2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 12:04

Hazmat crews deployed to the Pentagon on Thursday and a shelter-in-place was in effect for what authorities described as a "hazardous materials incident."

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:58

Trump says the U.S. will hit Iran "very hard" within hours, and seize key oil infrastructure "in the not too distant future."

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:55

Vance Boelter pleaded guilty to the shootings of two Minnesota lawmakers and their spouses on Thursday as part of an agreement with federal prosecutors.

2026-06-11 12:04
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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:51

Intelligence tool now set to expire today after Republicans fail to secure two-thirds majority needed to pass

The US supreme court has published its opinions, but none of the cases we’ve been watching for were part of the decisions today.

In comments reported by NBC News, House speaker Mike Johnson has said it is “stunning” to him that “House Democrat leadership has put out a statement saying that they’re willing to allow the number one national security tool to go dark over some political disagreement over a very short-term temporary appointment”.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:48

President says US will take vital fuel hub ‘in not too distant future’ and will ‘assume total control of their oil and gas markets’

Three Indian seafarers were killed in a US attack on an oil tanker earlier this week, India’s shipping minister, ‌Sarbananda Sonowal, said.

“It is deeply unfortunate to learn of the tragic incident aboard the Palau-flagged MT Settebello. Sadly, three Indian seafarers initially reported missing are now confirmed dead after bodies have been located and identified,” he wrote in a post on X.

The Middle East is being pulled deeper into crisis & the consequences reach far beyond the region.”

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:48

US president warns of further military action as both sides accuse each other of breaching temporary ceasefire

Donald Trump has said the US will take control of Iran’s oil and gas infrastructure and launch further strikes on Iran on Thursday night, just hours after the countries exchanged fire for the second consecutive day despite a nominal ceasefire being in place.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump said the US would hit Iran “VERY HARD, TONIGHT”, claiming that most of Iran’s offensive capacity had been destroyed. He also said the US would seize Kharg, an island in the Gulf that handles about 90% of Iran’s oil exports and hosts vast storage facilities.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:47

Former xAI engineer Devin Kim alleges he was illegally fired for trying to implement safety mechanisms for the chatbot

A former engineer at Elon Musk’s xAI who now heads a thinktank focused on AI safety filed a lawsuit claiming he was fired from the SpaceX subsidiary for raising concerns about the risks artificial intelligence poses to humanity.

Devin Kim claims in the lawsuit filed in California state court on Tuesday that his efforts to place guardrails on the development of the chatbot Grok made him a target for company leadership.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:47

Tories, SNP, Reform and Lib Dems all turn fire on PM with as Labour figures also call for greater defence spending

Ryan Henderson, assistant chief constable for the Police Service of Northern Ireland, is about to hold a press conference about last night’s rioting.

Andy Burnham is facing criticism after saying that he thinks the Waspi women should be entitled to “some” compensation.

I’ll stick by the Waspi women because they deserve some recompense for the unfairness.

One government figure decried Burnham’s intervention as “pathetic”, adding: “He can’t say no to anyone.”

An ally of Sir Keir Starmer likened Burnham’s economic agenda to that of hard-left former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, and argued that the mayor’s intervention would harm his chances of manoeuvring the prime minister out of Downing Street.

Andy Burnham’s continued support for Waspi women is both welcome and hugely refreshing. While some politicians have broken their promises, it takes real courage to speak out and say what millions of people across the country and hundreds of MPs from all parties already know - that 1950s-born women deserve justice.

Andy has always recognised the unfair way in which state pension equalisation was introduced.

As mayor of Greater Manchester, he supported Waspi women in the city-region with early access to concessionary travel, providing some recompense to them within affordability limits.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:45

Exclusive: PSNI repeatedly warned by monitoring group for eight months after a so-called hitlist of addresses began circulating in far-right networks

A monitoring group repeatedly warned the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) over the past eight months that anti-immigration activists were circulating the addresses of properties that were targeted in this week’s Belfast riots.

The Accountability Project Northern Ireland, a volunteer group formed last summer to monitor anti-immigration activity online, sent dozens of reports to police between November 2025 and June 2026.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:45

⚽️ Infantino tells fans to ‘chill’ in response to Fifa’s critics
⚽️ Match centre | Player guide | Bracketology | Mail Rob

BTL chat is thus far dominated by Gianni Infantino’s ritual pre-tournament torching of his own dignity. SonOfThe Desert offers this:

“Infantino is just absolutely wretched, isn’t he? An absolute nothing of a man, sucking up to tyrants because he thinks it makes him look strong.

”But you know what’s really annoying me? All those heads of national associations who could have unified around a candidate - anyone - to oppose Infantino and try and rescue Fifa from humiliation. Couldn’t be bothered though, could they? Might’ve had to do some actual work that way.

New York has honored two footballing greats by temporarily renaming streets after Thierry Henry and Pelé ahead of the World Cup kickoff …

Crowds gathered at West 50th Street and 6th Avenue in downtown Manhattan to mark the unveiling of “Thierry Henry Way” by city officials, according to FOX Sports.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:44

Do you owe money to debt collectors but use an online bank? Here's what to know before the problems escalate.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:42

The Justice Department announced it has charged three people in Ohio for conspiring to smuggle unaccompanied minors across the U.S. border.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:33

Analysts say IPO that could make Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire has a ‘major disconnect’ on price

Elon Musk’s SpaceX is set to launch the biggest stock market float in history amid warnings that it may be overvalued.

The space exploration, satellite broadband and AI company will join the US stock market on Friday at a valuation of $1.78tn, after offering at least $75bn of shares to investors through an initial public offering .

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:33

Regulator approval means patients who meet criteria such as having obesity will be able to purchase pills with private prescription

Patients will soon be able to buy the Wegovy weight-loss pill, the medicines regulator announced today.

It is the first GLP-1 receptor agonist tablet for weight-loss to be approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), making the UK the third country to authorise the pills, behind the US and the United Arab Emirates.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:23

Suspect, 19, still at large after officer dies in hospital having been shot while searching an apartment

A Toronto police officer has been shot dead as police raided an apartment allegedly linked to the March attack on the US consulate, the city’s police chief said.

Toronto’s police chief, Myron Demkiw, said 43-year-old constable Marc Pinizzotto was shot while conducting an early morning search warrant in the north-west of the city and later died at a hospital.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:19

Fatima Jabbe-Bio kept tenancy despite living for much of year in the presidential lodge in Freetown

A social housing flat rented by Sierra Leone’s first lady has been seized by a London council.

Southwark council confirmed it had repossessed the two-bedroom home in Walworth previously occupied by Fatima Jabbe-Bio, whose tenancy was reported by The Times last year.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:18

Officials found three passengers in the cabin and their suspect hiding in the lavatory, Bali immigration authorities said.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:05

The House on Thursday defeated a last-ditch effort to extend a key spy authority until early July.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:01

Measure failed in 198-218 vote after Democrats said they would block renewal of Fisa over naming of Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence

The US House of Representatives on Thursday failed to pass a short-term extension of a powerful surveillance law amid controversy surrounding Donald Trump’s decision to install an inexperienced loyalist as the country’s top intelligence official.

The measure failed in a 198-218 vote, after Democrats announced they would block the move to renew the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (Fisa) in protest of Trump’s appointment of Bill Pulte, a major Republican donor, as acting director of national intelligence.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:00

Australia, the US and Paraguay will have their work cut out to match the Crescent Stars’ young midfield but a shaky defence is a genuine concern

Turkey coach Vincenzo Montella has been building one of the nation’s strongest teams in living memory. A youth-driven squad with two genuine stars – Arda Guler and Kenan Yildiz – several players were not even born when the Crescent Stars last qualified for a World Cup and finished third in 2002.

In past tournaments, Turkey were often labelled as “dark horses” – which turned out to be more of a curse than a blessing. This time, Montella has constructed a squad that sits among those on the rung below heavyweights Spain, France and Argentina.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:00

The Interior Department is planning an aggressive work schedule to complete President Trump's arch near Arlington National Cemetery.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Politico: China was likely behind an online influence operation to sway U.S. perceptions of artificial intelligence technology and reshape the debate in Washington around the infrastructure needed to support it, according to research from OpenAI published Wednesday. OpenAI said it caught the influence campaign because China-backed operatives were using ChatGPT to create content for the social media campaign. [...] OpenAI's researchers identified two clusters of ChatGPT users "likely originating from China" who used the AI chatbot to generate social media content "in support of apparent covert influence operations" promoting certain narratives about AI. This includes claims that data center build-outs are raising electricity costs for the average American family and that President Donald Trump has weaponized tariffs to keep the U.S. ahead in the global tech race. These accounts have since been banned, the report said. One cluster of users asked ChatGPT to generate images and comments pushing these narratives. These comments were then posted on social media by "batches of accounts" posing as Americans, [said Ben Nimmo, principal investigator of intelligence and investigations at OpenAI]. Another cluster identified by researchers used AI to generate social media content criticizing the Trump administration's tariffs as an attempt to "dominate technological competition." Prompts used for this campaign were submitted in Simplified Chinese and asked that AI-generated content not include Chinese President Xi Jinping and focus solely on Trump -- a possible tell that China was behind the operation, according to the report. Nimmo said that the influence campaign amplified existing public backlash in the U.S. against the creation of new AI data centers, which has resulted in dozens of proposed moratoriums at the local, state and national level. "Neither campaign appears to have gained much authentic engagement," Nimmo said. "They're important for what they reveal about the intentions of influence operators from China, and the narratives they're testing and seeking to amplify, but not for the impact."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:56

Despite his managerial veneer and quiet approach, the outgoing defence secretary is a highly political operator

If there was one thing Downing Street could rely on with John Healey, it was avoiding unnecessary drama. Whether in parliament or on the morning broadcast round, his sober suits and general demeanour of a benign but firm headteacher spelled reassurance.

But then, just before 12.10pm on Wednesday, the drama arrived. In a letter posted to social media, Healey resigned as defence secretary, a job he had held – whether in government or its shadow equivalent – from the moment Keir Starmer became Labour leader.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:45

A wave of US strikes represents the gravest test yet of the fragile truce. Here’s what happened, what officials are saying and whether the deal can survive

The US has launched strikes across southern Iran for a second consecutive day. Although there have been several breaches since a ceasefire was agreed between the two sides in April, the attacks this week – launched after the downing of a US helicopter over the strait of Hormuz – represent the most serious and extensive breakdown of the truce to date.

The US president, Donald Trump, has raised the prospect of further attacks, while his defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, has told reporters if strikes “have to happen [Friday] night, they will be strong and they will be clear”.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:45

A surge in the Producer Price Index signals that businesses are paying more for goods and services, which could push up consumer costs.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:37

If there's one name on the bill, could two paychecks really be at risk? Here's what creditors can actually do.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:13

With the announcement of an upcoming new macOS release also come the usual changes in which Macs will still be supported. MacOS 27 Golden Gate is an important release in this regard, as it will be the first release of Apple’s desktop operating system that will be entirely ARM-only, dropping support for all Intel Macs. It’s important to note that Apple will provide three more years of security updates for the final Intel release of macOS, so Intel users won’t be dropped like a brick immediately.

Still, the Intel Mac Pro was still being sold all the way up until mid-2023, and I’d be royally pissed off if my expensive 2023 Intel Mac went out of support a mere six years after purchase. They weren’t cheap machines, and while you can argue everybody knew the writing was on the wall for the Intel Mac Pro in 2023, it still feels way too short of a supported lifespan for such an expensive, high-end piece of equipment. It didn’t sell many units, I’m sure, but still.

In addition, MacOS 27 will be the last release to include the Rosetta 2 translation layer that allows Intel binaries to run on ARM macOS. I have no idea how many important applications are still Intel-only, but I have a feeling that number is going to be relatively small, and will become even smaller as the first macOS release without Rosetta 2 support near release. On top op of that, I’m sure enterprising users will find a way to transplant Rosetta 2 onto unsupported macOS release, and if all else fails, there’s always virtual machines.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:02

PARIS, June 11, 2026 — Alice & Bob, a leader in fault-tolerant quantum computing, today unveiled the Helium Quantum System, marking the company’s expansion from developing cat-qubit chips to delivering a complete quantum computing system for on-premise deployment.

The Helium Quantum System has been engineered to encode Alice & Bob’s first logical qubit with as few as 18 cat-qubits. From the processor architecture to the cabling, control electronics and software stack, the entire system is optimized for quantum error correction. Designed as an upgradeable platform, the quantum system will also support the next 48 cat-qubit chip on Alice & Bob’s roadmap – expected to feature multiple logical qubits.

Alice & Bob is inviting research partners to conduct experiments on the Helium Quantum System and collaborate with the company on advancing fault tolerant quantum computing research. The system enables researchers to integrate quantum and classical computing resources within a single computing infrastructure, such as those found at high-performance computing (HPC) centers.

By providing direct access to cat-qubit architecture, Alice & Bob offers a platform for research into quantum error correction, logical qubits and the path to fault-tolerant quantum computing.

“Alice & Bob has focused on fault tolerance from the outset. Our cat-qubit architecture is designed to dramatically reduce the error-correction overhead – one of the industry’s largest technical and economic barriers. We believe the defining race in quantum computing is building better qubits that can reach fault tolerance with the fewest resources. The Helium Quantum System is an important milestone on that journey, giving researchers direct access to the architecture underpinning our roadmap to universal, fault-tolerant quantum computing,” said Théau Peronnin, CEO and co-founder of Alice & Bob.

The Helium Quantum System is designed with operational efficiency in mind, requiring approximately 40 kW of power to run, helping lower the cost of deploying advanced quantum systems, one of the key bottlenecks in quantum computing today.

As part of launch, Alice & Bob is releasing Starboard a custom monitoring interface that gives administrators visibility over the 18-cat qubit system. Through a single dashboard, administrators can visualize system behavior, monitor individual qubit performance, schedule workloads, and track live hardware metrics. Starboard features highly automated software designed by Alice & Bob. Starboard brings together the tools needed to monitor, run, and optimize the Helium quantum system.

The Helium Quantum System features compatibility with the most common HPC schedulers (including Slurm) through the open-source QRMI library, and other third-party solutions. Users can connect to the Helium Quantum System with Alice & Bob’s dedicated Felis software framework, providing custom instructions tailored to the Helium chip while maintaining compatibility with major quantum programming frameworks.

About Alice & Bob

Alice & Bob is a quantum computing company based in Paris and Boston whose goal is to create the first universal, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Advised by Nobel Prize winning researchers, Alice & Bob specializes in cat qubits, a technology developed by the company’s founders. Demonstrating the power of its cat architecture, Alice & Bob recently showed that it could reduce the hardware requirements for building a useful large-scale quantum computer up to 200 times compared with competing approaches.


Source: Alice & Bob

The post Alice & Bob Introduces Helium Platform for Quantum Error Correction and Logical Qubit Research appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 10:00

Employees at artificial intelligence companies are coming into gargantuan sums of money amid boom in IPOs

Home prices in the San Francisco Bay Area’s already expensive market are skyrocketing as employees at leading artificial intelligence companies come into gargantuan sums of money thanks to a boom in initial public offerings.

With San Francisco’s OpenAI and Anthropic, as well as SpaceX, which operates a major facility in the Los Angeles area, eyeing debuts on the stock market, the hot housing market may not abate soon. If their initial public offering (IPO) is well-received, the companies’ multibillion-dollar valuations are poised to produce massive wealth for employees and executives holding shares, which experts say could trigger an uptick in demand for the Bay Area’s limited housing stock.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:56

I just saw an advertisement in a local Onewheel group for a funwheel x10 for 1550 euro's? The parts are between 40-300km old. He told me he switched some parts out like the footpads have bin used for 40km and the rails for 300km.

The specs are as follows:

•⁠ ⁠20s2p P28a battery with Fungineers BMS

•⁠ ⁠Fungineers HS hub motor

•⁠ ⁠Burris BTG tire

•⁠ ⁠Fungineers casted vesc box

•⁠ ⁠Fungineers battery box

•⁠ ⁠Fungineers footpads

•⁠ ⁠LED, for behind and footpad

•⁠ ⁠bang bumpers

I have bin wanting a new board. I currently have a pint x and am looking for a bigger more stable board.

The fungineers X7 is an option I have thought about. My original choice would be a XR classic but getting that with fender and rail guards would cost me 2300 euro's. A new x7 would cost me 2200$ plus shipping so it would have costed me relatively close to the XRC and then I would have preferred the XRC since its a lot lighter and the specs of both boards are good enough for me.

But 1550 euro's for a used x7 is around 2/3's of a new XRC.

The only drawback is that the seller just told me the board only gets 18km (11miles) range and that is not enough for me. So I would need to upgrade the battery.

What do you think? Buy a used x7 for 1550 euro and upgrade the battery. Or a new XRC for around 2300euro's

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:52

Kharg Island is a heavily fortified, strategically vital island off Iran's north coast that President Trump says the U.S. may seize control of militarily.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:50

Meteorologists forecast it will rival – or exceed – record El Niño from 1997 and further heat globe

El Niño, Nature’s chaotic climate agent, has formed in a warmed-up Pacific Ocean and is expected to grow to historic strength, meteorologists announced on Thursday.

Experts said the El Niño, a natural warming cycle, should further heat a globe already warming from fossil fuel pollution and will probably turbocharge extreme weather across the planet. Meteorologists forecast it will rival – or exceed – a record El Niño that began in 1997 and helped trigger billions of dollars in damage from heatwaves, floods, droughts, tornadoes and wildfires.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:46

President Donald Trump threatened to take Iran’s most critical oil terminal “in the not too distant future,” after fresh attacks on U.S. bases in the region.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:44

Vance Boelter is facing both federal and state charges related to the fatal shootings of state Rep. Melissa Hortman (D) and her husband, Mark, and in an attack on state Sen. John A. Hoffman (D) and his wife, Yvette, that left them critically injured.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:35

Edit: My husband is 5'10" and 180 pounds.

I am suprising my husband with a Onewheel for his birthday. He has wanted one for years now and we are at the point where it makes sense financially.

Since I can't point-blank ask him what one he wants I am looking for recommendations from this sub.

For context, we have two young children (so not a lot of free time) and live in a very suburban but huge neighborood where he will be riding it around 90% of the time. I know he is not looking to take it on any heavy duty trails, but would like to capability to "off-road" occasionally (think dirt paths, and grass).

Considering this, I am leaning on the XR Classic but would like to hear from the hobbyists what they think first.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:29

Iran and the new Persian Gulf equilibrium Expert comment jon.wallace

The Axis of Resistance failed to deter Israel and the US. Whatever deal ends the war, Tehran will seek to rebuild its deterrence around the threat it poses to the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf states.

An Iranian police officer stands before a poster in Tehran, depicting President Trump's mouth gagged by a Strait of Hormuz shaped ribbon - May 2026.

The fragile ceasefire between Iran and the United States, in place for two months, has been punctuated by several episodes of violence. That includes the latest exchange of strikes following the shooting down of a US helicopter, and President Donald Trump’s threats on 11 June to seize Iran’s Kharg Island. However, both Washington and Tehran have generally expressed a reluctance to return to open warfare. And according to media reports the US has signaled to Iran, through Qatar, that recent attacks were not meant as a resumption of all-out war.

At the same time, negotiations to prolong the ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz have failed to make progress. A deal on the Strait will eventually emerge, but whatever the details, dynamics in the Persian Gulf have changed and will not return to the pre-28 February 2026 status quo.

A new deterrence strategy

Since the ceasefire in early April, Iran and the US have floated in a volatile state of no war and no peace. The two sides are far from reaching an agreement that would set bilateral relations on a more stable and predictable footing, let alone resolve the deep divergences that have divided them for 47 years. Each perceives that it has the upper hand, and expects the other to make compromises. In this fragile context, limited escalations are virtually guaranteed to happen again. But the events of early June reinforce the view that Iran and the US will continue to try to avoid uncontrolled escalation.

However the war ends, a new equilibrium is steadily emerging in the Persian Gulf based on an equation that features both new and pre-existing but modified variables.

First, the Axis of Resistance – the network of non-state armed groups supported by Iran – has failed. Israel has not been able, as much as it has tried since October 2023, to decisively defeat Hamas and Hezbollah. But the two Iran-backed groups have undoubtedly been weakened. More importantly, they could not deliver what was one of the original rationales behind Iran’s support for the Axis: deterrence.

When Tehran developed its forward defence strategy, one of its goals was to signal to the US and Israel that an attack on Iran would be met with a costly retaliation from Axis members. In this sense, the Axis did not fulfil its mandate: the threat of reprisals failed to deter multiple American and Israeli attacks on the Iranian homeland.

As a result, Iran’s focus is shifting to the Gulf. Analysts, in and out of government, have long known that in the event of a war that threatened its survival, the Islamic Republic would likely try to close the Strait of Hormuz. Countless wargames and simulations demonstrated exactly that. What was known in theory has now been demonstrated in practice, and there will be no turning back.

This profoundly and sustainably transforms the geopolitics of the Gulf region. There is little doubt that the Strait of Hormuz will eventually re-open to maritime traffic. It will probably not be a sudden re-opening. Instead, it will be gradual, for both security reasons and because it will take time for supply chains to re-organize themselves.

Rebuilding its missile and drone production facilities…will be [Iran’s] top priority, as will be the consolidation and diversification of its global supply networks. 

But the Islamic Republic will not forget the tremendous leverage it gained by closing it. Neither will it agree to permanently forego the option of resorting to this tactic again. Rather, it will integrate it into its strategy. And it will not hesitate to consider closing the Strait again if it perceives it to be necessary. The war, in other words, has broken a psychological barrier that will not be rebuilt.

Iran will, as such, restock and reconstitute its damaged military infrastructure with Hormuz in mind. Rebuilding its missile and drone production facilities, heavily damaged by American and Israeli strikes, will be its top priority, as will be the consolidation and diversification of its global supply networks. 

This will take precedence, for example, over rebuilding its shattered nuclear infrastructure and conventional navy. This will ensure that the threat of the closure of the Strait remains a black cloud permanently hanging over maritime shipping in the Gulf and, therefore, the global economy.

The Houthis

The fear of that scenario will be compounded by the possibility that the Houthis, the  group that controls the northwestern quadrant of Yemen, could join the fray and close the Bab al-Mandab at the southern tip of the Red Sea another crucial maritime chokepoint. This week, the Houthis explicitly threatened to close the route to Israeli shipping.

The Houthis are not Iranian puppets and do not merely execute orders from Tehran. That said, they caused severe disruption to Red Sea shipping throughout 2023-25, motivated, they said, by solidarity with Palestinians. In a hypothetical future conflict in which the Islamic Republic is seriously threatened, it is conceivable that they would renew their attacks. In combination with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the impact on the global economy would be significant.

The other feature of the new equilibrium is the threat of Iranian attacks on the Gulf Arab states. As with Hormuz, analysts have long understood that if pushed into a corner, the Islamic Republic would likely target the six petro-monarchies that form the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC): Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. 

And, as in the case of Hormuz, the war has created a precedent that provides Iran with important leverage moving forward. For GCC states, whose brand is partly premised on their reputation as havens of stability, this is another permanent threat that will further damage their security and prosperity.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:26

Service disruptions inhibited many Google users' AI work on Wednesday. Here's what Google said happened.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:24

The new space telescope will work in tandem with the Hubble Space Telescope to uncover more secrets of the universe.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 09:10

BOLOGNA, Italy, June 11, 2026 — The Italian Research Centre on High Performance Computing, Big Data, and Quantum Computing (ICSC) today inaugurated the IQM Radiance 54 quantum computer at CINECA, one of Europe’s leading supercomputing centers, enabling advanced applications in optimization, simulation, and machine learning.

The moment Italy’s second IQM quantum computer went live at CINECA in Bologna.

The installation, located at the CINECA headquarters in the DAMA Tecnopolo in Bologna, represents not just technological progress but a strategic Italian asset providing concrete tools for the scientific community and businesses to foster innovation, accelerate research, and transform knowledge into high-impact applications.

IQM Radiance, named NOX, is being integrated into Leonardo, one of the world’s fastest supercomputers to support hybrid high-performance computing and quantum workflows. The objective is to provide researchers with a production-ready environment for experimentation with integrated classical–quantum computing paradigms.

“This installation is what Production Quantum means to us. Quantum computers you own, operate, and build value on. Real infrastructure inside real environments, doing real work,” said Sylwia de Weydenthal, Chief Commercial Officer of IQM Quantum Computers. “The delivery of IQM Radiance to CINECA is a milestone for Italy and for European quantum computing. It reinforces our role as a strategic partner in delivering Europe’s HPC–quantum infrastructure on the ground.”

The system is the first on-premises superconducting quantum computer at CINECA and the second IQM quantum computer in Italy, further strengthening the country’s position in quantum computing.

This deployment contributes directly to IQM’s ambition to drive the global adoption of hybrid computing systems and enable customers to build quantum capability.

IQM has on-premises systems operating at four of the world’s top ten supercomputing centers and has sold 23 quantum computers globally, more than any other manufacturer.

“In line with the European strategy, we have invested in building a modern and competitive national infrastructure, capable of providing universities and research institutions with advanced computing tools essential for tackling major scientific, technological, and economic challenges. However, this milestone does not mark the end of our commitment. Several measures have already been launched to ensure continuity of PNRR results and activities, further strengthening the infrastructure and more effectively supporting the transfer of advanced applications and solutions to industry and public administration,” said Anna Maria Bernini, Italian Minister of University and Research.

“This significantly strengthens digital sovereignty and supports national competitiveness. Especially in today’s geopolitical and energy instability, this resource is crucial to avoid falling further behind in the global race for data control and to build a viable and sustainable Italian and European alternative to U.S. technological offerings,” said Antonio Zoccoli, President of the ICSC and the National Institute for Nuclear Physics (INFN).

“With the addition of SOL and LISA, we are delivering an integrated ecosystem built around Leonardo, designed to support a broad spectrum of workloads—from advanced AI applications to traditional HPC and emerging quantum computing. This milestone is the result of a strong national commitment by Italy—through the Ministry of University and Research, CINECA and ICSC—together with EuroHPC, aligning investments and capabilities to strengthen Europe’s technological sovereignty and enable a new generation of cutting-edge assets for research and innovation,” said Francesco Ubertini, Vice-President of the ICSC and President of CINECA.

More from HPCwire: EuroHPC Inaugurates SOL Quantum Computer and LISA AI Partition in Italy

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM Quantum Computers is a global leader in superconducting quantum computers, delivering full-stack quantum computers and cloud platform access to research institutions, universities, high-performance computing centers, national laboratories, and enterprises worldwide. IQM’s on-premises deployment model gives customers direct ownership and control of their quantum infrastructure. Founded in 2018, headquartered in Finland with major operations in Munich, it has over 400 employees. IQM operates across Europe, Asia, and North America. IQM has previously announced its ongoing business combination with Real Asset Acquisition Corp (Nasdaq: RAAQ), which will result in IQM becoming a public company in mid-2026.


Source: IQM Quantum Computers

The post IQM’s NOX Quantum Computer Integrated with Leonardo Supercomputer appeared first on HPCwire.

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June 11, 2026 — The EuroHPC Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) today inaugurated SOL, the 6th EuroHPC quantum computer and LISA, the Leonardo Improved Supercomputing Architecture partition, in Bologna, Italy.

The two systems, co-funded by Italy’s Ministry of University and Research through ICSC, the Italian Research Centre on HPC, Big Data and Quantum Computing Computing and the European Union though EuroHPC JU, were unveiled at the DAMA Technopole in Emilia-Romagna, Italy during a ribbon-cutting ceremony hosted by CINECA and ICSC.

The two systems were unveiled at the DAMA Technopole during a ribbon-cutting ceremony hosted by CINECA and ICSC.

The event was attended by Anna Maria Bernini, the Italian Minister of University and Research, Roberto Viola, Director-General of the Directorate-General Communication Networks, Content and Technology (DG CNECT) at the European Commission and Daniel Opalka, Head of Unit, Research and Innovation at the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking.

These two new systems connected to Leonardo, one of the world-class EuroHPC pre-exascale supercomputers, represent significant milestones that further strengthen Europe’s supercomputing, artificial intelligence (AI) and quantum computing infrastructure, and mark an important step in building a world-class, sovereign supercomputing ecosystem in Europe.

Anders Jensen, EuroHPC JU Executive Director stated: “Today’s inauguration shows how Europe continues to turn ambition into capability. With SOL, the new EuroHPC quantum computer and LISA, the AI-upgrade to the world-class Leonardo supercomputer, we are further strengthening our sovereign supercomputing ecosystem and giving European users new tools to innovate across AI, HPC and quantum technologies. This milestone expands opportunities for research, industry and the public sector, while reinforcing Europe’s technological leadership in strategic supercomputing domains.”

Francesco Ubertini, President of CINECA added: “With the addition of SOL and LISA, we are delivering an integrated ecosystem built around Leonardo, designed to support a broad spectrum of workloads—from advanced AI applications to traditional HPC and emerging quantum computing. This milestone is the result of a strong national commitment by Italy—through the Ministry of University and Research, CINECA and ICSC—together with EuroHPC, aligning investments and capabilities to strengthen Europe’s technological sovereignty and enable a new generation of cutting-edge assets for research and innovation.”

Antonio Zoccoli, ICSC President said: “The inauguration of LISA and the SOL quantum computer is a major step forward for Italy and Europe in advanced computing. Thanks to the strategic vision and strong commitment of the Ministry of University and Research, led by Minister Anna Maria Bernini, and in synergy with the European strategy, we are delivering a cutting-edge hybrid infrastructure integrating HPC and quantum technologies. This ecosystem will be able to strengthen technological sovereignty and the competitiveness of Italian and European research and industrial sectors. With the integration of the Pasqal quantum system into Leonardo, Italy is also positioning itself at the forefront of global innovation, providing powerful tools for scientific excellence and sustainable growth.”

SOL, the Quantum Acceleration for Leonardo Supercomputer

Hosted and operated by CINECA in Bologna and supplied by Pasqal, the new quantum computer is based on neutral atoms, and named SOL, reflecting both Italy’s cultural heritage and the laser-based technology at the core of the system. Inspired by the Roman Sun god and the precision associated with Sol Invictus and Apollo, it highlights the central role of light and accuracy for this system.

The system’s first-generation processor will provide at least 140 qubits operating in analogue mode. The planned upgrade in 2027, which will transition the system towards a hybrid analogue/digital paradigm, will create additional value for European end-users.

Utilizing arrays of optically trapped atoms and programmable laser interactions, SOL will enable the exploration of quantum many-body physics, optimization problems, and machine learning applications.

Integrated into Leonardo, SOL will also enhance hybrid quantum-classical HPC workflows and make next-generation computing resources available to a wide range of European users, spanning from the scientific community to industry and the public sector.

The system is currently undergoing calibration and is expected to provide compute resources to European end-users by autumn.

LISA, Upscaling IT4LIA AI Factory Capabilities

The LISA upgrade incorporates an AI-optimized partition into Leonardo, hosted and operated by CINECA in Bologna and will allow for more AI applications to be processed. It will better support the development of Large Language Models and multi-modal generative AI, as well as considerably extend the overall AI capacity of system.

LISA is the first EuroHPC computing partition designed from the ground up specifically for AI workloads. It is specifically engineered to address the demanding computational, memory, and networking requirements of next-generation AI models. The upgrade, provided by Bull, integrates a compute partition featuring 166 advanced 8-way GPU servers (1,328 GPUs in total) fully interconnected and significantly boosting the supercomputer’s performance for AI-intensive tasks.

The LISA upgrade will complement the operations of IT4LIA, the EuroHPC AI Factory currently centered around Leonardo, strengthening Europe’s capacity for AI research, innovation, and industrial applications. Under the IT4LIA initiative, a new AI optimized supercomputing system is currently being deployed, following the recent contract signing with E4 Computer Engineering and Dell Technologies, the selected vendors. This new system will be co-funded by Italy’s Ministry of University and Research (Ministero dell’Università e della Ricerca – MUR) and the Italian National Cybersecurity Agency (ACN),

The LISA upgrade is expected to become available to users during the summer of 2026.

Background

The procurement contract for SOL was signed in March 2025 with Pasqal, following a call for tender launched in August 2024. SOL is co-funded with a total acquisition cost of EUR 13 million. The EuroHPC JU will fund 50% of the costs, while the other 50% will be funded by the Italian Ministry of University and Research (MUR) through ICSC, the Italian Research Centre on HPC, Big Data and Quantum Computing, established in the framework of Italy’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR/RRF funds). The EuroQCS-Italy consortium is led by CINECA and includes the Academic and Research Network of Slovenia (ARNES) and the Forschungszentrum Jülich (FZJ) in Germany.

To date, the EuroHPC JU has procured six quantum computers, located across Europe. The five first systems have already been inaugurated since last year:

  • PIAST-Q in Poznań, Poland in June 2025,
  • VLQ in Ostrava, Czechia in October 2025,
  • Euro-Q-Exa in Munich, Germany in February 2026,
  • Lucy near Paris, France in April 2026.
  • EuroQCS-Spain in Barcelona, Spain in May 2026.

The EuroHPC JU signed the procurement contract for LISA with Bull in May 2025, following a call for tender launched in September 2024. The deployment of LISA was conceived as the upgrade of the Leonardo supercomputer and as a core building block of the IT4LIA AI Factory.

The deployment of LISA represents an investment of EUR 50 million, covering both the acquisition and installation of the infrastructure as well as the resources required for its operation and support. This investment is co-founded by the EuroHPC JU together with Italy through Italy’s Ministry of University and Research (MUR) and ICSC.

More from HPCwire: IQM’s NOX Quantum Computer Integrated with Leonardo Supercomputer


Source: EuroHPC JU

The post EuroHPC Inaugurates SOL Quantum Computer and LISA AI Partition in Italy appeared first on HPCwire.

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Ted Lasso will deliver a message of hope before the USA’s first game, in an America that is not a fit or desirable host right now

Shortly before 6pm local time on Friday night at the Los Angeles Stadium, the actor who plays Ted Lasso – the fictional manager of a fake team in a falsely heartwarming version of football – will tell hundreds of millions of TV viewers tuning in to watch the start of the American leg of the Fifa World Cup that football unites the world.

In an interesting twist, the actor Jason Sudeikis will do this at a time when the World Cup host is simultaneously bombing the second-ranked country in Group G, having recently murdered its head of state. The message of unity is one likely to be heard by the US president, Donald Trump, who has initiated six military conflicts in his second term, and whose brutally divisive immigration policies have now led to the barring of Omar Artan, the reigning African referee of the year.

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Forensic tests helped identify a man whose remains were found inside a sleeping bag in Washington state in 2000.

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European Central Bank increases main deposit rate to 2.25%, with two further rises expected by next spring

The European Central Bank has raised interest rates for the first time since 2023 in response to higher inflation caused by the war in Iran.

The ECB raised its main deposit rate from 2% to 2.25% in a move that financial markets expect to be the first of three rises by next spring.

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American Ja’Kobe Tharp broke the 110m hurdles world record with a blistering time of 12.75sec at the NCAA outdoor track and field championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, on Wednesday.

Tharp’s effort in the heats of the 110m hurdles improved upon the previous world record mark of 12.80sec, set by Olympic champion and fellow American Aries Merritt in Brussels in 2012.

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The iPhone was introduced in 2007, the same year the U.S. birth rate started to slide. The issues could be linked, a new analysis finds.

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The U.S. men's national soccer team, which last appeared at the 2022 World Cup, will face Paraguay to kick off its 2026 World Cup.

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With some matches being held in nearby Miami, a Cuban response to US military action could mar the tournament

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PC Jess Turnbull was responding to separate crash when she was hit by Mercedes

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Minister accuses Starmer of being ‘unable to commit the resources to defend the country at this time of rising threats’

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Twenty people were killed and 120 injured in the attack at the Erawan Shrine, a popular tourist destination

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Broadcaster reveals its revenues from expanded tournament are running about 30% higher than Euro 2024

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Guardian review finds group tied to Cleta Mitchell and Heather Honey funded misleading ads in swing states

As the 2024 election approached, advertisements began popping up in key swing states suggesting local officials had discretion not to certify elections.

