mr. Dollar Ton shares a report from the Guardian: Angela Lipps, 50, spent nearly six months in jail after Fargo police identified her as a suspect in an organized bank fraud case using facial recognition software, according to south-east North Dakota news outlet InForum. Lipps told the outlet she had never been to North Dakota and did not commit the crimes. Lipps, a mother of three and grandmother of five, said she has lived most of her life in north-central Tennessee. She had never been on an airplane until authorities flew her to North Dakota last year to face charges. In July, U.S. marshals arrested Lipps at her Tennessee home while she was babysitting four children. She said she was taken away at gunpoint and booked into a county jail as a fugitive from justice from North Dakota. "I've never been to North Dakota, I don't know anyone from North Dakota," Lipps told WDAY News. She remained in a Tennessee jail for nearly four months without bail while awaiting extradition. She was charged with four counts of unauthorized use of personal identifying information and four counts of theft. According to Fargo police records obtained by WDAY News, detectives investigating bank fraud cases in April and May 2025 reviewed surveillance video of a woman using a fake U.S. army military ID to withdraw tens of thousands of dollars. The officers allegedly used facial recognition software to identify the suspect as Lipps. A detective reportedly wrote in court documents that Lipps appeared to match the suspect based on facial features, body type and hairstyle. Lipps told WDAY News that no one from the Fargo police department contacted her before the arrest. Lipps is now back home but says the experience has had lasting consequences. While jailed and unable to pay bills, Lipps lost her home, her car and her dog, she said. She also told WDAY News no one from the Fargo police department had apologized.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:57

Two Democratic lawmakers are proposing tax reforms that would eliminate federal income taxes for millions of Americans.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:55

Watchdog ‘disturbed’ by president and US political leaders’ use of dehumanising language to target migrants

The “racist hate speech” being used by Donald Trump and other US political leaders, along with the country’s intensified crackdowns on migration, has led to “grave human rights violations,” a UN watchdog has said.

In a non-binding decision issued this week, the UN‘s committee on the elimination of racial discrimination (CERD) called on the US to uphold its obligations as a signatory to the international convention on combating racism and discrimination.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:55

FBI agents remove evidence from a private home at 9638 Naomi in Arcadia on March 8, 2012. Federal officials on Thursday announced fraud charges against a man accused of selling $1.3 million in counterfeit wines. The U.S. attorney's office in New York alleges that wine dealer Rudy Kurniawan claimed he was selling rare vintage French wine at various audctions. He was arrested in Los Angeles by the FBI.  (Photo by Gary Friedman/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
FBI agents remove evidence from a private home in Arcadia, Calif., on March 8, 2012. Photo: Gary Friedman/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

It was a Saturday in February, and I was checking my email inbox on my phone for no particular reason, during a conference. A Mother Jones reporter had written a note, so I opened it.

It’s not so unusual for me to receive press inquiries ­— I am a feminist writer who touches on hot-button issues — but this particular email I never could have predicted. It was about an infamous federal case against people arrested in connection to a protest against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Last July 4, a group of people had gathered for a demonstration against ICE’s Prairieland Detention Facility in Alvarado, Texas. It was a noise demo during which a police officer was shot. Some 18 people were arrested and charged for the protest.

Prosecutors had introduced my analysis of feminism’s relationship to horror cinema as “evidence of ideologically driven intent.”

The government’s indictment against the Prairieland protesters stood as a chilling development in President Donald Trump’s war on dissent: It was the first time that terrorism-related charges had been brought against people for allegedly being part of an “antifa cell.”

Did I have any thoughts, the Mother Jones reporter wanted to know, on the prosecution using an essay by me in a terrorism trial?

Excuse me?

The essay in question: a film review I wrote in 2019 about the horror movies “Hereditary” and “Midsommar.”

I blinked twice, rubbed my eyes, and then began digging around on the internet to understand.

To my astonishment, prosecutors had introduced my seven-year-old analysis of feminism’s relationship to horror cinema as “evidence of ideologically driven intent” the previous day.

Although I published the piece in “Commune” magazine, the review had been printed in zine format — and that was what authorities seized from the Dallas home of one of the defendants, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, last summer.

“Guilt by Literature”

The appearance of my review in the trial is a brazen attempt at conjuring “guilt by literature” — just one of the tactics prosecutors have used to criminalize speech and use First Amendment-protected speech as a legal weapon against the Trump administration’s political enemies.

Nobody, by the way, is suggesting that Estrada shot or conspired to shoot the officer. He stands accused of two crimes: attempting to conceal documents “by transporting a box containing numerous Antifa materials” and conspiracy to conceal those zines. He faces up to 20 years in prison.

Related

The Feds Want to Make It Illegal to Even Possess an Anarchist Zine

Estrada isn’t himself facing terror charges, but he being tarred with the label by his association with this so-called “antifa cell.” What Estrada’s case most acutely represents is the way the President Donald Trump conflates antifa and terrorism to do things like criminalize the transportation of zines — in other words, simple First Amendment protected activity.

Trump pulled this off by deeming antifa a “major terrorist organization” — a legal designation that doesn’t even exist for domestic groups — ignoring the fact that antifa is an orientation, not a group.

The feds, as Natasha Lennard notes, tend to try to evidence such charges by collecting circumstantial evidence of individual crimes alleged to have taken place “in the context of” legal protest activity — even when there is no direct link between those charged and the alleged crimes.

The charge may or may not stick — often they don’t — but the lawfare from above serves a terrorizing end in itself, she explains, since “the lengthy prosecutions hamper protest movements and chill dissent.”

Why My Review?

I need to ask: Why my review? And the truth is I don’t really have a great answer.

There is a rich irony here: My little horror movie review was introduced to prove a conception of antifa that — like many of the monsters we scream at in horror flicks — isn’t quite real.

The title of my essay — which is to say, of the zine seized from the accused’s house in Dallas — is “The Satanic Death-Cult Is Real.” It refers to the fictional demon-worshipping ceremony in the final scene of “Hereditary” as well as, at the same time, to the all-too-real, madness-inducing logic of the private nuclear household.

From my ego’s standpoint, it’s painful to assume that anyone is refusing to read beyond my titles before reacting. (It’s a tragically common occurrence: I’m the author, after all, of books about the communization of care with titles like “Full Surrogacy Now” and “Abolish the Family.”)

It seems that the FBI didn’t read beyond the cover of what it calls my “booklet.”

It seems, though, that the FBI didn’t read beyond the cover of what it calls my “booklet.” That was the description of my review-in-zine-form when it appeared in an itemized receipt for seized property, alongside cellphones, computers, weapons, and other bits of technology — for the sole reason that it is willing to throw anything, no matter how absurd, at anti-ICE activists to paint them as vile terrorists.

When the Mother Jones reporter messaged, I replied immediately, from my phone, in a state of agitation. It ought to be surprising, I pointed out, that possession of a printout of some film criticism could be brandished as evidence of a treasonous conspiracy against the United States government, yet — in 2026 — it is not.

“Perhaps,” indeed, I wrote, “there is an element of truth in the state’s preposterous linking of the mere implication of having read antifascist culture writing about the private nuclear family in [director] Ari Aster’s oeuvre with the alleged crime of belonging to a cell of an organization — antifa — that, as we all know, doesn’t even exist.”

Related

Wearing All Black at Protests Makes You Guilty of Terrorism, Prosecutors Tell Jury

Thankfully, however, organized antifascism does exist. I proudly accept the notion that any of my writings have helped in any small way to stoke the desire to practice antifascism, courageously and practically, as those blocking and protesting the brutality of American stormtroopers are doing all over the world.

If nothing else, I’m grateful that the FBI seized my book review and that prosecutors hauled it out in this ridiculous trial, because it gave me the opportunity to express my full solidarity with the Prairieland defendants.

The post I Wrote a Movie Review. Cops Took It From A Protester’s Home to Make the Case That He’s a Terrorist. appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:52

Suspected Iranian cyber and drone attacks are already impacting U.S. tech companies, and Iran says a list of American firms are now on its target list.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:50

The KC-135 tanker was involved in an apparent accident with another KC-135. The other aircraft landed safely, officials said.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:32

GDP grew at a sluggish 0.7% pace in the final months of 2025 as the government shutdown hurt economic activity.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:31

Samuel Ramirez Jr., 33, was wanted for his alleged involvement in the murders of two women on May 21, 2023.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:28

Joey Pete of Sunchild First Nation said king seemed ‘committed to learning’ after meeting Indigenous leaders

King Charles has expressed concern over a simmering separatist movement in western Canada, according to Indigenous leaders who met the head of state at Buckingham Palace.

Members of the Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations travelled to London from their territories in the province of Alberta to raise the alarm over the secessionist movement, arguing that it ignores key agreements signed between First Nations and the crown nearly 150 years ago.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:27

Your paycheck may be more protected from garnishment than you think — but only if you live in the right state.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:22

Synagogues and groups helping displaced people are coming up against hostility driven by conspiracy theories

A leading Jewish refugee advocate has vowed that solidarity work with asylum seekers will continue despite growing harassment from far-right activists targeting Jewish organisations supporting refugees.

Rabbi David Mason, the executive director of the UK Jewish refugee charity HIAS+JCORE, said groups such as theirs had increasingly faced antisemitic abuse and conspiracy theories from far-right activists, most notably online.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:14

Cuban leader Miguel Diaz-Canel confirmed Friday that Cuban officials recently held conversations with the President Donald Trump's administration.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 10:03

Parts defect affecting Highlander and Highlander Hybrid vehicles can increase the risk of injury, according to a safety notice. Here's what to know.

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The path to this reckless war was paved by the collapse of accountability in Washington

Since he reclaimed the White House, Donald Trump loves being compared with a monarch with unprecedented powers. “LONG LIVE THE KING!” Trump said on social media last year, after his administration tried to kill congestion pricing in New York. In October, the US president posted an AI-generated video of himself dumping brown sludge on protesters who participated in a daylong mass protest, known as “No Kings”, against his administration. In the video, Trump wore a crown and was flying a fighter jet labeled “KING TRUMP”.

He has also launched a relentless campaign of self-aggrandizement, plastering his name and face on government buildings, including the Kennedy Center and the US Institute of Peace. Trump demolished the White House’s East Wing and is overseeing plans to replace it with an enormous ballroom; the National Park Service designated the president’s birthday as a free-admission day at national parks; and the US treasury is poised to issue $1 coins featuring Trump’s image to commemorate the 250th anniversary of America’s independence later this year.

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2026-03-13 10:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Milan prosecutors have requested trial for Amazon's European unit and four of its managers over alleged tax evasion worth around $1.38 billion, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter said on Thursday. The move is unprecedented for a case of this kind in Italy, as Amazon agreed in December to pay 527 million euros, including interest, to Italy's Revenue Agency to settle the tax dispute. In all previous cases involving other international groups, once a settlement was reached and payment made, prosecutors closed related criminal investigations, either through plea deals or by dropping the cases. This time, however, Milan prosecutors did not share the tax authority's approach and decided to press ahead with their probe, leading to a request that the suspects be sent to trial. After December's tax settlement, Amazon said it would "forcefully defend its position on the potential ungrounded criminal case." It added: "Unpredictable regulatory environments, disproportionate penalties, and protracted legal proceedings are increasingly affecting Italy's attractiveness as an investment destination." Under what's described as a "VAT-avoidance algorithm," prosecutors accuse Amazon and four managers of enabling large-scale VAT evasion on goods sold in Italy between 2019 and 2021, allowing tens of thousands of non-EU marketplace sellers to sell goods in the country without clearly disclosing their identities. They allege that this helped the sellers avoid paying value-added tax. "Under Italian law, an intermediary offering goods for sale in Italy is jointly responsible for unpaid VAT by non-EU sellers operating through its platform," notes Reuters.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:53
Screw size from maghandle

Hi everyone,

I lost the screw from the handle of my Onewheel and I’m trying to replace it.

Would anyone happen to know the size of this screw? I’d like to try finding a replacement at a hardware store instead of ordering one online.

Thanks in advance for your help!

submitted by /u/Key_Spinach6638
[link] [comments]

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:42

Witness statements by Laimonas Jakštys ‘were clearly prepared by others’, insolvency judge rules

A claimant was being fed answers through his smart glasses while giving evidence in the high court in London, a judge has found.

Laimonas Jakštys was “untruthful in denying his use of the smart glasses” and his witness statements “were clearly prepared by others”, the insolvency judge Raquel Agnello KC ruled.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:37

The World Cup champion, coming off a second ACL tear in three years, is eager to step back into leadership roles with club and country as the NWSL season begins

One of the most important players on the team that won the 2025 NWSL championship played in just three matches all season. Tierna Davidson, the captain of NJ/NY Gotham FC, went down with a torn ACL on 28 March, and was quickly ruled out for the rest of the year. It was a brutal moment for the center-back, who had torn her other ACL three years prior.

The injuries were low patches in the 27-year-old’s already prolific career. In 2019, she left Stanford to turn pro; she was drafted by the Chicago Red Stars as the No 1 pick in the NWSL college draft. That year, at just 20, she was also named to the USWNT World Cup squad that would win the tournament.

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2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-13 09:31

Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best actress at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 09:30

Researchers use TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer to design proteins that self-assemble under extreme conditions

March 13, 2026 — Proteins are the building blocks of life. These biomolecules comprise chains of amino acids that fold into precise shapes to perform specific jobs in nature. But these elegant structures form only under narrow pH and temperature conditions, a property dictated by billions of years of evolution that has limited efforts to develop synthetic, protein-based advanced materials.

Tianren Zhang, Yao Tang and Darrin Pochan of the University of Delaware developed protein-based building blocks, called bundlemers, for advanced materials. The computer screen shows a visualization of two bundlemers stacked end-to-end. Molecular simulations on TACC’s Stampede3 helped provide an atomically resolved understanding of bundlemer structures, fluctuations, and intermolecular interactions. Credit: Kathy F. Atkinson/University of Delaware.

Now, researchers led by the University of Delaware’s Darrin Pochan have designed small protein fragments, or peptides, that can assemble themselves into well-organized structures across an unusually wide range of conditions and scales. The key lies in how positive and negative charges are carefully arranged on the peptides, giving them instructions for how to stick together in extreme conditions. The findings are published in Science.

Protein-based building blocks offer a promising, sustainable platform for materials development. They can potentially be produced biologically, degrade into environmentally compatible components and are well-suited for biomedical applications.

“This work is fundamental research that opens the door to potentially beautiful technology,” said Pochan, a Distinguished Professor of Materials Science at UD’s College of Engineering. “Sustained federal, industrial and university investment in this kind of basic science is essential for real innovation in the long run.”

Pochan’s laboratory focuses on designing molecular building blocks that assemble into novel materials. His advances were recently recognized with his designation as a 2026 Materials Research Society (MRS) Fellow.

Extreme Stability Unlocks New Possibilities

A team led by Pochan, Ph.D. candidate Yao Tang and postdoctoral researcher Tianren Zhang developed computationally designed peptides that come together to form particles they call “bundlemers.”

Consisting of four peptides, each bundlemer is shaped like a tiny barrel, with a carefully arranged pattern of positive and negative charges on its surface. That precise pattern makes the bundlemers extremely stable over the entire pH range, from the strongest acids to the strongest bases. At very low or very high pH, the particles form liquid crystals, while at neutral pH, they assemble into lattice-like clusters.

“Being so stable across the entire pH range is really unique and powerful,” Pochan said. This stability, combined with the ability to switch between different ordered states, paves the way toward new kinds of advanced materials, he explained.

For example, Kevlar, the material used in bulletproof vests, is made by processing liquid crystal polymers into an extremely strong solid. By harnessing the strength and adaptability of bundlemers, researchers may be able to create similar materials with precisely designed properties.

Supercomputing Powers Discovery

Molecular simulations of bundlemers and assemblies of bundlemers in solvated environments are essential for providing an atomically resolved understanding of their structures, fluctuations, and intermolecular interactions.

TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer resources are essential for these simulations,” said study co-author Jeffery Saven of the University of Pennsylvania. “The methods involved with this project make use of Stampede3’s versatile capabilities,” Saven added. “In addition to molecular simulations, the resource enables the computational modeling of lattices. High memory nodes facilitate the computational design of bundlemer sequences.”

The researchers were awarded supercomputer allocations on Stampede3 by the U.S. National Science Foundation-funded Advanced Cyberinfrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support (ACCESS) program, which provides support for thousands of U.S. scientists.

“By streamlining access to leading-edge computational resources, the NSF ACCESS program empowers researchers to focus on the fundamental scientific questions that computational science can help answer,” Saven said.

Programming Assembly Through Surface Design

“The surface patterning of chemistry is what’s so important about these building blocks,” Pochan noted. “This is something we’re going to explore for the next decade: how we can use that patterning to give these particles very specific behavior.”

In this case, the researchers designed surface charge patterns that allow the peptide particles to assemble into ordered structures across the entire pH range. Even small changes to this surface chemistry can lead to large changes in behavior, shifting how the bundlemers interact with each other and what kinds of structures they form.

This level of molecular precision is common in biology but rare in materials science. Changing a single amino acid on the surface of a protein can completely alter its structure and function. In contrast, conventional soft materials, such as plastics, are inherently disordered, making it difficult to leverage surface chemistry to control their properties.

“Combining tools from biology with materials science allows us to achieve an extraordinary degree of precision,” Pochan said. “Because we have exact control over the surface display of our bundlemers, we can explore in-depth how to direct their assembly into ordered materials.”

From Fundamental Discovery to Real-World Impact

For the current study, Pochan’s team built the bundlemers in the lab using standard chemical synthesis techniques. But because they are protein-based materials, they potentially could be produced inexpensively and at large scale using biological methods.

To explore paths toward scalable production, Pochan is collaborating with Pierre Rouviere, former Dupont scientist and entrepreneur with experience in engineering bacteria to produce protein and peptides for large-scale industrial applications. The collaboration is supported by a Delaware Bioscience Center for Advanced Technology grant for Entrepreneurial Proof of Concept.

Pochan also plans to launch his own startup on UD’s STAR Campus, further embedding this work within Delaware’s growing innovation ecosystem and extending insights that emerged from fundamental research into new directions.

Other UD co-authors of the paper include graduate student Jacob Schwartz and professor Christopher J. Kloxin. Postdoctoral researcher Dai-Bei Yang and professor Jeffery G. Saven, both of the University of Pennsylvania, are also co-authors. Major sources of support include the National Institute of Standards and Technology, part of the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the National Science Foundation through UD’s Materials Research Science and Engineering Center. UD central facilities and their scientific staff were also critical in performing the research. These include the Keck Center for Advanced Microscopy and Microanalysis, the Advanced Materials Characterization Lab, the Peptide and Protein Materials Center and the Delaware Biotechnology Institute.

The science story featured here was enabled by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s ACCESS program, which is supported by National Science Foundation grants #2138259, #2138286, #2138307, #2137603, and #2138296.

Adapted from a press release by Hillary Hoffman, University of Delaware.


Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC

The post TACC: Designing Protein Building Blocks for Advanced Materials appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:06

Djidji Ayôkwé was handed to Ivorian officials in Paris earlier this month

A sacred artefact looted by French colonial authorities more than a century ago has been returned to Côte d’Ivoire in one of the most significant cultural restitutions to a former French colony in years.

The Djidji Ayôkwé, a talking drum confiscated in 1916 by French administrators, landed at 8.45am on Friday at the airport in Port Bouët on the outskirts of the economic capital, Abidjan. It was handed over to Ivorian officials in Paris earlier this month after being removed from the Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac Museum.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 09:05

SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 13, 2026 — Marvell Technology, Inc., a leader in data infrastructure semiconductor solutions, has announced a major expansion of its 1.6T optical DSP platform portfolio, advancing the industry’s transition from 800G into 1.6T next-generation AI data center connectivity.

Marvell has a multi-generational history of industry firsts. The company was the first to introduce 200G/lane 1.6T DSPs in 5nm with Marvell Nova in 2023, followed by the 3nm 1.6T Ara platform in 2024, which increased performance and reduced the power envelope as the demand for 1.6T modules expanded in 2025. Now shipping in mass volume to global customers, Ara is enabling the world’s hyperscalers and cloud providers to deploy 1.6T pluggable connectivity for AI data centers.

Today, Marvell is introducing the next wave of its 3nm 1.6T optical DSP platform portfolio, increasing performance per watt by optimizing separately for each high-volume use case and introducing new capabilities, including:

  • Ara T, the first 8x200G transmit-retimed optics (TRO) DSP, delivers improved power efficiency and reduced total cost of ownership in network deployments.
  • Ara X, the first 1.6T DSP with advanced link reliability capabilities, enables customers to achieve higher resilience for optical networks.
  • Petra, the first 3nm 8x100G to 4x200G gearbox, enables high power efficiency and unlocks new, more flexible infrastructure designs.
  • Aquila M, the first O-band-optimized, coherent-lite optical DSP with integrated media access control security (MACsec), adds critical built-in security to next-generation optical links.

As AI infrastructure scales exponentially, connectivity has become the primary bottleneck of the modern data center, and the solution requires more than a “one-size-fits-all” approach. New, dedicated semiconductor interconnect solutions are required to address the increasing performance, power, design, security and application-specific challenges. With these new 1.6T offerings and an unmatched breadth and depth of expertise—and offering a full connectivity stack including industry-first DSPs, advanced SerDes, switching, interconnects, drivers and TIAs, and the Marvell RELIANT interconnect telemetry platform—Marvell is uniquely positioned to address this demand.

“Marvell pioneered PAM DSP technology, and we continue to lead with advanced SerDes and production-proven 800G platforms. We are now extending that multi-generational product leadership into the 1.6T era,” said Xi Wang, senior vice president and general manager, Connectivity Business Unit at Marvell. “With these new products, Marvell will deliver the performance, power efficiency and manufacturing capacity required to keep up with the explosive growth of next-generation AI data centers.”

“The performance of today’s data centers—powered by hundreds of thousands of GPUs, XPUs and other advanced compute engines—depends on the interconnect technologies that link them together,” said Vladimir Kozlov, founder and CEO at LightCounting. “Marvell DSP products are essential to many high-speed links in modern data center infrastructure, enabling compute resources to operate at peak performance and efficiency. The company’s expanded 1.6T DSP portfolio ensures that data centers can fully maximize their compute investments well into the future.”

Broadest End-to-End Connectivity Portfolio

Marvell delivers the industry’s most comprehensive portfolio of connectivity platform solutions for scale-up, scale-out and scale-across AI infrastructure, with a vast global installed base across hyperscale and cloud deployments and millions of high-speed lanes deployed worldwide.

The Marvell portfolio spans the full data center connectivity stack, including DSPs, SerDes, switching, interconnects, drivers and TIAs to support all systems, devices, links and nodes across the network. The new offerings announced today extend the company’s existing 1.6T portfolio, which includes Marvell Ara, Alaska and Nova DSPs, its Ethernet PHY platform, the Silicon Photonics Light Engine and the LPO TIA and laser driver chipset.

Marvell also provides supporting system-level technologies such as the Marvell RELIANT interconnect telemetry platform, which helps customers reduce operational complexity and improve network reliability and performance.

Last week, Marvell announced the expansion of its multi-generational 1.6T ZR/ZR+ and coherent DSP technology portfolio, underscoring the company’s commitment to continually deliver the latest scale-up, scale-out and scale-across technologies to drive AI innovation.

Availability

Marvell Ara X, Ara T, Petra and Aquila M DSPs are sampling to customers beginning in Q1 2026.

Marvell will showcase its end-to-end connectivity portfolio at OFC 2026, March 15–19, at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California. Visit the Marvell booth #1600 to learn how the company is driving the next generation of data center and AI infrastructure.

About Marvell

To deliver the data infrastructure technology that connects the world, we’re building solutions on the most powerful foundation: our partnerships with our customers. Trusted by the world’s leading technology companies for over 30 years, we move, store, process and secure the world’s data with semiconductor solutions designed for our customers’ current needs and future ambitions. Through a process of deep collaboration and transparency, we’re ultimately changing the way tomorrow’s enterprise, cloud and carrier architectures transform—for the better.


Source: Marvell

The post Marvell Ushers in the 1.6T Era with Expanded Optical DSP Platform Portfolio appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:00

Drivers in Detroit are unhappy with the spike in gas prices, even if reactions are mixed to the US-Israel war on Iran

On a rainy Detroit afternoon at a gas station off Interstate 75, Victor Rodriguez watched the pump tally tick up as he filled up his F-250 diesel pickup truck for $4.19 per gallon. It totaled $110. “Ridiculous,” he said.

The US-Israel war on Iran has crippled major portions of the oil supply chain, sending gas prices soaring as the conflict enters its third week. Rodriguez said he supports “getting rid of this thug”, referring to Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed by the US, but the cost is too high.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:00

Under oath, officers said they were told to make eight arrests a day and given special tech to help choose ‘targets’

US immigration agents in Oregon used a custom-made app to identify neighborhoods and people to target, and had daily arrest quotas they sought to meet during operations, courtroom testimony has revealed.

Details about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers’ surveillance tools and arrest goals in the state have come to light in a federal lawsuit that compelled officers to answer questions under oath, offering a rare window into opaque, internal strategies that are generally kept secret and have been driving mass detentions and chaotic raids.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:00

This popular wearable and baby monitor helped me view our sleep side by side, and what I learned surprised me.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:00

Premium powerhouses, budget steals and everything in between. Our favorite Android smartwatches strike the right balance between features and performance.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 09:00
Ruthie Shigon

RUTHIE SHIGON
Staff Reporter

Emma Karcz

EMMA KARCZ
Staff Reporter

From playing the beloved, yet ditsy, Cat Valentine on Nickelodeon to flourishing into the iconic Glinda the Good Witch, Ariana Grande’s career and image have blossomed over her many years in the spotlight, despite life-altering setbacks.

In 2008, at only 15, Grande made her acting debut in the Broadway musical “Thirteen  alongside future “Victorious costar Liz Gillies. “Thirteenwas a show with an all-teenage cast that centered around a new kid at school navigating middle school life. It was later adapted into a Netflix original movie. 

Grande played Charlotte, and her performance in the show earned her a National Youth Theatre Association Award and, later, a breakout role on television.

Her success on the stage landed her the role of Cat in Nickelodeon’s hit show “Victoriousin 2010

After the show’s four-season run, viewers still had not had enough of Grande’s beloved character. From goofy commentary to top-notch vocals, they adored her so much that she was given a spinoff show, “Sam and Cat.” The show also starred actress Jennette McCurdy, who played Sam Puckett on Nickelodeon’s “iCarly.” 

With that, Ariana Grande became a household name.

Grande could have continued her promising acting career, but during the filming of “Sam and Cat,”she was offered many opportunities to pursue music. After the show ended, she chose to expand on her music career. 

Her first album, “Yours Truly,debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 and earned her the 2013 American Music Award for New Artist of the Year. In addition to this album’s all-around success, her duet, “The Way, with Pittsburgh rapper Mac Miller, fostered an almost two-year-long romance. 

Grande also adopted a more mature persona during this period, in an attempt to distance herself from her Nickelodeon image. Her iconic high ponytail and cat ears became her signature style as she strayed away from her bright red “Cat Valentine” hair and more girlish aesthetic. 

Ultimately, “Yours Truly” was a huge stepping stone in kick-starting her celebrated pop music career.

Amidst her stardom, Grande suffered unimaginable loss and tragedy. In 2017, her concert in Manchester was the target of a terrorist attack bombing, which left over 1,000 fans injured

Although stunted with grief, Grande expressed apologies and support to her fans and everyone affected. She postponed tour dates and even questioned if her career should continue, but nevertheless, carried on for her supporters. She showed her support to the families by organizing the One Love Manchester benefit concert to raise awareness and funds in solidarity. 

The following year, she lost her former boyfriend and collaborator, Mac Miller, to an accidental overdose. The pair had broken off their two-year relationship months earlier and had just performed together at the One Love Manchester benefit concert. She referred to Miller as her “dearest friend” as she shared her anger and sadness over his loss on Instagram. 

Even after this devastation, Grande bounced back by releasing her album “Thank U, Next,” which broke records on Spotify and the Billboard charts. 

With the successful albums that followed, “Positions” and “Eternal Sunshine,” Grande’s music career seemed unstoppable. However, in 2021, she announced a return to her roots. She shared that she was reentering the acting industry in 2024, starring as Glinda the Good Witch in the silver-screen adaptation of the Broadway musical “Wicked.” 

A dream role for Grande, this chance to portray one of her favorite characters brought back her love for acting. As a musical, “Wicked” allowed Grande to combine her love of music and acting, showcasing to all of Hollywood what she brings to the table as a triple threat.

Along with the movie’s groundbreaking success, Grande formed a close friendship with co-star Cynthia Erivo. Throughout multiple interviews and press tours for the two “Wicked” movies, Erivo and Grande expressed how much the movie meant to them and how important their friendship was. 

However, due to the “Wicked” phenomenon, fans noticed a drastic change in Grande’s appearance. Many of them took to social media to say how they missed the “old Ariana,” and rumors started circulating about her body and whether she had undergone plastic surgery. In response to people criticizing her new look, Grande shut them down in a video posted on Instagram. 

“Glinda’s makeup kinda made me transform my entire look and my entire relationship to makeup. I just love it so much. Love, love, love,” she said in the video.

In an interview, Grande shut down any criticism from fans and the press about her weight or body and said that, contrary to popular belief, she has never felt healthier.

Not only was Glinda her dream role, but it also healed her in many ways and restored her self-confidence.

“I’ve just been taking baby steps towards healing my relationship to music and touring, and I think my time with Glinda and with acting really helped me build the strength to be able to do that,” Grande said in a conversation with Nicole Kidman for “Interview Magazine.” 

Starting in the industry at a young age can be very challenging, and many young actors struggle to find themselves when they are placed directly in the spotlight during the duration of their adolescence. 

From Nickelodeon all the way to the center of a Broadway classic, Grande has seen and done it all. Through adversity, nevertheless, she has found her footing as an artist and an actor. As she gets ready to kick off the Eternal Sunshine Tour in Oakland, California, on June 6, Grande has never seemed more confident and proud of her work.


Ariana Grande: Changed For Good was first posted on March 13, 2026 at 8:00 am.
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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:58

The art of the heel: if you want a shot at the US presidency, you better be ready to sartorially debase yourself on the world stage

The secretary of state of the United States of America is openly slopping around in a pair of too-big shoes that he has to wear because the president gave them to him. Why? Possibly as a piece of exquisite and complex satire about the size of his penis; possibly because Marco Rubio exaggerated his shoe size because he rightly assumed it would be linked to presidential speculation about the size of his penis.

According to the vice-president, JD Vance, Donald Trump gives all his best boys a particular brand of shoe, either after guessing their size or making them disclose it. “The president, he kind of leans back in his chair,” explained Vance a couple of months ago, “and he says: ‘You know, you can tell a lot about a man by his shoe size.’” Strong words, particularly from a president with such famously tiny hands. Incidentally, Vance casually dropped it into the anecdote that he wore a 13.

Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:51

Armed groups appear to have increased their firepower as they carry out raids deep in Hamas-controlled territory

Pro-Israel Palestinian militia have launched repeated raids, clandestine assassination and abduction operations deep inside parts of Gaza controlled by Hamas in recent months, with new operations launched recently despite the outbreak of conflict with Iran.

The militia, which are all based in eastern parts of Gaza that are under Israeli control after a ceasefire came into effect in October, have received significant logistic support from Israel since last year but appear to have increased their firepower, allowing new and more aggressive attacks in recent weeks.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:41

Rescue efforts continue for two crew members, while US temporarily lifts sanctions on Russian oil at sea. Plus, how China and the US see each other online

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Good morning.

Four of the six crew members onboard a US military refuelling plane that crashed in western Iraq on Thursday were killed, the US military has said. Rescue efforts were continuing for the remaining two.

What are people reporting from Tehran? A former political prisoner has told the Guardian about the terror of daily life under US and Israeli bombardment.

What do we know about the war’s economic cost? The Pentagon told lawmakers that its costs already exceeded $11.3bn in the first six days – but two sources said the costs is likely far greater.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 08:30

LEMONT, Ill., March 13, 2026 — A research team led by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory developed an innovative AI “adviser” that monitors and optimizes the performance of machine learning algorithms as autonomous experiments progress, enabling faster discovery of advanced electronic materials.

The researchers applied the adviser to Polybot, Argonne’s AI-guided robotic laboratory, to accelerate the investigation of electronic materials called mixed ion-electron conducting polymers (MIECPs), materials promising for wearable electronics and energy storage. Polybot is in the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a DOE Office of Science user facility at Argonne.

Autonomous platforms typically require large datasets to adapt effectively. The adviser mitigates data scarcity by evaluating algorithm performance in real time, extracting actionable patterns, and communicating those insights to human scientists who refine experimental plans. Integrated with Polybot’s autonomous synthesize-characterize-optimize workflow, the adviser guided adaptive choices that reduced the study to just 64 experiments out of more than 4,300 possible processing-condition combinations.

During the campaign, the adviser observed diminishing performance improvements from one AI optimizer and suggested switching to another AI algorithm for subsequent experiments. The scientists implemented the recommendation, and device performance improved significantly.

The adviser also flagged deposition speed as a key driver of performance, prompting a broader investigation of that parameter that led to further gains.

Researchers performed in-depth characterization of the 10 most representative material samples—including measurements conducted at the Advanced Light Source, another DOE Office of Science user facility at LBNL—to link device behavior to material structure. Two structural features played a crucial role in better performance: wider spaces between layers and thinner fibers. The team also discovered that the material crystallizes into two distinct structures. These significant findings can be leveraged to design higher-performing MIECPs.

AI algorithms used in autonomous laboratories lack the ability to make adaptive changes to experiments based on small datasets,” said Jie Xu, one of the study’s lead authors. Xu is an Argonne scientist and assistant professor of molecular engineering at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering. ​The AI adviser transformed our robotic laboratory from a relatively static workflow into a highly adaptable one. The results were compelling.”

Xu added, ​I expect researchers to apply our adviser concept and methods to various materials. This will help accelerate new discoveries.”

The study was published in Nature Chemical Engineering. In addition to Argonne, the research team included the University of Chicago, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), University of Southern Mississippi and the University of Central Florida.


Source: Argonne National Laboratory

The post Argonne-led AI ‘Adviser’ Accelerates Robotic Design of Advanced Electronic Materials appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:17

The first proper show since Valentino’s death is about the late designer, about beauty – and about Michele’s mother

Valentino Garavani wanted to make beautiful clothes for the women who could afford them. The perpetually tanned designer, whose vision of jet set glamour was matched only by his own yacht-and-pug lifestyle, died in January. So there was an obvious logic in taking the first proper catwalk show since his death off the fashion week schedule and back to Rome, where he lived, worked, and died. Milan and Paris may be the capitals of European style, but Rome looks better.

Garavani left his own brand almost 20 years ago. But his singular approach to beauty has not been without its obstacles for his most recent successor, Alessandro Michele, who took over the fashion house in 2024. “It’s a complicated DNA because beauty is always changing,” he said after the show, which took place in the 17th-century Palazzo Barberini. “This collection is about Valentino. It’s about beauty. But it’s [also] about the tension between me and the brand, a beauty I’m trying to translate.”

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 10:38

An aerial refueling tanker crashed in Western Iraq, U.S. officials said.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 10:54

The raids come as President Donald Trump ramps up his criticism of Mexico's record on fighting drug trafficking.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 10:36

The move is likely to be a boon to Russia as the United States tries to stem the economic fallout from its war on Iran as the price of crude has soared.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:01

Apple kicks off its 50th year with a vibe that reminds us tech should be fun and colorful.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 08:00

With anger stoked by Channel 4’s drama Dirty Business, we look at what has happened to some of the main players

Water companies have been in the public eye for the wrong reasons again recently. South West Water was in the dock pleading guilty to supplying water unfit for human consumption, while the regulator fined South East Water £22.5m for repeated supply failures that affected more than 280,000 people over three years.

As the full scale of the sewage pollution scandal has been revealed to the public over the past six years, key figures working for the regulators and the privatised companies have been heavily criticised. Channel 4’s drama Dirty Business has focused attention on individuals at the heart of the scandal.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 08:00

Wintzell’s Oyster House has a sign that reads: “Free oysters to any man 80 years old accompanied by his father.”

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:00

Fake pictures look authentic – and authentic ones get mistaken for fake. Here are three rules for navigating the war coverage

The videos look authentic – and they are spreading like wildfire on social media. One, for example, shows Iranian missiles exploding upon the airport in Tel Aviv, Israel. Another shows US soldiers being held at gunpoint by Iranian military.

They aren’t real but – often made with the help of cutting-edge AI – they are wildly misleading. They may get debunked, but somehow that doesn’t make a dent.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:00

Rent strikes have become more common in recent years with all-time high increases and more corporate investing

Nadia Langley had been organizing tenants in and around her south Minneapolis neighborhood since 2024, when, two months ago, the fledgling union saw a sudden explosion in interest.

The jump was prompted not by a downturn in housing conditions or a rise in rents, but by the arrival of thousands of federal agents in the city as part of the Trump administration’s recent mass immigration crackdown. Many immigrants and residents of color were afraid of agent run-ins and wouldn’t leave their homes, even to go to work. To protect their neighbors, residents organized group chats to alert their communities about immigration agent sightings and to provide food, aid and more.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:00

TORONTO, March 13, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, has partnered with the Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and Security (ARLIS), an affiliate of the University of Maryland (UMD), in a pioneering new cybersecurity project. Sponsored by the Secretary of the Air Force’s Concepts, Development, and Management Office’s SEQCURE (Securing Experimental Quantum Computing Usage in Research Environments) program, this project aims to define the foundational industry and government security standards for quantum computing.

As quantum computers transition from research laboratories to commercial deployment, establishing robust, forward-looking security protocols becomes critical to protecting national security interests and commercial applications. The ARLIS project directly addresses this need by evaluating the feasibility of implementing a Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA), as defined by the NIST standard SP800-207, within quantum computing environments. The application of ZTA to quantum systems is both a novel and critical step in proactive cyber defense, ensuring that the principle of “never trust, always verify” can be applied to this emerging technology.

“Establishing a trusted, secure operating environment is non-negotiable for the future of quantum computing,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “Our work with ARLIS is a commitment to not just developing cutting-edge quantum hardware, software, and applications, but also to pioneering the cybersecurity frameworks necessary to ensure these systems are secure from day one.”

As part of the collaboration, Xanadu is providing ARLIS with a comprehensive overview of its current and future generation quantum computers and the protocols being used to secure them. This includes a holistic security analysis across the entire quantum ecosystem, focusing on six key architectural areas: cloud, hardware, software, facilities, subjects, and data, with special attention paid to how integrated computing resources, custom hardware (including embedded software), and controlling software elements all interact.

“Xanadu is adding substantial value to the SEQCURE program’s mission to understand and protect the quantum ecosystem,” said Paul Lopata, Chief Quantum Scientist at ARLIS. . “By engaging with quantum computing leaders like Xanadu, we gain the crucial, on-the-ground technical data needed to assess the architectural viability of ZTA. The outputs of this study are vital for shaping the guidance that will protect quantum assets deployed across government and industry.”

The launch of this study marks a pivotal inflection point in the quantum industry, moving beyond theoretical discussions of future security risks to establishing practical, deployable security architectures today. By focusing on ZTA, this project is not merely adapting existing IT security models; it is helping to design a set of robust, resilient security standards.

The ultimate outcome of this research will be a foundational report that informs the U.S. Government and the wider industry on the steps needed to secure quantum infrastructure. Xanadu’s contributions aim to ensure that as quantum computing delivers on its promise of profound computational power, it does so within an IT architecture built for security and trust, accelerating the responsible integration of this transformative technology into sensitive environments.

More from HPCwire

About Xanadu

Xanadu is a Canadian quantum computing company with the mission to build quantum computers that are useful and available to people everywhere. Founded in 2016, Xanadu has become one of the world’s leading quantum hardware and software companies. The company also leads the development of PennyLane, an open-source software library for quantum computing and application development.


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu Joins University of Maryland’s ARLIS to Advance the Security of Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 08:00

These safes impressed us the most, not only with their locks but with useful smart features.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 08:00

Experts warn of ‘attack on Americans’ lungs’ from cuts to health programs, environmental rollbacks and other plans

Donald Trump’s policies are likely to drive soaring rates of lung disease and premature death, according to a wide-ranging new study by pulmonary specialists and public health experts.

The analysis, published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, examines policies adopted during Trump’s second term across 10 areas, including healthcare access, environmental regulation, workplace protections and vaccine uptake.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:54

The U.S. is temporarily allowing the purchase of Russian oil that's already at sea, in the Trump administration's latest move to loosen sanctions on Russia's oil industry as the world grapples with high oil prices.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:50

Senate Democrats have filed legislation hat would keep the U.S. from attacking Cuba without congressional approval as they seek to force a vote on President Trump's stated goal of a "takeover" of the Caribbean country.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:00

New pro-Trump press corps has surprised some skeptics with tough questions, though sycophancy fears remain

The question, asked during a 4 March press briefing with Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, and Gen Dan Caine, was a good one: if the US had “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear facilities during an operation last June, “what was the intelligence that suggested that somehow they became a threat once again that required us to get involved with Operation Epic Fury?”

It was asked by Heather Mullins, who works for LindellTV, the television network founded by Mike Lindell, the pillow entrepreneur, Trump cheerleader and 2020 election denier.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:00

Why would Trump launch a foreign war when he is so domestically weak? Precisely because he is weak

In the lead-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, members of the George W Bush administration presented the case for war exhaustively, repeatedly, and in public. The then national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, who played a major role in green-lighting waterboarding of detainees at Guantanamo Bay, wrote an editorial in the New York Times claiming that Iraq was lying about its so-called “weapons of mass destruction”.

Meanwhile, Colin Powell, then the secretary of state, went to a meeting of the United Nations security council in New York. There, before America and the world, he held up a tiny vial of substance meant to represent anthrax, a chemical weapon that had terrorized the US in a series of mail attacks just over a year before; Powell claimed that Iraq had the weapon and was willing to use it. Bush himself routinely addressed the American people, making the case for war. They were all lying, it turned out, but the lie served a purpose: it was a concession to the idea that the American people would have a say in whether or not their country went to war.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:00

Dale Steele.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:00

The podcast host and author of The Persian reflects on why Israel’s precision in Iran caught him off guard

As the author of a novel depicting the Mossad’s snatch-and-assassination squads inside Iran, David McCloskey was less shocked than most by the stunning killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the theocratic regime’s most powerful figure, in a strike carried out by Israel.

What caught him more off guard were reports that the up-to-the-minute, pinpoint accurate intelligence essential for its success was provided by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:00

This feature isn't new but it could still make your calls clearer.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 07:00

Early benchmarks show the A18 Pro-powered MacBook Neo beating every current x86 CPU in single-core Cinebench performance, including chips from Intel and AMD. Notebookcheck reports: We have performed a couple of benchmarks and were particularly impressed by the single-core performance. Not in the short Geekbench test, but in Cinebench 2024, where a single-core test takes about 10 minutes. The A18 Pro consumes between 3.5-4 Watts in this scenario and scores 147 points. This means it is faster than every other x86 processor in our database, including the two desktop processors Intel Core Ultra 9 285K & AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D. This also means the MacBook Neo beats every modern mobile processor from AMD, Intel and also Qualcomm, even though the upcoming Snapdragon X2 chips should be a bit faster. The A18 Pro is also slightly faster than Apple's own M3 generation in this scenario. Further reading: ASUS Executive Says MacBook Neo is 'Shock' to PC Industry

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 07:00

Less than a decade ago, Google employees scuttled any military use of its AI. Now Anthropic is fighting Trump officials not over if, but how

The standoff between Anthropic and the Pentagon has forced the tech industry to once again grapple with the question of how its products are used for war – and what lines it will not cross. Amid Silicon Valley’s rightward shift under Donald Trump and the signing of lucrative defense contracts, big tech’s answer is looking very different than it did even less than a decade ago.

Anthropic’s feud with the Trump administration escalated three days ago as the AI firm sued the Department of Defense, claiming that the government’s decision to blacklist it from government work violated its first amendment rights. The company and the Pentagon have been locked in a months-long standoff, with Anthropic attempting to prohibit its AI model from being used for domestic mass surveillance or fully autonomous lethal weapons.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 07:00

Early benchmarks show the A18 Pro-powered MacBook Neo beating every current x86 CPU in single-core Cinebench performance, including chips from Intel and AMD. Notebookcheck reports: We have performed a couple of benchmarks and were particularly impressed by the single-core performance. Not in the short Geekbench test, but in Cinebench 2024, where a single-core test takes about 10 minutes. The A18 Pro consumes between 3.5-4 Watts in this scenario and scores 147 points. This means it is faster than every other x86 processor in our database, including the two desktop processors Intel Core Ultra 9 285K & AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D. This also means the MacBook Neo beats every modern mobile processor from AMD, Intel and also Qualcomm, even though the upcoming Snapdragon X2 chips should be a bit faster. The A18 Pro is also slightly faster than Apple's own M3 generation in this scenario. Further reading: ASUS Executive Says MacBook Neo is 'Shock' to PC Industry

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 07:00

The rule made famous by Trinity Rodman’s offseason transfer saga had actually been in the works for years.

Sometimes, a rule’s official name is superseded by the player who seemingly inspired it. But sometimes, the origin story is a bit more nuanced.

Contrary to its initial prevailing narrative, the NWSL says it didn’t rush to create the High Impact Player rule (HIP) in reaction to the Washington Spirit’s efforts to sign Trinity Rodman. Stephanie Lee, the league’s vice-president of player affairs, said the NWSL began looking at how it could keep pace with the growing women’s soccer market in the summer of 2023.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 07:00

Exclusive survey finds negative economic impacts felt across party lines as White House doubles down on tariffs

Seven in 10 Americans say Donald Trump’s tariffs have led to them paying higher prices, according to an exclusive new poll for the Guardian.

The Harris Poll survey presents Republicans with a major problem in the battle for the upcoming midterm elections. The majority of all voters (72%) believe Trump’s tariffs have had a negative rather than a positive impact and 67% said tariffs aren’t the right solution for improving the economy.

64% of Republicans agreed that Trump’s tariffs had led to higher prices compared with 77% of Democrats and 67% of independents who believed the same.

60% of Republicans also said that tariffs had had more of a negative impact on consumers than a positive one, compared with 81% of Democrats and 75% of independents.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:57

Iran's relentless attacks on Gulf states and infrastructure appear to be overshadowing interventions by the U.S. and its allies aimed at easing energy prices.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:56

Traditionally jovial affair poses potential debacle for Irish leader at odds with US over foreign policy, tax and immigration

For Ireland’s leaders, it has long been the highlight of the political calendar: a love-fest in Washington with hosts who sport shamrocks and toast Saint Patrick.

Irish delegations are traditionally received on Capitol Hill and at the White House in a blaze of goodwill and backslapping that has them wishing every day was 17 March.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:47

Figures recorded by Femicide Census in past 12 months indicate highest rate of matricide in 16 years

The names of 19 women believed to have been killed by their sons in the last year were read out in parliament on Thursday, as research showed that almost one in five women killed by men since the last International Women’s Day were suspected victims of matricide.

For the 11th year running, Jess Phillips read out the names of the 108 women killed in the UK by men – or where a man has been charged – in the past 12 months. In keeping with previous years, she had to request special dispensation to speak beyond the time given to each MP in the International Women’s Day parliamentary debate, because reading the names took more than five minutes.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:00

Calls for Alexandra Căpitănescu’s Choke Me to be banned as campaigners say lyrics are ‘dangerous’ and ‘reckless’

Romania’s Eurovision entry Choke Me has been labelled “dangerous” and “reckless” for appearing to glamorise sexual strangulation, an unsafe practice that can lead to brain injury and death.

Campaigners against sexual violence said the entry, in which the words “choke me” are repeated 30 times during the three-minute song, was “playing fast and loose with young women’s lives”.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:00

From war zones and socially virtuous farming to ever-changing boards and role-playing with 167 dice, here’s our pick of the most absorbing table-based entertainment

Video games have long been heavily inspired by physical games, from chess and Scrabble to Dungeons & Dragons. The deck-building collectible card game, for example, has become immensely popular in digital form, thanks to hits such as Slay the Spire, Marvel Snap and Balatro. Now, an increasing number of games are going in the opposite direction, trading pixels for pieces and screens for spinners. Here are six of our favourites.

Company of Heroes 2nd Edition (Bad Crow Games, £119.70)

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:00

The 2026 NWSL season kicks off on Friday. Our writers discuss the teams, players and story lines they’re watching this year

How the High Impact Player (HIP) rule evolves the NWSL’s place in the global transfer market. The league has regained some control of the “is the NWSL still the best league in the world” narrative, keeping Trinity Rodman on a deal via this new mechanism. The next transfer window or two will be a fascinating test of the league’s willingness to ease restrictions and let its teams reach as far as they’d like. JR

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:00

A state visit is a connecting of people, not governments; of cultures, not commentators – our national bonds should be honoured

Should King Charles’s state visit to the United States next month be cancelled? The case for doing so is powerful. America is waging an unprovoked war on Iran in which more than 1,000 innocent people have already been killed. The collateral damage to the global economy, including Britain’s, is becoming astronomical. All Donald Trump can do is insult Britain’s prime minister as a “loser” and “no Winston Churchill” for failing to join him. Should the monarch honour such a man by attending a Washington banquet?

The call is close. The occasion is the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States with the declaration of independence. Of course this merits celebration. But now? British public opinion is emphatically opposed to the US war on Iran. Many more Britons think the royal visit should be abandoned (46%) than think it should go ahead (36%), with 18% undecided. Just as the war is staged by Trump for personal political gain, so he can be expected to exploit a royal visit.

Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist and the author of A Short History of America: from Tea Party to Trump

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:00

Following Taylor’s death, the US limited no-knock warrants. But the Trump administration has quietly rescinded those limits

The night Breonna Taylor died began quietly.

She had spent the evening at home in Louisville. The 26-year-old was an emergency room technician, someone who worked to prevent other people’s tragedies.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 06:00

Improve your audio experience with these quality soundbars under $200.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 06:00

Austrian officials took action after airline ignored court order to pay €890 to unnamed women

Bailiffs have boarded a Ryanair aircraft after the airline refused to pay compensation to a passenger whose flight was delayed.

Austrian officials took action after the budget carrier ignored a court order to pay the unnamed woman €890 (£742) in legal costs and compensation for a delayed flight two years ago.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Community activists often cite traffic congestion concerns as the primary reason to stop controversial projects. Gov. Matt Meyer’s executive order will speed up the construction of in-demand affordable housing by barring state transportation officials from considering those concerns. 

Gov. Matt Meyer removed a traffic regulation last month that he said acted as an obstacle to the development of new apartments, townhomes and other affordable housing in the state.

The new policy, created through an executive order, lifts a state requirement that developers of large affordable housing projects pay to study the impacts of those developments on local traffic. 

Builders of other developments, including commercial buildings or market-rate housing, must still conduct those impact studies. And in Sussex County — where growth and traffic have been at odds for years — local officials say they can still require traffic studies through the county’s land use approval process. 

The state rule change is part of a broader set of reforms outlined in the executive order that Meyer says will speed up “priority projects,” including affordable housing and energy infrastructure developments.

He said that development plans have too often been stuck in a regulatory limbo while waiting for the results of traffic impact studies and other state requirements. 

The policy comes after decades of growth in Sussex County, where large tracts of farmland have been regularly transformed into subdivisions and strip malls. In recent years, critics of the transformation say that growth has brought too many cars onto roads that were built for a more rural landscape.

Asked about Meyer’s reforms, some of the loudest critics responded with ambivalence. While they noted that the county still has the authority to require developers to make road improvements, they also argued that the state for years has treated road upgrades as an afterthought. 

Vehicles drive down Route 24 near the proposed site of the Belle Meade housing and retail development. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONSIFER

“Transportation infrastructure cannot simply be treated as irrelevant when evaluating new development,” Sussex resident Gary Vorsheim said.

Vorsheim is a member of the advocacy group, Route 24 Alliance, which last year protested plans to build commercial and housing developments on fields that sit inland of Rehoboth Beach.

In January, the group asked a Delaware judge to force the Sussex County Council to deny a proposal to build shops and apartments — some of which will be affordable — at the site of former horse farm. They argued that local officials misunderstood the timing of traffic improvements, among other issues, when approving the development, which is called Belle Mead.

In response to traffic-centered pushback against housing developments, Mike Riemann, former president of the Delaware Homebuilders Association, said the priority of the state should be building affordable housing. 

“Do we not support [an individual’s] ability to find a home because someone has to sit at an intersection for an extra five seconds?” Riemann said. 

Delaware is short almost 20,000 rental units for households that earn less than half the region’s median income, according to a 2023 study prepared for the Delaware State Housing Authority. Many people struggle to find homes that fit their budgets, especially near the Delaware beaches where home values have skyrocketed.

Under Meyer’s new rules, a housing project can avoid paying for a traffic study if at least 15% of its units are affordable to people making either 80% or 120% of an area’s median income, depending on if they are rentals or properties for purchase.

The housing project also has to be in an area that is either already served by public water and sewer infrastructure or that local officials designated for future growth. 

The removal of the traffic study requirements is part of Meyer’s broader edict to state agencies to create a “permitting accelerator” for his priority projects. 

Through the accelerator, he wants the timeline for state approvals for priority developments to go from the current average of 18 to 24 months to under six months. Review delays, he argued, drives up housing and energy costs. 

“Affordability is the defining challenge of this moment in our state, and what we’re doing today is addressing one of the most practical drivers of affordability,” Meyer said at the press conference announcing the order.

The post To push affordable housing, Gov. Meyer eases road upgrade rules appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
A series of Tiny Desk Concert-inspired musical acts in a small Mexican grocery store in New Castle is platforming up-and-coming artists while opening Delaware’s music scene to regional Mexican music

The bananas set the tone. 

The bristling piñatas then join the chorus overhead. Next, the humming of the produce fridges follows. 

Then, Carlos Mayo-Jimenez breaks through with his guitar. And Jesus Manuel Beltran Mendez finally joins the symphony with his voice. 

The Wilmington-based band Ilusión is playing a gig — inside a Mexican market nestled off of U.S. Route 13 in New Castle. 

Rows of tomatoes, tortillas and papayas serve as their backdrop. Customers stocking up on their weekly groceries serve as their audience. 

In the vein of NPR’s Tiny Desk Concerts, José Luis Aguilar Garcia created his own monthly series of “Mercadito Concerts” inside his family’s grocery store, Fiesta Fresh Market & Carniceria.  

Aguilar Garcia, the 28-year-old owner of the Wilmington-based independent music label VPS Music, said he hoped the project would spotlight up-and-coming, independent artists while also bringing more business to the market. 

And by bringing more Mexican culture to Delaware, Aguilar Garcia said he hopes people will feel a little bit more at home when they come to the market. 

A ‘fresh’ take on Tiny Desk

Aguilar Garcia first got the idea in 2023 when he attended a Tiny Desk Concert in Washington, D.C., for DannyLux, one of the artists his label represented. Then in 2024, Dariell Cano — a Mexican-American artist whom VPS also represented — was briefly staying in Delaware, and Aguilar Garcia asked him to stop by the shop. 

With an extra employee vest lying around, Aguilar Garcia asked Cano to put it on and pretend he worked at the market for a social media post.

“That’s when it sort of clicked,” Aguilar Garcia said. “What if we start doing live concerts?” 

The series took off from there. 

Delaware’s central position along the Northeast Corridor could work as an incentive for bands traveling between shows in Philadelphia and New York City during their tours, Aguilar Garcia said. 

In May 2025, Julio César, a regional Mexican musician, was traveling as a supporting act with singer-songwriter Ivan Cornejo in a nationwide arena tour. The tour was set to have a concert in New York City before traveling to Florida for their next stop. 

Aguilar Garcia reached out to César’s management and asked if they could stop by the market on their way down to Florida. César agreed

Nearly 60 people streamed into the quaint market to watch César’s free concert, Aguilar Garcia said.

“It’s really cool just to open up the scene over here in the East Coast,” Carlos Mayo-Jimenez, a member of Ilusión, said about the Mercadito Concert series. “It’s a really great starting point, in general, for the moment that we’re trying to start here.”

Concerts sprout from family business

Back inside the market, Ilusión is playing their newest song, “Colores,” as they continue their set. The song premiered Thursday night. 

Wires snake from Ilusión’s microphones to the control center that Aguilar Garcia set up near the entrance of the store, near the Coca-Cola cans. Aguilar Garcia periodically checks the focus of the video behind the camera.

Aguilar Garcia — a native of Puebla, Mexico — co-owns the market with his sister and dad. Aguilar Garcia’s father worked at the New Castle Farmers Market down the road for roughly 20 years before establishing his first grocery shop in Carneys Point Township, N.J., in 2019.  

The Fiesta Fresh Market & Carniceria in New Castle then opened in May 2024. 

Aguilar Garcia hopes brands may soon sponsor the series of Mercadito Concerts to help keep them going. For now, Ilusión’s strums and singing taper off, and the atmosphere returns to everyday-market sounds — refrigerators humming, shopping cart wheels turning and bags crinkling. 

Then the next song begins.

The post NPR-style concerts bring fresh Mexican music flair to New Castle market appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 05:46

Ministers face accusations of carrying out ‘irresponsible deregulation’ as they push through ‘clean energy’ proposals

Ed Miliband has unveiled plans to cut regulations, costs and bureaucracy by the end of next year to speed up the development of nuclear power generation.

The UK government said the changes, to be carried out this year, would deliver a “win-win for building critical infrastructure while protecting nature and the environment”.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 05:30

Back in 2019, it looked like Oregon lawmakers might finally commit to ending the state’s outlier status on campaign finance.

I had just authored an investigative series for The Oregonian/OregonLive, my previous newsroom, revealing how Oregon’s lack of limits on campaign donations had allowed corporate America to give more to lawmakers, per capita, than anywhere else in the country and led to some of the weakest environmental protections on the West Coast. The state Supreme Court had allowed it to happen by saying campaign donations were protected free speech under the Oregon Constitution.

Lawmakers in Oregon, one of five states without any limits at all, seemed willing to do something about what we’d revealed. They asked Oregonians to change the constitution and explicitly allow contribution limits, something legislators had repeatedly tried and failed to do before. At the ballot in 2020, 78% of voters said yes, one of the widest margins for any ballot measure in decades. All lawmakers needed to do was to write legislation limiting donations.

But for the next four years, no limits were adopted. When lawmakers eventually set caps in 2024, individual donations were restricted to $3,300 per election, well short of caps in the $1,000 to $2,000 range that good-government groups had sought previously. Lawmakers left other avenues for donors to give their time and money. They allowed corporate donations, which many states ban, to continue. They made it so the limits wouldn’t take effect until 2027, after the current race for governor is over.

And now, lawmakers have voted to ratchet the spigot open further — and perhaps, campaign reform advocates say, all the way.

On March 5, Oregon’s Democratic-controlled Legislature approved a bill that supporters described as containing little more than technical fixes to what they’d written two years ago. 

Groups that seek to limit the influence of money in politics said the changes are far more serious than housekeeping. They said the new bill inserted loopholes that, among other things, will allow companies to bypass the limits by giving through corporate affiliates.

Dan Meek, an attorney who for years has been at the center of efforts to curtail money in Oregon politics, labeled it “the bill to destroy campaign finance reform in Oregon.”

Oregon elections haven’t had contribution limits since briefly in the 1990s. Phil Keisling, a former secretary of state who advocated for those caps only to see them overturned in court, described the Legislature’s track record on campaign finance as “one of the most profound public policy failures” in Oregon’s recent history.

“Limits should have been in place decades ago,” he said. “The base problem is that there are powerful forces within both political parties who prefer the system as it is.”

Legislative leaders defended their work.

In a floor speech, House Majority Leader Ben Bowman described the contribution limits the Legislature adopted as delivering on “elections where the voices of everyday people are not drowned out by wealthy and powerful interests making unlimited political contributions.” He described this year’s changes as necessary for the new system to work.

The investigation I worked on seven years ago found that campaign donations in Oregon did more than just help politicians get elected.

They sometimes spent campaign money in ways that benefited themselves, including on luxury hotel rooms, dry cleaning, car washes — even picking up the tabs during dozens of visits to sports bars. One lawmaker used campaign money to buy a new computer three weeks before she left office; another spent it on an Amazon Prime membership, 11 days before resigning.

The money shaped public policy. As a reporter covering Oregon’s environment, I watched the Legislature weaken or stall efforts on climate change, logging practices, industrial air pollution, herbicide spraying, oil spill preparedness and other issues over a decade. One retired regulator told me all it took was a single phone call from a well-connected lobbyist to kill one clean air initiative.

What’s happened since my investigation was published reveals how hard it can be to eliminate this kind of influence when the people expected to rein in donations are the ones whose campaigns have long benefited from them.

After Oregonians overwhelmingly voted to hand lawmakers the power to regulate election money in 2020, lawmakers failed to put restrictions in place in 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023.

Tired of waiting, advocates for tight constraints on campaign money gathered tens of thousands of signatures to put a measure limiting donations on the ballot in 2024. Labor unions, a major source of giving to Democrats, responded by threatening to put up their own competing initiative.  A backer of the union measure said recently that it would have encouraged grassroots participation through small donor committees and included public financing for candidates.

Meek, the campaign reform advocate, described the union measure as an effort to create far looser limits, with less disclosure and major loopholes.

Lawmakers stepped in, brokering a deal that was hailed as a historic breakthrough. Unions, the campaign reform advocates and big business produced a bill that Meek described as at least a starting point for controlling Oregon’s political money — albeit with fewer constraints and bigger dollar limits than he and others wanted.

Kate Titus, Oregon director of Common Cause, an advocacy group that was involved in the negotiations alongside Meek, said everyone agreed that some technical fixes to the bill’s language would be needed before the system took effect in 2027. But she said the group, which included House Speaker Julie Fahey, agreed that no substantive changes would be made without everyone’s agreement.

Then came this year’s short, monthlong legislative session — and a surprise.

Titus described seeing Fahey in a state Capitol hallway in early February and asking whether any bills were coming on campaign finance. Fahey’s expression changed to what Titus described as “pure panic.”

“I can’t talk,” Titus said the speaker told her, before hurrying away.

(Fahey’s spokesperson, Jill Bakken, said the speaker was on her way from a floor session to a meeting and didn’t have time for an impromptu hallway conversation, telling Titus she could schedule time through her staff.)

Hours later, Titus said, an 85-page bill was introduced with Fahey’s name on it and a public hearing scheduled early the next morning.

It would push back the deadline that the 2024 legislation set for launching a new website for tracking campaign money, from 2028 to 2032.

The bill would make the $5,000 limit on donations to one type of political committee apply per year, not per two-year election cycle — effectively doubling the amount allowed. A spokesperson for Fahey called the 2024 provision a “typo” that needed correcting because it was inconsistent with limits on other donation types.

The 2024 law prohibited multiple businesses controlled by the same person from each giving as much as the law allows. The 2026 bill would allow it as long as the businesses weren’t created solely to evade limits, a change Fahey’s spokesperson said was needed to avoid a “chilling effect on community-based organizations’ participation in elections.” The Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based watchdog group, called it a loophole that renders Oregon’s contribution limits “illusory.”

On top of all that, the bill would remove a long-standing provision in state law that says that money someone spends in coordination with a candidate is a campaign contribution. A spokesperson for Secretary of State Tobias Read said the provision was “redundant” because the law also says “any other thing of value,” beyond money, is a campaign contribution. But the Campaign Legal Center said the change could leave Oregon functionally with “no contribution limits.”

A representative of the League of Women Voters of Oregon, which was involved in the 2024 negotiations, called the bill “a complete betrayal.”

Bakken, Fahey’s spokesperson, told ProPublica that groups including the league “have been part of this conversation for many years” and that they will have opportunities for input as lawmakers consider future changes.

As for why the Legislature hasn’t done more to stem the flow of money into the system, Bakken said that constraining donors too greatly could push them to divert cash from campaign donations into commercials and mailers in support of candidates, something candidates legally can’t control. These “independent expenditures” have no dollar limit under federal law.

Unhappy as Meek and others were with the proposal, they couldn’t do much. They threatened to go back to the ballot, but without the signatures they’d gathered to do so in 2024, they’d lost their leverage. The bill sailed through the Oregon House by a 39-19 vote and the Senate 20-9.

Sen. Jeff Golden, a Southern Oregon Democrat who opposed the bill, called its passage the biggest surprise of his eight-year tenure. Given the potentially huge loopholes, he said in an interview: “I thought my colleagues wouldn’t pass it. And I was wrong.”

The measure sits on the desk of Gov. Tina Kotek, a Portland Democrat. She has until April 17 to decide on it.

The post Oregon Voters Overwhelmingly Said Yes to Limiting Money in Politics. Then Politicians Had Their Say. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 05:01

Conflict in the Strait of Hormuz is spilling into the Indian Ocean Expert comment thilton.drupal

The effective blockade of the strait during the US-Israeli war with Iran has increased the chance of accidents and forced ships into alternative routes with their own risks.

The 'Mayuree Naree' on fire

The US-Israeli war with Iran has turned the Indian Ocean into a theatre for major maritime confrontations. 

On 2 March, in response to US-Israeli strikes, Iran announced it was closing the Strait of Hormuz, the vital maritime chokepoint that connects Gulf waters and the wider Indian Ocean beyond. On 4 March, a US submarine sunk the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena off the coast of Sri Lanka. Since the outbreak of the conflict, at least 18 vessels have been attacked in Gulf waters.  

The US now claims Iran’s navy is destroyed. Despite this, the Strait of Hormuz remains functionally closed. 

While some analysts argue that Iran lacks the power to fully control the strait, Iran’s strategy does not depend on naval control. If Iran can launch missile or drone attacks from its coast, it can impose enough risk to disrupt shipping. The recent experience in the Red Sea illustrates this dynamic: a relatively small number of Houthi missile and drone attacks caused container traffic in the region to fall by roughly 90 per cent in 2024.

Iran’s ability to essentially close the strait will have a knock-on effect on wider maritime traffic, creating new security risks as ships seek alternative routes. While Iran has vowed to disrupt international trade to inflict pressure on US President Donald Trump, the US may seek to intercept ships bound for Iran, creating dangerous conditions for escalation in the increasingly crowded Indian Ocean and beyond.

Heightened risks of accidents and US seizures 

The current conflict has created a de facto blockade in which the US seeks to deny maritime transit or access to Iran, while Tehran simultaneously seeks to stop all movement through the Strait. 

These competing strategies have created a highly uncertain operating environment for commercial vessels in the Gulf. According to a briefing from Lloyd’s List Intelligence, more than 40 ships disabled their Automatic Identification System (AIS) signals at the start of the conflict – a practice known as ‘going dark.’ Ships typically disable AIS to conceal illicit activity. Many of these vessels are part of Iran’s sanctioned shadow fleet. The number of dark vessels is likely to increase. 

At the same time, several Gulf countries have begun employing GPS jamming to interfere with guided missiles. While intended as a defensive measure, this jamming also disrupts navigation systems used by civilian ships. AIS signals can become scrambled or unreliable, making it more difficult for vessels to communicate with each other and avoid collisions. With maritime search and rescue capabilities already constrained by the conflict, such interference significantly increases the risk of accidents.

Amid this chaos, Iran announced that it would permit Chinese ships to transit through the Strait. In response, some ships are attempting to use their transponders to identify as Chinese. For example, a Liberian-flagged bulk carrier ship called SinoOcean broadcast its destination signal as ‘CHINA OWNER_ALL CREW’ to transit the Strait of Hormuz. 

While these operations are not necessarily aimed at illicit activity, they do represent a newer category of false flag operations in shipping, which involve the deliberate misrepresentation of a vessel’s flag state to evade oversight. This tactic is most often used by shadow fleet vessels moving sanctioned commodities. Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, both false flags and changing a ship’s flag during a voyage are considered illegal.

Taken together, GPS jamming, dark vessels, and false flag signals create significant uncertainty about the identity and activities of ships in the region. This ambiguity complicates attribution for maritime incidents and increases the likelihood that naval forces will misinterpret commercial behaviour. 

In response, it is possible that the US will pursue more ships seizures across the Indian Ocean, especially under the pretext of the ongoing conflict. On 24 February, before the attack on Iran, the US seized an oil tanker allegedly linked to Venezuela’s illicit oil trade off the coast of Sri Lanka. Back in November, the US also seized a cargo ship going from China to Iran across the Indian Ocean. 

Alternative routes in a crowded ocean

The blocking of the Strait of Hormuz will redirect shipping into other routes that pose their own risks. Since 2 March, the volume of traffic around Hormuz has dropped precipitously. Many ships have also decided to avoid the Suez Canal as a precautionary measure. 

This will increase traffic through the Mozambique Channel and Cape of Good Hope as ships attempt to take the long way around Africa. Due to the slowdown, rising costs, and uncertainty about the duration of conflict, many ships may also remain at ports along the Indian Ocean. 

These shifts in maritime traffic will create new security risks. Congested or poorly patrolled routes often attract piracy and other illicit activities. For example, pirates operating from Somalia have historically attacked ships off the coast of Africa in the western Indian Ocean, and piracy is on the rise again.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 05:00

More than 20% of weekend availability lost in England since 2022, forcing some to turn to A&E, says national association

People who need to obtain medication at the weekend are having to undertake long trips because more pharmacies are cutting their opening hours on Saturdays and Sundays.

One in six pharmacies in England have reduced their hours at weekends since 2022, with some shutting altogether, as a result of “unsustainable” pressures on their budgets.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 05:00

From a 28-game losing streak to the top of the East, the Pistons have rebuilt themselves the old Detroit way – defense, defiance and a refusal to stay down

In Detroit, the black-eyed Susan grows along lonely highways and in vacant lots. It pushes through gravel and broken glass. It survives heat that cracks the earth and winters that freeze it solid. When the wind bends its stem, it cracks back in place.

Its petals are a grungy yellow, the shade of anxiety, orbiting a bruised center. Black-eyed, signaling it can take a punch. It’s the kind of flower Pistons legend Dennis Rodman would wear in his hair. Hard to kill. Just like the Detroit Pistons.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 05:00

Nevada regulators have fined three people who played a role in offering peptide injections last year at a Las Vegas anti-aging conference where two women became critically ill following treatment.

Last month, the Nevada Pharmacy Board levied $10,000 fines against a doctor and a pharmacist who are licensed in California but who don’t have permission to practice in Nevada. It imposed a $5,000 fine against a third man who describes himself as an “integrative health coach” but who doesn’t appear to be a licensed health care practitioner.

The pharmacy board also imposed a $10,000 fine against a Texas-based private membership association, which authorities accused of mailing the peptides to Nevada. The group, Forgotten Formula, claims a constitutional right to conduct private transactions with its members and contends those transactions occur “outside the scope” of state commercial regulations.

The citations stem from an incident in July at the Revolution Against Aging and Death Festival, which is put on by an Arizona-based organization that promises pathways to an “unlimited lifespan.” Dr. Kent Holtorf, whose anti-aging medical practice is based in El Segundo, California, operated a booth at the festival offering alternative health therapies, including peptide injections. Peptides are short amino acid chains that have exploded in popularity thanks to claims they can fight aging and chronic disease. 

The board alleged that Forgotten Formula mailed the peptides to the casino resort hosting RAADFest, marking the package “to the attention of Dr. Kent Holtorf.” That shipment constituted “unlicensed wholesaling of drugs,” according to the board’s citation.

A trustee of Forgotten Formula told ProPublica his association was not present at the festival and did not provide peptides to be offered for public use.

After being injected with peptides at Holtorf’s booth, two women left the conference in ambulances, so ill they had to be intubated to assist them in breathing. They have since recovered. 

The pharmacy board was unable to determine why the women became ill — including whether the injections were contaminated or the women reacted to the peptides themselves. Investigators were unable to test the serums.

“We were not able to obtain the product, although attempts were made,” said David Wuest, the board’s executive secretary.

Although the Food and Drug Administration has approved many peptide-based medications to treat serious diseases such as diabetes and cancer, peptide therapies used for anti-aging and regenerative health are largely unregulated. (Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been a strong proponent of peptides.) The FDA allows compounding pharmacies to dispense some peptides, but has listed 19 of some of the most popular peptides as posing “significant safety risks.” Compounding pharmacies are prohibited from dispensing those on the list. As a result, many unsafe peptides are sold on a booming gray market, including directly to consumers by entities in the U.S. and abroad that are skirting FDA rules.

The injections administered to both women at the Las Vegas convention included at least one peptide that the FDA warns poses a safety risk, according to the pharmacy board’s citations. Kennedy said recently that the FDA plans to reclassify 14 of the peptides currently listed as unsafe, which could allow compounding pharmacies to begin dispensing them. 

Holtorf, who did not respond to repeated attempts to contact him, was fined for practicing in Nevada without a state license. Han Bao Nguyen, the pharmacist accused of mixing the peptides for both women and administering the serums to one of them, also was cited for the same violation. Nguyen works at Holtorf’s practice, according to its website. He did not respond to requests for comment.

Michael McNeal, the “integrative health coach” and director of education at Integrative Peptides, a company founded by Holtorf, was accused of prescribing or recommending a peptide cocktail to one of the women. Wuest said McNeal does not appear to hold any health care licenses. McNeal did not respond to requests for comment.

In July, Holtorf told ProPublica he didn’t believe the peptides caused the women’s illnesses, saying he’d asked an artificial intelligence app to analyze the incident. He wouldn’t share what the app had concluded was the cause. He also apologized for the situation and said he was “reassessing everything we are doing” to keep patients safe.

Wuest said the board notified the California boards that license Holtorf and Nguyen of the fines so they may consider additional discipline. The FDA also has been notified, he said.

Michael Blake Fiveash is co-founder and first trustee of Forgotten Formula, which the board accused of unlicensed wholesaling of pharmaceuticals. He said pharmacy board regulations, while necessary for regulating public commerce, don’t apply to his association because it offers services only to members who have signed a contract. He said such member-to-member activity is protected by the First and 14th amendments. In a letter to ProPublica, he said Holtorf, whose peptide company is listed as a partner on Forgotten Formula’s website, was operating at RAADFest under his public medical practice, not as an association member. Nor were the women who became ill members of the association, Fiveash said.

“Dr. Holtorf’s booth at RAADFest was a public commercial activity,” Fiveash said in a letter. The Forgotten Formula Private Member Association “did not supply materials for public commercial use or public distribution. If Dr. Holtorf utilized any materials in his public professional practice, that would represent his individual choice to apply private member resources to his separate public professional activities, which is beyond FFPMA’s control or responsibility.”

Fiveash did not directly answer questions about whether the association mailed the peptides to Holtorf. He also shared a video of testimonials from Forgotten Formula members, including children and adults, suffering serious illnesses such as cancer, Lyme disease, diabetes and cirrhosis who said they were helped by the association’s products. 

He challenged the premise that the women became ill from the peptides. “Without comprehensive toxicology, full medical histories, and analysis of all substances and treatments administered that day, attributing causation to peptides is speculation masquerading as reporting,” he said. “Any adverse event is concerning, and we hope both patients have fully recovered.”

Laura Tucker, the pharmacy board’s lawyer, said this is the board’s first encounter with a private membership association making such legal claims, but emphasized that mailing drugs to the state without a Nevada license is against state law. She added that any of the parties can appeal their citations to the board.

“Of course anyone is free to make any sort of legal argument they would like to try to make in front of the board,” she said.

The post Nevada Regulators Fine Peptide Providers at Anti-Aging Festival Where Two Women Became Critically Ill appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 05:00

March 13, 2026 — Prof. Thomas Lippert has been named one of the “People to Watch 2026” by the international magazine HPCwire. Each year, the editorial team highlights individuals who are shaping the field of high-performance computing worldwide and are expected to make a significant impact.

Prof. Thomas Lippert, Director of the Jülich Supercomputing Centre. Credit: Forschungszentrum Jülich/Sascha Kreklau.

Thomas Lippert is Director of the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) at Forschungszentrum Jülich. Under his leadership, the JSC became home to Europe’s first exascale supercomputer, capable of performing more than one quintillion calculations per second.

JUPITER is also the most energy-efficient supercomputer in its exascale class worldwide and ranks among the most powerful systems for training large AI models. As such, it represents an important pillar of Europe’s digital and scientific sovereignty.

HPCwire is one of the leading international trade magazines covering high-performance computing (HPC). For Thomas Lippert, this is the third time he has been named to the list, which HPCwire has published annually for the past 24 years. This year, HPCwire honors twelve individuals recognized for their transformative contributions to the impact of artificial intelligence on science and technology.

For more information and an interview with Thomas Lippert, click here.

More from HPCwire


Source: Forschungszentrum Jülich

The post Jülich Supercomputing Centre’s Thomas Lippert Named to HPCwire ‘People to Watch 2026’ List appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 04:41

China’s Five Year Plan commits to economic resilience – as the Iran war exposes the fragility of global supply Expert comment jon.wallace

Beijing is striving for tech self-reliance, aiming to embed intelligent technologies in its economy. But there is a tension in the strategy that could define China’s next decade.

Delegates carry red books as they leave the closing session of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People on 12 March 2026 in Beijing, China.

As China concluded its annual National People’s Congress (NPC) this week, the world beyond Beijing’s Great Hall of the People looks unusually unsettled. War and instability in the Middle East are rattling global energy markets and supply chains. And geopolitical rivalries between China and the United States are sharpening competition over technology, minerals and trade. 

Judging from Chinese Premier Li Qiang’s Government Work Report delivered on 5 March, and the latest executive summary of its Five Year Plan, China’s top leadership is sending a clear signal: economic resilience and technological self-reliance are not temporary responses to pressure but long-term strategic choices.

For Beijing, the logic behind this approach is straightforward. Over the past decade, Chinese policymakers have become increasingly convinced that globalization once the engine of the country’s meteoric growth is becoming a source of vulnerability. 

Conflicts, geopolitical rivalry and the COVID-19 pandemic have exposed the fragility of global supply networks. And intensifying technology restrictions by advanced economies have underscored how dependence on foreign inputs can constrain national development.

The turmoil in the Gulf will only reinforce Beijing’s conviction. Instability in several of the world’s most important energy suppliers illustrates how quickly geopolitical crises can ripple through global markets. For a country like China, which remains the world’s largest energy importer and a central hub in global manufacturing networks, the war is a stark reminder of the risks inherent in overreliance on external conditions beyond its control.

In that sense, the leadership believes its pivot toward resilience was both prescient and necessary. Policies aimed at strengthening domestic supply chains, boosting advanced manufacturing, and investing heavily in strategic technologies from semiconductors and 6G connectivity to artificial intelligence are framed not merely as economic initiatives but as pillars of national security. 

Some published details of the 15th Five Year Plan China’s economic blueprint further underscore this strategic shift. The Plan seemed to offer few surprises and did not catch any global media attention this week. Yet, it showed that Beijing has elevated high-end manufacturing and digital innovation to the centre of its economic agenda. 

The work report states that the Chinese government will increase its overall national research and development spending by around 7 per cent in the next five years compared to the period between 2021 and 2025. And it also proposes to make digital economy industries account for 12.5 per cent of the overall GDP in the following five years.

An intelligent technology economy

China’s government is placing stronger emphasis on fundamental breakthroughs in future industries such as brain-computer interfaces, quantum technology and semiconductor supply chains. Meanwhile policymakers are promoting the ‘AI Plus’ initiative an effort to integrate artificial intelligence across manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, and urbanization. 

The ambition is to move China up the value chain, embed intelligent technologies throughout the real economy and create a more productive and technologically autonomous growth model.

Yet resilience has come with heavy trade-offs. China’s economy is no longer expanding at the rapid pace that defined the previous decades. Indeed China has set its growth target at between 4.5 and 5 per cent. That number will make many advanced economies envious. But it is the lowest target since records were published from the 1990s.

Structural adjustments particularly in the property sector and local government finance have weighed on growth. Policymakers insist that slower but higher-quality growth is preferable to the debt-driven expansion of the past. But for many Chinese households and businesses, the transition has been uneven. Despite all the state and enterprise investments in high-end manufacturing, some business sectors and consumers still feel the chill of economic slowdown.   

Unemployment

Perhaps the most persistent challenge lies in China’s labour market. Youth unemployment, which surged as a result of the pandemic and shrinking service sectors, remains troubling. Can the economy generate opportunities for a highly educated generation entering the workforce? 

Even as official statistics fluctuate and measurement methods evolve, the underlying issue is clear. Millions of young graduates are struggling to find jobs that match their skills and expectations.

The country’s traditional engines of employment real estate, construction, and low-cost manufacturing are no longer expanding at the same pace.

This dilemma highlights the tension within China’s development strategy. On the one hand, the push toward high-tech industries and strategic manufacturing promises long-term competitiveness. On the other, these sectors are capital-intensive and cannot absorb the vast number of graduates produced each year. The country’s traditional engines of employment real estate, construction, and low-cost manufacturing are no longer expanding at the same pace.

Additionally, the latest push to tech self-reliance requires new skillsets in the secondary and tertiary education syllabus. 

Addressing this imbalance will require more than technological breakthroughs. It will demand policies that foster a more dynamic private sector, expand service industries, and encourage entrepreneurship among younger workers. Without such adjustments, the promise of resilience could come at the cost of creating a frustrated generation. 

Within the Plan’s executive summary, there are strong words to support employment generation, including helping skilled labours to acquire basic AI skills. But it is short on detail.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 04:37

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and a constellation of other conservative leaders are the defensive over their ties to President Trump because of his war against Iran.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 04:00

From violent collision contests to celebrity-backed offshoots, spin-off sports are finding captive audiences. Their spectacle masks something more sinister

A few weeks ago a clip went viral of a strange new contact sport emerging from the antipodes. Two burly men, one of them holding a football, sprint at each other on a kind of catwalk, waiting for the bloop-bloop-bloop of an electronic countdown before they launch into their runs. Neither wears any kind of padding or protective gear. Surrounded by baying spectators, the men collide in the middle of the track, making impact through shoulders, knees, hips, stomachs: in most instances, one of the runners is knocked flat on his back or face from the force of the collision, and the other stands tall in triumph. “We are literally getting dumber as a civilization,” noted one of the many comments on the clip on X.

Run Nation Championship, as this new sport is known, launched in Australia last year, and is now holding combines ahead of RNC03, its third instalment. Many of the competing athletes seem, from the early video evidence, as wide as they are tall; the risk of injury – to their limbs, to their heads, to their brains – is obvious. But this is all part of the pitch. Like all new mixed martial arts and contact sports, RNC owes an obvious debt to UFC in the way it’s named, structured, and promoted; like UFC and UFC boss Dana White’s newer sport, Power Slap, in which two opponents face each other across a table and slap the side of each other’s faces as hard as they can until one collapses, Run Nation is not so much a sport as an exploration of the frontier of sporting violence, a macabre social experiment to see how far athletes will push their bodies in the pursuit of victory and money.

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2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-13 04:00

Efforts to apply quantum computing to drug discovery increasingly rely on hybrid workflows that combine classical computing with emerging quantum hardware. Danish quantum software company Kvantify has recently advanced this approach through new funding and research collaborations with Danish universities, following the launch of its Qrunch platform for computational chemistry at SC25 last fall.

Earlier this month Kvantify completed the second close of a €7 million funding round aimed at advancing its hybrid quantum-classical approach to molecular simulation. The financing follows earlier backing, including a $10.8 million seed round announced in 2024, as well as prior support from the European Innovation Council’s Accelerator program and other early funding initiatives that helped the company develop several of its core products. The new funding will support continued development and commercialization of Kvantify’s quantum chemistry software stack.

Alongside its commercial development efforts, Kvantify is also participating in a new research collaboration aimed at improving the usability of quantum computing for drug discovery. The company is part of the ODAQS Project (Optimal Design Automation towards a Performant Quantum Software Stack) led by Aarhus University and supported by Innovation Fund Denmark. The initiative brings together researchers from Aarhus University and Aalborg University to develop software tools that simplify the process of designing and running quantum algorithms for pharmaceutical and chemical applications. A key component of the project focuses on applying advanced learning methods to automate and optimize the development of quantum software.

Credit: Kvantify

“One of the major challenges in quantum software is finding good solutions without using enormous amounts of computational resources,” said Kim Guldstrand Larsen, Professor at Aalborg University. “In ODAQS, we will use reinforcement learning to let software learn how to produce more efficient quantum programs. This makes it possible to make better use of quantum computers, even with the hardware available today.”

Last November, Kvantify introduced Qrunch, a platform intended to help computational chemists build and run hybrid quantum-classical simulations without requiring deep expertise in quantum programming. The platform integrates conventional chemistry methods with hybrid quantum algorithms, allowing researchers to define molecular systems and construct electronic-structure simulations while the software manages the technical complexities of hybrid quantum-classical execution. The platform includes Kvantify’s proprietary algorithms, FAST-VQE, and BEAST-VQE.

Kvantify is also exploring how classical supercomputing resources can support quantum software development. Last year the company became the first dedicated quantum software company to utilize Gefion, Denmark’s national AI supercomputer. Kvantify is using Gefion’s large-scale compute resources to simulate quantum systems and evaluate quantum algorithms. These simulations allow researchers to study quantum chemistry workflows that currently exceed the capabilities of existing quantum hardware.

Building scalable calculations on today’s noisy quantum hardware remains challenging, particularly for the types of molecular simulations required in drug discovery. As a result, much of the near-term progress in quantum computing is occurring in software development, algorithm design and hybrid workflows that combine quantum processors with classical HPC systems. Researchers are exploring ways to make practical use of emerging quantum hardware while relying on classical computing to support the most demanding workloads. Recent demonstrations of Kvantify’s FAST-VQE algorithm on systems approaching 50 qubits suggest that as quantum processors scale, continued advances in hybrid computing and quantum software will be key to enabling more complex chemistry simulations.

The post Kvantify Advances Hybrid Quantum-Classical Software for Drug Discovery appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-13 04:00

Deputy Editor Karl Baker joins “Beyond the Headlines” to mark the beginning of 2026 election season with a discussion about money – specifically how Delaware’s political parties finance their operations.

Two of Karl’s recent articles have taken on the topic through a bipartisan lens: “Longtime court critic quietly funds PAC controlled by House Speaker,” and “Delaware’s GOP projects strength after months of turmoil.” In the podcast, Karl discusses what these two developments say about the state of money in Delaware politics and shares how he tracks these trends. 

The podcast was hosted by Director of Community Engagement David Stradley.

This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

I’m going to start off with two things that you are famous for at Spotlight Delaware. The first is in our editorial meetings – you like to grill our reporters about their nut grafs. Can you share with our listeners what a “nut graf” is, and then give us the nut grafs for these two articles that you wrote? 

Sure. A nut graf is the paragraph within a story, usually up high – sometimes it’s the first line in the story, sometimes not – that encompasses all of the important themes for the story itself. 

So the nut graf for the story about the House Speaker’s PAC is, effectively, that this company and the company’s CEO, who has waged this campaign in Delaware for a decade now – really assailing the state’s court system and judiciary, specifically – gave some money to a new PAC controlled by the House Speaker. It kind of marks how the CEO, his name is Phil Shawe, has shifted his approach from sponsoring these protests and bringing in celebrities to criticize the courts to one where he is getting more directly political and supporting candidates. 

And the GOP story?

It’s a story about how there had been financial turmoil, confusion and disarray with the state GOP’s finances, particularly after the party’s longtime contracted accountant resigned in January. Now the party says they’ve been able to right the ship and are employing a new fundraising strategy. And they say they’re ready for the launch of the 2026 campaign. 

The other thing you are famous for at Spotlight Delaware is that you are considered our in-house expert in campaign finance, and particularly the institutional knowledge of campaign finance in Delaware.

How did you become interested in campaign finance, and why do you think it’s so important to watch carefully in Delaware? 

How did I become interested? I think just over the years you see how interests align behind candidates, and they align behind candidates through donations to their campaigns.

That can tell you where those companies or other interests think those candidates stand on issues, and that will then tell you potentially where those candidates may sit on certain issues. 

With both of these articles you wrote, why report on them now? 

Well, it’s the beginning of campaign season. It’s a little early, but we’re going to have a stretch where we see lots of fundraising initially, and then lots of spending of that money over the summer.

So it’s good to remind people that this is coming. Also, for the first story about the Speaker’s PAC, we had the year-end state campaign finance reports that came in in January. And then for that particular story, it was an amended report that came in in February that tipped us off. That’s the “why now” of that story. 

For the story about the state GOP, we had done one in December. I’ve been following the subsequent developments in their fundraising since then. I determined that the things that had happened particularly since the new year, it was now time for the new story because it was significant enough that the public should know.

When those campaign finance reports come out, what is your process like? What are you looking for? 

So, there are the reports that are filed with the state, and then there are reports that are filed with the federal government through the Federal Elections Commission.

For the state, at the start of the year in January, there’s going to be a lot of year-end reports filed. And so I just kind of look through every day to see which reports are filed on that day. I like to see how much money they raised for the period, how much money they spent, how much money they’re left with.

The money they’re left with is a good indicator of their war chest, as they call it, for the coming campaign. And then maybe most importantly, who made the donations.

Let’s go into this article about the Democratic finances. For anybody who has not read your article, or who has not been following Delaware politics for the last decade, can you tell us a little bit about Phil Shawe, the first funder of Delaware House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown’s Back on Track PAC?

He has a company called TransPerfect that, according to all the reports, makes a lot of money. Forbes did a feature story of Shawe last year, they called him a billionaire. I think they reported that TransPerfect revenues in recent years were nearing a billion dollars. It’s a company that makes money, and therefore Shawe, as the primary owner, makes a lot of money, too.

In 2015, his company was in a high-profile Delaware court case. He and his ex-fiancee were the co-founders of the company and they weren’t getting along. The reports are that boardroom fights at the company were acrimonious, apparently forging on violent, according to reports.

The judge ultimately said, “You guys can’t get along. There’s nothing I could do other than just sell the company off for the good of the employees and the good of your customers.”

Shawe launched this campaign to criticize not only the judge’s order, but also the subsequent custodianship of the company. Shawe saw that as an affront. He saw that as stripping his company away from him, and it effectively was. 

Shawe’s ex-fiancee agreed to sell him her half of the company, so he got his company back. Still, he continued his campaign. He brought in celebrities. Al Sharpton came frequently to Delaware to speak out against the state’s courts, particularly its lack of diversity.

It was this all-encompassing campaign to tell everybody how bad that Shawe thought the Delaware courts were.

Now, this was all done as an outsider campaign until 2024, or really 2023, before the [Delaware] gubernatorial campaign when things shifted. The TransPerfect public relations organization approached, as far as I understand, the leading candidates for governor and said, “Hey, we want to help you guys. Would you help us?’

At the time, I think they were arguing for what they call wheel spin, an arbitrary appointment of judges in cases. That’s what they wanted. And ultimately they threw their support both directly and indirectly behind Matt Meyer – indirectly in the sense that they spent a lot of money attacking his chief opponent, Lieutenant Governor Bethany Hall-Long.

Ultimately, their spending of over a million dollars in that campaign helped propel Matt Meyer to be the governor, which he is now. So that happened. 

And then last year, they announced, “We’re going to do something similar, maybe not as much money, but in the legislative races.” And now we know at least some of what they’re doing.

You quote Shawe’s spokesperson in your article as saying, “We look forward to working with members of the state legislature to build a more equitable and transparent justice system for both individual Delawareans and companies domiciled there.” 

I read that and think, “A more equitable and transparent justice system?” That sounds like a noble aim. For folks who are suspicious of campaign donations, what’s behind that quote? Is there more there? 

It sounds nice. Transparency is good. 

Frankly, I don’t know. And that’s kind of the story. We know that they wanted wheel spin, right? The random selection of judges on cases. But beyond that, I’m not exactly sure what that means policy wise. 

Now, I would say to readers of any publication, when a story says a statement, especially an emailed statement, especially from a spokesman, you should just generally have a higher degree of skepticism of that statement. 

The reporter is not able to have a back and forth when it’s an emailed statement. You’re not able to prod the person making the statement and say, “Hey, what about this? What about that?” There’s these logical holes in your statement.

That should just be understood with any emailed statement from a spokesperson. 

Is it true? Maybe. What does transparency mean for them? I’m not really sure. Cameras in courtrooms, maybe? I don’t know.

You also quote Speaker of the House Melissa Minor-Brown as saying Shawe’s support “doesn’t mean that I’m for sale, or bought and sold.”

Of course that’s the suspicion for any Delawarean about large campaign contributions: how is this going to impact the representative? 

Are those suspicions justified? Has there ever been a documented instance in Delaware of “Donor X makes this large donation. Politician Y then takes this step to implement policy preferred by donor X.” Or is this just our conspiracy minds at work? 

A couple things. I would start by saying, I think that suspicion is reasonable to have. 

To the question of does this mean that, you know, is she bought and sold? I guess that’s her language. I don’t know. Who knows? Probably not, but that’s not really the question. 

I think the question is, the importance of the news, is that this organization that has narrow interests – or any company or organization that has special interests – is aligning behind this candidate whose interests are broad to her district and, as Speaker, to the entire state. So that’s interesting that the special interest group is supporting this particular candidate. 

Now to your question, is there an example? There’s lots of examples of big contributors giving to a candidate who wins and then forms policy that is in the interest of that donor. The question is, was that candidate, was that politician, did they already believe those things and were they supported by that special interest because the donor knew that they believe those things? Or, I think what your question might be, did they switch their opinions? 

I don’t immediately have any examples in the past in Delaware of a politician changing on something immediately after getting a donation.

If I’m a typical small individual who makes a donation to a political campaign, I’m doing that because I believe in that politician. I think that they’re going to implement policies that I agree with. Ideally you would think a special interest would be functioning in the same way, 

Mostly I think that is how it works. They see somebody that they like and they give money to them. 

Now, their interests might be different from yours. You’re an individual, right? They’re “special interests,” whether it’s a company, a union, or any other interest group. But if they donate to a candidate, it’s because they think that candidate is good for them.

If you donate to a candidate, I imagine you think that candidate is good for you and maybe good for the state. So in a sense, it’s not different. The difference is where their interests lie. 

One thing you pointed out was this press release that Shawe’s advocacy group put out celebrating a new Delaware court policy that he was in favor of, and Minor-Brown provided a quote for that press release.

Is that standard practice, a politician providing a quote for an advocacy group’s press release? 

No, it was fairly unusual and particularly unusual with TransPerfect.

And more than that, I think it was four months before that, TransPerfect had announced after their successful support of Matt Meyer, that they were going to support legislative races. At the time, in that previous announcement, we didn’t know which candidates they were going to support. We could guess, but we didn’t know specifically. 

But then four months later, they put out this press release about this change in the court rules and the speaker is quoted there. That told me, “Oh, okay, that’s a strong indication of somebody that they will likely support in the next election or that person’s allies.”

So did seeing that quote in that press release, when you were looking at these campaign finance reports, were you then looking for anything connecting Shawe and Minor-Brown? 

I mean, I was looking at them all. But yes, I mean, when I saw that, I guess I looked for it.

When you’re looking at campaign finance reports, you’re going to look at the most powerful elected officials first. So, if it’s a governor’s race, you’re going to look at those running for governor. You’re also going to look at, with particular interest, those who are donating to the speaker of the house.

So let’s switch to the GOP. Your article on the current state of Delaware Republican Party finances follows up on reporting you did in December highlighting several financial and personnel challenges in the party. Party chair Gene Truono did not comment for your December article, but gave you two lengthy interviews for this article.

Did you have a sense that he was going to be more willing to talk to you as things were looking better for the state GOP? Why do you think he gave you more information for this article? 

I think that’s probably part of it. It’s easier to talk publicly to a reporter when things look a little bit better.

At the time, I’m not sure if they exactly knew what was going on. He has told me since, he told me during those lengthy interviews, that they weren’t really able to be in a lot of communication with their accountant at the time. So they may not really have had good answers.

I think part of it also is, and this is just me putting myself in his head and speculating, but he might’ve seen that it’s actually better for us when we talk to a reporter. 

Broadly, beyond just this story, I think it is better for folks to talk to reporters, even on a story that’s gonna be scrutinizing. Unless they think they’re going to get sued over something. If their comments might be used in a lawsuit, then maybe don’t talk to a reporter. But short of that, I think it’s generally better. 

Your reporting states that the Delaware GOP federal bank account as of February was $19,000 and that they had a similar amount for their state account.

Help the listeners out. Does that amount of money signal that the GOP is ready to field competitive candidates to take on Senator Coons and Representative McBride in national races, and then also try to chip away at Democratic majorities in the state. Is that a healthy amount of money to help them accomplish their aims? 

On its own? If they didn’t raise any more money, then no. But, it shows that they’ve started  raising a little bit of money. And then also what they’re telling me is this is the start of their new fundraising initiative, that they say will go well beyond their current cash on hand.

You are always looking for signs of what’s going to happen in the future, indicators about what’s going to happen in the future. And I think it is an indicator that things might be turning. The ship is slowly steering the other direction,

Will you be looking at the next campaign finance reports to see if that ship is heading in the right direction still? 

Yes. And, I think with the next campaign finance reports, I’m going to look closely at the donors themselves. Are there any big individual donors or groups, not just people but other groups or companies or anything like that. 

In that article about the GOP, you detail some turmoil in the business relationships with their former accountant and also in Truono “unappointing” GOP Executive Director Nick Miles.

How do you write about these issues – and I guess this goes for the Minor-Brown article as well – how do you write those in a way that doesn’t just seem like total political insider intrigue, but makes clear to everyday Delawareans how this impacts them? 

When you report, you get a whole lot of stuff. You just get a lot of notes, a lot of stuff together, and then you have to synthesize that all and try to just figure out how am I going to write this in a way that takes a hundred pages of notes and puts it into a two-page story.

But to answer your question directly, the most important nuggets from your notes, the most important to the public, to the reader, goes at the top of the story. And that is an editorial decision you have to make. And then you try to make it flow and try to make it interesting, so they’ll read to the bottom. 

I made the decision, for example, to put the information about Nick Miles no longer being with the party, or at least no longer being the executive director, at the very bottom of the story. I think it’s interesting, I think it follows up on what we reported in December, but it wasn’t central to this new story.

I thought it should go on the record and have the public know about it, but I made a decision – let’s put it at the bottom. I imagine a whole lot of people who read the story didn’t actually get that far down to even read it. So maybe they’re listening now and they learned.

And that political insider stuff still relates to – I mean, you talk about that over 200,000 Delawareans are registered with the GOP – that insider political stuff still impacts how those folks see their party.

Yes, it impacts how their party operates, especially in the current moment. There is within the GOP, I think, still this tension, maybe it’s resolving, maybe not, between the traditional GOP folks – the Chamber of Commerce type of folks – and the new MAGA coalition.

And so to see who is in leadership in their party can give the members of the party, and just the public generally, an idea of which of those camps the party is more following or is it a mixture.

And then the second part of it too is, you also have a whole lot of people who donate to the party and a lot of them aren’t super wealthy. A lot of them are just kind of regular people. So there is a level of accountability journalism that’s involved there just to tell people this is how they’re spending your money.

The original plan was to publish both of these articles the same day. That didn’t quite happen. But when you and Jake, our editor in chief, were planning the reporting cadence in our newsletter, why did you want these reports to land close to the same time? 

They were coming around the same time anyway. We were thinking, oh, might as well run them on the same day.

In part because I think it demonstrates to the readers that we go after power bases wherever they lie. The plan was to show that, and frankly a little bit of a public relations for Spotlight Delaware showing people that we’re scrutinizing the Republicans and we’re also scrutinizing maybe the second most powerful Democrat.

Big picture final question here. You’ve said that both of these articles really kind of marked the launch of campaign season. What are the big themes that you are looking for now that this campaign season is starting off, with finance and otherwise? 

So starting with the Democrats  in Dover, you have I think three camps that have emerged, if not more. 

You have the establishment Democrats. They may bristle at that description, but I’m just going to call them that for lack of a better term. You have the more leftist Democrats, the progressive Democrats. And then you have the governor’s office. You have Governor Matt Meyer.

Who aligns with who and who supports who is still a little squishy. But I think as this campaign moves forward, when we look at additional campaign finance reports, when we look at what people are saying, it’ll give us more clarity about what that means for who’s going to support who.

As the election moves forward, the campaigns move forward, I’m going to keep an eye to see whether the governor involves himself in any of these local legislative elections.He probably won’t, but I’d be curious to see if he does.

And then for the Republican side, it seems like we always state that this is a super important election for everybody, but this one will be for them. They can either win a few seats which could then maybe eliminate the Democrats super majority, at least in one of the House. There’s different kinds of super majorities in Delaware. Or they can lose a couple seats and the Democrats super majority could increase to allow them to pass constitutional amendments without any Republican votes. 

So they could either move into a little bit more relevance, because they’re on the fringes now. Or they can move farther into the periphery and become somewhat of an afterthought in Delaware politics. 

So that’s what these elections might tell us – first primary then in general.

Thank you for keeping us up to date on campaign finance. As you’ve noted, there’s going to be plenty more to talk about as we head towards November.

Thanks, David. Appreciate it.

The post ‘Beyond the Headlines’ podcast: Campaign finance ahead of 2026 Delaware midterm elections appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 03:35

University of Cambridge study finds AI-powered toys can misread emotions and respond inappropriately to children

It was all going well. Charlotte, five, was chatting with an AI soft toy called Gabbo at a London play centre about her family, her drawing of a heart to represent them and what makes her happy. She even offered a couple of kisses to the £80 toy with a face like a computer screen.

It was when she declared: “Gabbo, I love you”, that the fluent conversation came to an abrupt halt.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 03:00

A witness in a London High Court case was caught using smart glasses connected to his phone to receive real-time coaching while giving evidence during cross-examination. "In my judgement, from what occurred in court, it is clear that call was made, connected to his smart glasses, and continued during his evidence until his mobile phone was removed from him," said Judge Raquel Agnello KC. "Not only have I held that Jakstys was untruthful in denying his use of the smart glasses and his calls to abra kadabra, but the effect of this is that his evidence is unreliable and untruthful." The BBC reports: The claim arose during a ruling by Judge Raquel Agnello KC in a case brought by Laimonas Jakstys over the directorship of a property development company that owns a flat in south-east London and land in Tonbridge. Jakstys was told to remove the glasses after the court noticed he "seemed to pause quite a bit" before answering questions, and that "interference" was heard coming from around the witness. The judge later found that he had been "assisted or coached in his replies to questions put to him during cross examination" during the January trial. Once the glasses were taken off, an interpreter was still translating a question when Jakstys' mobile phone began broadcasting a voice -- which he later blamed on Chat GPT. Agnello said: "There was clearly someone on the mobile phone talking to Jakstys. He then removed his mobile phone from his inner jacket pocket." He denied using the smart glasses to receive answers, and denied they were connected to his phone. But the judge said multiple calls had been made from his phone to a contact named "abra kadabra," whom he claimed was a taxi driver.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 02:54

Is there a collection of modding-guides somewhere?
I need a new battery for my Pint X (Based in Europe) but I'm kind of overwhelmed by the options. Some info seems outdated.
Even the stock battery is hard to get in Europe and feels a bit pricey.
Then there are options that almost coast as much as a new board, like getting the PintV Power Kit + Battery. Is there a middle ground?

submitted by /u/GoatVsOctopus
[link] [comments]

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 02:00

Robert Habeck says world has moved on from weaponising energy to using tariffs, technology and more to inflict harm

The weaponisation of energy when Russia invaded Ukraine has given way to “weaponising everything” since Donald Trump returned to the White House, Germany’s former economy minister has said.

Robert Habeck, the Green politician responsible for keeping the lights on during the last energy crisis, said the belief gas “would never be a political weapon” led successive German governments blindly into Putin’s trap by building the Nord Stream pipelines and selling strategic reserves to Gazprom, which Russia emptied before the invasion.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 00:32

The Trump administration has launched investigations into dozens of countries accused of failing to crack down on forced labor, flexing a law that lets the federal government impose tariffs.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 00:30

Trump claims US makes ‘a lot of money’ when oil prices go up, but rising costs could become political liability – key US politics stories from 12 March

Donald Trump on Thursday shrugged off the economic toll the war in Iran is taking on gas prices across the US, writing on social media that “when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money”.

The president’s comment came as the American Automobile Association reports that the average price for a gallon of gas hit $3.60, a week after the beginning of the US-Israel military operation against Iran prompted the largest price spike since the opening days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 00:00

How America and Israel solved Iran’s succession problem.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 00:00

The region’s divisions helped precipitate U.S. intervention.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-13 00:00

In the strait, Iran holds the advantage—and America has no good options.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 23:37

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 13.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 23:30

joshuark shares a report from Reuters: Microsoft has filed an amicus brief on Tuesday in support of Anthropic's lawsuit asking the court to temporarily block the U.S. Department of Defense designation of the AI startup as a supply-chain risk. In an amicus brief filing in a federal court in San Francisco, Microsoft backed Anthropic's request for a temporary restraining order against the Pentagon order, arguing that its determination should be paused while the court considers the case. Microsoft, which integrates the AI lab's products and services into technology it provides to the U.S. military, said that it was directly impacted by the DOD designation. "Should this action proceed without the entry of a temporary restraining order, Microsoft and other government contractors with expertise in developing solutions to support U.S. government missions will be forced to account for a new risk in their business planning," the company said. Microsoft's filing argued the TRO is needed to prevent costly disruptions for suppliers, who would otherwise have to rapidly rebuild offerings that rely on Anthropic's products. The judge overseeing the case must approve Microsoft's request to file the brief before it is officially entered, but courts often permit outside parties to weigh in on important cases.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:49

NASA's huge Space Launch System rocket has been repaired and is ready for rollout back to the launch pad next week.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:47

But be prepared with something to hold all those screws.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:47

Officials praised the "brave" actions of ROTC students who confronted a gunman Thursday after he opened fire in a classroom​ on the campus of Old Dominion University, killing one person and injuring two others.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:42

In China, one social media trend hangs on the idea that a life in the US is always one step from disaster, while another in the US has gen Z revelling in Chinese lifestyle hacks

Across two online worlds that are normally splintered, over the last few months there has been a mirroring of sorts. On TikTok and Instagram, young people are diving into the joys of Chinese culture – from drinking hot water to playing mahjong – all under the banner of “Chinamaxxing”. On the Chinese internet, however, the US is losing its decades-long grip on soft power, and is instead being replaced by a darker trend: the kill line.

The kill line is a dangerous place to be. In gaming, the term refers to the point at which a player’s strength is so depleted that one more blow could lead to total wipeout. In China, the term refers to the risks that come with daily life in the US.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:32

This blog has now closed – our live coverage of the Middle East crisis continues here

An Iranian source is denying the country will allow India-flagged tankers to pass through the vital strait of Hormuz, Reuters is reporting.

The news agency a little earlier quoted an Indian source as saying Iran would in fact allow such tankers to pass through the strait, a key artery for global oil trade.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:19

Cuba's government says it will release 51 people from prisons, in an unexpected move that comes as the Trump administration puts immense pressure on the country.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 22:02

This blog is now closed. Read the latest here

US defense officials told senators on the armed services committee that the cost of the war on Iran totaled more than $11.3bn in the first six days alone, according to multiple reports.

The New York Times was first to break the news about the conflict’s price tag, citing three people familiar with the closed-door briefing on Tuesday.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 21:12

The dating app says it will launch "chapter-based profiles" and a personal dating assistant.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 20:45

Meta and YouTube accused of creating harmful products in trial seen as a bellwether for attitudes towards social media

The first-ever jury trial over the potential harms of social media wrapped up on Thursday. Lawyers for Meta and YouTube have argued their platforms are safe for the vast majority of young people, while lawyers for a young woman at the center of the case say the tech companies have designed their products to be addictive, leading to mental health issues in children and teens.

“How did they become such behemoths?” Mark Lanier, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said during closing arguments in Los Angeles superior court on Thursday, according to NBC. “It’s the attention economy. They’re making money off capturing your attention.”

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 20:25

A string of tornadoes touched down in multiple states as severe weather stretched from Texas to Michigan.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 21:48

Suspect who was convicted in 2016 for supporting Islamic State is dead after attack kills one and leaves two injured

The suspect who killed one person and injured two others at Old Dominion University on Thursday was identified by authorities as Mohamed Jalloh, a former member of the army national guard who pleaded guilty in 2016 to attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State.

Dominique Evans, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Norfolk field office, told reporters the suspect had attempted to commit an “act of terrorism” and shouted “Allahu Akbar” before opening fire. He was subdued and killed by members of the university’s ROTC program in a university classroom, she said, praising them for demonstrating “extreme bravery and courage” and preventing further loss of life. (ROTC is a college-based program that allows students to train to become a US military officer while also earning a college degree.)

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 20:04

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-13 05:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 13, No. 740.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-13 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 13, No. 1,728.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-13 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 13, No. 1,006.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 21:14

An Iranian vessel sailed too close to the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier, and the U.S. fired at the vessel, according to two U.S. officials.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 19:39

For one week, three New Jersey high schoolers agreed not to take their phones to bed, and to try different tools to reduce screen time.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 19:34

No serious casualties among those at Temple Israel, and explosives reportedly found in suspect’s vehicle

A man who rammed his vehicle into a Michigan synagogue and drove through a hallway on Thursday died during the incident, officials said.

There were no other serious casualties at the Temple Israel in West Bloomfield township, a suburb in Oakland county, and the FBI said it was treating the matter as a “targeted act of violence against the Jewish community”. It was not immediately clear how the driver died, but officials said security staff engaged the suspect and at least one fired shots.

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 19:28

Blake Miguez, 44, not criminally charged over allegation reported to local police but never disclosed to public

A Louisiana congressional candidate endorsed by Donald Trump was the subject of a 2007 rape accusation that was reported to local law enforcement the same day of the alleged assault – but never disclosed to the public or, reportedly, the president’s team as he became one of the rising stars in the state’s Republican party.

That has raised concerns within the White House that Blake Miguez “either wasn’t fully vetted or wasn’t forthcoming about discoverable documents from his past” before securing Trump’s backing, the Atlantic reported on Wednesday, citing two unnamed sources familiar with the endorsement process.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 19:28

March 12, 2026 — Most materials, especially metals and ceramics, are crystals. Their atoms are arranged in three-dimensional lattices that repeat the same exact pattern, over and over again. But there’s a well-known saying in materials science: “Crystals are like people. It is the defects that tend to make them interesting.”

A grain boundary defect with two phases (green and orange) in a tungsten crystal (blue) at 1848 degrees Kelvin. A new model gradually adds and removes atoms to calculate material structure and properties that were previously impossible to obtain. Graphic: Dan Herchek/LLNL.

In a new study, published in Physical Review Letters, researchers from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) created a new model for crystal defects at realistic temperatures. The simulation technique overcomes long-standing challenges in the field to calculate material structure and properties that were previously impossible to obtain. The result points the way toward improved production and performance of materials.

The work focused on two types of defects: point defects and grain boundaries. Point defects arise when atoms are missing in the lattice or when extra atoms are wedged in between the regular structure. Grain boundaries occur where two crystals with different orientations meet. Imagine the latter defect like a patchwork quilt where multiple pieces of fabric are stitched together at the seams.

“Cracks often find it easier to grow along grain boundaries, which can cause materials to fracture,” said author and LLNL postdoctoral researcher Flynn Walsh. “This is just one example of how defects affect the properties of materials ranging from protective walls in fusion energy plants to the magnets that power most electric motors.”

To improve technology based on these materials, researchers need to understand what’s happening to the crystal structure in complex defects like grain boundaries. While it is technically possible to image these defects, the associated experiments are very difficult. Modeling, therefore, is critical.

The new simulation technique advances the field with a simple but powerful idea: It allows atoms to come and go from the simulation. In a real-world defect, nature adjusts by moving atoms around until it finds a stable state. The team wanted to replicate that phenomenon.

“The conventional way to perform these simulations is to directly add and remove atoms, but this doesn’t work in solid crystals because the energy barriers are too high,” said Walsh. “Our approach is instead based on gradually adding and removing atoms. The basic idea is simple but doing it efficiently and correctly was surprisingly difficult.”

Instead of abruptly shoving an atom through a packed crowd of its fellows, the model softly pushes or pulls it into place.

“For the first time, this new technique opens the door to predicting grain boundary structures and phase transitions at finite temperatures,” said Timofey Frolov, LLNL scientist and principal investigator on the project. “This enables more accurate modeling of materials used in extreme environments such as fusion reactors.”

The method is more computationally demanding than traditional approaches and greatly benefited from LLNL’s supercomputing resources. But Walsh emphasized that the most important factor in its success was the research environment at the Laboratory. Much like defects make crystals interesting, the people involved (and their unique quirks and expertise) made this project possible.

“I was able to think deeply about this problem for a year and half with the guidance of experts in different areas of physics and materials science,” Walsh said.

Other LLNL authors included Babak Sadigh and Joseph McKeown. The work was funded by Frolov’s Department of Energy early career project and McKeown’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development Strategic Initiative. The LLNL Institutional Computing Grand Challenge provided computational resources.


Source: Ashley Piccone, LLNL

The post LLNL Researchers Develop Technique to Simulate Crystal Defects in Complex Materials appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 19:00

BrianFagioli writes: Google says it will finally release Chrome for ARM64 Linux in the second quarter of 2026, bringing the company's full browser to a platform that has existed for years without official support. Until now, Linux users running Arm hardware have largely relied on Chromium builds or unofficial packages if they wanted something close to Chrome. Google says the new build will include the same features found on other platforms, including Google account syncing, Chrome Web Store extensions, built-in translation, Safe Browsing protections, and Google Password Manager. The timing reflects how ARM hardware is becoming more common across the Linux ecosystem, from developer laptops to AI systems. Google also pointed to NVIDIA's DGX Spark, a compact AI supercomputing device built on the Grace Blackwell architecture, which will support installing Chrome through NVIDIA's package management tools. For many Linux users, the announcement feels like a "finally" moment, as ARM64 Linux systems have been widespread for years despite the absence of an official Chrome build.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 18:49

Slapping a 2.0 version number on plans makes them sound new, but what's actually changed? Let's check the details.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 18:19

The federal observer program sends neutral observers to monitor election sites to ensure voters don't experience discrimination at the polls.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 18:16

The new Sassy style is adults-only with a bit of profanity and a double dose of cringe.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 18:01

The war is expanding into Lebanon, as an Israeli offensive to dismantle Hezbollah has displaced 800,000 people there, with more than 680 people killed.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 18:00

Shantanu Narayen announced he will step down as CEO of Adobe once a successor is appointed, ending an 18-year tenure during which he transformed the company from boxed software to the Creative Cloud subscription model. Narayen said he will remain board chair as Adobe continues pushing into generative AI products. CNBC reports: Narayen joined Adobe in 1988 as a vice president and general manager, and he became CEO in 2007. Under Narayen, Adobe pushed from software licenses to subscriptions to its Creative Cloud application bundle, and the company is now working to expand through generative artificial intelligence. He sought to acquire fast-growing design software company Figma, but regulators pushed back, and the companies called off the deal, resulting in Adobe paying Figma a $1 billion breakup fee. [...] Narayen, 62, is lead independent director of Pfizer in addition to his responsibilities at Adobe, where he received $51 million in total compensation for the 2025 fiscal year, according to a filing. He owns $118 million in Adobe shares, according to FactSet. [...] On Narayen's watch, Adobe's stock jumped more than sixfold, while the S&P 500 is up about 350% over that stretch. "What attracted me to Adobe 28 years ago was our leadership in creating new market categories, world-class products, a relentless desire to innovate in every functional area of the company and the people I met during the interview process," Narayen wrote. "We have continued to create new markets, deliver world-class products, drive innovation in everything we do and attract and retain the best and brightest employees."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 17:34

Dyson first ever wet and dry robot vacuum is out, and I got to get an early look at it at the Dyson Soho Store.

2026-03-12 20:04
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The leading pro-Israel lobbying group has kept quiet on the race for an open Senate seat in Illinois while pouring its largest investments this cycle into the state’s high-profile House primaries, leaving observers to wonder whether it would really sit out the Senate contest.

But for the top of the ticket in Tuesday’s Democratic primary, more than two dozen donors to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee are quietly backing Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, The Intercept has found. 

At least 27 AIPAC donors have given to Stratton’s campaign to replace retiring Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., according to an analysis of federal campaign data. A former AIPAC president, Lee Rosenberg, is on her finance committee.

While public opinion sours on AIPAC’s brand, the group is backing a multimillion-dollar ad campaign run through other committees with palatable names like “Elect Chicago Women” in at least four Democratic House primaries. Its donors, meanwhile, have been funneling money to its preferred Illinois House candidates. The group has kept an even lower profile in the Senate race, where it’s been less clear how, if at all, the pro-Israel lobby is engaging.

Related

AIPAC Head Hosts Fundraiser for House Candidate Who Swears AIPAC Isn’t Backing Her

Neither of the top contenders for the safe Democratic seat have suggested they would champion the Palestinian cause if elected to the Senate. Both Stratton and Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, her leading opponent, have declined to call Israel’s destruction in Gaza a genocide or commit to stopping U.S. weapons transfers to Israel, and at least one of Stratton’s pro-Israel donors also gave to Krishnamoorthi’s campaign. AIPAC endorsed Krishnamoorthi, who has received more than $250,000 from the pro-Israel lobby during his decade in Congress, for his 2024 reelection.

Both are running to the right of Rep. Robin Kelly, a relatively progressive Illinois congresswoman currently in a distant third, but even she staked out a more critical position on Israel upon entering the race and has taken some pro-Israel money while in office, much of it from the centrist group J Street.

AIPAC donors have given more than $70,000 to Stratton’s campaign since August, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission — out of just over $4 million she’s raised in total. The 27 donors have collectively given just under $5 million to AIPAC, its super PAC United Democracy Project, and the group Democratic Majority for Israel, which has close ties to AIPAC. Only two of them live in Illinois.

Rosenberg, the former AIPAC president on Stratton’s finance committee, is a leading Democratic strategist in Illinois, longtime adviser to Gov. JB Pritzker, and former adviser to Barack Obama.

In response to questions from The Intercept, a Stratton campaign spokesperson said that AIPAC had not endorsed the lieutenant governor and was not spending in the Senate race. The spokesperson said Stratton has more than 28,000 individual donors and supports a two-state solution for peace between Israel and Palestine.

In the final days ahead of Tuesday’s primary, Stratton has begun to catch up in the polls to Krishnamoorthi, who has largely outperformed his Democratic opponents in fundraising and public opinion surveys. The two candidates’ allies and critics have pointed fingers over fundraising, accusing the other of drawing support from corporate donors.

Krishnamoorthi’s $30 million fundraising haul is supplied in part by a crypto PAC, donors to President Donald Trump, and Palantir’s chief technology officer, among others, the Chicago Tribune reported on Tuesday. Stratton, meanwhile, has said she’s not taking corporate PAC money and hit Krishnamoorthi’s campaign for accepting support from a “MAGA-backed crypto PAC,” but her opponents have also criticized her Senate campaign for still benefiting from corporate donors that fund PACs backing her.

Democrats in Illinois have criticized AIPAC’s efforts to elect pro-Israel Democrats in deep-blue seats in and around Chicago. Pritzker, one of Stratton’s top surrogates and funders (and her boss), is a former AIPAC donor who cut ties with the group and has since denounced it as a “pro-Trump organization” and “significantly MAGA-influenced.”

Related

AIPAC Is Flooding Illinois With Cash. Pro-Palestine Groups Are Backing Kat Abughazaleh.

Pro-Israel spending “is a moral issue,” said former Rep. Marie Newman, an Illinois Democrat who was ousted from Congress in 2022 after pro-Israel groups spent against her. “AIPAC must be stopped if you believe in democracy.” 

Stratton, who took a trip to Israel in 2019 to meet with an opposition leader, as Politico reported, has been critical of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel’s destruction in Gaza. She has not said whether she would support legislation blocking U.S. weapons to Israel

Criticizing Netanyahu is at odds with taking support from AIPAC and its donors, Newman said.

“AIPAC vigorously supports Netanyahu, a right-wing dictator, best friend to Trump and his authoritarian inhumane government,” Newman told The Intercept. “Israel’s right-wing government has dragged us into multiple unnecessary wars, helped ruin the US’ reputation in the world and is committing genocide.”

While Krishnamoorthi holds the advantage in polling and fundraising, it’s not clear who will win on Tuesday as dueling PACs fight it out in the final days of the race. Another group that has run ads in support of Krishnamoorthi recently launched ads backing Kelly in an apparent effort to peel votes away from Stratton. Kelly, who has raised $3 million, has struggled to keep pace in the polls with Krishnamoorthi and Stratton, and their backers have labeled her a spoiler.

Kelly’s campaign argues that she’s the most principled of the three candidates, particularly on Israel and Gaza.

“Robin pledged not to accept contributions from AIPAC after deciding to sign onto the Block the Bombs bill and meeting with doctors who volunteered on the front lines in Gaza,” her campaign spokesperson Joe Bowen told The Intercept. “She is the only candidate who has pledged not to take their money, the only candidate to support Block the Bombs and the only candidate to call the genocide in Gaza what it is.”

Kelly, who has hit both Krishnamoorthi and Stratton for stopping short of calling Israel’s destruction in Gaza a genocide, adopted that stance shortly before she launched her Senate campaign. Previously endorsed by J Street, she received $14,000 from AIPAC in 2025 and took an AIPAC trip to Israel in 2016. Kelly, now the only major candidate in the race to reject AIPAC support, has said the contributions were from individual donors who gave through AIPAC’s portal. 

The post AIPAC Is Staying Out of Illinois Senate Race — But Its Donors Back Juliana Stratton appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-13 20:04
2026-03-12 17:20

Two deportees sent to Eswatini were from Somalia, one was from Sudan and another was from Tanzania

The government of Eswatini announced on Thursday it received four more “third country” deportees from the United States, as part of the Trump administration’s multimillion-dollar deal with the small African nation.

Now a total of 19 deportees from the US have been sent to Eswatini even as they hail from other countries, amid the Trump administration’s continued anti-immigrant crackdown and changes to immigration policy.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 17:11

US already spent more than $11.3bn in first six days of conflict, but price tag does not include all spending

Pentagon officials told top lawmakers in a closed-door briefing on Tuesday that the cost of the war against Iran has already exceeded $11.3bn in its first six days, but the true cost of the opening days of the conflict is likely far greater, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The estimate, presented during a classified briefing on Capitol Hill, appeared largely limited to munitions expenditures and does not capture the full cost of the opening days of the conflict, one person familiar with the matter told the Guardian. Additional costs to consider include the deployment of forces to the region, medical expenses and the replacement of military aircraft lost in war.

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2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-12 17:02

Federal agents raiding the home of two alleged antifa “operatives” seized a telling piece of evidence, a defense attorney said during closing arguments in a landmark trial Wednesday.

A printing press.

That printing press was never presented to jurors. Still, the government has kept it locked away because it hated the pamphlets and zines it published, lawyer Blake Burns said.

Burns represents Elizabeth Soto, one of nine defendants whose fates were in the hands of jurors as deliberations began Thursday. All are accused of roles during or after a late-night noise demonstration outside Prairieland Detention Center, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility near Dallas that ended with a local police officer wounded by gunfire.

The case has become a bellwether for the Trump administration’s crackdown on dissent from the left. The government charged people involved with the anti-ICE protest with a slew of charges, including attempted murder and terrorism counts that defense attorneys said are being used to criminalize protest.

“They’re here asking you guys to put protesters in prison as terrorists.”

“They’re here asking you guys to put protesters in prison as terrorists,” Burns, the defense lawyer, told jurors. “That’s not happened before. And you are literally the only people in the world who can stop it.”

During 10 days of testimony in a packed Fort Worth, Texas, courtroom, prosecutors bombarded jurors with images of radical zines printed on the press, anti-government internet memes, drawings of burning cop cars, and a video of an unidentified street brawl between far-left and far-right protesters.

Prosecutors acknowledged those materials were protected by the First Amendment but said they showed the roughly dozen people who assembled outside the ICE facility were steeped in antifa tactics.

Eight of nine defendants on trial this month face material support for terrorism charges for wearing “black bloc” clothes at the protest. Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel have hailed the first-ever use of terrorism charges against alleged antifa members.

Defense attorneys argued Wednesday that prosecutors had wildly overcharged a case that should have centered on the alleged shooter, Benjamin Song, instead of the larger group.

Guilt by Zine

Prosecutors presented much of the evidence that might be expected at an attempted murder trial: ballistics and fingerprint experts, eyewitness police officers, and cooperating witnesses.

They also presented lengthy testimony about radical pamphlets and artwork collected from the defendants arrested that night or in raids during the following days.

Despite labeling the defendants “a North Texas antifa cell” in their indictment, prosecutors have acknowledged that they were at most a loose-knit collection of people from the Dallas–Fort Worth’s small leftist scene of anarchists and socialists.

Two of the scene’s fixtures were Elizabeth and Ines Soto, a married couple who operated the printing press and helped run a local reading group called the Emma Goldman Book Club, named for the early 20th-century anarchist revolutionary.

At one point during testimony Tuesday, a prosecutor spent more than half an hour scrolling through a Twitter account allegedly operated by the Sotos. The Twitter feed included a retweet of a December 2016 post with the words “How to handle fash in your hood” that included a shaky video of a street fight between protesters accompanied by the Flatbush Zombies song “Death 2.”

“I crack your fucking skull and use that as a bowl for cereal. I’m so serial. Ted Bundy, give me money, Son of Sam, gun in hand. Jeffrey Dahmer, with two llamas,” the jury heard in the song’s lyrics.

Defense attorneys objected to the introduction of the video as evidence.

“Yes, it is prejudicial,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Shawn Smith told the judge in defense of using the video. “The whole reason we’re putting it into evidence is because it’s prejudicial.”

Though U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, a Donald Trump appointee, allowed the Twitter feed to be presented in court, prosecutors could not definitively establish whether the Sotos had posted the video or what incident it depicted.

The Sotos, however, have not disputed that they were key members of the reading group. In his closing argument, Smith said the group was a front to recruit new antifa members.

“Emma Goldman Book Club,” Smith said. “It sounds very innocuous. It’s camouflage for what it is.”

“Your Body as Camouflage”

To help jurors interpret the book club’s readings and other materials, prosecutors presented a researcher at a far-right think tank as an expert.

Kyle Shideler of the Center for Security Policy once focused his research on the Muslim Brotherhood. After the 2020 George Floyd protests raged, he wrote a book about “black identity extremists.” In recent years he has focused on another right-wing boogeyman: antifa.

Shideler said Monday that he helped write the definition of “antifa” included in the government’s indictment. He walked that testimony back Tuesday, saying that he only conferred on a draft.

Related

Islamophobic Think Tank Helped Write Indictment Against ICE Protesters

Prosecutors also had Shideler read Trump’s September 22 executive order purporting to designate antifa as a domestic terrorist organization, in an apparent attempt to suggest that the language was borrowed from the order.

Shideler described what he said were common tactics of antifa, including using the messaging app Signal — which Shideler said he also used — and wearing “black bloc” clothes to obscure identities. The phrase refers to instances where groups of left-wing demonstrators dress in all black to make them less individually identifiable.

The point of that testimony came into focus during the prosecution’s closing arguments. Using Signal and wearing black-bloc clothing were “tactics that assisted in the ambush of a cop,” said Smith.

“Material support. It sounds — I don’t know — nefarious. Complicated. It’s actually very simple,” Smith said.

He said that wearing black clothes at the noise demonstration would be enough to convict the eight defendants accused of material support.

“Providing your body as camouflage for others to do the enumerated acts is providing support,” he said. “It’s impossible to tell who is doing what. That’s the point.”

Related

How Many Members Does Antifa Have? Where Is Its Headquarters? The FBI Has No Answers.

The government used Shideler and the antifa talk to try to distract jurors from the defendants’ actual actions on the night of July 4, said MarQuetta Clayton, an attorney for defendant Maricela Rueda. She also warned that the trial served as a larger proving ground for the government’s attempts to criminalize antifa.

“The government’s expert on antifa said his career may be boosted by the outcome of this case,” she said. “This is an experiment for them. But this courtroom is not a laboratory, and Maricela is not a lab rat.”

Charged for Carrying a Box

Rueda’s husband, Daniel Sanchez Estrada, is the only defendant on trial who is not accused of participating in the July 4 protest. Instead, prosecutors have charged him and his wife with conspiring to obstruct justice by moving a box of zines out of Rueda’s house after her arrest.

Free speech advocates say that Estrada’s arrest sets a dangerous precedent that criminalizes the mere possession of anti-government material.

“He is on trial for two things: Carrying a box, and conspiracy to carry a box.”

“He is on trial for two things,” said Sanchez’s public defender, Christopher Weinbel. “Carrying a box, and conspiracy to carry a box, of which they try to call evidence.”

Weinbel said the box contained Sanchez’s own possessions, the timeline of his movements disproved the theory that he was acting at the direction of his wife, and that a government agent had also testified that none of the materials were used in the investigation.

Smith, the prosecutor, argued that moving the boxes was part of a larger cover-up in the hours and days after the demonstration.

“What is important to the group is hiding their material,” he said. “This anarchist, insurrectionist, hating-the-government material.”

Song and the Rest

Defense attorneys chose their words carefully when it came to Song, the person accused of shooting an AR-15 rifle at two detention center guards and the Alvarado, Texas, police officer who was hit.

None of the defense lawyers overtly blamed Song for the bloodshed, but several suggested that the government should have distinguished between Song and the rest of the protesters.

“This should have been a three-day attempted murder trial of one person,” Weinbel said.

Prosecutors painted Song as the ringleader that night. Still, they argued that four defendants who are also on trial for attempted murder — Song, Rueda, Autumn Hill, and Megan Morris — could have reasonably foreseen that Song would use violence based on conversations before the demonstration.

The eight defendants who face material support charges gave aid to the attack by wearing black clothes, prosecutors allege. They include the defendants accused of attempted murder along with the Sotos, Savanna Batten, and Zachary Evetts.

Song’s attorney, Phillip Hayes, said during his closing argument that Song was only trying to shoot “suppressive” fire at the ground after police arrived on the scene. Hayes suggested that a ricocheting bullet wounded the officer.

The post Wearing All Black at Protests Makes You Guilty of Terrorism, Prosecutors Tell Jury appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 17:00

Apple's new MacBook Neo is "easier to repair than other modern MacBooks," according to Ars Technica's Andrew Cunningham. It introduces a more repairable internal design that makes components like the battery and keyboard easier and cheaper to replace. An anonymous reader quotes an excerpt from the report: Replacements for pretty much any component in the Neo are simpler and involve fewer steps and tools than in the M5 MacBook Air. That includes the battery, which in the MacBook Air is attached to the chassis with multiple screws and adhesive strips but which in the Neo comes out relatively easily after you get some shielding and flex cables out of the way. But the most significant change in the Neo is that the keyboard is its own separate component. For essentially all modern MacBooks, going back at least as far as the late-2000s unibody aluminum MacBook designs, the keyboard has been integrated into the top part of the laptop case and is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to replace independently. [...] Apple hasn't yet listed MacBook Neo components in its parts store, but based on the repair prices it has announced, Neo components should cost quite a bit less than those for higher-end MacBooks. An out-of-warranty battery replacement for the Neo will cost $149, down from $199 for current Airs and $229 for current MacBook Pros; fixing accidental screen or external enclosure damage will cost AppleCare+ subscribers $49 for a Neo, down from $99 for other MacBooks.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:54

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 536 for Friday, March 13.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:49

The FBI found only 38 non-citizens may have voted in the 2020 presidential election in the inquiry ordered by Sigal Chattah, Nevada's top federal prosecutor.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:47

Jeff Blair, 55, who was attacked while on duty in Shildon, died in hospital after sustaining serious injuries

A man has been charged with the murder of a court bailiff who was attacked while he was at work.

Jeff Blair, 55, died in hospital after he sustained serious injuries while on duty in Shildon, County Durham on Tuesday.

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:45
Massive 7 stair stomped🤘🏻

One wheel gives you wings (if you send it)

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 16:31

Even people with six-figure incomes are making financial sacrifices to pay for medical care, a new study finds.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:29

Angela Lipps spent nearly six months in jail after AI software linked her to a North Dakota bank fraud case

A Tennessee grandmother says she is trying to rebuild her life after an incident of mistaken identity by an artificial intelligence (AI) facial recognition system tied her to a North Dakota bank fraud investigation.