The advertisements, reported at the time by ProPublica and Wisconsin Watch, were misleading. Certification is not optional, and officials are required to certify the vote once the proper process for any election challenges are complete and an official challenge is complete. The warnings, nonetheless, arrived at a moment when Donald Trump and allies seemed to be gearing up to contest the election results if he lost.

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Iran says US attacks make ceasefire ‘practically meaningless’. Plus, Trump says ‘I love the inflation’ when asked about jump to 4.2%

Good morning.

Has the ceasefire collapsed yet?

What is the status of negotiations? Talks to turn the ceasefire into a durable peace deal have stalled for weeks, with periodic flare-ups as both sides continued to launch limited strikes and trade blame for violating the truce.

What do the two sides want? Iran seeks the lifting of international sanctions, the unfreezing of billions of dollars in assets, and control over the strait of Hormuz. Trump has said any future peace deal must prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, which Tehran denies it is seeking to do.

This is a developing story. Follow our live coverage here.

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Amanda Maria Souza de Oliveira faces fraud charges after allegedly persuading family to take her into their home

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Amanda Maria Souza de Oliveira was charged in the southern state of Santa Catarina with fraud and false identity offences.

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Nor is the dreamy promise that this tech will unlock boundless potential and productivity

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Five Mexican police officers were killed and five others wounded on the eve of the World Cup opener in Mexico City, authorities said.

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London, the east of England and the West Midlands have highest number of cases, as UKHSA urges families to get children vaccinated

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The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said on Thursday that two children had died this year, one from “acute measles” and the other from the “late effects of measles”.

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The Knicks set the record for the biggest NBA Finals comeback Wednesday night as they rallied from 29 points down to beat the Spurs 107-106.

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The ‘fraud’ he sees is in the very concept of democracy, in the idea that people who don’t agree with or fawn over him might have a say, too

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He rallies the rightwing media ecosystem to spread the lie; he convinces his followers to believe it. That this, by now, a repetitive spectacle, devoid of suspense, does not mean that it is not dangerous.

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There’s a downside to too much convenience: it harms our bodies

There is a seductive fantasy being floated by AI executives that all the efficiency their products will bring us will lead to humans finally returning to their essential, best selves. Picture it: when this day arrives, we’ll spring from our chairs, push aside our keyboards and, supposedly, do all things we’ve been meaning to do: hike, cook and finally take a pilates class.

It’s true – AI has already taken some workday drudgery, such as reading and writing contracts, presentations and quarterly reports, off some people’s plates. Within a few years, we’re told, a team of invisible digital assistants will take over mundane domestic chores too: making medical appointments, renewing our car insurance and planning. The vision is enticing: finally, the moment when we can stop switching-switching-switching between screens and devices, put our health first and flourish. Unfortunately, if the history of innovation teaches us anything, it’s that labor-saving technology has rarely, if ever, triggered healthier habits.

Drive-throughs and microwaves did not lead to more time spent walking in nature. When escalators replaced stairs, email took over from walking over to talk to a colleague, and wandering through the video store was swapped out for streaming from the couch, few of us considered how these tiny conveniences would chip away at our physical health, year after more efficient year. A task that took almost no effort used to be described with the saying: “You hardly need to lift a finger.” Now, we literally lift a finger and – tap – the chore is done.

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Most fathers would shield their children from death. Mine, a psychologist, did the opposite

My dad and I kept a running list of ways we didn’t want to die. Being buried alive was always No 1. Whenever we learned about unusual deaths – accidents involving farm machinery, medieval torture, mobsters encasing victims’ feet in cement before throwing them in the ocean – we added them to our shared catalogue.

Most fathers would shield their children from such morbid fascinations. Mine, a psychologist, did the opposite. He saw death as life’s most honest teacher and ensured I wouldn’t meet it as a stranger.

Amanda Sloat is professor of practice in international relations at IE University in Madrid, Spain

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Former intelligence officers sound alarm over ‘devastating’ impact of president’s bid to overhaul US security agency

For generations they have borne the mantle of strength and authority inherited from J Edgar Hoover’s Depression-era G-men, a label supposedly affixed after the arrest of Machine Gun Kelly in 1933.

Now hardened veterans of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) are projecting a different face as they seek to fight back against what many say is the systematic undermining of the bureau’s values under a drive by Donald Trump to turn it into an instrument of retribution.

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These alternate search engines are free and could help you break up with Google.

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Games are likely to be tied at the end of regulation at the 2026 World Cup, especially in the late stages of the tournament with a highly competitive field.

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NEW YORK, NY - NOVEMBER 07:   Journalist Scott Pelley speaks onstage at the annual Freedom Award Benefit hosted by the International Rescue Committee at The Waldorf=Astoria on November 7, 2012 in New York City.  (Photo by Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for IRC)
Journalist Scott Pelley speaks onstage at the International Rescue Committee’s annual Freedom Award benefit on Nov. 7, 2012, in New York City. Photo: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for IRC

The battle over “60 Minutes” can teach us a lot about how someone like CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss can wreak havoc on our media ecosystem. What has gotten a lot less attention, however, is the way the fight shows us how ill-equipped our media institutions already were when it comes to covering the Trump administration and MAGA-era politics.

The strife at the famous magazine television news program reached a fever pitch last week, when, during a staff meeting, longtime correspondent Scott Pelley unloaded on Nick Bilton, Weiss’s pick to run the show. Pelley was fired and took to the media to defend himself.

In a long interview with the New York Times over the weekend, Pelley talked about how Weiss had injected herself into the show’s editorial process.

The most revealing part of the discussion centered on Pelley’s own “60 Minutes” coverage of President Donald Trump’s surge of immigration enforcement officers into Minneapolis, the uprising against the invasion, and the subsequent crackdown that led to the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents.

Weiss’s role in the story was clearly toxic, but Pelley’s description of his own editorial process before Weiss got involved should also raise eyebrows.

“I felt it was very important to identify that the protesters themselves were being very aggressive.”

“I felt it was very important to identify that the protesters themselves were being very aggressive and that they were half of these confrontations, and so I instructed my producers to find images in which we see the protesters acting aggressively,” Pelley said. “I thought we’d done a really good job with this.”

Pelley said they found evidence of protesters chest-bumping officers and hitting them with snowballs. The Minnesotans screamed at federal agents, Pelley said, and Pretti himself could be seen in one picture kicking out a police car taillight.

Striving for “Balance”

It’s a striking passage because it shows a revered journalist searching for a balanced narrative where there simply wasn’t one. If, after scouring hours and hours video to find evidence of “aggressive” protesters, all you can find is a chest bump and a thrown snowball, perhaps that’s a sign that your narrative that both sides were aggressive isn’t all that accurate.

Related

Amy Goodman on the Media’s “Access of Evil”

The truth is that the Minneapolis protesters were remarkably restrained in the face of egregious state violence and brutality. Yes, they were angry, loud, persistent, and rude. Demonstrators yelled insults at officers, blew whistles, and recorded with their cellphones. Yet that is all First Amendment-protected activity, no matter how many times Stephen Miller or Kristi Noem try to call it “terrorism.”

There’s a reason why the criminal charges against protesters have rarely held up in court: There was never any merit to them. Over and over, when it came time to present actual evidence, the government backed down, was reprimanded by a judge, or was rejected by a grand jury.

Likewise, Pretti’s confrontation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement days before he was killed has nothing to do with whether immigration officers were justified in killing him. Videos of the killing show that Pretti did nothing to justify being confronted, beaten, and shot 10 times.

Pelley’s remarks, by themselves, offer a lesson in the pitfalls of striving for “balance” under an administration that lies by default, lies when it doesn’t need to, and lies as a demonstration of its power.

Enter Weiss

Weiss, her billionaire Paramount bosses David and Larry Ellison, and the other tech billionaires who fund her publication the Free Press are all of the belief that the legacy media is overwhelmingly left of center.

They’re correct in a very broad sense. Generally, journalists who work for legacy outlets have personal politics that skew liberal, but it’s more complicated than that. Legacy media journalists also tend to be institutionalists and deferential to authority. That can make them defensive of power and often skeptical of those who challenge it.

Even the most revered journalistic institutions aren’t equipped to sort through the firehose of lies and propaganda pouring out of Trump’s far-right movement.

As Pelley’s Minneapolis story shows, these journalists also want to be seen as fair, which can drive them to seek balance even when there is no credible “other side.” Contrary to Weiss and the MAGA world’s claims that legacy media is hopelessly blinkered, the more urgent problem right now is that even the most revered journalistic institutions aren’t equipped to sort through the firehose of lies and propaganda pouring out of Trump’s far-right movement.

Related

Bari Weiss Is Doing Exactly What She Was Installed at CBS to Do

Weiss’s role at both the Free Press and now at CBS News has been to make that task even more even more difficult. Her editorial feedback for Pelley, for instance, only served to muddy the waters.

“About four hours after our deadline,” Pelley told the New York Times, “Bari Weiss sends an email to my boss, Tanya Simon. Two of the things in the email include — can we make the protesters look more violent? Now, I’m paraphrasing. I don’t have the quote, but that’s what was communicated to me. And the other thing: Renee Good’s car. You need to describe her as driving toward the officer.”

Weiss’s editorial advice to Pelley wasn’t about clearer or fairer or more contextual journalism. She was asking for propaganda.

Weiss’s editorial advice to Pelley wasn’t about clearer or fairer journalism. She was asking for propaganda.

If Jonathan Ross, the ICE officer who shot Good, reasonably feared for his life, he was legally justified in killing Good. And if Good was driving toward him, that bolsters his claim to have reasonably feared for his life.

The problem is that there’s no evidence that she was. In fact, CBS News did its own analysis of the video footage, which clearly demonstrated that Good’s wheels were pointed away from Ross — as did several other outlets. As television producer Tim Carvell pointed out, however, CBS’s analysis never aired on the network; it was relegated to YouTube.

Weiss’s alleged directive also glosses over how Ross and his fellow agents also created the very volatility they claimed justified his use of lethal force. And it ignores how the agents violated multiple Department of Homeland Security policies during the encounter — for example, by putting themselves in front of Good’s car, and by rushing toward her door.

At the time of Good’s death, the administration and its supporters had also been pushing a much more destructive and conspiratorial narrative: that a cabal of far-left donors had been training protesters and ICE watchers to weaponize their cars against immigration officers. Not only was there zero evidence for this, it provided cover for what the agents themselves were doing. Video and witness accounts repeatedly showed agents ramming and boxing people in with their vehicles, then falsely claiming they were the victims who had been rammed. Slandering Good just reinforced the narrative.

If Weiss had really wanted to provide relevant context for Good’s death, there were plenty of places to look. Perhaps Good feared for her safety because immigration officers surging into liberal cities were pulling people out of their cars and beating them. Or maybe it was relevant that Border Patrol officers have a long history of improperly placing themselves in front of moving vehicles, then using that as justification to fire at those vehicles.

Weiss didn’t demand any of that. For her, balance and nuance meant telling Pelley to make his story more palatable to MAGA.

Crisis of Disinformation

We now live in an era in which one of the two major parties has given itself over to wild conspiracy theorists, white nationalists, and the whims and biases of a disturbed billionaire.

Related

Another Assassination Attempt, More Fertilizer for Conspiracy Theories

The mere fact that Trump leads that party means the airwaves are already polluted with nonsense like whether windmills cause cancer, whether immigrants are eating neighborhood pets, and whether developing countries are “emptying their insane asylums” into the U.S.

The fact that half the Congress, about 40 percent of the public, and the entire executive branch now subscribe to anti-vaccine bullshit, election denialism, and “great replacement theory” doesn’t make any of those claims legitimate. So long as a good portion of the country is in the throes of MAGA, however, there will be ongoing pressure to platform even the looniest claims out of a sense of fairness and representation. Weiss isn’t the cause of all of this, but she is an accelerant.

Pelley told the New York Times that he refused to make Weiss’s changes, and that his piece aired without them. That may be encouraging, except that not everyone has the institutional stature of Scott Pelley to insulate themselves from reprisals — not even Scott Pelley, it turns out.

Related

Kash Patel Is Using MAGA’s Favorite Tool to Muzzle the Free Press

The request itself, however, testifies to a disinformation crisis that’s only going to get worse, particularly as Weiss starts replacing departed staff with her own people and Trump keeps leaning on media outlets.

Another way it could get worse is if media honchos like those who own CBS keep gaining clout. Weiss’s own bosses, for example, have now set their sights on CNN — with Weiss reportedly expected to lead editorial at both news operations.

The post Scott Pelley Shows How Legacy Media Got It Wrong — Before Bari Weiss Made It Worse appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 06:00

Solar supplied 12.8% of US electricity in May even as Trump boosts coal over clean energy

Even as Donald Trump boosts coal over clean energy, solar power is hitting new milestones in the US and remains the leading source of new power.

Data released on Wednesday by the global energy thinktank Ember, along with a report by the Solar Energy Industries Association (Seia) and analytics firm Wood Mackenzie, show the continued growth of solar and decline of coal in the United States despite federal policy. In May, for the first time, solar supplied more of the nation’s electricity than coal, or 12.8%, Ember said. Coal supplied 12.2%, its fourth-lowest monthly share ever.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 06:00

Why Should Delaware care?
The practice of handing taxpayer money to private business has grown more controversial in Delaware in recent years. Last year, outsider Gov. Matt Meyer said he would shift how the state handles the practice. A recent state grant to a student loan startup follows the shift.

Delaware recently awarded nearly $800,000 to a student loan company through a grant that one economic development official noted was “a little bit unusual,” because of the company’s startup status. 

Founded last year by a former Sallie Mae executive, Delaware-based Gradbridge currently employs 12 people, according to company officials. They expect to have 49 employees in the coming years at a new headquarters at Newark’s Iron Hill Corporate Center.

The company markets student loans with high-interest rates to college students who had been denied by traditional lenders. Its fixed-rate loans range from about 18% to 23% interest, depending on qualifying factors. By comparison, student lending giant Sallie Mae offers undergrad fixed-rate loans ranging from under 3% to just over 17%.

Gradbridge also joins an existing ecosystem of online lenders based in Delaware that offer nontraditional loans. 

While still in its infancy, the company raised $20 million last fall from the private equity firm Acorn Investment Partners. At the time, company officials said the cash infusion would support GradBridge’s launch of a “first-of-its-kind private student loan product exclusively designed for students who have exhausted federal and private options.”

Last week, Delaware’s Council on Development Finance committed additional dollars to the new venture. 

The state council’s board — made up of members from government and private businesses — approved GradBridge’s request for a $780,000 grant tied to defined employment goals, and a $7,500 capital expenditure grant.

The terms of the grant contracts were negotiated by the public-private economic development organization Delaware Prosperity Partnership – a separate entity from the Council on Development Finance that receives dollars from the state but is not subject to open records rules.

Noah Olson, director of innovation at the Delaware Prosperity Partnership, noted the award is a “little bit unusual,” because it veers away from the state’s past practice of granting money to more established companies. 

But he said the Delaware Prosperity Partnership wants to “see more of these types of companies,” which he described as a venture-backed startup. 

“We think that it’s an exciting milestone for us to be supporting growth-stage companies,” Olson said.

Olson also emphasized that the grant is performance-based, meaning Gradbridge needs to hire and retain the promised workers before any dollars are disbursed. 

Gov. Matt Meyer has pushed for a reset on the economic development vision for the state to emphasize growing new employers here. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

Last year, Gov. Matt Meyer announced plans to focus the state’s economic development efforts on small businesses growth and on workforce development programs instead of dedicating huge sums of taxpayer money to large projects by established companies.

“In my administration, you’re going to see the use of this cash assistance de-emphasized,” Meyer said during the Delaware State Chamber of Commerce’s annual dinner last year.

The governor’s office declined to answer questions asking whether the Gradbridge grants are in line with the governor’s new vision for economic development, and about the company’s practice of marketing high-interest loans to college students.  

Meyer’s spokesman instead referred questions to the Delaware Division of Small Business. 

When asked whether the state has awarded money to startups in the past, Division of Small Business spokeswoman Andrea Wojcik said in an email that the majority of applications to the Council on Development Finance are from existing companies. 

But she said the state does not track grant awards by existing companies versus startups and there is nothing to prohibit a startup from applying.

In a press release announcing Gradbridge’s award, the Delaware Prosperity Partnership said the grant is a “strategic fit” for the governor’s innovation economy agenda. Meyer also was quoted in the press release.

“Delaware is proving once again that it is the best place for high-growth companies to launch, scale and succeed,” Meyer said.

Gradbridge focuses on unserved

Gradbridge markets its loans to college juniors, seniors, and graduate students — a model that CEO Jen O’Donald said allows her company to “pick up really where the other lenders leave off.”

In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, O’Donald said the inspiration for her to launch the company partly came from threats made last year by the federal government to shutter the U.S. Department of Education

If carried out, it would be a “massive disruption to the student loan industry, to schools, and to students themselves,” she said. 

She said her company lends to upperclassmen and graduate students because they might only need one or two loans to “cross the finish line” to graduation. She also said Gradbridge requires a cosigner for its undergraduate loans.

After originating loans, Gradbridge then sells them as assets to other companies. 

The startup’s technology centers on what O’Donald calls its custom credit score machine learning model, which it developed in partnership with the consumer credit reporting company, Experian Analytics.

To determine credit worthiness, the model considers FICO scores, past loan delinquencies, and bankruptcy, among other factors, O’Donald said. 

Growing Delaware’s existing fintech industry

Gradbridge joins an already rich online lending and fintech industry in Delaware. 

Wilmington is home to fintech student loan company College Ave, fintech lender Best Egg, and digital credit card company FairSquare.

Student lender Sallie Mae is headquartered in Newark. And the San Francisco-based online lending giant, SoFi, has locations in Greenville and Claymont. 

Other financial institutions headquartered or located in Delaware include BlackRock, Bank of America, Capital One, and JPMorganChase – all of which are increasingly expanding into the fintech field. 

Additionally, the University of Delaware houses a Fintech Innovation Hub on its STAR campus.

The post Delaware awards ‘unusual’ grant to student loan company after state’s economic development shift appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Laurel, a small town in western Sussex County, retains a disproportionately high violent crime rate compared to its small population. After the shooting of a local high schooler, a community group formed to make a change. More than three years later, with more donations and support, the group is still working to build a safer town.

Groups working to combat gun violence in the small, western Sussex County town of Laurel gathered last week with local leaders to unveil new beautification projects they hope will build community pride and push their work forward.

Organizers from Operation West Laurel gathered inside the Laurel Police Department headquarters on June 5. The group commemorated National Gun Violence Awareness Day by debuting the portraits of two Laurel high schoolers who were fatally shot in 2023 along with new community gardens.

The portraits memorialize Corey Mumford and Kylee Robinson – two 18-year-olds who were killed in the same year. Mumford’s death inspired Laurel High School teacher Amy Handy to start Operation West Laurel, an organization using prayer, trash pick up and after-school programs to combat violence. 

Mumford and Robinson’s portraits will be displayed at Laurel High School, along with a memorial bench.

Following the portrait reveal, Handy cut the ribbon for two new community gardens: a flower bed outside city police headquarters and a nearby vegetable garden across the street from Mount Zion Church. 

The portraits and community gardens represent Operation West Laurel’s ongoing community beautification work, one its many initiatives undertaken to mitigate violence in the town.

Those initiatives were bolstered last summer when it received a separate $93,000 grant from Healthy Communities Delaware. That grant was given in conjunction with Wilmington-based nonprofit End Community Violence Now, which has partnered with Operation West Laurel to extend its gun violence prevention work into southern Delaware.

The group also received a $50,000 grant from the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control to fund community beautification projects.

Rising from the classroom

Along with community beautification, Operation West Laurel hosts youth programming in the hopes of deterring teens in the community from turning toward violence.

Two days out of the week, Handy and her team hold after-school sessions for high-risk high school boys called Project RISE.

Handy defines “at-risk,” as kids who struggle with grades and attendance. Through working with the City University of New York’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice, the group has further identified students who are at-risk of becoming victims or perpetrators of gun violence.     

Last summer’s group included boys who were there when Mumford and Robinson were killed. 

Portraits memorializing Corey Mumford and Kylee Robinson — two 18-year-old Laurel residents who were fatally shot in the same year — were unveiled during a community gathering last week. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ELLA WALKER

At these after-school sessions, students are met with music and offered a snack. They then participate in “restorative circles,” and rate their days on a scale of 1-10. Afterward, they review their grades and do schoolwork. 

One of the students in the program, Woodley Dormevil, just graduated. Dormevil has known Handy since he was in seventh grade. Since leaving RISE, he has transitioned to helping out with some of the group’s community projects, like trash pick-ups. 

Dormevil said more people have come out to help Operation West Laurel since he started. He hopes Handy’s after-school program continues to grow and get more kids involved in the community.

This year, Operation West Laurel started offering workforce training once a week, including resume building and interview skills to the students at the after-school program. 

Handy said that she has seen a decline in community violence since starting her work. The Laurel Police Department did not respond to requests for the town’s most recent shooting data. 

According to news reports, there have been at least three shootings in Laurel in the last 12 months, none of which have resulted in a death. One incident in April involved a 16-year-old who fired a 3D-printed “ghost gun.”

Beyond the data, though, Handy said at-risk students have gained self-confidence and support from the after-school program. 

“They feel like people are listening to them,” Handy said. 

Pivoting toward in-state support

Since partnering with Operation West Laurel, the executive director of End Community Violence Now said the Sussex County town has gained more attention from philanthropic partners, the news, and elected officials. House Minority Leader Rep. Tim Dukes (R-Laurel) and Sen. Bryant Richardson (R-Seaford) both spoke at the gun violence press conference last week. 

“It’s really showed that it’s a bipartisan issue,” said Lauren Footman, the executive director.

Footman is using this traction to urge lawmakers to fund Gov. Matt Meyer’s proposed Office of Gun Violence and Community Safety. First introduced last May as an executive order, House Bill 369 would codify and secure funding for the office. The bill has passed the House and is currently awaiting consideration by the Senate. 

Due to the changing landscape of federal funding, Footman said that she is thinking strategically about how to leverage state support for gun violence prevention.

In April 2025, the Trump administration terminated hundreds of millions of dollars in existing violence prevention grants, an initiative launched by the Biden administration. 

Then in September, the administration changed the grant’s requirements, preventing community-based organizations like End Community Violence Now from receiving funding.

“We are exhausting all options of working with the federal delegation,” Footman said.  

Growing together 

The joint grant that Operation West Laurel and End Community Violence Now received last summer has helped the groups to work toward curbing crime through environmental design, mainly through community gardens and clean-up initiatives.

“I think it is really starting to show in the community – things are starting to look better,” Dormevil said.

Operation West Laurel’s new community gardens will help feed families and engage at-risk youth. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ELLA WALKER

Footman said the gardens serve many purposes. In addition to feeding families in need, they also serve as an opportunity to engage at-risk youth who tend to the gardens. 

She described the gardens as an “intergenerational opportunity,” bringing young and old residents together to co-create something for the community.  

Footman said she also is thinking about gun violence prevention on the infrastructural level, including improving street lighting. 

As for work on the streets, Operation West Laurel continues to do its prayer walks – one of the first group events Handy started shortly following Mumford’s death – every Thursday. 

Sabrina Isler, an Operation West Laurel volunteer, said the following has grown. More kids and families expect to see the team and join in on the walks. 

“We can’t control what people do, but at least they know someone is watching,” Isler said.

The post Laurel groups rally against gun violence, vow to continue community work appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
The Dover City Council’s decision to fire City Manager Dave Hugg earlier this spring has had costly and messy implications for the city government, including an age-based discrimination complaint and now a lawsuit alleging open meeting law violations. 

Former Dover City Manager Dave Hugg filed a lawsuit this week in Delaware’s Court of Chancery against the city of Dover, alleging officials violated open meeting laws in the process of firing him.

The lawsuit marks the latest development in the months-long turmoil over the city’s decision to oust its top administrative official. 

Hugg claims in the lawsuit that the public hearing during which the Dover City Council voted to fire him from his position was not conducted in compliance with Delaware’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)

According to Hugg’s complaint, the city violated FOIA by improperly labeling what would take place during the April 13 meeting where he was fired – the public notice did not explicitly say a vote to fire Hugg would be taken during the meeting. The complaint also alleges that holding the hearing at the end of an already long city council meeting prevented members of the public from attending.  

Hugg’s lawsuit represents another step in what is becoming a costly and litigious battle between the fired city manager and Delaware’s capital city. Hugg also filed an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) age-based employment discrimination complaint against the city last month, which will turn into a separate legal conflict once the investigation wraps up and he receives a “right to sue” letter. 

Dover is simultaneously dealing with a number of other controversies and financial roadblocks, including a $7 million budget shortfall, unrest between the Dover Police Department and city leaders, and an ongoing debate about a potentially unconstitutional panhandling ordinance

Hugg and the law firm representing him in the case, Offit Kurman, did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment on Wednesday. 

Dover City Attorney Dan Griffith confirmed the city is aware of the lawsuit, but said the city has not yet been served any court documents. 

The city has also not yet determined whether Griffith or an outside attorney will represent them, a spokesperson for the city told Spotlight Delaware. Keri Morris-Johnston, an attorney with the firm Marshall Dennehey, is representing the city against Hugg’s EEOC claim. 

The arguments

The thrust of Hugg’s case against the city focuses on the public hearing directly before he was fired. His attorneys say that meeting intentionally “lacked transparency” and “deprived the public” of the opportunity to defend Hugg’s performance as city manager. 

The saga began earlier this spring, when Hugg was quietly placed on administrative leave by city council. Hugg said that leave placement came after he was told by city leaders that he could either retire, resign, or be fired.

The Dover city charter requires a city manager to be given a public hearing and a “written statement of the reasons alleged for their removal” before the city council can take a final vote on removing them. 

And this, Hugg’s lawyers argue, is where the open meeting law issues arise. 

Hugg’s public hearing was listed on the April 13 council meeting agenda as “City Managers’ Request for Hearing Pursuant to City of Dover Charter, Article III, Sec. 33.” 

His lawyers say the city misrepresented the nature of the hearing in the pre-meeting notice, suggesting the agenda item was city council merely considering Hugg’s request for a public hearing, rather than actually conducting the hearing and voting on his employment status that same night. 

In addition, the lawyers argue the city’s decision to situate the hearing as the meeting’s 20th agenda item – so it did not begin until roughly two hours after the council meeting started – was another effort by the city to defy open meeting laws. 

“Because the Council was substantially delayed in beginning the termination hearing, at least one individual could not stay for several hours and was forced to leave before the hearing commenced,” the complaint says.

Hugg’s attorneys also say he submitted a FOIA request for a number of documents cited by the city council in its written statement of reasons for his removal, and the city denied the FOIA request. This prevented Hugg from being able to review the relevant records to prepare for the hearing, his lawyers argue. 

The lawsuit also makes mention of Hugg’s separate claim of age-based discrimination, which is currently playing out through an ongoing EEOC complaint and investigation. 

The lawsuit alleges the city council wanted to remove Hugg so that they could “replace him” with assistant city manager Sharon Duca, who is “over twenty years younger” than him. 

Duca was appointed the acting city manager in early March when Hugg was first placed on administrative leave. Then, at the June 8 city council meeting, she was named the full-time city manager. 

Griffith, the city attorney, and the city spokesperson declined to comment on the arguments laid out by Hugg’s team. 

Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen told Spotlight Delaware he is concerned about the lawsuit’s implications on the city’s financial situation and “the credibility of the city.” 

Other FOIA violations

While it remains to be seen how the court proceedings will unfold, there have been other questions raised in recent months about the city of Dover’s compliance with open meeting laws. 

Since last fall, city officials have been criticized for cutting the public comment section of city council meetings short and not including those public comments in the virtual livestream of the meeting, nor in the meeting recording posted online afterward.  

Thousands of pages of documents obtained by Spotlight Delaware via a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request reveal an unwavering solidarity from Dover city leaders in support of Police Chief Thomas Johnson despite calls for his resignation. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE GRAPHIC BY ELSA KEGELMAN

Then, in December, Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings ruled the city had violated FOIA by denying a Spotlight Delaware public records request.

The city had used an overly broad interpretation of what documents are exempted from FOIA due to ongoing or potential litigation, the Attorney General’s office wrote in its December ruling. Hugg’s attorneys wrote in the Chancery Court complaint that the city also denied Hugg’s FOIA request based on the same public records exemption – pending or potential litigation. 

Most recently, the Department of Justice ruled in favor of a citizen’s complaint that the city government did not follow FOIA rules by “failing to properly notice its rescheduled meeting.” 

This has forced the city council to reconsider its controversial panhandling ordinance, which the Attorney General’s office said was not properly advertised as being on the agenda for a final vote at the Feb. 25 council meeting. 

Once the city is formally served Hugg’s recent Chancery Court complaint, it will have 20 days to respond, according to Chancery Court rules


Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.

The post Fired Dover city manager sues city, claims open meeting law violations appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 05:37

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 05:01

With matches being played in 11 cities across the U.S., Mexico and Canada​, fans are getting three World Cup opening ceremonies.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 05:00

Looking for hands-free cleaning? We trialled the most powerful robot vacuums – some of which even mop your floors – to find the best

The best vacuum cleaners, tested

Robot vacuum cleaners take the drudge work out of cleaning your floors and carpets. No more tiresome weekly stints of vacuuming, and no more last-minute panic when you have visitors on the way. Instead, your compact robot chum regularly trundles out from its dock, sucking up dust, hair and debris to leave your floors looking spick and span.

Over the past few years, robot vacuums have become much more affordable, with basic units starting at about £150. They’re also doing more than they used to: mopping hard floors and charging in sophisticated cleaning stations that empty their dust collectors and clean their mop pads for you.

Best robot vacuum cleaner overall:
Eufy X10 Pro Omni

Best budget robot vacuum for small homes:
Roborock Q7 L5+

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 05:00

A woman wearing glasses and a tan blazer speaks into a handheld microphone while holding up a document featuring the ProPublica logo and a man's photograph. Several observers sitting in a row behind her, listening.
Rep. Norma Torres holds a printout of ProPublica’s reporting on the special treatment given to Juan Orlando Hernández, the former Honduran president who was pardoned of a drug conviction. Screenshot via House Appropriations Committee/YouTube

A federal lawmaker is pushing for a provision that would bar the Federal Bureau of Prisons from offering taxpayer-funded VIP perks to pardoned drug lords and child traffickers. 

Rep. Norma Torres, a California Democrat, introduced the measure last month as an amendment to a House appropriations bill, telling her colleagues that there “should never be preferential treatment for narco leaders.”

The move comes in response to ProPublica reporting on the special treatment extended to one high-profile pardon recipient — former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández, who was released from a federal penitentiary late last year. Less than 18 months earlier, Hernández had been sentenced to 45 years in prison for taking bribes and allowing drug traffickers to export more than 400 tons of cocaine to the U.S. while he was in office.

But after President Donald Trump pardoned him in December, the Central American strongman — who has long maintained his innocence — got what Torres and others have described as the “red carpet” treatment. On the day of his release, ProPublica found, Hernández had in place what’s known as an immigration detainer, a formal request for law enforcement agencies to hold noncitizens for pickup by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Yet instead of holding him, the Federal Bureau of Prisons scrambled to get the detainer removed so he could walk free. Then, instead of giving him a bus ticket or airfare to get home on his own, prison officials paid a four-man tactical team overtime to drive him six hours from a West Virginia high-security facility to the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan, New York, according to records and three people familiar with the situation. 

Torres sought to stop that sort of treatment with a narrowly tailored amendment barring the bureau and several other agencies from using taxpayer dollars to give convicted drug traffickers and child traffickers — even those who have been pardoned or received a sentence commutation — special accommodations or transportation, as well as from lifting “any detainers not provided to other inmates.” 

Last month, the amendment hit an early stumbling block when the House Appropriations Committee voted along party lines against including it in its proposed 2027 spending bill. 

“Taxpayer dollars should not be used to give convicted criminals special accommodations, lifted legal holds, or government-funded transportation,” Torres said in a press release afterward. “We should be enforcing the law, not handing out favors. I’m shocked that my Republican colleagues didn’t agree with that common sense idea.” 

But that doesn’t necessarily mean the proposal is dead. Last week in a statement to ProPublica, Torres — a Guatemalan immigrant who last year criticized the decision to pardon Hernández — said she planned to raise the issue before the Rules Committee, which can decide whether previously rejected amendments still get a vote on the House floor.

“I am not giving up,” she said, adding: “The American people deserve a government that enforces the law fairly and holds powerful criminals accountable, regardless of who pardons them.”

A Bureau of Prisons spokesperson declined to comment on the measure out of respect for members of Congress. Previously, a spokesperson said that the bureau does not discuss conditions of confinement or security procedures and that employee standards of conduct prohibit staff from giving any prisoners preferential treatment. ICE had previously referred questions to the White House, which this week did not respond to a request for comment.


Long before his arrest and controversial release, Hernández had been a polarizing figure, plagued by allegations of corruption in his country. Still, he was seen as a key U.S. ally under the Obama and first Trump administrations, in part because of his apparent interest in tackling drug trafficking and migration issues.

But in 2018, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration arrested his younger brother, former Honduran congressman Tony Hernández, for weapons and drug trafficking charges. The following year, a jury found Tony Hernández guilty in a Manhattan federal trial.

And weeks after the elder Hernández left office in 2022, he was arrested in Honduras and extradited to the U.S. to face drug trafficking and weapons charges. Prosecutors said Juan Orlando Hernández funded his political career with money he got from “violent drug-trafficking organizations” in exchange for allowing them to “move mountains of cocaine” out of the country. At one point, they said during trial, he bragged that he would “stuff the drugs right up the noses of the gringos.”

After a federal jury voted to convict him in early 2024, Hernández was sent to a notorious high-security penitentiary in West Virginia to serve his time. Last year, he appealed to Trump’s sympathies, penning a four-page letter framing his case as a “political persecution” by the Biden administration. 

In November — two days before the Honduran presidential election that swept Hernández’s right-wing National Party back into power — Trump announced his intent to pardon his former Central American counterpart. Experts said the timing sent an obvious message on the eve of a tight race; as one former high-ranking U.S. diplomat previously told ProPublica, the pardon was a show of support that served as a “clear green light for the National Party to manipulate the vote.”

(The narrow victory for Nasry “Tito” Asfura, who had been trailing in multiple polls, came amid reports of voter intimidation and fraud allegations. After the election, Asfura promised to “work tirelessly for Honduras.”)

On Dec. 1, Trump formally granted Hernández the full pardon, and by the end of the day he was on his way to the swank, five-star hotel in New York City, ProPublica reported. Days later, Renato Stabile, Hernández’s court-appointed lawyer, filed a motion to vacate the judgment and dismiss the indictment in light of the presidential pardon. When prosecutors didn’t file a response opposing it, a federal court agreed to Stabile’s request.

Previously, Stabile told ProPublica his client’s treatment during the release process was appropriate, as Hernández could have been arrested or killed had he been deported to his home country. He also declined to comment on where Hernández stayed but said the government did not pay the bill. Hernández had declined to comment through his attorney.

At the time, Joe Rojas, a retired prison worker and former union leader, said that BOP staff were “disgusted” after the agency “rolled out the red carpet” for Hernández. 

Last month, when the amendment came up for debate in front of the 63-member House Appropriations Committee, Torres held up a printed copy of ProPublica’s investigation as she told her colleagues about the special treatment Hernández received and about how the prisons agency had used “our hard-earned taxpayer dollars” to pay for his transport to New York. 

“These actions can never be allowed to happen ever again,” she said.

Two other lawmakers spoke in support of the measure. One, Rep. Hal Rogers, a Kentucky Republican, opposed it, calling the amendment “performative and unnecessary.” He did not explain his reasoning to the committee, and his office did not respond to an emailed request for comment. 

Ultimately, 31 Republicans opposed the amendment and 27 Democrats supported it. None of the Republican members who voted against the amendment responded to requests for comment from ProPublica.

Though Torres plans to raise the issue again this summer in front of the Rules Committee, the 9-4 Republican majority there makes it unlikely the measure will garner enough support to move forward right now.

But if the House fails to agree on spending bills before the end of this Congress, the November elections could change the balance of power and give the Democrats more say in what amendments make it to the floor next year.

The post Lawmaker Pushes for Ban on Special Treatment for Convicted Drug Traffickers After ProPublica Report appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-11 05:00

Spending on religious construction rose 17 percent last year as congregations grapple with the changing role of faith institutions.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 04:29

The Dreame X50 Ultra vacuums, mops and navigates every corner and right now you can get one for less than $900.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 04:09

I’ve been riding my GT for about two years now and I feel like I’ve hit a weird plateau with how it handles steep inclines. Usually, I can just lean into a hill and trust the torque to pull me through, but lately, it feels like the motor is fighting me or cutting out just a split second before it actually needs to kick in. I’m not seeing any error codes or anything on the app, but the sensation is definitely different than it was a few months ago. I checked my tire pressure and it's sitting right at the recommended PSI, and the battery is holding a charge fine, so I'm not sure if it's a firmware thing or if my motor is starting to show its age. I haven't done any major crashes or hard impacts recently, just standard trail riding and some pavement. Has anyone else noticed their board feeling less predictable on hills? I'm trying to figure out if I need to start looking at a replacement or if I'm just overthinking the way the sensor is reading the terrain. It's getting a bit nerve-wracking when you're halfway up a grade and you aren't 100% sure if it's going to bite or just bog down.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 03:43

For nearly 47 minutes, the San Antonio Spurs looked poised to leave Madison Square Garden with the NBA finals level at two games apiece.

They’d led by 81-52 in the third quarter, brought a frenzied Madison Square Garden crowd to heel and put themselves on the verge of reclaiming home-court advantage after having dropped the first two games at home. Even after the Knicks mounted a furious second-half fightback and wiped out the entirety of San Antonio’s 29-point cushion, the Spurs still appeared to have one final lifeline.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 03:41

The U.S. and Iran exchanged fire again on Thursday after President Trump pledged Tehran would "pay the price" for not accepting a deal.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 03:00

fjo3 shares a report from The Guardian: Tests reveal that when people are ambling about, they have a natural tendency to turn to the left and walk in an anticlockwise direction. "If you simply ask someone to start walking, whether they are wandering around a museum, a supermarket, or even an empty room, it is surprisingly likely that they will drift counterclockwise," said Dr Inaki Echeverria Huarte at University of Navarra in Spain. As with many critical discoveries in science, the revelation owes a debt to serendipity. During the pandemic, the researchers ran experiments to see how many people could share a space while keeping a safe distance. On reviewing the video, they noticed that crowds overwhelmingly walked in an anticlockwise direction. The surprise set in motion an entire research project. The scientists conducted a series of experiments in which individual pedestrians or small crowds roamed around enclosed spaces. Time and again, the researchers observed the tendency to walk in an anticlockwise direction. Suspecting that cultural norms might play a role, the team joined forces with Dr Claudio Feliciani at the University of Tokyo. He found the same results in Japan. The finding held when the researchers accounted for people being right-handed, right-footed and right-eye dominant, and was seen in both male and female walkers. The only difference they spotted was a more pronounced bias in children. "Each of us carries a small personal bias to turn slightly to one side, and when many people share a space, those tiny biases add up into a net counterclockwise rotation," said Echeverria Huarte. Researchers think the tendency may be tied to biomechanics: people are not perfectly symmetrical, and the way the brain processes sensory information and coordinates muscles may gently tip walkers toward one side. Right-side dominance may also play a role, especially in running, where anticlockwise movement puts more internal force on the right side of the body and may feel more natural to right-leg-dominant athletes. "We have tested several ideas and the bias stubbornly keeps showing up, so the exact mechanism is still an open question," said Echeverria Huarte. The findings have been published in Nature Communications.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 02:59

Budget airline describes inquiry as ‘bogus’ as watchdog says it is only large carrier flying from UK to impose charge

Europe’s biggest low-cost airline, Ryanair, is facing an investigation over the mandatory fee it charges a parent to sit with their child.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said the Irish carrier’s terms and conditions require at least one parent to sit with their children, including those with disabilities, and bills them about £8 a flight to do so.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 02:52

Singer and actor has denied all charges after more than 20 women made allegations against him dating back to 1990s

The French singer Patrick Bruel has been charged with rape and sexual assault in one of the biggest #MeToo cases in the French music industry.

The 67-year-old, a major figure in French pop culture, was placed under formal investigation over four cases that included alleged rape, attempted rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 01:45

Explosions reported across Iran after Donald Trump vowed to ‘hit them hard again’, with Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan targeted by Tehran

The US launched a new round of airstrikes on Iran into Thursday morning after Donald Trump warned Tehran would “pay the price” for stalled negotiations, prompting Iran to respond with strikes targeting Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan.

The new US assault across a range of Iranian cities came as efforts to negotiate an end to the war again appeared stuck, with Iran insisting it would maintain its chokehold on the strait of Hormuz. The American attack appeared more intense and wider than the day before, but Iran released no information about what was hit.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 01:32

The first-ever Creator Cup will put YouTube creators, athletes and celebrities on the pitch for a special exhibition match in New York ahead of the World Cup final.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 01:27

I used to mtn bike a lot. I have a GT i pretty much only off-road and she can’t do real steep hills. Really wana something crazy versatile. Can the XL do it?

submitted by /u/RealGrape123
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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 01:26

Sharon and Jack Osbourne defend their plan to create a "digital imprint" that would let fans talk with rock's Prince of Darkness.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 01:00

Under US rules, even a distant strike can suspend a game – and some will take place in Florida, the thunderstorm state

Hot weather will be a major concern at the World Cup, but lightning may also prove a particular problem. Under US safety regulations, a strike within 10 miles (16km) of a stadium triggers a 30-minute suspension of the game, during which players must leave the pitch.

The size of the safety zone was dictated by research on the distance that lightning can strike from a storm even with no clouds overhead. This is more than a theoretical risk. During a game in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1998, an entire team was killed by a single bolt of lightning. There have been many other deadly incidents.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 00:54

Former Labor foreign affairs minister says belief US would defend Australia in event of an existential attack is a ‘ludicrous delusion’

Aukus will prove to be one of the worst defence and foreign policy decisions ever made by an Australian government and is only being permitted by Donald Trump in order to destroy Chinese nuclear threats to the US mainland, former foreign affairs minister Gareth Evans has said.

In evidence to an independent public inquiry into the $368bn nuclear agreement with the US and UK on Thursday, Evans, a cabinet minister in the Hawke and Keating governments, warned the transfer and construction of submarines to Australia from the early 2030s was effectively only an extension of the American military fleet.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 00:24

This blog has now closed – our coverage of this crisis in the Middle East continues here

If the US genuinely wants a deal it will have to engage with Iranian demands on sanctions relief, says Danny Citrinowicz, the former head of the Iran branch of Israeli military intelligence.

Today’s exchange of strikes shows how easily both Iran and the US can slide towards another round of escalation, says Citrinowicz, who is now a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council.

If Washington is unwilling to accept that reality, it should recognize the likely alternative: continued confrontations with Iran that could eventually spiral beyond anyone’s control and lead to military conflict under less favorable conditions.

Even a limited military campaign designed to weaken Iran would not fundamentally alter Tehran’s negotiating position. It has not happened in the past, and there is little reason to believe it would happen now. Iran emerges from the latest exchange of blows convinced that it can absorb pressure and respond to attacks.”

Legal and moral responsibility of all countries in the region (especially those located along the southern shores of the Persian Gulf) to prevent the US military and Israel from using their territory or facilities to plan, organise, execute, or support hostile actions against Iran.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 00:00

How China’s currency manipulation is warping the world economy.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-11 00:00

Why the AI build-out was doomed from the start.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 23:50

California's Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom spearheaded a redistricting initiative that was intended to make up to five more districts more friendly to Democrats. Voters may have different ideas.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 23:43

A veteran North Korea analyst says Xi Jinping's visit to North Korea was about keeping tabs on an emboldened Kim Jong Un who wants "to confront the U.S."

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Electrek: Solar generated more U.S. electricity than coal for the first month on record in May 2026, according to new analysis from global energy think tank Ember. Solar supplied 12.8% of U.S. electricity during the month, while coal dropped to 12.2%. That's a dramatic shift in the U.S. power mix. Just five years ago, coal generated 19.7% of U.S. electricity in May, while solar accounted for only 5.4%. U.S. solar generation hit a record 45.5 terawatt-hours (TWh) in May 2026, up 17% from May 2025 and higher than the previous record set last July. Ember says another record could be broken again this summer. Solar output usually peaks in June or July, but its share of the electricity mix is often highest in spring, when strong sunshine lines up with milder temperatures before summer cooling demand ramps up. May was also the first time solar became the third-largest individual source of electricity in the U.S., behind only natural gas and nuclear. (If solar is included with all other renewables, then they're the second-largest source of electricity as an overall category of electricity.) Meanwhile, coal keeps sliding (and will continue to slide). Coal generation hit an all-time monthly low of 39.3 TWh in April 2026. Output rose slightly in May to 43.4 TWh, but it was still 11% lower than May 2025 levels. Even with that small rebound, coal couldn't keep pace with solar's rapid growth.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 23:01

Police have used water cannons on protesters in Northern Ireland after violence erupted for a second night over a stabbing in Belfast.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 22:06

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 11.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 22:00

Man accused of sedating and filming abuse of partner had contact with Pelicot, who was jailed for drugging wife and inviting men to rape her

A bodyguard from Lyon is to go on trial for allegedly sedating and raping his partner after he was in contact online with Dominique Pelicot, who was convicted of drugging and raping his own wife, Gisèle Pelicot.

Pelicot, one of the worst sex offenders in modern French history, is serving 20 years in prison after he was found guilty of drugging his then wife and inviting dozens of men to rape her in their home in the south of France over almost a decade. He and 50 other men were found guilty after the biggest rape trial in French history in 2024.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 21:57

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown is largely targeting people from the countries most vulnerable to displacement from climate-driven disasters, a Guardian analysis shows.

As the Trump administration pushes policies to boost planet-heating fossil fuels, millions of people are being forced to flee their homelands due to storms, floods and droughts worsened by the climate crisis.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 21:43

I just purchased a lightly used Pint S. I’ve created an account, connected the board to the account, but I don’t have/can’t find any kind of manual. I’m looking for basic info for things like the indicator lights, etc. is there a place on the website or somewhere else I can find an operator’s manual? Does one exist? Thanks…really looking forward to learning to ride!!

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 21:06

Jake Lang, a far-right influencer who was charged in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrection, was arrested in Dallas on a state charge of making terroristic threats.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 21:00

Two days of strikes followed downing of US Apache helicopter over the strait of Hormuz, which Trump has blamed on Iran – key US politics stories from Wednesday 10 June at a glance

The US has launched new strikes against targets in Iran for the second consecutive day, following through on Donald Trump’s promise to “hit them hard again” as a two-month-old ceasefire appears close to collapse.

US Central Command announced in a statement that forces began “launching additional self-defence strikes today at 5:15 p.m. ET [10.15pm UK time on Wednesday] against multiple targets in Iran at the Commander in Chief’s direction”.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 20:53

Pick out a frightening feature to watch this week.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 20:49

Defense says no evidence occasional Uber driver Jonathan Rinderknecht ignited deadly blaze on New Year’s Day 2025

The trial of 29-year-old Jonathan Rinderknecht, the man accused of starting last year’s deadly Palisades fire, kicked off on Wednesday with opening arguments. Prosecutors cast him as a vengeful arsonist who sought to hide his role from authorities, while his defense attorneys argued that the fire was caused by fireworks.

On New Year’s Day in 2025, firefighters extinguished a small blaze in the Pacific Palisades, a coastal Los Angeles enclave. But the flames continued to smolder underground, before reigniting as they were picked up by strong winds. The Palisades fire, the most destructive wildfires in city history, tore through roughly 23,000 acres, incinerating thousands of buildings and killing 12 people.

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2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 20:37

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 626 for Thursday, June 11.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 20:27

According to a recent survey, 71% of U.S. public school teachers said they work at least one second job.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 20:20

Commentary: My favorite anti-tech tech product has barely changed since the 2000s -- thank goodness.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-11 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 11, No. 1,818.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-11 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 11, No. 1,096.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-11 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 11, No. 830.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 23:18

The U.S. military launched an additional round of strikes on targets within Iran early Thursday morning local time, hours after President Trump vowed to hit Iran "hard."

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:58

A judge denied a request to block the DOJ's "anti-weaponization fund," noting Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche had already vowed not to move forward. But the judge warned: "Don't play possum with this court."

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:54

Trivia quiz …

How many teams have faced a 3-1 deficit in the NBA Finals and gone on to win?

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:45

This blog is now closed. Read our main report here: Police use water cannon against rioters in Northern Ireland

Hadi Alodid refused legal representation and made no reply to charges which were put put to him through an Arabic interpreter as he appeared in court charged with attempted murder following the Belfast knife attack, the Press Association reports.

The 30-year-old, with an address at Duncairn Avenue in Belfast, appeared before the city’s magistrates’ court on Wednesday morning.

He is charged with the attempted murder of Stephen Ogilvie on Monday, with threatening to kill an NHS radiographer on the same day and with the possession of a knife.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:39

Force disperses crowd of 300 people who burned truck and reportedly planned to target hotel hosting migrants

Police have used water cannon against rioters in Northern Ireland during a second night of anti-immigration protests.

It dispersed a crowd of about 300 people who burned a truck and threw bricks and petrol bombs close to the Sandyknowes roundabout near Newtownabbey, eight miles north of Belfast.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:37

Hundreds of free World Cup tickets will be given to working families with kids, first responders and military families in the New York City area.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:30

The wrongful arrest is just one of over a dozen in recent years linked to facial recognition technology.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:26

For now, new users still have the option to just buy the hardware upfront.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:18

Amid FIFA World Cup ticket troubles, the short-term rental company is offering fans free tickets with select bookings priced, on average, at $385 a night.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 19:14

U.S. Central Command said it went after “multiple targets” after the president said Tehran would “pay the price” for not making a deal.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:12

Apple recently announced its next crack at integrating “AI” into its operating systems, this time opting to simply whitelabel Google’s Gemini “AI” tools instead of developing its own LLM technology. Called “Siri AI”, Apple also stated it’s not coming to the EU, and the company stated that’s because the EU’s basic consumer protection legislation would give other “AI” tools “unprecedented access” to user data on users’ devices. The company made a big stink about this in the press.

As anyone with basic pattern recognition skills already knew, this was a blatant, baldfaced lie. What really happened is that Apple asked the EU for an 18-month long exemption from the EU’s consumer protection and privacy legislation during which it would not have to comply with any legal privacy and interoperability requirements – just so it could roll out Siri “AI” before anyone else could offer a competing product for Apple users.

Obviously, the EU wasn’t going to grant such an exemption.

“The decision not to roll out Siri AI in the EU is Apple’s and Apple’s only,” spokesperson Thomas Regnier told reporters in Brussels, saying there was nothing in the Digital Markets Act to stop the company from introducing new products in the EU.

“Apple was simply unable to develop interoperability solutions that meet essential EU ​privacy and security standards,” Regnier said.

“Instead ​of trying to find ⁠a suitable compliance solution, Apple simply made a request to the European Commission to be exempted from their interoperability obligations under the DMA – and this for at least 18 months. ​That’s not an option,” Regnier said.

↫ Inti Landauro and Foo Yun Chee at Reuters

So what’s really going on here is that Apple wants to offer a set of whitelabeled Google Gemini tools on iOS and macOS in the EU, but because Apple is classified as a gatekeeper, it is legally obligated to offer interoperability options for competing “AI” tools. These options in turn need to adhere to the EU’s strict privacy regulations, so that competing “AI” tools can offer the same level of privacy that Apple’s own whitelabeled Google Gemini tools claim to offer.

Apple didn’t want to offer these privacy-respecting interoperability options as required by law, so instead of following the law in the countries it wants to operate in, Apple asked to be placed above the law for at least 18 months, basically giving Siri “AI” a massive head-start over possible competitors so that it could entrench itself in the userbase. The EU saw right through Apple’s nonsense, and now called them out on their bullshit. Perhaps Apple has gotten so used to openly bribing Trump that they forgot other parts of the world don’t work that way.

Whenever Apple and its PR attack dogs say anything about the EU, you can be assured they are lying. They have proven time and time again to basically never speak a single word of truth when it comes to its dealings in the EU. It’s almost pathological at this point, and what makes it doubly interesting is that Apple will not launch Siri “AI” in China either, for the very same regulatory reasons – yet all China got was a single footnote in a press release.

I wonder why.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:11

Eufy's FamiLock line is now larger, with more affordable models that limit AI processing to help protect your privacy. Here's how that works.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 19:08

Howdy guys!

Looking to buy my first one wheel, I think I settled on the XRC over the pint s. Curious if I should buy the hybrid fender and rail guards that come with it? Or are 3rd party options or without fender better.

Thinking about buying it through suprents for peace of mind in case I don’t like it and want to return it.

Thanks for the advice in the fender.

submitted by /u/nick725
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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:06

State supreme court ruling aids nationwide redistricting effort aimed at helping party retain slim House majority

The Florida supreme court on Wednesday allowed new US House districts drawn by Republicans to be used in the midterm elections, marking another victory for the GOP in a nationwide redistricting effort aimed at helping the party retain its slim House majority.

Attorneys for voters who sued had argued that the new congressional districts violate a state constitutional prohibition on partisan gerrymandering, and that the court should order the state to continue using the same districts as in the previous election. The supreme court, in a 6-1 decision, denied their request for a temporary injunction without ruling on the merits of the case. The judges said they lacked jurisdiction to intervene while the lawsuit gradually plays out in the lower courts.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:01

Vishwash Kumar Ramesh was the only passenger to survive the incident in June 2025, which killed 260 people

The only survivor of the Air India plane crash that killed 260 people in June 2025 has called for “honesty, transparency and answers” a year on from the disaster, and spoken about his “significant psychological scars” and financial hardship.

Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, a British national, has previously described his fate as a “miracle” after being the only person to survive the incident, in which a Boeing 787 Dreamliner struck a medical college shortly after taking off from Ahmedabad airport.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:01

New name, Bristol Dockyards, and museum revamp aimed at becoming more rooted in community, says chief executive

One of the UK’s maritime landmarks is being renamed as part of a drive to make it “cooler” and more inclusive.

For a decade, the dockland site in Bristol that houses the ocean liner SS Great Britain, which was designed by the Victorian engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, has been promoted as Brunel’s SS Great Britain.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 19:00

A researcher using the name Nightmare Eclipse has released a new Microsoft Defender zero-day exploit called "RoguePlanet," which reportedly works on fully patched Windows 10 and 11 systems and can spawn a command prompt with SYSTEM privileges through a Defender race condition. The release came just hours after Microsoft fixed two previously disclosed flaws during its latest monthly Patch Tuesday drop -- its largest Patch Tuesday release ever. BleepingComputer reports: The researcher shared a proof-of-concept exploit on Tuesday afternoon in a self-hosted Git repository after saying that GitHub and GitLab repositories hosting their exploits had previously been removed by Microsoft. "The exploit is a race condition, so it's a hit or miss. I have managed to get a 100% success rate on some machines while it struggled to work on others," Nightmare Eclipse wrote in the repository. [...] Cybersecurity firm ThreatLocker told BleepingComputer that they successfully reproduced the flaw in their testing and confirmed the exploit worked against fully patched Windows 11 systems with KB5094126 installed, and shared a video demonstrating it. "Our initial analysis confirms that the RoguePlanet exploit is viable and performs as described. Organizations using application allowlisting can prevent the exploit from executing, providing an effective layer of protection against this attack," Danny Jenkins, CEO of ThreatLocker, told BleepingComputer. According to Nightmare Eclipse, RoguePlanet was originally developed as a remote code execution vulnerability that exploited Microsoft Defender's handling of files hosted on remote SMB shares. "In initial development, it was confirmed that this vulnerability was a remote code execution," the researcher explained in a blog post. "It required an attacker to coerce a victim to open a .vhd(x) in a remote SMB server, succesful exploitation resulted in defender overwriting its own files and obviously the end outcome was an RCE." The researcher says another attack scenario could lead to remote code execution simply by coercing a victim into opening an SMB share if symlink evaluation settings were enabled. However, the researcher claims Microsoft silently hardened Defender in mid-May by patching "mpengine!SysIO*" API, which blocked junction attacks. "Rewriting RoguePlanet to make it functional again drained my soul and I couldn't complete the other scenarios and for now it remains unclear if RoguePlanet is limited to LPE or there is some sort of way to turn it into an RCE," the researcher wrote.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 18:58

With its detachable display, the Insta360 Luna Ultra is exciting for YouTubers. Here's how it compares to the Osmo Pocket 4.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 18:46

For a while now the transition away from Manifest V2 (MV2) to MV3 has been on-going and it looks like it is entering its final phase of deprecation, at least, in the case of Google Chrome. A recent discussion thread in the w3c WebExtensions Community Group GitHub repo has highlighted how the latest and upcoming versions of the most popular browser are expected to be its final releases with support for MV2 extensions.

↫ Sayan Sen at Neowin

You shouldn’t be using Chrome anyway.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 18:44

Two months after the rousing success of the Artemis II mission, NASA introduced four new astronauts -- all men.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-10 18:37

Thanks to the success of its GPUs in powering the first stage of the AI boom, Nvidia became not only the world’s most successful chip company, but the world’s most valuable company. But as we enter phase two of the AI boom, we’re seeing a new class of chip based on static random access memory (SRAM) come to the forefront. That’s good news for Nvidia, which bought its own SRAM chipmaker, as well as upstarts like d-Matrix, Cerebras, and an SRAM cloud company called Gimlet Labs.

While GPUs excel at chewing through massive gobs of data, keeping the previously computed AI model values in memory is the main bottleneck with AI inference workloads today. The so-called GPU memory wall is the primary barrier, as it imposes a hard limit on the number of previously computed keys and values an AI inference system can cache in memory for quick recall during an AI session. A smaller KV cache translates into a substandard experience for users, either through limited context windows, longer response times, or fewer number of concurrent users.

d-Matrix builds in-memory compute in a chiplet form-factor

The brute force answer to the KV cache problems is to cram as much fast memory into the system as physically (or fiscally) possible. While the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in Nvidia and AMD GPUs offers relatively big caches for GPUs to stash data as they processes data, HBM resides off the chip, which limits the total memory bandwidth. The fastest memory available is SRAM, which resides directly on the chip and offers memory bandwidths on the order of 100 TB per second to 150 TBps, compared to the 1.2 TBps (HBM3) to 2 TBps (HBM4) per stack.

SRAM is superfast but it’s relatively expensive, which has traditionally limited its use to the chip registers and internal L1, L2, and L3 caches. Dynamic RAM (DRAM), by contrast, is slower but less expensive than SRAM, and traditionally has been the choice for use as main working memory.

But as AI pushes the limits of computing, that has started to change, and chipmakers are starting to build designs that feature SRAM as main memory. Groq is one of those chipmakers. Acquired by Nvidia in December for $20 billion, Groq built its Language Processing Unit (LPU) by building vector and matrix computing units directly onto the chips containing loads of SRAM. Nvidia quickly turned its acquisition around, and launched its Groq 3 LPX racks at GTC in March.

But Groq LPUs aren’t the only SRAM game in town. d-Matrix also based its chip architecture on a digital in-memory compute (DCIM) architecture that utilizes large amounts of SRAM. The Santa Clara, California company recently has been developing its Corsair accelerator, which incorporates 256 MB of SRAM in a 3D-stacked chiplet form factor. Each Corsair card delivers 150 TBps of memory bandwidth directly from a PCIe Gen 5 card.

Cerebras WSE-3 features 44GB of on-chip SRAM

Yesterday, d-Matrix announced that Corsair is in full production, with product shipping in volume to priority customers. Each Corsair accelerator offers up to 2,400 teraflops of 8 bit dense compute within a 600 watt TDP, and can be installed in standard air-cooled server racks. It’s being manufactured by d-Matrix partners TSMC and Alchip Technologies on TSMC’s N6 process node.

“We built Corsair specifically for this moment, the Age of AI Inference,” stated Sid Sheth, founder and CEO of d-Matrix. “The applications that matter most today–agentic AI, interactive coding, real-time voice agents–live or die on latency. Corsair takes off from where the GPU leaves off, and this summer our customers will be able to experience the turbocharge d-Matrix brings at full rack scale.”

Another chipmaker building around SRAM is Cerebras Systems. Where the d-Matrix Corsair takes a svelte, chiplet-based approach that can scale from very small to big, Cerebras is swinging for the fences with its massive chip, the Wafer Scale Engine.

The WSE-3, which Cerebras announced in March 2024, is a monster of a chip, containing 4 trillion transistors and packing 44GB of on-chip SRAM along with nearly 1 million AI compute cores onto a silicon wafer the size of a dinner plate. With up to 1 PB of external memory, it can train the biggest AI models in the world, spanning 24 trillion parameters or more.

Cerebras Systems went public three weeks ago. Trading on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol CBRS, Cerebras raised $5.55 billion with its shares price at $185 per, making it the biggest IPO of the year (so far). The company is currently valued at $56 billion, which makes it the poster child for the emerging SRAM chip market.

Source: Gimlet Labs

An SRAM company to keep an eye on is Gimlet Labs, an applied AI research startup out of Stanford University. The company is developing what it calls a “multi-silicon inference cloud” that eliminates hardware considerations for AI customers by building an abstraction layer in between the workload and the hardware.

Zain Asgar, the Stanford adjunct professor who co-founded Gimlet and is its CEO, is a fan of traditional GPUs as well as newer SRAM accelerators.

“Our software orchestration slices and maps inference workloads to the optimal hardware, and that experience has given us a practical view of where each architecture sits,” Asgar wrote in a March blog titled “The emerging role of SRAM-centric chips in AI inference.” “With top labs increasingly investing in inference speed and throughput, SRAM-centric accelerators are positioned to capture a meaningful share of the market,”

Gimlet, which recently raised $80 million in a Series A round, is running SRAM-based accelerators in its cloud, alongside traditional chips like Nvidia GPUs. The prefill and decode stages of AI inference put dramatically different demands on processors and memory stacks, and fitting each workload to the appropriate hardware is a constant challenge.

The auto-regressive nature of the decode stage maps very well to high memory intensity and doesn’t benefit from compute density, which favors the near-compute memory architectures, such as SRAM, Asgar wrote.

“This has created a perfect storm for near-compute memory chips (like today’s SRAM-centric architectures), which provide superior performance for decode,” he wrote. “As an industry, we are entering an exciting new era of chip design, with the unique demands of today’s inference workloads pulling architectures in many different directions at once. We look forward to seeing (and using) the new chips that emerge under these constraints.”

Feature image at top shows Groq 3 LPU. 

The post Why SRAM Chips Are Pulling Ahead in the New AI World appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-10 18:37

Less than two weeks ago, in a scathing rebuke, a federal judge ordered U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to release a Louisiana grandfather who’d suffered a heart attack while in ICE custody.

The man, Akram Mahmoud Omar, 77, lived in the U.S. for 50 years until ICE abruptly seized him during a routine check-in last October and soon sent him to “Camp 57,” the ICE detention camp within the notorious Angola, Louisiana, state prison.

The stress of the poor conditions there contributed to Omar’s heart attack, according to the habeas petition he filed in April. On May 29, a federal judge found ICE had violated Omar’s constitutional rights and ordered his immediate release. 

Then on Monday, just 10 days after his release, ICE seized Omar again and tried to whisk the still-recovering man onto a deportation flight the next morning, according to his lawyer Ken Mayeaux. 

Following an emergency motion from Mayeaux, the same judge again ordered ICE to release Omar and cautioned the agency not to make another deportation attempt.

“U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (‘ICE’) shall IMMEDIATELY RELEASE Omar from ICE custody,” said the Monday order from Judge Brian Jackson in Louisiana’s Middle District. “ICE shall not RE-DETAIN or REMOVE Omar from the United States during the pendency of Omar’s Emergency Motion to Enforce the Court’s May 29 Order.”

In the May order, the judge found that ICE had violated Omar’s constitutional rights by unlawfully detaining him and denying him the chance to prepare for an orderly departure.

ICE directly defied that order by seizing him without warning for immediate deportation, the emergency motion alleges, blocking him from arranging his affairs or even saying goodbye.

“Petitioner’s re-detention and planned removal are in direct contempt of this Court’s prior order,” reads the June 8 emergency motion. The government “lied to Mr. Omar, telling him and his family that he did not need to report to ICE/ERO” — ICE’s Enforcement and Removal Operations division — “until December, but now, Respondent is racing to remove petitioner within hours.”

In a statement to The Lens and The Intercept, ICE spokesperson Angelina Vicknair said, “ICE complies with all court orders, and any allegation that a judge’s orders were not followed are categorically false.”

Federal courts are now constantly dealing with flagrant violations of judicial orders by ICE, said Bridget Pranzatelli, an attorney with the National Immigration Project.

Related

“Warehousing Human Beings”

“This level of cruelty and disrespect for federal courts is the rule, not the exception,” said Pranzatelli, who is familiar with the case. “The Court looked at the entire record before it and issued a well-reasoned decision, which specifically mandated certain protections for this very elderly, very sick man, and ICE ignored it.”

ICE’s actions in Omar’s case are also in line with the way that the government is using extreme measures to target Palestinians, Pranzatelli said. Omar was born in Palestine before the formation of the state of Israel; in 1975, he moved to the U.S. as a lawful permanent resident.

“If In Fact He Survives the Flight”

After his release last month, Omar attended his regular ICE check-in on the first Wednesday in June; his next check-in would be in December, he was told. But last Friday, he received a letter telling him to report to an ICE office on Monday morning, June 8.

After Omar received the letter, Mayeaux emailed the ICE office in Bossier City, Louisiana, where Omar lives, warning immigration officials that “any attempted removal of Mr. Omar in June would be in direct contempt of the Court Order,” according to a copy of the email included with the motion. “I am instructing my client not to report as requested.”

Related

ICE Said They Were Being Flown to Louisiana. Their Flight Landed in Africa.

Instead, on Monday, ICE came to Omar’s home and arrested him again. Omar’s wife immediately called Mayeaux. Only hours later did ICE tell Omar’s family he was being taken nearly two hours away, to an ICE staging area for deportation flights, and would be put on a plane the next morning to Israel.

By early afternoon, Mayeux had filed the emergency motion. 

His client’s health, Mayeux wrote in the emergency motion, was his main concern. Omar is still recovering from his April heart attack and open-heart surgery. His wife told the arresting ICE officer that she was planning to take Omar to a cardiologist later that day, and that he could not move well. 

According to the filing, a doctor was prepared to testify that the roughly 14-hour flight without medical clearance raised serious concerns about Omar’s health, “if in fact he survives the flight.” 

“Heartless and Cruel”

Omar had been in the U.S. for half a century when ICE picked him up in Mississippi during a routine check-in last fall. There was no readily apparent cause: ICE had long known about two minor, nonviolent convictions, one in 2005 and one in 2022, but Omar had lived in the U.S. for years under ICE supervision and had complied with required immigration check-ins. 

“Incredibly, despite these undisputed facts, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (‘ICE’) considers Omar to be both a ‘flight risk’ and a ‘priority for removal,” said the May release order from Jackson, a federal judge in Baton Rouge. “Omar has been held in ICE detention since October 28, 2025 — 7 full months — with no end in sight.” 

Jackson ruled that ICE had to abide by its own regulations: If ICE were to deport him, the agency needed to give him advance notice, a reason, an opportunity for an orderly departure, and an informal interview to respond to ICE’s deportation efforts.

ICE did not serve Omar’s counsel with notice until he was already back in ICE custody. 

“The Notice also makes a mockery of the Court’s Order,” says Mayeaux’s June 8 emergency motion. “It was only after he was taken back into custody — in contravention of the Court’s Order — that he was informed of the existence of the travel document and of his imminent removal.” 

But even at that point, the motion alleged, ICE didn’t give Omar the chance to speak directly with counsel.

The court had also directed ICE to facilitate communication with Omar’s doctors and family “to ensure the most efficient and effective continuation of his required medical treatment upon his release.”

Related

Deportation, Inc.

ICE appears to have violated most of Jackson’s orders when its agents re-detained Omar. Even when ICE SUVs showed up at his door to bring him to the Bossier City field office, the agents continued to say that it was only a routine check-in. Not until less than 24 hours before the flight was scheduled to depart were family members told he was being deported.

Again, an order from Jackson mandated Omar’s immediate release. ICE agents returned him to his home around 7 p.m. Monday evening — leaving his family relieved, but shaken.

“They’re all completely traumatized,” Mayeaux said of his client’s family.

While ICE’s letter last week had made him suspicious, he said, “I couldn’t believe they would be so heartless and cruel as to do this to a 77-year-old man who’s ill. I just didn’t.”

The post ICE Defied Direct Order From Federal Judge and Re-Detained Elderly Palestinian appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 18:32

Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law, has finalized a deal with Albanian officials to allow construction on Sazan Island in the Adriatic Sea. The $1.6bn project is expected to build luxury tourism real estate on the pristine island and surrounding waters and wetlands. Spurned by the potential environmental impact of the plan and the possibility of corrupt dealings, demonstrators have taken to the streets of Albania's capital city demanding an end to the project. Cate Brown, the Guardian's political enterprise reporter, examines what the Kushner real estate deal on Sazan Island can teach us on how Donald Trump’s son-in-law pursues real estate ventures and examines why Albania isn't alone in its fight

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 18:12

Environmental groups say exchange between US government and SpaceX would worsen ecological risks

Environmental groups on Wednesday sued in an attempt to stop the Trump administration from giving SpaceX more than 700 acres (280 hectares) of wildlife refuge in Texas, claiming it would worsen ecological risks to a Gulf coast region already transformed by billionaire Elon Musk’s rocket operations.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service this month approved moving forward with the deal with SpaceX, which would surrender 683 acres (276 hectares) the company owns in exchange for federal land in the Lower Rio Grande Valley national wildlife refuge. The 103,000-acre (41,700-hectare) refuge spans four counties along the Texas border and is home to animal habitats and historical landmarks.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 18:00

Visa is integrating its payment network with ChatGPT so AI agents can shop and complete purchases on users' behalf. "It means AI agents can not only recommend products but complete the purchase on the user's behalf, at potentially any merchant that accepts Visa," reports the Associated Press. "The payment network's previous attempts at this technological leap were confined to a single retailer or a small set of enrolled merchants." From the report: OpenAI will provide the technology to allow agents to interact, make decisions and initiate purchases through ChatGPT. Visa, the world's largest payment network outside of China, will provide the payment authorization and fraud monitoring needed to do this at scale. "As AI agents become active participants in the economy, Visa's focus is to ensure transactions are trusted, secure and seamless," said Jack Forestell, chief product and strategy officer at Visa. Speaking at a company event Wednesday in San Francisco Wednesday, Forestell gave an example of a customer telling ChatGPT they're looking for a pair of wireless headphones under $150. The chatbot would find a pair for sale under those parameters and buy it on behalf of the customer. Visa and OpenAI did not disclose the financial terms of the collaboration and did not give details on the fees merchants or customers would have to pay. [...] Visa says the feature will have guardrails like spending limits, required approval steps and approved merchants for shopping in order to protect consumers and minimize fraud.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:59

National Science-at-Scale Collaborative will connect industry, the Department of Energy and national laboratories to accelerate manufacturing innovation

June 10, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory has launched a new effort to help American companies develop and scale new products and manufacturing technologies more quickly.

Pilot-scale manufacturing equipment at Argonne’s Materials Engineering Research Facility. Image credit: Argonne National Laboratory.

Called the ​“National Science-at-Scale Collaborative,” the effort is supported by DOE’s Office of Critical Materials and Energy Innovation (CMEI). The collaborative brings together industry, government and the national laboratories to address complex challenges in critical materials and chemical manufacturing in the United States.

Argonne will work with industry partners on projects designed to move promising technologies from research to commercial production faster. Researchers will use advanced computer modeling, artificial intelligence, rapid synthesis tools and pilot-scale manufacturing systems at Argonne’s Materials Engineering Research Facility to help companies test and scale new production processes.