Angela Lipps, 50, spent nearly six months in jail after Fargo police identified her as a suspect in an organized bank fraud case using facial recognition software, according to south-east North Dakota news outlet InForum. Lipps told the outlet she had never been to North Dakota and did not commit the crimes.

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:21

Multiple law enforcement agencies responded on Thursday afternoon to reports in Michigan of a shooter at a synagogue in a Detroit suburb after a driver crashed a vehicle into the building and shots were fired. Michael Bouchard, the Oakland county sheriff, confirmed the attacker had died and that one security officer had been taken to hospital

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:14
Is it time for a new tire yet?

Well.. 835 miles later. What should I get fam?

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:14

Energy prices won't ease up until the Strait of Hormuz is secure, experts say. Here's what it will take to get the oil flowing again.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-12 16:05

Is the U.S. at “war” with Iran? Americans are getting conflicting messages from the Trump administration and congressional leaders.

“We are not at war. We have no intention of being at war,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said at a press conference on March 5, hours after Republicans in the House blocked a war powers resolution that would have required congressional approval for any further military action against Iran. Instead, Johnson called the military action a “limited operation.”

But in remarks to reporters on March 7 — and on other occasions — “war” is exactly how President Donald Trump has described it.

“We’re winning the war by a lot,” Trump told reporters on March 7. “The war itself is going unbelievably. It’s as good as it can be.”

While there are varying definitions of war even among academics who study such things, the war-or-not political debate is mostly about the legal definition of war according to the Constitution, and the implications that come with such a designation.

While Article II of the U.S. Constitution designates the president as “Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy,” Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress — and only Congress — the power “To declare War.” In other words, the president is obligated to seek authorization from Congress before he initiates a war.

But Congress hasn’t formally declared a war since World War II. And it didn’t happen with the military attack initiated by Trump in Iran. Rather, in accordance with the 1973 War Powers Resolution, Trump provided a report to Congress on March 2 about the administration’s justification for the U.S.-Israeli joint strikes against Iran initiated on Feb. 28.

“So currently, if political leaders were to say that this is a war, they would also be acknowledging that the administration’s actions were unconstitutional,” Stephanie Savell, director of Brown University’s Costs of War project, told us.

In a March 1 post for his Substack, Foreign Exchanges, journalist Derek Davison wrote that Trump had “made a little verbal slip” when referring to the military operation as a war.

“You’re not supposed to refer to these sorts of things as ‘wars’ when you’re the president of the United States, at least not at their outset, because by law wars have to be declared by Congress,” Davison wrote. “Presidents have leeway to engage in military action prior to a congressional vote but only in self-defense, which was plainly not the case here even if one were to stretch that term beyond all comprehension.”

But Trump numerous times has referred to the situation with Iran as a war.

“We have unlimited middle and upper ammunition, which is really what we’re using in this war,” Trump said in remarks on March 3.

“We’re doing very well on the war front, to put it mildly, I would say,” Trump said on March 4.

In his remarks on March 7, when talking about American casualties, Trump commented, “It’s part of war. It’s a sad part of war. It’s the bad part of war.”

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has also repeatedly referred to the armed conflict as war.

“We didn’t start this war, but under President Trump, we are finishing it,” Hegseth said in a press conference on March 2. “We set the terms of this war from start to finish.”

Those characterizations are in stark contrast to the way many Republican members of Congress have described the military conflagration.

“Nobody should classify this as war. It is combat operations,” Republican Rep. Brian Mast said on CNN the day the U.S. and Israel initiated airstrikes on Iran.

In a press conference on March 3, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries pointed to Trump’s own words to argue that the president “has unconstitutionally and illegally chosen to launch a war.”

“He’s describing it as a war,” Jeffries said. Hegseth “is describing it as a war. Other members of the administration are describing it as a war. And it’s a requirement under the Constitution that it’s members of Congress who make the decision as to whether to get us entangled in this kind of armed conflict.”

As we’ve written before, legal experts have told us that under an originalist interpretation of the Constitution, congressional approval for the use of military force against another country is required. But in practice, several presidents have launched military actions in other countries without congressional authorization.

Robert Johnson, director of Oxford University’s Changing Character of War Center, told us via email, “There is a political reason not to call the campaign against Iran a war. The President must consult Congress and gain approval after 60 days. Until that time, he is permitted to take actions which are in self-defense of the United States, a power the POTUS was granted because [of] the Cold War and the speed at which a nuclear armed attack could be launched.”

“Most scholars and lawyers do not use the term war, even when they should,” Johnson said. “The term in use is armed conflict. This is further defined as an armed attack. A pattern has been set in the last three decades of not declaring war and taking military action, that is, using lethal force to obtain political ends and to neutralise an emergent threat, such as a terrorist attack. Legally, the criteria are that it should be a threat which cannot be dealt with reasonably by any other means and it should be ‘imminent’ as a threat.”

Other Definitions of War

The media and academics, of course, use other definitions of war that have nothing to do with the legal or constitutional considerations.

The Associated Press, for example, decided on March 1 to start using the word “war” to refer to the Israeli-U.S. strikes on Iran and Iran’s retaliation.

“This reflects the scope and intensity of the fighting,” the AP wrote.

The AP noted that the Merriam-Webster dictionary defines war broadly as, “A state of usually open and declared armed hostile conflict between states or nations,” or “a state of hostility, conflict, or antagonism.”

“Even though none of the countries have officially declared war, the attacks by the United States and Israel, combined with Iran’s retaliation, meet those criteria,” the AP noted. “The decision by the Trump administration and Israeli leaders to attack and the subsequent destruction and casualties are enough to call the actions, and Iran’s response, a war. Trump himself has used the word war to describe the conflict.”

Johnson, of the Changing Character of War Center, said, “As a phenomenon, war is a contest of organised polities using lethal armed force at scale. Under this definition, the U.S. is ‘at war.'”

Savell, at the Costs of War project, cited the words of Douglas Fry, an anthropologist of war, in his 2007 book “Beyond War: The Human Potential for Peace.” Fry defined war as: “A group activity, carried on by members of one community against members of another community, in which it is the primary purpose to inflict serious injury or death on multiple nonspecified members of that other community, or in which the primary purpose makes it highly likely that serious injury or death will be inflicted on multiple nonspecified members of that community in the accomplishment of that primary purpose.”

“This fits what the US is doing in Iran,” Savell said.

But there are other definitions used in academia as well.

Scott Wolford, a professor of government at the University of Texas at Austin, and Jeff Carter, a professor in the Department of Government and Justice Studies at Appalachian State University, are co-directors of the Correlates of War Project, which provides a “systematic accumulation of scientific knowledge about war” dating back to 1816.

COW defines war as “‘sustained combat’ between belligerents, or what we might call competitive violence used by groups organized for violence against other groups organized for violence,” Wolford and Carter told us via email.

The conflict between the U.S. and Iran meets their definition of “sustained combat,” they said.

“Operationally, though, to enter the COW data as a war (as opposed to lower-level violence) there’s a battle death cutoff of 1000, above which a conflict enters the data as a war,” they said.

Trump attends the dignified transfer of remains of six U.S. soldiers killed in an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait on March 7 at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. Official White House photo by Daniel Torok.

Seven American troops have been killed in the military conflict so far, and retaliatory Iranian strikes have also killed nearly two dozen others in the Middle East region, according to a March 8 New York Times report. Iran’s U.N. ambassador said on March 6 that more than 1,300 Iranian civilians have been killed in the conflict.

Those figures from Iran have not been verified, however, and Carter noted that COW’s 1,000 threshold “applies to members of the combatants’ armed forces,” not civilians.

If the military conflict leads to 1,000 battle deaths, it would be categorized as a war in the COW database, regardless of what either Iranian or U.S. leaders call it. (Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, did call the conflict a “war,” telling PBS News on March 9, “This is a war imposed on us.”)

“The virtue of those definitions is that they’re independent of what governments *say* about whether or not they’re at war,” Wolford and Carter wrote.

“But that’s distinct from the political-legal question of whether this is a war,” they said. “Declarations of war are pretty rare, though Congressional authorizations for the use of force aren’t, and the fact that this conflict began and continues with neither is probably what’s at issue in the public argument over the definition.”

But experts told us the political classification of the conflict could change over time, if the number of American casualties rose, if ground troops were deployed, or if the military action continues for a protracted amount of time.

“If there was a specific and limited set of armed attacks, of short duration, the Administration could sustain the argument that they are not yet at war,” Johnson said. “However, the scale, extent, and possibly duration of [counter] attacks would take us beyond purely legal definitions.”

In remarks on March 11, Trump referred to the military action in Iran as “a little excursion.”

A reporter asked, “You just said, ‘It is a little excursion,’ and you said, ‘It is a war.’ So which one is it?”

“Well, it’s both,” Trump said. “It’s both.”


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 Is the U.S. at ‘War’? Politicians Disagree appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 17:59

The Senate approved a package of bills aimed at lowering housing costs, the most sweeping housing legislation in decades and a rare point of bipartisan consensus in an election year, with the issue of affordability top of mind for many voters.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-13 12:40

Easing the century-old shipping law could help lower fuel prices as the Iran war pushes crude oil near $100 a barrel, experts say.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:01

President Donald Trump has claimed that the 2015 Iran nuclear deal was “a road to a nuclear weapon” and the country “would be sitting with a massive nuclear weapon three years ago” if he hadn’t withdrawn the U.S. from the deal in 2018 during his first term. The multilateral deal aimed to restrict Iran’s uranium enrichment program, and experts told us that after the U.S. withdrawal, Iran accelerated it instead.

It’s not possible to predict what would have happened if the agreement, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and negotiated by former President Barack Obama’s administration, had remained in place. In addition to imposing restrictions on Iran’s enrichment of uranium, the deal required international inspections of the country’s nuclear facilities.

On March 3, when speaking about the U.S. airstrikes on Iran that began Feb. 28, Trump said that Obama “made maybe the worst deal I’ve ever seen, because he gave all power in the Middle East to Iran, he went the exact opposite way, and I terminated that. If I didn’t terminate that deal, they would be sitting with a massive nuclear weapon three years ago, which would have been used already on Israel at least, and other countries also. And we wouldn’t be talking about it right now.”

The president went on to say that Obama “was giving them the right to have the path to a nuclear weapon,” saying that deal “expired.”

The next day, Trump said: “If we didn’t terminate the worst deal, one of the worst deals ever made, the Obama nuclear deal … it was a road to a nuclear weapon. Bad things would have happened four years ago, because they would’ve had a weapon four years ago, if I didn’t terminate that deal.”

And during a speech on March 11, Trump said, “But that deal, the Iran nuclear deal gave them the right to have a nuclear weapon as of three years ago.”

But several experts we spoke to disputed Trump’s claim and told us that Iran advanced its nuclear program after Trump’s decision to pull out of the agreement in his first term.

“Iran was able to advance its nuclear programme to the point where it was before the 12 Day War last June not because of the JCPOA, but because President Trump withdrew the United States from the JCPOA,” Laura Rockwood, senior fellow at the Vienna Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation, told us in an email. Rockwood worked for the International Atomic Energy Agency for 28 years, retiring in 2013.

Similarly, Richard Nephew, an international and public affairs senior research scholar at Columbia University who worked as a special envoy for Iran and for the State Department under the Biden administration, told us, “Trump’s decision to withdraw from the JCPOA in 2018 had a significant accelerating effect on the program.”

“The JCPOA would absolutely not have allowed Iran to develop nuclear weapons,” Nephew said. “First of all, there were prohibitions; then there were transparency requirements; and, then, there were the risks of snapback and punishment” if Iran violated the terms.

Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, a nonpartisan organization that provides analysis on arms control and national security issues, told us for an earlier story that the 2015 nuclear deal “established an array of limits on Iran’s uranium enrichment and uranium stockpiling” and a rigorous monitoring and verification program. After the Trump administration’s withdrawal from the deal, “Iran began to reconstitute its nuclear capabilities, including by deploying large numbers of advanced centrifuges and stockpiling” highly enriched uranium.

As we’ve explained before, the nuclear agreement, which took effect in 2016 and was signed by the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council — China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — and Germany, restricted Iran’s ability to enrich uranium for 15 years and required monitoring and inspections of Iranian facilities for the same amount of time.

Under the deal, Iran agreed to do away with much of its nuclear program and, in exchange, the signatories lifted sanctions, the Council on Foreign Relations explained.

Trump announced on May 8, 2018, that the U.S. would withdraw from the deal and reinstitute sanctions. About a year later, in July 2019, Iran had exceeded the limits on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium that had been set in the JCPOA, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported at the time. Iran’s foreign minister said the country would begin to enrich uranium beyond the low level allowed under the deal (3.67%), which was the level needed for civilian nuclear power.

“The JCPOA dramatically restricted Iran’s ability to produce fissile material and, in particular, not only placed a cap on the quantity of enriched uranium Iran could stockpile and on the level of enrichment, but required the dismantlement of 2/3 of its centrifuges and limited its ability to produce advanced centrifuges,” Rockwood said. “Iran simply would not have been able to enrich to the point of possessing over 400 kg of 60% enriched uranium had the JCPOA remained in place.”

Rockwood was referring to the amount of 60% enriched uranium that Iran had stockpiled before the June 2025 U.S. bombing of nuclear program sites in the country. To be weapons-grade, the uranium would need to be enriched to 90%, as we’ve explained.

Of course, Iran could have violated the terms of the nuclear deal and pursued a nuclear weapon.

“No single element blocks Iran’s pathway to nuclear weapons, but taken together, the nuclear restrictions and monitoring form a comprehensive system that will put nuclear weapons out of Iran’s reach for at least 15 years,” the nonpartisan Arms Control Association explained in an August 2015 analysis. “Many of the JCPOA provisions also extend beyond 15 years. Monitoring of centrifuge production facilities continues for 20 years, and monitoring of uranium mines and mills continues for 25 years. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors will have enhanced access indefinitely.”

Critics of the JCPOA — including Trump — have argued that the deal didn’t go far enough, and they objected to the lifting of economic sanctions.

“One of the main arguments used against the JCPOA was that it allowed Iran to continue enriching uranium and move closer to nuclear capability while remaining technically in compliance,” the nonpartisan Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation wrote in a June report. “The JCPOA also contained so-called ‘sunset provisions’ on various aspects of the deal such as lifting limits on centrifuges after 10 years or reduced enrichment beyond 3.67% only lasting for 15 years. This led to concerns that the deal would only temporarily delay Iran’s nuclear program while preventing parties from finding a more permanent solution. Additionally, critics worried that lifting sanctions on Iran in return for the JCPOA’s focus on constraining Iran’s nuclear program would diminish the United States’ ability to address other security concerns such as Iran’s missile program or its funding of violent non-state groups in the Middle East.”

In saying that Iran would’ve had a nuclear weapon “three years ago,” Trump may have been referencing one of these provisions, known as “transition day,” which was set to take effect on Oct. 18, 2023, eight years after implementation of the deal. On that day, if Iran had complied with its commitments under the deal, some of the restrictions on Iran’s nuclear and missile programs would have been lifted. However, while U.N. restrictions expired, countries that remained in the JCPOA after the U.S. withdrawal chose to maintain their restrictions, citing Iran’s noncompliance.

We asked the White House about Trump’s remarks, but we didn’t get a response.

While Trump claims that the JCPOA would have brought Iran closer to having a nuclear weapon and his withdrawal stopped that, the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation estimated that the withdrawal sped up the so-called “breakout time,” or the time Iran would need to produce weapons-grade uranium that could then be used for one bomb – if the country chose to do so. The center estimated, as of November 2024, that the breakout time went from two to three months before the deal to 12-plus months during the deal. And then, after the U.S. withdrawal, the breakout time was reduced to just a couple of weeks.

As we’ve explained, it would take more time to actually develop a nuclear weapon. “After this point, once you have the weapons-grade uranium, Iran would then need to manufacture the rest of the weapon. This process would likely take much longer, perhaps months to a year,” Emma Sandifer, program coordinator at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told us for an earlier story.

She said that last June’s airstrikes likely lengthened the “breakout time,” but the IAEA hasn’t been able to inspect the damaged nuclear program sites since then.

In 2017, several months before withdrawing from the nuclear deal, Trump had claimed that Iran “has committed multiple violations of the agreement.” But as we wrote at the time, the IAEA said in its multiple reports after the deal went into effect that Iran was abiding by it. Trump himself had twice certified to Congress that Iran had complied with the deal, before claiming there had been violations.

In late September 2017, Gen. Joseph Dunford, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress that “Iran is adhering to its JCPOA obligations” and that the agreement “has delayed Iran’s development of nuclear weapons.”


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post Trump’s Claim About the Obama Nuclear Deal and Iran’s Nuclear Development appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 16:00

Perplexity AI has introduced a "Personal Computer" agent system that can run on a local machine such as a Mac mini, giving its AI agents access to a user's files and applications to automate tasks. According to CEO Aravind Srinivas, the heavy AI processing runs on Perplexity's "secure servers" but sensitive actions will require user approval. There will also be activity logs and a kill switch available to help ease concerns. AppleInsider reports: Perplexity Computer is, effectively, an AI that is a go-between for other AIs. Instead of issuing specific instructions to multiple AIs, you provide the general outcome of the task to Perplexity Computer. Perplexity Computer then breaks down the task into subtasks, which it then provides to sub-agents to do the actual work. In effect, you're talking to a project manager, who then delegates the task to other AIs, before combining the results and presenting them to you. The managing AI has a lot more freedom in how it orders its subordinates than users may think. While one may create documents while another gathers data, the manager may go as far as to order the creation of software to complete its tasks. Personal Computer is an extension of this, in that it is a locally run app that ideally runs on a Mac mini. The app gives always-on, local access to the Mac's files and apps, which Perplexity Computer and the Comet Assistant can use and alter if required.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 16:00

PM has apologised for his handling of Peter Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador, but next tranche of files could contain further damaging details

Keir Starmer could suffer further resignations when ministerial WhatsApp messages are published in the next tranche of the Peter Mandelson files, senior government sources have told the Guardian.

With officials bracing for the subsequent releases – expected to include informal communications alongside formal messages like those in the first batch – Starmer apologised again on Thursday over his handling of Mandelson’s appointment, saying: “It was me that made a mistake, and it’s me that makes the apology to the victims of [Jeffrey] Epstein, and I do that.”

Continue reading...

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:39

Five soldiers were indicted over alleged violent abuse and rape of Palestinian man at detention centre in 2024

Israel’s top military lawyer has dropped all charges against five soldiers accused of the violent abuse and rape of a Palestinian detainee from Gaza.

The military advocate general, Itay Offir, said prosecutors lacked key evidence after the victim was sent back to Gaza, and that the conduct of senior officials had affected the chance of holding a fair trial.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:33

I have a GT and the range on it is ok but I kinda want to go on longer rides. The other thing is I am wondering how big of a difference is there between the GTFO vs the x7 LR? They are both the same vesc the Thor 301 right? And it would be the same 6inch high speed or I might get a 5inch bc it’s going to be a smoother ride. The other thing is it’s 18s vs 20s? Is it that big of a difference in terms of power having that slightly higher voltage?

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 15:31

Gavin Newsom says drone concerns always ‘top of mind’ and it’s about ‘preparedness for worst-case scenarios’

California leaders said on Wednesday there was no imminent threat to the state from Iran after the FBI sent a warning to local police about a potential plan to strike the west coast, which was based on “unverified information”.

The FBI’s alert caused significant anxiety and confusion in California after it was made public in an ABC News report. State leaders and police officials have since emphasized there was no credible threat from Iran, and FBI and White House officials have also said there was no cause for concern.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:26

I decided to start my old +XR which has not been used for a while (two or three years maybe) but I’ve since found out the battery is probably dead. But a new battery would be pretty expensive for me right now so just in case I was hoping to see if anyone would know what I could do.

It only lights up and blinks when plugged in, when plugged in charger light is red, shows 100% and charging on the app, but turns off as soon as I unplug it. If anyone has any suggestions or tips on what I should do I would really appreciate it❤️

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2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 15:26

Estimates reveal one in five girls aged 16-19 in England and Wales have experienced domestic abuse

Not enough is being done to tackle misogyny among young boys and toxic online influences, according to the National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for domestic abuse, as she reacted to data showing 18% of 16- to 19-year-oldgirls are estimated to be victims of abuse.

Louisa Rolfe said: “That’s a huge proportion of young people. And we work very hard in this space to look at where we apply justice outcomes, but we don’t want to criminalise a whole cohort of young people. We absolutely must identify the most harmful behaviour, but also our preference would be to prevent it.”

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:25

Defence secretary connects Middle East conflict to plight of Ukraine, sympathy for which remains relatively high

After a week or so of wearing media coverage about the deterioration of the Anglo-American relationship and the belated decision to deploy Royal Navy destroyer HMS Dragon to Cyprus, it was time to move the conversation on.

On a visit to the UK’s permanent military headquarters in Northwood, north-west London, the defence secretary, John Healey, asked two senior British military officers if there was “any sign of a link between Russia and Iran” in the sprawling conflict that has suddenly engulfed the Middle East.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 15:24

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 12, 2026 — The most powerful supercomputer at Harvard is about to get larger and faster. Much faster.

The Kempner Institute’s AI cluster, already one of the fastest AI supercomputers in the world, is undergoing a major expansion, adding more than 500 NVIDIA graphics processing units (GPUs) — the specialized processors that make modern graphics and AI possible — to scale-up its capacity for cutting-edge research on intelligence.

With a total of 1,144 graphics processing units (GPUs), the Kempner’s expanded AI cluster will join an elite league of systems whose performance is measured in exaFLOPS. Photo credit: Anna Olivella.

Once the upgrade is complete in Spring 2026, the enhanced Kempner AI Cluster is expected to join an elite league of systems whose performance is measured in exaFLOPS. One exaFLOP equals a quintillion (that’s a billion billion) mathematical operations per second, which means that in a single minute the cluster will be able to perform a task that would take a personal computer several years to complete.

“There are very few academic institutions on the planet that offer this scale of compute to a research community of our size,” said Kempner Institute Executive Director Elise Porter. “This expansion will allow for research in AI and natural intelligence at Harvard that would not otherwise be possible.”

The expansion will bring 424 of NVIDIA’s top-of-the-line H200 GPUs and 192 RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs into the institute’s high-performance computing environment, joining an existing array of 144 A100 and 384 H100 units and bringing the total number of GPUs to 1,144.

All the GPUs will be linked in a single, purpose-built system designed to help researchers train, test, and refine large-scale AI models that support work in machine learning, neuroscience, robotics, biomedical research, and a host of other disciplines.

Redefining What Academic AI Labs Can Do

AI clusters, however powerful they may be, can only draw on a fixed amount of computational power at any given moment, and academic researchers often come up against this reality. In many academic settings, there is a tradeoff between allowing researchers to use the cluster’s power for large-scale, computationally-intensive projects on the one hand, and reserving enough bandwidth for the larger community to run important but smaller projects.

With the expanded cluster, Kempner researchers will have enough computing capacity to undertake large-scale and small-scale projects simultaneously.

“Most institutions would have to stop all other work for months to run a large-scale project,” said Porter. “We’re not going to have to stop everyone so that one project can move forward. That’s what this upgrade enables.”

In particular, the new Kempner cluster now has enough GPUs so that a large-scale project can use the almost four hundred H200s in the cluster without interrupting all the smaller-scale projects already running on the cluster’s other GPUs.

“Being able to offer our community nearly four hundred H200 GPUs [for large-scale reservations] is unparalleled,” said Porter. “Very few universities can match that scale for a single project.”

With the expanded compute resources, the Kempner community is poised for a new and exciting chapter in intelligence research, said Porter. “This upgrade gives our researchers a combination of power and flexibility that was simply not possible before,” she said. “We are about to see research projects that redefine what academic AI labs can do.”

Designed with Speed and Flexibility in Mind

The supercharged power of the Kempner’s expanded AI cluster comes down to two factors: a huge influx of hardware that can perform bigger and faster computations than ever before, and a customized design that links the GPUs together in an efficient, integrated network.

“The upgraded Kempner AI cluster now delivers 1.79 exaFLOPS of performance, enabling much larger and faster AI training runs than before,” said Max Shad, the Kempner Institute’s Senior Director of AI/ML Research Engineering. “The heterogeneous GPU network, combining A100s, H100s, H200s, and RTX Blackwell server GPUs, lets us train larger models in a single, unified cluster.”

The mix of different kinds of GPUs also means the cluster can meet the diverse needs of the Kempner community, said Shad, who led the design of the expanded cluster.

“Some of the projects need the power of a Toyota engine for a day, and some need a Maserati engine for a month,” said Shad, likening the different types of GPUs to the power of different car engines. “With the new cluster, we optimized the InfiniBand network for our researchers’ workflows. Some workflows run for days and use large swathes of the GPU network, while others are quick single-GPU experiments that run independently.”

New Hardware with Specialized Capabilities

With the new RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs, Kempner researchers will now have the computational resources for advanced optical and physics-based simulations, as well as the technology for ray tracing, which simulates the behavior of light rays to generate realistic images and virtual worlds. The RTX chips also accelerate physics-based computations that can be used in neuroscience, including high-resolution simulations of electrical activity in the brain.

The RTX GPUs also have built-in support for working with low-precision numerical formats, which allow AI models to run faster and use less GPU memory by sacrificing a degree of mathematical accuracy. At the Kempner, this low-precision capability will support the institute’s current body of work on “quantization,” which is the process of compressing a model’s size, a line of research with implications for advancing model training and performance.

Alongside the RTX GPUs, the new H200s will provide essential horsepower for researchers working on the most computationally intensive AI models, such as large language models (LLMs), which process text, and “multimodal” AI models that process multiple data types, such as text, audio and video.

Yilun Du, a Kempner Institute Investigator, will use the expanded cluster to continue the development of “world models,” which enable robots to understand and respond to their “worlds” or environments.

“By using the Kempner cluster GPUs, we are able to build powerful foundation models that are typically only possible in large industry labs,” said Du, who is also an assistant professor of computer science at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). “It allows us to focus on building models with fundamental new capabilities but also to scale them up to industry-level performance.”

The cluster’s expanded computational capacity will also enhance researchers’ ability to work with AI agents, which are AI models that can act independently and solve problems using chains of reasoning steps.

“AI agents are quickly learning to tackle complex tasks — from hard math problems to advanced coding — and a big part of that progress comes from giving them room to reason through ideas,” said Kianté Brantley, Kempner Institute Investigator and assistant professor of computer science at SEAS. “We can finally run large-scale training on models with long reasoning chains, opening the door to studying far more capable AI agents than before.”

About the Kempner

The Kempner Institute seeks to understand the basis of intelligence in natural and artificial systems by recruiting and training future generations of researchers to study intelligence from biological, cognitive, engineering, and computational perspectives. Its bold premise is that the fields of natural and artificial intelligence are intimately interconnected; the next generation of artificial intelligence (AI) will require the same principles that our brains use for fast, flexible natural reasoning, and understanding how our brains compute and reason can be elucidated by theories developed for AI. Join the Kempner mailing list to learn more, and to receive updates and news.


Source: Yohan J. John, Kempner Institute

The post Kempner Institute at Harvard Announces Major Expansion of AI Supercomputing Cluster appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 15:17

RLC Pro AI delivers more AI output per dollar of infrastructure investment, with validated performance gains and use-cases for any organization with AI-based workloads, at any scale, in any environment.

RENO, Nev.March 12, 2026 — CIQ, the founding support and services partner of Rocky Linux, today announced the general availability of Rocky Linux from CIQ Pro AI (RLC Pro AI), an Enterprise Linux distribution purpose-built for AI inference and GPU-accelerated workloads, engineered to deliver more from every GPU in production. RLC Pro AI ships today with PyTorch and the full NVIDIA CUDA and DOCA-OFED stack, with expanded support for additional hardware partners and frameworks on the active roadmap.

AI infrastructure is now core to how enterprises operate. Organizations across every industry are moving GPU-accelerated workloads into production, and the operating system (OS) has become the constraint. The OS underneath AI workloads determines how much performance the hardware actually delivers. For most enterprises, that performance has been left on the table.

RLC Pro AI is purpose-built to maximize that performance, with every layer of the stack validated and pre-configured for AI workloads. The CIQ Linux Kernel (CLK), GPU drivers, libraries and frameworks are tuned and validated together for AI workloads, optimized from bare metal to Kubernetes to sovereign on-premises infrastructure. The result is an Enterprise Linux distribution that runs on the hardware enterprises are buying today, delivers day-one support for current GPU accelerators from NVIDIA and ships production-ready from first boot.

“The OS is where GPU ROI is won or lost, and the industry has ignored it for too long,” said Gregory Kurtzer, CEO of CIQ and founder of Rocky Linux. “Organizations are committing hundreds of millions of dollars to GPU infrastructure and running it on operating systems that were never designed for it. RLC Pro AI simplifies and de-risks AI infrastructure investments while driving cutting-edge performance and simplicity.”

RLC Pro AI delivers:

  • More output from existing hardware. CLK kernel, PyTorch flags and CUDA configurations ship pre-configured at first boot. No manual tuning. Organizations running inference at scale see measurably higher throughput gains on the GPUs they already own from day one.
  • Infrastructure economics that improve with scale, not against it. More throughput from the same hardware means fewer resources are needed to hit the same output targets. At the node level, at the cluster level, and at the fleet level, the economics of RLC Pro AI get better as deployments grow.
  • A complete, validated AI stack with CLK at the foundation. RLC Pro AI is built on CLK 6.12, the upstream kernel.org latest long-term release. CLK delivers GPU hardware support ahead of traditional enterprise distributions.
  • Day-one GPU hardware support. RLC Pro AI delivers support for current GPU accelerators from NVIDIA immediately, so organizations can deploy on the latest hardware without waiting for the OS to catch up.
  • Consistent performance across every environment. RLC Pro AI delivers the same validated stack and the same performance profile on AWS, GCP, Azure, bare metal and sovereign on-premises infrastructure, across any GPU architecture.

“GPU compute is the most constrained and expensive resource in AI infrastructure today,” said Bjorn Hovland, president of CIQ. “RLC Pro AI gives organizations more from the infrastructure they have already paid for, and those economics hold whether you are a startup running a single GPU node or an enterprise managing a thousand.”

RLC Pro AI is now available for general availability, and soon through the CIQ Portal. RLC Pro AI is part of the Rocky Linux from CIQ Pro product family alongside RLC+ NVIDIA, RLC Pro and RLC Pro Hardened.

To learn more about RLC Pro AI and CIQ’s complete Enterprise Linux portfolio, visit this blog “CIQ launches RLC Pro: redefining the Enterprise Linux standard.”  Also, join Brian Dawson, Director of Product Management (RLC Pro Hardened, RLC Pro AI), for the upcoming webinar “RLC Pro AI: Maximize the throughput of your AI infra” on Thursday, April 2, 2026 at 11am PT / 2pm ET.

About CIQ

CIQ is the founding support and services partner of Rocky Linux and the leader in Enterprise Linux architecture for sovereign AI inferencing at scale. CIQ delivers a complete software infrastructure stack, from the operating system to orchestration, enabling enterprises, government agencies, research institutions and supercomputing centers worldwide to deploy AI and high-performance computing workloads with strategic independence and control. CIQ’s product portfolio includes the Rocky Linux from CIQ (RLC) family of enterprise operating systems, Ascender Pro for IT automation, Fuzzball for cloud HPC orchestration, Warewulf Pro for cluster provisioning, and Apptainer, the leading container system for high-performance computing. Together, these products provide the secure, performant infrastructure foundation that modern AI deployments demand.


Source: CIQ

The post CIQ Announces General Availability of RLC Pro AI, Enterprise Linux Built to Deliver More from Every GPU appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 15:12

The high-flying storage company VAST Data appears to be topping off its bank account with a sizable Series F round–and allowing certain employees to top off theirs in a secondary tender offer–on its way to a possible IPO.

A spokesperson for the storage company confirmed to HPCwire that it’s raising money as part of a Series F round of funding, but said that it cannot disclose the exact amount due to SEC regulations.

VAST Data confirms that it has raised primary Series F preferred capital at a $30 billion valuation and concurrently is allowing certain employees and early investors to sell shares in a secondary tender offer,” the spokesperson write. “While the tender offer process is underway, SEC regulations prohibit the company from providing additional information.”

The company’s valuation has increased by more than $20 billion over the past two years. VAST was valued at $9 billion in late 2023 when it rasied $118 million as part of its Series E round. The company had raised $424 million in its previous funding rounds.

On March 9, the Israeli publication Calcalist reported that VAST has raised $1 billion in the latest Series F round. About half of that amount will go to the company and the other half will go to early investors and employees of VAST as part of the secondary tender, the publication reports.

VAST CEO Renen Hallak at VAST Forward in February 2026

VAST doesn’t necessarily need the cash, as the company is already well-funded, profitable, and growing quickly. But it’s not unusual for startups to raise additional cash when the terms are favorable. In this case, it also provided an opportunity for insiders to sell shares.

In a press conference before its recent VAST Forward conference in Salt Lake City, VAST co-founder Jeff Denworth stated that the company had about $1 billion in the bank. In recent years, the company has been tripling its revenues every year, CEO Renen Hallak said in the press conference at VAST Forward. Today the company is “generating more than $100 million of cash per quarter, every quarter,” Hallak said.

The company is proud of its thriftiness and its growth.

“If you think of us in the context of startups throughout history, never have you found a company that’s growing at the pace that we are that isn’t burning mountains of venture capital,” Denworth said at the press conference before VAST Forward. “And we’ve managed to find this very, very unique space where our business is efficient and we’ve still managed this growth trajectory that is very much influenced by the AI buildout that’s happening right now.”

VAST, which has about 700 customers and 1,200 employees (about a third of which are based in Israel), has benefitted greatly from good timing, as well as partnerships with companies like Nvidia, which is also an investor. The company set out in 2016 to build a storage system from scratch that was designed specifically to handle the scale of AI, which Hallak said is its North Star. The fact that the GenAI boom started in late 2022 was pretty much dumb luck, Hallak said.

“There is no way that we could have engineered the world as it has over the last 10 years, and specifically over the last five years,” Hallak said during the press conference at VAST Forward. “We’ve been building towards this, We’ve been hoping that AI happens. But even in our wildest dreams, we weren’t thinking that it would happen this fast and this big. It’s happening way faster.”

VAST develops software for managing the storage of large amounts of data on NVMe drives. VAST has been adopted by AI companies and neoclouds, such as CoreWeave, which inked a $1.17 billion deal with VAST in November, as well as HPC sites like Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at the University of Texas, Austin; the Center for High Performance Computing (CHPC) at the University of Utah, and the Italian supercomputing institute CINECA.

The New York City-based company has taken steps to prepare itself for a possible IPO. In 2024, the company hired its first chief financial officer, Amy Shapero, who guided Shopify through its growth period from $700 million in revenue to $6 billion in less than five years. At VAST Forward, Hallak confirmed to HPCwire that an IPO is a possibility for the company, even if it currently doesn’t need the funding.

The post VAST Tops Off with Series F at a $30 Billion Valuation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:08

Amanda Wixon, 56, sentenced to 13 years for keeping victim imprisoned at home in Gloucestershire since 1990s

A woman imprisoned and forced to work for a mother of 10 for more than a quarter of a century in “Dickensian” conditions has said nothing can give her back her lost years as her abuser was sentenced to 13 years.

The woman, who was held by Amanda Wixon in Tewkesbury, said: “For 25 years I lived in fear, control and abuse. I was treated as though my life, my freedom and my voice did not matter. The trauma and the nightmares are something I still carry with me every day.”

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:02

Appointment of Matt Brittin as director general would be latest sign of big tech’s power in media world

Google’s former Europe boss is closing in on becoming the BBC’s next director general, the Guardian has been told.

Sources said that Matt Brittin, 57, was very advanced in the appointment process. Some insiders believe that, barring a last-minute development, he will succeed Tim Davie as the broadcaster’s next director general.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 15:00

sinij shares a report from Car and Driver: Honda is making a monumental shift in its business plans. The automaker is canceling the development and launch of the 0 Series SUV, the 0 Series saloon, and the Acura RSX, and as a result, expects to take a significant financial hit in 2026 [of up to $15.8 billion]. The automaker was blunt in its announcement of the changing plans, citing American tariff policies and the unpredictable nature surrounding American EV incentives and fossil fuel regulations. In its release marking the announcement, Honda made it clear that it expected to incur further financial losses over the long term if it went through with launching the cars. Honda also called out changing customer values in China, with buyers focusing more on software features and less on things like fuel efficiency and cabin space. In its release regarding the changing product plans, Honda was shockingly blunt about its situation, saying that it was simply unable to deliver products that offer a better value than that of newer Chinese manufacturers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:53

Records could be smashed in southern California as experts warn weather set to be ‘exceptional – and not in a good way’

States across the US west are bracing for a brutal early-season heatwave threatening to cook several cities through the weekend and into next week. Forecasters warned temperatures will spike 20-30F above normal for several days.

Daily records could be shattered in southern California this week, the National Weather Service said, with a possibility that all-time records for March will be broken as well. Following the warmest winter on record across most of the region, the intense conditions are expected to eat into low snowpack levels, deepening drought concerns.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:44

HELOC costs are consistently declining. Here's how much a $60,000 line of credit will cost monthly if opened now.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:39

Your gold IRA is only as safe as where it's stored. Here's what to know about how that process works.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:27

The Senate failed for a fourth time to advance a funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security, with no deal in sight.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 14:27

We are in the midst of a seismic shift in wealth. This phenomenon, often referred to as the “Great Wealth Transfer,” describes the unprecedented movement of assets from the Baby Boomer generation to their heirs – an estimated $105 trillion by 2048. And women are poised to inherit most of this. 

J.P. Morgan Wealth Management’s 2025 Investor Study found that women are not only set to receive significant wealth – they’re actively working to build it on their own. Ninety-three percent of women surveyed who are expecting an inheritance aren’t relying on it to reach their goals. 

Here are a few tips for women to consider in their wealth-building journey. 

Create a financial roadmap

A detailed, well thought out plan is important. J.P. Morgan’s study found that 90% of those surveyed with a plan feel confident about reaching their financial goals, compared to 49% without one.

Your plan should reflect your unique goals, priorities and circumstances. Consider your investment horizon and risk tolerance, and remember to revisit your plan regularly as life evolves.

Are you saving up for goals like buying a house, sending your kids off to college or retiring early? Where do you want to be in the next five, ten or twenty years? Everyone’s financial situation is unique, so it’s important to think about these questions and build a plan that is unique to your life. 

Women tend to live longer than men on average. Many take career breaks or care for family members, which can influence long-term planning. It’s important to adjust your strategy with these factors in mind.

Where to start with investing

Don’t let misconceptions hold you back. Starting to invest doesn’t require a large sum, and beginning early can be beneficial. The earlier you start, the more time your money has to potentially grow over the years. Understand your overall financial situation, set clear goals and develop a long-term plan.

It’s important to also make sure you’re covered for unexpected expenses that come up before you start to invest. Build up a cash emergency fund, typically enough to cover three to six months of expenses, and pay down any high-interest debt. 

Taking charge of your finances

The good news is that women are taking charge of their finances. J.P. Morgan’s research found that 75% of women respondents make financial decisions with their partner or take the lead themselves. For those who have a spouse or partner, it’s important for each person in the relationship to play an active role in the process. 

Building wealth can be empowering for many women. The same survey found that 73% of women respondents said money gives them “security,” while 64% of Gen Z and Millennial women associated it with “freedom.” 

The power of having a team

Some people find it helpful to work with a financial advisor, so you don’t have to tackle things alone. An advisor can help you craft a plan tailored to your needs and keep you on track throughout your lifelong financial journey. If you expect to receive an inheritance, you should also consult with estate planning and tax professionals.

No matter where you are on your wealth-building path, education is key. It’s so important to be an informed investor, and there are plenty of resources out there to help. You can find a library of free educational resources at chase.com/theknow.

As the landscape of wealth continues to evolve, women have a unique opportunity to shape their financial futures and those of generations to come. By staying informed and planning ahead, women have the tools to help them confidently navigate the Great Wealth Transfer and set themselves up for financial freedom.

The post Women & Wealth: Tips for navigating your lifelong financial journey appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:22

Former plumber Hannah Spencer, who won Gorton and Denton byelection, also says more MPs from manual working backgrounds are needed

Hannah Spencer, the Green MP who won last month’s Gorton and Denton byelection, has used her first speech in the Commons to call for tolerance and inclusivity, and to argue for more people from manual working backgrounds to be elected to parliament.

Saying she wanted to “make hope normal again”, Spencer used a speech in a debate about International Women’s Day to say she had found out that some children had dressed up for events marking the day at their schools as “Hannah the plumber”, wearing overalls and copying her distinctive hairstyle.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:13

Part of the Genesis Mission, these awards enable Argonne to conduct transformative AI research

March 12, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory was awarded funding for more than a dozen research projects that aim to advance the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to enable scientific breakthroughs.

The primary objective of the onsite Transformational AI Models Consortium (ModCon) Hackathon is to bring together all Consortium members, Model Teams (MTs), and external partners to establish a collaborative foundation that drives delivery toward the March deliverables.

The funding from DOE is part of its investment in the Genesis Mission, a national initiative to use transformative AI capabilities to accelerate discovery science, strengthen national security and drive energy innovation. The Genesis Mission aims to develop an integrated platform that connects the world’s best supercomputers, experimental facilities, AI systems and datasets across every major scientific domain to double the productivity and impact of American research and innovation within a decade.

Argonne was awarded funding to lead the Genesis Mission’s Transformational AI Models Consortium (ModCon). The cornerstone of the Genesis Mission’s AI models and data efforts, ModCon will build and deploy self-improving AI models by harnessing DOE’s unique data, facilities and expertise. Selected teams will develop foundational capabilities needed across multiple scientific and engineering domains. ModCon is led by Rick Stevens, associate laboratory director for Argonne’s Computing, Environment and Life Sciences division. Argonne researchers are involved in a range of ModCon projects.

Argonne is participating in the American Science Cloud (AmSC), the foundation of the Genesis Mission’s integrated platform, which is led by DOE’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Oak Ridge). Argonne is a partner in designing and developing infrastructure to support next-generation AI and simulation workflows. In addition, the computing resources at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility, a DOE Office of Science user facility, are supporting Genesis Mission research projects.

Argonne also received funding for research that leverages AI, automation and robotics in scientific experiments and foundational AI projects that curate data and develop AI models.

Following is a list of projects that received funding:

  • AI-Assisted Multiscale Modeling of Radiation Damage in Fusion Materials, led by Paul Romano – Research that uses AI to better understand how fusion reactor materials degrade under intense neutron radiation.
  • AlphaFold for Microelectronics, led by Subramanian Sankaranarayanan – Just as AlphaFold transformed biology by predicting protein’s 3D shape from its genetic code, this physics-based AI framework will predict how tiny flaws emerge and evolve inside materials and how those changes impact how a device functions.
  • Foundation Models Orchestrating Reasoning Agents to Uncover Materials Advances and Insights (FORUM-AI) – A project to develop an AI research planner for materials science papers, capable of breaking down complex scientific questions into actionable steps; a registry of AI reasoning agents to carry out specialized tasks; and a unified framework that grounds AI model predictions in real-world data. Maria Chan is on the team led by DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley).
  • HEP AmSC IDA Pilot: Knowledge Extraction, led by Katrin Heitmann – An integrated framework to find new physics insights from legacy and varied high energy physics (HEP) datasets. Heitmann, along with Andrew Hearin, is also the Argonne point of contact for an additional HEP project: ​“HEP AmSC IDA Pilot: AI Universe,” led by Berkeley.
  • Integrated Agentic AI for Catalysis (ISAAC) – Agentic AI tools that leverage different types of data from scientific user facilities – such as X-ray and neutron measurements and physics simulations – to discover how catalytic reactions happen. Maria Chan is on the team led by DOE’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
  • Intelligent Design Assistant for Enzyme Discovery and Biosynthetic Pathway Optimization (IDeA), led by Arvind Ramanathan – An AI ​“co-scientist” that helps scientists discover and design enzymes much faster than today’s trial-and-error methods, enabling cleaner and more efficient bio-manufacturing.
  • LAMBDA: A Lakehouse-enabled AI-ready Multi-modal Bioimaging Data Architecture – A cross-facility, standardized data framework for all structural biology and imaging resources supported by DOE’s Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research program. Dion Antonopoulos and Gyorgy Babnigg are on the team led by Berkeley.
  • MIRAGE: Microstructure Insights through Reliable/Interpretable AI and Guided Experiments – A multi-lab project that uses AI to understand how materials wear down and even self-heal at the nanoscale. Mathew Cherukara, Jeff Larson and Todd Munson are on the team led by DOE’s Sandia National Laboratories.
  • Next-Generation Data Quality Monitoring: AI Solutions for High-Energy Physics Experiments, led by Walter Hopkins – A cross-experiment AI framework that modernizes data quality monitoring for HEP experiments. Hopkins is also the Argonne point of contact and an active participant of an additional HEP project ​“Hunting for TREASURE in HEP Collider Data,” led by DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory (Brookhaven).
  • OPAL: Orchestrated Platform for Autonomous Laboratories to Accelerate AI-Driven BioDesign – A multi-laboratory initiative to make biological discovery more automated. Argonne is pioneering an approach to protein design that integrates AI with advanced robotics, connecting computer-designed proteins with real-world lab testing. The Argonne project is led by Dion Antonopoulos. Other partners are Berkeley, Oak Ridge and DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
  • Preparing QCD Data for Foundation Model – This project is curating complex experimental data from particle accelerator facilities into standardized, AI-ready, machine-readable formats suitable for AI training. Ian Cloet is on the team led by Brookhaven.
  • Robot Scientific Assistants for Accelerating Experimental Workflows (RoSA), led by Nicola Ferrier – Aimed at developing a robot scientific assistant, this project collects data from human scientists to train learning models and build a classification of lab tasks, leading to improvements in safety and efficiency.
  • STREAMLINE Collaboration: Machine Learning for Nuclear Many-Body Systems – Creating faster, lower-cost computer tools to handle highly complex nuclear physics calculations while also building an AI-capable scientific workforce. Alessandro Lovato is on the team led by Michigan State University.

Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) institutes:

  • Frameworks, Algorithms, and Scalable Technologies for Mathematics (FASTMath) – FASTMath will develop mathematical techniques and algorithms to model complex physical systems, leading to faster and more accurate scientific computations that can be used on DOE supercomputers. Todd Munson is FASTMath deputy director and Jeff Larson is the Argonne institutional lead. This project is led by DOE’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
  • The RAPIDS3 Institute for Artificial Intelligence, Computer Science, and Data, led by Rob Ross – This SciDAC institute focuses on making scientific software run faster and use less energy, manage and understand the massive volumes of data from modern simulations and experiments, and speed up discovery using AI and machine learning.

Source: Julie Parente, Argonne

The post Argonne Receives DOE Funding to Advance AI for Science appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 14:10

Pilots reportedly adopting Russian tactics as statement in name of new Iranian supreme leader vows continued attacks on US bases

Vladimir Putin’s “hidden hand” lies behind Iran’s military methods, the UK defence secretary has said, after a night in which drones struck a base used by western forces in Erbil, northern Iraq.

John Healey was speaking after British officers at the UK’s military headquarters in north-west London told him that drone pilots from Iran and Iranian proxies were increasingly adopting tactics “from the Russians”.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:08

Josh Wardle hopes his digital take on the cryptic crossword can be a gradual on-ramp crossing the cultural divide between Britain and the US

In 2021, Josh Wardle became a household name almost overnight. His digital game, Wordle, turned a simple guessing game into a global morning ritual: six guesses, one word, and a grid of coloured squares shared across social media feeds.

It became a cultural phenomenon; bought within months by the New York Times for a seven-figure sum.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:00

The unit formerly known as Google Fiber is spun out and plans to offer wider fiber internet service.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 14:00

Anthropic updated Claude so it can automatically generate charts, diagrams, and other interactive visualizations directly inside conversations, rather than only in a side panel. The new visualizations are rolling out now to all users. The Verge reports: As an example, Anthropic says a conversation about the periodic table could lead Claude to generate a visualization of it, featuring interactive elements that let you click inside the table for more information. Another example shows how Claude can generate a visual related to a question about how weight travels through a building. Though Claude will automatically determine whether it should generate a visualization in your chat, Anthropic notes that you can also ask the chatbot to generate a diagram, table, or chart directly. [...] Anthropic already allows you to create charts, documents, tools, and apps through Claude's "artifacts" feature, which opens in a side panel where you can interact, share, and download the AI-generated creation. But, as noted by Anthropic, artifacts are persistent, while the visualizations created within Claude's conversations will change or disappear as the conversation progresses. You can also ask Claude to make changes to the visualizations it creates.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:57

With another Federal Reserve meeting looming this month, homebuyers should avoid these three things in advance.

2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 13:56

AI wars: Anthropic battles the Pentagon as China plans ahead. Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…

Our experts discuss what the the US government’s feud with AI firm Anthropic tells us about governance and competition in the AI race.

The US military’s AI provider Anthropic is feuding with the Pentagon after the company tried to impose ‘red lines’ over the use of its artificial intelligence products for lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance of Americans.
 
President Trump accused the US firm of being ‘radical left’ and designated it a ‘supply chain risk’ – usually reserved for Chinese or Russian firms who could compromise US security.
 
Our panel discusses the dispute, the battle to control artificial intelligence systems already being used in Iran, Venezuela and Ukraine, and how a public battle between tech and government throws a much-needed spotlight on the wider global issues of AI governance and who is – or isn’t – writing rules for the new era of warfare.
 
They also look at how China is pushing ahead quickly with its plan to integrate ‘AI Plus’ into all aspects of its economy and military.
 
This week’s guest host of the Independent Thinking podcast is Alex Krasodomski, director of Chatham House’s Digital Society Programme. He is joined by Laurel Rapp, director of the US and North America Programme; and James Kynge, a senior research fellow with the Asia-Pacific Programme who has spent years studying China and its high-technology industrial sector.

About Independent Thinking

Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.

More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts, Spotify.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:52

Programs offer students and recent graduates the opportunity to conduct research and technical projects at DOE National Laboratories

March 12, 2026 — The Department of Energy (DOE) is now accepting applications for the Fall 2026 term of the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships (SULI) program and the Community College Internships (CCI) program.

Credit: DOE Office of Science

Interns will acquire new skills through hands-on learning while being mentored by scientists, engineers, and technical professionals. They will also be exposed to science and technology careers and expand their professional networks to advance their educational and career goals. Interns will have the opportunity to work with a team of experts to solve real-world problems and contribute to research that supports the DOE mission. Topic areas include the Genesis Mission and new frontiers in artificial intelligence, quantum, nuclear energy and technology, biotechnology, critical minerals and materials, and fusion science and engineering.

SULI is open to full-time students attending 4-year institutions and community colleges or recent graduates within two years of receiving their bachelor’s degree or associate degree. CCI is for community college students, including those who are enrolled part-time. Both programs are stipend-based and offered three times annually in the fall, spring, and summer. Participants residing more than 50 miles away from the host DOE National Laboratory are offered round-trip travel to and from the host lab, and financial assistance with lodging. The application deadline for both programs is May 20, 2026, at 5:00 p.m. ET. A number of workshops, office hours, and technical support will be available to applicants throughout the process.

Workshop Details

Two workshops are planned to introduce the programs, explain the application process, and provide strategies for submitting a compliant application.

Office Hours

The program office invites applicants and letter of recommendation writers to attend office hours. In these office hours, program staff members will answer administrative questions including those related to uploading transcripts and submitting letters of recommendation. Timing and registration details can be found below and posted on the program website.

The programs offer a unique opportunity to gain a glimpse into discovery science at the cutting edge of national priorities like the Genesis Mission. Learn more about the internship experience through the many Lab Stories shared by previous participants.

SULI and CCI are managed by the Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) in the Office of Science. More information can be found at https://science.osti.gov/wdts.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Now Accepting Applications for Fall 2026 Undergraduate Internships appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:50

PARIS, March 12, 2026 — Atos Group, a global leader of AI-powered digital transformation, today announced the launch of the Atos Sovereign Agentic Studios (Atos SAS), a new operating model designed to help organizations move from agentic AI pilots to production, safely, at scale, and under full sovereign control.

As enterprises accelerate their adoption of agentic AI, the challenge has shifted. It is no longer about creating more agents, but about operating them reliably in live, regulated and mission-critical environments.

“The market is at an inflection point as enterprises seek to scale their AI deployments but wrestle to adapt to the operational realities of production environments,” said Tom Reuner, Principal Analyst at PAC. “As a result, many struggle to realize business value from their investments. By focusing on workforce transformation and by expanding trust to include governed autonomy, Atos Sovereign Agentic Studios provides organizations a pathway to better navigate these challenges, especially in highly regulated industries and projects exposed to the fragility of geopolitics.”

Sovereignty by design, not as a checkbox

Atos approaches sovereignty as an operational discipline not a compliance exercise. With Atos SAS, organizations retain explicit control over where autonomy is applied, how decisions are governed and how data and models are operated across jurisdictions.

Built for production: security and AI governance by design

Unlike experimental AI frameworks, Atos Sovereign Agentic Studios are engineered for real-world deployment. Security, AI governance and human oversight are embedded from the outset, enabling enterprises to progress from high‑value use cases to governed agentic workflows with confidence.

This production‑first approach allows organizations to scale autonomy where it creates measurable value, while maintaining control where risk, regulation or criticality demand it.

Global delivery powered by four Studios and ten delivery centers

Atos Sovereign Agentic Studios operate as a globally integrated delivery model, leveraging Atos’ worldwide delivery capabilities. They are anchored in four flagship geographies and supported by ten Global Delivery Centers combining local sovereignty requirements with industrial‑scale execution.

In the UK (Birmingham), the Studio enables sovereign‑aligned AI for regulated and mission‑critical operations. In the US (Texas), it supports early‑stage engagements around priority use cases. In France, one Studio (Southwest region) focuses on big‑data agents across the full data lifecycle, while another (Paris region) supports large‑scale industrialization across applications and cloud infrastructures. Germany completes this network, strengthening Atos’ sovereign and industrial delivery capabilities in Europe.

In addition, the Group is embedding AI upskilling across its global delivery teams and client environments to ensure agentic systems scale with the right skills, oversight and accountability.

Delivering measurable business value

The Group’s Agentic AI strategy is anchored in tangible business value, supported by Atos Amplify, its unified AI‑powered consulting business unit. Combining deep industry expertise with advanced capabilities across AI, cybersecurity and digital sovereignty, Atos Amplify helps clients prioritize high‑ROI agentic workflows and translate strategy into measurable business outcomes at scale. This approach is already delivering impact.

Paul Mukherjee, CTO, Defra, said: “Defra is delighted to extend its partnership with Atos as a lighthouse customer for their Sovereign Agentic Studio. Our collaboration with Atos has already delivered concrete results, including a 27% productivity gain in the modernization of critical applications for the Animal and Plant Health Agency. We are now progressing several AI‑enabled use cases through structured assessment, with clear expectations of tangible value. This partnership is proving instrumental in applying agentic AI to our mission‑critical work.”

Accelerating AI innovation through a trusted ecosystem of agentic startups

Embedded in the Sovereign Agentic Studios strategy, Scaler, Atos innovation accelerator, connects clients with a curated ecosystem of startups across the agentic AI lifecycle – from process assessment and workforce augmentation to sovereign‑grade execution and continuous performance governance. The current cohort – KYP.ai, Ema, Pay‑i, Klarity, Poolside and Noma Security – strengthens Atos’ ability to combine breakthrough innovation with industrial‑grade delivery standards.

With Poolside, a leader in foundation models and autonomous software agents for enterprises, Atos is building a strategic and unique partnership to deliver sovereign, production‑ready agentic AI across Europe and beyond. This collaboration combines Poolside’s full‑stack AI platform with Atos’ sovereign operating layer, embedding security, governance and control across the full agentic lifecycle and enabling deployment on customer‑owned infrastructure, including regulated and highly secure environments.

A distinctive position for the AI first era

The next three years of AI innovation will shape the next three decades of enterprise transformation. This is why Atos Group is moving toward a fully integrated, agentic AI‑powered operating model, supported globally by the Atos Sovereign Agentic Studios. This transformation is built on three mutually reinforcing tech‑strategic pillars: Agentic AI, Digital Sovereignty and Cybersecurity.

With decades of experience operating complex, regulated and sovereign systems, Atos brings a rare operator’s discipline to Agentic AI, shaped by environments where reliability, accountability and control are non‑negotiable

“Agentic AI will define the next era of enterprise services,” said Florin Rotar, CTO, Atos Group. “But the challenge for enterprises is no longer innovation it is execution. We are already working with clients to deploy agentic AI at scale, in complex environments. By transforming our own operating model first and acting as Client Zero, Atos is industrializing agentic AI as a governed, production‑ready capability —delivering value today, not promises for tomorrow.”

About Atos Group

Atos Group is a global leader in digital transformation with c. 63,000 employees and annual revenue of c. €8 billion, operating in 61 countries under two brands — Atos for services and Eviden for products. European number one in cybersecurity, cloud and high performance computing, Atos Group is committed to a secure and decarbonized future and provides tailored AI-powered, end-to-end solutions for all industries. Atos Group is the brand under which Atos SE (Societas Europaea) operates. Atos SE is listed on Euronext Paris.


Source: Atos Group

The post Atos Group Launches Sovereign Agentic Studios to Bring AI Safely into Production Across Organizations appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:49

Latest order comes after Hezbollah and Iran launch attack on more than 50 targets including Israeli military bases

Israel issued a sweeping new displacement order for southern Lebanon, instructing residents up to 25 miles away from their border to head north, and striking the centre of Beirut in a sharp escalation of its fight with Hezbollah.

A spokesperson for the Israeli military on Thursday ordered all residents to head north of the Zahrani River “for their safety”, before it began a bombing campaign against what it said were Hezbollah targets.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:48

The bipartisan bill’s future is uncertain, though, as Trump threatens to stall all legislation until voter-ID law is passed

The Senate passed a broad bill on Thursday to make US housing more accessible and affordable, a rare bipartisan effort in Congress to address a growing national problem.

The bill, which passed 89-10, would reduce regulations, regulate corporate investors, and expand how housing dollars can be used to build affordable homes and rentals. It will now head back to the House, which passed a similar bill earlier this year.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:46

DENVER, March 12, 2026 — Crusoe today announced Crusoe Edge Zones, powered by Crusoe Spark, a new solution that brings AI compute to virtually any location. Crusoe Edge Zones leverage Crusoe’s proprietary Crusoe Spark modular data centers to provide low-latency infrastructure and sovereign AI deployments for customers globally.

With Crusoe Edge Zones, customers can deploy dedicated Crusoe Spark units in geographically targeted locations, unlocking use cases that traditional hyperscale and neo-cloud providers do not support.

Vertical Integration from Factory to Inference

Crusoe Edge Zones illustrate the value of Crusoe’s vertically integrated approach to AI infrastructure, enabling customers to get more capacity faster. Powered by Crusoe Spark, Crusoe Edge Zones are modular data center units manufactured at Crusoe’s newly announced Spark Factory. By building the entire AI infrastructure stack – from factory assembly to cloud orchestration – Crusoe can stand up new cloud zones in as little as three months, delivering significant cost advantages and providing critical AI capacity in diverse locations where legacy infrastructure is limited.

“Crusoe Edge Zones powered by Crusoe Spark represent the continued expansion of our vertically integrated ‘AI Factory’ vision,” said Cully Cavness, Co-Founder, President, and Chief Strategy Officer of Crusoe. “By optimizing these modular AI factories to run both the Crusoe Cloud platform and our Managed Inference product, we are delivering a high-performance, distributed solution that provides the speed, sovereignty, and quality that the next generation of AI requires.”

Delivering Managed Inference powered by MemoryAlloy

Crusoe Edge Zones are optimized to run the full Crusoe Cloud platform and Crusoe’s Managed Inference service, providing a high-performance cloud environment for production-scale AI. By leveraging Crusoe’s proprietary MemoryAlloy technology – a cluster-wide KV cache fabric – these modular zones can deliver up to 9.9x faster time-to-first-token and 5x higher throughput than standard configurations for inference. This ensures that users at the network edge have access to the ultra-efficient and responsive AI infrastructure.

Key Use Cases

  • Low-latency inference: Deploying Crusoe Edge Zones units near business demand to deliver the ultra-low latency required for real-time AI applications where every millisecond matters.
  • Dedicated enterprise clusters: Providing customers with dedicated, factory-built clusters for specialized training and inference workloads, combining the control of on-premise infrastructure with the simplicity of a managed cloud.
  • Sovereign AI deployments: Enabling government entities and regulated industries with strict data residency requirements to deploy Crusoe Edge Zones within their jurisdiction – ensuring data sovereignty while leveraging Crusoe’s advanced infrastructure.

The launch of Crusoe Edge Zones reflects the company’s conviction that the future of AI infrastructure will include both massive, gigawatt-scale campuses for model training, as well as modular, distributed compute for high-performance delivery at the edge. With this announcement, Crusoe is investing in both. For more details, please see Crusoe’s blog.

Availability

Organizations interested in geographic expansion deployments, low-latency inference, or sovereign infrastructure options are encouraged to contact Crusoe to discuss Crusoe Edge Zones deployment opportunities.

About Crusoe

As the AI factory company, Crusoe is on a mission to accelerate the abundance of energy and intelligence. The company provides a reliable, scalable, cost-effective, energy-first solution for AI infrastructure. By harnessing large-scale energy sources, building AI-optimized data centers, and delivering a powerful AI cloud platform, Crusoe empowers its customers and partners to build the future faster.


Source: Crusoe

The post Crusoe Unveils Crusoe Edge Zones to Deliver High-Performance AI Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:45

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., March 12, 2026 — Lightmatter today announced its role as a founding member of the XPO (eXtra-dense Pluggable Optics) Multi-Source Agreement (MSA). Organized by Arista Networks, the XPO MSA aims to define a next-generation optical transceiver form factor designed to meet the massive bandwidth, reliability, and density requirements of hyperscale AI data centers.

As AI models grow in complexity, traditional pluggable optical transceivers have struggled to keep pace with the performance demands of next-generation switches and XPUs. The XPO specification addresses these bottlenecks by enabling a 4X increase in switch rack density compared to conventional pluggable transceivers, including OSFP. As a founding member, Lightmatter is leveraging its silicon photonics expertise to help evolve pluggable architecture, bringing its industry-leading bandwidth density as a key differentiator.

“The rapid growth of AI infrastructure requires a fundamental rethinking of interconnects across the entire data center,” said Nick Harris, Ph.D., Founder and CEO of Lightmatter. “Joining the XPO MSA allows Lightmatter to contribute our expertise in high-bandwidth-density, bidirectional photonics to a collaborative, multi-vendor ecosystem. We are committed to delivering differentiated solutions that eliminate data bottlenecks across all interconnect categories, helping the industry move beyond the limitations of traditional pluggables and copper-based interconnects.”

Key advantages of the XPO platform, enhanced by Lightmatter’s Passage photonic interconnect technology, include:

  • Higher Bandwidth Density: Best-in-class fiber bandwidth density with Lightmatter’s industry-leading bi-directional link architecture.
  • Integrated Liquid Cooling: The XPO design features an integrated cold plate, the most efficient way to manage heat in next-generation liquid-cooled AI data centers.
  • Enhanced Reliability: By reducing component counts and operating at lower temperatures, XPO offers substantial improvement in reliability per bit.
  • Architectural Flexibility: The MSA supports a range of optics technologies—including standards such as Data Center Reach, Fabric Reach and Long Reach.

Lightmatter will showcase its latest photonic innovations at the Optical Fiber Communication (OFC) conference in Los Angeles, from March 15-19, 2026. For more information, please visit https://lightmatter.co/event/ofc-2026.

About Lightmatter

Lightmatter is leading a revolution in AI data center infrastructure, enabling the next giant leaps in human progress. The company’s groundbreaking Passage platform—the world’s first 3D-stacked silicon photonics engine—and Guide—the industry’s first VLSP light engine—connect thousands to millions of processors. Designed to eliminate critical data bottlenecks, Lightmatter’s technology delivers unprecedented bandwidth density and energy efficiency for the most advanced AI and high-performance computing workloads, fundamentally redefining the architecture of next-generation AI infrastructure.


Source: Lightmatter

The post Lightmatter Joins XPO MSA as Founding Member to Accelerate High-Density Optical Interconnects appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:33

Colin Furze... https://youtu.be/yzXZ7cZXifo?si=A86kubkBB5ae4CRh

Could this be implemented on OneWheel without screwing up the electronics, it's some pretty strong magnets.

submitted by /u/r_a_newhouse
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:30

This week, when 2020 voting information from Maricopa County, Arizona, was handed over to the FBI, it might have seemed like a replay of the agency’s late January raid in Fulton County, Georgia.

Both are large counties in swing states that voted for Joe Biden in 2020, and both have long been targets of President Donald Trump’s claims that that year’s presidential election was stolen from him.

But the evidence collected from Maricopa County is fundamentally different, in ways that election experts say threaten the accuracy and integrity of the federal government’s investigation.

In Fulton, the FBI took the actual ballots cast in the county’s 2020 election, which had been kept in secure court storage facilities. In Maricopa, a federal grand jury subpoenaed digital data related to a partisan audit of the county’s vote, according to Arizona Senate President Warren Petersen, the subpoena’s recipient.

This material — which may have included scans and photos of ballots — was stored by the Senate, not the county. Maricopa County destroyed the original ballots after two years, as state law requires.

The firm hired by Senate Republican leaders to run the audit, the Cyber Ninjas, was funded by and took direction from Trump allies. Its leader, Doug Logan, privately admitted in text messages obtained by journalists via public records requests that its ballot recounts were “screwy.” County leaders, both Republicans and Democrats, and nonpartisan outside observers documented several ways Logan’s team had failed to follow procedures to prevent tampering. (Logan didn’t respond to a request for comment.)

Several election experts, including some who watched the Arizona audit in person in 2021, said any investigation based on the Cyber Ninja data would be fatally flawed.

“Accessing invalid data will only draw inaccurate conclusions and risk further degradation of public confidence,” said Ryan Macias, a national elections technology consultant who observed the audit on behalf of the Arizona secretary of state’s office.

The Department of Justice and White House did not answer questions from ProPublica on experts’ concerns about the quality of the data and records produced under the subpoena. A spokesperson for the Arizona U.S. attorney’s office declined to respond to questions about whether it was involved in the case, saying it was against policy to comment on grand jury subpoenas or proceedings.

Petersen, a Republican who helped launch the audit in 2021 and handed over the records to the FBI, didn’t say under which court’s authority the grand jury subpoena was issued or respond to a question on its basis. Neither Petersen nor a spokesperson for the Arizona Senate gave details on what exactly the FBI collected. The Senate has not released the subpoena.

The subpoena is the latest salvo in the Trump administration’s unprecedented attempt to reinvestigate purported problems in the 2020 election.

The White House has tasked Kurt Olsen, a lawyer who tried to assist Trump in overturning his loss, with helping to lead the criminal inquiry. Olsen helped initiate the Fulton County case, which is being overseen by Thomas Albus, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri, according to the supporting affidavit. It’s not yet clear whether Olsen or Albus is involved in the Maricopa County investigation.

The Arizona audit began in April 2021, after the Senate’s Republican leadership subpoenaed Maricopa County for scans of all 2.1 million ballots, the county’s voter rolls and other voting system data, such as logs showing who accessed the system. The Senate also had material that the Cyber Ninjas shared from the audit, such as sheets used to tally votes and track anomalies as well as data from the county’s election management system and ballot tabulators.

Cyber Ninjas pulled data from the Dominion Voting Systems machines the county used in 2020, so the FBI presumably has that material. Trump falsely claimed after the election that Dominion voting machines had been hacked, switching votes for him to register as votes for Biden. The Trump administration has been trying to access Dominion machines from other locations since he took office. Fox News and Newsmax settled defamation lawsuits with Dominion after making similar claims, agreeing to pay the company millions.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat who was secretary of state during the 2021 audit, said in an interview with ProPublica that it’s unclear what has happened to the records in the five years they have been out of the county’s hands.

“I don’t think anyone should have confidence in whatever comes out of whatever was turned over to the FBI,” Hobbs said.

Maricopa County’s 2020 election results have been confirmed repeatedly, both by the county’s postelection hand-count and by multiple audits conducted by independent firms commissioned by the county. Courts tossed out several cases filed by lawyers for Trump alleging fraud.

The Cyber Ninjas’ review, which also concluded that Biden won, drew intense criticism from the get-go, both for its methodology and its partisanship.

One of the audit managers was Heather Honey, who now holds a key post in the Trump administration as the Department of Homeland Security’s deputy assistant secretary for election integrity. The contractor conducted its review without county or Senate employees present and only allowed in observers from Hobbs’ office after a court demanded more transparency.

The firm’s workers made errors recounting votes cast in the presidential race, keeping three separate tally sheets for each batch of ballots that often reflected different totals, a secretary of state’s office report found. They also had black and blue pens out as they took photos of ballots, causing concern among observers about the potential for tampering. The contractor sent data collected from ballot tabulators to a Montana cabin for analysis and wouldn’t say how — or if — it had protected the data from hacking.

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes, a Democrat, said in an interview that the contractor’s sloppy procedures would make it unlikely a court would accept the records handed over to the FBI as evidence proving irregularities in the 2020 vote.

“You can easily poke holes in any of this stuff,” Fontes said.

Cyber Ninjas sometimes mistook routine aspects of the election process as signs of wrongdoing. It announced that 74,000 more mail-in ballots had been cast in Maricopa County than had been sent out. There was a simple explanation for the discrepancy, however: The ballots hadn’t been sent out; they’d been given to the voters by hand at early voting locations.

Ken Bennett, a Republican who was the Arizona Senate’s liaison to the audit and is a former Arizona secretary of state, said in an interview that he thinks the county’s original election results were correct.

“The only evidence I could find of mistakes made by the county were minor errors that had nothing to do with whether or not they came up with the accurate results,” Bennett said.

The post Election Records Handed Over to the FBI in Maricopa County, Arizona, Could Be Fatally Flawed, Experts Say appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:27

Supporter mistakenly travelled to St James Park ground instead of Newcastle namesake (save for an apostrophe)

The two stadiums are 366 miles apart. One holds more than 50,000 people, the other less than 10,000. The buzz as you walk up to the two grounds is a little different.

But nevertheless, one Barcelona fan appeared not to have realised that he was at the wrong ground and tried to get through the turnstiles at Exeter City’s modest stadium (St James Park), rather than Newcastle United’s hulking one (St James’ Park).

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:20

UAE cybercrime law means sharing images or footage of war can bring jail, prison time and deportation

A British man is among 20 people who have been charged in the United Arab Emirates under cybercrime laws in connection with filming and posting material related to Iranian attacks on the country.

The 60-year-old man, understood to be a tourist who was visiting Dubai, was charged under a law that prohibits sharing material that could disturb public security.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:14

Vast release of emergency crude reserves fails to quell mounting fears about supply crunch, rattling markets

Oil markets are facing the “largest supply disruption in history” as the war in Iran continues to block tankers from shipping millions of barrels of crude each day, the world energy watchdog has warned.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said the supply shock ignited by Iran’s effective blockade of the strait of Hormuz meant the world faced a deeper crisis than after the Yom Kippur war of 1973 and the 2022 outbreak of war in Ukraine.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:00

Ballerina Misty Copeland responded to controversial comments made by actor Timothée Chalamet when he appeared to dismiss the significance of ballet and opera, saying, "No one cares."

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 13:00

Google Maps is rolling out its biggest update in more than a decade, introducing a Gemini-powered chatbot and a new "Immersive Navigation" interface. "Ask Maps" lets users plan trips, ask questions, and refine travel suggestions conversationally within the app. "The new chatbot will be accessible via a button up near the search bar," notes Ars Technica. "You can ask it anything you're likely to find in Google Maps without jumping into another app. You can ask for directions, of course, but it can also plan out road trips and vacations from a single prompt. Ask Maps works like a chatbot, so it accepts follow-up prompts to refine and expand on its suggestions." Meanwhile, Google is promising a "complete transformation" of the navigation experience in Maps with what they're calling "Immersive Navigation." It brings detailed 3D visuals, smarter route previews, and improved guidance powered by data from Street View and aerial imagery. "You'll see accurate overpasses, crosswalks, landmarks, and signage in the new navigation experience," reports Ars. "Google also aims to solve some of the biggest usability issues with turn-by-turn navigation in this update. [...] Immersive Navigation tries to show you more of the route as you drive, using smart zoom and transparent buildings to help you plan ahead. Voice guidance will also reference turns after the next one where appropriate." Immersive Navigation will also highlights the tradeoffs between different route options, such as longer routes that avoid traffic or tolls. And, as you approach your destination, it will uses Street View imagery, building entrances, and parking information to help you orient yourself. The features are launching on Android and iOS first, with broader platform support coming later.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 12:54

After latest concert cancellation, singer also describes Valencia hotel as ‘indescribable hell’ that will require ‘one year to recover’ from

British singer Morrissey has cancelled a concert in Valencia after being left sleep-deprived during the city’s notoriously noisy Las Fallas festival.

A statement on his website said: “Having travelled for two days by road, Morrissey reached the hotel in Valencia late on Wednesday. Any form of sleep or rest throughout the night was impossible due to festival noise/loud techno singing/megaphone announcements.”

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 12:35

Plaintiffs claim that David Protein bars contain "way more" calories and fat than what's displayed on the label.

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-12 12:27

Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best supporting actor at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 12:19

If you have health questions, Amazon's new AI assistant may have some answers.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-13 17:24

Top US regulators met with Bill Anderson to discuss ‘supreme court action’ over glyphosate weed killer

Top US regulators met with Bill Anderson, Bayer’s CEO, last year to discuss “litigation” issues – including “supreme court action” over its glyphosate weed killer – just months before the Trump administration took a series of steps to boost Bayer’s case at the high court, internal government records show.

The 17 June meeting, between officials at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Anderson and two other top Bayer executives, came as the Germany-based company was working to quash costly US litigation brought by tens of thousands of people who allege they developed cancer from their use of the company’s glyphosate-based herbicides, such as Roundup.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 12:29

Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best actor at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 13:39

Attacks on shipping traffic and energy infrastructure in the Persian Gulf temporarily pushed oil back above $100 a barrel, stoking investor fears.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 15:32

Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina announced Thursday he will seek an 18th term in Congress.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 12:04

The US president says higher oil prices benefit the country as Iran war pushes petrol costs above $100 per barrel

Donald Trump on Thursday shrugged off the economic toll the war in Iran is taking on gas prices across the United States, writing on social media that “when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money”.

The president’s comment came as the American Automobile Association reports that the average price for a gallon of gas hit $3.60, a week after the beginning of the US-Israel military operation against Iran prompted the largest price spike since the opening days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

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2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 12:04

The incident, in a laundry room on the USS Gerald R. Ford, is another setback during the ship’s extended deployment.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Atlassian plans to cut 1,600 jobs or a 10th of its global workforce, joining rivals in slashing staffing to cope with the advent of AI and a broader post-Covid industry slowdown. Australian billionaire founder Mike Cannon-Brookes explained the reductions in a staff memo, while also announcing his chief technology officer was leaving the Sydney-based company. "It would be disingenuous to pretend AI doesn't change the mix of skills we need or the number of roles required in certain areas," Cannon-Brookes said. "It does."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 12:00

Interactive visuals and charts are just a prompt away.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:51

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

European gas prices are also rising today.

The month-ahead UK gas contract is up 4.2% at 132.6p per them, while the continental European equivalent is 3.2% higher at €51.6 per Megawatt hour.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:46

Downing Street denies former minister’s vetting and approval was rushed through after release of documents by government

Downing Street has rejected accusations it covered up Keir Starmer’s role in appointing Peter Mandelson as the UK ambassador to Washington, after documents detailing the process showed no formal input from the prime minister.

A day after 147 pages of documents were released by the government, No 10 also denied that the approval and vetting of Mandelson had been rushed through, saying that normal procedures were followed.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:45

Exclusive: none of the MPs are yet near point of crossing the floor and want guarantees they would be reselected for their seat at next election

Several Labour MPs are in talks about defecting to the Greens, but are seeking guarantees they would be backed electorally by their new party, the Guardian has been told.

Zack Polanski, the leader of the Greens in England and Wales, has said publicly that he has chatted to Labour MPs about the idea of switching sides, with the leftwing party enjoying a surge in membership and having overtaken Labour in some recent opinion polls.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:36

Did a debt collector freeze your bank account? Here's what to do next to protect your money and your rights.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:32

Animal charities call for ‘extreme’ breeds to no longer be eligible for prizes and full vetting of competitors

Animal charities have complained to Channel 4 after the winner of Crufts best in show was found to have been convicted of animal cruelty, and said the winning dog is an “extreme” breed that has had a “lifetime of suffering”.

After Lee Cox and his four-year-old Clumber spaniel Bruin won best in show at the prestigious dog competition, it emerged that Cox had a previous conviction for animal cruelty.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:30

These features can help you monitor and support your overall health.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 11:24

Company that runs the sites says it has ‘no reason to believe there is a correlation between the donors’ passing and plasma donation’

Two people have died in Canada after donating plasma at a chain of clinics that has been under scrutiny by federal inspectors for failing to keep accurate records, screen donors or maintain its machines.

While experts say the deaths are exceedingly rare, critics say Canada’s embrace of private companies to handle blood products reflects a “slow collapse of a system that has been the envy of the world”.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:22

News stories are weighing nuclear risk as experts muse on the possibility of global warfare

Intimations of world war three – the big one, nuclear Armageddon – didn’t arise yesterday. But they got more urgent when Donald Trump was elected the second time. In December 2024, Newsweek published a map of the “safest US states to live during nuclear war”. The article was not reassuring. “Nowhere is truly ‘safe’” from such consequences as “contamination of food and water supplies and prolonged radiation exposure”, said the senior policy director of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. Another expert noted that “even a ‘small’ nuclear war would ... kill at least a billion people”.

And since 28 February, when the US and Israel began their bombardment of Iran, chatter about a world war has spiked, with everyone from anonymous social media users to Harvard policy wonks weighing in.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:19

More than 300 TSA officers have quit since the partial government shutdown began last month, according to agency statistics obtained by CBS News.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:17

Oksana Masters said she was shocked to win her 22nd Paralympic Medal in Milan.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:06

The pipe, with a diameter of 11.5 feet, towered as high as 42 feet at one point, according to the Osaka construction department.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:05

After 14 years in orbit, NASA's Van Allen Probe A dropped back into the atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:00

Last year’s celebrated French hit Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is nominated in 12 categories this year, with Ghost of Yōtei, Dispatch, Death Stranding 2 and Indiana Jones also making strong showings

The 22nd Bafta games awards are coming up in April, and the 2026 nominations list is dominated by the impeccably stylish French breakout hit Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 which has 12 nominations, and has already won game of the year prizes at the UK’s Golden Joysticks last November, December’s Game awards in the US and February’s Dice awards in Las Vegas.

Dispatch, a game about a benched superhero roped into running a team of superpowered misfits at a call centre, has nine nominations. Among them is a best performer in a leading role nod for its star Aaron Paul, and one for Jeffrey Wright in a supporting role. Sony’s samurai epic Ghost of Yōtei came out with eight nominations, including best game and best performer in a leading role for Erika Ishii, who plays Atsu.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:00

The strike appears to have come without warning, and shows that Iran and its proxies can target ships even without mining the Strait of Hormuz.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:00

Asian governments are implementing emergency measures like four-day workweeks and work-from-home mandates to cope with a fuel shortage triggered by the Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. "Asia is particularly dependent on oil exports from the Middle East; Japan and South Korea respectively source 90% and 70% of their oil from the region," notes Fortune. From the report: On March 10, Thailand ordered civil servants to take the stairs rather than the elevator, and to work-from-home for the duration of the crisis. It increased the air-conditioning temperature to 27 degrees Celsius, and will tell government employees to wear short-sleeved shirts over suits. (Thailand has about 95 days of energy reserves left, according to Reuters). Vietnam also called on businesses to let people work-from-home to "reduce the need for travel and transportation." The Philippines is pushing for a four-day work week, and has ordered officials to limit travel "to essential functions only." South Asia is getting hit hard too. Bangladesh brought forward the Eid-al-fitr holiday, allowing universities to close early in a bid to save fuel. Pakistan also instituted a four-day week for government offices and closed schools. India suspended shipments of liquefied petroleum gas to commercial operators to prioritize supplies for households, leading to worries from hotels and restaurants that they may be forced to close without fuel supplies. Countries across the region are also considering price caps, subsidies, and tapping strategic oil reserves. On Wednesday, the International Energy Agency "unanimously" agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil and refined products from its reserves. The Associated Press offers a look at the energy supplies that countries hold and when they tap them.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 11:00

Save up to 75% in celebration of Lunar New Year!
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Offer ends February 24.

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The post Ignite Your Next Career Moveπ The Formula for Opportunity Starts Here — SAVE UP TO 40%!Ignite Your Next Career Move appeared first on Linux.com.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-12 10:56

Tech company files amicus brief in support of Anthropic’s effort to overturn an aggressive Pentagon designation

Microsoft has thrown its weight behind Anthropic’s legal challenge against the Pentagon, filing a court brief in support of the AI company’s effort to overturn an aggressive designation that effectively bars it from government work.

In an amicus brief submitted to a federal court in San Francisco this week, Microsoft, which integrates Anthropic’s AI tools into systems it provides to the US military, argued that a temporary restraining order was necessary to prevent serious disruption to suppliers whose products rely on the AI company’s technology. Google, Amazon, Apple and OpenAI have also signed on to a brief in support of Anthropic.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:50

William "Neil" McCasland was last seen at his home in Albuquerque on Feb. 27, investigators said. They have not found evidence of foul play.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:30

The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday sanctioned six individuals and two companies accused of aiding North Korea in running a global scheme using remote IT workers to fund their weapons program.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 10:27

Quantum computers have begun showing utility for solving problems that traditional supercomputers struggle with, particularly in areas like material science and molecular simulation. In many cases, quantum computers still require large amounts of classical HPC infrastructure to work. To help guide the industry toward a convergence of quantum and HPC, IBM today launched a reference architecture for implementing what it dubs quantum-centric supercomputing, or QCSC. It also shared a roadmap that brings the two worlds together in stages.

Quantum computing is reaching parity with classical HPC for some workloads, which is fueling massive investments across various quantum modalities. A large number of these quantum systems are being installed in supercomputing labs around the world, where HPC resources (like GPUs) can be used for mitigating errors that are inherent with quantum computing.

While work between these two systems is progressing, the integration is not ideal. Quantum computers and HPC resources today mostly exist in isolation, which forces users to manually orchestrate workloads, coordinate job scheduling, and transfer data between systems. This situation is what drove IBM researchers to develop a new framework that integrates the two types of computing and provides for shared resources that can eliminate the silo-ization.

IBM’s QCSC architecture (Source: “Reference Architecture of a Quantum-Centric Supercomputer”)

IBM’s new QCSC architecture depicts four logical layers, including hardware infrastructure, system orchestration, application middleware, and applications. It defines how quantum processors (QPUs) can work alongside GPUs, CPUs, ASCIs, and FPGAs in both tight and loose coupling scenarios. IBM proposes quantum systems API (QSA) that acts as the programmatic boundary between the classical and QPU environments.

The architecture depicts scale-up coupling of QPU and classical environment for real-time access across a low-latency interconnect, such as RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE), Ultra Ethernet, or NVQLink, according to a preprint copy of IBM’s new paper, “Reference Architecture of a Quantum-Centric Supercomputer.” The scale-up pattern is ideal for certain classes of problems that require the lowest latency and therefore the tightest coupling of resources between QPUs and classic HPC resources, such as for fault-tolerant error correction.

IBM also presents a scale-out pattern for connecting QPUs and classical resources in mixed and hybrid cloud environments, which is ideal for a range of workloads that surround and complement QPU execution but don’t have the same latency requirements as real-time error correction. This includes workloads like pre-processing (or generating the initial states for quantum runs); post-processing (retrieving the results from the quantum system, apply error mitigation, and recovering configurations); and interweaving simulations from classical HPC into QPUs as part of a hybrid workflow.

The QCSC architecture also provides for a system orchestration layer, which is powered by a Quantum Resource Management Interface (QRMI) that can be accessed via an API by other resource managers, like Slurm. The QRMI library is needed because classic workflow schedulers like Slurm generally lack native QPU support, IBM says. IBM proposes another component, dubbed the Slurm Plugin Architecture for Node and job Kontrol, or SPANK, to integrate QPU resources with Slurm (don’t ever let them tell you IBM Researchers don’t have a sense of humor).

IBM’s QCSC roadmap (Source: “Reference Architecture of a Quantum-Centric Supercomputer”)

On the middleware front, QCSC proposes a way to integrate the tensor data structures that are common in the supercomputing world with the unit of data in quantum circuits, which are ordered sequences of operations that are applied to qubits. A variety of tools have been created to optimize the compilation of quantum circuits for accuracy and speed, such as TKET, Cirq, and Qiskit. IBM proposes creating a directed acyclic graph dubbed a Tensor Compute Graph (TCG) to provide a way for developers to express workflows across both abstractions.

The QCSC application layer presents a model, or a collection of libraries, upon which developers can build domain-specific solvers that decompose problems into mixed representations of tensors and quantum circuits. These libraries automate various steps in the “application-specific circuit synthesis,” including preparation, optimization of application constraints, and finally encoding data.

Beyond these four elements, IBM discusses several other “cross-cutting” issues that need to be thought out and hopefully solved before QPUs and classical HPC can truly be integrated. This includes system monitoring and system management; orchestration in the cloud (where Kubernetes dominates); and mitigating security concerns.

IBM proposes a phased approach for its QCSC roadmap. Phase 1 involves using QPUs as co-processors, or offload engines, for HPC. In this stage, minimization of vibrations and electro magnetic interference is critical. Phase 2 heralds the age of heterogeneous quantum and classical systems, where latencies are reduced and complex hybrid algorithms can be run. Phase 3 brings tight integration of quantum and HPC systems, where hardware and software is co-designed as a unified platform from the ground up and the most challenging problems can be tackled.

QCSC is the culmination of decades of work and puts a new class of the world’s toughest challenges within reach, said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research, IBM Fellow, and a 2026 HPCwire Person to Watch.

“More than four decades ago, Richard Feynman envisioned computers that could simulate quantum physics,” said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research and IBM Fellow. “At IBM, we’ve spent years turning that vision into reality. Today’s quantum processors are beginning to tackle the hardest parts of scientific problems—those governed by quantum mechanics in chemistry. The future lies in quantum-centric supercomputing, where quantum processors work together with classical high-performance computing to solve problems that were previously out of reach. IBM is building the technology and systems that brings this future of computing into reality today.”

 

The post IBM Launches Reference Architecture for Quantum-Centric Supercomputing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:15

My gt-s 6.5 performance treaded tire has a bulge and looks like float life is out of the stock of the soft Thundercat

Should i go with the mid?/Get the enduro soft?/or go back to the performance treaded.

Riding currently between 17-21 psi .I enjoy a ballooned up nimble tire for carving so I've liked the performance treaded but am sick of loosing traction in my back yard track.

submitted by /u/Comfortable_Cry_5345
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:12

Revelation prompts questions over Scottish fire service’s capacity to deal with large fires after 2023 cuts

Concerns have been raised about the capacity of Scotland’s fire service to deal with large fires like the one that gutted a Victorian office block in Glasgow as it emerged that the city’s only remaining fire engine with a high-reach ladder was unavailable on Sunday.

The Scottish fire and rescue service confirmed that, while standard city-based fire engines were on the scene within minutes of the first 999 call, the nearest available high-reach appliance – which adds vital additional capacity to tackle a large blaze – came from Coatbridge, an 11-mile (18km), 26-minute drive away in light traffic.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:11

The first week of the U.S.'s war with Iran cost around $11.3 billion, military officials told members of Congress in a briefing this week, according to sources familiar with the meeting.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 10:05

CAMBRIDGE, England, March 12, 2026 — Riverlane today published its new roadmap outlining how its technology can accelerate the arrival of utility-scale quantum computing by as much as 3-5 years. The roadmap lays out step-by-step engineering and science milestones to overcome quantum computing’s defining technical challenge: correcting billions of unavoidable data errors in real-time.

Credit: Riverlane

Quantum computers generate accumulating errors as they perform tasks, creating an avalanche effect that rapidly degrades computation. Without correcting those errors continuously and with extremely low latency, even the most advanced quantum computers fail long before they can run complex computations that match, let alone outperform, classical computers.

Real‑time QEC is therefore essential for unlocking utility-scale quantum computing — the point where quantum computers can begin to solve a broad range of commercially and scientifically valuable problems beyond the reach of today’s supercomputers.

In December 2025, a paper by Riverlane scientists was published in the journal Nature Communications showing how its Local Clustering Decoder (LCD) enabled some quantum computers to improve speed, accuracy and throughput such that they can perform one million error-free operations with 4x fewer qubits. This improvement can accelerate their path to utility-scale quantum computing by 3-5 years. Riverlane’s new technology roadmap shows how the company will build on this work to achieve similar acceleration in quantum computers using every major qubit type.

Steve Brierley, CEO and Founder of Riverlane, said: “Identifying and correcting billions of quantum errors in real-time is one of the most difficult technical challenges in all of science and the key that unlocks quantum’s future. Riverlane is solving this problem for all quantum computers. Our current and future quantum error correction technology enables any quantum computer to run vastly larger applications at far greater speed than would otherwise be possible, accelerating the industry’s route to utility scale by years.”

Riverlane’s roadmap defines successive generations of ‘fault-tolerant’ (e.g. error corrected) systems, each representing a 1,000x scale-up in the number of reliable quantum operations (‘QuOps’) the quantum computer can perform when using Riverlane’s error correction system.

Key roadmap milestones include:

  • MegaQuOp systems (one million reliable operations), expected before the end of the decade. At this stage, quantum computers are expected to surpass classical supercomputers for a narrow set of specialised problems. Early hybrid systems combining quantum processors with AI and classical computing will begin tackling scientific challenges previously beyond reach, particularly in materials science and chemistry.
  • GigaQuOp systems (one billion reliable operations), expected by the early 2030s. Representing a further 1,000× increase in computational capacity, GigaQuOp systems will support complex quantum algorithms and begin enabling a first wave of commercial quantum applications. At this scale, quantum computers will begin modelling complex molecular and physical systems with unprecedented fidelity, accelerating discovery in fields such as advanced materials, energy technologies and industrial chemistry.
  • TeraQuOp systems (one trillion reliable operations), expected from 2033 onwards. Reaching TeraQuOp scale marks the beginning of utility-scale quantum computing. At this stage, quantum systems are expected to deliver transformative advantages across multiple industries, including materials discovery, molecular chemistry, drug design and climate modelling.

The roadmap shows the evolution of Riverlane’s hardware and software products that enable this scaling.

Deltaflow, Riverlane’s real-time QEC system that sits as a layer within the quantum computing stack. Built on scalable FPGA hardware, Deltaflow works by encoding many physical qubits into a single logical qubit, then inferring and decoding errors across many such logical qubits while processing terabytes of data per second in real-time.

Deltakit, Riverlane’s open-source software development kit (SDK) that helps developers and researchers experiment with quantum error correction before deploying real-time QEC on quantum hardware. 95% of quantum computing professionals believe QEC is essential for reaching utility-scale quantum computing. Yet the vast majority cite limited training, knowledge and access to QEC resources as barriers to adoption. Deltakit fills this gap.

Riverlane’s roadmap aligns with the ambitious timelines being explored by various national quantum programmes. Riverlane has partnerships with more than twenty quantum computer makers and national labs in Europe and the US covering all major qubit types, including several performers in DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative.

Neil Gillespie, Vice President of Applied Research at Riverlane, said: “Each generation of quantum computers opens new areas for scientific exploration, with different qubit modalities taking researchers down many different paths. At Riverlane, we’ve built one of the world’s largest teams of quantum research scientists and work closely with partners across the ecosystem to turn new quantum science into engineered QEC solutions that accelerate progress for the entire field.”

Accompanying the roadmap is a technical whitepaper published today that provides deeper detail on the science and engineering advances required at each stage of scaling. The full roadmap and technical whitepaper are available here.

About Riverlane

Riverlane is the world leader in quantum error correction (QEC), the technology that unlocks quantum computing’s promise of a new age of human progress. We partner with over 60% of the world’s quantum computer companies and leading high-performance computing (HPC) centres to solve the error problem blocking their path to ‘utility-scale’ systems that can transform multiple industries. Our real-time QEC system, Deltaflow, works with all major qubit types and includes proprietary QEC chips, decoders and a compiler. Deltakit, our software platform, helps quantum developers learn, develop and adopt QEC. Founded in 2016, Riverlane is headquartered in Cambridge, UK, and has offices in Boston in the US and Delft in the Netherlands. The company has raised over $120 million in private funding, including an $85 million Series C in 2024.


Source: Riverlane

The post Riverlane Publishes Quantum Error Correction Roadmap Targeting Utility-Scale Systems by Early 2030s appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:04

The R&D Centre, together with the planned deployment of a Quantinuum Helios system in Singapore, aims to accelerate industrial collaboration across pharma, materials and finance, while bolstering the local quantum ecosystem and workforce

SINGAPORE, March 12, 2026 — Quantinuum, a leading quantum computing company, has announced the establishment of a new R&D and Operations Centre (the “Centre”) in Singapore, marking its formal expansion into Singapore. This important development will enable Quantinuum to deepen collaboration with the nation’s research and industrial ecosystem, together with the company’s plan to deploy its Helios quantum computer in Singapore later this year.

Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony for Quantinuum’s new R&D and Operations Centre. Credit: Quantinuum.

Singapore’s early investment in quantum has positioned the nation to capture value as quantum systems move toward real-world use. In his national budget speech last month, Prime Minister Mr. Lawrence Wong highlighted Quantinuum as an industry leader, emphasizing that Helios will enable Singaporean researchers and companies to work on meaningful projects.

The new Centre will bring together Quantinuum staff with local researchers and industry partners to co-develop commercially relevant solutions across pharma, materials science, finance, and other sectors. It will also serve to help advance Singapore’s national priorities under its National Quantum Strategy by strengthening long-term R&D capabilities and workforce development, helping position Singapore as a global hub for quantum technology.

The Centre’s establishment is supported by the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB) and builds on Quantinuum’s close partnership with Singapore’s National Quantum Office (NQO) through the National Quantum Computing Hub. The National Quantum Strategy is developed and implemented by NQO, which is hosted in the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), and funded by the National Research Foundation (NRF).

As part of its commitment to developing a robust local ecosystem and support for innovation across the full quantum value chain, Quantinuum is collaborating with pioneering startups in Singapore, including Entropica, which accesses Quantinuum systems through its Startup Partner Program, and Squareroot8, with whom Quantinuum signed a Memorandum of Understanding to co-develop quantum communications applications.

Official Statements

  • Dr. Rajeeb Hazra, President and CEO of Quantinuum, said: “We believe there are three pillars to a holistic strategy for building a sustainable quantum frontier: use cases, infrastructure, and workforce. Singapore provides an exceptional foundation for this approach, and we are proud to contribute our experience in ecosystem development as we build a leading quantum ecosystem together.”
  • Dr. Marvin Lee, Country Leader for Quantinuum Singapore, who recently joined the company following senior appointments at A*STAR, EDB, and NRF, where he played a key role in shaping the National Quantum Strategy, said: “The new Centre will enable local talent and industry to work hands-on with quantum technologies, co-develop solutions aligned with national priorities, and support high-value jobs. We are committed to building long-term capability and resilience in Singapore’s digital economy.”
  • Mrs. Josephine Teo, Minister for Digital Development and Information, a key advocate of the National Quantum Strategy, joined Quantinuum as the Guest of Honour at the official opening of its new Centre, commemorated by a formal ribbon-cutting ceremony. She said: “Singapore aims to be a global hub for the development of algorithms and applications for quantum computers. We will tap on our strengths in sectors of potential application, such as finance, logistics, and pharmaceuticals. Doing so will not only benefit these industries in Singapore, but elsewhere in the world.”
  • Mr. Pee Beng Kong, Executive Vice President, Singapore Economic Development Board, said: “Quantinuum’s expansion into Singapore marks an important step in translating quantum research into real-world industry applications. The Helios system and new R&D Centre will enable local companies and researchers to collaborate on next-generation solutions in areas such as drug discovery, materials innovation, and financial optimisation. This investment will deepen partnerships across our industry and research ecosystem and build high-value quantum capabilities from Singapore.”
  • Mr. Ling Keok Tong, Executive Director of the National Quantum Office, said: “Quantinuum’s R&D Centre and the Helios deployment create opportunities for Singapore, giving our researchers hands-on access to advanced quantum hardware, and moves us closer to demonstrating real quantum advantage in drug discovery, portfolio optimisation, amongst others. This is a boost to our quantum research and talent development, as well as our efforts in building a robust quantum ecosystem.”

The new Centre represents an important step in Quantinuum’s international expansion and its commitment to collaborating with partners in key innovation hubs. Quantinuum looks forward to continued collaboration with Singapore’s research and industry ecosystem to advance the development and application of quantum technologies.

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. Quantinuum has active engagements with market leaders across pharmaceuticals, material science, financial services, and government and industrial markets.

The company has a global workforce of approximately 700 employees, including top scientists and researchers. Over 70% of its technology team hold PhDs. Quantinuum’s headquarters is in Broomfield, Colorado, with additional facilities across the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, and Singapore.


Source: Quantinuum

The post Quantinuum Establishes R&D Hub in Singapore, Plans Helios Quantum Computer Deployment appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:00

European Commission says it will suspend €2m grant if organisers of arts festival go ahead with proposals

The European Commission has warned it will cut funding for the Venice Biennale if organisers go ahead with plans to include Russia.

The commission reiterated that any breach of ethical standards by the art festival would be treated as a violation of contract, leading to suspension of the €2m (£1.7m) agreement.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:00

Stream the 2019 film Ready or Not, starring Samara Weaving.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Reducing Europe's nuclear energy sector was a "strategic mistake," European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Tuesday, as governments grapple with an energy crunch from the Iran war. Europe produced around a third of electricity from nuclear power in 1990 but that has fallen to 15%, she told an event in Paris, leaving it reliant on oil and gas imports whose prices have surged in recent days. Being "completely dependent on expensive and volatile imports" of fossil fuels puts Europe at a disadvantage to other regions, von der Leyen said in a speech. "This reduction in the share of nuclear was a choice. I believe that it was a strategic mistake for Europe to turn its back on a reliable, affordable source of low-emissions power." The report notes that the EU does not directly fund nuclear energy projects because all 27 member states have not unanimously supported the technology. However, von der Leyen said the Commission plans to provide a 200-million-euro guarantee from the EU's carbon market to help attract private investment in innovative nuclear technologies.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:48

Payment of 2% at employee-owned partnership follows sales increase to £13.4bn

Business live – latest updates

The owner of John Lewis and Waitrose has paid an annual bonus to workers for the first time in four years after underlying profits rose by 6%.

The retail group’s 69,000 employees – which it calls partners – will share £35m, the equivalent of 2% of salary, after it recorded an increase in sales and profits. The payout amounts to about one extra week of pay.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:43

Kremlin appearing to ramp up control over internet, as it tests new ‘whitelist’ restrictions and pushes people to state-owned app

Muscovites have been turning to walkie-talkies and pagers amid unexplained disruptions to internet services in the capital, as the Kremlin appears to ramp up control over online activity in Russia.

Users in central Moscow, as well as in St Petersburg, first reported difficulties accessing mobile internet about a week ago. Many said they were unable to load websites or apps, while some lost service altogether, leaving them unable to make phone calls.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:26

Sansevero Chapel Museum will host day of guided tours where visitors will be able to feel marble sculptures

The Sansevero Chapel Museum in Naples will allow dozens of visually impaired visitors to take part in a rare tactile experience, letting them touch celebrated works of art including the Veiled Christ, which is widely regarded as one of the most striking masterpieces in the history of sculpture.

On 17 March, the museum will host an initiative called La meraviglia a portata di mano – Wonder within reach – organised in partnership with the Italian Union of the Blind and Visually Impaired of Naples, offering about 80 blind and partially sighted visitors a chance to encounter the marble masterpieces.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:20

REGENSBURG, Germany, March 12, 2026 — HPC Gridware, a startup specializing in HPC and AI workload management solutions, has announced the release of Gridware Cluster Scheduler Version 9.1.0. This major release delivers significant advances in security, observability, topology-aware job placement, and cluster administration, building on the performance and GPU enhancements introduced in version 9.0.2.

“Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 represents a major leap forward for enterprises running demanding HPC and AI workloads,” said Daniel Gruber, Chief Solutions Officer at HPC Gridware. “With advanced topology-aware binding, munge authentication, TLS encryption, native Prometheus and Grafana integration, and the Qontrol UI preview, we’re giving administrators the tools they need to operate their clusters more securely, efficiently, and with greater visibility than ever before.”

Key Features and Enhancements in Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0

  • Advanced Binding Framework for Topology-Aware Job Placement: A completely redesigned, scheduler-driven binding framework elevates CPU, cache, and memory-domain placement to a first-class scheduling concept. Binding units—including threads, cores, sockets, dies, L2/L3 caches, and NUMA domains—are treated as consumable resources that are detected, sorted, reserved, and assigned during scheduling. The new -b… option family replaces the legacy -binding syntax, enabling deterministic and topology-aware job placement with support for hybrid CPU architectures (performance vs. efficiency cores), advance reservations, and highly configurable binding strategies for performance-critical workloads.
  • TLS Encryption of Component Communication: Gridware Cluster Scheduler now supports TLS encryption for all internal component communication, with automatic certificate generation and renewal, configurable certificate lifetimes, and simple enablement via the installation workflow or bootstrap configuration. This enhancement strengthens the security posture of cluster environments and supports Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) compliance requirements.
  • Prometheus and Grafana Metrics Exporter: The new qtelemetry tool enters beta, providing a native metrics exporter for integration with Prometheus and Grafana. Administrators gain immediate visibility into cluster health and workload behavior through comprehensive host, job, and qmaster metrics—with a pre-configured Grafana dashboard available for rapid visualization.
  • Protection Against Denial-of-Service (DoS) Attacks: New request-rate limiting protects the qmaster daemon with fine-grained, per-source, per-user, per-host, and per-object GDI request filtering. This ensures scheduler stability under load while allowing normal high-volume operations.
  • Enhanced NVIDIA GPU Support with qgpu: Building on the GPU tool introduced in 9.0.2, this release further improves qgpu with enhanced load sensing via NVIDIA DCGM, per-job GPU accounting for power consumption and usage tracking, and streamlined prolog/epilog setup for NVIDIA runtime environments.
  • Further Improved License Management (FlexNet Integration): Automated FlexNet license-manager integration enables automatic license discovery, real-time license monitoring as a load sensor, and external license tracking—eliminating manual configuration, preventing license exhaustion, and maximizing ROI on commercial software licenses.
  • Munge Authentication Support: Lightweight and secure Munge authentication is now available, highly recommended for container-based and user-namespace environments, and configurable during installation.
  • Systemd Integration: Full systemd integration allows Gridware Cluster Scheduler to be managed as a native systemd service, with optional job execution under systemd control for fine-grained resource management including core binding, device isolation, and cgroup-based accounting.
  • Decrease Resource Requests of Running Jobs: A new qalter -when now capability enables administrators and users to free resources—such as licenses or memory—from long-running jobs, allowing other jobs to consume them without requiring a job restart.

Introducing Qontrol — REST-Based Cluster Configuration UI (Preview)

Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 includes a preview release of Qontrol, a modern, REST-based Cluster Configuration UI that simplifies cluster management tasks. Qontrol provides an intuitive web interface for managing hosts, queues, parallel environments, user sets, projects, resource quotas, calendars, and global configuration—replacing the legacy qmon tool. With features like clone functionality for common objects and streamlined host group management, Qontrol makes it easier than ever for administrators to configure and maintain their clusters.

Broad Platform Support and SLES 15 SP7 Certification

Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 is certified on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) 15 SP7 and supports a comprehensive range of architectures and Linux distributions. The supported platform matrix spans x86-64, ARM64, ppc64le, s390x, and RISC-V64 architectures across major enterprise distributions including RHEL 7–10, Rocky Linux 8–10, Alma Linux 8–10, CentOS 7–9, Ubuntu 20.04–26.04, SUSE Leap 15, SUSE SLES 15, Raspbian 11–12, and FreeBSD 13–14—ensuring seamless deployment across diverse on-premise, cloud, and hybrid infrastructures.

Building on a Legacy of Expertise

While HPC Gridware is a startup, its founders bring decades of experience in workload scheduler development dating back to the 1990s. Gridware Cluster Scheduler continues to deliver exceptional performance, long-term stability, and comprehensive support for large-scale computing operations. It fully supports integration with all “SGE” (“Sun Grid Engine”) compatible interfaces, including major MPI implementations and a vast array of commercial and open-source applications used in industries such as EDA, life sciences, AI, oil and gas, and engineering.

Additional Features

  • Job Submission API Support: Robust support for job management APIs across Python, Go, Java, and C, adhering to the DRMAA standard, catering to diverse enterprise programming environments and supporting external frameworks through compatibility with standard job submission utilities.
  • Extensible Accounting in JSON Format: Standard JSON-based job resource usage accounting enables simple enterprise integration and allows configuration of custom resource metrics within the standard accounting framework, including per-job energy consumption metrics.
  • Faulty Job Loadsensor: Automatic collection and archival of job spool files from failed jobs to a configurable location, simplifying root cause analysis and debugging of job failures.
  • Long-Term Support and Services: Extensive documentation, regular updates, and a dedicated support portal for technical assistance ensure clients receive the highest level of service.

Platform Integrations

  • HPC Box Integration: Gridware Cluster Scheduler is fully integrated with HPC Box, enabling streamlined deployment and management of HPC environments.
  • EF Portal Support: Enhanced HPC and VDI user experiences and streamlined workflows through seamless integration and joint support collaboration with the EF Portal.

Security Enhancements

Version 9.1.0 introduces several security enhancements to strengthen the security posture of cluster scheduler components, including Munge authentication support for secure user and process authentication, TLS encryption for protected data in transit, and enhanced vulnerability reporting and incident response processes aligned with ENISA requirements and Cyber Resilience Act compliance.

Availability

Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 is available now and is already in production in some of the world’s most demanding computing environments. For more information, contact HPC Gridware at sales@hpc-gridware.com or visit www.hpc-gridware.com/download-main to request a free trial.

About HPC Gridware

HPC Gridware is an innovative startup specializing in workload management solutions that optimize the performance of applications, services, and users in high-performance computing environments. Founded by industry veterans with experience building HPC workload management solutions since the 1990s, HPC Gridware enables enterprises to fully utilize and scale compute resources across on-premise, cloud, and hybrid infrastructures. Our advanced reporting and monitoring capabilities provide insights to optimize scheduling, achieve faster time-to-results, and reduce operational costs. HPC Gridware’s solutions help companies manage hundreds of HPC and AI applications and run millions of tasks every day. HPC Gridware is headquartered in Regensburg, Germany. For more information, please visit www.hpc-gridware.com.


Source: HPC Gridware

The post HPC Gridware Releases Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:13

René Redzepi also steps down from non-profit board after accusations of physical and psychological abuse

René Redzepi, the head chef and co-founder of Noma, has announced his resignation from his internationally acclaimed Copenhagen restaurant following allegations he physically abused his staff.

Redzepi had been facing protests in Los Angeles before a four-month pop-up that launched this week. His resignation on Wednesday comes after the New York Times detailed allegations of physical and psychological abuse, including claims that he “punched employees in the face, jabbed them with kitchen implements and slammed them against walls”.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:00

Microsoft doesn't want its AI to be your doctor. It wants to make you better prepared when you do see them.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:00

Don't know what to watch? Dig through these Netflix movie picks that span every genre, and catch up on some Oscar nominees, too.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 09:00

Advocates say bill weakens safety reviews, boosts industry influence and shields pesticide makers from legal liability

The newly proposed, Republican-led farm bill includes a range of provisions opponents say constitute a “pesticide industry wishlist” that would kill protections for humans, the environment, wildlife and endangered species, while also shielding industry from legal liability.

Among other measures, they said the bill would delay safety reviews, give industry a prominent role in determining endangered species’ protections and grant the US Department of Agriculture new veto power over health safeguards for children, farm workers and the public.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:59

Programme which supports schemes in six African countries was previously hailed as vital protection for Britain against future pandemics

A flagship health project in Africa, which UK ministers said would play a vital role in protecting Britain from future pandemic threats, is being axed due to aid cuts, the Guardian can reveal.

The Global Health Workforce Programme (GHWP) which supported development and training for healthcare staff in six African countries, will close at the end of the month, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:55

SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 12, 2026 — Upscale AI has announced its plan to deliver open, scale-out Ethernet systems. These systems will be built upon industry-leading NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon and Upscale’s AI-optimized SONiC software. This enables AI infrastructure operators to deploy scalable, low-latency fabrics optimized for modern AI workloads, while supporting heterogeneous architectures across compute, accelerators, memory, and storage.

As part of this initiative, Upscale AI has joined the NVIDIA Partner Network, working closely with NVIDIA and its ecosystem on reference architectures and validated designs to accelerate the deployment of large-scale AI data center networks. Upscale AI’s planned NVIDIA-powered solutions strengthen its position as a pure-play provider of AI-native networking infrastructure.

Streamlining AI Infrastructure at Scale

To reduce complexity at scale, Upscale AI is fueling the adoption of open, interoperable Ethernet networking for heterogeneous AI clusters. This new AI fabric blueprint for NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet-based systems, centered on Ethernet interoperability and designed for diverse compute environments, enables customers to deploy multi-vendor, production-grade AI infrastructure while maintaining a consistent operating model.

Upscale AI’s AI optimized, scale-out systems built on NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon are powered by an enterprise-grade, focused SONiC network operating system with end-to-end support. By integrating ASIC-native telemetry with deterministic, lossless Ethernet behavior and industry-standard networking workflows, these systems deliver predictable performance, operational simplicity, and reliability at scale.

This full-stack approach enables high-speed data movement, workload isolation, and scalable orchestration across heterogeneous environments, while preserving the flexibility of open-source management.

Upscale AI plans to bring its Spectrum-X Ethernet based scale-out systems to market later this year, targeting AI data centers building diverse, multi-vendor infrastructure. Delivered as fully supported, end-to-end solutions, these offerings combine hardware, software, and lifecycle services to accelerate deployment, simplify operations, and enable long-term AI infrastructure evolution.

“NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon is setting a new standard for Ethernet-based AI performance,” said Barun Kar, CEO of Upscale AI. “Pairing this technology with our purpose-built systems and AI-optimized SONiC software allows us to deliver the best of both worlds: an open, highly scalable and interoperable architecture with operational simplicity.”

“To lead in the trillion-parameter model era, scalability and efficiency are paramount,” said Gilad Shainer, SVP at NVIDIA. “We look forward to collaborating closely with Upscale AI as the team leverages the NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet platform to help companies build the world’s most advanced open AI infrastructure.”

“As AI infrastructure evolves toward increasingly heterogeneous architectures, scalable and operationally sound Ethernet fabrics are becoming essential,” said Alan Weckel, Co-Founder and Technology Analyst at 650 Group. “By combining NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon with a full-stack approach that integrates systems, software, and support, Upscale AI is addressing a key gap in making open, scale-out AI networking practical for large scale AI deployments.”

“As scale-out Ethernet becomes the foundation for AI infrastructure, organizations are looking for solutions that combine openness with operational maturity,” said Sameh Boujelbene, Vice President at Dell’Oro Group. “By delivering a fully integrated stack built on NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon-based systems and SONiC, Upscale AI is addressing key requirements around scalability, supportability, and long-term operability for heterogeneous AI data center networks.”

About Upscale AI

Upscale AI is a category-defining pure-play Al networking infrastructure company enabling heterogeneous compute through open-standard, full-stack, turnkey solutions. Its portfolio of silicon, systems, and software is purpose-built for ultra-low-latency networking, enabling breakthrough performance and scalability across Al training, inference, generative Al, edge computing, and cloud-scale deployments.


Source: Upscale AI

The post Upscale AI Introduces Open, Scale-Out Ethernet Architecture for Heterogeneous AI Clusters appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:53

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 12, 2026 — PsiQuantum announced today that the company has signed a collaborative research agreement with the National Cancer Center Japan, a leading cancer treatment and research facility, to advance applications in oncology and healthcare for utility-scale quantum computers. This new agreement underscores the enormous potential for utility-scale quantum computing across the healthcare value chain, specifically in research and development, resource allocation, and patient outcomes in cancer treatment.

Under the newly formed collaboration, PsiQuantum will work alongside the National Cancer Center Japan to advance fault-tolerant quantum algorithm development and collaborate with the National Cancer Center Japan and other leading pharmaceutical companies in Japan in the development of clinically relevant quantum applications. The partnership will also utilize PsiQuantum’s software suite, Construct—a secure, end-to-end platform for designing, analyzing, and optimizing algorithms for fault-tolerant quantum computing.

“PsiQuantum is proud to work alongside the National Cancer Center Japan as we explore what utility-scale quantum computing will be able to deliver in designing new treatments for the benefit of researchers and patients,” said Sam Pallister, PsiQuantum’s Vice President for Quantum Applications. “Once deployed, utility-scale quantum computers will accelerate research and development that transforms how we develop new medicines—and partnerships like these are critical for making sure providers are equipped to take full advantage of this technology.”

“We are thrilled to partner with PsiQuantum on leveraging quantum computing technology to address some of the most pressing challenges in healthcare,” said Dr. Takayuki Yoshino, Director for the Department of Global Oncology at the National Cancer Center Hospital East in Kashiwa, Japan. “Together, our teams are poised to conduct innovative research and unlock new solutions at the intersection of pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and quantum computing.”

Today, the research and development process for new pharmaceutical treatments is long and expensive, and current computing methods struggle to produce meaningful or reliable outcomes that expedite a treatment’s time-to-market. Utility-scale quantum computers promise to deliver transformative results across the healthcare industry by simulating molecular systems with unprecedented accuracy, scale, and speed. By executing chemically accurate simulations faster, fault-tolerant quantum computers can accelerate drug discovery, lower research and development costs, and help providers tackle real-world healthcare challenges.

About PsiQuantum

PsiQuantum was founded in 2016 and is headquartered in Palo Alto, California. The company’s mission is to build and deploy the world’s first useful, fault-tolerant quantum computing systems. PsiQuantum’s photonic approach enables it to leverage high-volume semiconductor manufacturing and existing cryogenic infrastructure to rapidly scale its systems. Learn more at www.psiquantum.com.


Source: PsiQuantum

The post PsiQuantum and National Cancer Center Japan Partner to Accelerate Drug Discovery for Healthcare appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:45

NEW YORK, March 12, 2026 — Qrypt, the quantum security company that eliminated encryption key transmission, today announced it has brought its BLAST Protocol end-to-end encryption and quantum-entropy key generation to the NVIDIA Jetson edge AI platform, including Jetson Orin Nano and Jetson Thor. The integration extends Qrypt’s quantum-secure encryption from NVIDIA BlueField DPUs in the AI factory to Jetson endpoints at the edge, giving organizations a single security architecture from the data center to deployed robotics, autonomous systems and critical infrastructure.

BLAST is a peer-reviewed cryptographic protocol developed by Qrypt Chief Cryptographer Yevgeniy Dodis, a fellow of the International Association for Cryptologic Research and a professor at New York University. Conventional encryption relies on a key-distribution architecture, originally designed for 1970s telecom networks, that binds encryption keys and encrypted data together in the same channel. Replacing the underlying algorithm, as post-quantum cryptography does, does not resolve this structural weakness, because the new algorithms may themselves need to be replaced as cryptanalysis advances.

BLAST takes a fundamentally different approach, replacing the key-distribution architecture itself by generating identical encryption keys independently at each endpoint from quantum entropy. No key ever crosses a network, and the keys are never correlated with the data they protect. The protocol also automates key provisioning, rotation and lifecycle management across large-scale deployments, enabling organizations to secure entire fleets of edge devices without rebuilding their existing infrastructure.

Edge AI is accelerating into real-world, safety-critical environments such as robotics fleets, autonomous systems and remote industrial monitoring, pushing sensitive data and AI models outside the protection of the data center. Many of these devices will remain deployed for a decade or more, making them prime targets for “harvest now, decrypt later” attacks in which adversaries capture encrypted data today with the expectation of breaking it once quantum computing matures.

“AI is moving from the data center to the edge, and the security requirements are moving with it,” said Denis Mandich, Qrypt co-founder and CTO, who spent 20 years in the US Intelligence Community focused on national security and advanced technology development. “Organizations building on Jetson need encryption that’s quantum-ready on day one, not something they have to retrofit after deployment.”

As the only quantum security company in the NVIDIA Inception program, Qrypt integrates across the full NVIDIA platform stack. Each Jetson integration is built on a custom Yocto Project kernel tailored to the target device. For Orin Nano, Qrypt developed a kernel upgrade from Linux 5.15 to 6.6 to meet modern security requirements ahead of official NVIDIA support. These foundations are paired with Qrypt’s CNSA 2.0 and NIST-aligned cryptography stack. Qrypt’s hardware quantum random number generators are also NIST ESV certified, utilizing quantum entropy sourced through exclusive licensing agreements with Oak Ridge and Los Alamos National Laboratories.

“The same level of encryption that protects the most sensitive operations in the intelligence community should be available to every organization deploying AI at the edge,” said Kevin Chalker, CEO and co-founder of Qrypt, a former CIA operative who founded the company to democratize intelligence-grade cryptography. “With BLAST on NVIDIA Jetson, a robotics fleet or a critical infrastructure operator gets the same quantum-secure protection as a national security mission, from a single architecture that scales from the edge to the AI factory.”

BLAST Protocol is now available on NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano and Jetson Thor through Qrypt’s early access integration program. Organizations interested in deploying quantum-secure encryption across Jetson-based edge environments can learn more at qrypt.com/contact.

About Qrypt

Qrypt is the only company in the world to eliminate the need for encryption key transmission. Using quantum entropy sourced through exclusive licensing agreements with Oak Ridge and Los Alamos National Laboratories, Qrypt generates identical encryption keys simultaneously at multiple endpoints, so no key ever crosses a network. The company’s BLAST Protocol provides end-to-end encryption, automated key lifecycle management and post-quantum compliance for AI infrastructure, critical networks and edge deployments across the NVIDIA platform stack. Founded by former intelligence community officers Kevin Chalker and Denis Mandich, Qrypt is headquartered at One World Trade Center in New York City.


Source: Qrypt

The post Qrypt Brings Quantum-Secure Encryption to NVIDIA Jetson appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:43

The honor recognizes Koller’s leadership in collaborative European initiatives to increase HPC expertise and impact.

March 12, 2026 — Dr. Bastian Koller, Managing Director of the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS), has been named one of twelve “People to Watch 2026” by HPCwire.

The selection focuses on Dr. Koller’s leadership roles in international collaborative projects like EuroCC, CASTIEL, and FFplus, EuroHPC Joint Undertaking Centers of Excellence like EXCELLERAT, and the AI Factory HammerHAI. These efforts have contributed to expertise development in high-performance computing and artificial intelligence across Europe, HPC and AI uptake in industry and SMEs (small and mid-size enterprises), and initiatives to improve Europe’s digital sovereignty.

HPCwire is a leading publication covering the international high-performance computing industry. For 24 years, its “People to Watch” program has recognized HPC industry professionals who are driving innovation and increasing the benefits of high-performance computing for society.

For more information and an interview with Bastian Koller, click here.

More from HPCwire


Source: HLRS

The post HLRS Managing Director Bastian Koller Named to HPCwire ‘People to Watch 2026’ List appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:42

SUNNYVALE, Calif.March 12, 2026 — Synopsys, Inc. has announced advancements across its leading hardware-assisted verification (HAV) portfolio, including new hardware platforms and capabilities to support the ever-expanding demand for AI chip verification from the data center to the edge. Synopsys HAV platforms, powered by the company’s unique software-defined capabilities, set new performance, scalability, and use case benchmarks for verifying the world’s most sophisticated multi-die and AI chips amidst compounding design complexity and time-to-market requirements.

AI chip verification complexity is escalating rapidly as large language models continue to double in size roughly every four months, and interface data rates advance at a 2x rate every three years. Simultaneously, edge AI architectures are driving aggressive throughput, latency, and power‑efficiency targets that further expand the design and validation workload. To keep pace, the industry requires HAV solutions to support broader application coverage and run quadrillions of verification cycles, enabling first‑time‑right silicon and a seamless ability to integrate heterogeneous AI systems.

“As AI-driven systems become more complex, verification must scale just as quickly. Hardware-assisted verification is no longer optional. It is critical to meeting aggressive time-to-market goals and ensuring silicon readiness,” said Salil Raje, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Adaptive and Embedded Computing Group, AMD. “FPGA-based emulation and prototyping play a central role in that effort by accelerating system bring-up and enabling earlier software development. Our collaboration with Synopsys reflects that focus. Through joint optimization of Synopsys ZeBu with the AMD Vivado software stack, and by leveraging AMD EPYC processors for compute acceleration, we are reducing compile times and helping customers move to accurate system models faster.”

“As AI becomes more pervasive across almost every industry and products are now workload-optimized and silicon-powered, building high confidence early that the workloads are running to spec on the silicon under development is critical,” said Ravi Subramanian, Chief Product Management Officer at Synopsys. “Our software-defined, hardware-assisted verification solutions deliver continuous innovation. They are a powerful force multiplier to scale verification productivity and meet the growing demand for pre-silicon development across industries.”

The latest advancements across Synopsys’ software-defined hardware-assisted verification portfolio, include:

Breakthrough performance and capacity for the AI era: The latest software-defined updates and modular HAV are available across the ZeBu and HAPS platforms. Of note, with these updates, the industry’s highest capacity-scalable emulation platform, ZeBu Server 5, supports complex designs to meet the demands of mega designs supporting data center AI training and inference, GPU, custom accelerators, and networking IPU/DPU workloads. Modular HAV for HAPS enables the largest prototypes for software development, with further improvements for compute, storage, and bring-up capabilities.

New HAPS and ZeBu platforms: The new HAPS-200 12 FPGA and ZeBu-200 12 FPGA systems address the complexity and high-performance requirements for data center-sub-system, mobile, client, server, consumer, and edge AI applications. They deliver 2x higher capacity compared to previous 6 FPGA platforms utilizing the flagship AMD Versal Premium VP1902 adaptive SoCs, offering EP-Ready Hardware-enabled configurability between prototyping and emulation. Synopsys also introduces the new HAPS-200 1 FPGA platform as a desktop system ideal for IP verification and software bring-up using Synopsys Interface Prototyping Kits.

“As NVIDIA’s AI platforms have become software‑defined to meet rising performance and scalability demands, verification must evolve in the same way,” said Narendra Konda, Vice President, Hardware Engineering at NVIDIA. “Synopsys’ software‑defined hardware‑assisted verification and the new HAPS‑200 12 FPGA systems are accelerating our system‑level verification and validation, helping us deliver complex AI platforms on aggressive schedules. And, Synopsys modular hardware-assisted verification enables deeper collaboration across our ecosystem.”

Software-defined HAV capabilities extend system lifetime value: Continuous software improvements deliver compounding performance gains, increased debug productivity, as well as additional use case capabilities for both new and installed systems. The Synopsys HAV portfolio supports new, industry-first Hardware-Assisted Test Solutions, test automation capabilities that allow teams to stress corner cases for processor, memory, and I/O subsystems as well as full-system coherency validation and observe system behavior under realistic workloads in emulation long before silicon is ready. For mixed-signal and system-level designs, Real-Number Models (RNM) emulation enables fast, scalable abstraction of analog behavior within digital-centric verification flows for faster software bring-up. For safety-critical and high-reliability designs, new fault emulation capabilities enable scalable fault injection and analysis across RTL simulation, emulation, and prototyping.

“Verifying hardware for our highly anticipated rack-scale AMD Helios solution – marked by massive AI scale, complex subsystems, and robust software stacks – demands scalable and versatile verification platforms,” said Alex Starr, Corporate Fellow, AMD. “The Synopsys software-defined, HAV capabilities with EP-Ready Hardware are critical to how we perform CPU, GPU, and AI subsystems verification as well as full-system validation. Teams can also cover an expanded number of use cases in the pre-silicon phase, encompassing analog, digital, and software design verification using Real-Number Models (RNM) in emulation. As well, the flexibility to reconfigure and reuse hardware across projects and move seamlessly between emulation and prototyping as AI designs grow in both physical size and software stack volume are essential to delivering the high-performance, interoperable AI infrastructure at scale needed to meet the world’s growing AI demands.”

About Synopsys

Synopsys, Inc. (Nasdaq: SNPS) is the leader in engineering solutions from silicon to systems, enabling customers to rapidly innovate AI-powered products. We deliver industry-leading silicon design, IP, simulation and analysis solutions, and design services. We partner closely with our customers across a wide range of industries to maximize their R&D capability and productivity, powering innovation today that ignites the ingenuity of tomorrow. Learn more at www.synopsys.com.

The post Synopsys Introduces Software-Defined Hardware-Assisted Verification to Enable AI Proliferation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:41

TORONTO, March 12, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, has announced that it has entered negotiations with the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario for support for Project OPTIMISM, an initiative to establish advanced semiconductor and photonic manufacturing capabilities for the quantum technology supply chain in Canada. Subject to due diligence and the execution of definitive agreements, up to $390 million in combined government support is under consideration.

Under Project OPTIMISM, Xanadu would aim to establish new domestic capabilities for heterogeneous integration, photonic integrated circuit packaging, wafer-level semiconductor test and measurement, and quantum module assembly. By building this infrastructure in Canada, the initiative is expected to significantly advance Xanadu’s roadmap toward utility-scale quantum computing and future quantum data-center infrastructure, while offsetting a substantial portion of the capital required to develop that next phase of quantum computing deployment.

“Project OPTIMISM reflects a bold vision for building the advanced manufacturing capabilities required to support the next generation of quantum technologies. We believe this investment, upon finalization, will unlock a major milestone for Xanadu and for Canada’s quantum ambitions. With the proceeds expected from our pending transaction alongside the government’s support, we will be well-positioned to fund the infrastructure required for large-scale quantum computing,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “We are grateful for the opportunity to explore working with the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario as we continue discussions toward advancing this initiative and strengthening Canada’s leadership in quantum innovation.”

The project would help position Canada and Ontario at the forefront of advanced photonics, semiconductor innovation, and quantum manufacturing by addressing key gaps in the emerging quantum technology supply chain and enabling the development of next-generation photonic quantum systems. In addition to supporting quantum computing, the infrastructure and expertise developed through the initiative could contribute to broader advances in areas such as telecommunications, AI hardware, sensing, and other emerging semiconductor-driven technologies.

The proposed support remains subject to the completion of due diligence and the execution of final agreements.

About Xanadu

Xanadu is a Canadian quantum computing company with the mission to build quantum computers that are useful and available to people everywhere. Founded in 2016, Xanadu has become one of the world’s leading quantum hardware and software companies. The Company also leads the development of PennyLane, an open-source software library for quantum computing and application development.


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu Explores C$390M Government-Backed Quantum Manufacturing Project in Canada appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:34

Dyshan Best later died after having to wait 10 extra minutes for next ambulance, according to Connecticut investigation

A man who was shot by police and later died had to wait 10 extra minutes for an ambulance after an officer having a “mild anxiety attack” took the first one that arrived at the scene, according to a newly released state investigation.

Dyshan Best, 39, was shot in the back last year as he fled from officers in Bridgeport, Connecticut. A report released this week by the state’s inspector general found that the shooting was justified because Best had a gun in his hand and the officer pursuing him had reasons to fear for his own safety.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:30

The feature allows users to interact conversationally with the app, finding places such as a charging station, or available tennis court.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:21

Oil prices again rise over $100 a barrel as Iran threatens long ‘war of attrition’. Plus, San Francisco slashes air pollution

Good morning.

Iran dramatically escalated its strategy of striking civilian infrastructure and transport networks across the Gulf on Wednesday, attacking commercial ships and targeting Dubai’s international airport as US and Israeli warplanes launched new waves of strikes.

Who has borne most of Iran’s strikes? More than two-thirds of Iran’s attacks have been on the UAE. Dubai, a center of global finance and international tourism, is facing an existential threat as foreigners flee.

What do we know about the US defense secretary’s attitude toward Iran? A Guardian review of Pete Hegseth’s books, speeches and broadcasts revealed he has voiced extreme antipathy towards Iran for years.

Where is the bill now? The House has approved a version of the bill – but the Senate does not have the votes to do so. It would need 60 votes to move forward because of the filibuster rule.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:18

Criminals using artificial intelligence tools to take over mobile, bank and online shopping accounts, says Cifas

Criminals are increasingly exploiting AI technology to take over people’s mobile, banking and online shopping accounts, the UK’s leading anti-fraud body has warned.

Last year, a record number of scams were reported to the national fraud database, fuelled by AI, which allows for large-scale deception on “industrialised” levels, according to Cifas, the fraud prevention organisation.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:10

Campaigners say people unlikely to ‘look favourably’ on package for Wael Sawan, which rose to £13.8m in 2025

The chief executive of Shell saw his pay jump more than 60% to almost £14m in 2025 despite a slump in profits at the oil company and prospects of rising pump prices related to war in the Middle East.

The package for Wael Sawan, who took the top job in 2023 and has refocused the company on fossil fuels, rose from £8.6m in 2024 to £13.8m in 2025.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:07

Whether the Iran war-linked leap in the price of gas will give a shot in the arm to EV sales will depend on a variety of factors, experts say, so the answer isn't clear-cut.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 11:44

Golestan Palace in Tehran, a world heritage site, and buildings in historic city of Isfahan harmed, despite Unesco sending coordinates

The governor of the historic Iranian city of Isfahan has accused the US and Israel of a “declaration of war on a civilization” as heritage sites across the country suffer damage in their bombing campaign.

The most serious confirmed damage to date has been to Tehran’s Golestan Palace, dating back to the 14th century, and the 17th-century Chehel Sotoon Palace in Isfahan.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 16:39

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 12.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 16:38

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 12, No. 535.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 13:48

A new paper argues that humans are losing varied ways of thinking due to the use of chatbots, and that's concerning.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:04

Exclusive: Lab tests discover ‘new form of insider risk’ with artificial intelligence agents engaging in autonomous, even ‘aggressive’ behaviours

Robert Booth UK technology editor

Rogue artificial intelligence agents have worked together to smuggle sensitive information out of supposedly secure systems, in the latest sign cyber-defences may be overwhelmed by unforeseen scheming by AIs.

With companies increasingly asking AI agents to carry out complex tasks in internal systems, the behaviour has sparked concerns that supposedly helpful technology could pose a serious inside threat.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:01

Samsung delivers modest but meaningful upgrades to the Ultra's design, cameras and battery. And yes, the phone is packed with new AI features -- and most of them are actually pretty useful.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 08:00

The most powerful nation in the world is now being led by a rogue president who rejects its longstanding values

As we reach the 13th day of the war in Iran – with death and destruction rippling throughout the Middle East – it’s important to bear in mind where the real failure lies.

So far, nearly 2,000 people have been killed, including 175 Iranian schoolchildren and seven US service members. At least 140 US service members have been wounded, several critically. The final tallies on both sides will almost certainly be far higher.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 08:00

Experts warn younger people not to dismiss symptoms such as rectal bleeding as diagnoses rise for those under 50

Colorectal cancer is now the leading cause of cancer death in the US for people under 50, according to a new analysis from the American Cancer Society, prompting both experts and those in that age group with the disease to warn others to take certain symptoms seriously.

Becca Lynch, who works in cyber security in Denver, Colorado, was diagnosed with advanced colon cancer last year, when she was just 29. At first, she assumed her symptoms couldn’t be anything serious: “I chalked it up to stress,” she said.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 07:57

We look at the 14th regular season before it kicks off on Friday with two expansion sides: Boston Legacy and Denver Summit

The National Women’s Soccer League’s 14th regular season starts on Friday with a rematch of last year’s semi-final between the Portland Thorns and Washington Spirit. From there, 16 teams will compete in a 248-match season, with eight teams qualifying for the playoffs.

We look at four themes that may define the year.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:53

As pennies begin to disappear, states are grappling with a "rounding" problem for cash purchases that would have included them in the past.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:50

Proposed package comes after regulator finds ‘serious and unacceptable breaches’ in how company operates

Welsh Water is to pay a proposed £44.7m after the industry regulator found “serious and unacceptable” breaches in the supplier’s sewage and network services.