“American manufacturing has an opportunity to lead the next generation of innovation in critical materials and chemical processing,” said Paul Kearns, director of Argonne. ​“The National Science-at-Scale Collaborative will help connect discovery, engineering and deployment in ways that strengthen U.S. competitiveness and advance our economic security.”

The announcement followed an industry roundtable chaired by CMEI. Leaders from the chemical and critical materials sectors met to discuss manufacturing challenges and opportunities for collaboration.

“To compete globally, the U.S. must bring new technologies into domestic production more quickly,” said Assistant Secretary of Energy Audrey Robertson. ​“This collaborative will help connect DOE, the national laboratories and private industry to speed up that process.”

The collaborative supports CMEI’s broader mission to strengthen America’s critical minerals supply chains and accelerate next-generation energy technologies.

Industry roundtable participants list:

  • DOE: Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation Office.
  • National Laboratory System: Argonne National Laboratory.
  • Manufacturers: Aclara, Albemarle, ATALCO, BASF North America, Chemours, Dow, Entegris, Exxon Mobil, Orbia and Standard Lithium.

About Argonne National Laboratory

Argonne National Laboratory seeks solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology by conducting leading-edge basic and applied research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne is managed by UChicago Argonne, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.


Source: ANL

The post Argonne and DOE Launch New Partnership to Speed Up US Manufacturing Innovation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-11 08:04
2026-06-10 17:58

In a 6-1 ruling, the court determined the First District Court of Appeal should consider the merits of the case before it weighs in on the matter.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:51

Microsoft co-founder appears in closed-door session as part of lawmakers’ investigation into convicted sex offender

Bill Gates testified in front of the House committee on oversight and reform on Wednesday, and told lawmakers in his opening remarks that he “never witnessed nor had any indication” that Jeffrey Epstein was “engaged in ongoing criminal conduct”.

“I am here to answer your questions about my interactions with Jeffrey Epstein and to help contribute to the committee’s important work,” Gates said in his opening statement, seen by the Guardian. “I support the release of all the Epstein files and sincerely hope that, through your efforts and those of others advocating on their behalf, the survivors of Epstein’s crimes can get the justice that they deserve.”

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:43

The hit summer reality show is off on Wednesdays.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:41

The Fifa president’s monologue before the 2022 World Cup attained legendary status for all the wrong reasons. He was in familiar form four years on

Gianni Infantino’s speech on the eve of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar is the stuff of legend. You know the one – the rambling, hour-long monologue where he told us all how he felt. He felt gay that day. He also felt disabled, Qatari, Arab, African and like a migrant worker. In doing so, the Fifa president engraved himself permanently into meme culture, and his remarks remain a popular source of online amusement to this day.

On Wednesday, amid a gaggle of reporters and photographers, Infantino once again took to the stage. He sat in a tent in the shadow of the Estadio Azteca – it has been renamed Estadio Ciudad de México for the World Cup – a place many see as the western hemisphere’s cathedral of football. On Thursday, Mexico will host South Africa in the opening match of the 2026 World Cup.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:41

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:32
  • Quarterback has two years added to his deal

  • Contract will last until Mahomes is 38

The Kansas City Chiefs and their starting quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, have agreed to a restructured contract that adds two years to his deal and pushes his total compensation past a half-billion dollars, according to sources.

Mahomes signed a 10-year, $450m contract in 2020 that set a benchmark not only for the quarterback position but for any NFL player. The latest extension ties the two-time MVP to the Chiefs through the 2033 season, when Mahomes will be 38, and it comes in at $504.75m, with incentives and escalators that could push the value beyond $520m.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:26

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, often touts bipartisanship and moderation. The word "bipartisan" appears 2,635 times on her official website. But her Democratic rival, Graham Platner, said she is a rubber stamp for the Republican president.

"If you are an independent voice, why do you vote with Donald Trump 95% of the time?" Platner said, addressing Collins during his June 9 Senate primary victory speech. 

That number matches a respected analysis of senators’ votes in 2025, although Collins sided with Trump at a slightly lower rate during his first term. However, a percentage in isolation disregards that Collins has opposed Trump on some key issues.

Collins largely aligned with Trump’s position in 2025

Collins' 2025 votes supported Trump’s position 94.6% of the time. Among Republicans, only Rand Paul of Kentucky and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska supported Trump less frequently than Collins. Republican senators supported Trump at record levels; most Republicans voted 100% with Trump. 

The percentage comes from CQ Roll Call, a nonpartisan source that has examined congressional votes and presidential support since 1953.

Members’ scores reflect how often they vote in agreement with the president’s position. The analyzed votes are a fraction of all votes that Congress takes.

During Trump's first term, Collins sided with Trump about 90% of the time.

Not all votes are equal  

Congressional experts said the percentage doesn’t tell the full story about a lawmaker’s record.

Mark D. Brewer, a University of Maine political science professor, said the CQ metrics are legitimate measures and useful to voters, but they have two drawbacks. 

"First, they do not register if a member fails to vote on a bill (obviously not a problem for Collins)," Brewer wrote in an email to PolitiFact, a nod to the senator reaching her historic 10,000th vote without missing a roll call vote. "Second, and more important, they treat all measures that the president has taken a position on the same. Obviously some bills matter more to a president than do others, but that is not accounted for here."

Collins has taken some high-profile votes against Trump. In 2026, she sided with Democrats to block a nearly $1.8 billion weaponization fund for Trump allies. In April, she voted in support of a resolution directing the removal of U.S. armed forces from hostilities against Iran.

In 2025, Collins was one of three Republican senators who voted against Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill. Collins said she supported extending tax relief for families and small businesses, but primarily opposed the legislation because of "the harmful impact it will have on Medicaid, affecting low-income families and rural health care providers like our hospitals and nursing homes."

Weeks later, Trump said on Truth Social: "Republicans, when in doubt, vote the exact opposite of Senator Susan Collins. Generally speaking, you can’t go wrong."

She opposed Trump during his first term on some major votes. After the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, Collins voted to convict Trump on an impeachment charge. She said his actions interfered with the peaceful transition of power and were an abuse of power.

As Senate Appropriations Committee chair, Collins has the power to shape federal spending. During Trump’s current term, Collins opposed $1 billion in White House ballroom funding and objected to the administration's proposed cuts for biomedical research.

Bipartisan analysis is another way to measure her record

Another useful metric is the Bipartisan Index Rankings, a partnership of the Lugar Center and Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy. The index measures the frequency with which a lawmaker co-sponsors bills offered by the other party and how often they attract or recruit co-sponsors from the other party for their own bills. The more often lawmakers collaborate with members of the other party on bills, the higher their score.

Over the last 13 years, Collins has ranked first on the index among Republicans.

These analyses don’t capture other ways senators can influence outcomes on measures that never reach a vote.

In 2025, the White House withdrew its nomination of Dave Weldon as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hours before his Senate hearing. In a statement to The New York Times, Weldon, a former Florida congressman, blamed Collins and Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La.

Collins said she "had some reservations, but I certainly had not reached a final judgment." 

Our ruling

Platner said Collins votes with Trump "95% of the time."

That was a reference to CQ’s analysis of her votes in 2025. During Trump’s first term, she sided with Trump on about 90% of votes.

Focusing on this percentage alone omits that Collins has opposed Trump on some key measures. 

We rate this statement Mostly True.

RELATED: All of our fact-checks in the 2026 midterms

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:25

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-10 17:10

Shasta county passes measure requiring elections to be held in person on one day and limiting absentee ballots

Northern California’s Shasta county, best known for its radical conservative politics and thriving election-skeptic movement, appears on track for another clash with the state over a newly approved ballot measure that would transform local elections.

In last Tuesday’s election, the majority of voters in the rural county backed Measure B, which requires elections to be held in person on a single day and limits who can cast an absentee ballot – effectively putting an end to vote by mail – while also requiring photo ID and a hand count.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:08

CNET experts have tested dozens of standing desks and have landed on these as the best choices of 2026.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:02

Trial of former New York City comptroller is ‘another example of the Trump administration’s suppression of political dissent’, lawyer argues

The trial against senior New York City Democrat Brad Lander, stemming from his arrest during an attempt to inspect rooms holding detained immigrants, involved six hours of litigating elevator logistics in Manhattan federal court on Wednesday.

Lander, the former city comptroller now vying for Democratic incumbent Dan Goldman’s congressional district, which encompasses lower Manhattan and north-west Brooklyn, was taken into custody on 18 September last year at 26 Federal Plaza.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:02

These desks are the best ones CNET experts have tested.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:00

I end up riding the pint more often. Whats a 4212/4152 Gemini firmware XR board in excellent condition bring lately?

tfl bumpers, new hoosier tire, side plates, 180 miles.

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

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:00
Emily Brady

EMILY BRADY
Opinion Columnist

I love reality television. Maybe that’s a hot take for some people. I know there are many people out there who are against it, calling it “trashy” reality and denying that it’s even real at all. Although that could very well be true, it doesn’t take away from how entertaining it is. I think it’s especially nice when we, as an audience, get to have a say. We almost feel like we’re a part of the show.

Take “Dancing with the Stars,” for example. Just as much as the judges have their say, we get to be judges too! “Dancing with the Stars” is a reality competition show where celebrities are paired with professional dancers to perform routines and compete for judges’ scores and audience votes. Every week, we get the chance to text the name of the person we are voting for to the number 21523, and you can do it up to 10 times. The fans basically get to decide who wins the entire thing.

The same goes for “Love Island,” where we get to vote in real time, with new episodes almost every single day. It’s a show where single contestants live together in a villa, form romantic couples and compete in challenges to win a cash prize. I’ve been a huge fan since the United States version started in 2019. 

Then I discovered the UK version, which is amazing as well. It’s not only about them finding love — how likable they are to the audience plays a big part, too, and America’s votes usually make the drama 10 times better. Did you see that time America voted for Iris to go on the date with Jeremiah when he was coupled up with Huda? That was crazy. America really did its big one, and that made for some great television. 

Some shows where we don’t get a say, like “The Bachelor,” are pre-filmed. “The Bachelor” is a show where one man dates multiple women at the same time, and chooses one at the end who he’s supposed to propose to. But we still get to tune in weekly, all at the same time. 

There’s something kind of cool about knowing that while you’re watching, thousands of other people around the world are reacting to the same moments, too. I have been a fan of “The Bachelor” franchise for a while, but I remember specifically when Joey’s season blew up. Everyone got together with their friends each week to tune in for the new episode. That made for a huge bonding experience with my friends freshman year.

The fascinating part about these shows is that they’re filled with real people who live real lives. As parasocial as it may sound, you really start to feel like you know the people on these shows. You start rooting for your favorites, and you feel for them almost like they’re your personal friends.

I think that’s what makes these shows so addictive. It’s easy to find them on social media and continue to follow their lives if you want to. It’s important not to get overly invested, though, because that could end up being unhealthy. You can get emotionally attached and forget that you don’t actually know these people. 

Sometimes the drama is just so good that fiction can’t even replicate it. Another favorite of mine — and a fan favorite — is “Dance Moms.” It’s a show that follows young dancers and their mothers as they train and compete under the very strict dance teacher, Abby Lee Miller. The moms are just so hilarious. 

Even though that show ended a few years back, it never gets old and continues to bring in new fans. The reruns are the best, and it’s so easy to find some of the best clips on YouTube. “Dance Moms Best Moments” are great. It features clips of the show’s funniest and most out-of-pocket moments. 

Some shows have such interesting concepts that it’s impossible not to tune in. “Love Is Blind” is an interesting show where singles form relationships and even get engaged without seeing what their partner looks like. The fact that they get engaged to someone they’ve never seen before? Crazy. I’m obsessed.

Even if reality TV is not your cup of tea, there’s no denying that it’s one of the most entertaining forms of television. Give the first episode of “Love Island USA” season six a chance and get back to me — I swear you’ll be hooked!

Emily Brady is an opinion columnist at The Review. Her opinions are her own and do not represent the majority opinion of The Review staff. She may be reached at emilyhb@udel.edu


Opinion: Why I love reality TV was first posted on June 10, 2026 at 4:00 pm.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 17:00

Valve is discontinuing physical Steam Gift Cards and says it will stop restocking them as retailers sell through remaining inventory. In a blog post, the company blamed persistent gift card scams as the reason, though Steam Digital Gift Cards will remain available and existing physical cards can still be redeemed. PC Guide reports: Valve says it has "responded to gift card scams over the years" -- but this doesn't stop scammers from adapting. The Steam creator has actively worked with retailers and law enforcement, among other precautions, to counteract scams, but says the issue can never be fully resolved. Steam Digital Gift Cards will continue to operate as normal.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 16:54
  • Cooper Lutkenhaus, 17, wins 800m by 0.01sec

  • Gout Gout sixth; Tebogo says: ‘He has a long way to go’

There are few venues more deeply embedded into track and field’s soul than the Bislett Stadion. An extraordinary 70 world records have been set here. Plenty of reputations have been made. Plenty more left frayed, too.

And so it proved again as the brilliant 17-year-old American Cooper Lutkenhaus added to his staggering résumé by taking down the Olympic 800m champion, Emmanuel ­Wanyonyi, with a race for the ages in Oslo. But another, the Australian star Gout Gout, learned what it is like in the big leagues.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 16:54

After a months-long carriage dispute was resolved, missing channels like Telemundo will be restored.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 16:46

Federal prosecutors unsealed indictment against activists trying to force the school to cut financial ties to Israel

Federal prosecutors unsealed an indictment on Wednesday against eight pro-Palestinian activists who are accused of conspiring to run a criminal intimidation campaign against University of Michigan officials while trying to force the school to cut financial ties to Israel.

The indictment also describes vandalism against some companies that operate in Michigan and against the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 19:35

Bill Gates told members of Congress on Wednesday that Jeffrey Epstein put his philanthropic work at risk, and that meeting him represented "a grave error in judgment."

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 17:29

President Trump said the U.S. has taken out "millions" of barrels of Iranian oil in the dead of night, and said inflation will come down when the war ends.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Last year, Meta radically overhauled the rules around what content it would allow on its platforms. The company claimed that its own efforts policing speech had gone too far and that it would relax the rules around what speech was allowed. "We have been over-enforcing our rules, limiting legitimate political debate and censoring too much trivial content and subjecting too many people to frustrating enforcement actions," Joel Kaplan, Meta's chief global affairs officer, wrote in a blog post at the time. Over a year later, new research from the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) shows the immediate impact of these changes. The researchers analyzed about 8 million Facebook comments and found that abusive and racist comments targeting both Republican and Democrat lawmakers tripled in the six months after the new rules were put in place. Some categories of abusive comments documented by the researchers saw even sharper rises, with violent threats and hate speech quadrupling during the same period. The report cites specific examples of gendered and racist abuse directed at lawmakers like US representatives Jasmine Crockette of Texas and Byron Daniels of Florida. These comments were not taken down by Meta. The CCDH researchers also found that threats against President Trump more than doubled in the six months after Meta overhauled its rules. Many of the comments, which included direct threats to his life, could have been classified as felony offenses, the researchers say. [...] Comments that violated Meta's policies around violent threats quadrupled, from 1,800 in the six months before the changes to 7,600 in the six months after. Hate speech comments also quadrupled, from 6,900 to 30,000. Comments that broke Meta's rules on bullying and harassment doubled, from 15,700 to 39,900.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:58
Bent life saver?

Went for a ride to deliver something and once I got home I looked at my tire and saw this? Is this bad? Can it be fixed? New tire time?

submitted by /u/NotInterestingGuy786
[link] [comments]

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 15:58

June 10, 2026 — At Computex, Supermicro announced a new class of servers designed to meet the rapidly growing compute demands of the Agentic AI era. Powered by Arm’s recently introduced AGI CPU, these systems deliver industry-leading compute density and power efficiency for next-generation AI inference and agentic workloads.

Credit: Shutterstock

AI infrastructure is entering its inference era

Since the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, AI infrastructure conversations have largely centered around GPUs. Datacenter expansion over the past several years has been driven by the race to deploy more accelerated compute for large-scale model training. However, the AI landscape is evolving quickly. Unlike first-generation AI deployments that focused primarily on model training, agentic AI workloads are persistent, distributed, and inference-driven. They require systems capable of handling orchestration, retrieval, reasoning, and real-time decision making at scale.

This shift is driving a new wave of infrastructure requirements where efficient CPU compute plays a foundational role in maximizing overall AI system performance. As workloads shift from training to inference — and increasingly toward autonomous, multi-step agentic AI systems — CPUs are becoming a critical component of modern AI infrastructure.

Agentic AI introduces a fundamentally different compute profile. Unlike traditional chatbot-style interactions, agentic systems continuously orchestrate reasoning, memory access, retrieval, planning, and communication across multiple services and models. These workflows generate massive demand for highly efficient general-purpose compute, memory bandwidth, and I/O scalability alongside GPU acceleration.

To address this shift, Arm introduced the AGI CPU in March 2026. Built with up to 136 Arm Neoverse V3 cores, 12 DDR5 memory channels at up to 8800 MT/s, and PCIe Gen6 connectivity within a 300W power envelope, the AGI CPU is designed to deliver exceptional compute density and energy efficiency for AI-first data centers. Arm AGI CPU with leading performance per core combined with high core density, high memory bandwidth per core and industry leading power efficiency enables up to 2x higher performance per rack to comparable x86-based solutions, according to Arm estimates.

Purpose-built infrastructure for next-generation AI workloads

Supermicro’s new server and rack-scale portfolio brings the AGI CPU capabilities to market across cloud, enterprise, and edge deployments.

For hyperscale and neocloud AI infrastructure, Supermicro unveiled the liquid-cooled Open Rack Wide (ORW) platform, the ARS-142TP-QNR-LCC. A fully populated ORW rack can support up to 336 AGI CPUs, enabling massive compute density for cloud-scale agentic AI and inference workloads.

For customers adopting Open Rack V3 (ORV3) environments, Supermicro also introduced the liquid-cooled 2U4N ORV3 ARS-242TP-QNR-LCC server, enabling up to 168 AGI CPUs per rack while maintaining deployment flexibility for modern datacenters. Both the ORW and ORV3 systems are targeted for sampling in Q1 2027, with production availability in Q2 2027.

Supermicro is also extending AGI CPU support into air-cooled environments. For edge deployments with constrained power and space requirements, the single-socket ARS-212HE-FNR short depth server provides an optimized platform for distributed AI inference and edge computing applications. The system is targeted to sample in Q4 2026 and reach production in Q1 2027.

For general-purpose compute workloads, the dual-socket 2U ARS-222H-NR server supports up to 8 NVMe drives and additional accelerator expansion in a standard 19-inch form factor. These servers are ideally suited for a wide variety of datacenter workloads such as web & application serving, databases & Analytics, virtualization & cloud infrastructure, and media & content processing applications.

Meanwhile, the 5U ARS-522GP-NR platform targets high-performance AI inference deployments with support for up to eight accelerator cards alongside dual AGI CPUs and high-density NVMe storage. These platforms are targeted to sample during Q3 ’26 and released to production in Q1 ’27.

Together, these platforms highlight an important industry transition: the future of AI infrastructure will not be defined by GPU performance alone. As agentic AI scales across enterprises and cloud providers, balanced architectures that combine high-performance CPUs, accelerators, memory bandwidth, and efficient system design will become essential.

At the same time, power efficiency and datacenter scalability are becoming increasingly critical. As enterprises look to deploy AI broadly across cloud, enterprise, and edge environments, infrastructure must deliver higher compute density without unsustainable increases in power and cooling requirements. This is where platforms built around the AGI CPU can provide a significant advantage by enabling scalable AI compute with improved performance-per-watt.

With this portfolio based on the AGI CPU, Supermicro is helping customers build AI infrastructure optimized for the realities of agentic computing — from hyperscale inference clusters to enterprise and edge deployments. As the industry moves toward AI systems that can autonomously reason, collaborate, and act, the combination of efficient CPU compute and accelerated AI infrastructure will form the backbone of the next generation of datacenters.


Source: Dilip Ramachandran, Arm

The post Supermicro and Arm Advance Compute for the Agentic AI Era appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 15:57

For years, centrist Democrats like Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia dismissed claims that a key National Security Agency surveillance program could be abused to spy on Americans.

Then President Donald Trump tapped Bill Pulte — an unqualified housing official accused of misusing sensitive databases to pursue the president’s political vendettas — to oversee the nation’s spy agencies. That got the centrist Democrats’ attention.

Warner, who serves as ranking member of the Select Committee on Intelligence, voted with every Senate Democrat except for Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman last week against advancing the renewal of the NSA program authorized by Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA.

In the face of pushback from Democrats and some Republicans, Trump declined to back down on his choice. Instead, he said Tuesday that he was moving up the effective date of Pulte’s appointment to lead the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to June 19.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., a longtime critic of Section 702, said that there’s unprecedented support for reforming the law.

“I have been doing this a while,” Wyden, who is on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, told The Intercept on Tuesday. “I am the longest serving member of SSCI in history, and I’ve never had this kind of bipartisan support.”

That doesn’t, however, mean that reform efforts hinge on Pulte’s political fate. Though the announcement narrowed the odds that the spying program will be renewed before it expires Friday, the fracas over Pulte has revealed a deep divide among Democrats that could keep the issue alive.

Centrists such as Warner would still vote to renew Section 702 if Pulte is sacked. Other Democrats, like Wyden, say that Pulte’s selection only exacerbated long-standing issues such as the lack of a warrant requirement for searching through the NSA’s data.

“Firing Pulte doesn’t fix the problem,” Wyden told reporters on Tuesday. “There have to be reforms.”

Section 702 has been the subject of an intense behind-the-scenes squabble since Congress passed a short-term, 45-day extension of the program in April.

Related

Mike Johnson Used Crypto Catnip to Get Freedom Caucus Support for Domestic Spy Law

The law allows the FBI and other agencies, including ODNI, to pore through Americans’ communications collected abroad without a warrant. Ostensibly, there are safeguards in place to prevent those agencies from targeting specific Americans — but courts have repeatedly found widespread violations of those rules.

For years, civil liberties advocates have sought to create a warrant requirement that would require the FBI and other agencies to go to a judge to read through Americans’ communications.

That idea has proven a nonstarter for defenders of Section 702 such as Warner, who argue that it would create insurmountable logistical obstacles for agents hoping to prevent terror attacks. Warner has long allied with Republicans to push back on the warrant proposal.

Compromise Flop

Since April, a bipartisan coalition of civil liberties supporters in Congress has managed to block a long-term reauthorization of Section 702. In recent weeks, Warner helped craft what was billed as a compromise proposal intended to win over enough of the critics to allow the passage of a long-term renewal of the law.

Then, Trump said on June 3 that he would appoint Pulte to serve as temporary director of national intelligence, to replace departing chief Tulsi Gabbard.

The announcement immediately soured centrist Democrats’ plans to help secure passage of a FISA extension. Pulte, whose net worth is at least $190 million, is a private equity firm founder who became a minor internet celebrity for giving away money on Twitter. Then Trump appointed him last year to serve as director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency and chair of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

In those roles, Pulte helped launch housing fraud probes of Trump nemeses including Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Democratic New York Attorney General Letitia James. He is being investigated by the Government Accountability Office for allegedly misusing confidential government databases for information on the president’s foes.

“There were already sensitive negotiations that were ongoing,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., told PBS NewsHour on Tuesday. “And then Donald Trump chose to elevate this partisan political hack, Bill Pulte, into this position of great sensitivity, effectively tossing a hand grenade in the midst of these negotiations as we approach the deadline to potentially renew surveillance authority.”

The compromise deal floated by Warner and others had never impressed privacy advocates. They said the changes it made to the law mostly layered on more layers of internal oversight, which would not stop a determined Trump flunky from abusing the NSA’s spying powers.

Even calling it a “deal” was misleading, said Elizabeth Goitein, senior director of the liberty and national security program at the Brennan Center for Justice, a nonprofit working on law and policy.

“The members who drafted this legislation, basically Trump allies plus Sen. Warner — all longtime opponents of 702 reform who are in complete alignment with each other on the fundamental points of debate — they were the members who drafted the legislation,” she said on a conference call Tuesday. “Members who support reform were shut out.”

Push and Pulte

While Warner and other Democratic supporters of the program voted against putting its renewal on the Senate agenda last week, that boiled down to a repudiation of Pulte instead of a sudden change of heart on the program.

“Pulte is the major stumbling block for people like myself and Mark Warner, who are generally supportive because of the importance of the program,” Sen. Angus King, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats, told The Intercept on Tuesday. “But we can’t in good conscience hand the keys to the country’s most significant car to a teenager.”

In the Republican caucus, a faction of members with libertarian tendencies support adding a warrant requirement. Some longtime supporters of the program, on the other hand, have dismissed the significance of Pulte’s appointment.

“He’s an interim guy, he’ll be there for weeks to a couple months, so I don’t understand why it’s a big issue anyway,” said Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., who serves on the Intelligence Committee.

Privacy advocates are largely aghast at the appointment of Pulte, but they hope the expiration of Section 702 will create space for reform. They were heartened on Tuesday when Jeffries gave some of his strongest statements yet in support of overhauling the law.

Related

Democrats Might Save Mike Johnson’s Push to Give Trump Domestic Spying Power

“Donald Trump needs to withdraw his decision to elevate Bill Pulte,” Jeffries said on PBS. “That’s a starting point, not an ending point. And then we can see if we can responsibly get to a place where there are enough reforms built into the law to provide guardrails and protect the American people.”

Reformers have a smorgasbord of reform proposals. Wyden wants to create a warrant requirement not only for searches of NSA data, but also one for searches of sensitive information available on the open market, such as location tracking from commercial data brokers.

Wyden said he senses a rare opportunity, pointing to support from Republicans such as Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, and said, “Both of us have bipartisan bills with almost all of the provisions we’re talking about.”

The post Momentum Builds to Rein In Domestic Spying Law — Whether or Not Bill Pulte Survives as Intel Chief appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 15:54

Any official reprimand will come from regulator Ofcom, but not for at least two months

Elon Musk’s X will face no action to remove a mass of posts inciting violence in Northern Ireland for at least two months, despite widespread condemnation of the platform and its billionaire owner.

Concern over the role social media played in spreading disturbing images and fuelling anger continued to grow on Wednesday as police and community leaders urged calm.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 15:43

Misty Roberts, 44, who faced up to 17 years in prison, convicted of two felonies including statutory rape

Misty Roberts, a former mayor in Louisiana, has been sentenced to 90 days for raping a 16-year-old boy.

On Tuesday, 44-year-old Roberts was sentenced following her conviction earlier this year of two felonies including carnal knowledge of a juvenile – or statutory rape – and indecent behavior with a juvenile.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:42

The vice president said President Trump "has been very clear about what is in our best interest" as the relationship with Israel is tested over the Iran war.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 15:40

June 10, 2026 — Researchers at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) hosted an innovative workshop series to make high performance computing (HPC) education more accessible for practitioners with disabilities and the broader research community.

NCSA’s Delta

Led by Omar Khan, a graduate research assistant at NCSA, and JooYoung Seo, an assistant professor at the School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and NCSA faculty affiliate, the workshop emerged from a recognized gap in accessible educational resources for HPC systems. While prior efforts have explored how learners conceptualize HPC environments, there has been limited work examining how to make HPC education accessible.

Khan and Seo sought to learn how disabled researchers work with HPC systems and expand access to research computing through education and support.

“As researchers with disabilities ourselves who regularly use HPC resources, we wanted to understand how other practitioners leverage these resources – if at all – and what we can offer in education and support to ensure open access,” Khan said. “These are systems that hold tremendous power in expediting large-scale task completion across multi-disciplinary domains, and therefore, multi-disciplinary researchers. To that end, we felt that such resources should not be limited to those with certain abilities or ability levels.”

The workshops emphasize that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to working with HPC systems. Khan and Seo included different teaching practices in the workshops, including reading terminal commands character by character to reflect the actual interaction flow of screen-reader users with HPC systems, and emphasizing multimodal interaction with the terminal and text editor to prompt ideas for a personalized user experience.

“It’s a curriculum built by, with, and for practitioners with disabilities and beyond, demonstrating that learning HPC concepts, like any other computing concept, can and should be taught in a multitude of ways to support learners with different abilities,” Khan said.

Sponsored by the NCSA Delta project – a U.S. National Science Foundation-funded resource charged with making computing more accessible – the workshop series was also created to raise broader awareness of the different educational opportunities for HPC systems. A variety of perspectives can strengthen collaboration and boost innovation, especially within NCSA’s multidisciplinary initiatives, because researchers can bring unique approaches to the work.

By understanding how researchers and practitioners with different abilities interact with HPC systems, the broader HPC community can develop more sophisticated and open strategies for improving accessibility across the field.

“Each of us brings our own unique backgrounds to any project we work on, and recognizing this variety of perspectives is critical to the most impactful collaboration,” Khan said.

The workshop series received a positive response from its audience and will have a significant impact on the future of accessible research computing.

“We’ve received a positive reception to our workshop series with both disabled and non-disabled learners being excited to have accessible learning materials and to learn how each group can communicate their understanding more effectively with the other,” Khan said. “We are especially thankful for our participants’ feedback as we look to improve this workshop series for future offerings.”

The workshop recordings are available to the public. Watch here.


Source: Andrew Helregel, NCSA

The post NCSA’s Delta Brings Accessibility to HPC appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:37

On a related note, what about a raycasting first-person shooter written in… COBOL?

Can you think of a better programming language than COBOL to implement an FPS from scratch? I know I can’t, so buckle up and enjoy what can only be described as an out-of-body experience for COBOL enthusiasts as I set out to make a Wolfenstein3D-like raycasting based FPS game (and potentially go a bit further than that, hopefully it’s not a DOOMed attempt).

↫ icitry on YouTube

I don’t link to YouTube videos very often, but there’s always the exception that proves the rule. The COBOL code’s available on GitHub.

What a mad man.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:35

Splashy initial public offerings often skyrocket early on, only to return to earth with a thud, Wall Street analysts say.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 15:33

Easily split bills and create digital passes from physical cards with the latest Wallet updates.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:32

Reform UK leader has been unusually quiet in recent weeks – at great cost to the party during a crucial byelection

Fake images of Nigel Farage have been ubiquitous online lately – but the real politician has proved far more elusive since it was revealed seven weeks ago that he took a £5m personal gift from a crypto billionaire.

And while an AI-generated depiction of the Reform UK leader was falsely shown getting violent on BBC’s Question Time, Farage has been largely avoiding the TV studios where he might face questions over the cash.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:29

Chemical tank overheated in May and forced evacuation of 50,000 nearby residents due to danger of explosion

The FBI is searching a southern California aerospace facility where an overheated chemical tank forced 50,000 residents to evacuate last month, after federal authorities served a search warrant there on Wednesday.

Signed by a federal judge last week, the warrant approved the seizure of records related to the “storage, use or disposal” of methyl methacrylate, the chemical stored inside the tank that authorities feared could explode.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:26

My goal was to build a complete, shippable first-person shooter using techniques that were common in the early 90s, while allowing myself the luxury of using a modern compiler and a platform abstraction layer.

↫ Marko Stanic

It looks amazing already, and it isn’t even done. Stanic goes into great detail explaining how he created the various assets for the game, and it’s a joy to read through his creative process and problem-solving routines. The game’s called Catlantean 3D, and is expected to ship somewhere early 2027.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:24

Commentary: Sure, iOS 27 will be able to run on an iPhone 11, but does that actually matter?

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:14

Microsoft has detailed that Windows 11 is going to switch away from dedicated printer drivers to its Windows Ready Print system. This should make it a lot easier and less cumbersome to get printers running on Windows 11.

At the core of Windows Ready Print is a transition away from legacy, third party drive-based workflows toward modern, standards-based printing with IPP (Internet Printing Protocol) using the Windows inbox IPP printer driver. 

Starting in July 2026, new printer installations will default to Windows Ready Print where supported, enabling a simpler and more reliable setup experience. This change reduces the need for traditional driver management and lays the foundation for a more scalable and predictable print experience.

↫ elliesekine at the Windows Tech Community

Printers still play a huge role in our lives – whether we like it or not – and their terrible user experience is basically a meme a this point. Making at least one aspect of printing easier, less cumbersome, and more streamlined is incredibly welcome, and I’m glad Microsoft is taking the Windows printing ecosystem along for the ride on this one.

My own personal experience with printing on Linux and now on Windows 11 (as promised, I’ve been using nothing but Windows 11 since 26 May!) has been mostly effortless already. Our cheap networked printer/scanner/combo thing from HP “just works” on both Linux and Windows 11, since Windows downloads HP’s drivers and application automatically when detecting the printer on the network. Still, not having to use HP’s driver would be a nice bonus.

Coincidentally, I also managed to get the printer component of our HP combo thing working on… HP-UX 11i v1. Despite being more than two decades newer, our HP printer works perfectly with a printer definition file included in HP-UX, giving me full printing from CDE and the rest of HP-UX. It’s entirely useless and cost me an evening of my life, but seeing the test page and other documents from HP-UX come out of our printer, over the network, put a big smile on my face.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:11

Pinterest is tying Amazon storefronts to its app, making it easier for creators to earn from product recommendations.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:08

NASA's Jared Isaacman says the crew was selected solely based on their experience, expertise and availability for flight assignment.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:03

Inflation just rose to its highest level since 2023. Here are three CD account moves savers should make in response.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:02

President Trump has offered timelines of days and weeks for the Iran war, but a solution remains elusive.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:00

The men’s head coach discusses his ‘American dream’ at the World Cup and tempering the host nation’s ‘arrogant’ expectations

This American dream begins in small-town Murphy, Santa Fe. That’s Santa Fe, Argentina, at a little club where the old folk played bochas, a kind of boules, and they had one of the few colour television sets. It was 1978, Mauricio Pochettino was six years old and he can see it perfectly, still feel the meaning of it all.

“I lived in a prefab with my grandmother and my older brother because my parents were off working the land, then at the weekend we would go to the club,” he says. “There were three courts and I remember standing there, hanging on to my dad’s pocket, watching the World Cup. The ticker-tape at River [Plate], that image engraved. Passarella, Ardiles, Luque, Bertoni, Kempes, Fillol, Tarantini … my heroes.”

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:00

The researchers saw many strange animals — many believed to be new to science — living off the whale carcasses.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 15:00

BYD plans to install 3,000 ultra-fast "Flash Chargers" across Europe by the end of 2027, with the first stations already appearing in Germany and the UK. The Verge reports: At an estimated cost of 580,000 euros (about $670,000) per charger according to the Financial Times, that would mean a total spend of roughly $2 billion to install the network. The 1,500kW charging stations are significantly more powerful than Tesla's 500kW V4 Superchargers, though Tesla already has 20,000 chargers installed in Europe. BYD, which has been steadily overtaking Tesla in global sales, says its chargers shouldn't add undue strain to the energy grid, as they'll charge cars from batteries which can be topped up overnight. Any car with a standard CCS charge port can use the Flash Chargers, though only BYD cars equipped with the company's new Blade Battery can hit the top speeds. Right now there's only one of those in Europe, the 115,000 euros ($133,000) Denza Z9 GT -- it charges to 70 percent in five minutes on the new chargers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:55

Ever wanted to attend a Pokémon Go event? Here's what the whole crazy, colorful, collector experience is like.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 14:55

Logitech has launched an $80 ultracompact folding mouse. Its design is great, but its ergonomics leave a little to be desired. Still, it's a rather nifty travel mouse.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:52

ICE has extended training for new officers and mandated additional instruction for those onboarded under a shortened process that has now been scrapped.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:50

As completion of 144-year basilica nears, questions swirl over resemblance of church to architect’s original plans

It has been a long wait but 144 years after work began, Pope Leo XIV has blessed the recently completed central tower of Antoni Gaudí’s Sagrada Família church in the presence of members of the Spanish royal family, the prime minister and hundreds of bishops.

With the completion of the Jesus Christ tower, the tallest of 18 in the temple, the basilica has reached its full height of 172.5 metres. It is now not only the world’s tallest church but Barcelona’s tallest building. It was consecrated in 2010 by Pope Benedict XVI.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:49

Prime minister is ‘hellbent’ on fighting any contest, even if his future may be out of his hands, sources say

Keir Starmer’s closest aides are “war-gaming” how to win a leadership contest ahead of Andy Burnham’s much-anticipated return to Westminster if he wins the Makerfield byelection, the Guardian understands.