Ofwat said Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water failed to properly operate, maintain and upgrade its wastewater network to ensure it could cope with levels of sewage and wastewater, and did not have adequate processes in place or oversight by senior bosses.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 07:50

Hacker group Handala claimed responsibility for attack that caused ‘global disruption’ to Stryker Corporation’s systems

An Iran-linked group said it hacked a US medical company, causing “global disruption” to its systems, in retaliation for the bombing of the Minab school in Iran, in an attack seen as widening the Middle East into the cyber realm.

Handala, a hacker group, claimed responsibility for the attack on Wednesday on the Stryker Corporation, which makes medical devices and is based in Michigan. It affected thousands of employees using the company’s Microsoft systems.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:43

Vast release of emergency crude reserves fails to quell mounting fears about supply crunch, rattling markets

Oil prices have again topped $100 a barrel as widespread Iranian attacks on energy facilities in the Middle East overshadowed a vast release of government reserves.

As Donald Trump vowed to “finish the job” and press ahead with the US-Israel war on Iran, the country’s regime stepped up retaliatory strikes on economic targets across the region.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:42

Court makes finding pending final hearing that trafficking victim ‘likely to suffer harm to his mental health’ if returned

A high court judge has halted the removal of an Eritrean trafficking victim to France under the UK’s “one in, one out” scheme, after raising concerns that forcibly sending him back could cause him harm.

The controversial deal, under which one asylum seeker who arrives in the UK on a small boat is forcibly returned to France in exchange for another being brought over legally, was launched last summer. As of 5 March, 370 people have been brought to the UK legally and 354 sent back to France. The aim is to deter small boat crossings, but thousands of asylum seekers have crossed the Channel since the scheme started. So far this month, 1,200 people have made the perilous journey.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:08

my kid tried the GT and it simply refuses to acknowledge he's on. he tried different positions on the sensor but to no avail. while some positions do work, the GT stops within 1 or 2 seconds afterward.

so which model is better for this 8years old?

submitted by /u/Curious_Party_4683
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:07

The report raised questions about what took place after the shooting, which left Dyshan Best bleeding with fatal injuries.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

In week two of Rhik Samadder’s diary, our resident AI skeptic put his reputation on the line

Every writer I know is in despair at the prospect being replaced by AI. Many of them say they never use it on principle; I know all of them do.

So this week, as part of my AI diary, I’m conducting the forbidden experiment in plain sight. I’m going toe to toe with ChatGPT as a creative writer. Can it truly match me, and might it replace me? Let’s settle this.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

The world of soccer throws up no shortage of questions. Today, Graham Ruthven endeavors to answer three of them

Sergiño Dest’s World Cup is at risk. The 25-year-old limped off with a hamstring injury during PSV’s Eredivisie win over AZ Alkmaar on Saturday, immediately starting a countdown clock in the minds of US men’s national team supporters who now fear Mauricio Pochettino’s first-choice right back could miss this summer’s tournament. Dest said on social media he hopes to be back by the end of the season, but nobody truly knows when he’ll return.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

Florida investors featured in Guardian investigation claimed they lost most of their life savings after a financial adviser put their money into ‘alternative’ assets

In a victory for everyday investors, arbitrators have awarded $3.8m to 13 Florida seniors who claimed a financial adviser squandered their retirement money by plowing it into risky investments.

The award comes after the Guardian highlighted these investors’ losses as part of an investigation into dangers that so-called “mom and pop” investors face at a time when the Trump administration has thrown its support behind Wall Street’s efforts to sell them more higher-risk “alternative investments”.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

The answer to rising food costs isn't eating less of what you love -- it's making more of it at home. Here are seven kitchen tools worth every penny.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

Dentists explain why you shouldn't rinse right away when brushing your teeth

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

A Pew Research Center survey found that only 53% of U.S. adults went to a movie theater in the past year, while 7% said they've never seen a movie in a theater at all. "The findings reflected a domestic box office still fighting to regain its footing since the COVID-19 pandemic, when ticket sales collapsed 81% in 2020 due to theater closures," reports Variety. From the report: In 2025, moviegoers in the U.S. and Canada bought 769.2 million tickets, less than half of the all-time peak of roughly 1.6 billion tickets sold in 2002, according to data from Nash Information Services. However, an August 2025 study field by NRG/National Research Group showed that 77% of Americans ages 12-74 went to see at least one movie in a theater in the previous 12 months. Box office revenue peaked at an inflation-adjusted $16.4 billion in 2002, and annual ticket revenue held relatively steady through the 2000s and 2010s before falling to under $3 billion in 2020 when theaters closed for months. Last year, U.S. theaters sold just over $9 billion worth of tickets, per media analytics firm Comscore. The number represents a recovery, but nowhere near a full one, as ticket sales have been lagging around 20% below pre-pandemic levels.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 07:00

Fortunes of the country’s 22 billionaires doubled in last five years, reaching unprecedented collective wealth of $219bn

Scrunched between luxury apartment buildings and a lush gated community, the neighborhood of Santa Lucía Reacomodo in Mexico City is a working-class pocket of real estate. Electrical wires tangle above cinder-block houses, stray cats slink down narrow streets, debris piles up on the pavement.

María del Socorro Corona, 79, arrived here decades ago, back when it was just a cactus-covered hillside. The two-bedroom turquoise house she built with her now-deceased husband is crammed with bags of clothes and knick-knacks she sells at a weekly market.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:34

Despite what online forums might tell you, including ChatGPT, you can't "speed up" an old TV.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:23

The general staff said that it used Storm Shadow missiles, which are produced jointly by Britain and France, to hit a plant that makes microchips and high-end electronics.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:15

President delivered a vague and contradictory forecast on the future of the war in Middle East. Plus, how to recognize a psychopath

Good morning.

Donald Trump has said the war in Iran is “very complete, pretty much”, as the economic toll of the joint US-Israeli operation rises, disrupting global oil trade and threatening to engulf the Middle East in a regional war.

Any unintended consequences so far? Among others, it has probably reinforced North Korea’s decision to build a nuclear arsenal.

Do we know yet who bombed the Minab school? Trump blamed Iran without evidence. All the actual evidence indicates the US was responsible.

This is a developing story. Follow the latest updates here.

Who did X say were the most prolific state actors? Russia, followed by Iran and China.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:14

President Trump says he'll end the war soon, when he wants to, as Iran hits ships in and near the Strait of Hormuz and warns U.S.-linked banks will be next.

2026-03-12 08:04
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If regime holds, control of enriched uranium may be ultimate measure of US-Israeli success, insiders say

Israel did not have a realistic plan for regime change when it attacked Iran, multiple Israeli security sources have said, with expectations that airstrikes could lead to a popular uprising having been driven by “wishful thinking” rather than hard intelligence.

Iran has survived nearly two weeks of bombing raids and the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Trump is publicly contemplating ending the increasingly costly war.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:01

The U.S. and Israel had a "flawed assumption" that the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would lead to the collapse of the regime, said an expert on the region.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:00

Under new Taliban laws, a husband is allowed to beat his wife as long as it is not done with ‘obscene force’, which the woman must prove in court

The shocking level of physical violence against women permitted under the Taliban’s new laws has been revealed this week by the case of a woman in northern Afghanistan, who said she was beaten with a cable wire by her husband and told by a judge: “You want a divorce just because of that? … A little anger and a few beatings won’t kill you.”

Farzana* said her husband was quick-tempered and often resorted to beating her. He regularly humiliated her and called her “disabled”, she said, because her right leg was slightly shorter than the left. She had tolerated the abuse for the sake of their children, but one evening, she said, his violence went too far.

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2026-03-12 08:04
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A lot is riding on the success of the latest multiplayer online shooter from Halo creator Bungie, a DayGlo spectacular that whisks players to a far-off planet mired in an endless battle for resources

In rare quiet moments playing Marathon, you may find yourself overcome by the iridiscently pretty planet Tau Ceti IV. This fictional world seems to radiate a chemical glow: powdery pink skies and lurid green vegetation fill the screen alongside supermassive architecture emblazoned with ultra-stylish, neon graphic design. Yet enjoy the scenery for a split second too long and you might catch a bullet, causing your character to bleed an icky blue substance. In such moments, the camera locks – meaning you must stare down at their unceremonious expiry. Marathon’s considerable beauty is matched only by its clinical brutality.

The road to Marathon’s release has been long and contentious. This extraction shooter – so-called because you must do as much shooting and looting as you can in a given level before making an escape – was first shown off in 2022 with a ravishing trailer (below). Among many startling images, it showed tiny robotic bugs, a little like silkworms, weaving a synthetic body into existence. The game, made by Halo and Destiny creator Bungie, looked weird in a way that blockbuster shooters rarely do, causing excitable stirrings among both shooter stalwarts and art-game aficionados.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:00

Comments in books, speeches and videos shed new light on defense secretary’s personal commitment to war on Iran

The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has expressed a violent antipathy towards Iran for years in books, Fox News broadcasts, educational videos and a 2018 speech to an Israeli media conference in Jerusalem, a Guardian review has revealed.

In a 2020 book, for example, Hegseth wrote that Iran’s leaders were “actively seeking the military means – especially nuclear weapons – to bring the West to its knees”. And in a 2017 video for PragerU, the hard-right media platform, Hegseth described Iran as “America’s mortal enemy”.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:00

If you're looking for a cam with a spotlight, floodlight or other illumination, I've tested top models to see how they perform.

2026-03-12 08:04
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Why Should Delaware Care?
The Leipsic River — running through a small, Kent County town bearing the same name — has for generations been a taxiway out to the Delaware Bay for swaths of the state’s watermen to catch crabs, oysters and different kinds of fish. But as watermen who have called the river home for years watch their industry change over time, some have begun thinking about how to preserve it for future generations.

Craig Pugh sat inside his pickup truck, his eyes trained on the bending Leipsic River before him.

A river that, despite its tranquil nature, bore an outsized impact on Pugh’s life. 

The Leipsic River runs through a 180-person fishing town bearing the same name, about 7 miles northeast of Dover. Pugh has called the town home for each of his 63 years. He even served as mayor for a time. 

Many in Delaware have likely never even driven through the small town off Route 9, especially since the Route 1 highway allowed traffic to virtually bypass it. For those who make the trek, it’s likely to eat at Sambo’s Tavern, the local favorite crab spot that many argue is the best in Delaware for crustaceans. 

For generations, watermen — commercial fishermen who often cycle between crabbing and oystering depending on the season — have called the Leipsic River home. 

And Pugh is among them. He has worked the water, using the Leipsic River as a taxiway to and from the Delaware Bay to collect crabs and oysters, for nearly five decades. 

But he has seen the industry change over the years, from rising operating costs to increased regulations. And he is not alone. 

As Pugh, and some other veteran watermen, think about their own futures, they also are looking for ways to preserve Delaware’s commercial fishing industry for the next generation.

“We’re all connected to this goddamn river,” Pugh said on a sunny day last December. 

A life on the water

Founded in the late 1700s, the town was named Leipsic by 1814 because of its muskrat pelt industry — taking the Americanized name from Leipzig, Germany, another fur trading center of its time. Its successes as a river town grew to include a grist mill, canneries, shipyard, docks and hotels in the 1800s, but it declined in the next decade as roads grew farther inland.

But the Leipsic River, Pugh explained, is one of the deepest running in the state. Its depth makes for a far more stable route to the bay during low tides than some of the state’s other waterways.

Pugh’s godfather first put him to work on a crabbing boat when he was 12 years old. He never looked back.

“I believe that boy is old enough to do a day’s work,” Pugh remembered his godfather telling his dad.

Pugh’s story is familiar among watermen of his generation. 

Leonard “Limbo” Voss — his uncle gave him the nickname — is a fifth-generation waterman. He also started working on a boat when he was “young enough to still be playing Little League,” he said. All three of his brothers are watermen, as well.

Leonard “Limbo” Voss talks with his crew of fellow watermen as they make their way out the Delaware Bay on Dec. 8, 2025, in search of oysters to harvest. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Limbo did not grow up in Leipsic — he is from nearby Smyrna. But he has docked his boat in town on the river for nearly 30 years. And while the river has been a stable home for Limbo and other Delaware watermen like him, the commercial fishing industry it supports has been marked by adapting to change.

Pugh and Limbo both began their careers primarily as crabbers. Both men also stand by their assertion that Delaware Bay crabs far exceed in quality their more well-known Chesapeake Bay “blue” brethren.

But while crabbing gave both men their start, oyster dredging was once the name of the game on the Leipsic River, Pugh said.

That changed in the 1950s and ‘60s, when parasitic diseases that plague oysters, like MSX and Dermo, forced watermen to diversify their income. Pugh said that refocused the industry in Leipsic around crabbing.

The town’s location on the mouth of a river centrally located along the shore of the Delaware Bay also makes it a prime spot for crabbers, who work up and down the coastline, to dock their boats, Limbo noted.

But crabbing, like oystering, proved volatile.

In the winter of 1976 into 1977, the Delmarva peninsula plunged into a sustained, months-long freeze. It was so cold the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency rated it the “coldest winter on the East Coast since maybe the founding of the Republic,” according to local author and historian Jim Duffy.

Pugh recalled that winter, saying it was “catastrophic” to the blue crab population. 

Limbo, who has worked on boats since he was about 10 years old, said 1977 is one of the only two years he has not worked since. 

“You’re feast and famine,” Pugh added.

A morning out on the bay

It was quarter past 6 a.m. on a frigid morning last December. Limbo was already out on the Leipsic River, heading toward the bay. 

The sun rises over the bank of the Leipsic River on Dec. 8, 2025. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Accompanying him were a slew of other watermen – all of whom happened to be his relatives: His son, Zach; his brother, Bird (whose given name is Burton, but that uncle had a penchant for nicknames); and his cousin, Joe. The crew hoped to harvest the last remaining oysters of the season before it became too cold to make the trek out to the bay. 

But Limbo also had another goal to accomplish.

After making it out of the river, Limbo drove down the coast and picked up a group of post-graduate students studying at the University of Delaware’s College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment in Lewes. While Limbo and his crew hoped to catch some oysters, the students would collect data on the ones not yet ready for harvest.

Out on the bay, the water was rough. Rougher than Limbo had expected. 

Waves rocked his 20-foot-long boat to one side and then back again. Water crashed into the cabin’s windshield. 

Gone was the man who casually steered through the Leipsic River’s winding waters earlier that morning, charismatically holding court from his captain’s chair and telling stories of gambling woes and wins, boat mechanics, climate change and evolution.

Now, Limbo was focused. His eyes shifted between the wide open bay in front of him and the boat’s back deck, where the crew had assembled in anticipation of the real work beginning.

He decided to abandon harvesting for the day. No need to stay out in that mess longer than necessary, he said.

But he wanted the students to check on the oysters’ growth — to collect the data they needed. So he dropped the dredge — a large, chainlink, basket-like structure with metal teeth on one end — into the murky water. 

When the dredge reached the floor of the bay, where the oysters grow on “beds” of accumulated mud and shell, he slowly drove the boat forward, dragging the dredge with it. 

After a few moments, the dredge, now filled to the brim with slimy brown and gray colored shells, rose out of the surf. 

Zach, Limbo’s son, stood on a platform at the rear of the boat, grabbing the full dredge and pouring out the oysters onto a conveyor belt. A smile was plastered across his face.

The students stood in a line, picking at the shells as they moved down the conveyor belt and throwing them back over the side of the boat like a scene out of “I Love Lucy.”

Occasionally, Limbo shouted questions out the back window of his cabin: Have the students found any oysters? How do they look? How big are they? 

Limbo explained later that he works with the school on some of its marine science programs, hoping to ensure the bay’s oyster beds remain sustainable for future generations.

It takes anywhere from four to six years for an oyster to mature, he said. So cataloguing the size of oysters in certain beds can help determine their age and how much longer they should remain in the bay to grow and reproduce.

“We’re trying to build something up,” Limbo said. “And you can’t build something up if you’re constantly tearing it down.”

An eye on the future

While Limbo works to ensure the environment for watermen is on solid ground, he and Pugh also know that building a sustainable industry requires more.

Pugh has seen Leipsic lose some of its ties to the fishing industry as longtime residents – many of whom were watermen themselves, or came from families with a history of working on the water – either die or move away.

And beyond the town itself, the industry is tougher now, Pugh said. He pointed to increased regulations on watermen, like commercial license requirements that are often capped, meaning only a certain number of people can hold them at a time. 

Limbo also said rising costs for fuel, bait and labor have been coupled with largely stagnant sale prices for crabs and oysters, meaning there is less profit to be made.

Essentially, there is no longer room for error for the younger watermen trying to make their way in the industry. 

“I don’t think there is a shortage of younger guys,” Limbo said. “It’s just that throwing somebody in the water and saying, ‘Sink or swim,’ is tough. And it’s not like it was when I started doing it. You could make mistakes, and you didn’t hurt [financially].”

To help combat this, Pugh has taken a younger waterman, 22-year-old Trevor Fox, under his wing. Pugh has taught Fox the hard skills of fishing, crabbing and oystering, but he also has tried to instill in Fox a sense of business acumen.

Craig Pugh, a lifelong waterman and Leipsic resident, has a home full of art and memorabilia about the town — and the commercial fishing industry — that raised him. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

“And now it’s time for you kids to learn from our mistakes,” Pugh said. “And hopefully, you’ll be able to retain what we’ve done, and then build on that.”

At 63 years old, Pugh said he is ready to pass on his decades of knowledge to the next generation. He has come to learn, he said, that life — especially life on the water — is about cycles and seasons. 

For now, it seems, the seasons are starting to change.

The post In Leipsic, watermen have toiled for generations to dredge the deep appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-12 08:04
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About half of middle-income households said they have delayed a major life event because of medical costs, new Gallup polls found.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-12 06:00

The differences between what Trump and Netanyahu want out of this war are starting to show and complicating how it will end

When the US and Israel launched an attack on Iran to start a war that is now entering its third week, it was the start of something unprecedented; the first joint Israeli-American war. Even though the US has long been a close military ally of Israel, this has never happened before. Unlike last year’s “12-day war”, when Israel launched attacks that the US joined near the very end with a single set of strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, this Israeli-American war on Iran is deeply coordinated at the operational level between both belligerents day in and day out.

That is precisely why clear, shared objectives between Washington and Tel Aviv will be crucial for the US to exit this war with a political victory and not just the tab for tons of destruction across the region with little significant change. Much of what we have seen so far suggests strongly that that is not the case; Israel and the US have different goals here, if they even really know what their goals are, and because of this no clear endgame can be envisioned even as the costs of the war mount.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-12 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
With the lowest average elevation in the country, Delaware is in line to be among the most impacted states by sea-level rise. Coastal communities are at the forefront of those flood risks, and homeowners there will be faced with increasing questions of how much flood resiliency is needed.

Simone Reba said she was worried about the future of her southern Delaware vacation home when she began seeking solutions to the increasing risks posed by coastal storms and floods.

She didn’t expect her curiosity would get her sued.

The nine-member condominium association board that manages her Mallard Lakes community filed a lawsuit last fall against Reba, seeking an injunction that would gag her from asking public officials for funding or other support for flood repairs or resiliency measures for the coastal development. 

The Mallard Lake Community Association claims Reba was speaking on behalf of the board-governed group at county meetings, in emails with government officials, and on her personal website. 

And they say she has no right to act as a formal representative of the community or of the board, which is responsible for the community’s shared resources including its roadways, stormwater infrastructure, and most of the buildings’ exteriors. 

Reba’s attorney wrote in recent court filings that anything she might have said ”falls within the scope of core political speech.” 

“This lawsuit is nothing more than an attempt to limit Reba’s public participation in the political process and stifle her First Amendment rights,” the attorney, Daniel McAllister, wrote.

The dispute highlights growing tensions in Delaware’s low-lying coastal communities as residents grapple with worsening flood risks tied to sea-level rise and coastal erosion. It also sets up an early test of a new state law designed to protect people from lawsuits that they claim are meant to silence public speech.

Simone Reba | PHOTO COURTESY OF SIMONE REBA

Reba’s quest for solutions to her condo’s flood risks — which are expected to increase as climate change exacerbates sea-level rise along the East Coast — is now just one thing causing her stress.

With the lawsuit and the association’s messaging to neighbors, Reba says her reputation has also been damaged. The Virginia resident and retired federal government employee said that even if a judge dismissed the case, she worries “it’ll be difficult to live that type of life I wanted.” 

“We bought it as a vacation home, and it’s supposed to be fun,” she said. “It’s supposed to be relaxing.”

While Reba doesn’t make a reputational counter-claim in the court case, the condo association argues that its reputation has been damaged by what they called Reba’s “continued misconduct.” 

The association claims Reba’s efforts “eroded much of the groundwork” it had previously made with elected officials. 

But Reba notes that the association also stated in court documents that it has found “no readily available, financially feasible solutions to address tidal water flow into the community.”

“They’re basically saying, ‘We’re done,’” Reba said. “What harm did I do if they’re not even trying to get government funding?”

Association leaders particularly point to a website Reba created to house her research into flood risks and potential solutions for the community that sits just west of Fenwick Island. 

They claim “misinformation” from the website could potentially drive down property values, alleging in their lawsuit that at least one local real estate agent was led to believe the condominium buildings need to be raised “at considerable cost” to avoid future flood problems.

The debate over raising the buildings — and who should bear that cost  — has pitted Mallard Lakes residents against the board before. It first became a point of contention over a decade ago, after Hurricane Sandy damaged several buildings in the neighborhood and left residents arguing in court over who was responsible for the fixes.

In its October lawsuit, the condominium association, which operates like an HOA, also demanded that Reba add additional disclaimers to her website noting that it is not endorsed by the association. As of Tuesday, the website does include such disclaimers.

Are public comments protected?

Reba insists that her website is fact-based. And she claims in court documents that the lawsuit amounts to an attempt to silence her.  

But Mallard Lakes’ case also relies heavily on public comments Reba made during one Sussex County Council meeting in July 2025. During the meeting, she identified herself as an individual condo owner and asked the elected officials to consider setting aside $500,000 in funding for a watershed-wide engineering study or a smaller feasibility study to identify solutions to future flooding.

Her lawyer has argued that Reba has “every right to speak at public meetings” and to ask public officials to help the community pay for flood mitigation.

“This is true even if Reba has no authority to speak on behalf of the Association, or if the expenditure of any requested money on Mallard Lakes common areas would require ultimate approval from the Association,” Reba’s attorney said. 

Leaning on a law passed last year to further protect free speech in the First State, Reba’s attorney is asking the court to dismiss the case entirely and also award Reba punitive damages for a suit they believe should have never been brought in the first place. 

Last year’s amendments to the Uniform Public Expression Protection Act aim to shield individuals from being sued for speaking publicly – particularly during public meetings or to elected officials.

Living that ‘salt life’

Mallard Lakes is no stranger to water. 

Water regularly flows under some of its buildings, including the 11-unit dwelling that houses the condo Reba and her husband, Jeff, bought in September 2023 for $337,000. They had dreamed of owning beachfront property, and bought the unit sight-unseen, after falling in love with the community during previous trips there with friends.

Mallard Lakes officials acknowledge that water flows under its buildings, but the community association’s board vice president, Chris Reutershan, said structures in the 61-acre community haven’t suffered any significant flooding damage since Superstorm Sandy in 2012. 

Reba argues that her building’s 3-foot pilings mean water sometimes comes right to the first floor. 

“We were told by the owner, no, there’s no water issues,” Reba said. 

But when she witnessed the water flowing beneath the porch, Reba was surprised to hear there was nothing to be done about it. That’s when she started doing some research on her own.

Mallard Lakes was essentially designed to welcome the tides — the community is nestled into Delaware’s southernmost coast with Assawoman Bay to the south, canals and Little Assawoman Bay to the north, and several smaller ponds scattered throughout the community. A handful of the buildings were constructed on raised pilings.

According to publicly accessible flood mapping tools provided by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, which rely on mapping data that is over a decade old, much of Mallard Lakes lies less than 10 feet above sea level. Its proximity to the coast makes it even more vulnerable during tropical storm or winter nor’easter conditions.

The community includes 47 buildings with 477 condominium units and is mostly in a floodplain surrounded by natural and manmade waterways. Located just north of Route 54, construction was focused in two phases between 1986 and 1992.

Since that time, sea level as measured in Lewes has risen about 7.25 inches, said Delaware State Climatologist Kevin Brinson.

Based on current trends, which show that sea level rise is accelerating, the area is expected to see that same amount of sea level rise in a shorter timeframe, Brinson said.

“In other words, another 7.25 inches by 2040,” Brinson said. 

Those estimates do not account for impacts from erosion on shorelines near the community, or a replaced drainpipe under Route 54 that the HOA in court documents said reportedly has allowed for larger volumes of water to flow between one of the ponds and Assaswoman Bay, increasing water levels in and around Mallard Lakes by adding an estimated 6-8 inches of tidal change.

“I think of Mallard Lakes as one of the area’s canaries in the coal mine, kind of signaling the past ills of poor development choices coupled with and coming up against the flood risks that are so inherent in that area and that are only going to be getting worse,” said Danielle Swallow, coastal hazards specialist with Delaware Sea Grant, who is familiar with this unincorporated area of Sussex County.

Todd Fritchman, of Envirotech, an environmental consulting firm in southern Delaware, said he was not even sure how Mallard Lakes was permitted to be built in the first place. 

“They’re clearly in the wetlands,” Fritchman said, recalling a walk-through assessment of the property years ago. “Any corrective actions that would be done would be Band-aids…relative to the entire situation.”

From the coast to the courtroom

This also is not the first time the association has been pitted against displeased residents in court over water-related drama.

In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, water damaged about two dozen units in four buildings. Delaware was spared a direct hit from the 2012 storm, but it still grazed the coast with destructive wind and waves that caused more than $9 million in damages in Delaware, according to the National Weather Service.

Several years after the storm, a handful of residents sued the condominium association and others after being told they would each have to pay tens of thousands to address an alleged lack of repairs that rendered some units legally uninhabitable

In that 2016 Chancery Court case, former Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock III denied the association’s attempts to gag individual condo owners from speaking out about the litigation and storm damage.

At the heart of that legal dispute were discussions about the need to elevate some of the buildings — at the time, to the tune of about $400,000 each. That solution, like all other previous attempts to address rising tides, proved too complex and too costly. 

“Eventually, all litigation from Superstorm Sandy was settled and all units repaired,” lawyers representing the association wrote in court documents in Reba’s case.

Documents provided by Reutershan, the association board’s vice president, note that the post-Sandy litigation, not the damages from Sandy itself, were what negatively impacted the community’s property values at the time.

“Once the suit was settled, the property values have risen to values equivalent to similar properties located along the Delaware Coastline (adjusted for age, quality and location),” a printed out presentation from the board reads. “For most of the last three years, few units have remained on the market much longer than a month or so and [Mallard Lakes] sales continue to reach record highs.”

Now the question of whether to raise the buildings is being raised again. 

On Saturday, Mallard Lakes residents will be asked to vote on whether they want to raise their buildings for further flood protection, explore the possibility of a tidal flood gate on the Route 54 drainage pipe. And, if so, if they’d be willing to privately foot the bill for those efforts.

Reutershan said the price tag to elevate buildings would run $75,000 to $112,000 per unit owner this time around.

“It will be tabulated right then and there, so we will know what the answer is,” he said. 

Meanwhile, Reba’s pending motion to dismiss the association’s case against her will be heard this April. But by that time, she may no longer even own the Mallard Lakes condo.

Reba said she and her husband listed their vacation home for sale this spring.

“It breaks my heart,” she said. “But in my former life, I was also a risk manager. Every time we see the next big nor’easter coming that way, we get nervous.”

The post A condo owner asked the county for flooding help. Her HOA sued appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:57

TV star announces birth of Ozzy Matilda Osbourne on social media, alongside image of cuddly bat

Jack Osbourne, the only son of Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne, has honoured his late father by naming his baby daughter after him.

Jack, 40, announced the birth of Ozzy Matilda Osbourne on social media alongside his wife, Aree, whom he married in 2023. The newborn Ozzy was pictured lying next to a cuddly bat toy: another reference to his father, who famously bit the head off a real bat during a 1982 concert believing it was made of rubber.

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2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-12 05:30

As Jason Beaman recounts his long slog searching for mental health therapy last year, he sounds defeated.

The first therapist assigned to him by the Department of Veterans Affairs told him at their initial meeting that she was leaving the agency. A few months later, his second therapist told him she was also leaving. An appointment with a third counselor was canceled with no explanation.

These were huge setbacks for the 54-year-old veteran of the Navy and Army Reserve. Nearly a decade ago, a spiral of depression and anxiety left him homeless and living on the streets of Spokane, Washington. A VA social worker threw him a lifeline, helping him apply for benefits, find housing and get into therapy.

He still needs mental health care, he and his physician say. But bouncing from therapist to therapist has left him exhausted.

“I just quit. I don’t want to mess with the therapist anymore,” Beaman said. He spends much of his time now alone playing video games or walking with his dogs.

A seated man, wearing a blue checkered shirt and blue jeans, ruffles the fur of a dog’s neck.
Beaman, a veteran of two military branches, gave up searching for a new therapist after attempting to meet regularly with several different providers after his move to Nebraska. He eventually met with a therapist in January, after months of false starts.

After President Donald Trump returned to office last year, his administration announced plans to overhaul the VA, one of the largest health care systems in the country, to deliver “the highest quality care.”

“This administration is finally going to give the veterans what they want,” VA Secretary Doug Collins said last March, as the department announced tens of thousands of job cuts.

But in interview after interview, veterans across the country told ProPublica that one year into the second Trump administration it’s become more difficult to get treatment, as hundreds of therapists and social workers have left the VA. Many of them have not been replaced.

While front-line mental health care workers were largely exempted from the job cuts, hundreds chose to leave anyway. Some cited disagreements with new administration policies, including several targeting the LGBTQ+ community, while others, facing diminished ranks, said they simply could no longer provide proper care.

In January, the department had around 500 fewer psychologists and psychiatrists than it had at the same time last year, ProPublica found.

Although the losses represent a relatively small number — about 4% of psychologists and 6% of psychiatrists — they are notable for an agency that has long struggled with inadequate mental health staffing. For years, administrators have listed psychologists in particular among their most “severe staffing shortages.”

Mental health is not the only area where the VA has lost medical staff. The agency has eliminated more than 14,000 vacant health care positions across the system, according to data first reported by The New York Times.

Data published by the VA going back to May 2023 shows that the agency was adding psychologists every quarter until Trump’s return to the White House. Then, the trend flipped, with departures outpacing hires in all four quarters of last year.

Compounding the losses, the agency’s cohort of social workers, some of whom are licensed therapists who provide mental health counseling, declined by nearly 700 staffers over the year.

To better understand the departures and their impact on veterans’ care, ProPublica interviewed dozens of former and current VA staffers as well as patients.

ProPublica also examined a previously unreported internal employee exit survey, which included hundreds of responses from mental health care workers.

“Mental Health is understaffed, burned out, and there is not enough mental health care for the Veterans who need the services,” wrote one New York-based former employee, according to the records.

“Support is no longer there to provide ethical and good care for these Veterans,” wrote a second, based in Indiana. “Scheduling issues are incredibly high due to poor staff hiring and retainment.”

Yet another wrote that the number of new patients seeking help at their Kansas facility was far too high, making it “unethical to accept more veterans in our clinics.”

Many of those vacated positions have gone unfilled due to a yearlong hiring freeze, which was only lifted in January.

After Hiring Spree Under Biden, VA Lost Mental Health Staff When Trump Returned to Office

The losses under the new administration amount to 4% of the agency’s psychologists, 6% of psychiatrists and 3% of social workers.

Bar chart showing the change in the number of providers — social workers, psychologists and psychiatrists — from the third quarter of 2023 to the end of 2025 on the x-axis and the number of providers from negative 400 to 800 on the y-axis. The trend starts with a peak of about 700 social workers and around 200 psychologists added in the third quarter of 2023, followed by a steady decline across all groups, dropping below zero by the first quarter of 2025 with social worker losses eventually dipping around 400.
Note: Quarters are labeled by calendar, not fiscal, year. Source: VA workforce dashboard, internal data.

Echoing the exit survey, many who remain on staff describe crushing workloads as they struggle to fill the gaps. Those reached by ProPublica, who agreed to speak only under the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said that as staffing losses mount, they’ve seen their patient loads increase, while administrators shorten their appointments and pack more and more clients into group therapy sessions.

“It was always bad,” said one VA psychologist, referring to staffing at a facility in Arizona. “And now it’s at a breaking point.”

The therapist described being stretched so thin that schedulers replaced some one-on-one sessions with online group sessions that included as many as 35 veterans. The therapist said despite that they were still overloaded with individual sessions and had to limit each one to as little as 16 minutes.

The VA declined ProPublica’s request to interview an official familiar with its mental health programs. In an email, VA spokesperson Peter Kasperowicz accused ProPublica of attempting to mislead the public by “cherry picking issues that are limited to a handful of sites and in many cases were worse under the Biden Administration.”

He argued that the agency’s performance around mental health has improved since Trump took office, citing more than 15.5 million direct mental health care appointments in the most recent fiscal year (Oct. 1, 2024, to Sept. 30, 2025), a 4% increase from the previous fiscal year. He did not say whether those additional appointments were for individual therapy. Kasperowicz also noted that the administration has opened 25 new health care clinics.

After ProPublica shared its findings and the names of veterans who would appear in this story, the agency reached out to several to inquire about their care and offer help. The veterans told ProPublica they remained skeptical that the VA would consistently respond to their mental health needs.

As the ranks of mental health care providers at the VA have shrunk, the department has proposed shifting billions of dollars into community care, a program in which veterans obtain health care via private physicians and other providers. But the program has been stretched thin amid the loss of administrative staff and ongoing issues finding private therapists, ProPublica found, with veterans encountering longer delays as they seek help.

In December, patients waited an average of around 25 days just to receive a confirmed appointment date, nearly four times the VA’s stated goal for scheduling community care.

Collins has disputed assertions that there’s a systemwide problem with access to mental health care. “And if you need emergency care, or are in a crisis situation, you have immediate care,” he told a Senate committee in January.

He said the VA’s average wait time for new patients seeking mental health care appointments was less than 20 days, the number it has set as its goal. But other VA officials have acknowledged problems with access.

“There are wait times at some facilities that are beyond what our expectations and standards would be,” Dr. Ilse Wiechers, assistant undersecretary for health for patient care services, told senators at a separate hearing.

ProPublica’s analysis found that wait times fluctuate dramatically, and fast access to care can depend on location. For example, the small clinic near Beaman’s home in rural Nebraska, with its comparatively small staff, saw appointment wait times for new mental health clients climb as high as 60 days in December and drop to 20 days in February, according to the VA figures.

But a closer look at the entire VA system reveals that a large number of facilities are struggling. In early February, more than half of its hospitals and clinics reported one-on-one mental health appointment wait times for new patients that were longer, and in some cases far longer, than the VA’s 20-day goal, according to a ProPublica analysis of data published on the agency’s website.

In late December, Beaman said he received an email from the VA saying he’d been approved for additional therapy. He was able to meet with a therapist in January — after about six months of waiting and going more than a year without a session. In the interim, he said, he relied on prescription medications, video games and his therapy dogs to keep him steady. Still, his anxiety worsened, he said, and now he often feels so uncomfortable around others that he rarely leaves his home except to walk his dogs while wearing headphones so no one speaks to him.

Kasperowicz, the VA spokesperson, wrote in his email to ProPublica that Beaman had “more than a dozen mental health visits at VA between late 2024 to mid-2025 through the Cheyenne VA clinic” in Wyoming, which is about an hour-and-a-half trip for Beaman. Kasperowicz declined, however, to say whether those appointments involved the one-on-one mental health counseling Beaman had requested. Beaman said he only had two sessions for one-on-one therapy in 2025 — meetings that were truncated because of the therapists’ impending departures.

Kasperowicz also said that one of Beaman’s appointments didn’t occur because he had “moved.” Beaman, however, said he has lived at only one address in Nebraska.

Experts warn that the exodus of mental health care providers from the VA has hurt the agency’s ability to meet veterans’ unique needs.

“VA psychologists are best in class,” said Russell Lemle, former chief psychologist for the San Francisco VA Health Care System and a senior policy analyst at the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. “They have research and training and decades-long experience” working with veterans. 

“When you lose them, the veterans are the ones who pay the price,” he said.

A pink plastic figurine of a soldier pointing a firearm rests on a green marble table.
Michelle Phillips, a Navy veteran, received a pink toy soldier at a Department of Veterans Affairs event.

“It Could Mean Life or Death”

Michelle Phillips, 56, a Navy veteran from Ohio, saw her therapist in remote sessions once a week for two years for her PTSD. Then, in December, Phillips’ therapist told her that she was quitting the VA because of Trump’s policies.

The change, Phillips said, “could mean life or death.”

Years of depression have led Phillips to isolate. Inside her small home about an hour outside of Columbus, the city where she enlisted in 1988, the walls are filled with reminders of brighter times — photos of family members and military paraphernalia from her time in the service. Her only real company is an aging dog, and she almost never leaves.

Her virtual therapy sessions were “the only contact that I had coming in my home to talk to me every week,” she said. “And I would sit and just wait for that appointment.”

Phillips said the counselor requested that the VA continue her one-on-one remote counseling with a new therapist — which totaled about four hours per month. The agency initially offered her virtual group therapy, an option that her previous therapist dismissed as inappropriate. In the third week of January, the VA told Phillips she could have an appointment for one-on-one sessions in March. She later declined the appointment because she didn’t want to face starting over with a new therapist.

Phillips, who is disabled and doesn’t work, said she will try to pay for one-on-one therapy out of pocket with the same therapist who left the VA but will likely only be able to afford one, possibly two, sessions a month.

James Jones said his close connection to his VA therapist, who was trained in combat trauma, helped him control his PTSD-fueled episodes of anger and alcohol abuse. Now the 54-year-old Gulf War veteran, who lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, has seen his care cut in half after his therapist told him colleagues had quit and he had to pick up the load.

His sessions went from an hour every week to half an hour every two weeks. “I can tell it’s rushed,” said Jones, a maintenance mechanic with the National Park Service. “I’m not able to work through something.”

Others have found it difficult to establish care in the first place.

Last summer, George Retes, 26, who left the Army in 2022 after serving for four years, was driving to work in Camarillo, California, when he was suddenly caught between immigration agents and protesters. Retes said the agents broke his car window, pepper-sprayed him and detained him for days. The incident, which ProPublica detailed last fall, left him shaken and exacerbated the PTSD that was first sparked after he faced missile attacks in Iraq, Retes said. (The Department of Homeland Security has not responded to ProPublica’s questions about Retes.)

Following his release, Retes found himself withdrawing from the world. “I wasn’t texting anyone or talking to anyone,” he said. “Not even my kids.”

A few weeks after being arrested, Retes sought help from the VA clinic in Ventura, California, where staffers told him they’d be in touch for an appointment. But Retes said he never heard back, even after he called to follow up. His incident with Immigration and Customs Enforcement was in July. Retes is still waiting.

According to data on the VA’s website, new patients seeking individual therapy at the Ventura clinic had to wait an average of two and a half months in early February.

The VA said it could not discuss Jones’ or Retes’ accounts because the veterans declined to waive their privacy rights.

Strains on the System

The VA overhaul has also taken a toll on mental health providers, many of whom quit after spending years at the agency.

Natalie McCarthy worked as a social worker and mental health therapist for a decade before quitting the VA in May. Like many others working in mental health, she did all of her work remotely; from her Ohio home she saw vets mostly from the Washington, D.C., area.

But McCarthy and her colleagues faced pressure to return to agency offices after the VA issued new restrictions on telehealth workers. She was uneasy about the prospect of having to conduct sessions in makeshift spaces like conference rooms filled with other counselors — a situation that raised widespread ethical concerns over the legally mandated privacy for medical conversations.

Complicating matters, McCarthy said, were Trump’s orders eliminating diversity and equity initiatives within the federal government. She said she began to worry that therapists would no longer be able to discuss the subject of race with their patients or document patients’ thoughts on the topic in their session notes. So she quit.

“I was angry that veterans were in that position,” said McCarthy, who started her own practice. “I was angry that I was in that position. It just felt like an unnecessary thing to have to navigate.”

A woman wearing a maroon button-up shirt and blue pants sits in an office chair near a desk with a laptop and notepad.
Psychologist Mary Brinkmeyer quit working with the VA last February after her superiors began enforcing the Trump administration’s anti-diversity agenda.

Psychologist Mary Brinkmeyer found herself in a similar situation. She started at a VA facility in metropolitan Norfolk, Virginia, in 2022 after seeing a posting for an LGBTQ+ care coordinator, which oversees support programs for LGBTQ+ veterans and helps navigate their care. She quit last February after her superiors began enforcing Trump’s anti-diversity orders.

Brinkmeyer said she was told to stop conducting training for physicians and other staff on best practices for caring for LGBTQ+ patients. Then, she said, staff members were ordered to remove all LGBTQ+ paraphernalia from the facility such as rainbow flags, identity-affirming literature and program brochures. Also, an edict was issued directing people to use the bathroom of their gender assigned at birth, Brinkmeyer said.

That’s when the VA stopped feeling like a welcoming place. “There was a failure of empathy,” she said.

The VA did not respond directly to either Brinkmeyer’s or McCarthy’s accounts of how the administration’s policies had impacted the quality of mental health care.

Much like those seeking mental health care directly from the VA, veterans referred to community care are also struggling to secure appointments.

Gwyn Bourlakov, 58, enlisted in the Army National Guard in 1998 and over the following 21 years she was awarded a Bronze Star for her service in the invasion of Iraq, climbed the ranks to become a major and won a Fulbright scholarship to study Russian history.

Today, after a series of professional setbacks, Bourlakov works as a museum security guard. Lingering PTSD from her time in the service, coupled with deep bouts of depression over her current circumstances, have kept her seeking the VA’s help despite long-standing frustrations with its services.

After she began looking for a new therapist last year following a move to Colorado, officials at her local VA clinic in Golden said at her intake appointment that its in-house providers were swamped and could not see new patients for at least six months.

She asked if she could get help through community care, but staffers told her that the system was so overwhelmed that it would be a “nightmare,” she recalled. Veterans living in eastern Colorado waited 57 days on average to get a community care appointment scheduled in December, VA figures show.

Bourlakov said she tried to get help through a separate VA clinic, but when her phone calls went unanswered, she finally gave up.

“I don’t have time for all of that,” she explained. “It’s just like shouting into the wind.”

A woman with short graying hair, wearing glasses and a checkered shirt, sits on a pink sofa with a cat and blue curtain behind her.
Gwyn Bourlakov gave up looking for care through the VA after a series of unanswered calls and attempts to find help went nowhere. After inquiries by ProPublica, VA authorities reached back out to offer her assistance.

Following inquiries from ProPublica, VA officials reached out to Bourlakov and other veterans interviewed for this story to offer additional assistance with their mental health care. The calls left several frustrated, saying it shouldn’t take questions from the media for them to get help from the VA. 

Though skeptical, Bourlakov decided to move forward. She was contacted by three separate VA representatives in February asking about her health and if she needed help scheduling a therapy appointment. 

The earliest telehealth appointment they offered was not until June, she said. The next available in-person slot was not until July. Bourlakov opted for June.

The post Veterans Who Depend on Mental Health Care Keep Losing Their Therapists Under Trump appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 05:17

Ofgem licence means firm can replicate Texas setup of powering homes, businesses and EVs

Elon Musk’s Tesla has won approval to supply electricity to households and businesses across Great Britain, as the tech billionaire expands his energy ambitions.

The energy regulator, Ofgem, has formally granted Tesla an electricity supply licence, enabling it to provide electricity to domestic and business premises in England, Scotland and Wales.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:00

The Hawks decided to pay tribute to Atlanta institution Magic City. The league soon found itself dealing with a narrative it doesn’t understand fully

Manufactured outrage will have to serve as the theme for what had been the most hotly anticipated game of the season.

For those who may have missed it: last month the Atlanta Hawks announced plans for a 16 March promotional event called Magic City Night. The name wasn’t just a nod to that evening’s opponent, the Orlando Magic; it was meant to honor the civic institution in the shadow of the Hawks’ arena – Magic City, America’s most famous strip club.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:00

The Trump administration is backing off a rule aimed at stopping commercial space companies from leaving rocket bodies in Earth’s orbit, a practice that experts say could threaten public safety and telecommunications.

The Federal Aviation Administration first proposed the measure in 2023, under the Biden administration, in hopes of curbing the growing junkyard of debris circling the planet. It would have required companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX to safely remove such spacecraft within 25 years of launch, saying they “pose a significant risk to people on the ground due to their mass and the uncertainty of where they will land.” 

Officials cited examples such as a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket reentering Earth’s atmosphere over the Pacific Northwest in March 2021, which created streaks of lights across the night sky and dropped a tank on a farm in Washington state.

SpaceX and other companies, however, criticized the proposal, citing concerns that included its cost, and in January, the FAA nixed the rule, saying the agency needs more time to research it. 

“FAA intends to review the space launch industry cost inputs and expectations with respect to debris mitigation activities,” the FAA said, adding it would also look at the agency’s authority to enact such regulations. In response to questions for this story, an agency spokesperson reiterated that rationale.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment about the withdrawal.

The action is a concession to the commercial space industry and follows moves by President Donald Trump’s administration last year to roll back regulations meant to protect the environment and the public during rocket launches. “The Trump administration is committed to cementing America’s dominance in space without compromising public safety or national security,” a White House spokesperson said last summer. 

Critics, however, said the government was missing an opportunity to control debris — and endangering the public in the process. Rockets can be hundreds of feet tall and typically are made up of multiple parts, known as stages. After any lower stages fall away, the upper stage continues on into space to deploy payloads such as satellites or to perform other missions.

“Instead of requiring companies to responsibly dispose of these upper stages, the U.S. has decided to roll the dice on a person or a plane getting hit by falling debris,” said Ewan Wright, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of British Columbia and junior fellow at the Outer Space Institute, a nonprofit that supported the rule. 

Wright’s research with colleagues found a 20% to 29% chance that debris from a reentering rocket would kill at least one bystander sometime in the next decade.

No deaths have occurred from falling space debris yet. But minor injuries have been documented, including a boy in China whose toe was broken and a woman who was hit on the shoulder in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 2024, a piece of metal from the International Space Station crashed through the roof of a home in Naples, Florida.

The explosions of two SpaceX Starship megarockets last year that rained debris over the Caribbean brought new attention to the danger to airplanes as spacecraft reenter the atmosphere — sometimes in an uncontrolled way. After ProPublica wrote about the Starship mishaps, the FAA issued a new warning to airlines, saying that rocket launches could “significantly reduce safety” and that pilots should prepare for the possibility that “catastrophic failures” could create dangerous debris.

Space junk also adds to the threat, experts said, for both the space program and daily life on Earth.

If the growing debris field above the planet is left unchecked, the FAA said in 2023, it could clutter orbits used for human spaceflight and increase the chance of collisions causing damage to satellites that support communications, weather forecasting and global positioning systems. The FAA said at the time that the rule was an attempt to bring the evolving commercial space industry in line with national practices that are followed by NASA and with international guidelines. 

Wright said that about half of all launches leave the rocket’s upper stage in orbit. There, it can pose a risk to crewed space stations and interfere with astronomers’ research before crashing to earth. 

In the last three years, U.S. rocket companies, including SpaceX and United Launch Alliance, have abandoned 41 upper stage rockets in orbit, Wright said. Thirty-three are still there now. “Abandoning truck-sized upper stages in orbit is an irresponsible act,” he said.

In response, SpaceX pointed to a statement posted on its website, saying it has been working to reduce — and ultimately eliminate — space debris left behind by Falcon, which regularly deploys new Starlink satellites. 

“In 2024, 13 out of 134 upper Falcon 9 stages remained on-orbit after successful payload deploys,” the company said. “In 2025, we reduced this number to three out of a total of 165 launches.”

United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin and Boeing, said through a spokesperson that it disposes of its upper stage rockets safely “by placing them in a graveyard orbit or conducting a controlled reentry where most of the stage disintegrates over the remote, deep ocean.” 

A piece of space debris has fallen to Earth every day on average for the last 50 years, the FAA said when it proposed the rule. Last year, an eight-foot, 1,100-pound ring from a rocket fell on a remote Kenyan village, and fragments of a Falcon 9 were found in a forest, warehouse and field in Poland.

The FAA’s proposal would have required launch companies to submit a plan for how they would remove debris prior to launch and would apply to any pieces of debris larger than five millimeters. Acceptable options for disposing of used rockets that couldn’t burn up in the atmosphere would include pushing them out to a higher “disposal” orbit or navigating them to splashdown in a “broad ocean area,” the FAA wrote.

In comments responding to the proposal, commercial space companies challenged the FAA’s authority to implement the rule and said they were concerned about issues including cost. SpaceX said the proposal “grossly underestimates the costs and impacts of the proposed rule and overstates the benefits.”

Experts worry that a debris collision could create a chain reaction that would be hard to stop, rendering large areas unnavigable — a phenomenon known as Kessler syndrome. In 2009, a U.S. satellite and a defunct Russian satellite collided above northern Siberia, generating more than 2,300 pieces of debris large enough to be tracked.

The problem complicates SpaceX’s work, too. As the New Scientist reported in January, the company’s Starlink satellites regularly maneuver to avoid colliding with objects such as other satellites or space debris — performing about 300,000 such actions last year alone.

The post Amid Crowded Skies, FAA Kills Rule Aimed at Regulating Space Junk appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:00

Crystalline silica, which is released into the air when workers cut and polish engineered stone for kitchen countertops, can scar human lungs beyond repair.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 04:33

Prime minister makes claim as accusations mount that he is using row with Ukraine for political gain in run-up to elections

Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has accused Ukrainians of plotting to attack his family, as an increasingly bitter standoff between Kyiv and Budapest continues.

Orbán and his allies appear to be using the dispute for maximum political gain before the election due next month that could end the 16-year rule of his nationalist government.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 03:25

The fox is said to be ‘settling in well’ after mischievous 3,400 mile journey from Southampton to New York

A sly fox slipped on to a cargo ship and travelled from Southampton to New York, according to officials at Bronx Zoo.

The zoo, which is looking after the animal, said it appears healthy after early examinations.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 03:00

Health justice charity Medact says data-sharing potential could be used for UK version of US immigration raids

Palantir’s NHS contract opens the door to the Big Brother-style data-sharing that Reform UK would use for a version of US immigration raids, health bosses have been told.

Palantir Technologies – the data analytics company founded by Peter Thiel and Alex Karp – won a £330m NHS England contract to deliver the Federated Data Platform in 2023.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 03:00

GFiber (a.k.a. Google Fiber) and Astound Broadband announced that they plan to merge into a deal backed by infrastructure investor Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners. The resulting company will be majority owned by Stonepeak, with Alphabet becoming a "significant minority shareholder." Light Reading reports: Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners teamed with Patriot Media to acquire Astound in November 2020 for $8.1 billion. Stonepeak is Astound's largest investor. The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2026. The combined business will be led by the existing GFiber executive team. GFiber is currently led by CEO Dinni Jain. Jain, a former Time Warner Cable and Insight Communications exec, took the helm of what was then called Google Fiber in 2018. "This agreement advances GFiber's mission of redefining internet connectivity and represents a major step toward its goal of operational and financial independence," the companies said. "GFiber will have the external capital and strategic focus needed to accelerate its next phase of growth, expanding its customer-first approach and pioneering fiber technology across the country." GFiber's combination with Astound represents "a strategic opportunity to scale our customer-focused approach to connect more households to a truly different type of internet service," Jain said in a statement.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:57

In today’s newsletter: Robert Malley, who led talks for the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, helps make sense of the war

Good morning, and apologies for the interruption to your usual programming. Stepping out from behind the editing desk to write today’s newsletter feels somewhat like a player-manager throwing himself on to the pitch, but I’ll try not to destabilise your morning routine too much. Lord knows, the world doesn’t need any more chaos.

Since the US and Israel first attacked Iran two weeks ago, it’s been a scramble to keep up with events. The death of a supreme leader, speculation about his successor, global implications ranging from oil price spikes to drones raining down on once-safe cities like Doha and Dubai – the world has rarely felt so unstable.

Iran | Iran dramatically escalated its strategy of striking civilian infrastructure and transport networks across the Gulf on Wednesday, attacking commercial ships and targeting Dubai’s international airport as US and Israeli warplanes launched new waves of strikes on the Islamic Republic.

UK news | Keir Starmer overruled officials who warned of a “reputational risk” in making Peter Mandelson US ambassador, despite being handed a dossier of evidence about the peer’s relationship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, documents reveal.

Artificial intelligence | Popular AI chatbots helped researchers plot violent attacks, including bombing synagogues and assassinating politicians, with one telling a user posing as a would-be school shooter: “Happy (and safe) shooting!”

Oil | The International Energy Agency is poised to call for the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price shock triggered by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

UK politics | Keir Starmer warned his cabinet against an “overly deferential” approach to the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish governments, telling ministers they should be prepared to make spending decisions “even when devolved governments may oppose this”, according to a leaked memo.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:18

Anthropic sued the Defense Department and other federal agencies on Monday over the government's move to designate it a risk to the supply chain.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:00

Former PM says schools ‘deserve same moral status as hospitals’ after 168 schoolgirls killed in US-Israel war on Iran

Gordon Brown has called for the creation of an international criminal court for crimes against children, saying “no child should ever become collateral damage in a conflict”.

Writing for the Guardian, the former prime minister drew on the tomahawk missile strike on the Shajareh Tayyebeh school at the start of the Iran conflict, which killed 168 schoolgirls, to argue that “schools deserve the same moral status as hospitals – protected places – and the same protection under international law”.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:00

Countries across the continent have spent more than $2bn on Chinese tracking technology that is not ‘necessary or proportionate’, new report finds

The rapid expansion of AI-powered mass-surveillance systems across Africa is violating citizens’ right to privacy and having a chilling effect on society, according to experts on human rights and emerging technologies.

At least $2bn (£1.5bn) has been spent by 11 African governments on Chinese-built surveillance technology that recognises faces and monitors movements, according to a new report by the Institute of Development Studies, which warns that national security is being used to justify implementing these systems with little regulation.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 01:00

Exclusive: Oil at $100 a barrel means higher prices in the EU and UK, making savings for those with electric vehicles even greater, analysts say

European drivers face paying an extra €220 (£190) a year at the pumps because of the surge in oil prices caused by the war in Iran, analysts have warned. In the UK, a separate estimate puts the cost at an extra £140.

A sustained oil price of $100 a barrel, the level seen on Monday, would mean motorists in the EU paying €55bn more over a year, researchers at the Transport & Environment (T&E) thinktank estimated. That is the equivalent of an average of €220 for each driver, with higher-mileage drivers facing even bigger hikes. The assessment was made by comparing data from 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine pushed the oil price to the $100 mark, with data from 2017-2019.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 01:00

Viral video of girl being shoved by fellow pedestrian has reignited debate over butsukari – with experts blaming stress and gender dynamics

It starts out as a heartwarming clip. A young girl, clearly delighted to be in Tokyo, beams as she makes a peace sign to the camera. Seconds later, she is shoved to the ground from behind by a woman wearing a surgical mask. The assailant doesn’t skip a beat, striding out of shot of the clip filmed by the girl’s mother.

This was no accidental clash of shoulders in a crowded place, but one of the most visible examples of a spate of butsukari otoko – “bumping man” – shoving incidents in Japan that experts attribute to a combination of gender dynamics and the stresses of modern life.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 01:00

The Guardian’s science editor, Ian Sample, talks to Madeleine Finlay about three eye-catching science stories from the week, including a study that explores the link between exercise and brain health. Also on the agenda: the discovery that hedgehogs can hear high-frequency ultrasound and what this could mean for their conservation, and new research examining how biased AI autocomplete tools can influence the beliefs of users.

Ultrasound repellers could keep hedgehogs off roads, scientists hope

Support the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 00:00

A wounded Islamic Republic can still threaten the world.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 00:00

The U.S. military isn’t ready for it.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:40

From fuel caps to four-day work weeks, the Middle East conflict has left the world’s top crude oil importing region desperate to shore up supplies

Donald Trump has scrambled in recent days to reassure the world that the economic impact of his war on Iran can be contained.

Sure, one of the most important waterways in global trade has, in effect, been shut for almost two weeks – but it might reopen before long. In the meantime, US oil-related sanctions on “some countries” will be lifted. And besides, the entire conflict could be over soon.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: In a paper, published last month in the journal The Anatomical Record, researchers offered a novel take on falling felines. Their evidence suggests new insights into the so-called falling cat problem, particularly that cats have a very flexible segment of their spines that allows them to correct their orientation midair. [...] People have been curious about falling cats perhaps as long as the animals have been living with humans, but the method to their acrobatic abilities remains enigmatic. Part of the difficulty is that the anatomy of the cat has not been studied in detail, explains Yasuo Higurashi, a physiologist at Yamaguchi University in Japan and lead author of the study. [...] Modern research has split the falling cat problem into two competing models. The first, "legs in, legs out," suggests that cats correct their falling trajectory by first extending their hind limbs before retracting them, using a sequential twist of their upper and then lower trunk to gain the proper posture while in free fall. The second model, "tuck and turn," suggests that cats turn their upper and lower bodies in simultaneous juxtaposed movements. [...] The researchers found that the feline spine was extremely flexible in the upper thoracic vertebrae, but stiffer and heavier in the lower lumbar vertebrae. The discovery matches video evidence showing the cats first turn their front legs, and then their lower legs. The results suggest the cat quickly spins its flexible upper torso to face the ground, allowing it to see so that it can correctly twist the rest of its body to match. "The thoracic spine of the cat can rotate like our neck," Dr. Higurashi said. Experiments on the spine show the upper vertebrae can twist an astounding 360 degrees, he says, which helps cats make these correcting movements with ease. The results are consistent with the "legs in, legs out" model, but definitively determining which model is correct will take more work, Dr. Higurashi says. The results also yielded another discovery: Cats, like many animals, appear to have a right-side bias. One of the dropped cats corrected itself by turning to the right eight out of eight times, while the other turned right six out of eight times.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:09

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:01

Global heating linked to rising risk of extreme rain that causes devastating landslides and rising coffee prices

The record floods that have brought death and destruction to the heartland of Brazil’s coffee industry are expected to intensify if people continue to burn fossil fuels, analysis has shown.

Dozens of residents in the state of Minas Gerais have been buried alive in landslides or swept away as roads turned into rivers over the past month. Thousands more have been forced to evacuate their homes, while the wider, longer-term effects are likely to include higher prices for coffee across the world.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:52
  • Pasquantino lifts Italy with historic effort

  • US reach quarter-finals despite loss to Italy

  • Canada beat Cuba to win group in San Juan

Vinnie Pasquantino had the World Baseball Classic’s first three-homer game, leading Italy over Mexico 9-1 on Wednesday night to win Pool B and advance the United States to the quarter-finals as group’s second-place team.

Italy’s victory ended a day of uncertainty for the Americans, who needed help to reach the quarter-finals after losing to Italy 8-6 on Tuesday night.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:43

René Redzepi, the head chef of one of the highest-rated restaurants in the world, has resigned from Noma amid abuse allegations and protests outside his L.A. pop-up location.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:30
Vesc kit for xrc

just wondering if anyone knows how this relates to floatwheels gtv kit, and if it would be better for the money (it costs 700 usd)

submitted by /u/-theplayer11-
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:02

President tells John Thune to force through Save America act, which requires proof of citizenship while registering to vote and curbs mail-in voting

Donald Trump said that the US-Israel war in Iran will end “soon” because there is “practically nothing left to target” in a phone interview with Axios.

“Any time I want it to end, it will end,” the president told the outlet. “The war is going great. We are way ahead of the timetable. We have done more damage than we thought possible, even in the original six-week period.”

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 21:00

Your Attention Please, a documentary premiering this week at SXSW in Austin, Texas, explores how we live in the attention economy.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 21:00

President Trump ordered the release of 172 million barrels of oil from the U.S.'s Strategic Petroleum Reserve on Wednesday, after oil prices rocketed to their highest levels in years amid the U.S.'s war with Iran.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:57

Training today’s largest AI models requires thousands of GPUs operating as a single synchronized system, which means a single hardware fault can halt a job and wipe out hours of work.

Most training frameworks still rely on periodic checkpointing to recover from these failures, forcing jobs to roll back to the last saved model state and repeat lost computation. Clockwork.io, a startup developing software for managing large-scale GPU clusters, says a new capability in its FleetIQ platform addresses this problem by allowing distributed training jobs to continue running even when individual GPUs fail.

The new capability, called TorchPass Workload Fault Tolerance, was announced today as generally available. TorchPass takes a different approach to failure recovery than traditional checkpointing. When a GPU fails or begins showing signs of instability, the platform transfers the training state from the affected GPU to a spare GPU and reintegrates it into the distributed job rather than restarting from a checkpoint. Clockwork says the process typically takes seconds to a few minutes, depending on whether the failure can be predicted in advance.

(Image courtesy of Clockwork.io)

HPCwire sat down with Clockwork CEO Suresh Vasudevan to learn more. “When you’re training an AI model, typically you’re running thousands, or tens of thousands of iterations of the same computation. Each iteration may last anywhere from a second to maybe tens of seconds for very large-scale models, but at the end of every iteration, all of these thousands of GPUs have to synchronize state with each other,” Vasudevan explained. “That synchronization doesn’t just happen once every iteration. It can happen dozens to a few hundred times during that one second. When the synchronization happens, if any single GPU is either failing or running slow, then everybody else has to wait for that single GPU.”

Vasudevan said these failures become more common as AI clusters grow in size. Citing research from companies including Meta, Alibaba, and Google, he noted that clusters with around 1,000 GPUs can experience disruptive events roughly every eight hours, leaving operators to deal with multiple failures in a single day. At larger scales, such as clusters with tens of thousands of GPUs, those events can occur every few hours or less. The causes vary from network link issues and firmware problems to memory errors, power supply faults, and thermal conditions that reduce GPU performance.

TorchPass addresses this problem by maintaining standby GPUs that can take over when a failure occurs. According to Vasudevan, the handoff happens at the infrastructure layer, allowing frameworks such as PyTorch to continue operating as if the original GPU were still part of the job. The approach depends on spare capacity that many large GPU clusters already maintain. Vasudevan said operators typically reserve a small pool of standby GPUs that can be brought online when hardware fails. In practice, that reserve often amounts to about 8–12% of a cluster’s GPUs. While holding GPUs in reserve may seem counterintuitive at a time when GPU capacity is in high demand, operators say the buffer is necessary to keep large systems running reliably. Some rack-scale systems are now being designed with a similar spare capacity built in, leaving a small number of GPUs available to replace failed devices without interruption.

Vasudevan

The TorchPass process resembles live virtual machine migration in cloud environments, where workloads can be moved between machines without shutting them down. But the capability brings the concept of live migration to GPU-based AI training, allowing CUDA workloads running across synchronized clusters to move between devices without interrupting the job. While the underlying mechanisms differ because AI training involves tightly coordinated communication across many GPUs rather than a single operating system instance, the goal is similar: move the workload to new hardware while the distributed training job continues.

In addition to supporting sudden failures, TorchPass can also preemptively migrate workloads when infrastructure telemetry shows that a failure may be coming. Based on internal observations and industry data, Vasudevan said roughly 70–80% of hardware failures show detectable symptoms before they occur, such as rising memory error rates, PCIe communication errors between the CPU and GPU, or thermal conditions that cause devices to reduce clock speeds. In those cases, the platform can move the workload before the device fails, shortening the migration process even more.

Because the migration happens at the infrastructure layer, TorchPass can work independently from the machine learning frameworks used to run training jobs. Vasudevan said the system has been tested with frameworks including PyTorch, Megatron, and DPPs, as well as common cluster schedulers such as Slurm and Kubernetes. While some research projects have explored fault tolerance within the training frameworks themselves, he said those approaches often introduce significant performance penalties, limiting their adoption for large-scale clusters.

TorchPass is only one component of Clockwork’s FleetIQ platform, launched late last year, which the company describes as software designed to improve reliability, observability and performance across large GPU clusters. The platform operates as a control layer across different GPU architectures and networking technologies, monitoring infrastructure health and managing communication between nodes in distributed AI workloads, an approach Clockwork refers to as a “software-driven AI fabric.”

(whiteMocca/Shutterstock)

Clockwork is targeting several segments of the rapidly expanding AI infrastructure market, including neo-cloud providers, large enterprises, and national laboratories. Vasudevan said the company sees growing interest from HPC and sovereign AI initiatives as research institutions begin adopting generative AI workflows alongside traditional machine learning pipelines. In some cases, he said, organizations that previously relied on conventional HPC-based modeling are experimenting with large language models and other AI techniques to address similar scientific and analytical problems.

“In a recent conversation with one of the largest national labs, they were describing a fairly large effort to migrate traditional HPC-based learning models into AI-based learning models. And I was stunned at how quickly that seems to be moving now,” Vasudevan said.

Looking to the future, Vasudevan believes the ability to migrate GPU workloads could eventually support operational tasks beyond failure recovery. “If you think about live GPU migration as a capability, as opposed to just being used for fault tolerance, the ability to move infrastructure around to accommodate workloads is a broad capability,” he said. “It’s a foundational technique that can be used in many other use cases as well.” Distributed AI and HPC workloads are often sensitive to network topology, Vasudevan noted, and a single GPU placed on a distant rack can introduce communication delays across an otherwise tightly coupled job. Live migration could allow operators to rebalance workloads dynamically, moving GPUs closer together within the cluster to improve performance. If that vision comes to pass, live GPU migration may ultimately become a routine part of operating large-scale compute infrastructure.

The post Clockwork.io Introduces Live GPU Migration for AI Cluster Failures appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:45

Trump continues contradictory messaging on Iran; US will release 172m barrels of oil from strategic supplies. Key US politics stories from 11 March

Donald Trump has continued his contradictory messaging over the Iran war, telling a rally in Kentucky that the war is “won” but “we don’t want to leave early, do we?”.

With Trump and his fellow Republicans under pressure, according to polls, due to a stuttering economy, immigration crackdowns and the Iran conflict, the president noted this year’s midterm elections “are going to be very, very important”.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:44

The company aims to combat growing fraud schemes, including impersonation accounts that lure users with fake celebrity endorsements.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:15

NYPD Chief Aaron Edwards hopped a metal barrier to chase down a suspect accused of throwing IEDs during clashing protests outside Gracie Mansion.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-12 16:37

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 12 No.1,005.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-12 16:37

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 12, No. 1,727.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-12 16:38

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 12, No. 739.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 20:24

President Trump's scorn towards GOP Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky is a key factor in the May primary. He has called Massie the "worst Republican congressman" in Congress' history

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 20:04

FBI memo warning that Iran may try to launch drones at California in a seaborne "surprise attack" raised concern Wednesday — but officials tell CBS News there is no known, specific threat underpinning it.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:04

"The president is constantly critical on mail-in voting, and that's ridiculous," Democratic Sen. John Fetterman said Wednesday.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:00

New legislation will require schools to use Mandarin by default, taking priority over minority ethnic languages such as Tibetan, Uyghur and Mongolian

China’s National People’s Congress (NPC), the state legislature, will vote on Thursday on a suite of new laws agreed at this year’s annual two sessions gathering, including a piece of legislation that will diminish the role of minority ethnic languages in the education system.

NPC delegates are expected to approve a new ethnic unity law, along with a new environmental code and the 15th five-year plan, the economic planning document for 2026-2030. Delegates have spent the last week debating Beijing’s proposed bills, which they are all but certain to approve. The NPC, which is often described as a rubber-stamp parliament, has never rejected an item on its agenda.

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2026-03-13 08:04
2026-03-11 20:00

Go behind the scenes with our team as we find and make sense of the numbers.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 19:51

Administration opens new trade investigation into manufacturing in foreign countries

The Trump administration on Wednesday opened a new trade investigation into manufacturing in foreign countries – an effort that comes after the supreme court struck down Donald Trump’s previous use of tariffs by declaring an economic emergency.

The US president and his team have made clear that they’re seeking to replace the hundreds of billions of dollars in lost revenues after the supreme court’s February ruling by using different laws to establish new tariffs .

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:42

Qatar defense minister says nine missiles launched in its territory; Trump declares victory in Iran conflict but acknowledges the operation is not over

Over in Senate question time, the foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, has confirmed embassies in Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv and the consulate in Dubai all physically closed in the last week.

Wong said the government’s number one priority is to “keep Australians safe at home and abroad”.

She continued:

“The dangerous and destabilising attacks by Iran put civilian lives at risk, including Australian lives.”

More than 3,200 Australians over 23 commercial flights have returned to Australia since the US and Israel attacked Iran, setting off a regional conflict and grounding thousands of international flights.

Wong criticised Nationals senators for “winding up people and stoking fear” to panic buy fuel.

The senator said:

“Petrol companies are telling us that fuel stock continues to arrive as expected and on time but there has been a large change in the pattern of demand and that is having an effect on the supply, particularly in regional communities. We have seen jerry cans coming off the shelves at Bunnings and lines at the pump.”

One of the two members of the Iranian women’s football teams provided with a humanitarian visa to stay in Australia has changed her mind and contacted the Iranian embassy, according to the country’s home affairs minister.

In Australia, people are able to change their mind, people are able to travel. So, we respect the context in which she has made that decision.

Unfortunately, in making that decision, she had been advised by her teammates and coach to contact the Iranian embassy and get collected … As a result of that, it meant that the Iranian embassy now knew the location of where everybody was.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:39

While offering no details to hundreds of supporters, US president seemed to suggest conflict would not end soon

Donald Trump told hundreds of supporters assembled inside a packaging plant in northern Kentucky on Wednesday that Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities had been significantly degraded.

“Their drones are down 85%, we’re blowing up their factories,” he told an ecstatic audience in Hebron.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:35

Layoffs to affect 10% of workforce amid Australian company’s restructuring plan to push into artificial intelligence and enterprise sales

Software giant Atlassian has announced it is laying off about 10% of its workforce, or roughly 1,600 positions, and replacing its chief technology officer as it restructures to invest further in artificial intelligence.

Shares of the company rose more than 4% in extended trading on the Nasdaq.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:31

The Supreme Court ruled in February that the president lacks the authority to impose unilateral tariffs using an emergency powers law.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:30

TikTok and Apple Music come together to introduce two new features to the music listening experience.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:24

"I think, overall, what's accomplished is remarkable," Sen. John Fetterman told CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett in an interview Wednesday.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:20

Diego Villavicencio also made violent threats against an unnamed individual, who appears to be Jerome Powell

A Florida man was charged with making threats against Donald Trump, the Democratic representative Eric Swalwell and an unnamed individual who appeared to be Fed chair Jerome Powell.

A federal grand jury in the northern district of Florida returned a four-count indictment against Diego Villavicencio, who is accused of making violent threats against a member of Congress and the president of the United States. A lawyer for Villavicencio declined to comment.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:02

Iranian officials warn of ‘war of attrition’ and global economic chaos as energy supplies are throttled

Iran dramatically escalated its strategy of striking civilian infrastructure and transport networks across the Gulf on Wednesday, attacking commercial ships and targeting Dubai’s international airport as US and Israeli warplanes launched new waves of strikes on the Islamic Republic.

Senior Iranian officials struck a defiant tone, warning of a long “war of attrition” that would threaten global economic chaos as energy supplies from the region were throttled.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Researchers say they have uncovered a takedown-resistant botnet of 14,000 routers and other network devices -- primarily made by Asus -- that have been conscripted into a proxy network that anonymously carries traffic used for cybercrime. The malware -- dubbed KadNap -- takes hold by exploiting vulnerabilities that have gone unpatched by their owners, Chris Formosa, a researcher at security firm Lumen's Black Lotus Labs, told Ars. The high concentration of Asus routers is likely due to botnet operators acquiring a reliable exploit for vulnerabilities affecting those models. He said it's unlikely that the attackers are using any zero-days in the operation. The number of infected routers averages about 14,000 per day, up from 10,000 last August, when Black Lotus discovered the botnet. Compromised devices are overwhelmingly located in the US, with smaller populations in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Russia. One of the most salient features of KadNap is a sophisticated peer-to-peer design based on Kademlia (PDF), a network structure that uses distributed hash tables to conceal the IP addresses of command-and-control servers. The design makes the botnet resistant to detection and takedowns through traditional methods. [...] Despite the resistance to normal takedown methods, Black Lotus says it has devised a means to block all network traffic to or from the control infrastructure." The lab is also distributing the indicators of compromise to public feeds to help other parties block access. [...] People who are concerned their devices are infected can check this page for IP addresses and a file hash found in device logs. To disinfect devices, they must be factory reset. Because KadNap stores a shell script that runs when an infected router reboots, simply restarting the device will result in it being compromised all over again. Device owners should also ensure all available firmware updates have been installed, that administrative passwords are strong, and that remote access has been disabled unless needed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:52

When used by humans, large language models often lack sufficient information to make a correct diagnosis, a new study in Nature Medicine shows.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:49

CBS News California Investigates found that food banks, children's hospitals and charities are owed thousands of dollars sitting in the state's unclaimed property system, while other states automatically send checks to return the money.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:20

The Van Allen probe's mission was meant to last two years, but ended up going for nearly seven.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:17

Red Hat developer Marcin Juszkiewicz is working on the RISC-V port of Fedora Linux, and after a few months of working on it, published a blog post about just how incredibly slow RISC-V seems to be. This is a real problem, as in Fedora, build results are only released once all architectures have completed their builds.

There is no point of going for inclusion with slow builders as this will make package maintainers complain. You see, in Fedora build results are released into repositories only when all architectures finish. And we had maintainers complaining about lack of speed of AArch64 builders in the past. Some developers may start excluding RISC-V architecture from their packages to not have to wait.

And any future builders need to be rackable and manageable like any other boring server (put in a rack, connect cables, install, do not touch any more). Because no one will go into a data centre to manually reboot an SBC-based builder.

Without systems fulfilling both requirements, we can not even plan for the RISC-V 64-bit architecture to became one of official, primary architectures in Fedora Linux.

↫ Marcin Juszkiewicz

RISC-V really seems to have hit some sort of ceiling over the past few years, with performance improvements stalling and no real performance-oriented chips and boards becoming available. Everybody seems to want RISC-V to succeed and become an architecture that can stand its own against x86 and Arm, but the way things are going, that just doesn’t seem likely any time soon. There’s always some magical unicorn chip or board just around the corner, but when you actually turn that corner, it’s just another slow SBC only marginally faster than the previous one.

Fedora is not the first distribution struggling with bringing RISC-V online. Chimera Linux faced a similar issue about a year ago, but managed to eventually get by because someone from the Adélie Linux team granted remote access to an unused Milk-V Pioneer, which proved enough for Chimera for now. My hope is still that eventually we’re going to see performant, capable RISC-V machines, because I would absolutely jump for joy if I could have a proper RISC-V workstation.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-11 18:17

The U.S.-based companies, Planet Labs and Vantor, say they were not instructed by any government to restrict image access.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:14

The simply named Better Value plan has features that will appeal to families, but check the details.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 18:05

Google founder backs both Republican and Democrat in governor’s race while ex-CEO fights billionaire tax

Tech billionaires are adding to their already huge spending spree on California politics as campaigns for governor and a proposed wealth tax heat up. According to recently released campaign finance disclosures, big names pouring millions into state politics include current and former chief executives from Google, DoorDash, Reddit, LinkedIn and Facebook – evidence of Silicon Valley’s increasing involvement in politics.

Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt has become a major donor, contributing $1.04m to an independent committee, the California Business Roundtable, that is campaigning against the proposed Billionaire Tax Act, according to new filings released by the state government. The union-backed tax proposal, opposed by almost all of the state’s mega-rich, aims to help cover education, food assistance and healthcare programs.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:04

Strait of Hormuz, key transit passage for global oil trade, has been effectively shut down by Islamic Revolutionary Guard

US intelligence reporting sees direct attacks by Iran as the greatest threat to oil tankers going through the strait of Hormuz, the key transit passage for the global oil trade that has been effectively shut down by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard since the start of the US-Israeli war against Iran.

The Trump administration, spooked by possible preparations by Iran to mine the strait, carried out strikes against 16 mine-laying vessels near the strait on Tuesday. US Central Command posted a video showing munitions hitting nine vessels, most of which were moored as they were struck.

Continue reading...

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 18:02

LOS ANGELES, March 11, 2026 — The 2026 Optical Fiber Communications Conference and Exhibition (OFC), the world’s largest annual gathering for optical networking and communications professionals, takes place next week at the Los Angeles Convention Center (March 15-19, 2026, Exhibition: March 17–19).

Credit: OFC

With the exhibit hall sold out, OFC 2026 is set to be one of the largest to date, with an expected 16,000 attendees from 90 countries and more than 700 exhibiting companies convening in Los Angeles for a week of product debuts, technical milestones and industry collaboration. The program will also feature 130 invited and tutorial speakers and 45 presentations across three exhibition theaters.

From startups to established global brands, OFC’s exhibit floor will spotlight the technologies shaping next-generation networks, including systems, silicon photonics, lasers, optical modules, components and the test and measurement tools that support performance at scale.

“We are witnessing a pivotal time for the industry, as AI-driven growth accelerates the need for higher bandwidth and better power efficiency,” said OFC General Chair Johannes Fischer, Fraunhofer Heinrich-Hertz Inst., Germany. “The sold-out exhibit floor and broad global participation underscore how urgently the ecosystem is advancing new solutions, and how quickly they’re moving toward deployment.”

OFC gives attendees a chance to compare approaches side by side, connect directly with the engineers and product teams behind them and better understand which technologies are ready for near-term deployment and which are still taking shape.

Exhibitor Announcements Set to Debut in Los Angeles

With the industry convening in one place, OFC expects a strong slate of exhibitor news and product updates across the optical communications ecosystem, including announcements submitted through OFC’s First News program (an advance preview of exhibitor announcements for media and analysts). A selection includes:

  • Acacia – Acacia will highlight its coherent pluggables and client optics portfolio, including field-proven 400G products and the industry’s first 800GZR+ with interop PCS for AI-era networking.
  • Applied Optoelectronics, Inc. (AOI) – AOI will showcase its readiness for CPO and NPO architectures with transceivers through 1.6T, 6.4T on-board optics demos and a new narrow-linewidth pump laser.
  • CEA-Leti – CEA-Leti and NcodiN will announce a strategic collaboration to industrialize optical interposer technology on a 300 mm photonics process for next-generation semiconductors and AI chips.
  • LightSpeed Photonics – LightSpeed Photonics will launch what it calls the industry’s first solderable near-packaged optical interconnect technology, positioned as a low-power alternative between CPO and LPO.
  • OIF – OIF will bring multi-vendor interoperability to life with 40 member companies demonstrating the building blocks behind AI-era data center networks, from coherent optics to CEI-224G, live 448G, CMIS and co-packaging.
  • Semtech – Semtech will unveil a new family of 224G per lane TIAs and MZM drivers built for the shift toward linear optical interconnects across 800G, 1.6T and 3.2T architectures.
  • Taara – Taara will unveil Taara Photonics and Taara Beam, a solid-state wireless optical communications platform based on optical phased arrays.
  • VIAVI Solutions – VIAVI will showcase validation tools for next-generation AI fabrics, including demos focused on 1.6T Ethernet, PCIe over optics and high-density test capabilities.

Plenary Spotlights AI, Optical Innovation and Optical Networks in Space

The OFC Plenary Session takes place on Tuesday, 17 March (08:00–10:00 PDT) at the JW Marriott next to the Los Angeles Convention Center, featuring:

  • Julie Sheridan Eng, Chief Technology Officer, Coherent
  • Alexis Bjorlin, Senior Vice President, AI Infrastructure, NVIDIA
  • Siegbert Martin, Chief Technology Officer, Tesat-Spacecom

Registration and information

For registration, exhibitor details and the schedule-at-a-glance, visit OFCConference.org.

About OFC

The Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exhibition (OFC) is the world’s largest event for optical communications and networking professionals — a showcase for the trends and technologies that impact how the world communicates and transacts. It is the locus for scientific visionaries and the industry’s biggest brands to make connections and move business forward. For more than 50 years, participants from all corners of the globe have been drawn to OFC by its high-impact, peer-reviewed research, dynamic business programs and the world’s largest in-person exhibition for optical communications.

OFC is co-sponsored by the IEEE Communications Society (IEEE/ComSoc) and the IEEE Photonics Society and co-sponsored and managed by Optica.


Source: OFC

The post OFC 2026 Brings 16,000 Attendees to Los Angeles for Optical Networking Showcase appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:00

In the last few days, President Donald Trump has said that the U.S-Israel war on Iran will end soon, after oil prices jumped and the growing regional conflict continued to shake markets. After a wave of heavy bombardments throughout Iran, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth promised another round, “The most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes.” 

“Hegseth has, yes, said that it’s going to be basically death and destruction from the air, and they’re delivering that,” Hooman Majd, an Iranian American writer and journalist, tells The Intercept Briefing. 

“Killing civilians is a hallmark of American air war. This particular campaign Operation Epic Fury is set apart by the relentlessness of the attacks,” adds Nick Turse, senior reporter for The Intercept. “The two militaries — U.S. and Israel — combined were striking a conservative estimate of 1,000 targets per day in the first days of the conflict. Around 4,000 targets were hit in the first 100 hours of the campaign. For another point of comparison, Israeli attacks in the recent Gaza war were also relentless, but this far outpaces the Israeli campaign by more than double the number of strikes.” On Wednesday, Trump told Axios the war would end soon because there’s “practically nothing left to target.”

This week on the The Intercept Briefing, host Akela Lacy talked to Majd and Turse about the latest developments in the U.S. and Israel war on Iran and the growing number of conflicts the U.S. is engaged in. Senior technology reporter Sam Biddle also joined to discuss how artificial intelligence is being used in various U.S. conflicts.

Related

OpenAI on Surveillance and Autonomous Killings: You’re Going to Have to Trust Us

“Airstrikes, air war generally is already so prone to killing innocent people even when you take your time. But whenever you try to hurry for the sake of hurrying — and AI is great at enabling that — you just increase over and over again the chance of killing someone that you didn’t intend to or didn’t care enough to avoid killing,” says Biddle. “So I think that is an immense risk of just accelerating the metabolism of killing from the air by drone, by airplane — with the stamp of ‘intelligence’ that these AI companies are really pushing.”

Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen.  

Transcript 

Akela Lacy: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing, I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter at The Intercept.

Sam Biddle: And I’m Sam Biddle, senior technology reporter at The Intercept.

AL: Sam, this is your first time on The Intercept Briefing, correct? 

SB: It is. I’ve been at the Intercept for 10 years. I finally got the call. I’m excited.

Akela Lacy: Welcome, we’re very glad to have you. 

SB: Thank you so much.

AL: On a serious note, as we speak, the U.S. is engaged in war and acts of aggression on multiple fronts from the Middle East to the Caribbean and Central America. You have been doing some really important reporting on how the Pentagon is using artificial intelligence in wars and surveillance around the world.

Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported that Claude, an AI tool from the company Anthropic, was used to capture now former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, which set off a dispute between the company and the U.S. government, and opened the door for Anthropic’s rival to swoop in. The Wall Street Journal also reported that Trump has used those same tools in strikes on Iran. Tell us more. 

SB: So what’s been reported is that the Pentagon has made use of a system it has called the Maven Smart System, which is operated by Palantir, the semi-infamous data mining firm. We know based on multiple reports at this point that they’re using the Maven system to essentially accelerate the selection and subsequent destruction of targets on the ground.

This is a way of executing airstrikes at a greater speed potentially, not necessarily more intelligently or with greater accuracy, but I think just faster. And I think people at the Pentagon would probably say, more effectively, more efficiently finding things to destroy and people to kill.

“Target selection is a labor-intensive task.”

Target selection is a labor-intensive task. If you can have an LLM like Anthropic’s Claude system — we’ve all seen how quickly they can generate a huge wall of text, of questionable accuracy — can bring that same hyper-speed to creating lists of buildings to destroy and people to kill. I think that is proven to be the biggest value — not just to our military, but to militaries abroad as well.

AL: Sam, what do we know about how the Pentagon is using AI tools in the Trump administration’s various wars?

SB: Under Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, there has been a huge, very aggressive push to integrate AI really wherever and whenever possible.

Related

AI’s Imperial Agenda

I think that you’re seeing the Pentagon under Hegseth mimic a lot of tech industry rhetoric, which is “we don’t totally understand this technology. We don’t totally know where it’s got to be useful, but we need to use it as much as possible anyway.” I think that you’ve seen DOD under Hegseth be extremely aggressive in the cadence of airstrikes.

This is a Pentagon that believes in killing people. I think, at times, it seems to sort of give itself things to tweet about. This is a political movement and an ideology guiding the Pentagon that I think relishes violence. These AI systems, when you want to blow things up and kill people, these tools can provide a very rapid, turnkey means of having a list of people and places to destroy.

So what we know based on a recent Washington Post report that was discussing the use of Anthropic’s Claude system in Iran, was that it was not just used for target selection, but also target prioritization: Here are the most important targets to attack. Also, something that the Post described as sort of simulating battlefield outcomes. It’s a little unclear what exactly that means. One can imagine just asking a chatbot to basically create a story about how an airstrike could play out. That’s essentially what an LLM does, is generate text that’s plausible based on the inputs. How exactly these simulations are playing out of what value they are, how accurate they are in terms of what might actually happen subsequently in real life is unknown.

“This is a Pentagon that believes in killing people.”

To me and for the public, the most concerning aspect of what’s been reported about the ongoing use of these LLMs by the Pentagon is the focus on speed. Airstrikes, air war generally is already so prone to killing innocent people even when you take your time. But whenever you try to hurry for the sake of hurrying, and AI is great at enabling that, you just increase over and over and over again the chance of killing someone that you didn’t intend to or didn’t care enough to avoid killing.

So I think that is an immense risk of just accelerating the metabolism of killing from the air by drone, by airplane — with the stamp of “intelligence” that these AI companies are really pushing. If you blow up a school because Claude told you that it was actually an IED factory or whatever, you could say, “Oh, well, the super-smart computer told me to.”

AL: It was the robot. It wasn’t me.

SB: Exactly. We’ve spent the past several years having the tech industry tell us how ultra-smart, ultra-intelligent these systems are. That’s worrying enough when we’re asking them to write our emails for us and do our homework for us. But again, this is the business of killing people. Mistakes are not just mistakes. I think that is now just the way wars are going to be fought, and that is a very troubling new reality.

“This is the business of killing people. Mistakes are not just mistakes. I think that is now just the way wars are going to be fought, and that is a very troubling new reality.”

AL: Backing up a little bit. There is a fight right now between these companies and the government over how, if at all, their tools should be used. We know that they are being used.

But can you tell us a little bit about what is in dispute here? It also sounds like there’s some talk about guardrails being put in place, but we know that means very little in this context. Can you walk us through that?

SB: So the original controversy here was Anthropic, a leading rival of OpenAI. Some would say they have a better product at this point. They got into a dispute with the Pentagon over selling access to Claude, which is their AI chatbot system, akin to ChatGPT.

AL: But it has a human name.

SB: It does have a human name. Don’t you love that?

The company says that they did not want to permit the Department of Defense to use Claude for domestic surveillance of Americans and for killing people without human oversight. The Pentagon says this is woke nonsense, you’re now banned from doing work with the government —and then OpenAI enters.

AL: I will also note in 2024, The Intercept sued OpenAI in federal court over the company’s use of copyrighted articles to train its chatbot ChatGPT. The case is ongoing.

SB: And this is where it gets very strange because OpenAI claims to have the same red lines as Anthropic, but somehow was able to seal a deal with the Pentagon.

Both are very muddled when it comes to what they actually refuse to do. They seem to both want to say that, look, we’re not going to do anything illegal and we’re also not going to engage in these acts — autonomous killing and domestic surveillance — which are largely considered legal.

“It ultimately comes down to what they, what their lawyers decide is legal.”

Appealing to the law is no protection against these acts that the companies are saying that they will not facilitate. I wrote in a piece a few days ago, I think, ultimately, without being able to review the actual contract language for ourselves and to have lawyers go through it carefully, it all just comes down to whether or not you trust the corporate leadership of OpenAI and Anthropic, as well as Pete Hegseth and the White House. It ultimately comes down to what they, what their lawyers decide is legal. We’ve seen White House lawyers say a lot of things are legal: NSA spying, torture, et cetera. So that appeal to the law by these companies is not as reassuring as they want the public to believe it is.

Just one note though: Even though Anthropic’s deal with the Pentagon fell apart, the DOD is still able to use their technology through — it gets a little complicated here — Palantir’s Maven Smart System software, which has Claude in it as a feature, rather than getting it straight from Anthropic.

When you see headlines about Anthropic being banned or being rejected by the military, DOD can still use their software. It’s a pretty nice loophole. So they are still very much in use.

AL: I’ll also mention that the U.S.–Israel war on Iran is also the first example of countries attacking data centers as an act of war, which Sam, you have some reporting coming out on in the future, so everyone look out for that. 

So to recap, the Trump administration appears to be at war with the world. The self-proclaimed “president of peace” has sent U.S. forces jumping from conflict to conflict from Venezuela to Iran to Ecuador and more. As our colleague Nick Turse, senior reporter for The Intercept, tells me on the podcast today, the U.S. has launched attacks in eight countries and killed civilians in two bodies of water — and made threats against five other nations. We also speak with Hooman Majd, an Iranian American journalist and contributor to NBC News, about the latest developments in the U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran, which is ricocheting around the globe. This is our conversation. 

Nick and Hooman, welcome to The Intercept Briefing 

Hooman Majd: Thank you. 

Nick Turse: Thanks for having me on.

AL: Hooman, the Israel–U.S. war on Iran is stretching into another week. A new round of air bombardments hit throughout the country, Al Jazeera reported Monday evening, “We can say this is by far one of the most heavily intense nights in Tehran in terms of air bombardment.” Secretary of War Pete Hegseth promised, “The most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he hoped the Iranian people would oust the regime. The civilian death toll in Iran has reached about 1,300 people. To start, what are the latest developments, particularly over the last few days? 

HM: Last few days, I mean, it’s heavy bombardment. That’s what it is.

Hegseth has, yes, said that it’s going to be basically death and destruction from the air, and they’re delivering that. Bombing — whether it was Israel or the United States, I don’t know — but earlier this week, they bombed oil depots in and around Tehran. There was black soot, oily rain falling on people’s heads basically in Tehran.

You’ve got Netanyahu telling people to rise up. Rise up how? Exactly how are they supposed to take control of a government that is so secure right now that it can go through the constitutional process of setting up its three-person council that rules Iran in the absence of a supreme leader, then elects a supreme leader by a majority of ayatollahs in person? Because the actual vote has to be in person and they were not blown up. So they obviously had a secure location to do this. How are the Iranian people supposed to do this? You’ve got the Revolutionary Guards who are very powerful. They haven’t shown any real fracture in their ranks. There’s not been a split. The top leadership is there. The second tier of the leadership is there. The third tier of the leadership is there. How are people supposed to get out and go and take over the government?

It’s insane for someone like the prime minister of another country to say, “We’re bombing the hell out of you, now please rise up and go take over your government.” It defies logic.

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But to answer your question, what’s been happening? It’s just been war. It’s an all-out war. They can call it a special operation. They can call it whatever they want. The Iranians recognize it as war. The death toll is rising among Iranians, but also among the American servicemen and women.

The cost of this war is going up daily for everyone. It’s turning into this kind of — oh, I won’t call it a world war, that would be hyperbole — but way more countries are involved in this other than the U.S., Israel, and Iran.

AL: One of the first acts of aggression in this war was this strikes on this elementary school for girls in the southern Iranian town of Minab, which killed 175 people, mostly children, according to Iranian health offices. Trump blamed Iran for the bombing. But Nick, your reporting, and reporting from the New York Times and others, and new video evidence all suggest that the U.S. struck the school. What did your sources tell you?

NT: Even before footage of a Tomahawk missile landing near the school emerged, I was talking to sources that were refuting claims by President Trump about this being an errant Iranian strike. He apparently seized on talking points that emerged in Iranian monarchy circles. They were spread on social media that this attack on the elementary school was an errant Iranian rocket. Or he just made it up. This is standard Trump behavior.

But my sources — current government official, two former Pentagon officials who were experts in civilian harm, who worked on these issues for the Pentagon for years — said that the satellite imagery showed that these weren’t errant strikes, but they were precision attacks. The angle of the weapon, the precise nature of the strike, the fact that the munitions came straight down from above, the fact that all the strikes in the general area looked the same, including those that hit buildings on the nearby Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps base — all this made it crystal clear that this was a U.S. or an Israeli attack.

The fact that it was known that the U.S. carried out strikes in the specific area offered more evidence that America was behind this. And then this video emerged a couple days ago showing a Tomahawk missile landing in the area.

Now, only the U.S., Britain, Australia, and the Netherlands use Tomahawks. Israel doesn’t have them. Despite mis- or disinformation that President Trump peddled during a news conference on Monday, Iran does not have Tomahawks. Any country the U.S. sold Tomahawks to would have to obtain authorization from the State Department before transferring these sophisticated weapons to a third party. The U.K. is not going to sell Iran Tomahawk missiles.

If Iran was somehow able to obtain a black-market Tomahawk — and let me emphasize, there’s no such thing as black-market Tomahawk. There’s no market for these. Iran lacks the technical equipment and the capabilities that are used to program the flight paths of these missiles and to upload the data necessary to the missiles onboard computer. They also need a specialized launcher to fire a Tomahawk.

So Trump’s assertion on Monday that the Tomahawk is some sort of generic munition and that Iran has some Tomahawks — it’s absurd.  The only party to this conflict that’s firing off Tomahawks is the United States.

What’s also notable about this, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth was standing right next to Trump when the president claimed that it was Iran that hit the school, and Hegseth would not endorse those comments.

He said there was an ongoing investigation, and he issued a classic non-denial, denial taking Iran to task for targeting civilians. But the fact that he wouldn’t back up his boss who was standing right next to him, I thought was very telling.

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Then I spoke to U.S. Central Command, which oversees U.S. military operations in the Middle East, oversees this war in Iran. They told me that to comment on any of this was getting ahead of an ongoing military investigation — which is precisely what President Trump did. They said it was just inappropriate to do. You don’t often have a military spokesperson say that what the commander-in-chief has just done was inappropriate, but they did so in this case.

HM: Yeah, I mean it’s really interesting, Nick. For Iranians, it reminds them of the USS Vincennes shooting down an Iran air jet killing all passengers — civilian jet — in the Persian Gulf under George Bush Sr. at the time. And denials, denials, denials that it was us. And then, “Well, it looked like an enemy aircraft, so we fired a missile.” George Bush refused to apologize, but the U.S. did finally admit that it was an accidental shooting down of the passenger plane. And did actually end up paying reparations to Iran for that act. 

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It just adds to the litany of complaints or accusations that Iran throws at the United States for how the United States is the aggressor against Iran and not the other way around. There is a point to their claims that the U.S. will start aggression against Iran unprovoked. 

In this particular case, there’s very little evidence, if any at all, that Iran, as President Trump has just said, was about to attack the United States and therefore we had to attack them. There’s literally no evidence. And if they do have the evidence, they really should provide it because the American people at this point are not particularly keen on this war and the approval will probably go down from what it is now, the approval ratings for being at war, as we see more and more damage, as we see gas prices go up further, as we see American servicemen and women potentially lose their lives or be injured. And of course, our allies be continually attacked.

Which by the way, I should add, I don’t know why it’s a surprise to anybody. Iran said this after the last Twelve Day War in June. They said, “Next time, no more Mr. Nice Guy; we had restraint this time.” It’s that old joke, no more Mr. Nice Guy. They actually said it out loud, no one’s going to be safe if we are attacked again by U.S., Israel, or both. They said it to the Persian Gulf States. They said it to Saudi Arabia, which is probably the reason those countries were so adamant in trying to get President Trump to not attack Iran because they knew that the blowback would be against them. 

AL: A couple of things I want to just pick up on here. Going to your point on provocation and the idea that the U.S. was somehow provoked to attack Iran. They’ve already shown their hand on this. A couple days after the first strikes you had Marco Rubio blaming Israel for dragging the U.S. into the war. Then Trump is walking that back a couple days later. I think anyone who’s paying attention — obviously, there are a lot of questions about what the communication was here, how much the U.S. was actually goaded into this over Israel. I don’t think it’s a surprise that the neocons in the various administrations have been foaming at the mouth to go to war with Iran for a very long time. So I just want to make that point.

You mentioned this regime change thing. I mean we’ve talked about this when you were last on the show, Hooman. There’s been additional reporting in the last few days, hammering home this idea that that is not on the table right now.

HM: There’s been a million different reasons or rationale given by the U.S. administration for starting this war — bounces back and forth from one thing to another. Just this week, Trump now is saying that Kushner and Witkoff and Rubio, and these guys were telling him we have to go to war otherwise — two real estate people were telling you to go to war? Really? Would any president of the United States say that?

Jared Kushner doesn’t have a job. Has no title whatsoever. Steve Witkoff has never talked about Iran his entire professional life and has no knowledge. I’m not dissing him; I’m just saying he has no knowledge of the nuclear issue. None whatsoever. Probably got a briefing from the State Department, one-hour briefing — this is what enrichment means, this is how they can do this, how they can do that — and gets thrown into negotiations while he’s running back and forth from one negotiation to the Ukraine negotiations in Geneva and taking Jared with him. It’s an insane way to negotiate, but they did it. And so they, and this is what Donald Trump said this week, they — along with Marco Rubio and obviously Lindsey Graham, we know that — were pressing very hard for an attack on Iran, “Iran is the weakest that it’s ever been.” 

According, again, to Donald Trump, Steve Witkoff told him that Iran could build a bomb in two weeks. How Steve Witkoff could even think that when there is no access right now to the nuclear material, let alone bomb making ability of Iran? It’s just beyond belief. So it’s insane. 

The regime changed idea was clearly something that was in Donald Trump’s mind. We go in — I’m sure Lindsey Graham, Bibi Netanyahu, various people were telling him: Look, you did it in Venezuela. It’s not that hard. Look at all the protests in January. These people want to overthrow the government. This is what they want to do. They’re shouting “Down with the regime.” And they were brutally murdered. So all you have to do is just take out the supreme leader and bang, people will rise up. 

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Well, they took out the supreme leader, and people didn’t rise up because bombs were falling on their heads. If that’s all they had done, maybe some people would’ve been coming out on the streets celebrating. There were some celebrations, but they stopped pretty quickly because you keep bombing people. They’re going to care about their own lives, especially since there’s no leader to take over to help overthrow the regime. Trump has already ruled out the former Crown Prince of Iran, Reza Pahlavi. He himself has ruled himself out. He has no operations on the ground in Iran. His name is shouted by people when they protest a little bit because that’s the only name they know. It doesn’t mean that they want the monarchy to return.

Then the MEK, as we know, are absolutely despised by 99 percent of the Iranian people. They have some ground operations in Iran, but again, not enough to overthrow the regime. They’ve been trying for 47 years, and they haven’t been successful.

So talking about regime change is meaningless. Most Iranians understand that. Iranians want the regime changed. That doesn’t mean they want it overthrown, but they want it changed. No question about that. I would argue that there’s a majority, but there’s a minority — quite a strong minority, as we saw even from the images a couple of days ago, of crowds gathering to mourn the supreme leader’s death. So if there’s 10 percent, 20 percent of the population that are diehard supporters of the Islamic Republic, that’s a significant number of people, significant enough — and they tend to be the people with the guns.

[Break]

AL: Nick, in all of this, Iran is not the only country the U.S. is at war with at the moment. Trump also recently launched attacks on Ecuador. What can you tell us about the various countries the U.S. has attacked since Trump came into office this term and other conflicts that U.S. forces are involved in?

NT: Yeah, this is a president who ran for office promising to keep the United States out of wars, who claims to be a “peacemaker,” who has campaigned for the Nobel Peace Prize and founded a so-called Board of Peace but President Trump is conducting wars across the globe at a furious clip. Sen. Elizabeth Warren said Trump has conducted more strikes in more countries than any modern president. I’m not sure that’s actually true. It really depends on what you call a strike, what you’re counting. But during his second term, Trump has already launched attacks on Ecuador, two wars in Iran, attacks in Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, Yemen. He’s attacked civilians in boats in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean.

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The Trump administration also claims to be at war with at least 24 drug cartels and criminal gangs, who, I should add, it won’t name. It’s also threatened Colombia, Cuba, Greenland, Iceland — I think, inadvertently, caught flack from Greenland — and Mexico. The Trump administration is threatening some sort of takeover of Cuba at this very moment.

“It seems to me that U.S. involvement in raids against so-called narco-terrorist targets was more than just passing along intel.”

There have been at least two attacks inside Ecuador, both of them since the second Iran war started. It’s unclear as to the extent of U.S. involvement in this. A lot of outlets initially reported that the U.S. simply provided intelligence to Ecuadorian forces. I specifically did not. A lot is unclear, but it seems to me that U.S. involvement in raids against so-called narco-terrorist targets was more than just passing along intel.

I believe this even more following a very strange war powers report that the Trump administration sent to Congress on Monday regarding the recent partnered U.S. operations in Ecuador. It says specifically, although present for this partnered operation, the United States ground forces did not come in contact with hostile forces. Mere mention of U.S. ground forces in connection with this operation raises red flags for me. And the fact that the administration actually filed this war powers report with Congress suggests to me that U.S. forces themselves took kinetic action, that it wasn’t just Ecuadorian forces. So I think there may have been U.S. forces on the ground and that the U.S. possibly conducted lethal strikes there, much like the boat strikes in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean that have killed close to 160 civilians since September.

My sources say that these strikes in Ecuador are the opening salvo of a larger campaign in that country and also elsewhere in Latin America. So I’d stay tuned on that.

“The fact that the administration actually filed this war powers report with Congress suggests to me that U.S. forces themselves took kinetic action, that it wasn’t just Ecuadorian forces.”

AL: I’m just got to list these out for people. You mentioned Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, Yemen, civilians boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific, the 24 unnamed cartels and criminal gangs and threats, to Columbia, Cuba, Greenland, Iceland, and Mexico.

HM: What about Canada?

AL: We haven’t even talked about Canada.

NT: Yes, our 51st state in the making.

HM: Yeah, by force if necessary. 

NT: If necessary, yes.

AL: Going back to Iran, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has said “America, regardless of what so-called international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise air power campaign in history.” Can you tell us more about how the U.S. is conducting this war on Iran? What does that actually mean? What does that look like?

NT: Lethal is certainly right, lethal to the Iranian security forces, but also to innocence — men, women, and children. The U.S. has been killing civilians from aircraft for more than 100 years, and lying about it, covering up, trying to explain it away, so that part is par for the course. Killing civilians is a hallmark of American air war.

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This particular campaign — “Operation Epic Fury” — is set apart by the relentlessness of the attacks. There was a new investigation by Air Wars, which is a U.K.-based airstrike monitoring group. And it found that the first days of this Iran war saw far more sites targeted than any recent U.S. or Israeli military campaign.

The moniker “Operation Epic Fury” is ridiculous and bellicose. But there’s some perverse truth to this name because in the first 100 hours of this war the U.S. and Israel said that they struck more targets in Iran than in the first six months of the U.S. led coalition’s bombing campaign of the so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, which was a formidable campaign. 

The two militaries — U.S. and Israel — combined were striking a conservative estimate of 1,000 targets per day in the first days of the conflict. Around 4,000 targets were hit in the first 100 hours of the campaign. For another point of comparison, Israeli attacks in the recent Gaza war were also relentless, but this far outpaces the Israeli campaign by more than double the number of strikes. It’s going to be a while, I think before the full civilian toll of this war is clear, if we ever really find out. Official Iranian sources say it’s creeping up on 1,500 or more killed, but it may actually be higher. 

While the true rate of civilian harm can’t solely be predicted by the number of targets that are hit, the initial indication suggests it’s been high, and I should add that U.S. targets have been correlated with heavily populated areas. So we have to assume that we’ll come to find out that large number of civilians have been killed and will continue to be killed before this war is over.

HM: The kind of war that is being waged on Iran, generally speaking, the Iranian Red Cross, or Red Crescent in Iran’s case, has been pretty accurate in terms of what they’ve reported. As Nick pointed out, it’s probably under-reporting right now. We do know there’s rubble in parts of the city of Tehran. Tehran, a city of more than 9 million, probably closer to 10 or 11 million people, densely populated, very densely populated.

For anybody who’s been there or even looked at a satellite image, they’ll see you cannot strike a building in Tehran and not kill someone who is unintended, an unintended target. Iran is not making this stuff up. They’re busy trying to protect themselves, trying to fire as many missiles as possible to try to bring an end to this war in a way by causing pain for not just America, but for American allies. 

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A lot of people complain and say Iran is breaking international law by attacking countries that have nothing to do with this war. That’s probably true. It is probably against international law what Iran is doing, but so is the war that the United States and Israel started on Iran. That’s also against international law. So it’s a complete break of the so-called international order.

AL: I just want to add some context for our listeners. You’re mentioning these attacks by Iran on U.S. allies. Since the war began, Iran retaliated against the U.S.-Israel attacks by targeting U.S. military bases in Bahrain, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, and three sites in Kuwait. Israel has also been attacking southern Lebanon where it says it’s targeting Hezbollah and seizing land, displacing at least 80,000 people so far. Lebanon’s government has now asked Israel to talk and blamed Hezbollah for attacks [on Israel].   

Iran’s strategy appears to be also targeting Israel and Gulf energy sites. Iran blocked oil and gas exports through the Strait of Hormuz and attacked several oil tankers. Energy sites in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Oman have also reported damage from Iranian drones. Last week, U.S. Central Command, or CENTCOM, reported that the U.S. had destroyed Iran’s navy, and that there are no Iranian ships underway in the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf of Oman, and the Arabian Gulf. But fighting has continued to slow ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. 

Last week, President Donald Trump said the war could last weeks. On Monday, Trump now says the war could end very soon after oil prices jumped significantly and this conflict spooked the markets. For both of you, do you think that impact on the markets will actually motivate Trump to end U.S. involvement in the war? 

NT: It’s always difficult to gauge where this administration is at and you know what the president is thinking. This is a wildly unpopular war, and I think the longer it goes on, the more we’ll see whatever bare minimum of public support exists continue to drop. So if Americans continue to feel pain at the pump, I think there is a chance that it could hasten an end to this conflict.

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The trouble is it’s really difficult to gauge what the goals of this conflict were. I’m also not sure what impact public sentiment has on Trump at this point. It may take billionaire friends of his calling him, telling them that they’re starting to feel pain for him to decide to wrap up this conflict. 

On Monday, we heard that the conflict was almost over while the stock market was in session, and then afterward we heard that the war might go on for a week more, or maybe as long as it takes — unclear what that means. It does, at some points, appear the president’s trying to manipulate the markets with his statements.

“It does, at some points, appear the president’s trying to manipulate the markets with his statements.”

HM: I would agree with that, Nick. I also would say some of his friends in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and places like that. Qatar just gave him a $400 million plane, and they’re not particularly interested in this war going on.

But what I want to add to this is that Trump may be looking for an off-ramp right now. Obviously, the war’s not going the way he expected. So looking for an off-ramp means the Iranians have to be willing to offer one. They’re very adamant in every interview the foreign minister has given, every X post that one of the other leaders — Larijani, Ghalibaf — make is: We’re not interested even talking to you and let alone a ceasefire. We’re not interested in a ceasefire.

“This one is really existential.”

If you look at that carefully, and if you know the Iranians, you understand where they’re coming from since the Twelve Day War back in June, is that this one is really existential. That one wasn’t existential. That one they could show some restraint and then maybe talk to Trump and figure out how to make this nuclear deal. As we know they did, they started talking about it. 

Now it’s like, this is going to happen every six months, if we stop the war. If we go to a ceasefire, six months from now it’s going to be the same thing. Our new supreme leader will be assassinated, and then we have to start all over again. So this time, we’re not going to give him that opportunity.

What it appears they are doing is bringing as much pain as possible so that when Trump, without begging, looks for an off ramp, Iran then says, sure, but I want these sanctions removed. I’ll give you that off ramp, but you’ve got to give me a non-aggression pact, and you’ve got to give me some of these sanctions because I need to fix my country, and I can’t do it with the sanctions you’ve got.

Then it’s a question of whether the U.S. and how Israel factors into this. Trump we know is fine with dictators. He’s totally fine with it. He’ll be totally fine with Mojtaba Khamenei as the new supreme leader. The question is really what will Trump do at a point where it appears that the U.S. wants to get out of this war he wants to get out, even if Hegseth doesn’t, and Lindsey Graham doesn’t, but he wants out? Gas is at $6 a gallon in California at that point, $7 a gallon in some places. And people are crying saying, wait a sec, this is not what we counted on. Then Iran is in the driver’s seat at that point. Did he ever think that could ever happen?

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I’m not trying to advocate for Iran’s position. I’m saying they’re playing it well, if you think about it, they are playing it well. It’s like yeah, we’re just got to keep going. It’s fine. We can handle it. Foreign Minister of Iran on NBC News, on “Meet the Press”: Ground troops, bring ’em on. We’re ready. We’re ready for them. They probably are prepared for ground troops.

Turkey doesn’t want this war right on their border. Iraq doesn’t want this war right on their border. Kuwait doesn’t want it, we know. And all the other Persian Gulf countries don’t want it. And I think they’re, all the Persian Gulf countries, in all the other countries are very worried that this is not regime change. And the regime will be in power, and the regime can threaten them again. Everyone will, in my mind, will want an end to this war that includes a strong sense that this won’t happen every six months. And then the question really becomes, what are the Israelis going to do? What’s Netanyahu — how is he gonna sell the end to the war?

“Everyone will, in my mind, will want an end to this war that includes a strong sense that this won’t happen every six months.”

AL: We know that on the question of ground troops, Trump has sent conflicting messages saying he hasn’t ruled out sending ground troops into Iran. We also know that seven U.S. soldiers have already been killed in the war, and as we’re recording, news broke that about 140 U.S. troops have been wounded in the war, including eight severely, according to the Pentagon.

Hooman, to your earlier point on the Trump administration’s expectations, as you mentioned over the weekend in Iran, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Mojtaba, was named his successor. Trump told reporters at a press conference he was disappointed. Briefly, what can you tell us about the new supreme leader? 

HM: He was the second oldest son of the supreme leader who had a few other sons and daughters. Very little is known about him personally because he’s been behind the scenes, but known to be very close to the supreme leader, his closest adviser actually, and very close to the IRGC, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, who are the most powerful military force in Iran; and the Basij, who are the paramilitaries force under the IRGC. He is known among Iranians to have basically created that very close connection between the supreme leader’s office and the revolutionary guards. 

One thing we have to remember is that when Ayatollah Khamenei, his father, took over, he was considered a weak supreme leader. He didn’t have the same authority either — political or religious authority — that [Ruhollah] Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic had.

It’s also good to remember that the supreme leader is not the supreme leader of Iran. His title is the Supreme Leader of the Revolution — the Islamic Revolution. And it’s also good to remember that the military force, the IRGC, are not the Islamic Revolutionary Guards of Iran. They’re the Islamic Revolutionary Guard of the Revolution. They’re the guardians of the revolution. So those two, that connection, that tight connection has meant that it’s always been something that any future supreme leader would try to maintain. Since Mojtaba already had that connection, one of his closest people inside the guards is the former intelligence chief for the IRGC.

Mojtaba was known — at least whether it’s true or not, because we don’t know, we can’t tell — [to be] behind the manipulation of votes or whatever you want to call it, to have the second term of Ahmadinejad to be president for a second term. On a personal level, people don’t really know him. Everybody in Iran knows who he is because he’s been talked about for years and years as being the closest person to the supreme leader.

He hasn’t shown up yet. There were rumors that he was killed in the first strike on his father. There were rumors that he’s injured, and if he was injured, I can imagine why he wouldn’t want to be seen as the new supreme leader in a hospital bed, for example, if that’s the case.

“Netanyahu and Donald Trump killed his dad, killed his mom, killed his wife, killed his sister, killed his niece in one strike.”

How will he command as the supreme leader, if you want to call it that? It’s hard to say, but Netanyahu and Donald Trump killed his dad, killed his mom, killed his wife, killed his sister, killed his niece in one strike, and potentially injured him. He’s not got to be keen on Donald Trump and on the United States, and he’s definitely not going to be keen on Israel either.

He’s also probably quite pragmatic. He’s 56 years old. I don’t think he wants to be assassinated. I don’t think he wants war for the long term. I’m sure he wants to continue this war, as we were talking earlier about Iran’s strategy, to go as long as they can to put pressure on Trump and on all the allies, but I don’t think in the long term he wants to commit suicide of any kind and or anything like that.

But he’s going to be a hard-liner. He’s considered to be hard-line, in some cases, more hard-line than his father. One thing that opens up for him is the fatwa that his father supposedly people talk about as prohibiting the building or use of nuclear weapons as being against Islam. He could arguably reverse that. He could arguably have his own fatwa.

Related

Lesson From Ukraine: Breaking Promises to Small Countries Means They’ll Never Give Up Nukes

So I think we’re in a very dangerous place right now in terms of what could happen in the future. Iran could certainly look at North Korea and say nobody’s threatening North Korea and they have missiles — nuclear missiles that can hit California. I think there’s a lot of things we don’t know what can happen in the future, what can Mojtaba do. 

Israel has already threatened to assassinate him or actually said they’re going to assassinate him. Trump has already said he should be careful. He’s not going to last long, meaning the U.S. is also potentially looking to assassinate him. Clearly he’s not got to be running around the streets of Tehran.

He’s only ever been seen in a few photographs, and he only ever comes out in the past publicly for the rallies which celebrate the birth of the Islamic Republic. He’s never given a speech, to my knowledge; he will have to as supreme leader, but he has not done so yet. So we don’t really know — the long answer to that. We really don’t know.

AL: I know you have a forthcoming piece in the Los Angeles Review of Books. I want to ask you, as we’re wrapping here, for your personal hopes for the future and thoughts on where this all goes, speaking as an Iranian exile.

HM: My hopes are always for Iran to be a democratic country, rule of law, have the people — it sounds cliché, but have people have freedom and freedom to choose their own leaders, not to be imposed from outside, not to be bombed, and not to be at war with anyone. And also to not suffer from economic sanctions that make the lives of the people miserable, hardly make the lives of whatever regime is in power miserable. That’s been proven. Regimes don’t change because of sanctions. All it does is immiserate the people. So that’s what I want for Iran. Whether that’s possible or not, I don’t know, but in terms of hope. 

“Regimes don’t change because of sanctions. All it does is immiserate the people.”

There’s so many different things that can happen. War upends a lot of other kinds of predictions that we may have had in the past. The Iranians certainly thought at the last meeting they had in Geneva between the Iranian Foreign Minister and Witkoff and Kushner, that they thought things were moving ahead and they were going to have a deal.

They were sending their technical team to Vienna for the following week to go through the technical aspects of how this deal was going to work. What we do know, and this is not me, this has been printed and reported on that what Iran was willing to offer the United States was better — far better — than the deal that President Obama was able to make with Iran in 2015, 2016. Trump, we now know, could have taken that and said, I did better than Obama, but chose not to. 

The hope for some Iranians was that with a nuclear deal out of the way, sanctions perhaps being lifted, that the regime would change a little bit, if not completely into something different, but at least loosen up, meet the demands of the people, but that wasn’t to be as we know now.

AL: We’re going to leave it there.

Thank you, Nick and Hooman for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.

HM: Thank you. Thank you for having me. 

NT: Thanks so much.

AL: That does it for this episode. 

This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our managing editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Desiree Adib is our booking producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. Will Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

This show and our reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join

And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. Leave us a rating or a 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 podcasts@theintercept.com.

Until next time, I’m Akela Lacy.

The post Trump’s AI-Powered World Wars appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:00

In April, Microsoft will be rolling out a full-screen "Xbox mode" to all Windows 11 PCs, including laptops, desktops, and tablets. The move follows last week's confirmation of its next-generation Xbox console, known internally as Project Helix, which will be capable of running both Xbox titles and PC games. The Verge reports: Technically, you've been able to try the Xbox Full Screen Experience (FSE) in preview since November 2025, if you were part of both the Windows Insider and Xbox Insider Programs. But it needed work, as well as a better name. When Microsoft originally shipped it on the Asus-designed Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X handhelds, we were clear: it didn't meaningfully turn a PC experience into an easy-to-use Xbox one. But if Microsoft is putting its full weight behind PC as the future of Xbox gaming, perhaps that will change change.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 17:56

AUSTIN, Texas, March 11, 2026 — JetCool, a Flex company and a leading provider of end-to-end liquid cooling solutions for high-density compute, today announced it has collaborated with Broadcom to deliver liquid cooling for next-generation AI XPUs, backed by Flex’s global mass production capabilities.

As AI training and inference workloads accelerate, silicon power densities are advancing into sustained multi-kilowatt ranges per device. Thermal architecture now directly impacts system performance, long-term reliability, and deployment timelines. Through this collaboration, JetCool has developed a single-phase direct-to-chip cooling solution designed to integrate with Broadcom’s mechanical and thermal reference architecture, enabling sustained multi-kilowatt ASIC operation at heat flux levels of 4 W/mm² per device.

By aligning silicon design, advanced packaging, mechanical integration, and thermal engineering early in development, Broadcom and JetCool are enabling AI platforms engineered for performance and repeatable manufacturing. Combining JetCool’s direct-to-chip liquid cooling, Flex’s global manufacturing scale, and Broadcom’s custom AI silicon expertise, the partnership establishes a production-ready thermal foundation for hyperscale AI infrastructure.

“At Broadcom, we design AI systems to lead at hyperscale,” said Ken Kutzler, VP of AI Systems Development for Broadcom’s ASIC Products Division. “Supporting multi-kilowatt ASIC platforms requires a tight coordination across silicon architecture, advanced packaging, power delivery, and thermal engineering. Our partnership with JetCool, combined with Flex’s manufacturing and integration capabilities, provides a clear path from advanced ASIC innovation to high-volume AI XPU deployment.”

“Cooling has become a primary design constraint for next-generation AI silicon,” said Bernie Malouin, PhD, VP, Liquid Cooling at Flex. “JetCool’s advanced direct-to-chip cold plate technology, combined with Flex’s global manufacturing scale, enables production-ready thermal solutions engineered for high-density silicon architectures. We’ve developed a strong partnership with the Broadcom team, and together we’re advancing scalable thermal solutions for the next generation of AI infrastructure.”

The partnership supports AI systems that:

  • Deliver sustained multi-kilowatt-class performance for high-density ASIC platforms through advanced direct-to-chip liquid cooling
  • Enable high-volume manufacturing through Flex’s global scale
  • Support future AI silicon generations as power densities continue to increase

Broadcom maintains a broad ecosystem of partners supporting diverse cooling approaches and deployment models. As part of this ecosystem, JetCool is working closely with Broadcom to advance high-performance direct-to-chip thermal architectures for next-generation AI platforms. JetCool provides end-to-end liquid cooling infrastructure from cold plates and manifolds to coolant distribution units (CDUs) supported by Flex’s global manufacturing capabilities to enable scalable deployment across hyperscale AI environments.

About Flex

Flex (Reg. No. 199002645H) is the manufacturing partner of choice that helps a diverse customer base design and build products that improve the world. Through the collective strength of a global workforce across 30 countries and responsible, sustainable operations, Flex delivers technology innovation, supply chain, and manufacturing solutions to diverse industries and end markets.

About JetCool

JetCool, a Flex company, is a global leader in advanced thermal management for compute-intensive applications. Trusted by top chipmakers, OEMs, and data centers, JetCool delivers a comprehensive portfolio of liquid cooling solutions that enhance performance, increase energy efficiency, and support sustainability goals. Engineered for the demands of artificial intelligence (AI) and next-generation computing, JetCool’s liquid cooling technologies deliver reliable, scalable, and future-ready performance for data centers worldwide.


Source: JetCool

The post JetCool Collaborates with Broadcom to Deliver Innovative Liquid Cooling for Next-Generation AI XPUs appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:48

The key functionality runs through Aliro, a new protocol from the makers of Matter and Thread.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:48

The strike on an Iranian elementary school killed at least 175, many of them children, raising questions as to whether the military’s use of AI-enabled targeting was a factor.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:36

John Thune refusing to alter rules to force a vote as US president says he won’t sign any legislation until bill is passed

Donald Trump hit back at Republican Senate majority leader John Thune over the latter’s refusal to alter rules to force a vote on the Save America act, a sprawling bill that would upend elections for American voters amid the midterms.

Trump delivered a blunt message for Thune to reporters outside the White House on Wednesday: “He’s got to be a leader.”

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:29

Identity theft experts say criminals are creating fake business entities by targeting a specific population: legal immigrants.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:25

Grammarly has disabled its Expert Review feature after backlash from writers whose names were used to present AI-generated feedback without their permission. Superhuman (formerly Grammarly) CEO Shishir Mehrotra wrote in a LinkedIn post that the company will disable Expert Review while they "reimagine" the feature: Back in August, we launched a Grammarly agent called Expert Review. The agent draws on publicly available information from third-party LLMs to surface writing suggestions inspired by the published work of influential voices. Over the past week, we received valid critical feedback from experts who are concerned that the agent misrepresented their voices. This kind of scrutiny improves our products, and we take it seriously. As context, the agent was designed to help users discover influential perspectives and scholarship relevant to their work, while also providing meaningful ways for experts to build deeper relationships with their fans. We hear the feedback and recognize we fell short on this. I want to apologize and acknowledge that we'll rethink our approach going forward. After careful consideration, we have decided to disable Expert Review while we reimagine the feature to make it more useful for users, while giving experts real control over how they want to be represented -- or not represented at all. We deeply believe in our mission to solve the "last mile of AI" by bringing AI directly to where people work, and we see this as a significant opportunity for experts. For millions of users, Grammarly is a trusted writing sidekick -- ever-present in every application, ready to help. We're opening up this platform so anyone can build agents that work like Grammarly -- expanding from one sidekick to a whole team. Imagine your professor sharpening your essay, your sales leader reshaping a customer pitch, a thoughtful critic challenging your arguments, or a leading expert elevating your proposal. For experts, this is a chance to build that same ubiquitous bond with users, much like Grammarly has. But in this world, experts choose to participate, shape how their knowledge is represented, and control their business model. That future excites me, and I hope to build it with experts who want to develop it alongside us.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:11

French aid worker Karine Buisset died in the attack. Two others were also killed, according to rebel group M23. Congo’s government and M23 blamed each other.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 17:01

From the iPhone 17 Pro and Google Pixel 10 Pro to Samsung's Galaxy S25 Ultra and Galaxy Z Fold 7, these are the top camera phones we've tested.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:59
First thing to do with Onewheel XL?

just got it from the mail today

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[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 16:44

How much high-bandwidth memory (HBM) is enough? For Meta, the answer apparently is around half a terabyte, which is the amount of HBM it’s aiming to pack into one of the new AI accelerators it unveiled today.

An MTIA chip from Meta

Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, announced four new members of its Meta Training and Inference Accelerator (MTIA) lineup today. The homegrown chips, which it develops with partner Broadcom, are designed to handle a range of compute-intensive tasks at the social media giant, from ranking and recommendation (R&R) training and inference workloads to training foundational AI models and running those models in inference mode.

Each of the chips is designed to accel at a particular task. For instance, the new MTIA 300–which contains two RISC-V cores in addition to several other specialized processing elements (PEs) assembled using a chiplet design–is intended to be used for R&R training. The MTIA 400, which is based on the MTIA 300 design, is aimed at general Meta workloads. The MTIA 450 and MTIA 500 are evolutions of that original MTIA 300 design that bring new chiplet configurations, additional PEs, and support for new data types, with the intent to tackle the biggest, gnarliest AI workloads.

Meta paid particular attention to speed up data movement between memory and processors, which often is the bottleneck in GenAI workloads. While the MTIA brought 288 GB of HBM and 9.2 TB per second in HBM bandwidth, the MTIA 450, which also has 288 GB of HBM, offers double the memory bandwidth, or 18.4 TB per second. The MTIA 500, meanwhile, gets anywhere from 384 GB to 512 GB of HBM and offers a smoking 27.6 TB per second of memory bandwidth.

MTIA specs (Source: Meta)

The MTIA 500, which is slated to go into Meta data centers in 2027, will also deliver 30 petaflops of MX4 (i.e. MXFP4, or microscaling 4-bit floating point) inference performance, versus 21 petaflops of MX4 inference performance for the MTIA 450 chip. It will do this within a thermal design power (TDP) envelope of 1,700 watts, versus 1,400 watts for the MTIA 450 and 1,200 watts for MTIA 400.

Those figures stack up nicely against Nvidia and its upcoming Rubin GPU. Rubin will deliver 22 TB per second of HBM4 bandwidth, which is 5 TB per second less than what Meta says it will deliver with MTIA 500. In terms of performance, Nvidia says Rubin will offer 35 petaflops of NVP4 training capacity and 50 petaflops of NVP4 inference capacity. NVFP4 is a new low-precision data type unveiled last year by Nvidia for Blackwell that it says delivers more accuracy and lower quantization error, and the expense of more complexity and lower compression.

Meta says the MTIA 400 is its first in-house chip designed to compete with the fastest AI accelerators in the market. “It combines two compute chiplets to double compute density, and also supports enhanced versions of MX8 and MX4, which are important low-precision formats for efficient GenAI inference,” the company writes in a blog post today. “A rack with 72 MTIA 400 devices, connected via a switched backplane, forms a single scale-up domain.”

The MTIA 450 builds on the MTIA 400 with more memory bandwidth, a 75% increase in MX4 capacity, new hardware acceleration for attention and feed-forward network (FFN) computation, and the capability to efficiently support mixed low-precision computation, the company says.

Evolution of MTIA chip design (Source: Meta)

The MTIA 500 offers even more raw HBM and memory bandwidth, in addition to some design innovation. For instance, with MTIA 500, Meta will adopt a 2×2 configuration, where smaller compute chiplets are “surrounded by several HBM stacks and two network chiplets, along with an SoC chiplet that provides PCIe connectivity to the host CPU and scale-out NICs.

The MTIA 400, 450, and 500 all use the same chassis, rack, and network infrastructure, which allows the chips to be upgraded with a minimum of hassle. “We architect our accelerators as systems of chiplets–discrete, reusable building blocks for compute, I/O, and networking,” Meta writes. “Because each chiplet can be upgraded separately, we can implement improvements in months rather than years. Moreover, different chiplets can be manufactured at different process nodes that are most cost-effective while meeting performance and power requirements.”

While Meta is building its own custom silicon with Broadcom, it’s also one of Nvidia’s biggest customers, buying millions of its GPUs over the years, including Grace, Blackwell, and the upcoming Rubin GPUs.

 

 

The post Meta Packs Gobs of HBM Into Homegrown AI Accelerators appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:42

A new, open, 120-billion-parameter hybrid mixture-of-experts model optimized for NVIDIA Blackwell addresses the costs of long thinking and context explosion that slow autonomous agent workflows.

March 11, 2026 — Launched today, NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super is a 120‑billion‑parameter open model with 12 billion active parameters designed to run complex agentic AI systems at scale. Available now, the model combines advanced reasoning capabilities to efficiently complete tasks with high accuracy for autonomous agents.

Credit: NVIDIA

AI-Native Companies: Perplexity offers its users access to Nemotron 3 Super for search and as one of 20 orchestrated models in Computer. Companies offering software development agents like CodeRabbit, Factory and Greptile are integrating the model into their AI agents along with proprietary models to achieve higher accuracy at lower cost. And life sciences and frontier AI organizations like Edison Scientific and Lila Sciences will power their agents for deep literature search, data science and molecular understanding.

Enterprise Software Platforms: Industry leaders such as Amdocs, Palantir, Cadence, Dassault Systèmes and Siemens are deploying and customizing the model to automate workflows in telecom, cybersecurity, semiconductor design and manufacturing.

As companies move beyond chatbots and into multi‑agent applications, they encounter two constraints.

The first is context explosion. Multi‑agent workflows generate up to 15x more tokens than standard chat because each interaction requires resending full histories, including tool outputs and intermediate reasoning.

Over long tasks, this volume of context increases costs and can lead to goal drift, where agents lose alignment with the original objective.

The second is the thinking tax. Complex agents must reason at every step, but using large models for every subtask makes multi-agent applications too expensive and sluggish for practical applications.

Nemotron 3 Super has a 1‑million‑token context window, allowing agents to retain full workflow state in memory and preventing goal drift.

Nemotron 3 Super has set new standards, claiming the top spot on Artificial Analysis for efficiency and openness with leading accuracy among models of the same size.

The model also powers the NVIDIA AI-Q research agent to the No. 1 position on DeepResearch Bench and DeepResearch Bench II leaderboards, benchmarks that measure an AI system’s ability to conduct thorough, multistep research across large document sets while maintaining reasoning coherence.

Hybrid Architecture

Nemotron 3 Super uses a hybrid mixture‑of‑experts (MoE) architecture that combines three major innovations to deliver up to 5x higher throughput and up to 2x higher accuracy than the previous Nemotron Super model.

  • Hybrid Architecture: Mamba layers deliver 4x higher memory and compute efficiency, while transformer layers drive advanced reasoning.
  • MoE: Only 12 billion of its 120 billion parameters are active at inference.
  • Latent MoE: A new technique that improves accuracy by activating four expert specialists for the cost of one to generate the next token at inference.
  • Multi-Token Prediction: Predicts multiple future words simultaneously, resulting in 3x faster inference.

On the NVIDIA Blackwell platform, the model runs in NVFP4 precision. That cuts memory requirements and pushes inference up to 4x faster than FP8 on NVIDIA Hopper, with no loss in accuracy.

Open Weights, Data and Recipes

NVIDIA is releasing Nemotron 3 Super with open weights under a permissive license. Developers can deploy and customize it on workstations, in data centers or in the cloud.

The model was trained on synthetic data generated using frontier reasoning models. NVIDIA is publishing the complete methodology, including over 10 trillion tokens of pre- and post-training datasets, 15 training environments for reinforcement learning and evaluation recipes. Researchers can further use the NVIDIA NeMo platform to fine-tune the model or build their own.

Use in Agentic Systems

Nemotron 3 Super is designed to handle complex subtasks inside a multi-agent system. A software development agent can load an entire codebase into context at once, enabling end-to-end code generation and debugging without document segmentation.

In financial analysis it can load thousands of pages of reports into memory, eliminating the need to re-reason across long conversations, which improves efficiency.

Nemotron 3 Super has high-accuracy tool calling that ensures autonomous agents reliably navigate massive function libraries to prevent execution errors in high-stakes environments, like autonomous security orchestration in cybersecurity.

Availability

NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super, part of the Nemotron 3 family, can be accessed at build.nvidia.com, Perplexity, OpenRouter and Hugging Face. Dell Technologies is bringing the model to the Dell Enterprise Hub on Hugging Face, optimized for on-premise deployment on the Dell AI Factory, advancing multi-agent AI workflows. HPE is also bringing NVIDIA Nemotron to its agents hub to help ensure scalable enterprise adoption of agentic AI.

Enterprises and developers can deploy the model through several partners:

  • Cloud Service Providers: Google Cloud’s Vertex AI and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, and coming soon to Amazon Web Services through Amazon Bedrock as well as Microsoft Azure.
  • NVIDIA Cloud Partners: Coreweave, Crusoe, Nebius and Together AI.
  • Inference Service Providers: Baseten, CloudFlare, DeepInfra, Fireworks AI, Inference.net, Lightning AI, Modal and FriendliAI.
  • Data Platforms and Services: Distyl, Dataiku, DataRobot, Deloitte, EY and Tata Consultancy Services.

The model is packaged as an NVIDIA NIM microservice, allowing deployment from on-premises systems to the cloud.


Source: Kari Briski, NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA’s New Nemotron 3 Super Delivers 5x Higher Throughput for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:42

These are the best TVs I’ve reviewed for every budget, including top brands, including LG, Samsung and TCL.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:24

Anthropic's AI assistant can now keep a single continuous conversation across both tools.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:21
  • He withdrew from Arnold Palmer Invitational on Saturday

  • ‘I’m taking it hour by hour, but it feels better’

Rory McIlroy will make a last‑minute call on Thursday over whether to defend his Players Championship title, with the Northern Irishman still feeling the effects of a weekend back injury. McIlroy will wait until his pre-round range session to determine whether he is fit enough to play.