Downing Street sources said the prime minister had taken the last fortnight to think seriously about his future but was now “hellbent” on fighting any contest. His team is working through various scenarios, including sacking ministers who publicly support Burnham.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:42

Lawmakers warn appointment of presidential loyalist will scuttle bipartisan agreement to renew Fisa surveillance law

Donald Trump stood firm on his decision to install the controversial loyalist Bill Pulte as the country’s top intelligence official, demanding Congress pass a short-term extension of a surveillance law set to expire amid intense criticism of the appointment.

Pulte has been asked “to execute the immediate and needed downsizing” of the office of the director of national intelligence, the US president declared on Wednesday, after lining him up to serve as acting director on a temporary basis.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:39

Don't miss out on big discounts and record low prices on tech, smart home gear, kitchen gadgets and more with this week's best deals.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:32

NHS bosses urge all hospitals in England to use ‘digital triage’ process to combat overcrowding in emergency services

Patients who turn up at A&E with non-urgent ailments could be told to come back another time under NHS plans to stop hospitals becoming overcrowded and avoid the service’s usual winter crisis.

Eighteen hospitals in England are already using “digital triage assessment” to help A&E staff decide which patients need to be seen right away or be dealt with in another way. If patients do need urgent care they are treated at once in the usual way. But if they have more minor ailments and can wait, they are told to come back later that day or the next day, or are referred to a community-based service, such as a GP or pharmacy.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:32
  • Richards back in full training before first match

  • Center-back feared worst after Palace ankle injury

  • US face Paraguay in high-pressure Group D start

If it was up to Chris Richards, he’d be in the lineup when the United States opens Group D action against Paraguay.

The center-back is among the most important players on the squad, the clear lead defender among a deep corps of options. When he exited Crystal Palace’s second-to-last Premier League fixture with an ankle injury, anxiety spiked that Mauricio Pochettino’s side would enter the tournament without their bedrock. Richards was as tense as anybody, admitting his ankle was so swollen after the hit that he braced for the worst – again.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:30

Awards for prose, children’s writing and poetry, for writers of colour in UK and Ireland, come with £1,000

Diana Evans has won this year’s Jhalak prose prize for I Want to Talk to You, a nonfiction collection on subjects ranging from Jean Rhys and Toni Morrison to lockdowns and the British monarchy.

The book, described as a “pleasure and an invigoration” by the Guardian’s reviewer Alex Clark, was announced as the 10th winner at a reception on Wednesday evening.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:24
  • Kirsty Coventry: IOC will have taskforce for any issues

  • Referee Omar Artan refused entry by US officials

The International Olympic Committee insists it is “confident” that the LA Games in 2028 will not face the same immigration issues that have marred the buildup to the World Cup – including Africa’s top referee, Omar Artan, from Somalia being refused entry by US officials.

Despite Fifa’s close relationship with the Trump administration, it was also unable to stop Iran being moved from a training camp in Arizona to Mexico and some of its officials being denied entry visas.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-10 14:18

DRESDEN, Germany and DELFT, Netherlands, June 10, 2026 — GlobalFoundries (GF) and Qualinx today announced the successful completion of the first fully European-based, end-to-end semiconductor manufacturing flow at GlobalFoundries’ Dresden fab on its FDX technology. The milestone demonstrates that security-critical chips for aerospace, defense and critical infrastructure can be designed, manufactured and delivered entirely within Europe.

In this partnership, Qualinx served as the launch customer with a sophisticated GNSS SoC design for secure Positioning, Navigation and Timing (PNT) applications. The QLX3xx design targets sovereign GNSS-based PNT solutions for aerospace, defense and critical infrastructures—such as resilient timing and synchronization networks and highly integrated, ultra-low-power GNSS receivers at the connected edge.

GF and Qualinx Set a Benchmark for GF’s European Sovereign Manufacturing co-funded by the European Chips Act, GF’s Dresden fab is establishing its European sovereign manufacturing flow, consolidating every step of the production process — from design intake and mask services to wafer manufacturing — within the European Union. No sensitive design data or physical materials leave Europe, meeting the strict regulatory and security requirements of European governments, defense agencies, system integrators and critical infrastructure operators.

“We are demonstrating that Europe can rely on a secure, end-to-end semiconductor manufacturing flow that meets the highest requirements of aerospace and defense,” said Dr. Manfred Horstmann, Senior Vice President and General Manager at GlobalFoundries. “Our partnership with Qualinx marks the first operational milestone: it shows that complex, security-relevant ASIC designs for aerospace, defense, and critical infrastructure can already be industrialized today using a fully European, trusted manufacturing path.”

“This first secure product demonstrates that a fully European manufacturing path – from mask services to wafer production – is already a reality today,” said Tom Trill, CEO of Qualinx. “Together with GlobalFoundries, we’ve optimized our Digital RF technology on GF’s FDX with a secure end-to-end flow, culminating in the launch of our ultra-low-power reconfigurable GNSS SoC and Analog Front End. This milestone underscores our ability to deliver trusted, energy-efficient solutions while maintaining full control over IP, data and the supply chain within Europe.”

Roadmap: Scaling European Sovereign Manufacturing

The tape‑out realized with Qualinx represents the first operational milestone on the path toward a fully automated trusted European flow, which GF aims to establish in Dresden by the end of 2026. Starting in 2027, aerospace and defense, as well as critical infrastructure customers, will be able to use this automated flow as part of regular foundry engagements, including the integration of European IP partners, mask houses and OSAT service providers to ensure a consistent, European-anchored value chain.

Already today, a number of European system and module manufacturers from aerospace and defense, as well as operators of critical infrastructure, are in discussions with GF to map upcoming product generations onto GF’s sovereign manufacturing flow. The successful start with Qualinx serves as a strong proof point and reduces both technical and regulatory risks for subsequent programs.

To further strengthen its European sovereign manufacturing flow, GF is also working with leading European connectivity and cloud providers to secure data flows across the entire semiconductor value chain. In a joint project with Deutsche Telekom, GF is assessing how production-related data from design and tape-out through manufacturing, test and quality can be processed, transported and stored entirely within Europe on European networks, cloud infrastructures and data centers. The resulting practices in secure data routing, encryption and access management for highly sensitive A&D and critical infrastructure workloads will feed directly into the scaling of GF’s European sovereign manufacturing model.

About GlobalFoundries

GlobalFoundries (GF) is a leading manufacturer of essential semiconductors, enabling AI at scale from the cloud to the physical world. Through deep partnerships with customers, GF delivers differentiated, power-efficient and high-performance solutions for automotive, aerospace and defense, data centers, smart mobile devices, the Internet of Things and other high-growth markets. With global manufacturing operations across the U.S., Europe and Asia, GF is a trusted and holistic technology partner for customers around the world. GF’s talented, global team remains focused every day on security, longevity and sustainability. For more information, visit www.gf.com.

About Qualinx

Qualinx is a European deep-tech semiconductor company redefining ultra-low-power connectivity for the connected edge. Its proprietary Digital Radio Frequency technology implements traditional analog receive-chain functions in digital hardware building blocks, powering GNSS, PNT and PVT chipsets and modules that deliver secure, scalable and reconfigurable tracking solutions for wearables, consumer electronics, automotive, fleet, pet, and asset tracking applications.

Founded in 2015 and headquartered in Delft, the Netherlands, Qualinx delivers next-generation Digital RF semiconductors designed for real-world deployment and long device lifecycles. Follow Qualinx on LinkedIn or learn more at https://www.qualinx.io.


Source: GlobalFoundries

The post GlobalFoundries and Qualinx Demonstrate 1st European Sovereign Manufacturing Flow forSecurity‑Critical Semiconductors appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:15

Robert Dillon was arrested at home in Florida despite living 300 miles away from where a crime was committed

A Florida man is suing several law enforcement agencies for his arrest and prosecution for allegedly luring a child after he was wrongly identified using faulty AI facial recognition software.

According to the Jacksonville Beach police department, an algorithm returned a 93% probability that Robert Dillon was the man caught on security cameras at a McDonald’s in the town attempting to persuade an unaccompanied girl, aged younger than 12, to leave with him.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:08

Social Security disability benefits can provide crucial income support, but eligibility is notoriously strict.

2026-06-10 16:04
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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 14:00

The Asahi Linux team is warning Apple Silicon users not to upgrade to the macOS 27 beta because Apple's changes to the boot picker and Startup Disk app make Asahi partitions invisible, preventing Linux from booting. The Register reports: The team added: "If you insist on trying out macOS 27 as soon as possible, please ensure you install a secondary copy of macOS 26 first, or install macOS 27 itself on a secondary volume." They've also updated the installer to prevent installs from running on macOS 27 for now. For anyone who ignored all of the above, "we will not support users who have installed the macOS 27 beta without ensuring at least one stable version of macOS is installed." Considering macOS 27 is in beta, the issue may be accidental rather than an attempt by Apple to block Linux on its hardware. The Asahi team said it has filed bug report. The good news for anyone who pulled the trigger on installing the macOS 27 beta is that although the partition might not be visible, it hasn't gone anywhere. The Asahi team wrote: "If you have already upgraded to the beta and noticed that your Asahi partition has disappeared, do not stress. Your Asahi partition is still there, and you have not lost any data."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:55
  • Mboko forced to retire in singles match at Queen’s

  • Duo are due to play next on Thursday evening

The future of Victoria Mboko’s doubles partnership with Serena Williams was plunged into doubt after the Canadian was forced to retire in her opening singles match at the HSBC Championships in London.

Williams, 44, made her comeback to tennis on Tuesday, securing a win alongside Mboko in their first doubles match. The duo beat Nicole Melichar-Martinez and Erin Routliffe, and are scheduled to face Leylah Fernandez and Laura Siegemund on Thursday evening at Queen’s Club.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:47

NEMA, ASHRAE and PNNL Join Forces To Establish an Authoritative Framework To Equip Data Center Project Developers and Facility Managers With Resources Needed To Advance Safe, Reliable, and Resilient Data Centers

ARLINGTON, Va., June 10, 2026 — The National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA), ASHRAE, and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) today released their trilateral AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework, a comprehensive set of technical standards and industry best practices that will aid data center project developers and facility managers in the design, installation, and maintenance of critical energy infrastructure – including electrical, heating, and cooling equipment and integrated systems.

“Data centers are foundational to America’s growth, competitiveness, and national security objectives, providing essential capabilities to advanced manufacturing, healthcare, financial services, and critical infrastructure,” said NEMA President and CEO Debra Phillips. “As data centers grow in number, complexity, and scale, it’s imperative that they operate safely, reliably, and as efficiently as possible. The AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework that NEMA has developed with ASHRAE and PNNL is a new way of connecting standards, guidance, and deployment into one operating guide designed specifically for the data center environment.”

The AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework marks the culmination of years of close coordination between NEMA and ASHRAE – two leading standards development organizations – and PNNL, a federal authority in energy systems research. The joint Framework sets the standard for efficiency, resilience, and performance in data center design, construction, and operation, covering all aspects of energy sourcing, energy use, and water use in data center facilities.

At a time when the market is coalescing around the value of ‘speed to power’ and increasingly pursuing innovative pathways to project energization, the AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework connects standards, guidance, and deployment into one actionable operating framework– eliminating uncertainty at each stage of the development process.

The Framework outlines best practices and applicable standards for planning and siting, integrated design principles, energy and thermal efficiency, grid-interactive design, resilient design, commissioning and performance validation, operations and maintenance, and retrofit and modernization strategies for data center development professionals. The Framework features more than a dozen NEMA technical standards and guidance documents, including resources for energy storage systems, microgrids, fire and life safety equipment, insulating material, transformers, switchgear, uninterrupted power supply systems, wire and cable, electricity metering, and alternating current grounding and bonding systems.

“ASHRAE’s technical leadership in building systems and data center guidance is central to this effort at a pivotal moment for our industry,” said 2025-26 ASHRAE President Bill McQuade, P.E., CDP, Fellow ASHRAE, LEED AP. “As AI continues to drive rapid changes in load density, system design and operational expectations, this Framework brings together the collective expertise of ASHRAE, PNNL and NEMA to deliver practical, integrated solutions. It translates complex technical challenges into clear, actionable strategies that help operators enhance performance, control costs and make more effective use of energy, while strengthening reliability at both the facility and grid level.”

“This guide brings together the most comprehensive industry expertise on data centers in a single resource,” said PNNL Director of Buildings and Industrial Programs Bing Liu, who launched this industry-lab partnership a year ago. “Rather than being frozen in time, it’s a dynamic online resource that can be updated, remain relevant, and stay accessible to anyone involved in developing a data center.”

About NEMA

The National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) represents over 300 electrical equipment manufacturers that make safe, reliable, and efficient products and technologies that power, connect, and light our world. Together, our members contribute a full 1% of U.S. GDP and directly provide over 590,000 American jobs, adding more than $375 billion to the U.S. economy. Learn more at makeitelectric.org.


Source: NEMA

The post NEMA, ASHRAE and PNNL Release AI Data Center Energy Performance Framework appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:37

Before the conflict began, inflation was at 2.4%, but the closure of the strait of Hormuz has affected energy prices

Donald Trump said “I love the inflation” after new data showed that inflation jumped to an annual rate of 4.2% in May, the third consecutive monthly increase since the start of the Iran war and a three-year high.

Speaking from the White House on Wednesday, the US president said that he was not concerned about inflation because of recent developments in the conflict.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:37

Republican who chairs House panel says he based decision on testimony from Epstein’s longtime assistant Lesley Groff

Representative James Comer, the Republican who chairs the House committee on oversight and government reform, announced that he would be asking Alan Dershowitz, Jeffrey Epstein’s former attorney, to appear before the panel as part of its investigation into the late sex offender.

“I am going to ask Alan Dershowitz to come in, we will have questions for him and we will give him an opportunity to come in,” Comer said on Wednesday morning, adding that the decision was based on the testimony of Lesley Groff, Epstein’s longtime assistant, who testified before the committee on Tuesday, as well as “a meeting that I had afterwards with several of the Epstein survivors”.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:25

Rows over US visas and excessive ticket prices have overshadowed flawed tournament preparations. But fans will still hope for a gripping spectacle

One hundred and four matches involving 48 competing nations, to be played in 16 venues across a continent and four time zones: the sheer scale of the men’s World Cup in Canada, the United States and Mexico, which begins on Thursday and ends on 19 July, makes it easily the biggest and longest football tournament ever staged.

Whether it will ultimately be judged the greatest in sporting terms will depend on the 1,248 players competing in gruelling conditions, ranging from the heat of Houston to the high altitude of Guadalajara. But after a lead-up marred by hubristic hype, visa rows and the eye-watering cost of buying tickets for games, for many people it will be a relief when Mexico finally kick off against South Africa in the Estadio Azteca on Thursday evening.

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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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:25

A growing number of Europeans see the U.S. as a rival or an adversary, especially in Denmark, France, Spain and Switzerland, according to the poll.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:21

WWDC was all about Siri AI, but it certainly looks like a piece in the smart glasses puzzle. Vision Pro's new features are another big sign.

2026-06-10 16:04
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The U.S. Embassy said Americans traveling to Mexico for the World Cup should look at advisories for the region they will be visiting.

2026-06-10 16:04
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CAMBRIDGE, England, June 10, 2026 — Nu Quantum, a leader in distributed quantum computing, today announced new research showing that multi-node quantum networks can be designed to tolerate the complete failure of individual QPUs.

The simulations show that on a distributed system with quantum information encoded across the entire network rather than on a single-QPU, catastrophic node failure can become a correctable error. Information encoded across the wider network can still be recovered, so long as the failed node holds only a small fraction of the total error correction code. It also shows that when a replacement node is brought online, logical information can be transferred to it and operations can continue.

This work provides techniques for multi-QPU systems to support arbitrary length computations, compared to monolithic platforms which lack these mechanisms to reduce the risk of unrecoverable loss of logical information.

“This research offers additional evidence that distributed quantum computing represents a viable approach to achieving fault-tolerant computing at scale. Increasing the size of the quantum code by adding more QPUs to the network simultaneously improves the systems resilience to qubit errors and improves critical system availability,” said Dr. Carmen Palacios-Berraquero, Founder and CEO of Nu Quantum. “While this tolerance is not unconditional, our team’s work indicates that node failures can be suppressed with only a negligible impact on logical error rates. Adding QPUs on a network therefore offers a promising method to achieve even lower logical error rates. Classical Cloud and HPC computing services have for decades exploited elastic modularity to deliver robust, highly available services; this work proves that Quantum can get the same benefits.”

The findings also indicate that fault tolerance improves as the proportion of total qubits held on any single node declines, meaning that resilience is enhanced by using more or smaller QPUs.

The identified distributed quantum error correction techniques are up to 6x more efficient than previously identified ways of mitigating node failure.

A Major Step Towards Unlocking the Full Potential of Quantum Computing

There is consensus across industry that to access valuable industrial applications, quantum computers need to be significantly larger than today. However, building a monolithic machine with 1 million or more physical qubits poses its own set of complex science and engineering challenges.

Sir Peter Knight, Chair of the UK National Quantum Technology Programme Strategic Advisory Board and Professor at Imperial College, said of the research: “Quantum networking is at the heart of the UK quantum strategy. Nu Quantum has now demonstrated an important advance in linking together quantum processors to deliver resilience against sub-component failure, a major step towards fault tolerant distributed quantum computing.”

Distributed quantum computing provides a parallel path to reaching the 1 million qubit target. By enabling quantum computing with QPUs of any scale, networked quantum-computers can derisk the path to valuable applications. At the same time, it enables large codes to be spread over multiple nodes, which improves error correction and reduces the risk of losing logical information.

The research examined two types of error correcting codes, toric and hyperbolic Floquet, to assess their ability to protect logical information when individual nodes fail. Both codes maintained effective error suppression, suggesting that at low node failure rates, a distributed toric code would outperform a monolithic implementation.

The techniques in the paper are modality agnostic and can be applied to multiple modalities, including trapped ion, superconducting and neutral atom systems. Node failure rates and performance numbers in the paper would vary for each hardware platform.

The paper is available for review here.

About Nu Quantum

Nu Quantum is the category creator and leader in distributed quantum computing. The company’s approach represents a shorter path to useful quantum computing by implementing a modular layer for interconnecting multiple QPUs into a single, more powerful distributed quantum computer. This ‘Entanglement Fabric’ approach to interoperable networking of quantum computers presents a faster and more scalable method to deliver useful fault-tolerant quantum computing for industrial users. Founded in 2018, the company has raised over $70 million from investors and now has more than 80 team members located primarily in Cambridge and Los Angeles. For additional information, visit nu-quantum.com.


Source: Nu Quantum

The post Nu Quantum Research Suggests Distributed Quantum Systems Can Survive QPU Failures appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:10

Outcome of polls in four states offers mixed signals about direction of two major parties before November’s midterms

Progressives rallied around Graham Platner after his primary victory in Maine on Tuesday while Donald Trump again exerted his grip on the Republican party by helping to defeat a politician who had pushed for the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.

Primary elections were held in four states – Maine, Nevada, North Dakota and South Carolina – before November’s midterms to decide control of both houses of Congress. The results offered mixed signals about the direction of the two parties.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:10

Scientific breakthroughs are often associated with new algorithms, novel approaches, or more powerful computing systems. But according to speakers at a TPC26 panel discussion, one of the most important and often overlooked drivers of progress in this space may be something less technical: collaboration.

During a Scientific Advancement Through TPC Collaboration session,  researchers from several leading scientific institutions discussed how partnerships and collaboration across organizations and countries is critical to advancing AI for science. Some of it is already happening but more is needed. 

The session was moderated by Intersect360 Research CEO Addison Snell. The panel included computational biologist Nicholas Chia of Argonne National Laboratory, computer scientist Christine Sweeney of Los Alamos National Laboratory, RIKEN researcher Eliott Jacopin, and Rio Yokota, a professor at the Institute of Science Tokyo and leader of a research team at RIKEN. 

The discussion ranged from international research programs and shared scientific infrastructure to hackathons, workforce development, and industry engagement. While the panelists represented different disciplines and institutions, they shared a common view that future scientific advances will increasingly depend on communities that can combine expertise, data, and computing resources across organizational and geographic boundaries.

A core theme through the discussion was that many of today’s scientific challenges are simply too large and complex for any single organization to tackle alone. That’s one of the primary reasons why collaboration is so vital for the success of AI for science. Researchers are increasingly relying on expertise, data, and computing resources that span institutions, disciplines, and national borders.

(DC Studio/Shutterstock)

Yokota shared that most of his own work already depends on international partnerships. He cited collaborations involving researchers in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. Those relationships have supported projects ranging from molecular dynamics research to the development of scientific AI models. He suggested that global research networks will become even more important as datasets grow and computing requirements increase.

“We’ve been discussing about how to collaborate in building these open foundation models,” said Yokota. “But we can’t do this alone. Having your own data at one site is not as good as being able to train on everyone’s data. And this doesn’t necessarily mean we need to share all our data. There are many different ways to train across sites without moving the data.”

Chia echoed the importance of international partnerships. This is especially true in scientific fields that naturally extend beyond national boundaries. 

Drawing on his work in computational biology, he shared that overcoming research challenges requires cooperation among institutions around the world. “You can’t track infectious disease around the world without world partners,” he said.

Collaboration, however, is about more than sharing expertise and data. The panelists also discussed the role it plays in validating scientific results. 

The conversation later shifted from collaboration itself to a related challenge: trust. While AI systems and simulations can generate powerful insights, researchers still need ways to verify that those results hold up in the real world.

For all the discussion around AI models and computing power, panelists noted that science ultimately comes back to evidence.

A model may suggest an answer, but researchers still need experiments and observations to determine whether that answer holds up in the real world. However, validation often requires specialized tools and equipment that may only be available in certain facilities. 

Accessing the facilities needed to perform those tests often requires partnerships that extend beyond a single lab or research organization.

According to Sweeney, collaboration helps researchers quantify uncertainty and validate results. It ultimately helps build confidence in the systems they develop. And to that, they need access that can be enabled through collaboration. 

“It’s very good at making simulations,” explained Sweeney.  “And those data sets are a basis for our models. And we do want to validate and collaborate with others that have the right facilities, like in Europe or Japan or wherever,” she said.

Several speakers pointed to TPC26 hackathons as one of the consortium’s most effective collaboration mechanisms. 

Jacopin described how the events bring together researchers from different institutions and countries, often leading to relationships and projects that continue long after the event itself. “The hackathon for me was phenomenal because the people that were there all coming from TPC (community),” he said.

The discussion also touched on workforce development. Panelists noted that TPC hackathons give students and early-career researchers exposure to new tools and research methods. They also provides an opportunity to expand professional networks. 

Those connections can lead to new collaborations and broaden the scope of future research efforts. Beyond producing technical results, the hackathons also help cultivate the talent needed to support future scientific advances.

The panel suggested that collaboration is not simply a benefit of AI for science but a requirement. As scientific questions become more complex, the ability to share expertise and resources may prove just as important as advances in computing technology.

The post TPC26 Panel Highlights the Growing Importance of Collaboration in AI for Science appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:01

Outbreak driven by falling vaccination and misinformation as federal public health cuts hamper state response

The US has recorded more than 2,000 confirmed measles cases so far this year – near the total of 2,228 recorded in all of 2025, and on track to become the worst year for measles in decades as states struggle with the loss of federal funding for public health.

The virus continues to spread in unvaccinated and under-vaccinated communities, including among babies too young to be vaccinated, and it reveals the depths of the twin crises of misinformation and public health in the US.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:01

Vertiv Rack Extreme supports heavier, deeper IT equipment with expanded load ratings, flexible configurations and integrated cable management

COLUMBUS, Ohio, June 10, 2026 — Vertiv, a global leader in critical digital infrastructure, has announced the Vertiv Rack Extreme, a next-generation rack designed for the increasing demands of high-performance computing and AI applications. This future-ready rack platform supports deep and heavy IT equipment required for next-generation deployments.

Credit: Vertiv

Driven by increasing compute density, data center operators must accommodate IT equipment while supporting airflow, cable organization and installation flexibility. The Vertiv Rack Extreme is designed to help meet these evolving demands with higher load ratings, deeper configurations, integrated cable management and compatibility with power and thermal management systems used in data center environments.

“As computing requirements continue to intensify, customers need rack infrastructure designed not just for higher density, but for flexibility, strength, and ease of integration within complex data center environments,” said Ramesh Menon, vice president of IT systems solutions at Vertiv. “The Vertiv Rack Extreme is engineered to address these requirements by providing a robust platform that supports IT deployments while simplifying installation and long-term scalability.”

The Vertiv Rack Extreme has multiple size and configuration options, allowing organizations to align infrastructure with specific application requirements. Designed for rapid deployment, the cabinet ships fully assembled and integrates seamlessly with a broad ecosystem of compatible accessories, including overhead cable management and airflow optimization solutions, supporting simplified expansion as infrastructure demands grow.

With static and dynamic load ratings of up to 4,500 lbs. (2,045 kg), the Vertiv Rack Extreme supports higher‑density deployments than traditional racks, which typically have lower load limits when rolled than when stationary. By maintaining the same load capacity in both conditions, it delivers up to 2x higher dynamic capacity and up to 1.3x higher static capacity compared to conventional designs and enables operational flexibility through full-rated mobility. Its fully welded construction, integrated airflow and cable management—including a high open‑area mesh door and flexible rail systems—and standard features such as vertical cable bars and corner rPDU mounting bars streamline installation and ongoing management. Engineered shipping solutions, including shock‑absorbing pallets and multiuse ramps, help protect equipment and enable smoother on‑site deployment.

The platform is also designed for seamless integration with Vertiv’s broader portfolio, supporting a wide range of rack-mounted solutions including Vertiv uninterruptible power supply (UPS) systems, Vertiv rack PDUs, Vertiv thermal management solutions such as Vertiv CoolLoop RDHx rear door heat exchanger (rDHX) solutions and Vertiv CoolChip CDU coolant distribution units with liquid-to-chip manifolds, and Vertiv Avocent KVM and serial console solutions—enabling a fully integrated, end-to-end infrastructure.

For more information about the Vertiv Rack Extreme or Vertiv’s full portfolio of rack, power, and thermal management solutions, visit Vertiv.com.

About Vertiv

Vertiv (NYSE: VRT) brings together hardware, software, analytics and ongoing services to enable its customers’ vital applications to run continuously, perform optimally and grow with their business needs. Vertiv solves the most important challenges facing today’s data centers, communication networks and commercial and industrial facilities with a portfolio of power, cooling and IT infrastructure solutions and services that extends from the cloud to the edge of the network. Headquartered in Westerville, Ohio, USA, Vertiv does business in more than 130 countries.


Source: Vertiv

The post Vertiv Unveils High-Capacity Rack Platform for AI and High-Density IT Deployments appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:00

A cycle of threat, detente and deadlock repeats itself wearisomely as the president’s war in Iran drags on

As the story of the US-Iran war is written direct to social media, Donald Trump may be the genre’s premier unreliable narrator.

Since the war began, Trump has again and again threatened Iran with fearsome consequences if Tehran doesn’t come to the table and sign a peace deal that the US president said was imminent weeks ago. And he has also repeatedly claimed that an Iran deal is “close” – without any result. (A CNN tally put the number of times he’s claimed it at 38.)

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 13:00

A Munich regional court has ruled (PDF) that Google can be held directly liable for false claims in AI Overviews. The case involved AI Overviews falsely linking two publishers to scams and shady business practices, with the court rejecting Google's argument that users could simply check the sources themselves. The Decoder reports: Google's AI overviews work nothing like traditional search results, the court argues. The AI rewrites and judges results "in its own words and according to its own structure," the ruling says. In the case at hand, for example, it opened with confident claims like "Yes, [company] is known for dubious business practices," then built its own structure with a summary, red flags for the alleged scam, and tips for users. The court also found that the AI overview made claims "that are not even made in the search results." None of the linked sources drew any connection between the plaintiffs and the shady companies the AI mentioned. The court called these "the defendant's own statements." Google built the AI, Google offered it to users, so Google owns what it produces, "because it alone has influence over the AI's offering and the algorithms with which the AI operates." The court also examined existing rulings from Germany's Federal Court of Justice (BGH), which gave traditional search engines and autocomplete limited liability. The BGH had argued that search engine operators were only liable as indirect infringers because they merely made third-party content findable. A proactive duty to check results would threaten how search engines work. The Munich court found that this reasoning doesn't apply to AI overviews. A regular search engine just points to outside websites. But AI overviews generate "independent, new, and substantive statements" by evaluating and combining content from various third-party sites. And only Google can check those statements, the court said, "at least by comparing the underlying third-party websites with its own statements based on them." The court also noted that the AI overview is "by no means absolutely necessary" for using the internet. Traditional search results already help users sort through information, the AI overview is just an extra feature. At the hearing, Google argued that users could check the linked sources themselves to verify if the AI summary was correct. It also said that these users knew "that information generated with AI should not be blindly trusted." The court rejected this.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:52

Package allocates $38bn to ICE, $26bn to Customs and Border Protection and $5bn more to the DHS

Donald Trump signed a nearly $70bn immigration enforcement package into law on Wednesday after the House narrowly passed the legislation, ensuring funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and border patrol activities through the rest of Trump’s presidency.

The Secure America Act passed in a 214-212 vote that was largely along party lines, with Kevin Kiley, an independent who aligns with the Republicans, joining all Democrats in voting no. The Senate approved the measure last week, which allocates $38bn to ICE, $26bn to Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and $5bn more to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) through September 2029.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:51

The primary victories set up a race that could be key to Democrats' hopes of winning control of the Senate.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:40

The recall affects certain Honda Pilot, Ridgeline, Passport, and Acura MDX vehicles sold in 23 states and the District of Columbia.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:38

US defense secretary continues ramp-up of pressure against country including sanctions and devastating oil blockade

Pete Hegseth has warned Cuba against acquiring weapons that could threaten the United States, during a visit to the US military base at Guantánamo Bay.

Washington has ramped up pressure against Cuba with sanctions and a devastating oil blockade, and Donald Trump has repeatedly signaled that the Cuban government could be the next after Venezuela to fall to US pressure.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:32

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:29

Director of Chatham House UK in the World Programme gives evidence at Parliament Foreign Affairs Committee News release jon.wallace

Olivia O’Sullivan gave evidence on the purpose and focus of the Integrated Security Fund, at a time of changing priorities for UK security.

Olivia O’Sullivan, Director of Chatham House’s UK in the World Programme, gave evidence to the UK Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee on 9 June, discussing the Integrated Security Fund, which aims to tackle high-priority threats to UK security.  

During her evidence, Olivia discussed the UK’s changed strategic security outlook in the light of the massive contraction in global aid spending, and the difficult trade-offs facing the UK government.

Olivia O'Sullivan speaking at Parliament on 9 June 2026.

Olivia O’Sullivan speaking at Parliament on 9 June 2026.

During her evidence she examined how the UK should plan to address immediate threats and long-term, complex risks; how the UK should balance defence priorities with conflict prevention and managing new and unanticipated threats; and how the government should prevent conflict-affected states becoming neglected in the new international aid landscape.

Addressing the focus of the Integrated Security Fund, Olivia said:

‘Looking forward we do have a good opportunity here for a fund that sits in the centre to respond to the way that security is changing, to make long-term plans and long-term investment. The question I would have for government is [how can we ensure] that in the wider FCDO restructure… that doesn’t get lost.’

Watch the session in full.
 

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:18

Critically endangered Tapanuli orangutan population falls after heavy rain and landslides, fuelled by climate crisis, in North Sumatra

Extreme rainfall and landslides fuelled by the climate crisis killed 7% of the remaining population of the world’s rarest great ape, a study has found, prompting fears for the species’ survival.

The research suggests 58 out of the remaining 800 critically endangered Tapanuli orangutans (Pongo tapanuliensis) were killed after more than 1,000mm (39in) of rain fell over four days in Indonesia’s North Sumatra province in November 2025. This equates to 11% of the local population and 7% of the entire species.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 12:16

In a 3-0 ruling, the Michigan Court of Appeals on Tuesday overturned a conviction against a man in connection with the 2020 plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 12:55

A federal judge banned Alabama from executing an inmate by nitrogen hypoxia, calling the method unconstitutionally cruel.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 19:17

The Consumer Price Index rose last month at a 4.2% annual rate amid a spike in U.S. energy prices.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 17:46

Attackers torched neighborhoods across Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, after a Sudanese asylum seeker was arrested and accused of stabbing a man.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 12:00

Seattle has enacted a one-year moratorium on new datacenters, making it the largest U.S. city to do so as the backlash against AI infrastructure grows across the country. The city council voted unanimously in favor of the ban. The Guardian reports: Lawmakers have framed the pause as an opportunity to draft regulations specifically targeting the electricity-hungry datacenters being built nationwide to serve the AI sector, and to protect local residents from environmental risks and rising electricity bills. According to Seattle mayor Katie Wilson, the moratorium will also let city officials determine whether datacenters are a "good use of urban land," and potentially impose new stipulations on their approval, such as requiring developers to invest in local transit and housing initiatives in exchange for construction permits. "There are times when public pressure forces elected officials to do something they don't want to do, but in other cases, public pressure just supports and helps to spur on elected officials to do things that they already want to do," said Wilson. "I think this was one of those latter cases." [...] An amendment to the moratorium that passed unanimously last week allows existing datacenters in Seattle to apply for expansions requiring up to 20 megawatts of additional power during the year-long pause. Activists are concerned that the provision may lead to a spike in datacenters' demand for power while the moratorium is in place, and may undermine the premise of the pause. Lawmakers justified the amendment as a way to differentiate between the datacenters that already exist in Seattle and serve a civic purpose, like those powering health facilities and emergency-call systems, from large-scale centers designed to serve the AI sector.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 12:00

Commentary: Parental controls, perimenopause and last-day-of-school photos. Apple seems to have followed us into our 40s, and now I'm worried about both of us.

2026-06-10 12:04
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2026-06-10 11:54

Graham Platner, a Marine veteran, oyster farmer and progressive activist, has won the Democratic nomination for the US Senate in Maine. Platner won 72% of the vote, defeating the state governor, Janet Mills, who suspended her campaign in April but remained on the ballot. Platner received scrutiny during the campaign for old incendiary Reddit posts, a tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol, sexually explicit messages sent to other women early in his marriage and accusations from a former girlfriend, denied by Platner, that he was physically intimidating. Platner will face the senator Susan Collins, a Republican running for a sixth six-year term, in November. The race is seen as a must-win for Democrats to take control of the Senate, where Republicans hold a 53-47 majority.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 11:40

President Trump said he's asking Congress to approve a short-term extension of a key spy authority to "provide time for the selection and confirmation of a permanent" director of national intelligence.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 11:39

House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman James Comer said he wants Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche to appear before lawmakers in July.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 11:37

Sean Strickland claims he was not cleared to attend the UFC event because he ‘made fun of Israel and Epstein’

The only current American men’s UFC champion says he has been barred from Sunday’s fight card on the south lawn of the White House because he dared to criticize Donald Trump, Israel and Jeffrey Epstein.

On Tuesday night, middleweight champion Sean Strickland wrote on X that he had been informed by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that he had not been cleared to attend the event by the White House.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 11:36

I've been riding my GT for about a year now and mostly sticking to paved paths and light gravel, nothing crazy. Usually, I can get through a solid session without even thinking about the percentage, but over the last two weeks, it feels like the battery is draining way faster than it used to. I'm seeing much more aggressive drops when I hit even slight inclines, and I'm definitely not riding it harder than I was a few months ago. I checked my tire pressure and everything is solid, so I don't think that's the issue. I'm starting to wonder if it's just the natural degradation or if there might be some firmware issue causing a drain. Has anyone else in the sub experienced this sudden dip in range? Also, for those of you who have been riding longer, at what point did you notice a significant change in your capacity? I'm trying to figure out if I need to look into a battery replacement or if I'm just overthinking it. Any advice on how to test the health properly would be great.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 11:30

Restaurant chain took chainsaw to ancient oak tree in Enfield without permission

The UK restaurant chain Toby Carvery has settled a legal dispute over taking a chainsaw to an ancient oak tree without permission, by agreeing to pay to restore a lost orchard.

The unauthorised partial felling of the 500-year-old oak next to a Toby Carvery car park in Whitewebbs Park, Enfield, north London, in April last year, prompted widespread public outrage and questions in parliament.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 11:00

Australia, Turkey and Paraguay must be vigilant of a defender-heavy squad ready to bring Mauricio Pochettino’s vision to life on the home stage

The opening salvo kicked off pitchside at Wembley – not between the Australian and USA World Cup teams, but between players turned pundits Mark Schwarzer and Mike Grella. The former Socceroos goalkeeper, with 109 caps on his CV, was on-hand for the EFL Championship promotion final and stationed alongside Grella, who had a fine career in MLS and the EFL but never cracked the USMNT. It’s unlikely Schwarzer arrived with an axe to grind but he took umbrage with Grella’s post-draw reaction that playing Australia was “a lay-up” for the co-hosts.

“Host nations are always difficult to play against at any World Cup,” Schwarzer said. “We always knew the USA was going to be a tough, tough opponent. What we like to do is let our performances do the talking.”

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ComputerWeekly: Microsoft has issued patches for about 200 flaws in its latest monthly Patch Tuesday drop, blasting past a previous record high of almost 170 common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) set in October 2025. Among a great many others, the latest update from Redmond fixes a total of 32 critical CVEs and three zero-day flaws. Dustin Childs, head of threat awareness at TrendAI's Zero Day Initiative, said: "We are heading into a high-stakes summer for cyber security. June's record-shattering drop ... is a stark warning that AI is supercharging flaw discovery at an uncontrollable scale. The current number of CVEs shipped by Microsoft this year exceeds the total number of CVEs shipped in all of 2018. It is extraordinary that Microsoft can produce so many patches in a single month, and I expect many testers are wondering what quality issues may exist." And with the addition of hundreds of CVEs in Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge (Chromium) and other third-party flaws taking the total to almost 600, Chris Goettl, vice president of security product management at Ivanti, said talk of a 'Patch Apocalypse' was no longer unwarranted. "We are in the Patch Apocalypse. The Patch Apocalypse is now," said Goettl. "This is not intended to be a scare tactic. It is meant to outline the challenge that many organizations were anticipating, but the new generation of LLMs [Large Language Models] has accelerated significantly in the first half of 2026." "There are going to be more CVEs resolved by vendors at a faster and more continuous pace than we have ever seen previously. Unfortunately, this will also include more zero-day and n-day exploits than previously seen as well. The window from release from a vendor to exploitation had already shortened to five days as of 2023 threat intelligence data." Goettl said that many suppliers have acknowledged the need to use AI tools in their security research to identify and resolve flaws, with Oracle, Google Chrome and Mozilla all upping the cadence of their updates. Whether or not Microsoft follows suit remains to be seen.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 10:57

WASHINGTON, June 10, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has released the finalized Fusion Science and Technology (FS&T) Roadmap, a national strategy to accelerate the development and commercialization of fusion energy on the most rapid, responsible timeline in history. Building on earlier roadmap efforts, the finalized roadmap brings together fusion science, technology, infrastructure, workforce development, and commercialization priorities into a single national strategy to support fusion pilot plants and commercial fusion power in the mid-2030s.

Fusion is the process that powers the sun and stars. For decades, scientists and engineers have worked to bring that same process to Earth as a source of abundant, reliable energy. The finalized roadmap outlines how DOE, industry, universities, and national laboratories will work together to accelerate the path toward commercial fusion energy in the United States.

This effort advances President Trump’s energy dominance agenda and reinforces the Administration’s commitment to expanding reliable American energy production, strengthening domestic supply chains, and maintaining U.S. leadership in critical technologies. By accelerating progress toward commercial fusion power, DOE is helping secure a future of abundant and reliable energy.

“Fusion energy has entered a new era defined by extraordinary scientific progress and public-private momentum,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Dr. Darío Gil. “With this roadmap, we now have the clarity, coordination, and sustained commitment needed to turn the promise of fusion into a reality for the American people.”

Developed with input from more than 800 scientists and engineers across the public and private sectors, the finalized FS&T Roadmap reflects contributions from more than 15 private companies, over 10 National Laboratories, and more than 70 universities. The roadmap identifies the critical science and technology gaps that must be closed to realize fusion pilot plants and strengthen U.S. leadership in the global fusion industry.

The FS&T Roadmap establishes a unified strategy for the U.S. fusion enterprise built around three primary drivers:

  • Build critical infrastructure to close fusion materials and technology gaps.
  • Innovate through advanced research, high-performance computing, and artificial intelligence.
  • Grow the U.S. fusion ecosystem through public-private partnerships, supply chain development, workforce growth, and commercialization pathways.

The roadmap aligns with DOE’s Genesis Mission and will be implemented through the DOE’s newly established Office of Fusion, leveraging artificial intelligence, advanced computing, and public-private collaboration to accelerate fusion research, engineering, and commercialization. With more than $10 billion in private investment already advancing fusion technologies and demonstration projects, DOE is coordinating a national effort to close the remaining technical gaps needed to commercialize fusion energy. Through the Build-Innovate-Grow strategy, DOE and its partners are strengthening domestic supply chains, advancing fusion science, and positioning the United States to lead the global race to commercialize fusion energy.

The activities outlined in the Fusion Science and Technology Roadmap are focused on prioritizing strategic directions for DOE to further collaborate with the U.S. fusion industry. DOE’s ability to support the roadmap’s milestones and timelines is contingent on future public-private partnerships and future Congressional appropriations. This roadmap is not committing DOE to specific funding levels.

A full copy of the Fusion Science and Technology Roadmap can be found here.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Releases Finalized National Fusion Strategy Aligned with Genesis Mission appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:53

Your Social Security check isn't fully shielded from old federal student loans. Here's how much is at risk.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:46

People have absorbed violence and terror into their lives. Somehow, they keep going – quietly rescuing, evacuating, replacing, mending, adapting … and sometimes saving tiny animals

It was a glorious balmy night, and I was walking home from dinner. I’d just eaten fried red mullet from the Black Sea on a pavement terrace, listening to the cries of the last swifts as darkness crept over the city. A couple of blocks from where I was staying, there was a curious sight: a couple and their dog were standing over a hedgehog, which was standing seemingly irresolute in the road. I wasn’t sure the couple were doing the right thing by shining their phone torches at the poor creature, but their intentions were clear enough: they were trying to protect it and chivvy it out of the way of the traffic. As a car bore down, I flung myself into the street, like a latter-day Roberta from The Railway Children, and waved my arms to get the driver to stop. At the same time, the couple’s dog gave an encouraging bark to the tiny animal, which scuttled across to the opposite pavement, and into the safety of a yard.

Everything always feels heightened in Kyiv, and I was apt to overthink into this moment many metaphors of escape, protection and destruction. Hedgehogs, by the way, are a surprisingly common sight in Kyiv. So too are the “hedgehogs” made from metal beams welded together in a three-dimensional star-shape, a highly effective obstruction for tanks. (The other favoured tank obstructors are known as “dragon’s teeth”, because of their resemblance to monstrous molars rising from the ground.)

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:45

It’s just a ruling from a lower court, but it sets the stage for how European courts are going to deal with the question of who is liable for whatever slop “AI” generates.

The Regional Court of Munich hit Google with a temporary injunction barring the company from spreading false claims about two Munich-based publishers through its AI-generated search overviews (case no. 26 O 869/26). The court classified Google as a direct infringer because the “AI overview” is its own content, not just a list of search results.

Google’s AI overviews had falsely tied two publishing companies to scams, subscription traps, and shady business practices for certain search queries. According to the court, the AI mixed up information about other, genuinely sketchy companies with the plaintiffs and drew connections that didn’t appear in any of the linked sources. The publishers sent Google a cease-and-desist letter, but Google didn’t respond appropriately.

↫ Matthias Bastian at The Decoder

Google tried to argue it doesn’t carry any responsibility or liability for whatever slop its “AI” generate, but the German court does not agree. According to the court, “AI” overviews are not the same as regular search results, because they rewrite findings and just make shit up, thereby making claims that are nowhere to be found in any search results (or in reality in general). Furthermore, the court states that Google develops the “AI”, it runs it, it offers it to users, and Google alone controls its output, and as such, Google is liable for whatever their “AI” produces.

Google also tried to argue that users know not to trust anything an “AI” produces, which is hilarious considering how hard Google is pushing these tools, but the courts state that the ability of users to do further research does not absolve Google of liability. In addition, the court made it very clear that free speech protections absolutely do not apply, because the “AI” expressions are coming from an algorithm, not a person, and are above all an expression of Google’s business activities”.

In other words, if an “AI” tool generates false accusations and misleading statements, the creator of said “AI” is liable. With this ruling in hand, countless other people have a stronger case to make whenever Google or any other company tries to absolve itself from liability from slop just because a pachinko machine generated it.

Excellent news, and the only fair outcome.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:32

Thanks. The smoothing in the package and the firmware do different things, if you change both at once I imagine the difference is quite markable, I’ve gotten similar feedback from others. I never experienced it, for me it was a lot of gradual testing and tweaking (and dealing with issues on the firmware side of changes). But still happy about how my board rides right now (and planning on ironing out the remaining kinks).

Wasn’t aware 6.06 won’t pair with 7.0 Tool anymore, don’t think there’s a real reason for it. I’ll do a 7.0 release at some point. Haven’t tested riding 7.0 yet, but looking into more IMU comms improvements now, some things still missing for some controllers (Little FOCer 3.1 is probably as good as it gets already though) and I’ll be testing those on 7.0.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:28

In an age of spiritual isolation, witches are forming covens that defy the oppressive natures of man and church

On the floor of a sun-drenched room in a 200-year-old Irish estate, a group of 15 witches gather to commune with the spirits. Everyone has someone they want to talk to – dead ancestors, forest fairies, the witches who came before them – and the room has the same expectant charge as the first day of school. Some of the witches wear long black capes and bandannas. Some wear Columbia fleeces, spaghetti-strap tank tops and Adidas sneakers.

Isabella Ferrari, known as Penny the Witch, guides the women as they make divination maps, sheets of paper covered with “yeses” and “nos” that work like Ouija boards: the witches ask their questions and the spirits guide the crystal pendulums in their hands towards the answer. One of the women, Tara Monte, screeches as her pendulum begins circling uncontrollably. “Isabella, do I stop this? Someone really wants to talk to me.” Later, she will confess she believes it was her archangel Michael letting her know yes, her parents were proud of her. Yes, they still loved her.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:21

When it comes to 80s computer brands, few flew as high as Eagle Computer flew in 1983. The aptly named company was selling 12,000 computers a month and had been doubling sales every quarter under the leadership of a talented CEO. Then Eagle lost its CEO, Dennis Barnhart, in a crashed Ferrari on the day of its IPO, June 8, 1983. In this blog post, we’ll explore the reasons Eagle Computer fell, because there was more to it than just the tragic story involving its CEO.

↫ Dave Farquhar

Just one of the many early PC companies that died off, even if Eagle died off before many of the other big players. It must’ve been such a vibrant and fascinating time to be into PCs and computers in general at that time, with so many companies and players to choose from.

Shame about the 308 GTS.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:20

US inflation hits a three-year high in May

European stock markets are taking a more decisive turn downwards now – the UK’s FTSE 100 has fallen 0.5%. The German Dax is down 0.6% and the French Cac 40 is down 0.3%.

The Europe Stoxx 600 is down 0.4%.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:05

Footage appears to contradict Israeli military’s account of killing of seven-month-old Sam Abu Haikal in West Bank

Footage has emerged that appears to contradict the Israeli military’s account of the shooting that killed seven-month-old Sam Abu Haikal in his mother’s arms, showing the family’s car slowing near a military post before soldiers opened fire.

On Friday, the killing of the infant by Israeli troops in the occupied West Bank caused outrage, after soldiers opened fire on the family’s vehicle despite it having complied with an order to stop. Sam was killed and his mother, Daniyah Abu Haikal, and father, Fahed Abu Haikal, were both injured.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:04

Left stranded in freezing temperatures near Everest's "death zone," the climber said he survived for days with almost no food or water.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:01

The best part? The sustainable single-serve coffee system is only $100 during the preorder sale.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:00

The president’s immunity from continuing audits made fewer headlines than the ‘anti-weaponization fund’, but it’s no less egregious

Last week, Todd Blanche, the acting US attorney general, told Congress that he was abandoning plans to establish a $1.8bn fund to compensate Donald Trump’s political allies. The administration’s attempt to use taxpayer money to pay people who claimed to have been unfairly prosecuted by the government – possibly including those convicted of violence during the January 6 Capitol riot that Trump incited – was too much for Senate Republicans.

But Blanche, who served as Trump’s personal lawyer before joining his administration, made another announcement that got far less attention than scrapping Trump’s “anti-weaponization fund”: the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will be barred from continuing audits into the president, his family and their “affiliates”. In other words, Trump secured something most Americans can only dream of: immunity from IRS audits of his past tax returns.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 10:00

If you own a cellular-enabled iPad model, you can get affordable unlimited wireless data for 24 hours.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:57

Retailer plans to shut unprofitable stores as falling US airport traffic due to Middle East conflict hits trading

Business live – latest updates

WH Smith has issued a profit warning after shopper numbers at its stores in US airports fell as a result of the war in the Middle East, prompting the company to raise fresh capital from investors.

The retailer, which operates 1,200 outlets globally in airports, railway stations and hospitals, raised £102m through a share sale on Wednesday to strengthen its balance sheet, pay down debt, invest in technology and shut down unprofitable stores after “a downturn in trading conditions”.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:56

Israeli restaurateur Yehezkel Schweiger tells CBS News why he's willing to brave daily Hezbollah attacks to bring customers a bit of joy.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:48

Oscar winner Mikey Madison and Jeremy Strong to star in film focused on fallout from whistleblower Frances Haugen

The first trailer for Aaron Sorkin’s eagerly anticipated follow-up to The Social Network has landed.

The Social Reckoning has been described as a film that isn’t a “straight sequel” but one that will still revisit Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:35

Star, 59, of 2000 blockbuster X-Men seeks to raise awareness of condition as he undergoes chemotherapy

The actor and former professional wrestler Tyler Mane has revealed he has been diagnosed with breast cancer, and is undergoing chemotherapy.

Mane, 59, a star of the 2000 superhero blockbuster X-Men, posted the news to Facebook in an attempt to raise awareness of a condition he said was rarely talked about.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:29

Research suggests households that include a GLP-1 user collectively spent £780m less on grocery bills

Weight-loss drugs are saving users’ households more than £400 a year on grocery bills, according to a survey, which found use of GLP-1s has nearly tripled in the past two years to 1.9 million adults.

More than 6.3% of households in Great Britain now include at least one GLP-1 user, according to the research by Worldpanel by Numerator. This marks a sharp rise from 4.1% of households in 2025 and 2.3% in 2024.

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2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 09:22

BOLOGNA, Italy, June 10, 2026 — NextSilicon, a leader in next-generation computing solutions for AI and high-performance computing (HPC), today announced plans to productize its Arbel RISC-V core into a 64-core and a 128-core, enterprise-grade processor suited to deliver ultra-speed performance for agentic tools, expected to be available in early 2028. Following an October preview, the company is now sharing expanded technical detail and a roadmap shaped by early customer and partner feedback. This announcement coincides with NextSilicon’s presentation at the RISC-V Summit.

NextSilicon announced plans to productize its Arbel RISC-V core into a 64-core and a 128-core, enterprise-grade processor suited to deliver ultra-speed performance for agentic tools, expected to be available in early 2028.

NextSilicon designed Arbel from the ground up for the performance demands of AI infrastructure and HPC. The move from test chip to production roadmap follows customer and partner silicon evaluations, including HPC program leads, AI infrastructure architects, and data center operators. Their input has validated Arbel’s key performance attributes and is shaping the requirements and architecture decisions for the 64-core production processor.

Introducing Arbel: Silicon-Proven, Customer-Validated

Arbel exists because NextSilicon needed a core that could keep up with the rest of the system. The company originally designed it as the control processor inside its Maverick-2 accelerator platform, where it handles the serial logic and data movement that the dataflow engine cannot parallelize. That production deployment became the proving ground: the core had to perform under real workload conditions, not just pass a benchmark suite.

NextSilicon fabricated a standalone Arbel test chip on TSMC’s 5nm process to validate the architecture outside the accelerator context as a full evaluation system. The results confirmed what the Maverick-2 deployment had already demonstrated. A 10-wide instruction-issue pipeline and 480-entry reorder buffer deliver up to 16 scalar instructions per cycle at retirement. Four 128-bit vector units handle data-parallel workloads, including AI inference. Clock speeds reach 2.5 GHz. Standard coherent CHI interconnect and full Linux OS support make the core a practical candidate for server and HPC system evaluation.

Customer and partner evaluations of the test chip silicon validated those performance characteristics and shaped the requirements for the production processor. That feedback drove the decision to productize Arbel as a standalone 64-core server chip, detailed in the next section.

Taking Arbel from Test Chip to Production

The production processor scales the Arbel architecture to 64/128 performance cores, targets a 3.4 GHz operating frequency, and moves to a more advanced process node to meet the power efficiency and density requirements of production data center and HPC deployments. The core architecture retains the defining characteristics of the test chip, including the TAGE branch predictor designed for competitive prediction accuracy against the leading x86 and ARM server implementations.

The chip targets two complementary deployment roles. As a standalone enterprise server processor, it offers organizations a high-performance RISC-V alternative designed to reduce ISA licensing constraints and long-term dependence on third-party vendor roadmaps. As a host processor for NextSilicon’s Maverick accelerator platform, it handles system orchestration and data movement for heterogeneous AI and HPC deployments. Both roles are supported by full RVA23 compliance and standard Linux distribution support.

“Agentic AI changes the game. The future isn’t just more accelerators – it’s smarter, more powerful CPUs with fewer, stronger cores. The response from our early customers and partners has been clear: the architecture performs, and they want to see it at production scale,” said Elad Raz, CEO and co-founder of NextSilicon. “We built Arbel because Agentic AI changes what a CPU needs to do. As AI agents call more tools, trigger more code, orchestrate more services, and move through more complex workflows, the CPU can no longer be an afterthought. It needs to run fast, respond quickly, and keep the entire system moving.”

With Arbel, NextSilicon started from the workload requirements, not from the constraints of an inherited architecture. The result is a CPU designed for the next generation of AI and HPC systems, built on an open ISA that gives customers control.

“RISC-V is the most compelling architecture for the future of AI, data center, and HPC workloads,” said Andrea Gallo, CEO of RISC-V International. “We are excited to see the innovation and success of the Maverick-2 accelerator and Arbel test chip, and look forward to future developments, including RVA23 compliance.”

The RISC-V Data Center Opportunity

RISC-V has crossed the threshold from an academic architecture to a viable enterprise platform. As ecosystem standards have matured, software vendors increasingly have stable, consistent targets to build and certify against – similar to the foundation that drove broad adoption of x86 and ARM in data centers. Major Linux distributions, compiler toolchains, and systems software now support RISC-V natively, with ecosystem support from Canonical, Red Hat, and NVIDIA. The data center and HPC segment of the RISC-V market is projected to expand at a compound annual growth rate of 33.1% from 2025 to 2034 to over $200B.

The gap that remains is at the top of the performance envelope. HPC and AI workloads are hybrid. They require massive parallelism for compute-intensive segments, combined with serial control logic that determines the throughput ceiling of the entire system. Agentic AI coding platforms represent a fast-growing example of this architectural mismatch. Unlike training workloads that scale across thousands of GPU cores, agentic coding tasks run autonomous reasoning loops that are fundamentally serial: parsing code context, evaluating alternatives, generating and validating output.

These workflows demand strong single-thread performance from a compact core alongside integrated acceleration for inference, not the wide, general-purpose server cores designed for cloud multitenant scheduling. As agentic workloads scale from developer tools to enterprise infrastructure, the gap between what cloud CPUs were designed for and what these workloads actually need will widen. That serial path requires a CPU designed for maximum single-thread execution speed, not a general-purpose core managing system overhead. No existing RISC-V processor was built with that specific requirement as the primary design constraint. Arbel was.

Availability and Customer Engagement

The Arbel production processor is expected in Q1 2028. NextSilicon is engaging qualified customers now for early access discussions and continued roadmap collaboration. Organizations evaluating RISC-V infrastructure for HPC or AI applications can contact NextSilicon to discuss workload requirements and options.

NextSilicon will present a detailed technical overview of the Arbel architecture and production roadmap at the RISC-V Summit on June 10, 2026. Additional technical documentation is available at www.nextsilicon.com.

About NextSilicon

NextSilicon builds computing infrastructure for algorithmically complex workloads. The company’s Maverick-2 accelerator uses a runtime reconfigurable dataflow architecture to deliver up to 10x performance over leading GPUs at less than half the power, with no requirement to rewrite existing applications. Maverick-2 is in production at customer sites across HPC, AI, and national security computing environments. NextSilicon is headquartered in Tel Aviv, Israel, with offices in Minneapolis, MN, in the United States.


Source: NextSilicon

The post NextSilicon to Productize Arbel RISC-V Core into 64-Core Enterprise Processor for AI and HPC appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:16

Nancy Lacore, ousted by Pete Hegseth last year, heads to a run-off in race for Nancy Mace’s seat

A three-star navy rear-admiral fired by Pete Hegseth last year in the defense secretary’s purge of senior US military officials advanced to a Democratic run-off in a closely-watched congressional race in South Carolina.

Nancy Lacore, who served 35 years in the navy, was chief of the navy reserve when she was ousted by Hegseth in August.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 09:14

Can't decide between a laptop and a tablet? You don't have to. Check out my top picks for the best two-in-one convertibles.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-10 09:02

The Prelim Attention Score system enhances vision-language model safety and trustworthiness

June 10, 2026 — Vision-language models are AI systems that combine image analysis with large-language models. These widely used AI systems have a persistent problem: hallucinations, or outputs that describe objects that are inconsistent with, or absent from, the input image.

The Prelim Attention Score tool helps detect whether a model’s output is grounded in the image or driven too strongly by its own generated text.

Los Alamos National Laboratory researchers have developed the Prelim Attention Score (PAS), a tool that helps detect whether a model’s output is grounded in the image or driven too strongly by its own generated text.

“The PAS is a real-time, plug-and-play metric that acts as an internal monitor for the AI,” said Manish Bhattarai, a Los Alamos computer scientist. “The system works with major existing vision-language models and requires minimal additional computational overhead, making it an efficient way to detect potential hallucinations. PAS achieves state-of-the-art accuracy in catching hallucinations, offering developers a practical path toward safer and more trustworthy multimodal AI systems.”

Most commonly used vision-language models are autoregressive, meaning they generate each new token, or word, based partly on the words they have already produced. The PAS system monitors a vision-language model’s prediction of each token, allowing PAS to identify where the model is drawing its information from and where hallucinations are likely to occur. PAS presents a score that alerts users to the possible presence of hallucinations in the output.

A Useful Screen for Practical Applications

Many autoregressive vision-language models are built on transformer architectures, a class of deep-learning neural networks that use attention patterns to weigh information as they generate an output. The Los Alamos research team examined how these models attend to the image, the text prompt and the model’s own preliminary generated words.

When integrated into a vision-language model workflow, PAS can run alongside the model as it handles a request. For object mentions in the model’s response to an image and text input, PAS computes an attention-based score that indicates how strongly the model relied on its own previously generated words. The closer the PAS score is to zero, the less likely it is that the model has produced a hallucination.

“By understanding the way a vision-language model pays attention to preliminary information, PAS can help identify the exact instance where a model begins to over-rely on its own words,” said Xuan Nhat Hoang, Los Alamos intern. “Our tool reads signals the AI is already producing, representing a low-overhead way to help ensure that information is reliable and useful.”

PAS could be employed in scenarios where images, documents, diagrams and text are analyzed by vision-language AI models. For instance, it could eventually support reliability checks in settings such as medical imaging, scientific document analysis, engineering diagrams, remote sensing and other mission-relevant visual workflows where unsupported visual claims could affect downstream decisions.

The Los Alamos team is presenting PAS at the prestigious Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2026 conference, sponsored by the IEEE and Computer Vision Foundation, in Denver this month.

Funding: This work was supported by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at Los Alamos.


Source: LANL

The post Los Alamos Method Helps Expose Hallucinations in Vision-Language AI appeared first on HPCwire.

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Kenya’s G7 role must address the economic pressures fuelling domestic criticism of President Ruto Expert comment LToremark

Kenya has felt the pressures of costly debt, risk-averse Western investment and China’s industrial dominance. The G7 summit on global economic imbalances is a chance to speak up.

Kenyan President William Ruto arrives for a reception with French President Emmanuel Macron at State House ahead of the Africa Forward: Africa- France Partnerships for Innovation and Growth Summit in Nairobi.

Kenya’s participation at the G7 summit in France on 16-17 June sees it walk a familiar tightrope between international opportunity and domestic political risk. Though Kenya has attended three G7 summits since 2017, its presence this year has been spotlighted by South Africa’s reported exclusion following US pressure.

President William Ruto will see the invite as tacit endorsement of his efforts to present Kenya as a reliable broker between global powers. The G7 summit also follows Kenya’s co-hosting of the Africa–France summit on 11–12 May in Nairobi, framed as the first edition in a non-Francophone country by design – although critics took a more sceptical view

But Ruto’s international ambitions rest on shaky domestic foundations.

Major anti-government demonstrations in June 2024, which led Ruto to dissolve his cabinet, followed a prolonged inflation crisis and proposed new taxes – but also came just weeks after a state visit to the US which drew criticism for its cost. Recent protests – over a US-backed Ebola quarantine facility on Kenyan soil, and a transport shutdown over rising fuel prices – show how external conditions continue to affect domestic politics. 

A purely symbolic Kenyan presence at the G7 would do little to alleviate these pressures. The summit’s headline focus on global economic imbalances, however, is a chance for Kenya to speak out on structural conditions that have constrained its domestic choices. 

Global economic imbalances and Kenyan debt

The main theme of this year’s G7 refers to large and persistent disparities in the current account balances – the sum of a country’s trade in goods and services – of major economies. The world’s two largest economic powers feature on opposite sides of this equation: a US current account deficit of 0.9 per cent of global GDP last year contrasting with China’s surplus worth 0.8 per cent.

This G7 focus is particularly timely for Kenya. As a lower middle-income country with a market-facing economy and persistent trade deficits, its experience shows how global imbalances can deepen existing vulnerabilities.

Kenya’s defining weakness in recent years has been its public debt burden, with servicing costs consuming over a third of revenues. As the largest bilateral lender to Kenya, China has attracted much of the blame. But this is not the full story. There has also been a parallel rise in Kenyan borrowing from international commercial markets.

The decade following the 2008 global financial crisis saw Kenya issue its first Eurobonds alongside a rapid surge in Chinese lending to Africa, as global interest rates remained low despite US deficits. In the post-COVID-19 era, however, the US deficit has contributed to higher global interest rates, leading to rising Kenyan borrowing costs and refinancing challenges.

Billions of US dollars in Chinese lending agreed in 2014-15 for a major Kenyan railway project – converted to renminbi in 2025 – were set at floating commercial interest rates that subsequently surged after 2021. In parallel, Kenya’s struggles to secure liquidity for a $2 billion Eurobond repayment due in June 2024 brought a rapid slide in the Kenyan shilling, worsening the fiscal crisis that precipitated major youth-led protests.

Kenyan leaders must shoulder the primary blame for the rapid accumulation of unproductive debt. But indirect exposure to global conditions has made the solutions more painful.

Kenya’s trade imbalances

Alongside its debt stock, China is also Kenya’s largest trade partner and runs a widening trade surplus: 2024 figures show Chinese exports to Kenya were $4.3 billion, against $196 million in imports. 

Closing this gap will be difficult for several reasons. One is that deals presented by China as addressing the disparity may ultimately keep it intact. In May, China finalized an interim agreement extending zero-tariff access to 53 African countries. Kenyan agricultural exports are an obvious beneficiary of tariff removal – as the continent’s mineral and energy exports were already tariff-free – but Kenya’s middle-income status meant it had first negotiated a reciprocal agreement to open its market to Chinese imports. A rumoured 10-year timeline for this also compares unfavourably to existing 25-year deals with the EU and UK. 

However, more consequential drivers of this trade gap are the structural conditions underpinning China’s global surplus – including weak domestic consumption, industrial subsidies and an undervalued renminbi – which erode the relative competitiveness of Kenyan industry. The US remains a more significant market for Kenyan exports, totalling $662 million in 2024, but its tariffs have introduced significant uncertainty.

The example of a French road project epitomizes how such imbalances constrain Kenya’s economic decisions. In 2019, Kenya signed a $1.5 billion deal with a French consortium to build an upgraded toll highway between central Kenya and Nairobi. Kenya cancelled the contract in 2024 amid rising costs and reports that the French partners declined to take on the risk of potential shortfalls in toll revenues. The contract was instead awarded to Chinese contractors who promised to accept this risk and deliver at a lower price, with labour and materials sourced from China.

This underscores the difficult decisions facing Kenya. On the one hand, Western countries claim that their financing models create fewer dependencies than China, yet a risk-averse private sector was unable or unwilling to deliver at a time of acute vulnerability for Kenya. On the other hand, Chinese firms, with the muscle of state backing, can reduce project cost and fiscal risk – but imported materials and labour add to an already glaring trade deficit.

Kenya’s G7 opportunity 

Kenya’s G7 participation is a chance to ensure that summit debates on global imbalances do not neglect a shared responsibility to emerging economies. 

An attainable first step following on from the Africa–France summit is to secure expanded G7 commitment to a first-loss guarantee mechanism to help derisk investment. Another more challenging objective will be to ensure that stricter EU trade measures do not disincentivize Chinese investments in African export industries. Kenya must also leverage its Ebola quarantine commitment to extract US concessions, including progress on a trade agreement first proposed in President Trump’s first term.

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Hundreds of thousands gather to remember Carlos ‘Indio’ Solari, who inspired cross-generational devotion, especially among working class

The line stretched for more than 7km (four miles). Mourners sang rock songs, waved banners, and carried speakers blasting music while smoke rose from makeshift barbecues and vendors sold T-shirts bearing the image of a bald man with sunglasses.

As evening fell, a drizzle set in, but the queue remained. At the end of the line in Avellaneda, outer Buenos Aires, stood a chapel containing the body of a rock star.

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A Guardian analysis reveals how most of 39 countries facing US entry restrictions are most vulnerable environmentally

Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown is largely targeting people from the countries most vulnerable to displacement from climate-driven disasters, a Guardian analysis shows.

As the Trump administration pushes policies to boost planet-heating fossil fuels, millions of people are being forced to flee their homelands due to storms, floods and droughts worsened by the climate crisis.

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As the US shuts its doors to most refugees, there’s little hope of a new system to help those forced from home by climate impacts

Millions of people around the world are having their lives upended by floods, storms and heatwaves worsened by the climate crisis. Those forced to flee their home countries, however, are finding that the door to the US is more firmly shut than ever.

Neither US nor international law recognizes environmental hazards, such as climate-related displacement, as a valid cause to claim asylum or gain entry through other migration pathways, despite the mounting toll of disasters caused by an overheating planet.

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The last words spoken by Angela Prichard, 55, an Iowa wife and mother who called 911 to report she was in danger, was the first clue investigators had to identify her killer.

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A surveillance camera captured the sound of dogs barking, helping authorities determine when Angela Prichard's estranged husband arrived at the location to wait for her.

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Thai woman is in custody in connection with investigation after man was reportedly found dead at a hotel in Yangon

A US diplomat has been found dead in Myanmar’s largest city, and members of the diplomatic community in Yangon say a Thai woman has been detained by police in connection with the investigation.

US officials in Thailand and the US embassy in Myanmar referred questions on the case to the state department, which confirmed the “death of a US government employee” assigned to the embassy in Yangon, but gave no other details.

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From horror galore to Chinese action games, the key trends, trailers and surprises from Summer Game Fest’s many, many hours of streams and broadcasts

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Did you spend hours of your weekend watching a relentless series of video game adverts? No? I don’t blame you – Summer Game Fest, the collection of livestreams that has arisen in place of the giant annual E3 video game expo in Los Angeles, is extremely overwhelming. There are the bigger, longer shows: the PlayStation and Xbox streams, the main SGF show hosted by Geoff Keighley and Lucy James, Future’s duet of the Future Games Show and the PC Gaming Show. Each show is two hours long. Then there are all the indie showcases: cosy games, women-led games, Black voices in gaming, Day of the Devs. Between them, they show off hundreds of games that might pique your interest.

I picked out exactly 34 highlights here: the biggest news, the most interesting-looking smaller games. But from the barrage of trailers I was also able to discern some trends. Here’s what we can learn.

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Police are treating the case as a possible homicide and have a Thai woman in custody, sources told The Associated Press.

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Despite calls for calm, masked anti-immigration protesters in Belfast set a bus, vehicles and some homes on fire in what one politician called "a race-based pogrom."

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"This is similar to a doctor that is licensed to practice family medicine but is doing brain surgery in their office," police said.

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The flames from the cross burning in the middle of Grant Park were visible to anyone driving or walking down Columbus Drive.

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Pamela Evette and Alan Wilson are heading to a runoff on June 23 in South Carolina's Republican primary for governor.

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Democrats are aiming to unseat Nevada GOP Gov. Joe Lombardo in one of the country's most tightly contested gubernatorial contests this year.

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This month, the administration is seeking to denaturalize 17 people, part of an effort unprecedented in modern US history

I still remember my citizenship ceremony from 2011. There was a festive spirit among the dozens of us who were about to become the newest Americans, a kind of joy offset only by the anxiety of having to turn in our green cards first. For years, I jealously guarded that little card, which was not only not green but also something I was repeatedly told by authorities to carry with me at all times. They had to pry it from my fingers that day.

At my ceremony, which I wrote about at the time, a representative from the New York City commission on human rights explained to her captive American audience what civil rights protections we had, and the judge who swore us in as citizens encouraged us to exercise our vote, serve on juries, run for office and speak out for our rights. We were each given a pocket constitution. The whole thing was a celebration of democratic values. I entered downtown Brooklyn that day as a resident alien. I left as a newly minted American citizen, equal in the eyes of the law to every other American citizen.

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2026-06-10 08:04
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Vice-president says he expects war to end in a week or few months with ‘a deal that is good for US economically’. Plus, get ready for start of Fifa men’s World Cup

Good morning.

US forces have launched strikes against Iran in response to the downing of an Apache helicopter near the strait of Hormuz a day earlier, and Iran has retaliated by hitting American airbases in the Middle East. The exchange of fire came as the US vice-president, JD Vance, was vague on the possible timeframe for ending the Iran war, saying it could conclude in a week or a few months.

What did Vance actually say? “Right now, I feel that we are in a position to get a deal that is good for the United States economically and that really does deal with the Iranian nuclear program. Not just now, not just while Donald Trump is president, but for the long term, to where my kids can say when they’re adults: ‘Iran is not going to have a nuclear weapon.’”

Who is Steve Hilton? Since arriving in the US 14 years ago, he has had stints as an entrepreneur, a policy analyst and a Fox News host after years of working in the background of Conservative party politics in Britain.

Who has been supporting him? Hilton has assembled a broad coalition spanning working-class voters, Latino small-business owners, religious conservatives and Silicon Valley tech tycoons. He has managed to turn his British accent into an asset, priding himself on being a legal immigrant as opposed to the undocumented kind derided by the Republican establishment.

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  • Wilson sparks winner as US beat Brazil 1-0

  • Marta slams referee for being ‘main character’

  • Riot police surround match officials

United States manager Emma Hayes said she had “an experience I will never forget” after her side’s bad-tempered 1-0 win over Brazil in Fortaleza saw the home team handed eight red cards.

Brazil head coach Arthur Elias and three members of his staff were dismissed towards the end of the second half before police in riot gear surrounded the match officials on the pitch at full-time after further flashpoints.

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Karmelo Anthony was found guilty earlier Tuesday after a trial that examined the confrontation leading to Austin Metcalf's death at a Frisco track meet.