McIlroy arrived here on Wednesday afternoon, having withdrawn shortly before his third round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. He hit shots for around an hour before walking the back nine with wedge and putter in hand. McIlroy sustained a muscle problem in the gym on Saturday morning, which left him basically inactive for three days.

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:19

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 11, 2026 — D-Wave Quantum Inc. has announced that it will present new scientific results at the American Physical Society’s Global Physics Summit, the world’s largest physics conference, on March 15-20, 2026, in Denver, Colorado.

At the conference, D-Wave researchers will present technical developments in both annealing and gate-model quantum computing, highlighting advances in analog-digital processor control, error detection and correction, programmable quantum dynamics and optimization. The talks underscore D-Wave’s continued momentum scaling practical, commercially viable quantum computers.

“The Global Physics Summit is an important forum for sharing scientific progress with the global physics community,” said Trevor Lanting, chief development officer at D-Wave. “The work we will present reflects meaningful advancements in performance, scalability and real-world applications. We are focused on translating these technical breakthroughs into capabilities that help our customers solve complex problems better, faster and more efficiently than classical approaches.”

Through this research, D-Wave’s esteemed scientists and engineers continue to strengthen the Company’s commercial leadership in annealing quantum computing while accelerating its differentiated dual-rail approach to building gate-model systems. D-Wave’s dual-rail gate-model qubits combine superconducting speed with the fidelity of trapped ion and neutral atom systems, a capability unmatched by any other quantum computing vendor.

The D-Wave team will present the following accepted talks (all times listed are in Mountain Daylight Time):

March 18, 2026

March 19, 2026

March 20, 2026

Attendees are invited to visit Booth 1228 to meet with D-Wave scientists, experience interactive demonstrations, and learn more about career opportunities, which can also be found on D-Wave’s website.

Explore D-Wave research publications here.

About D-Wave Quantum Inc.

D-Wave is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum computing systems, software, and services. It is the world’s first commercial supplier of quantum computers, and the first and only to offer dual-platform quantum computing products and services, spanning both annealing and gate-model quantum computing technologies. D-Wave’s mission is to help customers realize the value of quantum today through enterprise-grade systems available on-premises and via its Leap quantum cloud service, which offers 99.9% availability and uptime. More than 100 organizations across commercial, government and research sectors trust D-Wave to address complex computational challenges using quantum computing. Learn more about realizing the value of quantum computing today and how D-Wave is shaping the quantum-driven industrial and societal advancements of tomorrow: www.dwavequantum.com.


Source: D-Wave

The post D-Wave to Present Quantum Computing Scientific Advancements at APS Global Physics Summit appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:18

Here's how the $599 iPhone 17E matches up with the lower-cost flagship offerings from Google and Samsung.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 16:14

A 2024 government lawsuit accused Invitation Homes of deceiving renters about lease costs, charging undisclosed junk fees and other unlawful practices.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:13

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 11, 2026 — Broadcom Inc., a global technology leader that designs, develops and supplies semiconductor and infrastructure software solutions, today announced the availability of its 3nm 400G/lane optical PAM-4 DSP, the Taurus BCM83640, optimized for 1.6T transceiver solutions with unprecedented bandwidth density and efficiency. T

he device features 400G/lane serial optical interfaces, which enable optical transceiver manufacturers to cost effectively deliver low power 1.6T pluggable modules to meet the growing bandwidth needs for AI data centers.

Taurus BCM83640 Product Highlights

  • Monolithic 3nm 1.6T (8:4) PAM-4 DSP with integrated laser driver
  • Delivers best-in-class module performance in BER and power consumption
  • Proven interoperability with Broadcom’s 400G EML and PD
  • Compliant to all IEEE and OIF standards, capable of supporting LR links on the chip to module electrical interface
  • Supports optical modules from 1.6T to 3.2T

400G/lane technology is the next evolution of 200G/lane architectures, enabling a critical step in scaling bandwidth for high-performance networking and AI infrastructure. 1.6T pluggable modules using the Taurus BCM83640 double the bandwidth per optical lane, effectively enabling 102.4T switching capacity in a 1RU system to improve bandwidth density in AI optical interconnects. Further, the adoption of 400G/lane optical interfaces lays the foundation for the eventual deployment of 3.2T module solutions with 400G/lane electrical interfaces for 204.8T switches.

“Broadcom’s 400G/lane Taurus platform of optical DSPs is laying the foundation for next- generation AI networks and data center connectivity,” said Vijay Janapaty, vice president and general manager of Broadcom’s Physical Layer Products Division. “Taurus, the industry’s first 1.6T DSP based on 400G/lane I/O, doubles the throughput per lane to enable the next generation of 3.2T optical modules. Crucially, Taurus pushes the IMDD technology envelope into 400G/lane, further reducing power and advancing our roadmap of cost-optimized solutions for connectivity in AI and cloud networks.”

“We expect more than 100 million units of 1.6T and 3.2T optical transceivers to be shipped over the next 5 years with close to half of these using 400G optics,” commented Vladimir Kozlov, CEO and founder of LightCounting. “High speed optical interconnects are essential for operation of AI clusters. Doubling of the lane rates has been a proven strategy to keep up with the bandwidth growth and it is great to see the first 400G per lane solutions becoming available.”

“Our goal is to drive innovation,” said Richard Huang, CEO of Eoptolink Technology. “Taurus is more than a product milestone — it’s a catalyst for the future of connectivity. By delivering the industry’s first fully functional 448G/ln transceivers, we are empowering a new era of scale, speed, and possibility. Taurus-based optical transceivers bridge today’s 102.4T networks with tomorrow’s switching generations, unlocking transformative bandwidth growth. With Taurus, we are not just advancing technology — we are shaping the 448G future.”

Availability
Broadcom has begun sampling its Taurus BCM83640 to its early access customers and partners. Please contact your local Broadcom sales representative for samples and pricing.

For more information on Broadcom’s 400G/lane optical solutions, please click here.

About Broadcom

Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) is a technology leader that designs, develops, and supplies semiconductors and infrastructure software for global organizations’ complex, mission-critical needs. Broadcom combines long-term R&D investment with superb execution to deliver the best technology, at scale. Broadcom is a Delaware corporation headquartered in Palo Alto, CA. For more information, visit www.broadcom.com.


Source: Broadcom

The post Broadcom Delivers 400G/lane Optical DSP for Next-Gen AI Networks appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-14 08:04
2026-03-11 16:05

Decades after patients first warned Columbia University that one of its doctors sexually abused them, some university administrators have finally faced consequences.

On Tuesday, Columbia released a long-awaited report that details a culture of silence that allowed OB-GYN Robert Hadden to abuse more than 1,000 patients during his nearly 25-year career at Columbia. 

In unveiling the report, the university also announced that two long-time administrators are leaving their positions. 

Dr. Mary D’Alton, chair of the OB-GYN department and Hadden’s former boss, has stepped down. D’Alton will maintain her clinical practice.

Dr. Lee Goldman, the former dean of the medical school, will retire. The two were administrators above Hadden. They were also among those cc’d on a 2012 letter that let Hadden continue seeing patients even after he was arrested when one woman reported he’d assaulted her.

Yesterday’s report was prompted by a ProPublica investigation that revealed how Columbia had dismissed women and ultimately protected a predator. Amid outrage in the wake of the 2023 story, Columbia announced it would set up a $100 million fund for survivors and initiate an independent review.  

More than two years after the review was announced, the 156-page report was published days after the New York attorney general said it was investigating Columbia’s response to the Hadden case.

The report outlines how more than a dozen patients’ complaints had gone nowhere, in part because of the lack of clear reporting procedures. The report also found a “hierarchal institutional culture” in which physicians occupied an “exalted” or “god-like” status that made it difficult for staff to report concerns.

One patient, Eva Santos Veloz, was 18 years old when she saw Hadden for an emergency delivery in 2008. At the time, she and her mother reported that Hadden had touched her in ways that made her uncomfortable, sometimes without gloves. Nothing happened after she filed the complaint. At the time, she said, she came to believe she was making the whole thing up because no one seemed to believe her.

Santos said that while the report confirms that she was right all along, it doesn’t tell her anything new. “The only peace it gives me is that they are publicly saying, ‘We knew about this and we did nothing,’” she said.

The report also lists five different complaints that were reported to leadership but resulted in no action against Hadden. Investigators note that the university’s record-keeping practices were insufficient and that higher-ups failed to conduct a full investigation into his misconduct.

In an internal email sent Tuesday to the OB-GYN department and obtained by ProPublica, D’Alton announced that she will remain on the faculty “to continue our department’s work of advancing women’s health.” 

“I cannot adequately express the sorrow that I feel for the suffering Robert Hadden inflicted on his patients,” D’Alton wrote in the email. “That these acts were committed by a doctor in our department, including while I was chair, pains me deeply and always will.”

A similar statement posted to the Columbia website does not note her continued employment.

D’Alton did not respond to a request for comment.

In a statement, Goldman said his “heart breaks for the victims of Robert Hadden.”

He continued: “Throughout my tenure we focused on prioritizing a culture of ethics and patient safety at the medical school, and to reassess and enhance its policies and procedures on an ongoing basis.”

The report also confirms that executives at the top of the organizations — including former Columbia President Lee Bollinger, as well as one of the trustees at both Columbia and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, the Columbia-affiliated system where Hadden was an attending physician — had been alerted to Hadden’s arrest the evening it occurred.

Bollinger, who retired from his post in the summer of 2023, did not respond to a request for comment.

A letter accompanying the report’s release said, “The University remains steadfast in our commitment to our ongoing responsibilities. We must continue to operate with transparency and confront systemic failures when they occur.” Columbia did not provide an additional comment.

In a statement, a group of survivors, including Marissa Hoechstetter and Evelyn Yang, criticized the report for failing to examine what happened in the years after Hadden left Columbia — including the university’s documented efforts to destroy evidence, fight former patients in court and discredit those survivors.

The statement also points out that Claire Shipman, the current acting president of the university and who signed Tuesday’s announcement, has been on the board of trustees since 2013, amid the fallout from the Hadden case. She did not respond to a request for comment.

“What Columbia has released today offers the bare minimum accountability for failures that

should have been addressed years ago,” the survivors’ statement said. “It confirms the systemic breakdown that allowed Hadden to operate. But it stops short of examining the cover-up culture that survivors experienced firsthand once the abuse came to light.”

The deadline to submit a claim for compensation to Columbia’s survivor fund, which was established for former patients who do not want to file a lawsuit, was extended to June 15.

The post Report Confirms Columbia Ignored Decades of Doctor’s Sexual Abuse appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 20:40

Richard Kahn was one of Epstein's closest associates in his final years, managing his finances and investments.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:01

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., March 11, 2026 — Lightmatter today announced vClick Optics, a breakthrough technology enabling detachable fiber array units (FAU) that overcome the critical scaling challenges of Co-Packaged Optics (CPO).

Optimized for high-volume manufacturing (HVM), vClick Optics accelerates the industry roadmap toward advanced packaging for 3D CPO-enabled XPUs and switches by demonstrating a low insertion loss of less than 1.5 dB. With support for high-bandwidth Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing and unmatched field serviceability, this technology provides the essential foundation for 32-100Tbps+ next-generation optical interconnects, including Lightmatter’s Passage L-Series.

vClick Optics: Shifting Left to Scale Photonic Interconnect Production

The development of high-bandwidth optical engines (OEs) requires integration with advanced packaging (AP) technologies. The delivery of known-good OEs with detachable FAUs is essential for ensuring high production yields in advanced packaging flows. To address this challenge, vClick Optics enables the integration of SENKO’s SEAT and MPC Connector solutions with Lightmatter’s vertically expanded-beam photonic technology. This creates a detachable optical interface between fiber arrays and photonic integrated circuits (PICs) that is mold-and-grind compatible, as demonstrated in ASE’s advanced packaging flows. The integration of vClick Optics capability directly into the wafer fabrication process enables a “shift left” in the assembly cycle; a critical innovation required to scale next-generation 3D CPO production. By allowing manufacturers to verify “known good optical engines” before final integration, vClick significantly reduces the risk of yield loss when integrating optics with high-cost ASIC die structures in advanced XPU or switch chip packages.

Key advantages of vClick include:

  • High Bandwidth DWDM Compatibility: Supports broadband (up to 80+ nanometers) Coarse Wavelength Division Multiplexing (CWDM) and Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) to enable massive optical bandwidth density and flexibility.
  • Advanced Packaging Compatible: The technology is mold-and-grind compatible across advanced packaging flows of the world’s largest foundries and outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) vendors.
  • Automated Assembly: Does not require active fiber alignment during production, minimizing assembly and testing time.
  • Field Serviceability: A demonstrated insertion and re-insertion loss of less than 1.5 dB, preserves the optical power required to drive field-serviceable CPO with 100Tbps or more of bandwidth.

Executive Perspectives

“The increasing complexity in advanced AI chip packages and their production processes necessitates a move toward a known good optical engine at the wafer level,” said Ritesh Jain, SVP, Engineering and Operations of Lightmatter. “With vClick Optics, we are providing physical optical engine connectivity that integrates seamlessly into the world’s largest and most advanced semiconductor supply chains, ensuring that our L-Series 3D CPO platform is hyperscale volume-ready.”

“Collaborating with Lightmatter on this milestone underscores our commitment to advancing scalable packaging solutions for evolving AI infrastructure,” said Calvin Cheung, VP, Engineering and Business Development of ASE. “Integrating vClick technology into high-volume advanced packaging flows is a vital step toward enabling detachable fiber connectivity for co-packaged optics and emerging XPU platforms.”

“Our partnership with Lightmatter on vClick Optics moves detachable fiber connectors closer to mainstream adoption,” said Kazu Takano, President, Senko Emerging Technologies Group and Corporate Officer of SENKO Advanced Components. “By integrating our SEAT and MPC technologies into Lightmatter’s 3D CPO architecture, we are enabling detachable fiber interfaces that meet the manufacturability, performance, and serviceability requirements of large-scale AI infrastructure.”

An FAU serves as the critical bridge between optical fibers and Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs). vClick Optics represents a major step forward as the industry’s first detachable FAU that is compatible with advanced packaging, transforming once-permanent fiber attachment into a “must-have” plug-and-play FAU. With this new technology, Lightmatter ensures that high-density 3D CPO solutions like Passage L-Series are both massively deployable and easily serviceable for mission-critical hyperscale AI data center applications.

To provide comprehensive coverage across the CPO roadmap, Lightmatter also revealed eClick Optics, a high-performance edge-coupling solution optimized for larger die complexes like those enabled by the Passage M1000 reference platform. By utilizing an edge-attach method to minimize the impact on PIC die area, eClick achieves very low insertion loss in large-scale implementations, serving as a complementary alternative for specialized, large-format hardware.

Lightmatter will showcase its latest innovations, including vClick Optics, at the Optical Fiber Communication conference in Los Angeles, from March 15-19, 2026. For more information, please visit https://lightmatter.co/event/ofc-2026.

About Lightmatter

Lightmatter is leading a revolution in AI data center infrastructure, enabling the next giant leaps in human progress. The company’s groundbreaking Passage platform—the world’s first 3D-stacked silicon photonics engine—and Guide—the industry’s first VLSP light engine—connect thousands to millions of processors. Designed to eliminate critical data bottlenecks, Lightmatter’s technology delivers unprecedented bandwidth density and energy efficiency for the most advanced AI and high-performance computing workloads, fundamentally redefining the architecture of next-generation AI infrastructure.


Source: Lightmatter

The post Lightmatter Unveils vClick Optics Detachable Fiber Array Unit for CPO Advanced Packaging and High-Volume Production appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 16:00

A Swiss e-voting pilot was suspended after officials couldn't decrypt 2,048 ballots because the USB keys needed to unlock them failed. "Three USB sticks were used, all with the correct code, but none of them worked," spokesperson Marco Greiner told the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation's Swissinfo service. The canton government says it "deeply regrets" the incident and has launched an investigation with authorities. The Register reports: Basel-Stadt announced the problem with its e-voting pilot, open to about 10,300 locals living abroad and 30 people with disabilities, last Friday afternoon. It encouraged participants to deliver a paper vote to the town hall or use a polling station but admitted this would not be possible for many. By the close of polling on Sunday, its e-voting system had collected 2,048 votes, but Basel-Stadt officials were not able to decrypt them with the hardware provided, despite the involvement of IT experts. [...] The votes made up less than 4 percent of those cast in Basel-Stadt and would not have changed any results, but the canton is delaying confirmation of voting figures until March 21 and suspending its e-voting pilot until the end of December, while its public prosecutor's office has started criminal proceedings. The country's Federal Chancellery said e-voting in three other cantons -- Thurgau, Graubunden, and St Gallen -- along with the nationally used Swiss Post e-voting system, had not been affected.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

WILMINGTON, Del., March 11, 2026 — Zymtrace, a distributed AI infrastructure optimization platform, today announced that it has raised $12.2 million to date to help enterprises uncover hidden performance bottlenecks inside their GPU clusters. The funding includes a newly closed $8.5 million seed round led by Venture Guides, an early-stage investor in cloud infrastructure and AI companies, with participation from Mango Capital, Fly Ventures, and 6 Degrees Capital.

The round also includes strategic angel investors Thomas Wolf, co-founder of Hugging Face; Christian Bach, founder of Netlify; AI systems optimization expert Christopher Fregly; Reece Chowdhry of Concept Ventures, and more.

The company also previously raised an unannounced $3.7 million pre-seed round led by Fly Ventures and Mango Capital, with participation from Entropy Industrial Capital. In the latest financing, Mango Capital and Fly Ventures doubled down on their investment, reinforcing their conviction and support in Zymtrace’s mission.

The new funding will support continued product development, expanded enterprise deployments, and growth of the U.S. go-to-market team, while advancing Zymtrace’s move toward profile-guided autonomous AI workload optimization. The company’s Profile Guided AI Optimization approach completes the full agentic optimization loop autonomously, from detecting a GPU bottleneck to opening a pull request with the fix. With MCP integration, customers can wire it directly into their existing pipelines, cutting what once took weeks of manual investigation down to minutes.

The founding team pioneered, open-sourced, and donated the eBPF CPU profiling agent to OpenTelemetry while at Elastic. This technology is now used in production at Cisco, Datadog, Grafana, IBM, and more. At Zymtrace, they are bringing that same engineering excellence to GPUs and AI-accelerated workloads.

Continuous GPU Profiling for Production AI Workloads

As AI adoption increases, infrastructure spending has risen significantly, with the global GPU market expected to reach $326 billion by 2036. Yet, most GPU clusters operate at just 35-40% utilization, wasting billions of dollars in compute capacity.

This inefficiency is a massive economic drain. Underutilized GPUs lead to longer training cycles, costly inference, and wasted energy. When performance bottlenecks arise, identifying the root cause is no simple task. It demands highly specialized expertise and days or weeks of manual investigation across fragmented tools. As a result, many organizations default to a costly stopgap: buying more GPUs.

At the heart of the problem is a lack of fleet-wide, production-grade visibility. Existing solutions are intrusive, fragmented, and blind to the critical interactions between hosts and GPUs. They show utilization percentages. They don’t show why.

Zymtrace was built to close that optimization gap. The platform continuously profiles GPU and CPU workloads across distributed systems, correlating cluster-level activity down to individual lines of code. Engineers can trace GPU kernel stalls, memory bottlenecks, or scheduling inefficiencies back to specific CUDA kernels, Python functions, Rust or C++ routines, without requiring code changes.

“The cheapest GPU you can buy is the one you already own,” said Israel Ogbole, co-founder and CEO of Zymtrace. “The bottleneck is rarely the hardware. It’s the code that runs on it. Every idle GPU cycle is money and energy lost. We are building the autonomous optimization layer for AI infrastructure, improving unit economics with more throughput per GPU, lower cost per inference, and less energy per output.”

Customers have used Zymtrace to reduce inference latency and improve GPU throughput while avoiding costly overprovisioning. To cite an example, “before Zymtrace, we spent so much time hunting down why our GPUs were being used inefficiently,” said Ben Carr, co-founder and CTO of Anam. “Zymtrace pinpointed where our workloads were stalling and showed us how to resolve the issues. We improved inference latency by 2.5x and increased throughput by 90% for our Cara3 model.”

Unlike traditional profiling tools that can introduce significant overhead in production environments, Zymtrace uses an eBPF-based architecture designed for continuous introspection with minimal performance impact. The platform generates actionable optimization recommendations across kernel execution and batch sizing, CPU scheduling, and distributed communication, along with estimated cost and performance gains.

Scaling the Next Layer of Efficient AI Infrastructure

As AI infrastructure costs continue to rise, Zymtrace aims to become a critical efficiency layer for enterprises running large-scale AI workloads. Here’s what some of the investors backing Zymtrace had to say.

“Zymtrace is creating core technology that will underpin the next generation of AI infrastructure. As infrastructure increasingly becomes the limiting factor to growth, performance gains and efficiency aren’t optional, they’re essential,” said Sage Nye, Partner and Founding Team Member at Venture Guides. “With a strong focus on customers and a clear long-term vision, the Zymtrace team is addressing one of the most significant challenges in GenAI adoption.”

“The future of AI won’t only be defined by who can acquire the most GPUs, but by who gets the most out of them. As compute becomes the dominant cost center, Zymtrace is solving a problem every AI-driven enterprise will face,” said Fredrik Bergenlid, Partner at Fly Ventures.

“Most organizations are still flying blind inside their GPU clusters, unable to see why their most expensive resources are sitting idle,” said Robin Vasan, Founder and Managing Partner at Mango Capital. “The teams that can squeeze the most FLOPs from their GPU will have a decisive competitive advantage. That’s exactly why we backed Zymtrace from day one.”

About Zymtrace

Zymtrace is an AI infrastructure optimization platform that helps enterprises run large-scale AI workloads more efficiently. By continuously profiling GPU and CPU execution across heterogeneous, distributed systems with zero instrumentation, Zymtrace delivers deep visibility into CPU⇄GPU interactions, pinpoints root causes down to the line of code, and uses Profile-Guided AI optimization to help engineers fix bottlenecks and maximize throughput per GPU, per dollar, per watt.


Source: Zymtrace

The post Zymtrace Raises $12.2M to Optimize GPU Cluster Performance for AI Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

Meal kits can make dinner a breeze, especially when you get one that uses this foolproof cooking method.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

If you're looking for a sign to get an under-desk treadmill, this is it.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:56

SAN JOSE, Calif., & TAIPEI, Taiwan, March 11, 2026 — Ayar Labs, a leader in co-packaged optics (CPO) solutions for AI scale-up, and Wiwynn, an innovative cloud IT infrastructure provider for data centers, announced a strategic partnership to deliver optically connected, rack-scale AI systems that support next-generation hyperscale AI workloads.

Joint AI CPO solution from Ayar Labs and Wiwynn, highlighting an HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current)-enabled, rack-level system architecture for next-generation AI data centers. It features a 100% liquid-cooled AI system reference design with support of ELSFP SuperNova remote light sources and AI ASICs with Ayar Labs TeraPHY optical engines.

As AI models drive compute demand, traditional copper interconnects increasingly constrain performance, system growth, and power efficiency. By combining Ayar Labs’ CPO solution with Wiwynn’s rack-level system design and manufacturing capabilities, the two companies are enabling a new class of rack-scale AI infrastructure that’s not constrained by the bandwidth and reach limitations of copper.

“AI infrastructure is outgrowing the limits of copper, and hyperscalers need a fundamentally new approach to scale,” said Mark Wade, CEO and co-founder of Ayar Labs. “Optically connected racks eliminate the interconnect bottleneck and unlock the next order of magnitude in performance and efficiency. By combining Wiwynn’s global system and manufacturing leadership with Ayar Labs’ co-packaged optics expertise, we are delivering pioneering, rack-scale architectures purpose-built for optically connected scale-up AI networks.”

The joint solution integrates Ayar Labs’ AI scale-up CPO technology, including TeraPHY optical engines powered by the SuperNova remote light source, into Wiwynn’s rack-level architecture for next-generation data centers. Together, the companies are solving the practical deployment challenges hyperscalers face, including optical fiber management, integration of CPO-enabled AI ASICs, thermal management, power efficiency, and manufacturability.

“Silicon photonics is reshaping how AI infrastructure is built,” said William Lin, President and CEO of Wiwynn. “With Ayar Labs’ leadership in co-packaged optics and Wiwynn’s strengths in rack-level integration and manufacturing, we accelerate the shift from silicon-ready innovation to system-ready solutions. Together, we are enabling advanced optical I/O that delivers greater scalability and energy efficiency for cloud and hyperscale customers, powering next-generation AI data centers.”

The new optically-connected rack-scale AI infrastructure is designed to scale to 1,024 AI accelerators and beyond, with each accelerator capable of delivering more than 100 Tbps of optical connectivity, enabling thousands of accelerators to operate as a single, unified system across multiple racks. The solution incorporates a liquid-cooled architecture optimized for high-power operation, including support for external laser small form factor pluggable (ELSFP) light sources, advanced fiber management, and serviceable system designs required for hyperscale environments.

Wiwynn brings over a decade of experience delivering rack-level IT solutions to the world’s leading cloud service providers, with end-to-end capabilities spanning board design, system integration, and high-volume L10 and L11 rack delivery. The company has shipped general and AI servers to more than 750 data centers worldwide, supported by manufacturing operations in Taiwan, the United States, Mexico, Malaysia, and the Czech Republic.

At the Optical Fiber Communication Conference (OFC), March 15-19, 2026, in Los Angeles, Ayar Labs and Wiwynn will showcase their joint AI CPO solution, highlighting an HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current)-enabled, rack-level system architecture for next-generation AI data centers. It features a 100% liquid-cooled AI system reference design with support of ELSFP SuperNova remote light sources and AI ASICs with optical engines. Access to this preview will be available through private, pre-arranged briefings for select customers, press, and analysts

For a full list of Ayar Labs’ activities at OFC 2026, visit the OFC event web page for more information.

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 and Wiwynn Partner to Bring Co-Packaged Optics to Rack-Scale AI Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:53

Newly released documents also show Peter Mandelson was offered highly classified briefings before formal vetting was complete

Keir Starmer overruled officials who warned of a “reputational risk” in making Peter Mandelson US ambassador, despite being handed a dossier of evidence about the peer’s relationship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, documents reveal.

The disclosure in newly released files will raise fresh questions about Starmer’s judgment – as well as about the vetting procedures at the highest levels of government.

Mandelson was offered a severance payment of £75,000 after initially asking the Foreign Office to pay him more than £500,000;

Starmer was warned before appointing Mandelson that he remained in contact and stayed with Epstein after the financier was first convicted of procuring an underage girl in 2008;

Powell told an investigation that he thought the appointment was “weirdly rushed”;

Starmer was reassured about Mandelson’s friendship with Epstein by Matthew Doyle, his former communications chief and a friend of Mandelson. Doyle said he was “satisfied” with Mandelson’s explanation of the relationship.

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:51

The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to clear the way for it to end temporary deportation protections for more than 350,000 Haitian immigrants.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:50

Release shows that Jonathan Powell warned Morgan McSweeney about the appointment of Mandelson as US ambassador

As reported by Nadeem Badshah this morning, the documents relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador to the US expected to be released today will include a due diligence report by the Cabinet Office, which is believed to be two pages long.

It is likely to raise questions about Keir Starmer’s judgment, with sources saying it had warned the prime minister of the serious “reputational risk” of going ahead with Mandelson’s appointment in December 2024 given his links with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

He has said, as you know that it is a little bit – it does fall into the category of too little too late, but I think they have a good, solid relationship, and hopefully they’ll be able to repair it. I go by what the president says, and the president says continuously that everybody is entitled to their point of view. But I think sometimes we detect that there’s not that feeling of gratitude.

I think the president’s position is that we do plenty for Europe, plenty for the UK, in the area of trade, in the area of defence, in the area of the support we give to Nato. And I think sometimes the response back, the reciprocity back, is a little bit lacking. I would leave it at that, OK?

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:40

Latest sculpture titled ‘King of the World’ includes plaques with pointed commentary on pair’s past association

A woman’s heart is a deep ocean of secrets. The appearance of a golden statue depicting Donald Trump and the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein as doomed lovers from the movie Titanic is confronting Washington with a murkier mystery.

The nearly 12ft sculpture, unveiled on Tuesday on the National Mall, is the third piece of guerrilla art satirising Trump’s past relationship with Epstein attributed to The Secret Handshake, a shadowy collective whose members remain anonymous.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:38

Apple's MacBook lineup now includes three tiers: Neo, Air and Pro. See our favorites and find the best MacBook for your laptop budget and needs.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:30

PM knew of US ambassador’s ‘close relationship’ with Jeffrey Epstein and potential conflicts of interest from his lobbying role

Four months after Peter Mandelson was sacked as UK ambassador to Washington over his links with Jeffrey Epstein, he sat down for a primetime BBC interview. A less hubristic individual would have long since slunk away into the shadows.

But despite all the condemnation and humiliation surrounding his departure, Mandelson seemed intent on maintaining a public profile. “Who knows what’s next?” he told Laura Kuenssberg. “I don’t know what’s next. I’m not going to disappear and hide – that’s not me”.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:18

Richard Kemp tells high court former Sinn Féin leader would have authorised attacks carried out in England

A former British army commander has told the high court it is “inconceivable” that Gerry Adams was not involved in the authorisation of IRA bombings.

Richard Kemp said there was evidence from “a multitude of intelligence” spanning 20 years about the former Sinn Féin leader’s membership of the paramilitary organisation.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:18

Amazon-owned Zoox hopes to start offering paid robotaxi rides to regular riders sometime this year. Right now, the rides are free.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:18

A new report shows inflation holding steady. So, does gold investing still make sense? Here's what to consider now.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:14

Unite union began all-out strike more than a year ago and city remains without full waste collection service

It has been more than a year since Birmingham’s bin workers began their all-out strike that has left residents without a fully functioning waste collection service – and there is still no end in sight.

The strikes have attracted global media attention as pictures emerged of towering waste and overflowing bins on the streets of the UK’s second largest city.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:09

Nathan Chasing Horse found guilty on 13 of 21 charges in case that affected Indigenous communities across US

Nathan Chasing Horse, the actor known for his role in Dances With Wolves, is scheduled to be sentenced next Wednesday after being convicted of sexually abusing Indigenous women and girls, bringing to an end a case that deeply affected Native American communities across the country.

The sentencing comes about a month after a Nevada jury found him guilty on 13 of the 21 charges brought against him. Many of the convictions stemmed from allegations involving a victim who was 14 years old when the abuse began. The jury cleared him of several other sexual assault counts. Chasing Horse has denied all accusations.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:08

Strike in Shukeiri killed schoolgirls, teachers and healthcare workers in latest incident in three-year war

At least 17 people, most of them schoolgirls, were killed on Wednesday when an explosive-laden drone blamed on Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces struck a secondary school and a health care centre.

At least 10 people were wounded in the strike in the village of Shukeiri in the White Nile province, according to Dr Musa al-Majeri, director of Douiem hospital, the nearest major medical facility to the village.

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:02

President Trump said the government agency will provide political risk insurance to "all shipping lines" operating in the Persian Gulf.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:00

Using a VPN on your Android device can help you keep your online activity private, stream geo-restricted content and bypass throttling from anywhere.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Binance is hoping that suing (PDF) The Wall Street Journal for defamation might help shake off a fresh round of government probes into how the cryptocurrency exchange failed to detect $1.7 billion in transfers to a network that was funding Iran-backed terror groups. The lawsuit comes after a Wall Street Journal investigation, based on conversations with insiders and reviews of internal documents, reported that Binance had quietly dismantled its own investigation into the unlawful transfers and then fired compliance staff who initially flagged them. Alleging that the report falsely accused Binance of retaliation -- among 10 other allegedly false claims -- Binance accused the Journal of conducting a "sham" investigation that intentionally disregarded the company's statements. That included supposedly failing to note that Binance had not closed its investigation into the unlawful transfers. Binance's role in the large-scale violation of US sanctions laws is currently being investigated by the Justice and Treasury Departments. Congress members also took notice, including Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), ranking member of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI), who launched an additional inquiry. In a letter to Binance CEO Richard Teng, Blumenthal cited the Journal's report, as well as reporting from The New York Times and Fortune, while demanding that Binance explain how it managed to overlook the money-laundering for so long and why compliance staff members were fired. In its complaint Wednesday, Binance claimed that these probes may "be just the tip of the iceberg" if the record is not corrected. The reputational harm is particularly damaging, the exchange noted, since Binance has allegedly worked hard to strengthen its compliance after reaching a settlement with the US government in 2023. In taking that plea deal, Binance admitted to violating anti-money laundering and sanctions laws and paid a $4.3 billion fine, and its founder, Changpeng Zhao, eventually pled guilty to a related charge. Since that scandal, Binance claimed that the WSJ has "made a business of maligning both the cryptocurrency industry generally and Binance specifically." That's why the Journal allegedly rushed to publish its story following a similar New York Times investigation. Alleging that the WSJ was financially motivated to publish a negative story that would get more clicks, Binance claimed the Journal provided little time to respond and then failed to make necessary corrections before and after publication.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:51

Elon Musk said his long-planned payments platform, dubbed XMoney, is set to launch for select users. Here's what to know.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:43

Now let’s go live to Amazon for the latest updates about this developing story.

Amazon’s ecommerce business has summoned a large group of engineers to a meeting on Tuesday for a “deep dive” into a spate of outages, including incidents tied to the use of AI coding tools.

The online retail giant said there had been a “trend of incidents” in recent months, characterized by a “high blast radius” and “Gen-AI assisted changes” among other factors, according to a briefing note for the meeting seen by the FT.

Under “contributing factors” the note included “novel GenAI usage for which best practices and safeguards are not yet fully established.”

↫ Rafe Rosner-Uddin at Ars Technica

Oh boy.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 14:38

Payment for Inditex founder, the world’s 15 richest person, tops last year’s dividend of €3.1bn

The billionaire founder of Zara is to receive a company record €3.23bn (£2.8bn) dividend this year from the world’s biggest fashion retailer.

Amancio Ortega, who still controls 59% of Spain’s Inditex and whose daughter Marta Ortega Pérez is now chair, will receive half his dividend in May and half in November – as will other shareholders.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 14:32

March 11, 2026 — For nearly two decades, Rice University’s Ken Kennedy Institute has convened the energy and computing communities to focus on a shared reality: Modern energy discovery, production and transition depend on advanced computation.

Credit: Donald Soward, D2 Studios

That theme anchored the 19th annual Energy HPC & AI Conference, held Feb. 24-26 at Rice’s BioScience Research Collaborative. The meeting brought together nearly 600 leaders and experts from industry, academia, national labs and the information technology sector to engage in critical discussions on high-performance computing and AI-powered integrations that support increasing workload demands across the energy sector.

The program included keynotes, panels and fireside chats, technical sessions, workshops and numerous networking opportunities. Invited speakers represented organizations including BP, ExxonMobil, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Texas Advanced Computing Center and the University of Texas at Austin. One keynote featured the 2025 ACM-IEEE CS Ken Kennedy Award winner Saman Amarasinghe.

The conference traces its roots to 2008, when it launched as the Rice Oil and Gas HPC Workshop. What began as a focused industry-academic exchange has grown into a premier annual gathering at the intersection of energy, advanced computing and data science. The program provides a platform to showcase technical rigor and emerging advancements in computing while also creating space for niche conversations on workforce strategies for a rapidly evolving industry.

In the opening remarks, David Sholl, Rice’s executive vice president for research and a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and chemistry, tied the conference to both institutional history and global need.

“Energy is the cornerstone of our modern economy,” Sholl said. He pointed to Rice’s long-standing contributions to computing, from early university projects in the late 1950s to Ken Kennedy’s foundational work in parallel computation in the 1980s.

“Today, the Ken Kennedy Institute connects over 300 faculty and researchers across the campus,” said Sholl, emphasizing Rice’s role in guiding the development of responsible and ethical AI as part of the university’s strategic plan.

Keith Gray, vice president of computational science and engineering at TotalEnergies and a co-founder of the conference, described its origins as a practical response to change inside the energy sector.

“High-performance computing was becoming more important to the oil and gas industry,” Gray said.

He noted that Houston is an ideal backdrop for the conference, given its status as “energy capital of the world” and the high density of high-performance computing practitioners in the area. He also pointed to Rice’s strengths in research and education, particularly in computer science, geophysics and applied math.

“The synergies just work,” he added.

It began as an opportunity to bridge communication across industries. The first gathering, held in conjunction with the Society of Exploration Geophysicists annual meeting, drew about 100 participants. Once at Rice, it expanded from roughly 200 attendees in Duncan Hall to now nearly 600 participants eager to shape the future of energy infrastructure and innovation.

Credit: Donald Soward, D2 Studios

An enduring goal of the conference is to build meaningful connections. The culture of Rice’s interdisciplinary network of researchers and exemplary students and faculty underscore that impact. In keeping its roots on campus, the conference maintains its influence through focused, smaller-scale connections that bring together a wide range of participants — from local industry professionals and Rice researchers to global partners from leading energy and computing companies.

“We’ve chosen to keep the scale at approximately 600 people,” Gray said. “It allows a much better sense of community, and we recognize how important it is to create a community within the industry to solve problems.”

That community also reflects a long-running interplay between energy and computing. For decades, offshore seismic surveys — in which vessels tow sensor-equipped streamers to record reflected sound waves from beneath the seafloor — have generated enormous data volumes that must be processed into coherent subsurface images. As acquisition techniques and imaging methods advanced, so did the need for faster, more capable computing systems. Dedicated high-performance computing centers within energy companies, and close collaboration with hardware and software providers, grew in response.

That lineage was visible in the conference exhibit hall, where 30 sponsors demonstrated high-powered systems and architectures. On one screen, a detailed 3D slice of subsurface geology rotated in real time — a reminder that behind every visualization is a chain of data collection, modeling and compute-intensive processing that links field operations to decision-making.

Beyond industry exchange, the conference plays a direct role in graduate education at Rice.

Over the years, the Energy HPC & AI Conference has directly funded 95 graduate students through the Ken Kennedy Institute’s annual recruiting and sponsored fellowship programs. These awards help attract and support graduate students working in AI, high-performance computing and related areas of computational science and engineering, particularly in areas relevant to energy.

Gray sees that workforce connection as central to the event’s purpose.

“This is where we come to look for the interns who are going to become our next generation of professionals,” he said. “This is just incredibly valuable for us.”

Students were involved throughout the program, many presenting their work during lightning talks and poster sessions. Carolina Brindis, a chemical and biomolecular engineering graduate student in Walter Chapman’s research group and a recent recipient of the Scott Morton Memorial Fellowship, presented research on hydrogen and carbon dioxide geostorage — an area that combines laboratory experiments with large-scale computational modeling.

“I greatly appreciate how the Scott Morton Memorial Fellowship, along with the lightning talk and poster session, increase visibility for our research,” Brindis said. “This is particularly significant as our new consortium expands partnerships that integrate experimental measurements with large-scale computational modeling to advance energy innovation.”

Her comments reflect a goal of the conference’s broader structure: to create space for students to present work directly to industry representatives and computing specialists, while building relationships that extend beyond a single week.

As advanced computation in energy has evolved, so has the conference. The addition of “AI” to its name reflects a shift in the kinds of methods practitioners are deploying.

“AI was a natural outgrowth of the use of advanced computation in energy,” said David Pynadath, executive director for research initiatives at the Ken Kennedy Institute, noting the steady increase in AI-focused submissions and presentations over the years. The change also reflects growing interest in shaping AI’s transformative impact across industries and workforces — a priority for both Rice as a leading research institution and Houston as the energy capital of the world.

Even as new methods gain attention, the conference remains a forum for taking the pulse of industry needs and discussing challenges, opportunities and new developments across the energy sector.

“The scale that we’re working at and the importance to the business continues to grow,” Gray said. “So I think that is another reason this continues to be exciting.”

Next year, the Energy HPC & AI Conference will celebrate its 20th anniversary Feb. 23-25, 2027.

Recordings of the 2026 conference presentations and of the Best Practices in HPC Systems Management workshop can now be viewed online.

More from HPCwire: Finding Energy at the Rice University HPC & AI Conference


Source: Silvia Cernea Clark and Kelly Peters, Rice University

The post Ken Kennedy Institute’s Energy HPC & AI Conference Ties Advanced Computing to Energy Innovation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:31

Lack of public appearances prompted speculation about new leader’s mortality after multiple family members died

The confirmation that Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, was injured in the first wave of Israeli attacks underlines how desperate the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (ICRG) was to ensure their wounded choice was elevated to high office, and how confident it is that the wartime machinery can operate almost on automatic pilot without him.

The full scale of Khamenei’s injuries and speed of his recovery remain unclear, but a broken leg and facial injuries are the minimum. It is not a medical bulletin on which the authorities are seeking to dwell, although Ali Larijani, the secretary of the supreme national security council, chose his words carefully in saying “his condition has not been reported as critical”, a phrasing that suggests he has not personally seen him.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:30

The Tories and Reform UK have abandoned British interests to become ideological satellites of radical US conservatism

Britain is one of many countries that would benefit from the replacement of brutal theocracy with democratic government in Tehran. The Iranian people would be the biggest beneficiaries. It does not follow that British interests are served by the current US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, which claims regime change as a goal but includes no credible strategy for achieving it.

The distinction was never hard to grasp. Sir Keir Starmer understood it and kept his distance from Donald Trump’s war. The leader of the opposition was not so judicious. In the first week of the conflict, Kemi Badenoch accused Sir Keir of indecision and cowardice. She thought the absence of a legal mandate for war was irrelevant and called for the RAF to be more involved. The Conservative leader no longer holds that view. Or, rather, she denies having held it. She says that she did not call for Britain to join the US-Israeli action, but did call for British forces to strike targets inside Iran and that those are different things, although she struggles to explain how.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:30

More than a week into the US-Israel war on Iran, president has provided little clarity on how the conflict might end

One week into the war with Iran, the central questions about the conflict remained largely unanswered: what would constitute victory, how long the crisis might last and whether the United States was responsible for a deadly strike on a girls’ elementary school that has come to embody the war’s early controversy.

On Saturday, leaning against the bulkhead outside the press cabin as Air Force One cruised toward Florida, Donald Trump still struggled to clarify his own message.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:30

Here are some highly rated series to try, plus a look at what's new in March.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:29

Grammy-winning singer is in advanced talks to lead an adaptation of Sylvia Plath’s novel for Oscar-winning writer-director

Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Billie Eilish is set to make her big screen acting debut in an adaptation of Sylvia Plath’s semi-autobiographical novel The Bell Jar.

According to Deadline, the 24-year-old will take on the lead role for Sarah Polley, the writer-director who previously won an Oscar for her Women Talking screenplay. Eilish is reportedly in advanced talks for the part.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:26

Trio held on suspicion of ‘terrorist bombing’ that caused minor damage but no injuries

Three Norwegian brothers have been arrested on suspicion of a “terrorist bombing” at the US embassy in Oslo that caused minor damage at the weekend but no injuries.

The police prosecutor Christian Hatlo told a press conference that the brothers, who were Norwegian citizens of Iraqi origin, had been arrested in Oslo and that police were investigating the motive.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:23

Strike that killed at least 175 people, most of them children, reportedly due to targeting mistake by US military planners

A preliminary US military investigation has reportedly determined that Washington was responsible for a deadly Tomahawk missile strike on an Iranian elementary school in February that killed scores of children.

According to the New York Times, quoting unnamed US officials and others familiar with the initial findings, the investigation has concluded that the strike on 28 February on the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school building was the result of a targeting mistake by the US military planners.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:22
  • Quarterback had promising start to Colts career

  • 2025 season ended in series of injuries

Daniel Jones plans to stay with the Indianapolis Colts for at least two more years.

The two sides agreed to a new contract, a deal that will pay the quarterback up to $100m, a person with knowledge of the contract told the Associated Press on Wednesday.

Jones will receive $88m over the next two seasons with $50m guaranteed. He can make an additional $12m through incentives.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 14:21

Jason Hughes died after slipping in the road as Georgia teens fled a prank involving toilet paper

The parents of a high school student charged in the death of his teacher after a prank gone wrong have released a statement saying that the teacher “meant the world to our son” and their family is in “deep remorse and grieving”.

Jason Hughes, 4o, a teacher at North Hall high school in Georgia, died last week after being run over by a student driving away from a prank involving toilet paper.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:15

Crew of Thai-registered bulk carrier forced to flee fire, as US says it has destroyed 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels

Three merchant ships have been struck in and around the strait of Hormuz, including a Thai registered bulk carrier that caught fire after leaving a port in the UAE, forcing crew members to evacuate for their safety.

The Mayuree Naree was struck on Wednesday by “two projectiles of unknown origin”, its owners said, as it sailed about 11 nautical miles north of Oman, marking the end of a four-day lull of attacks in the strategic waterway.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:00

Nvidia is preparing to launch an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw, designed to compete with the likes of OpenClaw. According to Wired, the platform will allow enterprise software companies to dispatch AI agents to perform tasks for their own workforces. "Companies will be able to access the platform regardless of whether their products run on Nvidia's chips," the report adds. From the report: The move comes as Nvidia prepares for its annual developer conference in San Jose next week. Ahead of the conference, Nvidia has reached out to companies including Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike to forge partnerships for the agent platform. It's unclear whether these conversations have resulted in official partnerships. Since the platform is open source, it's likely that partners would get free, early access in exchange for contributing to the project, sources say. Nvidia plans to offer security and privacy tools as part of this new open-source agent platform. [...] For Nvidia, NemoClaw appears to be part of an effort to court enterprise software companies by offering additional layers of security for AI agents. It's also another step in the company's embrace of open-source AI models, part of a broader strategy to maintain its dominance in AI infrastructure at a time when leading AI labs are building their own custom chips. Nvidia's software strategy until now has been heavily reliant on its CUDA platform, a famously proprietary system that locks developers into building software for Nvidia's GPUs and has created a crucial "moat" for the company.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:50

Gold IRA withdrawals come with strict tax rules. Here's what investors should understand before taking money out.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:46

Don't let your tax refund linger in a regular savings account. Here's how to earn 4% interest (or more) on it now.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:43

Let's just say Taylor Swift has nothing to worry about.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:42

The men were Norwegian citizens of Iraqi origin who were not previously known to police, police prosecutor Christian Hatlo said.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:31

Samsung's flagship audio line upgraded with the Galaxy Buds 4 Pro. I'm revisiting the Buds 3 Pro to see if their lower price makes them a smarter buy than the latest model.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:29

Man in his 60s from Berne area had been reported missing before incident, say authorities in Fribourg canton

Police investigating a bus fire that killed at least six people in western Switzerland have said they believe it was started by a “marginalised and disturbed” Swiss man onboard who set himself ablaze.

The vehicle, operated by a service that transports passengers and mail, went up in flames on Tuesday evening in Kerzers, a town of about 5,000 people about 12 miles (20km) west of Berne in the canton of Fribourg.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:24

Chief executive and chairman of ICI in the 1990s who oversaw the creation of the pharmaceutical company Zeneca

Ronnie Hampel was a businessman’s businessman, a major force in the reshaping of ICI, Britain’s largest manufacturing company, in the 1990s and in the birth of the pharmaceutical company Zeneca (now part of AstraZeneca), as well as a powerful influence on other company boards.

He was exceptionally well-connected. His place at the heart of the UK business establishment as chairman of ICI – from 1995 to 1999 – was highlighted by his regular golfing four which included the then cabinet secretary, the chairman of BP and the permanent secretary of the Treasury.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:22

The discovery caused officials to evacuate 18,000 people on Wednesday, the largest such operation ever in the city, emergency services said.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:15

Save your body from falling into fatigue and stiffness with one of the best standing desks.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:14

Despite rare act of multilateralism, there is no guarantee the IEA’s release of 400m barrels from reserves will depress prices

When the global economy was still in the grip of the devastating 1970s oil crises, exposing the chokehold exerted by a few important oil states, the International Energy Agency (IEA) was created, in the hope of limiting future shocks.

Almost half a century on, the IEA’s 32 members have drawn up plans to hit the emergency button, for only the fifth time in its history.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 13:14

Company also launches tools to spot scammers as Thai police arrest 21 people

Meta disabled more than 150,000 accounts and Thai police arrested 21 people in a sweeping international crackdown on south-east Asian criminal scam centers that targeted people around the world, the social media company said on Wednesday.

The operation was led by Thailand’s Royal Thai police anti-cyber scam center, alongside the FBI and the US justice department’s scam center strike force, with Meta investigators acting on intelligence shared in real time by law enforcement.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:07

A U.S. military investigation determined in its preliminary findings that the United States conducted an attack on an Iranian elementary school that killed at least 175 people, most of them children, according to two U.S. officials familiar with the ongoing inquiry. The findings directly contradict assertions by President Donald Trump that Iran struck the school.

The lethal strike on the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school building was the result of a “targeting error” by the U.S. military, which mistook the facility for part of an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy base that was adjacent to the school, according to one of the U.S. officials who spoke to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.

U.S. Central Command attacked the school based on long outdated coordinates for the strike provided by another defense agency, one of the officials told The Intercept. While the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school was once connected to the IRGC base by roads, the building was partitioned off by 2016, according to an investigation by New Lines Magazine.

The attack, which came after a yearlong effort by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to gut programs to reduce civilian casualties, killed more civilians than any other strike in Trump’s second Iran war. It was “colossal negligence,” one of the current government officials said.

Trump has repeatedly claimed that Iran was responsible for the strike, despite mounting evidence to the contrary. “In my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran,” Trump told reporters March 7. “They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”

Wes Bryant — who served until last year as the senior analyst and adviser on precision warfare, targeting, and civilian harm mitigation at the Pentagon’s Civilian Protection Center of Excellence — called the attack on the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school a “failure in fundamental targeting doctrine and standards.” 

Bryant, who called in thousands of strikes across the greater Middle East as a Special Operations joint terminal attack controller, said it was common to rely on outdated imagery while conducting operations.

Related

U.S. Military Refuses to Endorse Trump Claim That Iran Bombed Girls’ School

“As a targeter, the imagery and initial intelligence data you receive on a potential target or target set is just the start. You don’t prosecute based solely off any organization — NGA or otherwise — giving you an image and saying they have intelligence that it’s an enemy location,” he told The Intercept, referring to the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which specializes in such imagery. “You corroborate with other intelligence, and you conduct as near real time as possible characterization of that target as well as the civilian presence and risk to include collateral damage analysis risk of civilian casualties.”

U.S. Central Command refused to comment on the preliminary findings of the inquiry. “It would be inappropriate to comment given the incident is under investigation,” a CENTCOM official told The Intercept by email.

The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency did not immediately reply to requests for comment on their potential involvement in providing intelligence that led to the strike.

The investigation’s findings were widely expected as evidence of a U.S. attack on the school mounted. A video released on Sunday by Iran’s semiofficial Mehr News Agency showed a cruise missile striking the IRGC naval base beside the elementary school as smoke appears to billow from the school itself, indicating that it had recently been struck. According to Bellingcat, the cruise missile was a Tomahawk missile. The U.S. is the only party to the conflict employing Tomahawk missiles.

“America, regardless of what so-called international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise air power campaign in history,” Hegseth said at a March 2 press conference. “No stupid rules of engagement.”

CENTCOM would not offer an estimated civilian death toll for the U.S. war on Iran. More than 1,300 Iranian civilians have been killed, according to the Iranian Red Crescent Society.

An investigation by Airwars, a U.K.-based airstrike monitoring group, found that the first days of the Iran war saw far more sites targeted than any recent U.S. or Israeli military campaign. “While the rate of civilian harm cannot be solely predicted by the number of targets hit, initial indications suggest it has been high — particularly with U.S. targets correlating with heavily populated areas,” according to the Airwars report. “The targets map heavily onto the highest populated areas.”

The post Pentagon Report: U.S. Military Fired Missile at Elementary School in Iran appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:01

The reigning champions welcome Liam Rosenior's Blues to the Parc des Princes.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:01

Flavor Flav is honoring all of the Team USA female Olympians and Paralympians who won a medal at the 2026 Winter Games.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:00

The pick of this week's UCL action sees the injury-hit Los Blancos host Pep Guardiola's men.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:00

YouTube is expanding its AI deepfake detection tools to a pilot group of politicians, government officials, and journalists, allowing them to identify and request removal of unauthorized AI-generated videos impersonating them. TechCrunch reports: The technology itself launched last year to roughly 4 million YouTube creators in the YouTube Partner Program, following earlier tests. Similar to YouTube's existing Content ID system, which detects copyright-protected material in users' uploaded videos, the likeness detection feature looks for simulated faces made with AI tools. These tools are sometimes used to try to spread misinformation and manipulate people's perception of reality, as they leverage the deepfaked personas of notable figures -- like politicians or other government officials -- to say and do things in these AI videos that they didn't in real life. With the new pilot program, YouTube aims to balance users' free expression with the risks associated with AI technology that can generate a convincing likeness of a public figure. [...] [Leslie Miller, YouTube's vice president of Government Affairs and Public Policy] explained that not all of the detected matches would be removed when requested. Instead, YouTube would evaluate each request under its existing privacy policy guidelines to determine whether the content is parody or political critique, which are protected forms of free expression. The company noted it's advocating for these protections at a federal level, too, with its support for the NO FAKES Act in D.C., which would regulate the use of AI to create unauthorized recreations of an individual's voice and visual likeness. To use the new tool, eligible pilot testers must first prove their identity by uploading a selfie and a government ID. They can then create a profile, view the matches that show up, and optionally request their removal. YouTube says it plans to eventually give people the ability to prevent uploads of violating content before they go live or, possibly, allow them to monetize those videos, similar to how its Content ID system works. The company would not confirm which politicians or officials would be among its initial testers, but said the goal is to make the technology broadly available over time.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:35

Supreme court recently rejected Cedric Ricks’ claim that potential jurors in his trial were eliminated based on race

A north Texas man faces execution on Wednesday for fatally stabbing his girlfriend and her eight-year-old son nearly 13 years ago.

Cedric Ricks was sentenced to death for the May 2013 killings of 30-year-old Roxann Sanchez and her son Anthony Figueroa at their apartment in Bedford, a suburb in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Sanchez’s 12-year-old son, Marcus Figueroa, was injured during the attack.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:29

Bring one of the best desks of 2026 into your work, gaming or hobby space.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:25

Advisers to RFK Jr drop the plan to end federal guidance amid Republican worries about the political impact

A major federal panel that advises the government on vaccines has stepped back from efforts targeting Covid-19 mRNA vaccines, a change that comes as some Republicans reportedly caution that additional shifts in vaccine policy could hurt the party in the upcoming midterm elections.

Several vaccine advisers selected by Robert F Kennedy Jr, the health secretary, had been exploring the possibility of ending federal recommendations for mRNA covid shots. That initiative is no longer going forward, according to two sources familiar with the discussions who spoke to the Washington Post.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:14

Julie T. Le made headlines during DHS’s surge in Minneapolis and will launch a campaign to challenge Rep. Ilhan Omar for her seat.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:06

With the Iran war nearing its second week, social media posts shared unfounded reports that a key Israeli political figure was killed.

A March 9 X post showing an image of Israel National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said Israeli and Iranian media reported his death.

"BREAKING: So the Israeli media reports Itamar Ben‑Gvir died in a ‘car crash,’" the post read, garnering more than 623,000 views as of the morning of March 11. "While in fact he’s been obliterated by an Iranian missile strike on his home."

(Screenshot of X post.)

The far-right Ben-Gvir has advocated relocating Palestinians from Gaza. He has also been convicted for supporting terrorism and inciting anti-Arab racism, CNN reported in 2024. In January 2025, Ben-Gvir resigned in protest of a Gaza ceasefire deal, but Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet reappointed him in March 2025. 

Hundreds of people have been killed across the Middle East during the Iran war, but Ben-Gvir isn’t among them. He also hasn’t been in a recent car accident, as the social media posts claim. 

Ben-Gvir was injured and taken to the hospital after a car accident in 2024 as he returned from a stabbing scene in the city of Ramle, Israel. But neither the Israeli government nor any credible news outlets have released any recent reports about Ben-Gvir’s demise, either from an automobile accident or from a strike on his home. 

Ben-Gvir’s verified TikTok account posted a March 10 video in Hebrew with the caption, "I'm alive, God willing," and he went on to debunk clips and headlines that said he was dead. We translated the video and caption from Hebrew to English using Google Lens and Google Translate.

Ben-Gvir also posted March 10 at least three times on his X and Telegram accounts. 

Other news outlets have also debunked the claim that Ben-Gvir is dead.

An Iran war report from the Israeli government (which we translated from Hebrew to English using Google Translate) says the claim that Ben-Gvir was killed by an Iranian attack isn’t true, and that its purpose is to "create the impression that Iran is capable of penetrating Israel's security alignment and directly harming key decision-makers."

We rate the claim that Ben-Gvir died False. 

PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 11:47

For now, the Supreme Court has ended a controversial bid for a machine to be named as the original author of artwork sent to the U.S. Copyright Office for protection.

On March 2, 2026, the Court without comment denied an appeal in Thaler v. Perlmutter. Nearly a year earlier, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia determined the Copyright Office correctly denied Dr. Stephen Thaler’s copyright claim for an AI-created picture titled “A Recent Entrance to Paradise.”

Thaler, a computer scientist, created a generative artificial intelligence named the “Creativity Machine,” which then created the picture on its own. On a copyright registration application, Thaler listed the Creativity Machine as the work’s sole author, and himself as the work’s owner.

In his appeal to the Supreme Court, Thaler wanted the justices to consider whether “works outputted by an AI system without a direct, traditional authorial contribution by a natural person could be copyrighted.”

The case’s background

Congress created the U.S. Copyright Office under its power to regulate copyrights, as outlined in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution. The Copyright Clause allows Congress to “promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”

On Nov. 3, 2018, Thaler filed an application to register “A Recent Entrance to Paradise” with the Copyright Office. He stated the submission “lacked traditional human authorship” and Thaler, as the owner of the AI he created, should be the owner of any copyright related to the artwork. On August 12, 2019, the Copyright Office refused Thaler’s copyright claim because it “lack[ed] the human authorship necessary to support a copyright claim.”

The Copyright Office cited as precedent the Supreme Court ruling in Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony (1884). In the Sarony decision, Justice Samuel F. Miller ruled that Burrow-Giles Lithographic violated the copyright owned by Sarony for a posed picture taken of the playwright Oscar Wilde. Burrow-Giles argued unsuccessfully that photographs were not copyrightable because they lacked human authorship, and they were the product of a machine; but the Court held the “photograph to be an original work of art, the product of plaintiff's intellectual invention.”

In its Compendium of Copyright Office Practices, the Copyright Office cites the Sarony decision and another case, In re Trade-Mark Cases, from 1879, as limiting copyright authorship to human beings. The Copyright Office uses the Compendium to state its policies.

Thaler appealed to the U. S. District Court for the District of Columbia, where District Judge Beryl A. Howell on August 3, 2023, held that the “Copyright Office acted properly in denying copyright registration for a work created absent any human involvement.” Judge Howell said copyright law “has never stretched so far, however, as to protect works generated by new forms of technology operating absent any guiding human hand, as plaintiff urges here. Human authorship is a bedrock requirement of copyright.”

A three-judge District of Columbia appeals panel affirmed the Copyright Office’s ruling and Howell’s decision. “The Creativity Machine cannot be the recognized author of a copyrighted work because the Copyright Act of 1976 requires all eligible work to be authored in the first instance by a human being,” said Circuit Judge Patricia A. Millett, writing for the court. In her decision, Millett ruled only on Thaler’s application as not conforming to the law, and not on broader constitutional issues raised by the Copyright Office and Thaler in court briefs.

“The Compendium reflects the agency’s longstanding view that copyright requires human authorship. It states that the Copyright Office ‘will refuse to register a claim if it determines that a human being did not create the work,’” the Copyright Office argued in its district court brief.

Millett also discounted Thaler’s argument that the Copyright Office’s human-authorship rule prevents copyright law from protecting any works made with artificial intelligence. “The rule requires only that the author of that work be a human being—the person who created, operated, or used artificial intelligence—and not the machine itself.”

The appeal from Thaler to the Supreme Court

In the petition for a writ of certiorari, Thaler’s attorney, Ryan Abbott, made several claims. Abbott argued that a “straightforward reading” of the Copyright Act results in the conclusion that “works without a direct, traditional authorial contribution by a natural person can be copyrighted.”

“The U.S. Copyright Office, however, imports words into the Act that Congress never drafted and requires vague elements of human authorship that arose from the Copyright Office itself—without statutory support. Indeed, the Copyright Act explicitly permits nonhuman authorship,” Abbott concluded.

Among other arguments, Abbott believed the appeals court decision, if left standing, would undermine the definition of “author” in Burrow-Giles Lithographic v. Sarony, resulting in photographs losing their copyright protection.

In his brief, Solicitor General John Sauer repeats the appeals court’s argument that the Copyright Office’s Compendium “reflects the agency’s longstanding view that copyright requires human authorship” and the Copyright Office “will refuse to register a claim if it determines that a human being did not create the work.” Sauer cited the Burrow-Giles Lithographic v. Sarony precedent.

Sauer also concurred with Judge Millett’s opinion that “adhering to the human-authorship requirement does not impede the protection of works made with artificial intelligence.” Sauer believed the case focused on the narrow question of whether an AI machine can be considered as an “author” of a copyrightable work. “It does not present any broader question about the eligibility for copyright registration of works created using AI,” he concluded.

In the end, the Supreme Court agreed with Sauer and Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by denying Thaler’s appeal.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-11 11:26

US energy prices were set to rise long before the Iran war Expert comment thilton.drupal

Even if the disruption to oil and gas from the Iran war subsides, the Trump administration’s energy policy will likely lead to a long-term increase in energy prices.

Power lines in California

In his election campaign, US President Donald Trump promised to halve energy prices within 12 months in office. Not only was this unrealistic, but all signs now point in the opposite direction – including trends that predate the US-Israeli war with Iran. 

The war and the resulting disruption to oil and natural gas exports from the Middle East has shocked global energy markets. Global oil prices soared to almost $120 a barrel on Monday, their highest level since 2022, as a result of the effective halting of shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20 per cent of global oil and natural gas passes. 

Prices then dropped slightly on Tuesday as Trump sought to reassure markets that the war would be over soon and G7 ministers met to discuss the release of strategic oil reserves. Nevertheless, American consumers are already likely to feel the war’s impact at the gasoline pump.

Liquefied natural gas (LNG) has also been dramatically affected by the war. Qatar, which accounts for a fifth of global LNG supply, has halted LNG production amid Iranian drone attacks. This disruption has led to European and Asian natural gas prices doubling. The change in US natural gas prices has been more muted as they reflect domestic supply and demand rather than global LNG markets due to export constraints.

However, the long-term trend suggests that energy prices in the US will continue to rise. This was the case even before the current war. Last year, US retail electricity prices rose by almost 7 per cent compared to 2024, double the rate of inflation. While pre-war petrol prices had fallen by 5 per cent since Trump’s inauguration, the price of heating oil and natural gas had also increased significantly. 

Consumers are likely to face even higher electricity and gas prices in coming years, in addition to the mounting costs from climate inaction. In simple terms, this is because demand is skyrocketing while supply is tightening. Meanwhile, infrastructure is becoming more expensive and vulnerable to extreme weather. 

Rising demand 

Demand is being driven by new data centres, increasing LNG exports and deregulation.

New data centres require massive amounts of new power generation, with their demand projected to more than double by 2030 and quintuple by 2035. This surge has led utility companies to run older, less efficient and more polluting power plants. Analysis suggests that data centre growth could drive up electricity prices as much as 25 per cent for some US markets by 2030. 

The Trump administration recently announced its Ratepayer Protection Pledge, framed as a ‘historic commitment to keep electricity costs down’ by getting tech companies to pay  for the energy to build and operate data centres.  But the pledge is more of a political signal than a policy solution. It is voluntary, non-binding and relies on self-negotiated agreements between tech companies and utility companies, with no federal oversight of whether those agreements actually shield consumers from rising costs. 

Fundamentally, even if companies pay for new power generation infrastructure, they still compete for fuel and equipment, raising demand and prices for others.

Under prevailing utility regulation and explicit exemptions for data centres, the burden of transmission upgrades and elevated demand will still likely fall on consumers. The counterargument that data centres could actually reduce electricity bills by spreading costs across a larger consumer base and providing flexibility would require demand management policy that is currently absent. Unless the buildout of data centres is carefully planned with low-cost clean energy, it will likely lead to a rise in both costs and emissions. 

US natural gas demand is also rising due to increasing LNG exports, which are forecast to be up 50 per cent by 2027 compared to 2024. This tightens the domestic market, as LNG exports compete with domestic natural gas. In 2025, exports were the fastest growing use of natural gas, comprising 14.1 per cent, more than residential or commercial sectors. The war in Iran is likely to push exports to their maximum; an extended conflict could incentivize further export infrastructure investment. 

Moreover, broad deregulation will not only accelerate costly climate impacts, but also increase consumer energy costs by removing efficiency standards. This effectively raises demand, as more energy is needed for the same output. In the power sector, the subsidized use of coal power plants past their retirement date will cost $3-6 billion per year. 

Tightening supply 

Meanwhile, supply is tightening. While embracing and expanding fossil fuel production, the Trump administration has moved to cancel clean energy projects, including wind projects already under construction, and phased out tax incentives for clean energy under the ‘The One Big Beautiful Bill Act’ (OBBBA).

Yet renewables are the cheapest and quickest deployed additions of energy supply. Studies suggest that the OBBBA could lead to households paying an additional $165 annually by 2030 and $280 by 2035. Despite a clear partisan divide, over two-thirds of Americans say they support the expansion of solar and wind power. 

Antagonistic policy surrounding clean energy will likely harm future investments. In 2025 alone, $30 billion of clean technology investments left the US market, with a cumulative $500 billion forecasted by 2035. While renewables did still rise in 2025, this reflects projects approved years earlier – with some developers likely rushing to capture incentives before expiring. Renewable energy capacity is still forecast to grow, but at a slower rate. 

President Trump’s pledge to ‘drill, baby, drill’ has not driven the price of gas down. The cheapest US natural gas basins are pipeline-constrained, leading to any new incremental supply coming from deeper and more expensive basins, such as Haynesville, with nearly double breakeven costs compared to other basins. This will reflect higher gas prices, which are projected to already be 60 per cent higher this year than in 2024. 

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:13

WASHINGTON, March 11, 2026 — Siemens today announced it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to support the Genesis Mission, a federal initiative to modernize America’s scientific infrastructure and strengthen the translation of research into real-world deployment through advanced AI, computing, and interoperable digital systems. The Genesis Mission seeks to accelerate discovery, strengthen lab-to-industry translation, and reinforce technological leadership across critical domains.

As a global industrial technology leader, Siemens brings decades of experience in digital engineering, high-fidelity simulation, industrial AI, scientific data lifecycle management, and mission-critical infrastructure. Siemens is prepared to help provide industrial technology that aligns directly with the Genesis Mission’s goal of compressing discovery timelines and ensuring breakthroughs can scale into operational environments.

“The Genesis Mission’s goal of accelerating scientific discovery and scaling it in the real world is a perfect match for our core expertise: combining the real and the digital worlds,” said Roland Busch, President and CEO of Siemens AG. “Our leadership in industrial AI and advanced simulation is proven in national laboratories and industrial ecosystems across the United States and worldwide. We look forward to contributing these capabilities to make the Genesis Mission a success.”

Siemens’ unique expertise brings AI into the real world by uniting scientific data, physics-informed simulation, digital twins, automation systems, and secure infrastructure into a connected industrial tech stack. Rather than delivering isolated AI models or point solutions, Siemens integrates deep domain AI directly into engineering, validation, and operational workflows, enabling discoveries to be simulated, tested, validated, and deployed within the same interoperable digital environment.

“Siemens has a long history of trusted partnership with the U.S. government, supporting scientific leadership and industrial competitiveness,” said Ann Fairchild, Interim President and CEO, Siemens Corporation. “The Genesis Mission represents an immense opportunity to modernize the digital infrastructure that underpins scientific discovery and innovation. Together with DOE and partners, we can strengthen the connection between research and real-world deployment, accelerating innovation across industry and infrastructure.”

By maintaining continuity from research to deployment, Siemens’ end-to-end solutions ensure resilience and scalability across complex physical systems, helping translate breakthrough research into reliable, real-world impact across energy, manufacturing, infrastructure, and other mission-critical domains. Our integrated approach empowers the Genesis Mission to bridge the gap between advanced research and tangible impact, accelerating discovery and enabling resilient, future-ready scientific infrastructure.

Through its participation, Siemens will engage with DOE, interagency stakeholders, and private sector partners to explore collaboration on interoperable, secure, and industrial-grade digital infrastructure for science and engineering. This includes advancing AI-enabled simulation and digital twins, scientific data lifecycle governance, lab-to-deployment workflows, and the resilient physical infrastructure required to support AI-intensive research environments.

Siemens’ participation builds on its longstanding engagement with DOE and the National Laboratories, as well as its broader commitment to advancing U.S. innovation, manufacturing, and infrastructure. Siemens Government Technologies, a wholly owned but distinct operating unit for Siemens in the U.S., enables collaboration with government researchers across domains at all classification levels given its regulatory framework and certified procurement and accounting systems, with a proven track record of delivering advanced software solutions for missions of national consequence.

More from HPCwire: First Genesis Mission Supercomputers on Track to Launch by June. ‘Unprecedented’ Speed, DOE’s Darío Gil Says

About Siemens

Siemens Corporation is a U.S. subsidiary of Siemens AG, a leading technology company focused on industry, infrastructure, transport, and healthcare. The company’s purpose is to create technology to transform the everyday, for everyone. By combining the real and the digital worlds, Siemens empowers customers to accelerate their digital and sustainability transformations, making factories more efficient, cities more livable, and transportation more sustainable. A leader in industrial AI, Siemens leverages its deep domain know-how to apply AI – including generative AI – to real-world applications, making AI accessible and impactful for customers across diverse industries. Siemens also owns a majority stake in the publicly listed company Siemens Healthineers, a leading global medical technology provider pioneering breakthroughs in healthcare. For everyone. Everywhere. Sustainably.


Source: Siemens

The post Siemens to Help Build AI-Ready Scientific Infrastructure as Part of DOE’s Genesis Mission appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:06

Deep Engineering Collaboration on AI Factories, Powering Inference and Agentic AI, Enables Nebius to Deploy More Than 5 Gigawatts of NVIDIA Systems by End of 2030

SANTA CLARA, Calif. and AMSTERDAM, March 11, 2026 — NVIDIA and Nebius Group N.V. today announced a strategic partnership to develop and deploy the next generation of hyperscale cloud for the AI market, from AI natives to enterprises. NVIDIA will invest $2 billion in Nebius, reflecting NVIDIA’s confidence in Nebius’s business and unique depth of engineering expertise across the full AI technology stack.

Credit: Shutterstock

To help meet rapidly growing global demand for high-performance compute, the partnership deepens Nebius and NVIDIA’s relationship across the full AI technology stack, from AI factory architecture to production software, enabling Nebius to accelerate the buildout of its industry-leading, full-stack AI cloud platform.

This partnership builds upon Nebius’s ongoing deployment of NVIDIA infrastructure across its global platform, including multiple gigawatt-scale AI factories in the U.S. To enable Nebius to deploy more than 5 gigawatts of capacity by the end of 2030, NVIDIA will support Nebius’s early adoption of the latest generation of NVIDIA’s accelerated computing platform.

Under the terms of the partnership, the companies will collaborate on:

  • AI factory design and support: Including access to partner design material, design review processes and acceptance, early samples and system software support, bring-up support, and regular system partner business and technical reviews.
  • Inference: Creating a best-in-class inference and agentic AI stack for developers and enterprises with NVIDIA’s latest software technologies, optimized models and libraries.
  • AI infrastructure deployment: Deploying multiple generations of NVIDIA infrastructure across Nebius’s platform through early adoption of NVIDIA computing architectures, including the NVIDIA Rubin platform, NVIDIA Vera CPUs and NVIDIA BlueField storage systems.
  • Fleet management: Optimizing Nebius’s holistic fleet health by deploying NVIDIA’s latest GPU health monitoring and software recommendations.

“AI is at another inflection point — agentic AI, driving incredible compute demand and accelerating infrastructure buildout,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Nebius is building an AI cloud designed for the agentic era, fully integrated from silicon to software and powered by NVIDIA’s next-generation accelerated compute. Together, we are scaling the cloud to meet the surging global demand for intelligence.”

“Nebius has been built for AI since day one — not adapted from a general-purpose cloud, but designed for what developers actually need,” said Arkady Volozh, CEO of Nebius. “Now with NVIDIA, we are extending that throughout the stack — from gigawatt-scale AI factories to inference and software — as we build one of the first and largest clouds for all AI builders everywhere.”

About Nebius

Nebius, the AI cloud company, is building the full-stack platform for developers and companies to take charge of their AI future — from data and model training to production deployment. Founded on deep in-house technological expertise and operating at scale with a rapidly expanding global footprint, Nebius serves startups and enterprises building AI products, agents, and services worldwide. Nebius is listed on Nasdaq (NASDAQ: NBIS) and headquartered in Amsterdam.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA and Nebius Partner to Scale Full-Stack AI Cloud appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:05

ESPOO, Finland, March 11, 2026 — IQM Quantum Computers today announced the launch of Aalto Q20 quantum computer in Finland, reinforcing its commercial leadership in the quantum industry.

The 20-qubit system, which is operational at Aalto University, is the fourth quantum computer deployed by IQM in Finland, marking a milestone in the country’s growing quantum technology ecosystem. Finland has recently been characterized as the number two global quantum cluster and is amongst the top five countries for quantum patent applications.

Ribbon cutting of the Aalto Q20 quantum computer delivered by IQM. Credit: IQM.

“When institutions like Aalto University own their quantum computers, it means their data, their IP, and their expertise stay theirs. That’s not a feature — that’s a strategic posture to enable world-class research and education. Aalto Q20 is Finland’s fourth proof point that IQM´s strategy to empower customers is a winning strategy” said Jan Goetz, CEO and Co-founder of IQM Quantum Computers.

Aalto University aims to use the quantum computer to educate future talent in quantum engineering. The advanced specifications of the systems make it one of the highest performant quantum computers deployed at a university, allowing world-class research in quantum computing.

The installation builds on IQM’s investments in education and collaboration with universities, research institutions, industry and policymakers in advancing research. Together with other offerings like IQM Academy the quantum computer installation is supporting the growing needs of the quantum ecosystem in Finland.

The Finnish quantum industry is projected to need around 3,000 new skilled employees to maintain the country’s leading position and deliver the goals laid out in the national quantum technology strategy. IQM’s deployment at Aalto directly addresses the talent gap and development.

In addition, the installation strengthens Finland’s quantum computing capabilities and expands the domestic supercomputing infrastructure. For this purpose, Aalto University is also collaborating with CSC – IT Center for Science to integrate AaltoQ20 with LUMI, one of the EuroHPC pre-exascale supercomputers, to provide access to a broader community of users across the European Union.

With a proven scalable deployment track record, IQM’s approach is to power local quantum ecosystems with an open and transparent hardware and software platform.

“As Finland’s fourth quantum computer, the Q20 is a show of strength for the Finnish quantum ecosystem of universities, companies, and research organizations. Q20 allows Aalto to have its own computer for researchers to easily access and students in the quantum technology major will get to use it as part of their studies, which is rare even on a global scale,” said Professor Tapio Ala-Nissilä of Department of Applied Physics at Aalto University.

More from HPCwire

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM Quantum Computers (IQM) is a global leader in superconducting quantum computers. IQM provides both on-premises full-stack quantum computers and a cloud platform to access its systems. IQM customers include leading high-performance computing centres, research laboratories, universities, and enterprises that require full access to quantum hardware and software. IQM has over 300 employees, with headquarters in Finland and a global presence in countries including France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, UK and the United States.


Source: IQM Quantum Computers

The post IQM Delivers 4th Quantum Computer in Finland, Operational at Aalto University appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:01

Goal Zero's newest portable power station comes with a more durable build and additional capabilities.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 11:00

Experts documented murder, torture and disappearances under Nayib Bukele’s policy targeting gangs

The draconian mass incarceration policy of El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, may have led to crimes against humanity, according to a new study by legal experts.

By locking up 1.4% of the population without due process, Bukele turned El Salvador from one of Latin America’s most violent countries into one of its least violent – but at the cost of human rights and the rule of law.

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 10:45

Bobbi Boudman’s win over Republican Dale Fincher could be a harbinger of blue wave during midterms

A Democrat won a special election for a state house seat in New Hampshire on Tuesday, flipping a Republican district that Donald Trump carried and marking the latest in a string of 28 Democratic upsets that could usher in a blue wave in the midterms.

Bobbi Boudman beat Republican Dale Fincher in New Hampshire’s Carroll county district 7. It was Boudman’s third try at the seat – she lost to incumbent representative Glenn Cordelli in the last two cycles by several points. Cordelli resigned from the seat after moving, leading to the special election on 10 March.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 10:27

Members agree unanimously to release about 400m barrels amid market volatility caused by Iran war

The International Energy Agency has ordered the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price shock triggered by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

The world’s energy watchdog said its 32 members had agreed unanimously to release about 400m barrels of emergency crude, a third of the group’s total government stockpiles and more than double the IEA’s previous biggest release.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 09:08
  • Participation ruled out after killing of Khamenei

  • Trump said to have told Infantino Iran are welcome

The prospect of Iran playing at this summer’s World Cup appears remote after the country’s sports minister, Ahmad Donyamali, said on Wednesday that “under no circumstances can we participate”.

Donyamali is the first Iranian government representative to address the issue of the World Cup since the US, one of the co-hosts, began bombing the country with backing from Israel 10 days ago.

Continue reading...

2026-03-14 12:04
2026-03-11 08:05

Nigeria and Ghana foreign ministers discuss security, AES countries, Boko Haram and US operations News release jon.wallace

During an event at Chatham House, HE Yusuf Tuggar and HE Samuel Ablakwa also discussed ECOWAS, West Africa-France relations, and allegations of attacks on Christian communities in the region.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa and Minister of Foreign Affairs Yusuf Maitama Tuggar speaking at the Chatham House event.

Ghanaian Minister for Foreign Affairs Samuel Ablakwa and Nigerian Minister of Foreign Affairs Yusuf Tuggar discussed West African security and peacebuilding in a packed event held at Chatham House on 9 March. 

The foreign ministers took questions from the audience on West African security issues, from the withdrawal of AES countries from the ECOWAS security bloc and US airstrikes in Nigeria on Christmas day, to West African relations with France and how to combat groups like Boko Haram.

During the event, Minister Tuggar emphasized the importance of local security solutions in West Africa, saying:

‘I think what has worked in our region successfully, what we’ve been able to achieve in Sierra Leone, what we’ve been able to achieve in Liberia… bringing about peace and peacebuilding successfully… I think we have done so when we have come up with our own solutions. This is why ECOMOG was so successful. It was led by forces from the region, with the support of the United Nations, with the support of other major powers… That should be the formula.’

Addressing the role of the United States in Nigerian and regional security, he said the US should play ‘an indirect role. A supportive role as opposed to…taking a more direct approach that would see perhaps boots on the ground.’

Asked by an audience member about the nature of violence in Nigeria and the region, and the role of religion, Minister Tuggar said:

alt

HE Samuel Ablakwa discusses Ghana’s policy towards foreign military bases. 
 

‘I’m not saying that the violence is not religious altogether. Some of it is motivated by religion. But it does not necessarily mean that there is a Christian genocide going on in Nigeria. That is false. It is incorrect…And it is not confined to Nigeria. It’s a regional problem. So that is why with framing we have to be careful.’

Minister Ablakwa, describing Ghanaians killed by terrorists in Burkina Faso, said:

‘These terrorists they didn’t ask them which religion they subscribed to. So, the point we are making is that we should be more nuanced…It is not just a simple, you know, religious matter.’ He also pointed out other drivers of violence including youth unemployment, climate change and state collapse.

Asked if the regional security bloc ECOWAS had been weakened by the withdrawal of three Sahelian ‘AES’ states (Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger) Minister Ablakwa said:

‘ECOWAS is still strong’ and spoke of Ghana’s plans to increase defence spending, build the country’s first electronic warfare centre, and improve its ISR capability. 

Addressing AES countries’ poor relations with France, and Ghana’s viewpoint, Minister Ablakwa said:

‘We have to admit that there is a genuine concern in francophone Africa that their relations with France will have to be reset and that there is a need for a new approach.’

He also pointed to the responsibility of the international community in delivering security:

‘Terrorism taking root is a threat to the entire global community…the challenges we face today are direct consequences of certain actions by the international community, from Afghanistan to Syria to Libya…. not having a post Gaddafi plan, how we deal with the regime change agenda in Libya. We’ve had to bear the brunt. 

‘What is going on now in the Middle East is going to further aggravate the situation. As you chase out the terrorists and dismantle those cells which you don’t want close to you, they will have to relocate… Should we allow Africa to be their safe haven?’

The panel event formed part of the Chatham House Africa Programme’s ongoing work on African peace and security. The Programme will shortly launch a new project focused on regional conflict systems in the Horn of Africa, the Sahel and Central Africa.

Watch the event in full here.

 

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
New Castle County officials could soon be able to subpoena records from the most contentious commercial properties in the county after state lawmakers on Monday passed legislation enabling them to do so. The bill is part of a “quality control” review package meant to empower county officials to scrutinize the results of last year’s property reassessment.

The Delaware House of Representatives passed the second half of a two-bill package Monday that would give New Castle County new authority to subpoena certain business records during its ongoing “quality control” review of its much-maligned property reassessment.

But an added amendment to the bill means it must return to the Senate for a final, largely procedural, vote before Gov. Matt Meyer can officially sign the bill into law.

After passing the first half of the package in January amid Republican pushback that the bills were rushed, the House of Representatives unanimously passed an amended version of the second bill, Senate Bill 230.

The bill would give New Castle County officials the ability to subpoena both records and witness testimony from commercial property owners about the income earned from their properties as the county reviews the results from last year’s first-in-40-year property reassessment. 

The subpoena power would be available to all three of Delaware’s counties, but was geared specifically toward New Castle, which experienced much of the property reassessment-related blowback from residents and business owners last summer. 

New Castle County Executive Marcus Henry recently told Spotlight Delaware last month that his office would use those power to re-examine some commercial properties that were deemed to be undervalued.

Senate Bill 230, sponsored in the House by Rep. Frank Burns (D-Pike Creek), was originally tabled in January over what House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover) called “due process” concerns for business owners.

But Burns said Monday that an amendment added to the bill sought to assuage those concerns by clarifying some key points: that only commercial properties are subject to subpoena, that records will be kept private and exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, and how objections and exceptions to subpoenas will be handled. 

“I think a lot of things were implicit in the language,” Burns said. “But I think people were more comfortable when it was explicitly stated.” 

House Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman thanked his House colleagues for answering concerns from business owners . | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

Senate Bill 230 passed unanimously, but not without one House Republican leader taking one final swipe at Senate Democrats for how the sausage was made. 

House Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman (R-Clayton) thanked his Democratic colleagues in the House for holding off on voting on the bill in January in order to “get it right.”

“Thank you for doing the process the right way,” Spiegelman said. “Unlike, perhaps, another chamber in this building.”

The amended bill will be taken up by the Senate when it next convenes at 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 11.

The post House passes subpoena power bill for ‘quality control’ assessment review  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-11 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The growth of data centers has become a hotly contested topic in Delaware and nationally, because the facilities, which power the technology of the future, require huge amounts of electricity. New regulations on the industry approved by New Castle County are the first of their kind in the state.

After months of acrimonious debate, the New Castle County Council agreed to compromise Tuesday and passed an ordinance that imposes new regulations onto the rapidly growing data center industry.  

The sweeping legislation includes new rules that require data centers to maintain buffer zones around them, and to use energy-efficient backup generators, among other regulations.

But the new regulations will not apply to the most controversial data center proposal in the state – the Project Washington development proposed near Delaware City.  It is not immediately clear whether they would apply to development projects already in the county’s approval pipeline that may add plans to build a data center at a future date.

“It’s a good start,” said Councilman Dave Carter, who wrote the bill. “It was difficult to make some compromises, but I think we’ve got tremendous improvements in.”

After council members critiqued the original legislation last fall, Carter worked with county staff to change the bill to address those concerns, such as concessions on noise regulations. The final proposal ultimately passed with 12 councilmembers voting yes, and 1 absent. 

Tensions ran high among audience members in the packed council chambers Tuesday evening, with jeers, laughs and applause throughout discussions by the council and during a public comment period. 

A resident speaks about data center regulations during a meeting of the New Castle County Council on Tuesday, March 10. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

But while past county council debates over the data center regulations got heated — one even featured a councilman flipping off another — this one stayed mostly cordial. 

After some debate and conferring with the council’s lawyer, councilmembers Janet Kilpatrick and John Cartier both agreed to withdraw their last-minute amendments, allowing the compromise to pass. 

Kilpatrick’s amendment would have exempted all existing buildings from following the regulations, while Cartier’s amendment would have made the regulations apply to data center proposals in the pipeline. 

Carter first proposed the regulations last summer amid a backlash to a developer’s plan to build a massive, power-hungry data center on about 580 acres north of the Delaware City Refinery, called Project Washington.

Many residents and elected officials feared the facility would harm the local environment and exacerbate an energy crunch that was already impacting the region.  

Project Washington would not have to follow these regulations, though. Part of the council’s compromise was to make the ordinance only apply to new projects, not ones already in the development pipeline. 

The New Castle County Council chambers were packed for a meeting Tuesday during which the council voted on a proposal to regulate the data center industry. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

Even so, members of Delaware’s building trades unions on Tuesday expressed fear that the regulations will cause the state to lose future data center projects, along with the tax revenue and jobs they would bring.

For months, those union members have accounted for the most vocal contingent in support of data center proposals locally.  

The ordinance will now go to County Executive Marcus Henry, who will either veto it or sign it into law. David Culver, New Castle County’s General Manager of Land Use, said during the hearing that Henry supports the regulations. 

What do the regulations say?

Carter’s amended ordinance included a few concessions on noise regulations, but also clearly outlined how data centers are allowed to use water to cool their supercomputers. 

Carter removed specific requirements developers would have to meet in order to dampen persistent noise from data centers. Instead, it says developers would have to defer to existing code that says they “shall not generate noise levels that exceed the pre-development noise level.”

He did the same for the lighting regulations, deferring back to existing standards for industrial projects. 

Additionally, the ordinance says data centers must use closed-loop cooling systems, which are designed to reuse as much water as possible. By mandating these systems, Carter said, data centers could reduce their water and energy use. 

The regulations say data center projects must be at least 1,000 feet from the nearest residential dwelling, unless the developers submit a noise study to the county. They could then build them within 500 feet of a home. 

Data center developers also must set aside funds to decommission the data center if they decide to no longer operate it. That means tearing down the buildings and restoring the land to its original condition. 

Where do the data center projects stand?

The regulations approved Tuesday will not impact the handful of data center projects that were already in New Castle County’s development pipeline, including most notably Project Washington near Delaware City.

The first half of that massive project has been hamstrung by a ruling under the Coastal Zone Act though, which would prohibit the data center’s use of diesel generators for back-up power. The developer, Starwood Digital Ventures, has appealed that ruling, but it could take months or years to be fully adjudicated.

The second half of Project Washington would require the same approval under the Coastal Zone Act by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control as well as a rezoning by the county — a more onerous process than the first phase that requires the county council to approve it.

The same Coastal Zone Act ruling could be a hurdle for a project proposed near the St. Georges Bridge. But it is unclear whether the new regulations would apply to it because the plan was originally for a warehouse.

Finally, a third site near Newark has perhaps the easiest path now that the regulations, and their effective start date, have been determined. That project would see the redevelopment of the White Clay Corporate Center into a three-building data center. It is already properly zoned, does not lie within the Coastal Zone and would not be affected by the new regulations.

The post After months of debate, New Castle County Council agrees to regulate data center industry appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-11 05:00

The Trump administration’s immigration enforcement arm is requesting unfettered access to what is considered to be the most comprehensive government database of people in the United States and their most private information, including sensitive details about individual children, according to six current and former federal officials.

It is called the Federal Parent Locator Service, and it’s meant for finding people who owe child support. Granting access to the Department of Homeland Security, the officials said, would violate a federal law that explicitly limits its use to determining and collecting child support payments and a handful of other narrow purposes. But DHS’ ask is being seriously considered within the Department of Health and Human Services, which maintains the database.

The database contains the name, address, Social Security number, employer, and salary or wages of every employed person in the country, as well as the equivalent details for anyone listed in state unemployment systems. It exists so that if someone owes child support, the government can pursue them for it even if they’ve changed jobs or moved to another state. 

The repository includes these personal details and employment records, updated throughout the year, for all types of people — even those who don’t have any children. Only some who work exclusively in the gig or cash economy, or who are entirely self-employed, might not be listed.

The database also names every child in the U.S. who is the subject of a state child support case, including each child’s sex, birthday and Social Security number, as well as family members’ names and relationships. And it identifies when single mothers and kids who receive child support are domestic violence victims — alongside their address. 

“This is the most powerful people-finder system that the U.S. government has, and possibly that exists,” said Bethanne Barnes, who from 2019 through October of last year was a data director for the Administration for Children and Families, the subdivision of HHS that oversees the database.

Turning the child support data over to Homeland Security “would be disastrous for child support enforcement” and “would ruin the foundation of the child support program,” said Vicki Turetsky, who was commissioner of HHS’ office of child support enforcement from 2009 to 2016. Turetsky said that if this were to happen, many employers, fearful of ICE arrests of their employees or workplace raids, would consider no longer reporting new hires to the government. This in turn would degrade the ability of the system to find parents who owe payments to their kids, she said.

State child support agency leaders have been nervously messaging one another about this prospect recently, said Kate Cooper Richardson, the longtime head of Oregon’s child support program who retired in January. State officials have spent decades building trust with employers, Cooper Richardson said, reminding them that submitting their new-hire data to child support authorities is required and that sensitive information about their workers will be used only for child support enforcement and otherwise kept confidential. Some business leaders have already reached out to state administrators, she said, concerned about rumors of President Donald Trump’s administration seeking to use this data for immigration enforcement.

“And if we’re not learning from employers when a parent who owes child support gets a new job, who loses in that situation?” Cooper Richardson said. “The 1 in 5 U.S. children who rely on consistent and regular child support.”

A White House spokesperson said in a statement that “the entire Trump administration is working to lawfully implement the President’s agenda to put Americans first. Any sensitive information required to do so will be obtained and handled properly.” A DHS representative requested additional time to respond to detailed questions sent by email, which ProPublica agreed to, but DHS did not provide any responses. 

Last year, Department of Government Efficiency appointees sought and for a brief period gained access to the National Directory of New Hires, the part of the child support database that contains people’s employment information. It is unclear what, if anything, the DOGE team did with this data; the federal courts temporarily blocked it from continuing to access Social Security, IRS and other sensitive records, and then DOGE disbanded last summer before final rulings on the legality of its efforts had been made. 

Over the past month, though, three officials said, DHS has separately and expressly requested both the new-hire data and also the Federal Case Registry, the other half of the database where the catalog of all child support cases is housed. This has the much more sensitive specifics on families and children, including information on paternity, domestic violence and more.

It is unclear why DHS would want this, given that locating undocumented immigrants at their places of work or targeting those businesses for raids would be possible using just the employment data, without all of the case registry’s additional personal details. Whatever DHS’ intentions might be, multiple officials and privacy experts interviewed for this story expressed concern that abusers in the ranks of law enforcement would soon be able to see their victims’ case information and addresses, and that a manifest of vulnerable children would become widely available in the government.

The Department of Health and Human Services general counsel’s office, which is run by a Trump political official, must now decide whether it believes federal law allows the agency to provide DHS with the full child support database. Child support staff strongly oppose doing this, but the request is now with the lawyers, people familiar with the situation said.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. may also have to approve the data sharing. If it’s approved, the department is likely to be sued by legal advocacy groups almost immediately, lawyers and experts said.

HHS did not respond to a request for comment.

Internal emails show that HHS’ Administration for Children and Families last year was also directed to cross-check all of its other datasets — on families who interact with child care, foster care, Head Start and other systems — against DHS immigration records. The Trump administration has expanded a DHS tool called SAVE to allow federal and state agencies to check the citizenship of millions of people at once, including those who rely on public assistance programs like these. (Also using this tool, the administration has consistently inaccurately flagged citizens as noncitizens on state voter rolls, ProPublica has reported.)

In DHS’ efforts to gather data from other agencies, the department has argued that several U.S. statutes allow federal law enforcement to obtain information without a warrant from any government agency pertaining to the identity and location of people living in the country illegally, especially if national security is at stake. In DHS’ view, these statutes should overrule all others, even a law that would seem to bar the department from obtaining an entire database of sensitive information about children unrelated to immigration.

Congress has previously permitted a handful of exceptions that allow certain agencies to access parts of the child support data archive. That includes using it in limited ways to help manage custody and visitation cases, to pursue people who have federal student loan debt and to check the incomes of those who apply for means-tested government programs, like housing assistance. 

Maya Bernstein has overseen federal data privacy policies for over three decades, starting during the first Bush administration. In the 1990s, she helped lead the work on the creation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, the medical records privacy law, before serving 20 years as the senior adviser for privacy policy at HHS. “I know a lot about a lot of different databases,” she said, and the child support database is “the one that I’m most worried about.”

“It is very unusual for them to want the Federal Case Registry,” Bernstein added, referring to the part of the database with children’s case information. “In my career, no one has asked for access to that. Most people have never even heard of it.”

The post DHS Seeks Access to Massive Employment, Salary and Family Database Legally Restricted to Use in Child Support Cases appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-10 21:03

More than 100,000 people have tuned in to watch ‘kākāpō cam’, which captures a rare flightless bird sleeping, tidying her nest and fighting off intruders

On an island in New Zealand’s remote south , one of the world’s strangest and rarest parrots – the kākāpō – is caring for her tiny chick as fans from across the globe watch on.

Through the black and white lens of a hidden camera, a fluffy orb with a kazoo-like squeak jostles for food from its mother’s beak. The mother, Rakiura, is attentive – scooping her chick under her large green wings, fending off an intruding bird, and periodically tidying her nest.

This article was amended on 12 March 2026. The kākāpō featured in the story lives on an island in New Zealand’s remote south, not the southern fjords, as previously reported.

Continue reading...

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-10 16:47

Multiple news outlets have reported that video, satellite images and expert analysis indicate that the United States was likely responsible for the Feb. 28 bombing of an Iranian school for young girls, contradicting President Donald Trump’s unsupported claim that the deadly strike “was done by Iran.”

When a reporter aboard Air Force One asked Trump on March 7 if the U.S. had bombed the Shajareh Tayyebeh elementary school, the president said, “No, in my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran.” He continued: “We think it was done by Iran – because they are very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who was standing near Trump at the time, didn’t echo the president’s version of events when a reporter asked if that claim was accurate.

“We’re certainly investigating,” Hegseth said, before adding that “the only side that targets civilians is Iran.”

But the available evidence suggests that Iran wasn’t at fault, according to several news reports.

A view of the debris of a school, where many students and teachers lost their lives on the first day of the wave of attacks launched by the U.S. and Israel against Iran, in Hormozgan, Iran, on March 5. Photo by Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images.

The bombing happened on the first day of U.S. and Israeli airstrikes against Iran as part of the joint military mission known as Operation Epic Fury. The school was located in very close proximity to an Iranian naval base operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that was bombed in the air attacks. NBC News reported that the naval base had closed more than a decade ago, according to an official with Iran’s education ministry and a mother the network interviewed.

Iranian officials have said that more than 160 people, mostly students, were killed when the school was hit. But the number of casualties hasn’t been independently verified.

A video posted March 8 by the Mehr News Agency, which has been described as a semiofficial Iranian news service, shows a missile striking in the vicinity where the naval base and school were in southern Iran, according to news reports. Smoke was already visible in the surrounding area when the missile landed and exploded, creating a new, darker plume of smoke and debris. Multiple news organizations verified the video using geolocation tools.

The New York Times reported that satellite images it obtained from Planet Labs show “that multiple precision strikes hit at least six Revolutionary Guards buildings along with the school,” including four buildings that were completely destroyed. The Times, citing a timeline of the strikes, said that the video suggests that the school could have already been struck when that missile made impact with another structure.

The Washington Post reported that eight munitions experts said that the missile seen in the Mehr News Agency video, based on its shape, appears to be a Tomahawk Land Attack Missile, which the U.S. developed and is known to have used in its air assault on Iran. The U.S. military has released several videos and photos of those long-range missiles being launched from Navy warships during the now 11-day conflict. 

Trevor Ball, a former U.S. Army explosive ordnance disposal technician who covers munitions for the investigative journalism group Bellingcat, wrote in a thread on X that the posted video “shows a US Tomahawk missile hitting an IRGC facility in Minab, Iran, on Feb 28, showing for the first time that the US struck the area.” He said, “The footage appears to contradict President Donald Trump’s claim it was an Iranian missile that hit the school.”

In a March 9 press conference in Miami, Trump still insisted that Iran could be responsible, saying it “also has some Tomahawks” and Iran “wish[es] they had more.” The president added: “But whether it’s Iran or somebody else, the fact that a Tomahawk, a Tomahawk is very generic.”

But there is no evidence that Iran has acquired Tomahawk missiles. “Iran has none, though it has lots of missiles of different kinds,” Mark Cancian, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic & International Studies, told us in an email.

Ball wrote on X that the U.S. “is the only participant in the war that is known to have Tomahawk missiles.”

In addition, Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a news conference on March 4 that the initial U.S. airstrikes were focused in the south of Iran, where the school bombing occurred. Israel “predominantly” targeted air defense systems in Iran’s “northern flank,” he said.

“An Israeli military official said the military was looking into the school incident but wasn’t aware of an Israeli strike in that area” with the school, the Wall Street Journal reported.

When asked about the school bombing, a U.S. Central Command spokesman, Capt. Tim Hawkins, told reporters that “it would be inappropriate to comment given the incident is under investigation.”

Meanwhile, Reuters, citing two unnamed U.S. officials, reported on March 5 that “U.S. military investigators believe it is likely that U.S. forces were responsible for an apparent strike on an Iranian girls’ school.” U.S. officials requesting anonymity to speak about the preliminary findings told the Associated Press, CBS News and the Wall Street Journal the same thing.

CBS News said “[t]he preliminary U.S. assessment suggests that the United States is ‘likely’ responsible for the deadly attack but did not intentionally target the school and may have hit it in error, possibly due to the use of dated intelligence which wrongly identified the area as still part of an Iranian military installation.”

In response to early reports about the probe, a White House spokeswoman, Anna Kelly, issued a statement to reporters saying that the “investigation is ongoing” and has reached “no conclusions at this time.” She called it “both irresponsible and false for anyone to claim otherwise.”

Reuters said in its reporting that the officials it spoke with “did not rule out the possibility that new evidence could emerge that absolves the US of responsibility.”

Even with satellite images and video of the airstrikes, remnants of the missile would need to be examined to more definitively determine culpability, N.R. Jenzen-Jones, an arms and munitions intelligence specialist who directs the Armament Research Services, told the newswire.

Complicating matters, the AP said, is the fact that “[n]o independent agency has reached the site during the war to investigate.”

At the March 9 press conference, Trump was asked why he is the only person in the U.S. government claiming that Iran was responsible for the bombing of the school. He replied: “Because I just don’t know enough about it. I think it’s something that I was told is under investigation, but Tomahawks are used by others, as you know. Numerous other nations have tomahawks. They buy them from us.”

But Cancian told us that the only countries other than the U.S. using Tomahawks are the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan and the Netherlands.

The U.K. and Australia have previously purchased the missiles, according to their own defense departments. The U.S. State Department approved selling the weapons to Japan and the Netherlands, in 2023 and 2025, respectively.

Those four countries are not involved in the U.S-Israeli conflict with Iran.

Ultimately, once the investigation is complete, “whatever the report shows, I’m willing to live with that report,” Trump 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 Without Providing Evidence, Trump Pins School Bombing on Iran appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-13 16:04
2026-03-10 11:47

China’s economic statecraft has been exposed by US attacks on Iran and Venezuela Expert comment jon.wallace

The US strikes raise questions over China’s policy to forge energy and trade ties with US rivals. But in the long term, Beijing sees itself gaining diplomatic capital through a contrasting role as a stable and peaceful superpower.

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The US attack this month on Iran, coupled with that on Venezuela in January, register as a blow to China’s diplomatic and economic statecraft. Beijing has forged a comprehensive relationship with both countries that spanned diplomacy, energy, trade, infrastructure and even military cooperation.

China has a ‘Comprehensive Strategic Partnership’ with Iran, denoting one of the highest tiers in China’s hierarchy of diplomatic ties. Significant investments are involved. As part of the partnership, in 2021 Beijing and Tehran signed a 25-year, $400 billion deal to invest in Iran’s energy, infrastructure and banking sectors, partly in exchange for discounted oil exports to China. Tehran exported more than an estimated 80 per cent of its oil to China in 2025, representing a lifeline for the regime.

Other aspects of China’s involvement in Iran include the construction of new railway lines from Tehran to Hamadan and Sanandaj, as well as from Kermanshah to Khosravi. Ports, airport and navigation systems are also under development, according to local media reports, and a $2.1 billion project to upgrade the Abadan refinery is underway.

China enjoys an ‘All-Weather Strategic Partnership’ with Venezuela, a term that also indicates a significant level of diplomatic affinity. China received three quarters of Venezuelan oil exports in 2025, according to Reuters, using oil to repay significant loans. 

But now, as the US strikes these Chinese partners and goes after Chinese strategic assets (such as two ports in the Panama Canal controlled by a Hong Kong Chinese company), Beijing is finding that its strategy of courting US adversaries threatens to jeopardize some of its interests.

Broadening out this theme are the cases of Ukraine and, potentially, Cuba. In Ukraine, China – as a staunch partner to Russia – finds itself on the opposing side to the US-led West. In Cuba, where President Donald Trump has said he wants to effect a ‘friendly takeover’, China has significant commercial ties and some aspects of military cooperation.

US intentions

All this raises a question: is US action in Iran, Venezuela and Cuba intended to impede China’s statecraft? Clear answers remain elusive. 

President Donald Trump has justified the Iran intervention for reasons including supporting Iranian protestors, combating Iran’s regional network of proxy groups, and eliminating its ballistic missile programme. 

The Venezuelan attack had a similar range of justifications, from acting as a judicial extraction mission against an alleged ‘narco-terrorist’ (former Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro), and compensation for supposedly stolen US energy assets. In each case, the prime motivation appears to have been specific to each country as opposed to part of a broader strategy to counter Beijing’s influence. 

China’s pragmatism revealed by lack of concrete support for Tehran

Regardless of US motivations, its attacks on Iran and Venezuela have demonstrated the limits of China’s support for countries with which it professed to share ‘strategic partnerships’ – and the strain of pragmatism in Beijing’s foreign policy.

China has resisted taking concrete action against the US in response to the strikes on its partners. Not only that, but it appears likely to go ahead with plans to host Trump for a summit at the end of the month. Asked this week if China would still host the US president, Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, did not answer directly but hinted the summit was still on, saying ‘the agenda of high-level exchanges is already on the table’.

To be sure, Beijing has been forthright in its verbal criticism of US operations this year. After the abduction of Maduro, Wang Yi said: ‘We have never believed that any country can act as the world’s police, nor do we accept that any nation can declare itself the world’s judge’.

Beijing has clearly demonstrated that ties with Iran and Venezuela do not rank anywhere close to the utility it sees in trying to improve relations with the Trump White House.

Addressing Iran, he said it was ‘unacceptable for the US and Israel to launch attacks against Iran… still less to blatantly assassinate a leader of a sovereign country and instigate regime change’.

‘This was a war that should never have happened, and a war that benefited no one,’ he said on Sunday, portraying China as ‘the world’s most important force of peace, stability and justice’. Wang reiterated Beijing’s call for an immediate ceasefire to ‘prevent the situation from escalating and avoid the spillover and spread of the flames of war’.

But the reality is that in spite of its pledges of partnership, and its public condemnations, Beijing has clearly demonstrated that ties with Iran and Venezuela do not rank anywhere close to the utility it sees in trying to improve relations with the Trump White House, and prevent it from again turning vengeful on China. 

Washington retains a panoply of economic sanctions against China, including hundreds of Chinese companies identified on the so-called ‘entity list’, a separate regime of restrictions on semiconductor exports, and a range of other bans related to military, human rights, narcotics, cybersecurity, surveillance and other issues. 

It also maintains some tariffs on Chinese exports to the US. The Chinese economy has not been excessively hindered by these measures – exports, for instance, have surged this year. But Beijing still prioritizes preventing a new round of trade war with Washington.

China may benefit from portraying itself as the stable superpower

Beijing’s inaction in support of its partners may cause some short-term damage to China’s prestige – and the perceived value of its ‘strategic partnerships’. But China will also see merit in its approach over the long-term.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-10 11:45

The University of Phoenix expects enrollment to grow as the Education Department softens oversight of for-profit schools, despite industry concerns.

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-10 10:02

Finland’s president, Alexander Stubb, on why Europe needs flexible integration 17 March 2026 — 12:30PM TO 1:15PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join us at Chatham House to hear from President Stubb on the need for Europe to adapt to a rapidly changing world.

Join us at Chatham House to hear from President Alexander Stubb on the need for Europe to adapt to a rapidly changing world.

Alexander Stubb speaking at the NATO summit.

Europe is entering a period in which it is being severely tested. Geopolitical, economic and technological changes are heightening the sense of urgency across the continent to provide a coherent response to the many challenges Europe faces.

Alexander Stubb, President of Finland, will outline why he believes a more flexible model of European integration is essential for the continent to remain resilient, competitive and unified. He will reflect on Europe’s current security environment, the pressures on multilateral cooperation, and the need for pragmatic mechanisms to enable countries to enact much-needed change at pace, all still with a shared sense of purpose.

President Stubb will discuss how differentiated integration could strengthen the EU’s ability to respond to global challenges, from defence and energy to technology and economic security. He will also consider the political realities facing Europe in an era of shifting alliances and rising geopolitical tension, and outline how greater flexibility could help the continent protect its interests and values.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-10 06:41

Mexico's anti-cartel operations seek to prove to Trump it is serious about security, as World Cup looms Expert comment LToremark

President Sheinbaum hopes that operations like that against ‘El Mencho’ and wider efforts to cooperate with the Trump administration’s demands will protect Mexico from more drastic US actions.

National Guard police officers participate in the initial training ceremony for community policing officers at the San Miguel de los Jagueyes Military Base.

On 22 February, Mexico’s armed forces carried out a major operation against one of the most important cartels, Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). The main target was El Mencho, the alias of CJNG leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, who was captured wounded and later died during transit to a medical facility. CJNG members responded with disruptive acts of violence in several states, and at least 25 members of the National Guard were killed in the fighting.

Last week, Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum visited Guadalajara in Jalisco state – a World Cup host city – to assuage security concerns and announce that up to 100,000 security personnel will be deployed during the 2026 World Cup.

The El Mencho operation was carried out with the help of US information and intelligence. President Trump has previously criticized Mexico’s efforts to tackle the cartels and even threatened a US attack on Mexican soil against a cartel target. This exceptional raid is part of a wider collaboration network between the two countries, which will reduce the likelihood of any immediate US action. Some analysts, however, assume such intervention would never happen, given that Mexico is home to the largest number of Americans outside the US.

Mexico and the United States have one of the closest and most complex bilateral relationships in the world. More than 30 million people of Mexican origin live in the US, while 1.6 million Americans live in Mexico. The two countries are also each other’s most important trading partner and share a 1,954-mile-long border – only slightly shorter than the distance from the UK to Syria.

But the relationship has come under increased pressure since Trump took office last year. President Sheinbaum has so far cooperated with US demands while also attempting to push for domestic reforms. While the US priorities are overwhelmingly migration and security, reforms in other areas that could also affect US interests – such as justice, energy, and political system reform – have been dealt with pragmatically and steps have been taken to ensure US companies are not negatively affected.

Under Trump, three issues have come into sharp focus: migration, security and trade. The three were dramatically intertwined when Trump made free trade contingent on actions by Mexico on migration and security. In November 2024, Trump threatened a 25 per cent tariff on Mexico until it solved the ‘problem’ of fentanyl and illegal immigration – a threat he made good on in February 2025. The lack of information on how advances in these areas would be measured resulted in huge levels of uncertainty. Illegal migration and drugs flow north across the border into the US, but US guns flow south – and into the hands of Mexican cartels. 

After intense diplomatic and backchannel conversations, large carve-outs were made to these tariffs in March 2025. As result, 85 per cent of Mexican exports to the US still flow on a free-trade basis, and remaining exports have a low average tariff of just 4.5 per cent. Meanwhile, the situation on the border has changed drastically. ‘Contacts’ with migrants on the US border dropped from 2.5 million in 2023 to 443,000 in 2025, the lowest in 50 years.

On action against cartels, Mexico has made several goodwill gestures. It has renewed and intensified dialogue, cooperation, intelligence gathering and information sharing on the activities and methods of drug cartels. It has also resumed joint training for security forces and accepted an increased number of security-related attachés at the US embassy in Mexico. Between February 2025 and January 2026, 93 high-ranking cartel figures serving sentences in Mexican jails were sent to the US outside formal deportation procedures.

The more Mexico and the US cooperate successfully on security-related matters, the less likely a US drone strike on Mexican soil becomes. While future joint operations should not be entirely ruled out, it is far more probable that Mexican authorities will execute them. Successful security cooperation will show the US that Mexico is a trustworthy partner and that it is in the best interest of both countries to maintain dialogue, cooperation and coordination.

Progress on migration and security are also helping to lay the groundwork for more productive talks on renewing the US, Mexico and Canada Free Trade Agreement (USMCA), due for renewal by 1 July. Trade is a key part of the bilateral relationship. In 2025, exports from the US to Mexico reached $338 billion, while Mexican exports to the US reached $535 billion (compared to $308.4 billion for China’s exports to the US).  

Other developments too have increased the probability of an agreement on the USMCA being reached in time, including bilateral negotiations carried out during numerous trips to Washington by Mexican officials. These negotiations have so far been based on a 54-point list of pending issues from the US side, formally delivered to President Sheinbaum by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during his trip to Mexico City in September 2025. The list includes a wide variety of issues, ranging from energy, intellectual property and agriculture to relations with China.

The US’s main concerns regarding China revolve around Chinese involvement in the ownership of Mexican ports and container terminals, and Mexico’s perceived lack of accuracy and transparency on its trade with China, such as inputs in supply chains, as well as Chinese investment. Mexican authorities have responded reforming its foreign investment screening mechanism and imposing more than 1,400 new tariffs on certain goods coming from various countries – mainly from China. Progress made will hopefully avoid a protracted renegotiation process on the USMCA which could open a Pandora’s box at the worst possible time, creating uncertainty and volatility for the Mexican economy.

2026-03-13 12:04
2026-03-09 20:51

A researcher at a far-right think tank helped Justice Department prosecutors craft their indictment for terror charges against an alleged “north Texas antifa cell,” the researcher testified Monday. The charges were brought in relation to a protest outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center outside Dallas.

Kyle Shideler of the Center for Security Policy said under questioning from a defense attorney that he provided language that prosecutors used in the first-ever domestic terrorism case against a purported antifa cell.

The decision to use the language was the government’s, Shideler said.

“I told them what I believed to be an accurate definition of antifa, and they used it,” Shideler said.

The courtroom testimony provided a window into the extraordinarily close cooperation between federal prosecutors and a Washington advocacy group that has regularly argued for government action against left-wing activists.

Shideler himself was the author of a September article titled “How to Dismantle Far-Left Extremist Networks: A Roadmap for the Trump Administration” that called on the Justice Department to take more aggressive action against left-of-center activists. He said he conferred with prosecutors in October, a month before they obtained an indictment in the Texas case.

Related

How Many Members Does Antifa Have? Where Is Its Headquarters? The FBI Has No Answers.

Defense lawyers raised questions about Shideler’s professional home, the Center for Security Policy. The nonprofit think tank was founded by Frank Gaffney, a former Defense Department official under President Ronald Reagan who has routinely been described as an Islamophobic conspiracy theorist. Gaffney’s views on Islam are commonly espoused at Center for Security Policy events.

The center itself has been branded a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a designation Shideler bristled at in court.

“Yes sir, the Southern Poverty Law Center has mislabeled many people as a hate group,” he said in response to questioning from defense lawyer Phillip Hayes.

The nine defendants on trial this month face years or life sentences in prison for a noise demonstration outside ICE’s Prairieland Detention Center on July 4 of last year.

Related

Texas “Antifa Cell” Terror Trial Takes On Tough Questions About Guns at Protests Against ICE

After demonstrators used fireworks in a show of solidarity for the detainees held inside the Alvarado, Texas, facility, local police arrived to confront them. One of the responding officers was shot in the neck.

Shideler testified as an expert witness for the government over the objections of defense attorneys, who were overruled by U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, a Donald Trump appointee.

In lengthy testimony, he provided a recounting of the history of antifascist organizing that ranged from 1930s Germany to 1980s U.K. activism to the present-day United States. Various tactics used by the Prairieland demonstrators to protect their identities — such as Signal chats, “black block” clothing, and a general “security culture” — were all consistent with antifa practices, Shideler said.

Under questioning from prosecutors, Shideler sought to tie the ideas laid out in anarchist zines recovered from the defendants’ possession with their actions outside the detention center.

Several cooperating defendants have testified that they did not consider themselves members of antifa, defense attorneys pointed out during cross-examination.

They also went on the attack over Shideler’s professional qualifications and his conclusions. Shideler acknowledged that he does not use academic social science methods, does not submit his research for peer review, and relies largely on open-source materials whose authenticity is difficult to verify.

Shideler called Signal a “hallmark of antifa” before adding that he uses it himself.

Shideler called Signal a “hallmark of antifa” before adding that he uses it himself.

The antifa trial is Shideler’s first time testifying as an expert witness in a trial, he said. One defense lawyer noted that Shideler was invited to testify about antifa before the Senate Judiciary Committee in October and asked whether his courtroom appearance this week would provide a further boost to his career.

“I guess it will depend how it goes,” he said.

His testimony is set to continue Tuesday.

The post Islamophobic Think Tank Helped Write Indictment Against ICE Protesters appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-12 20:04
2026-03-09 11:31

Trump’s ‘Shield of the Americas’ coalition is destined to fail Expert comment jon.wallace

The Shield seeks to address serious security and narcotics issues. But a detail-light, ‘Trumpista-only’ alliance repeats past mistakes in Latin America. 

Leaders pose at the start of the The Shield of the Americas Summit on 7 March 2026 in Doral, Florida.

Latin America’s regional diplomatic history is littered with failed multilateral organizations. Some have disappeared, such as the Union of South American Republics (UNASUR) and the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our Americas (ALBA). Others, such as the Latin American Parliament or the Community of Latin America and Caribbean States (CELAC) continue to limp along, zombie projects of once high-minded goals.  

This past weekend US President Donald Trump added one of his own. 

The ‘Shield of the Americas’ sounds much like a new instalment in the Marvel movie series. The first summit, convened on 7 March at the Trump resort in Doral, Florida, was intended to create an alliance to improve regional security and combat drug cartels. ‘The heart of our agreement,’ said President Trump, ‘is a commitment to using lethal military force to destroy the sinister cartels and terrorist networks.’ 

To that end the president brought together 13 heads of state, including the presidents of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama and Paraguay, as well as the prime ministers of Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica.    

All are centre- to hard-right leaders, whom President Trump has either praised (Javier Milei of Argentina, Santiago Peña of Paraguay, Nayib Bukele of El Salvador) or endorsed when they were candidates (Tito Asfura of Honduras).  

The others have vocally supported Trump’s policies in the Western Hemisphere. Notably, the sitting president of Chile – leftist Gabriel Boric – was passed over in favour of the president elect, Jose Antonio Kast, who ran promising ‘Trumpista’ hardline policies on crime and immigration. The defence/security secretaries of Bahamas, Belize, Guatemala, and Peru were also present.

Pointedly absent at the Doral-fest were the presidents of Brazil (Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva), Mexico (Clauda Sheinbaum) and Colombia (Gustavo Petro), all of them of the left. This is significant: those three countries represent more than half of the region’s GDP. And they host a large part of the region’s illicit markets including narcotics production and trade – the supposed targets of the summit. 

And, even as the usual summit ‘grip-and-grin’ photo-ops took place, with Trump, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hesgeth and newly appointed head of the Shield of the Americas Kristi Noem, the shadow of previous failures loomed.

All Latin America’s defunct or zombie multilateral organizations were founded on laudable goals. But they had fatal flaws. And the Shield of the Americas shares many of them.

Now what?

In the end, the summit produced a half-page declaration, with signatories agreeing to four general points.

According to the official press release, those were: ‘expand multilateral and bilateral cooperation to enhance security’; cooperate in ‘whole of government’ efforts regarding ‘border security, countering narco-terrorism and trafficking, securing critical infrastructure, and other areas as mutually determined’; ‘advance peace through strength’; and ‘join a coalition to combat narco-terrorism and other shared threats to the Western Hemisphere’. Nothing more.

These are noble objectives addressing essential challenges for US foreign policy south of its border. And a new initiative could help deliver a long-overdue re-evaluation of failing past policies. Cocaine production and transnational crime of all sorts have increased over the last half decade. 

There are no promises to address the root causes of insecurity and crime – poverty, weak states and corruption. 

In Colombia, cocaine production jumped 53 per cent in 2023 alone. Between 2023 and 2024, the US seized more than 45,000 pounds of fentanyl crossing its border, the vast majority produced in and shipped from Mexico, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. And crime/ insecurity is the number one concern of Latin American citizens according to recent surveys and the International Monetary Fund.   

But like many Trump initiatives – and previous failed Latin American multilateralism attempts – there is a telling lack of detail. The thin, four-point official announcement presents no long-term commitments for burden sharing. There are no promises to address the root causes of insecurity and crime – poverty, weak states and corruption. And, perhaps most importantly, no funding has been allocated to beef up security cooperation through regional institutions that can share intelligence, conduct joint manoeuvres and intercept drugs and related financial flows. 

Neither are there regionally integrated plans for tracking cross border flows of illicit activities (including narcotics but also illegal gold, timber, and copper, money laundering and human trafficking). And no commitments have been made to independently investigate government involvement in corruption. 

Partisanship

Most of all, it is misguided to believe that a summit of only like-minded leaders can establish a meaningful basis for long-term shared principles and cooperation on security and narcotics issues.  

The openly partisan nature of this effort hobbles it at the outset. Without Brazil, Colombia and Mexico three of the most important Latin American countries are missing. 

It is unclear whether they were invited or not. But the fact that their presidents were not in the Trump orbit likely contributed to their absence. Their concerns about the president’s so called ‘Donroe Doctrine’, and the spectacular US operation to abduct Venezuela’s former president Nicolas Maduro, may also have played a part. Brazil’s Lula, Mexico’s Sheinbaum and Colombia’s Petro have all spoken out against the operation. 

Their absence is a fundamental flaw. Any meaningful hemispheric military alliance that could begin to hope to address the Shield’s lofty goals would need to include these countries. 

As the data indicate, Colombia and Mexico are the major sources of narcotics entering the US. And Brazil is the home of one of the largest criminals groups in the region, the ‘Primeiro Comando da Capital (Brazil)’. 

Trump may feel that the clear MAGA hue to the Shield of the Americas will make it easier for him to pursue his objectives – which many believe include countering Chinese influence in the region. But past Latin American attempts at regional alliances shows: partisan networking relationships never last. 

2026-03-12 16:04
2026-03-08 07:10

OpenAI claims it has accomplished what Anthropic couldn’t: securing a Pentagon contract that won’t cross professed red lines against dragnet domestic spying and the use of artificial intelligence to order lethal military strikes. Just don’t expect any proof.

Sam Altman, OpenAI’s CEO, announced the company’s big win with the Defense Department in a post on X on February 27.

“Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems,” he wrote. The Pentagon “agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement.”

The deal came after the very public implosion of what was to be a similar contract between the U.S. military and Anthropic, one of OpenAI’s chief rivals. Anthropic had said negotiations collapsed because it could not enshrine prohibitions against killer robots and domestic spying in its contract. The company’s insistence on these two points earned it the wrath of the Pentagon and President Donald Trump, who ordered the government to phase out use of Anthropic’s tools within six months.

But if the government booted Anthropic for refusing mass surveillance and autonomous weapons, how could OpenAI take over the contract without having the same problem?

OpenAI has attempted to square this circle through a string of posts to X by company executives and researchers, including Katrina Mulligan, its national security chief, and a claim by Altman that the company negotiated stricter protections around domestic surveillance.

The company and the government, however, are not releasing the only proof that matters: the contract itself.

The Department of Defense did not respond to a request for comment.

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OpenAI and company personnel contacted by The Intercept did not respond when asked for specific contract language. Company spokesperson Kate Waters did not respond to questions, sending The Intercept only links to prior public statements from Altman.

(In 2024, The Intercept sued OpenAI in federal court over the company’s use of copyrighted articles to train its chatbot ChatGPT. The case is ongoing.)

So far, OpenAI has released only snippets of the deal’s language loaded with PR-speak and national security jargon. Without being able to verify the company’s claims, Altman’s pitch to the world comes down to one premise: Trust me — along with Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth — to do the right thing.

Following widespread criticism of these vagaries, Altman said earlier this week that the firm was able to quickly negotiate into its contract stricter terms with the Pentagon. These additions, Altman said, include language the company claims will stop domestic spying and collaboration with the National Security Agency.

But the company’s muddled messaging throughout the week only raised more questions about OpenAI’s willingness to do the federal government’s bidding.

“We have been working with the DoW to make some additions in our agreement to make our principles very clear,” Altman posted on Monday, using Trump’s preferred name for the Department of Defense.

“The Department also affirmed that our services will not be used by Department of War intelligence agencies (for example, the NSA),” Altman continued. “Any services to those agencies would require a follow-on modification to our contract.”

Since OpenAI has not released the contract, it’s unclear if the Pentagon’s affirmation is actually reflected in binding contract language.

Mulligan at first responded to criticism of the company’s deal with a pledge to release a “clear and more comprehensive explanation” of the relevant terms of the contract. On Tuesday, having failed to deliver such an explanation, she told one concerned X user, “I do not agree that I’m obligated to share contract language with you.”

She added, “For the record, I would want to work with NSA if the right safeguards were in place,” but did not specify what these safeguards might be.

Former military officials told The Intercept they had grave concerns about the arrangement based on what’s been made public. “I’m not confident in the language at all. And in some parts I don’t even believe it,” said Brad Carson, who previously served as under secretary of the Army during the Obama administration and is co-founder of Public First, a super PAC that lobbies in favor of AI safety regulation and is funded in part by Anthropic.

Carson noted that blocking Pentagon spy agencies like the NSA or National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency would ostensibly prevent usage of OpenAI’s tools in pressing intelligence analysis contexts, like the ongoing war against Iran. “I don’t believe that provision is in the contract. I say that reluctantly, but I don’t,” Carson added.

A former Pentagon official who worked on military artificial intelligence applications told The Intercept the caveats around “intentional” surveillance are worryingly unclear. “That’s the get out of jail free card right there,” this source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said in an interview. “The language gives them enough flexibility to still do whatever the fuck they want, more or less, and then say, whoops, sorry, didn’t mean to.”

“There is nothing OpenAI can do to clarify this except release the contract.”

“There is nothing OpenAI can do to clarify this except release the contract,” former Department of Justice National Security Division attorney Alan Rozenshtein said. Rozenshtein described OpenAI’s attempt to sell its contract to the public without letting the public read the contract as “not sustainable” and “bizarre.” If OpenAI will restrict its tools from the NSA, with its long-documented history of extra-constitutional dragnet domestic surveillance, this would be memorialized in the contract, not a tweet, he said. But if OpenAI has indeed come to any such agreement with the government, it is asking the world to take it as an article of faith.

“It’s quite possible that OpenAI understands that these red lines are fake, but has written a contract to give them some PR coverage. That would be bad because that feels pretty dishonest,” Rozenshtein added. “Or it’s possible that OpenAI has a different understanding of its own contract than what DOD understands the contract to be. Which is a bad position to be in, and suggests that this contract negotiation has not been done skillfully.”

Potentially undermining OpenAI’s credibility is that some of its public outreach has been simply untrue. Asked by an X user whether the contract would permit the Pentagon “[g]etting and/or analyzing commercially available data at scale,” Mulligan replied, “The Pentagon has no legal authority to do this.” This is false, at least according to the Pentagon. A declassified 2022 report by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence provided an overview of the collection of commercially available data by the government, including the Department of Defense — exactly the activity Mulligan was asked about.

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The Pentagon’s domestic surveillance has been further established in news reports. In 2021, Motherboard reported a letter sent from Sen. Ron Wyden to the Department of Defense in which he urged then-Secretary Lloyd Austin “to release to the public information about the Department of Defense’s (DoD) warrantless surveillance of Americans.” A New York Times report on a related investigation by Wyden’s office that same year showed that the Defense Intelligence Agency had spied on Americans’ precise movements and locations without a warrant by simply buying access to their GPS coordinates. In a letter responding to Wyden, the Pentagon said the DIA’s lawyers had blessed the surveillance.

“It is a fact that the Pentagon has both purchased and analyzed vast amounts of Americans’ location, web browsing, and other data, for years,” Wyden wrote in a statement to The Intercept. “I’ve personally revealed several of those programs, with the help of brave whistleblowers. Anyone who claims that isn’t happening simply doesn’t know what they’re talking about.”

OpenAI’s rhetoric fails to reckon with the way the national security state has secured both secrecy and operational latitude through relying on misleading interpretation or radical ambiguity of words.

For instance, Altman shared on Monday evening a purportedly updated clause stating: “Consistent with applicable laws, including the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, National Security Act of 1947, FISA Act of 1978, the AI system shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons and nationals.”

The phrase “Consistent with applicable laws” sounds promising until one reflects on the fact that the government claims consistency with applicable laws in every dragnet surveillance program, drone strike, kidnapping, assassination, or invasion. “I’m saying that the programs are legal, obviously,” White House spokesperson Jay Carney told reporters in the early days after whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed the existence of the NSA. (Ironically, Mulligan was part of this public relations deflection effort during her stint in the Obama National Security Council.)

The word “intentionally” provides a miles-wide wall of plausible deniability that has helped cover for decades of domestic spying. In a March 2013 Senate hearing, Wyden asked then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, under oath, “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?” Clapper replied “No, sir.” When pressed, he added “Not wittingly.” A few months later, NSA materials disclosed by Snowden would reveal this was entirely false: The agency routinely collected vast quantities of information on Americans as a routine practice.

Related

Alex Karp Insists Palantir Doesn’t Spy on Americans. Here’s What He’s Not Saying.

The Clapper episode revealed the peril of public reliance on commonsense words like “wittingly” or “intentionally” in the context of national security. Offices like the NSA or ODNI are staffed by sharp legal minds, brilliant mathematicians, accomplished engineers, and funded with billions of dollars. They do little by accident. Altman’s invocation of “intentionally” spying on Americans, like Clapper’s dodge behind the term “wittingly,” reflects what’s known in the intelligence field as “incidental collection”: a euphemism that camouflages the fact that the government historically asserts spying on Americans is legal. In this case, incidental doesn’t mean by mistake, but rather secondary; while vacuuming up unfathomably large quantities of data to surveil foreigners, for whatever reasons deemed necessary, the government has asserted its legal right to catch Americans in the process, even if they are not the actual the target.

Altman’s other revised assurances come with similar linguistic escape hatches. “For the avoidance of doubt,” he wrote on X, “the Department understands this limitation to prohibit deliberate tracking, surveillance, or monitoring of U.S. persons or nationals, including through the procurement or use of commercially acquired personal or identifiable information.” Here, the word “deliberate” is load-bearing, while crucial terms like “tracking,” “surveillance,” and “monitoring” are left undefined.

“The word surveillance doesn’t even include the kind of activities that people are most concerned about,” Carson, former general counsel of the Army, said. He doubted the Pentagon, for instance, would consider using an OpenAI large language model to build intelligence dossiers on private citizens with data pulled from federal and commercial databases as an act of “surveillance.”

“They’re trying to blind you with complicated legal terms that ordinary people think mean something different entirely,” Carson said of OpenAI’s rhetoric. “But the lawyers know what it means. And the lawyers know that this is no guardrail at all.”

One’s ultimate comfort with and confidence in this occluded contract will likely be reduced to one’s opinion of the integrity of the involved parties. How one of the most secretive institutions in the world will use the technology of similarly opaque corporation will remain the stuff of trade secrecy and classified records.

Altman and Mulligan say that OpenAI engineers will make sure the Pentagon doesn’t break its commitments: “Our contract offers additional layered safeguards including our safety stack and OpenAI technical experts in the loop,” a company statement says, without explaining what its “safety stack” is or how its “technical experts” could apply oversight to the country’s single largest bureaucracy, comprised of a litany of sub-agencies and components employing over 2 million service members and nearly 800,000 civilian personnel. Indeed, in an employee all-hands meeting held Tuesday, Altman told staff that Hegseth would hold ultimate authority over how the Pentagon makes use of the contract, according to CNBC.

When it comes to honesty and a respect for the law from Altman, Trump, and Hegseth, there is good reason for skepticism.

Altman has been repeatedly accused of false statements by the people he works with. In a 2025 court filing submitted as part of an ongoing lawsuit by Elon Musk against Altman alleging OpenAI betrayed its original nonprofit mission, former OpenAI researcher Todor Markov — who now works at Anthropic — described Altman as a “person of low integrity who had directly lied to employees.” In a memo that surfaced after Altman was briefly ousted as CEO, OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever alleged he had engaged in a “consistent pattern of lying” leading up to his firing.

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U.S. Military Makes First Confirmed OpenAI Purchase for War-Fighting Forces

Nor is it always easy to pin down Altman’s ideological commitments or ethical boundaries. “Honestly, I’m scared for the lives of all of us,” Altman wrote in an October 2016 tweet. “My #1 fear w/Trump is war.” Ten years later, Altman announced his company would sell services to the Trump administration hours after it launched a new war in the Middle East. OpenAI itself was originally founded to benefit all of humanity, and the company officially prohibited the use of its technologies for warfare — until it silently deleted this prohibition from its terms of service.

The tenure of Hegseth, might prompt similar wariness. He has overseen the assassination of Iran’s leader, the kidnapping of Venezuela’s head of state, and the killing of more than 150 men either blown apart or left to die in the ocean in boat strikes, all without congressional authorization.

Trump, meanwhile, as part of a broad disregard for legal statutes or the Constitution, has refashioned the Department of Justice into his personal firm and directed his Department of Homeland Security to brutalize and warrantlessly surveil Americans across the country. Without the text of the contract in sunlight, it is ultimately these three men — and whoever succeeds them in years to come — that the world is being asked to trust. An appeal to “applicable laws” or the sanctity of contract language is only as meaningful as the people in charge want it to be.

The former Pentagon AI official said that ceding this power to Hegseth is cause for alarm even with the most diligently crafted contract. Will anyone feel they are able to speak up should someone in the military use or be ordered to abuse OpenAI’s systems in contravention of the law or the contract? “Is the one-star general going to be able to escalate — ‘Hey, this is a huge fucking national security problem’ — appropriately without the Defense Secretary moving them around?”

“My presumption is always to trust people in what they say,” said Carson, speaking of OpenAI. But following days of what he described as “change, backtracking, a bit of deception, [and] outright deception, I’m afraid I don’t really trust you on this one anymore.”

The former Pentagon official agreed: “If you trust the cabal of Sam Altman, Donald Trump, and Pete Hegseth, there’s nothing I can do for you.”

Update: March 12, 2026

This article was updated to note Brad Carson’s affiliation with a super PAC funded in part by Anthropic.

The post OpenAI on Surveillance and Autonomous Killings: You’re Going to Have to Trust Us appeared first on The Intercept.

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https://preview.redd.it/onomv5xv11pg1.jpg?width=140&height=105&auto=webp&s=cfd3a9de39fded1b422bc2150b08d6123f09e01d Onewheel -●-
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https://preview.redd.it/s35xvq0vxvog1.jpg?width=140&height=105&auto=webp&s=79de2e54af573086614b4a2d618625264445047b Onewheel -●-
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