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Brexit 10 years on: Michel Barnier and the future of UK–EU relations 22 June 2026 — 10:00 TO 11:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join a fascinating discussion with the EU’s former chief Brexit negotiator to assess a decade of change and the future of EU-UK relations.

Join a fascinating discussion with the EU’s former chief Brexit negotiator to assess a decade of change and the future of EU-UK relations.

A decade after the Brexit vote, UK–EU relations are entering a new phase marked by friendly yet cautious engagement. Ongoing disputes over trade, regulation and mobility continue to test progress. These pressures frame efforts to rebuild cooperation while domestic politics and wider European shifts influence the direction of the relationship.

Join us as Michel Barnier, former Prime Minister of France, discusses the challenges framing efforts to reset cooperation between London and Brussels. From a potentially pivotal 2027 presidential election in France, to wider issues facing Europe and the UK, Mr Barnier will outline potential solutions to overcome these challenges.

This event discusses:

  • What priorities shape the UK–EU relationship after Brexit, and where do key tensions remain?
  • How do domestic politics in the UK, France and the EU affect cooperation?
  • How could political change in France next year influence European policy?
  • What outcomes are realistic in the near term?

2026-06-10 08:04
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System not fit for purpose due to poor infrastructure and planning, with minority groups particularly at risk, MPs say

The UK’s stem cell transplant system is potentially putting the lives of blood cancer patients at risk as a result of inadequate infrastructure and a lack of long-term planning, a parliamentary report has found.

A hematopoietic stem cell transplant, often referred to as a bone marrow transplant, is a medical procedure in which stem cells from a healthy donor are transplanted into a patient.

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As Hollywood searches for its next iteration of the superspy, the actor explains how he earned pop culture’s most sought-after role – and how he’s taking 007 back to basics

Is any acting gig more contested than James Bond? Each week seems to bring a din of audition speculation so loud that it must be exhausting for the Elordis, Cavills and Dickinsons who are at the centre of it all. But when one of them does finally bag the role, perhaps they should seek the counsel of the actor who has quietly played the part for the last five years: Patrick Gibson. He’s the star of 007 First Light, the video game that has sold 2.7m copies since it was released two weeks ago.

As a computerised Bond, Gibson is the first video game actor to lend both his voice and likeness to the role. With endorsement from both Amazon MGM and previous brand guardians Eon there’s a case to be made that he is the seventh official Bond (and the second Irish one). Not that he knew this when submitting a self-tape to Danish developers IO Interactive. “There was talk of martinis in the audition sides that gave me an inkling,” says Gibson. “Although at that point I didn’t believe there was any way it could be that.”

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Interactive takes on MI6’s globetrotting spy have been around almost as long as the films, but that doesn’t mean all of them were a success. Here’s 007’s chequered past of hits, flops and oddities

Bond finally arrived in an official video game capacity in 1984, courtesy of Parker Brothers. The game grouped several 007 adventures (Diamonds Are Forever, The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker and For Your Eyes Only) together. Yet despite including elements from each movie, it was essentially the same game throughout: an unsatisfying and tricky mashup of the arcade games Moon Patrol and Scramble, with the player controlling Bond’s amphibious Lotus from The Spy Who Loved Me. Obscure pub trivia fact: due to the dispute between Bond producers Eon and screenwriter Kevin McClory, the Diamonds Are Forever segment replaced Blofeld with a villain named Seraffino.

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This year’s events will be a mélange of Trumpian egotism, Maga populism and Christian nationalism

Musicians who dropped out of the Great American State Fair said they were tricked.

“I HAVE INFORMED MY AGENTS THAT I WILL NOT BE PERFORMING AT THE FREEDOM 250 EVENT,” wrote the rapper Young MC on Facebook of the first major celebration of the US’s 250th birthday. “The artists were never told about any political involvement with the event. And despite the claims by the organizers that the event is nonpartisan, SPIN magazine describes it as ‘Trump-backed.’” The country singer Martina McBride said that the organizers’ description of the event as nonpartisan “turned out to be misleading”.

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Commonwealth Fusion has published five peer-reviewed papers laying out the physics case for ARC, its planned 400 MW fusion power plant, which would follow the company's smaller SPARC tokamak now under construction. The papers suggest ARC could produce more energy than it consumes using high-temperature superconducting magnets, molten-salt heat extraction, and 15-minute fusion pulses. Ars Technica reports: ARC will be a tokamak that hosts fusion between hydrogen's two heavier isotopes, deuterium and tritium. This reaction results in a helium nucleus and releases a neutron and radiation. The helium transfers heat to the plasma, maintaining the conditions needed for fusion, but it is otherwise a waste product, referred to as "ash" in the fusion context. The neutron and radiation, however, are put to use. Part of that use is simply imparting energy into a blanket of molten salt that surrounds the fusion chamber. That energy, in the form of heat, will be used to drive a turbine that produces the electricity. The molten salt includes lithium ions; when one lithium isotope absorbs a neutron, it decays into more helium, plus tritium that can be used as fuel for the reactor. There are isotopes present that will also release additional neutrons, allowing this process to generate sufficient fuel. Overall, the present design of ARC is expected to produce about 1.13 GW of fusion power, with 500 MW of that extracted as electricity. Some of that (100 MW) will be needed to power the plant's operations, leaving 400 MW to be sent to the grid. The rest of the energy is either kept in the tokamak to maintain the fusion reactions or lost due to inefficiencies in the heat and energy transfer of the system. There's a lot of uncertainty about these numbers; the 1.13 GW is just the center of a range of potential values running from 900 MW to 1.3 GW, so the 400 MW output may need to be adjusted up or down accordingly. Some of that 400 MW comes during periods where fusion is not occurring. The nuclear reactions will occur within 15-minute-long periods that will be interspersed with one minute resets. The resets are meant to be kept short enough that nothing has much of a chance to cool down before it gets heated up again -- thermal inertia will let it continue generating power. That will be one of the key differentiators with SPARC, which doesn't have the heat extraction needed to maintain stable fusion for these long time periods, and so can't maintain the near constant temperatures needed for reliable power generation. It's inevitable that parts of the device will be exposed to radiation and perhaps fusion plasma. The inner walls of the reactor will be shielded by tungsten, which will limit erosion by the conditions. Meanwhile, the vacuum vessel is designed to be replaced every one to two years. The papers note that this flexibility will allow them to make some design changes even after ARC is built. To enable this, the whole tokamak is meant to split in half for maintenance.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Commentary: Siri AI is the headline feature of WWDC26, but there are more new capabilities I need to check out.

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Multiple attackers killed at least 12 people and wounded nine others in a late-night mass shooting near South Africa's biggest city, Johannesburg, police say.

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Hadi Alodid, 30, further charged with possessing a knife in a public place and making threats to kill on same day

A man has appeared in court accused of the attempted murder of a man in Belfast on Monday night.

Hadi Alodid, 30, of Duncairn Avenue, Belfast, was charged with the attempted murder of Stephen Ogilvie. He was further charged with possessing a knife in a public place, Kinnaird Avenue, on the same day.

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Jermiah Copeland had admitted killing Angelina Resendiz, attacking another sailor and illegally recording another

A member of the US navy has been ordered to spend 44 years in federal prison after admitting that he fatally strangled a fellow sailor in his barracks room, violently squeezed the neck of a second woman onboard an aircraft carrier and illegally made secret video recordings of a third, including while they were being intimate.

Meanwhile, the family of the petty officer whom Jermiah Copeland acknowledged murdering, Angelina Resendiz, has called for reforms within the armed forces meant to better protect women serving in the military.

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2026-06-10 08:04
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The Monaco striker’s impact on the US attack will vary depending on how the team builds up, and where that buildup happens

Free newsletter | Daily podcast | Download our app

Some strikers are gregarious personalities who ensure attention even when they struggle. Folarin Balogun prefers to speak softly and maintain a healthy goalscoring record. The 24-year-old has still been making himself known to his country of birth – he was born in New York but raised in London – after committing to the US over England and Nigeria. This past season, he finished fourth in Ligue 1 scoring with 13 goals, priming him for an emergent World Cup on home soil.

Balogun’s recruitment was closely monitored by US fans, desperate for a dependable goalscorer.

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We’re thinking about the crisis facing pollinators all wrong. And we’ve come to a crucial moment

Last winter, commercial beekeepers lost more than 60% of their colonies – their worst losses on record. We tend to blame bee losses on separate, singular threats: pests, pesticides, habitat loss or extreme weather. But we’ve been thinking about bee losses wrong.

The real culprit is our industrial food system.

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2026-06-10 08:04
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Don't forget to check out all these iOS 26 features before Apple releases the next iOS software later this year.

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Why Should Delaware Care?
In the wake of rising energy costs and concerns about future electricity demands from new high-demand users like data centers, elected officials are considering a slew of solutions. That has included a task force considering nuclear energy, but their recommendations will likely arrive too late to make legislative changes.

In April, New Jersey lifted a 50-year moratorium on new nuclear power projects.

In Virginia, an energy company is already 3D printing parts for the state’s nuclear plants.

And details about restarting Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island nuclear power plant could be announced as soon as this month.

But in Delaware, decisions about the state’s stance on nuclear power — specifically the emerging technology of small modular reactors — will likely be delayed until well after this year’s General Assembly adjourns on June 30.

That’s because the Delaware Nuclear Energy Feasibility Task Force, which has been convening regularly since last fall to study the issue, pushed back its deadline to produce a report until nearly a month after the legislative session ends. 

The group, created by the legislature, was supposed to present its findings by the beginning of 2026, but task force members decided to delay the deadline almost immediately after they first convened.

“Right now, Delaware is years behind the other states,” said Martin Willis, a member of the Boilermakers Local 13 union, and task force appointee. “If we wait until 2027, we’ll be light years behind. We have to do something.”

The July 31 deadline means lawmakers are unlikely to consider new rules or regulations for the small nuclear reactor industry until next year — after the November elections that could impact lawmakers currently sitting on the task force. Additionally, task force member Rep. Jeff Hilovsky (R-Long Neck) will retire at the end of this year. 

Despite the late deadline, the task force could potentially vote on its recommendations as early as Monday. Even so, it would leave only seven legislative days left in the 2026 General Assembly to draft, hear and pass legislation to advance those priorities this year.

State Sen. Stephanie Hansen testifies during a Senate Education Committee meeting in March 2024.
Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown). | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

Led by Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown), the task force has been exploring the potential for small modular nuclear reactors in Delaware. While some see such reactors as part of a long-term solution, the industry is currently largely unproven. 

The U.S. military reported in April that it is developing small modular reactors and related technologies that could come online as early as next year. But there are no such reactors actively providing power to anyone anywhere in the world, according to Allison Macfarlane, the former chair of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

During a meeting last month of the task force, Macfarlane told members that only large reactors operate throughout the world because the immense costs inherent in nuclear technology can only be overcome through economies of scale.  

“It’s basic economics and I don’t think we’re going to be escaping that any time soon,” Macfarlane said

Nuclear gets a bipartisan nudge

Unlike coal and renewables, nuclear energy has traditionally been a less politically polarizing source of power. 

Advancing nuclear technologies played a key role in the Biden administration’s plan for a transition toward a cleaner electric grid. Meanwhile, removing “undue burdens” on certain energy resources, including nuclear, was among President Donald Trump’s first executive orders.

Next-generation small modular nuclear reactors are a fraction of the size of traditional nuclear power plants. | GRAPHIC COURTESY OF IDAHO NATIONAL LABORATORY

Meyer, too, proclaimed in his State of the State earlier this year that “safe, modern nuclear energy” is needed in Delaware. In April, he noted during a radio program that Delaware is in an energy crisis. He said that is due to the state not generating much of its own power. The state typically imports 30% to 55% of its electricity from its regional grid.

“I’ve been very clear that we need to invest to make sure that we have wind generation, solar generation, nuclear generation, combined-gas generation,” Meyer told WHYY/DPM listeners in late April. “That is state policy.”

While Delaware’s nuclear energy task force began as a Republican idea, it was embraced by Hansen, a Democrat known for spearheading progressive environmental policies. 

Lawmakers created the task force last year through a resolution that passed the House of Representatives through a voice vote, and the Senate through a vote of 19 to 2. 

Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown) has been a proponent of exploring the potential for nuclear power in Delaware. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DE SENATE REPUBLICANS

Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown), who does not sit on the task force, told Spotlight Delaware that he didn’t expect the resolution to pass. But with an energy supply crunch, he said all options need to be considered. 

While modular nuclear reactors show promise, Pettyjohn also noted the challenges. He said the  technology is not ready to be deployed so it would not solve the state’s immediate electricity needs. 

He also pointed to historical events, such as the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, that leave lingering concerns for any residents living nearby a reactor.

Not an immediate answer

Pettyjohn’s comments came after Delaware elected officials repeatedly stated over the previous year that every energy option needs to be considered. 

Lawmakers collectively turned their attention to the state’s energy industry after power bills shot up in the winter of 2025. Additionally, some have expressed concerns about grid reliability with power-hungry data centers sprouting across the region. 

Still, Pettyjohn said unproven nuclear power technology likely “isn’t going to be the silver bullet” to address the region’s rising energy costs.

Economists and energy experts have for years set nuclear as one of the most expensive energy resources when start-up costs are included, typically running over $100 per megawatt hour. Modern nuclear projects have come in billions over budget and years overdue. Others have been abandoned altogether.

“If you need electricity in the next five years, nuclear is just not going to be able to answer that,” Macfarlane told the task force in early May. “You will not get what you need in that time period, probably not even in 10 years.”

Nuclear power in recent years has accounted for about 19% of the U.S. energy mix. But none of those electrons are being generated by small modular reactors, Macfarlane said.

Willis, who has been critical of the task force’s sense of urgency, wanted to see legislation passed this year to take advantage of federal funding opportunities that are already flowing to energy projects elsewhere. 

“Everything we know now we knew six months ago,” Willis said. “In the meantime, New Jersey just leapfrogged right over us and passed legislation.”

The post State task force delay likely shelves nuclear legislation until next year appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-10 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Booming population growth, high rent prices and a lack of housing diversity have been prominent issues in Sussex County in recent years. The county government has now made changes to increase the region’s affordable housing supply, but whether the new measures will have the intended effects remains to be seen. 

Following more than a year of discussion over booming growth in Sussex County and how to diversify the housing supply, the county council passed two measures on Tuesday aimed at encouraging more affordable housing. 

The ordinances, which will allow higher rents and more density within the county’s historically underutilized affordable housing program, passed the five-member council unanimously. 

The two reforms represent one of the few times in recent years that Sussex County has instituted regulatory changes focused on addressing the region’s population boom and housing crunch. 

The measures were taken from recommendations proposed by the Sussex County Land Use Reform Working Group, but are less expansive than what the group originally proposed last fall.  

Council members gave limited insight during the meeting into their reasons for casting votes in favor of the reforms. 

Councilwoman Jane Gruenebaum did, however, express concern that the ordinances do not require an assessment of “the adequacy” of roads, schools, emergency medical services and other infrastructure when developers are applying to build new housing. 

Gruenebaum said she is “disappointed” both the land use reform group and the current ordinances did not address the need for infrastructure studies. 

Concerns over road capacities and the current county infrastructure’s ability to handle new developments were a major point of contention surrounding the controversial Atlantic Fields and Belle Mead project proposals last fall. 

Despite her hesitations, Gruenebaum voted in favor of the reforms. 

The changes also come on the heels of attempts by the state legislature in recent months to address affordable housing shortages across the state by forcing municipalities to increase housing density. 

Councilman John Rieley said during Tuesday’s meeting that he is pleased the county is taking action, so the state cannot “override all of our authority and take it up to Dover.” 

County staff made clear they view the reforms as just the first step in solving the region’s housing crisis. The policies, they said, will need to be reviewed and assessed over the next year to ensure they are serving their intended purposes. 

“This is going to be a living ordinance,” County Attorney Vince Robertson said. 

What will the reforms do?

The first of the two adopted reforms allow for higher rents within the Sussex County Rental Program, enacted in 2008 to incentivize developers to incorporate affordable rental units in their projects, in hopes of encouraging more participation from housing developers.

Currently, in order for a project to qualify for the rental program, 25% of its housing units must have a maximum rent of $810 for a one-bedroom, $970 for a two-bedroom and $1,120 for a three-bedroom. 

These rents are meant to be affordable for households earning half the county’s median income, or about $40,749 a year. 

Under the new regulation, housing developments will need to keep the 25% affordable housing threshold, but will now have a range that the rent caps can fall within. 

The rents will need to be between $970 and $1,295 for a one-bedroom apartment, between $1,165 and $1,550 for a two-bedroom and between $1,345 and $1,790 for a three-bedroom. 

The reform is an effort to make building affordable homes more appealing to developers, County Administrator Todd Lawson said at the public hearing for the ordinances on May 19, since only two projects have used the rental program since its creation in 2008. 

At the Sussex County Land Use Working Group’s penultimate meeting on Aug. 21, 2025, members discussed ways to improve developer incentives to build affordable housing in the county. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

The change is not as far-reaching as first proposed by the land use working group, which would have raised the rent caps to be affordable for households making 80% of area median income and lowered the required threshold of affordable units to 15%.

Developers still say they believe the amended regulations will incentivize more participation in the program. 

The second measure passed on Tuesday amends certain aspects of the county code to allow for more dense housing developments. 

The ordinance aims to address the need for the county to move away from large-tract, single-family home developments toward more mixed-use, multi-family housing. That debate has been at the forefront of the land use working group’s discussions since it first convened last spring. 

Councilman Steve McCarron said at Tuesday’s meeting he believes the new regulations are something all council members will have to vow to “keep our eye on,” evaluating how they function over the next year. 

“If we didn’t get it exactly right, we turn right back around and make sure we get it right eventually,” McCarron said. “But we do have to start from somewhere.” 

Olivia Marble contributed to this report.


Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.

The post Sussex County Council approves affordable housing reforms appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 05:59

EV maker aims to overtake Toyota, as it plans to spend £1.8bn to build five-minute flash chargers in Europe

The Chinese car company BYD has said it aims to be the world’s biggest automaker within the next five years.

Targeting Toyota’s long-held top spot, BYD’s founder and chair, Wang Chuanfu said he was confident it could overtake global rivals through rapid advances in battery technology and fast charging, as well as growing production overseas, including Europe.

Continue reading...

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 05:55

The rise of AI factories marks a fundamental shift in how we think about and utilize intelligence. We are witnessing the transition from traditional AI models and isolated tools to AI being used as a scalable production system with the power to automate business operations in real time. The number of organizations considered “AI mature” increased from 1% in 2024 to 37% in 2025.[i],[ii]

Traditional AI strategies center on R&D, training custom models, and running proof-of-concept pilots. AI factories go beyond fundamental capabilities—focusing on inference predictions, driving agentic AI workflows, and scaling efficiently to accommodate vast datasets and diverse workloads. These environments are purpose-built to enable enterprises to industrialize AI. From data pipelines and model training to inference and real-time insights, AI factories are engineered to handle massive workloads while maintaining seamless performance and operational efficiency. They incorporate sovereign AI capabilities to ensure data control, compliance, and security, as well as exascale computing power to drive breakthroughs in fields like science, healthcare, and national security.

Sovereign AI is critical for organizations that need AI environments aligned with their own security, compliance, and privacy standards. For many users, sovereign AI depends on trusted infrastructure with control over who can access AI systems, where workloads run, and how models are governed. AI factories are the physical engines that enable sovereign AI. However, building and securing the right infrastructure can be costly and difficult to manage. Defining clear policy frameworks and securing AI expertise can pose major roadblocks along the journey.

Deploy trusted AI faster

HPE supports sovereign AI with infrastructure designed to help organizations move from pilot to production with stronger security, compliance, governance, and control over AI operations. Leveraging an extensive portfolio of edge-to-cloud solutions, HPE makes it simpler to build an AI factory that connects, protects, analyzes, and acts on data wherever it resides—empowering organizations to turn questions into discovery, insights into action, and imagination into reality. Whether deploying turnkey solutions or designing custom infrastructures, HPE equips businesses with the tools to scale AI projects and fuel AI-powered enterprises.

HPE AI Factory sovereign is designed for environments that need jurisdictional control, options for on-prem and air-gapped deployment, centralized visibility, and architecture built to support sovereignty requirements. Co-engineered with NVIDIA, HPE AI Factory sovereign builds upon the at-scale AI Factory story by adding capabilities designed to protect AI-based computing:

  • Broad control plane for observability and policy management
  • Framework to ensure compliance with regulatory and corporate controls (including structures like HIPPA, EU AI, FEDramp, FIPS and NIST)
  • Consulting Services to integrate sovereign security control into frameworks
  • On-prem data control to store data locally
  • Air-gapped solutions for isolating infrastructure
  • Government-Ready NVIDIA AI Enterprise and NVIDIA AI Factoryfor Government reference design
Image provided by HPE AI, large-scale AI, AI initiatives, AI factory, AI factories, sovereign AI, agentic AI, AI capabilities, AI models

Image provided by HPE

Solutions from HPE and NVIDIA transform high performance AI into a computing platform that remains within an organization’s total control and jurisdiction—including the infrastructure itself, data, and models to the outcomes they deliver.

Large enterprises and service providers are implementing HPE AI Factories in multiple industries:

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  • Heavily regulated industries, such as healthcare and financial services
  • Telecommunications infrastructure and tenancy
  • Retail supply chain management, purchasing, and inventory management

Experience HPE AI Factory sovereign

HPE invites you to confidently grow your sovereign AI initiatives to power innovation and unlock economic growth. Join us at ISC High Performance 2026 returning to Hamburg, Germany from June 22nd–26th. Visit HPE at booth C10 and NVIDIA at booth E30 to talk with our experts, experience demos, and much more.

The HPE AI Factory sovereign kiosk will showcase videos of sovereign AI in action as well as an interactive slide show for you to explore. Ready for next steps? Schedule a meeting with HPE and NVIDIA specialists to discuss how turnkey speed and sovereign data control can transform your work.

Key takeaways:

  • Run large-scale AI with confidence: Every aspect of creating a production-grade AI Factory is handled by HPE and offers you complete control.
  • Secure sensitive and confidential data: Your data never migrates externally, and access is governed by your organization’s policies.
  • Ensure compliance: Your AI Factory is architected with a comprehensive compliance framework, backed by HPE’s proven cybersecurity and compliance readiness.

Let HPE and NVIDIA help you harness sovereign AI to thrive in today’s data-driven world.


[i] “Superagency in the workplace: Empowering people to unlock AI’s full potential,” McKinsey 2025 mckinsey.com/capabilities/tech-and-ai/our-insights/superagency-in-the-workplace-empowering-people-to-unlock-ais-full-potential-at-work
[ii] “The art of AI maturity,” Accenture 2026 accenture.com/us-en/insights/artificial-intelligence/ai-maturity-and-transformation

The post Building AI Factories for the Future of Sovereign AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:35

NIne months into the Trump administration’s deadly campaign against so-called drug boats, there is a pattern to the strikes. And a glaring anomaly.

The U.S. military has conducted more than 60 attacks, resulting in over 200 extrajudicial killings in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean. In almost all the strikes, between one and four people lost their lives. In only one strike did the death toll of a single boat reach double digits: the first attack on September 2, 2025.

Since then, experts, lawmakers, and even military officials behind the scenes have been asking a simple but haunting question: Why was that boat packed with 11 people?

“Why would 11 people be on board a boat carrying drugs?” said a government source who attended a classified briefing where the large crew on the first boat attacked was discussed. “It’s a high risk for the cartels. That always stood out.”

One top military officer provided a plausible explanation, behind closed doors on Capitol Hill, The Intercept has learned. His admission raises even more questions about a strike that a high-ranking Pentagon official called a criminal attack on civilians and resulted in a firestorm in Congress last year.

In the briefing, the high-ranking officer on the Pentagon’s Joint Staff stated that some of the people killed by the U.S. military may have been the victims of human trafficking.

A 40-foot go-fast boat with four 200-horsepower engines sped off from San Juan de Unare on Venezuela’s Paria Peninsula deep in the night of September 1. It was “probably headed to Trinidad or some other country in the Caribbean,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio would later say.

As the peñero cut through the warm waters of the Caribbean Sea, a secret U.S. Special Operations plane flew high above. Its transponder was “squawking” its military identity by radio. But to the 11 people on the boat below, the plane — a secret Special Operations aircraft with a non-military appearance — would have looked like a civilian aircraft. Its munitions were hidden inside the fuselage, rather than affixed visibly under its wings.

A month earlier, War Secretary Pete Hegseth signed an execute order directing Special Operations forces to attack suspected drug smuggling boats and kill their crews, according to three government officials who spoke with The Intercept. Hegseth gave the go-ahead order to attack the boat to Adm. Frank Bradley — then the head of the secretive Joint Special Operations Command, or JSOC, who presided over the September 2 mission — according to four sources.

Now, Hegseth and numerous military officers were watching live video of the boat as it plowed through the Caribbean waters. The Americans gathered at the JSOC joint operations center at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, could see the men in the boat clearly, according to three government officials briefed on the matter.

The secret plane dove low enough that those on the boat noticed it, said three government officials familiar with the operation. It apparently unnerved the men aboard so much that they turned the boat around and headed back toward Venezuela.  

U.S. Navy Adm. Frank M. Bradley, accompanied by Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, right, walks to a meeting with senators on Capitol Hill, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
Adm. Frank M. Bradley, left, accompanied by Gen. Dan Caine, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, right, walks to a meeting with senators on Capitol Hill on Dec. 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C. Photo:Mark Schiefelbein/AP

Bradley — now the four-star chief of Special Operations Command — consulted with Col. Cara Hamaguchi, JSOC’s staff judge advocate, before ordering SEAL Team 6 operators to attack the packed speedboat, according to government sources. In an instant, the vessel exploded and was engulfed in fire and shrouded in smoke. Two survivors pulled themselves onto a fragment of the overturned hull as the Americans watched from above.

According to officials, Bradley explained in briefings that because the September 2 attack was the initial strike of the campaign and was conducted by the secret plane, the survivors would have had no idea they were attacked by the aircraft. They probably believed the explosion was caused by a catastrophic engine malfunction, Bradley said in the briefing.

The two men were shipwrecked, helpless, or clearly in distress, six people who saw video of the attack said. Bradley watched as the injured men clung to what remained of the boat. “You had two shipwrecked people on the top of the tiny little bit of the boat that was left that was capsized,” Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, said on CNN after viewing video of the attack.

Three sources familiar with briefings by Bradley provided to members of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence as well as the Senate and House Armed Services committees confirmed that the men bobbed along, drifting with the current, for roughly 45 minutes. “They had at least 35 minutes of clear visual on these guys after the smoke of the first strike cleared. There were no time constraints. There was no pressure. They were in the middle of the ocean and there were no other vessels in the area,” said one of the sources.

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U.S. Military Killed Boat Strike Survivors for Not Surrendering Correctly

Bradley again turned to Hamaguchi for guidance on whether he could legally attack the shipwrecked men. Bradley, according to a lawmaker who spoke to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity to discuss a classified briefing, said that the JSOC staff judge advocate deemed a follow-up strike lawful. In the briefing, Bradley said no one in the room voiced objections, according to the lawmaker.

Five people familiar with briefings given by Bradley, including that lawmaker who viewed the video, said that the survivors waved their arms and, logically, must have been waving at the U.S. aircraft flying above them. All believed the men were signaling for help, rescue, or surrender. “Obviously, we don’t know what they were saying or thinking,” said one of the sources, “but any reasonable person would assume that they saw the aircraft and were signaling either: don’t shoot or help us.”

Raising one’s hands is a universal sign of surrender for members of armed forces. Under international law, those who surrender — like those who are shipwrecked — are considered hors de combat, the French term for those no longer in the fight, and may not be attacked. The Pentagon’s Law of War Manual is explicit on this point. “Persons who have been incapacitated by wounds, sickness, or shipwreck are in a helpless state, and it would be dishonorable and inhumane to make them the object of attack,” reads the guide.

Bradley found a workaround. While he declined to comment to The Intercept, a U.S. official familiar with his thinking said he did not perceive their waving to be a “two-arm surrender.” About 45 minutes after the men had been thrown into the water, a second missile screamed down on Bradley’s order, killing them. Two more missiles followed in rapid succession, sinking the remnants of the boat.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, President Donald Trump claimed in a Truth Social post that those killed by U.S. forces were “positively identified Tren de Aragua Narcoterrorists,” and members of a “designated Foreign Terrorist Organization.”

But from the very beginning, questions swirled among members of Congress and their staffers about the identities of those killed in the attack — and why there were so many of them.

During a classified briefing on Capitol Hill last fall, Rear Adm. Brian H. Bennett — a military officer overseeing Special Operations for the Pentagon’s Joint Staff — was asked if any of the people aboard the boat on September 2 could have been human trafficking victims. “They could be,” Bennett replied, according to two people present at the briefing. 

One of the government officials at the briefing explained that questions arose about the few boats targeted by the U.S. with greater-than-expected numbers of people on board; the September 2 strike was singled out due to the especially large number of passengers.

Out of more than 60 strikes since, only four involved boats with six or more people aboard, almost all of them in the initial wave of attacks. In October 2025, there were two strikes on boats with six crew members and one with eight people on board. Since then, just one other vessel has had as many as six crew.

Sources and methods of identification were a major topic of the fall briefing, where it became increasingly clear that JSOC did not positively identify everyone on the boats, said the official. “Questioning then led to trying to understand who these people could be,” that official said.

“I was surprised. But only by the admission.”

The second source at the briefing said they were astonished by Bennett’s candor that victims of human trafficking might have been among those killed. “I was surprised. But only by the admission,” said that official.

Military officials with knowledge of the strikes also discussed the likelihood that some of those on board were being trafficked, were part of a more generalized smuggling operation, or had simply hitched a ride on the vessel, said another government official who was not at that briefing.

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Trump Administration Conjures Up New “Terrorist” Designation to Justify Killing Civilians

In later classified briefings, the Pentagon’s story of who was aboard the vessel changed — but only marginally, said two government officials. Just one person aboard the go-fast boat on September 2 was a member of a so-called “designated terrorist organization,” while 10 were “DTO affiliates,” according to the officials who received those later briefings. Both said that they were under the impression that little more than a conversation with a DTO member might confer affiliate status but said that the military’s explanations were vague.  

For weeks, The Intercept has sought to speak to Bennett, the deputy director for Special Operations on the Joint Staff, about the strikes and his briefings. “RADM Bennett is unavailable for an interview,” Maj. Annabel Monroe, a spokesperson for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told The Intercept. “As a matter of policy, the Joint Staff does not confirm specific operational details or comment on ongoing or potential future military actions.”

Asked specifically for comment from Bennett and the Joint Staff about the trafficking remark and about how many victims of U.S. boat strikes may have been passengers of any sort, such as trafficking victims, smuggled persons, or paid passengers, Monroe replied: “Nothing further to add.” 

Col. Allie Weiskopf, the director of public affairs at Special Operations Command, said the command was unaware of any allegations of victims of trafficking being killed on September 2 or in subsequent strikes.

“Targeting decisions are based on comprehensive assessments and reviewed through established processes,” a spokesperson for U.S. Southern Command told The Intercept. “Every narco-terrorist killed … was an affiliated member of a Designated Terrorist Organization actively transporting illicit material along known trafficking routes in international waters.”

classified opinion from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel — drawn up by an interagency lawyers working group including representatives of the CIA, the State Department, White House counsel, Department of Justice, and the Department of War — claims that narcotics on supposed drug boats are lawful military targets because they generate revenue for cartels with whom the Trump administration claims they are in a “non-international armed conflict.” Government officials told The Intercept that the memo was not actually signed by Assistant Attorney General T. Elliot Gaiser until days after the September 2 attack. Attached to that secret memo is a similarly secret list of designated terrorist organizations.

Six current and former government officials briefed on the boat strikes or with experience in counter-narcotics smuggling efforts said that while the vessel struck on September 2 might have had cocaine on board, the sole intent of its voyage was not drug trafficking.

“No one would smuggle cocaine with 11 people on board their drug-running boat.”

“No one would smuggle cocaine with 11 people on board their drug-running boat,” said one of the current officials, noting that it was a waste of space, fuel, and created security risks. “It just is not done. Full stop.”

That official, who talked with The Intercept on the condition of anonymity to speak freely, said that the vessel’s profile more closely matched that of a ship smuggling various types of cargo, including people. 

Retired Rear Adm. William Baumgartner, the former commander of the Seventh Coast Guard District who oversaw drug-interdiction operations in the Southeast U.S. and the Caribbean Basin, said the number of passengers was an obvious red flag. “I’m disappointed in the quality of planning for this operation,” he told The Intercept. “There appears to have been a lack of knowledge and expertise in what cocaine smuggling operations look like.”

The vessel that would become the target of the first Trump administration boat strike reportedly left San Juan de Unare in Venezuela on the night of September 1. The 11 men aboard all hailed from that town or nearby Güiria, coastal communities on the Paria peninsula in Venezuela’s Sucre state. It’s an impoverished region where 90 percent of the population is food insecure; the nongovernmental organization Transparencia Venezuela identified the area as the country’s prime center of, and transit hub for, human trafficking.

Reporting by Venezuela’s El Nacional identified Güiria and San Juan de Unare as having gone from fishing and tourist centers to “corridors of organized crime,” as the economic crisis in the country “drove many fishermen to replace fishing with smuggling gasoline, migrants, and eventually, drugs.” Some boats are known to carry mixed cargos of drugs, weapons, and people.

A 2020 report on human trafficking in the Caribbean found that Venezuela was “the greatest supplier of trafficking victims to Trinidad and Tobago” — and that 43 percent of those trafficked from Venezuela to Trinidad and Tobago travel from Sucre. It cited a Venezuelan government official who drew specific attention to Güiria due to its proximity to Trinidad and Tobago, stating it was “frequently used clandestinely for human trafficking.” A 2025 U.S. State Department report also highlighted the “long-standing allegation that national guard and coast guard members active in coastal states, such as Sucre and Falcon, facilitated the transport of trafficking victims to Aruba, Curaçao, and Trinidad and Tobago.”

A recent investigation by a consortium of journalists from Venezuelan outlets noted immigrant transport, people smuggling, and human trafficking is integral to the desperately poor population of Güiria and “as ordinary a job as teaching school — only far better paid.” The journalists wrote:

In this Venezuelan town, people do not call the illicit transportation of drugs and other goods … to neighboring Caribbean islands or Colombia’s Guajira Peninsula “drug trafficking” or “smuggling.” They call them vueltas—literally “runs” or “jobs”—borrowing the slang Colombian traffickers use for narcotics shipments, contract killings, or debt collections.

For many people in Güiria, those vueltas are the only path to a decent life.

According to a 2025 analysis by InSight Crime, a think tank that studies organized criminal activity in the Americas, gangs from Sucre are involved in “cocaine trafficking, human trafficking and smuggling, arms trafficking, and the contraband of animals and minerals.” Roughly 30 percent of trafficking victims who pass through the region wound up in sexual exploitation networks, Transparencia Venezuela found.

While trafficking victims are often assumed to be women and girls forced into sexual slavery — and many aremen and boys represent nearly half of the total number of human trafficking victims worldwide. And males are frequently mentioned in reports on Venezuela. A 2019 State Department investigation of human trafficking, for example, noted Venezuelan men were “increasingly vulnerable to forced labor in destination countries, including islands of the Dutch Caribbean.” A 2023 State Department report noted “an increase in male Venezuelan labor trafficking victims” in Trinidad and Tobago. It also details “migrant smuggling, which serves as traffickers’ primary method of transportation of victims from Venezuela.”

Between 2019 and 2022, 69 percent of Venezuelan immigrants in South America interviewed by the Mixed Migration Center reported having hired smuggling services to leave their country.

In 2023, the Curaçao Public Prosecutor’s Office also put out a warning about child trafficking, particularly from Venezuela: “Trafficked children range in age from 4 to 15 years old and are often transported in boats that also carry drugs and firearms on board.”

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“Trump Has Appointed Himself Judge, Jury, and Executioner”

An investigation by The Associated Press into the lives of nine of those slain in boat strikes examined the life of one of the men killed in the September 2 attack: Luis “Che” Martínez. The AP found that Martínez, a 60-year-old local crime boss, made his living smuggling both drugs and people across borders, according to several people who knew him. He had been incarcerated in late 2020 on human trafficking charges after a boat he had operated capsized, killing almost 25 people — including two of his sons and several other relatives, according to local reporting at the time. He was eventually released from custody and returned to smuggling people and narcotics, acquaintances told the news outlet.

In the aftermath of Trump’s first boat strike, the size of the death toll immediately surprised those knowledgeable about illicit trade in the region. “With 11 people on board, there could have been a human smuggling element as well,” InSight Crime observed just after the September 2 attack, noting that such go-fast boats generally have a crew of two or three people. “You do not need 11 people on board a single vessel to smuggle drugs, even for a very big consignment.”

“I would have expected much more attention to what smuggling operations look like and how to distinguish serious bulk cocaine smuggling boats from inter-island smugglers that might be primarily carrying passengers,” said Baumgartner, the retired Coast Guard rear admiral.

When questioned just a day after the initial strike, at a press conference in Mexico City, Rubio explained the reasons for the attack by first mentioning human trafficking. “The President of the United States has determined that narcoterrorist organizations pose a threat to the national security of the United States,” he explained. “They are traffickers of people, they are traffickers of deadly drugs,” he said.

A boat sits stranded along the shore in Cumana, capital of Venezuela's Sucre state, Sept. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos, File)
A boat sits stranded along the shore in Cumana, the capital of Venezuela’s Sucre state, on Sept. 12, 2025.  Photo: Ariana Cubillos/AP File

Facing outrage over the extrajudicial killings, Bradley has attempted to quiet questions about who the U.S. has targeted.

In recent testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Bradley confirmed significant involvement in the boat strikes by the National Security Agency. He has also reportedly told lawmakers that U.S. intelligence officials had verified the identities of the 11 people on the boat on September 2 and validated them as legitimate targets. But Special Operations Command would not confirm what Bradley told lawmakers about the identities of the 11 people killed. And numerous government officials who spoke to The Intercept said that claims that intelligence “confirms who these people are” — as Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson asserted in December — is a rhetorical sleight of hand, if not an outright lie.

JSOC did not know the names or supposed affiliations of all persons aboard the vessel struck on September 2, numerous government sources told The Intercept.

Two sources specifically mentioned that some passengers were identified only by an obvious nom de guerre. “I don’t think we knew the identities of any of the people in the boat. We might have known one or two. … But we certainly didn’t know the identities of all 11,” Democratic Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., said in December. “I don’t think we have any idea, who precisely, any of the individuals in these boats are.”

“Srikes [sic] are deliberate, lawful, and precise — aimed squarely at narco-terrorists and their enablers, not civilians,” a Southern Command spokesperson told The Intercept by email. “SOUTHCOM has full confidence in the operational and intelligence professionals who inform our missions.”

SOUTHCOM routinely claims, in fact, that “intelligence” confirms that targeted vessels are “engaged in narco-trafficking operations.” But last week, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, revealed that “the presence of narcotics on a boat is not one of the targeting criteria” involved in the boat strikes.

Behind closed doors, in fact, Pentagon officials don’t even pretend that they need to know who they are attacking. “They said that they do not need to positively identify individuals on the vessels to do the strikes,” Rep. Sara Jacobs, D-Calif., a member of the House Armed Services Committee and the Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations, told The Intercept in October. “They just need to show a connection to a DTO or affiliate.”

Most of the government officials, including lawmakers briefed on the attacks, who spoke with The Intercept said that they believed the vessels targeted in the campaign are involved in illicit trafficking and are not simply fishing boats. But without stopping and searching boats, many said it was impossible to know for certain who and what is aboard a particular vessel.

In late April, Bradley told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee that the boat strikes are built upon the targeting procedures of the post-9/11 drone wars. “It is based off of the lessons learned and the processes perfected over the last 25 years of persona targeting,” he said, referring to strikes targeting people. Over that span, the U.S. has consistently killed civilians the world over — from Afghanistan to Iraq, Pakistan to Somalia and Libya to Yemen — due to intelligence failures and targeting errors.

“There has never been a ‘perfecting’ of persona targeting.”

“There has never been a ‘perfecting’ of persona targeting. Just because the U.S. military — and other U.S. forces — conducted many strikes against known targets under the moniker of counterterrorism does not mean that they became significantly better at it over time,” said Sarah Yager, a former senior adviser to the chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff. “Over those same two decades being lauded as a time of learning lessons for the U.S. military, human rights groups documented repeated civilian deaths tied to flawed intelligence or assumptions or bias.”

A 2023 investigation by The Intercept, for instance, revealed a raft of errors leading up to a drone strike in Somalia that killed three, and possibly five, civilians, including 22-year-old Luul Dahir Mohamed and her 4-year-old daughter, Mariam Shilow Muse. The Pentagon’s inquiry found that the Special Operations forces who conducted the strike were confused, despite months of “target development,” and argued about basic details, like how many passengers were in the targeted vehicle. They mistook a woman and child for an adult male and never even knew how many people they killed.

“When Adm. Bradley references ‘the lessons learned and the processes perfected over the last 25 years of persona targeting,’ he’s actually invoking an architecture that human rights groups criticized regularly for overconfidence in the intelligence, confirmation bias and assumptions, and institutional incentives to interpret ambiguity as threat confirmation,” Yager said.

Related

The U.S. Still Owes Money to Family of 10 Afghans It Killed in “Horrible Mistake”

Five experts, including current and former government officials, say that it’s impossible that the U.S. has not killed innocent people in its boat strike campaign given the long-standing limitations of U.S. targeting procedures, such as an overreliance on signals intelligence, or SIGINT. In recent testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Rubio admitted that the U.S. has erroneously identified boats as possible targets, only to pull back. “I can tell you they do walk away from strikes,” he said. “There are multiple times that I’ve been aware of … because it doesn’t meet the criteria or because there’s doubt.”

“Secret planes and SIGINT aren’t the answer. Confirmation bias continues to be a problem,” one government official briefed on the boat strikes told The Intercept. That official said it was far more likely that U.S. forces had misidentified or outright failed to notice a person aboard one of the boats that have been struck than that they knew the names and affiliations of everyone they had killed.

Government statistics confirm the limitations of intelligence, profiling, and the ability of U.S. personnel to identify supposed drug traffickers from afar. Between September 1, 2024, and October 7, 2025, the Coast Guard interdicted 212 boats headed toward the U.S. that it suspected of drug-trafficking. Forty-one of them, or about 20 percent, had no illicit contraband on board, according to official statistics. As for ships just off the coast of Venezuela, the amount wrongly suspected of carrying drugs was a shade higher: 21 percent.

When asked about the statistics showing 1 in 5 vessels had no drugs aboard, Yager told The Intercept that “positive identification of both targets and civilians has been a known problem in the U.S. military kill chain.”

“In the case of the boat strikes, that’s a high rate of mistaken identity,” she said. “My guess is that the U.S. military has no idea who these people actually are before moving to kill them.”

The post Top Pentagon Official Admits Boat Strike May Have Killed Victims of Human Trafficking appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-10 05:35

A child reported among those killed when Taliban forces fired on crowds in Herat, who were protesting over arrests of women accused of violating hijab dress code

A Taliban crackdown on women’s dress code in Afghanistan has escalated into a rare mass street protest in the western province of Herat, with at least two people, including one boy, killed by security forces.

Officials made a wave of arrests in recent days targeting women and young girls accused of “improper hijab”. Residents say many families had received no information about the whereabouts or condition of those detained.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:09

Renewed outrage at White House’s use manga and anime imagery after US president is depicted as ninja Naruto

Japanese anime and manga fans are urging Donald Trump to stop using their favourite characters in his social media posts.

About 20,000 people have signed a petition on Change.org entitled Protect Japanese Manga, protesting against the official White House X account posting videos featuring unauthorised use of imagery from the popular Dragon Ball, Yu-Gi-Oh! and Naruto series. Angry fans have also been posting on social media.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 10 No. 625.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 10, No. 829.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:00

Billboards are being painted over and former allies seem eager to forget the man they once glorified

For years, his bewhiskered face stared down from propaganda billboards glorifying the supposedly revolutionary rule of a dictator who styled himself as “the protector of the people”.

The spin-doctored adoration was such that factories churned out plastic action figures exalting Nicolás Maduro as an “indestructible” and “iron-fisted” caped crusader nicknamed “Super Moustache”.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:00

What about using voice notes, or calling someone totally unannounced? Experts give their verdict on how to use your phone without causing offence

It is not news that many of us are addicted to our phones and nor is it a revelation that inconsiderate public behaviour now appears to be the norm, but when the two collide it can cause anger. Last week, at the end of a performance of the drama Inter Alia in London’s West End, the actor Rosamund Pike took to the stage after the curtain call to announce that she had seen someone texting during the performance. “I just wanted to say for anyone going to the theatre, it’s a huge thing that we’re trying to give you. I am trying to tell you a story, and I’m feeling you, and I hope you’re feeling me too … Maybe it was very important, and maybe you’re a doctor, and you’re saving someone’s life, and I hope you are, but we do see these, we do feel them.”

What is the correct etiquette when using your phone? Myka Meier, author of Modern Etiquette Made Easy, says: “It is always thinking about other people before yourself when you’re on the phone.” This also means being aware of how disabled people might use, and rely on, their phones. As an academic with hearing loss pointed out to the BBC after Pike’s comments, bans on phones in theatres, or public shaming, could exclude disabled people in audiences, such as those who use hearing aid apps and need to adjust the settings.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:00

As a lifelong Knicks fan, the Public Enemy frontman knows how much New York craves an end to its 53-year NBA title drought

I didn’t see the Knicks win their second championship in 1973 because I had to go to bed.

That night, the Knicks beat the LA Lakers, but clinching game was on the west coast and it was a school night. I couldn’t watch it. I was 13 and in seventh grade. Back then things were different. Today, 13-year-olds stay up to 5am. But I had to go to bed.

Chuck D was talking to Jacob Uitti.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 05:00

A woman adjusts a large respirator mask with bright pink filters onto a young girl’s face.
Mindan Ocon poses for a photo with her daughter, Angelise Ocon, 3, at their family home in Portland, Oregon, on March 9. Protests at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility have turned the street outside Ocon’s affordable housing complex into a battlefield of stinging smoke and pepper spray. Ocon has relied on air purifiers and taking her daughter into the bathroom to hide from tear gas, and she’s prepared to use gas masks given to her by community members if it gets worse. Leah Nash for ProPublica

In city after city, the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown has been met by protests and rallies from members of the local community opposed to the White House’s deportation policies. Federal agents from the Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement have repeatedly attempted to break up and drive back these crowds through the use of airborne irritants like tear gas and pepper spray, which can cause an array of immediate reactions — from eye pain to shortness of breath to nausea and vomiting — intended to temporarily disable their targets.

DHS has defended its use of these weapons on crowds and said that it “does NOT target children,” but after reviewing news accounts, lawsuits and officer-worn body camera footage, as well as verifying incidents by interviewing more than 40 victims or witnesses, ProPublica recently identified more than six dozen instances in which children had been harmed by tear gas and pepper spray.

Here are five things you should know about how these airborne weapons have been used during Trump’s immigration crackdown and how their use has particularly harmed children.

Dozens of children have been harmed by tear gas deployed by immigration agents.

So-called less lethal weapons like tear gas and pepper spray were developed to inflict severe pain and debilitate adult combatants and rioters, but ProPublica identified 79 children across the country since 2025 who have been harmed by these chemicals after they were deployed by federal immigration officers. Our tally is nearly four times the number cited in a recent congressional report, yet it is likely still a vast undercount.

The Department of Homeland Security has defended its agents’ use of the chemicals and claimed the blame lies with “agitators” in the crowds and parents who put their children in harm’s way. Many children harmed by tear gas and pepper spray were in their cars, at home or walking to school when they came into contact with the airborne weapons.

What It’s Like When Officers Deploy Tear Gas

Tear gas and pepper spray are especially toxic to children.

There is no one such thing as “tear gas.” It’s a catch-all term for various chemical irritants that exist as a fine powder and trigger nerve endings to feel as if they’re on fire. The chemicals sear your lungs and throat, inflaming your airways until it feels like you’re breathing through a straw, while snot and tears stream down your face. They can cause vomiting, rashes and coughs that last for weeks. Pepper spray is made from compounds found in hot peppers and causes similar effects.

Because children breathe more rapidly and can pull in more contaminated air than adults relative to their body weight, these weapons are particularly dangerous to the young. Children are also more vulnerable because they have narrower airways and they are closer to the ground, where tear gas tends to pool after being deployed. The Trump administration’s use of tear gas has been so extraordinary that no one yet knows what long-term harm may result from children who’ve come into contact with these chemicals — some of them multiple times.

Courts have found that agents’ use of tear gas is excessive, but their power is limited.

In November 2025, a federal judge in Illinois ruled that ICE and CBP officers had deployed these chemicals “without justification, often without warning” against people who didn’t pose a physical threat. This constituted an illegal use of excessive force, said the judge, ordering the agencies to stop. But her injunction covered only the areas mentioned in the complaint. Agents were unfettered to continue using the weapons elsewhere.

After federal agents in Portland, Oregon, responded to a Jan. 31 rally by firing various less-lethals into the crowd — including Triple Chaser grenades that each separated into three tear gas canisters; dozens of pepper ball projectiles filled with chemical munitions; and “rubber ball grenades” that released stinging pellets, bright lights, and loud sounds — a judge there issued a temporary restraining order that forbade federal agents from using chemical munitions unless targeted at someone who posed “an imminent threat of physical harm.”

However, appellate courts have subsequently vacated the Illinois judge’s ruling and multiple rulings from judges in Portland seeking to enjoin the use of these weapons.

Once deployed, these weapons are difficult to contain.

Though the Trump administration has defended agents’ training and said ICE officers are taught to use “the minimum amount of force necessary to resolve dangerous situations,” not only can tear gas canisters launched into a crowd bounce and roll unpredictably, but the toxic chemicals can travel through the air, sometimes for blocks. In Minneapolis, ProPublica found that tear gas had traveled at least a quarter mile before seeping into a McDonald’s.

Derrick Nash and his family live a block and a half east of an ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois. Even from that distance, they felt the effects inside their homes when officers tear-gassed protesters. Each time the tear gas seeped in, the kids — ages 6 to 17 — coughed, and their throats often burned. The eldest, a high school senior with asthma, would hide out in his second-floor bedroom. One evening, his face turned red as he coughed uncontrollably and sucked on his inhaler without relief.

“He was wigging out, saying, ‘I can’t breathe,’” Nash recalled. The family considered calling an ambulance, but the street was closed.

No national standard for use of tear gas exists.

Law enforcement policies governing the use of tear gas and pepper spray differ widely by location, and no federal standard exists. The DHS policy on force says officers must use tactics that “minimize the risk of unintended injury” and should be guided by “respect for human life.” The CBP’s policy says officers “should not use” pepper spray or “less-lethal” chemical munitions against “small children.” ICE’s policy says “the presence of other officers, subjects, or bystanders” are a factor in determining whether an officers’ use of force is reasonable.

Compare that with tear gas policies in two cities that have experienced Trump’s immigration crackdown firsthand. In Portland, police officers who consider using tear gas must take into account their proximity to homes. Meanwhile, Minneapolis forbids officers from using chemical munitions for crowd control unless authorized by the police chief — even when officers fear they will be physically harmed.

Requiring all law enforcement agencies to adopt uniform policies and training methods would go a long way, experts told ProPublica. At the same time, they acknowledge that this would likely require Congress to pass a bill mandating that federal law enforcement entities adopt stricter practices and incentivize local police departments to do the same.

Bills that seek to strengthen use-of-force training on such a wide scale and legislation that targets DHS and its use of these weapons have thus far failed to even make it to a vote in Congress. Following ProPublica’s investigation, U.S. lawmakers have begun demanding reforms to immigration officers’ use of these weapons.

The post What You Need to Know About How Tear Gas Harms Kids appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 03:00

NASA has named Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio, and Andre Douglas as the crew for Artemis III, which has been reworked from a moon-landing mission into a roughly two-week Earth-orbit test of lunar landers being built by SpaceX and Blue Origin. NBC News reports: Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas are expected to launch into Earth orbit next year, with the goal of testing two commercially developed lunar landers that are slated to carry astronauts to the surface of the moon during the Artemis IV mission in 2028. Bresnik will be the mission's commander, with Parmitano, an Italian astronaut with the European Space Agency, serving as the pilot. Douglas and Rubio will be mission specialists, and Bob Hines will train with the crew as a backup member. "This test flight will enable us to prove we can carry out highly choreographed operations with our partners across hardware interfaces, software propulsion systems and life support elements with crew in the high-stakes space environment," Jeremy Parsons, NASA's Artemis program manager, said during NASA's announcement on Tuesday. Bresnik has been to the International Space Station twice, most recently as commander of an expedition in 2017. A retired U.S. Marine colonel, he was selected as a NASA astronaut in 2004. Bresnik has helped oversee development and testing of spacecraft for the Artemis program as an assistant to the chief of the Astronaut Office, which manages astronaut training and operations. Parmitano has also done two stints on the ISS and served as commander of an expedition in 2019. He has completed a total of six spacewalks and also performed the first live DJ set in orbit. Before becoming an astronaut, Parmitano was a test pilot for the Italian air force. For Rubio, a physician with 28 years of service in the Army, Artemis III will be his second trip to space. From 2022 to 2023, he spent 371 days on the space station, breaking the record for longest-duration spaceflight by an American, according to NASA. Douglas is the only crew member making his spaceflight debut. An engineer who previously worked on space exploration and robotics at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab, he became a NASA astronaut in 2022. Douglas was the backup crew member for the Artemis II mission around the moon earlier this year. He told NBC News in an interview after Tuesday's announcement that the role had at times been a challenge. "It was hard to figure out how do you balance getting ready to go, not go, all that stuff," he said. "But to go now is just fantastic."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 02:00

Apple Peiqing Ni targeted by account portraying her as promiscuous drug addict after posting about Tiananmen Square

A high-profile Chinese activist in the UK who was inundated with deepfake posts on X portraying her as a sexually promiscuous drug addict was told that the abuse did not breach the rules of Elon Musk’s platform.

Apple Peiqing Ni, the 27-year-old founder of the UK-based China Dissent Network, had been advised by UK police to complain to the US-headquartered platform after she was targeted by what she believes is a pro-regime bot.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 01:47

The two helicopter pilots were uninjured. After the retaliatory strikes were announced, President Trump said, "I believe the response should be very strong, very powerful."

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 01:39

US president blames Tehran for loss of Apache gunship, whose crew were rescued by a drone near strait of Hormuz

The US has launched strikes against Iran after Donald Trump blamed Tehran for downing a US army helicopter near the strait of Hormuz, imperilling a shaky ceasefire that was announced by the two countries in April.

The attacks triggered a wave of retaliatory strikes from Iran on Wednesday morning, with Tehran saying it had targeted Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 01:00

MP Melanie Ward calls on Charity Commission to look into 32 organisations she says have given at least £28m

Thirty-two charities in England and Wales have donated at least £28m to Israeli settlements that are illegal under international law, an MP has said.

Labour’s Melanie Ward said that if gift aid were claimed against the donations in the usual way, it would mean taxpayers had subsidised illegal settlements to the tune of £5.6m, a situation she described as deplorable. The foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, announced on Tuesday that the Charity Commission has been tasked with investigating UK charities’ links to settlements.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 01:00

Amazon and Sony among firms that may have sourced coltan, used in phones, from supply chains controlled by the M23 rebels, says Global Witness

Leading global brands including Amazon, Ericsson and Sony are “likely” to have sourced minerals linked to a militia accused of widespread sexual violence, summary executions and torture, a new investigation claims.

The companies allegedly, but unknowingly, acquired coltan smuggled from mines in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) that are occupied by the M23 militia, which has committed myriad atrocities in eastern DRC.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 01:00

The Ukraine and Iran wars are very different, but a common authoritarian delusion unites the men who started them

A strongman president, self-styled redeemer of national glory, is trapped in a conflict he can’t win but doesn’t know how to end without looking like a loser. A cult of infallibility prevents the leader admitting a strategic blunder even to himself. It could be Donald Trump or Vladimir Putin; Iran or Ukraine.

The conflicts and the regimes involved are also dissimilar in important ways. Russia’s campaign to eradicate a neighbouring democracy is nastier in conception and bloodier in execution than the bungled US effort to dislodge a dictatorship in Tehran. It has also gone on much longer. The first world war was shorter than a “special military operation” that was supposed to capture Kyiv within weeks. The Soviet Red Army repelled Nazi invasion and marched on Berlin in less time than it has taken Putin’s forces to occupy a tranche of eastern Ukraine, and they are not making any significant advances. The war has burned trillions of roubles and sacrificed hundreds of thousands of lives for no discernible dividend in national greatness.

Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 00:09

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 10.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 00:00

Exclusive: poll across 15 countries finds ‘deep mistrust’, with majority doubting US would come to their aid in an attack

European confidence in an American “security guarantee” has hit a historic low, a survey suggests, with only one in 10 people across 15 countries seeing the US as an ally and majorities in all doubting it would come to their aid if they were attacked.

The survey, published on Wednesday by the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) thinktank before critical G7 and Nato summits in France and Turkey over the coming weeks, revealed “deep European distrust in the US”, the authors said.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 00:00

Russia’s loss is NATO’s gain.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 00:00

Europe lost the plot on online speech.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-10 00:00

America must build—and use—leverage against Beijing.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) wants to make it effectively impossible for people to buy what many call burner phones -- a phone not explicitly linked to your identity at the point of purchase -- which would impact privacy-conscious people, to domestic abuse survivors, to journalists, and many more. The FCC plans to do this by legally forcing the country's telecoms to store a wealth of personal information about essentially all phone customers, including a government issued identification number and their physical address, alarming privacy advocates and civil rights activists who compare the measures to those from authoritarian countries where it can be difficult to buy a mobile phone plan without giving up your identity. The proposed change would drastically shake up how people obtain phone plans in the U.S., and have all sorts of privacy and cybersecurity knock-on effects. The FCC is proposing the data collection partly as a way to combat scammers, with telecoms being required to collect other information on business and foreign customers like the intended use case of their bulk phone plan purchase and their IP address. But the changes would mean telecoms collect data on all new and renewing customers, and the FCC provides a long list of other things that the collected data could help authorities with. In a synopsis of the proposed changes, the FCC writes, "Specifically, we seek comment on requiring originating providers to, at a minimum, obtain and retain the name, physical address, government issued identification number, and an alternate telephone number of any new and renewing customer before granting access to its services." The goal of collecting this data, the FCC writes, is to deter some scammers from getting onto a telecom network in the first place, and so "enforcers will be better able to identify the scammers when they do." The FCC compares the changes to the sort of data collected by banks to prevent money laundering. One section stresses that the newly collected data would help "law enforcement to more easily identify callers that use the network to perpetuate crimes by ensuring that voice providers have accurate and complete customer information." It goes on to ask if the data would help identify people buying and selling illicit goods; the investigation of "fraud, espionage, or influence operations that undermine national security", and "address abuse in text messaging networks." "Criminals continue to leverage the anonymity provided by phone calls and texts to defraud Americans and exploit communications networks to further other crimes," one section reads. "For decades, civil libertarians have looked overseas at authoritarian countries where the government requires people to register to get a mobile phone to ensure they can be tracked. We never thought that would happen here," Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU) Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project told 404 Media in an email. "But make no mistake: with this rulemaking, the government is contemplating taking away people's ability to get a burner phone, which will hurt low-income people, domestic violence victims, and anyone else who cares about their privacy."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 23:10

Progressive Randy Villegas' win is an embarrassing defeat for establishment Democrats amid an intraparty feud about the party's future.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 23:05
  • Staal scores twice as Carolina level Cup final

  • Hurricanes beat Vegas 5-3 in Game 4 thriller

  • Series shifts to Carolina tied at two games apiece

Jordan Staal scored his second goal of the game while stretched out on his stomach at 6:32 of the third period to put the Carolina Hurricanes ahead for good in their 5-3 victory on Tuesday night over the Vegas Golden Knights and even the Stanley Cup final after four games.

Game 5 is Thursday night at Carolina, which will potentially have two games on home ice to win their first Cup in two decades. The Golden Knights are searching for their second in four years.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-09 23:01

Hey all,
Got my X7LR and love it overall but am really struggling to enjoy the stock tire.

I put a Hoosier Whisper on my original XR and loved it. Is there something better these days?

Would I be sad if I got a T2? Like I wonder how much street feel you give up going with tread?

EDIT: Thank you guys so much for all the amazing info! This has helped me tremendously.

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

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 22:53

Lieutenant governor and attorney general advance but result signals decisive defeat for controversial Nancy Mace

Donald Trump-backed Pamela Evette, South Carolina’s lieutenant governor, and Alan Wilson, the state’s attorney general, have advanced to a runoff in a competitive race to represent the Republican party in South Carolina’s gubernatorial election.

The winner of the Republican primary is favored to win the closely watched general election, given South Carolina’s conservative tilt, although Democrats are hoping to ride a wave of progressive enthusiasm to make political gains across the ticket.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 22:22
SilverSurfer Onewheel World Speed Record 57.7MPH

His top speed is 59.9 mph which as far as I know is the worlds fastest speed on a onewheel style board. Totally custom ofc and vesc

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

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 22:14

The killing of Austin Metcalf, 17, captured national attention and exposed racial and ethnic tensions in the north Dallas suburbs.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 22:12

Sen. Lindsey Graham has held the seat since 2003, and Democrats have an uphill battle in any attempt to unseat him.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 22:12

Maine Democrat Graham Platner clinched the nomination to take on Republican Sen. Susan Collins in November.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 21:30

Thanks. Sounds like the battery path is basically a dead end on a 7314/Hydrus 5200.

If you were in my position and wanted:

  1. More range

  2. Better hill climbing

  3. To eventually go VESC

what would you do next?

Would you spend money on a tire, motor, or other upgrades first, or would you skip all that and just go all-in on a Pint X V Kit?

I’m trying to avoid spending money twice. If you had $300–$800 to put toward this board, where would you spend it and why?

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 21:27

Platner, whose campaign was hit by series of negative headlines, to face Susan Collins in key midterm contest

Graham Platner, a Marine veteran, oyster farmer and progressive activist, has scaled a mountain of personal controversies to win the Democratic nomination for the US Senate in Maine.

Platner won 72% of the vote, defeating the state governor, Janet Mills, who suspended her campaign in April but remained on the ballot, and third-placed David Costello, based on early results reported by Reuters.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 21:05

The latest VisionOS updates give Apple's headset a few things that future glasses could also add. There are other interesting additions, too.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 21:00

If you can't afford to have your teeth professionally whitened, these are some affordable options to try at home.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-09 20:29

A longtime fixture of the Democratic establishment in California and a Republican former Fox News host will head to a runoff in the race to be the state’s next governor in November.

Steve Hilton, a conservative former political aide and commentator, finished second Tuesday, a week after the state’s nonpartisan primary day. He will compete with Xavier Becerra, the former Health and Human Services secretary under President Joe Biden. The pair edged out Tom Steyer, a billionaire philanthropist who ran on a progressive platform.

The ascension of Hilton, a conservative power player endorsed by President Donald Trump, suggests dissatisfaction with the slate of Democratic candidates on offer in the open primary and an inability for Steyer, who has never held elected office, to break through with a campaign vowing to help redistribute the wealth.

It also offers Becerra an easier path to election, with California voters expected to skew heavily Democratic in November.

Becerra, who ran a relatively quiet campaign focused on his credentials, previously served as California attorney general under Govs. Jerry Brown and Gavin Newsom. He came under fire for his work in that office, as The Intercept reported last month. In 2018, Becerra’s office pushed for the state Supreme Court to artificially inflate the IQ of an intellectually disabled Black man in order to execute him, and he fought to uphold death penalty sentences during the Covid pandemic, despite a moratorium Newsom imposed. Becerra has also been criticized for his alleged mishandling of migrant children who were in his office’s care while serving as HHS secretary. 

Related

“Me Too” Comes Back to Congress

His primary campaign managed to overcome those criticisms, racking up high-profile endorsements from figures including Reps. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., and Ted Lieu, D-Calif., as well as several notable labor unions. Becerra’s campaign was also boosted by the rapid and scandalous departure of former front-runner Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct, including rape. Swalwell denied the allegations but swiftly resigned from Congress and ended his gubernatorial campaign, clearing a path in the centrist lane that Becerra quickly filled. 

Hilton, meanwhile, spent months neck and neck in the polls with Steyer, a former hedge fund manager who used his immense wealth to fund his campaign yet ran on what was widely considered the most progressive platform in the race, earning the head-turning endorsement of Our Revolution, the group founded by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. 

While he’s a relative unknown in the United States, Hilton has a reputation in the United Kingdom for helping to orchestrate the rise of former British Prime Minister David Cameron. If he manages to defeat Becerra in November, Hilton will be California’s first Republican governor since Arnold Schwarzenegger, the architect of the state’s open primary system.

The post In California, a Former Biden Official Will Face Fox News Personality for Governor appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 20:26

The ex-reality TV star, who lost his home in the Pacific Palisades fire, cast himself as the antidote to the city’s woes

Spencer Pratt, an ex-reality TV star, cast himself as the antidote to Los Angeles’s woes as he campaigned to be the city’s next mayor.

He curried favor with swaths of disillusioned voters who related to his diatribes against city leadership. His fervent social media posts, including re-shares of AI-generated campaign ads showing LA in an apocalyptic light, garnered national attention.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 20:26

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-09 20:15

Home city of Amazon and Microsoft passes moratorium as backlash against energy-guzzling AI infrastructure grows

Seattle has passed a year-long moratorium on the construction of new datacenters. The city council voted unanimously in favor of the temporary ban on Tuesday.

A major tech hub whose metro area is home to Amazon and Microsoft, Seattle is the largest US city to have passed such a moratorium as the backlash against AI infrastructure grows across the country.

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2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-09 20:11

After extensive hands-on testing, these are the watches that stood out for their design, features, accuracy, battery life and overall value.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 20:08

Portable Bluetooth speakers keep getting better with each passing year. As CNET's mobile audio expert, I've tested hundreds of wireless speakers. Here are my current top picks for every budget.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 22:01

Former UK political operative endorsed by Trump will face off against Democrat Xavier Becerra in November election

Republican Steve Hilton, the former UK political operative turned Fox News personality, has advanced to the November general election in the race to become California’s next governor, facing off against Democrat Xavier Becerra, a former congressman, state attorney general and US health secretary.

Hilton’s success, a remarkable achievement for a recent immigrant, came after he was endorsed by Donald Trump.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-10 10:08

The startup touted a production-ready breakthrough in solid-state battery tech, but the claims collapsed under scrutiny.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-10 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 10, No. 1,817.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-10 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 10, No. 1,095.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 23:24

Republican Steve Hilton, a former Fox News host and adviser to former British Prime Minister David Cameron, will advance to November's general election in the race to become California's next governor, CBS News projects.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:57

Bill Pulte will begin serving as acting director of national intelligence in a week-and-a-half, President Trump said, effectively standing by his decision to name the housing regulator and Trump loyalist.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:53

Polls open in Maine, North Dakota, Nevada, and South Carolina; voters appear to stand by Democratic challenger Graham Platner despite string of controversies

The Associated Press projects that Republican Steve Hilton, the former UK political operative turned Fox News personality, has advanced to the November general election in the race to become California’s next governor, in a match-up against Democrat Xavier Becerra, a former congressman, state attorney general and US health secretary.

Hilton’s success, a remarkable achievement for a recent immigrant, came after he was endorsed by Donald Trump.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:51

Emily C Marks finds method proposed to kill Jeffery Lee violates ban on cruel and unusual punishment

A federal judge on Tuesday permanently blocked Alabama from executing a man with nitrogen gas after declaring the method violates the ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Alabama became the first state in the nation to use the execution method in January 2024, but has faced repeated legal challenges to its use.

Emily C Marks, a US district judge, permanently enjoined the state from executing Jeffery Lee by nitrogen gas. Lee was scheduled to be executed Thursday at an Alabama prison.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:49
If you are new to VESC, here’s how to tune your new board. (Basic)

This video is meant for those who are very new to VESC.

submitted by /u/Portuwheel
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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:48

Crowds gather at sites across Belfast after Sudanese man charged with attempted murder

Badenoch said, after the murder of Stephen Lawrence, it was right that people wanted to ensure this did not happen again.

It led to the Macpherson report, she said.

[It] wanted to put right what went wrong with policing in the 1990s.

However, in attempting to do so, it also enshrined a principle which I believe is wrong that a racist incident is racist if it is perceived as racist by the victim or any other person.

Equality law, properly designed, should protect us all in the same way. It should be a shield, not a sword.

It should protect people from discrimination. It should protect people from being treated differently because of their race, sex, religion, sexuality, disability or age.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:35

A sunscreen ingredient that's been available in Europe, Japan and South Korea for years has finally been approved by the FDA for sale in the U.S.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:28

It's the seventh time this session that a discharge petition has secured the necessary 218 signatures to force a vote on legislation.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:17

President backs Pulte for acting DNI chief despite backlash that puts reauthorization of key surveillance law at risk

Donald Trump met with the House speaker, Mike Johnson, at the White House on Tuesday as pressure mounts on the president to nominate a permanent director of national intelligence, the step some Republicans now believe is the only way to save a controversial and powerful surveillance law before it expires by the end of the week.

At stake is section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a post-9/11 authority that allows US intelligence agencies to collect the communications of foreign targets overseas without a court warrant. While the program is intended to target non-Americans abroad, it can also sweep up communications involving Americans. This powerful and contentious spy tool is set to expire at midnight on Thursday.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:02

Justice secretary’s plans likely to increase black people’s suspicion of court system, committee suggests

David Lammy’s planned changes to the criminal courts in England and Wales could have a “far-reaching” impact on race relations, a cross-party committee of MPs has concluded.

The deputy prime minister’s plan to remove the right to elect for a crown court trial “has the potential to increase mistrust in the criminal justice system among the black community”, the justice select committee said, because black defendants are more likely to elect for trial.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:02

Inmates in England and Wales live among vermin while gangs control entire wings, monitors warn, with failures ‘at risk of becoming normalised’

The independent monitoring board’s annual report of conditions across the prison estate of England and Wales is stark and unflinching.

Men and women are held for long periods in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions, often living alongside vermin.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:02

Chair of prisons and detention watchdog concerned about intimidating effect as wide-ranging and damning review published

Staff at an immigration detention centre wore England flags pinned to their uniforms while guarding migrants, a report from the prisons and detention watchdog has revealed.

Their use by staff at one of the Home Office’s short-term holding facilities to detain migrants is revealed in the Independent Monitoring Boards’ national annual report, published on Wednesday, which is based on 127 annual reports about different prisons, young offender institutions and immigration detention centres.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:01

Targeted vaccination and improved testing planned as part of drive to eradicate disease by 2038

Cattle will be vaccinated against tuberculosis from 2030 as a “gamechanging” part of a new strategy to drive eradication of the disease in England by 2038. In parallel, the last badger culls are expected to end by 2029, with vaccination of badgers expanded.

More than 20,000 infected cattle are slaughtered each year, costing taxpayers £100m and inflicting a heavy toll on affected farmers’ livelihoods and mental health. Mass culling of badgers began in 2013 and has killed about 250,000 animals, at a cost of about £60m.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 19:00

The Pentagon has added Alibaba, BYD, Baidu, Unitree, and other Chinese companies to its list of firms it says support China's military, barring them from U.S. defense contracts. The companies and China's embassy deny the allegations. The Associated Press reports: Created in 2021 by a congressional mandate, the list (PDF) seeks to identify Chinese companies that the Pentagon considers to have links to the Chinese military -- not only those directly controlled by the Chinese military and security forces but also those contributing to the country's defense industrial base. When updating the list last year, the Pentagon said the Chinese military sought to acquire advanced technologies and expertise developed by Chinese companies, universities and research programs that "appear to be civilian entities." The Chinese Embassy on Monday accused the U.S. of "overstretching the concept of national security and making discriminatory lists to go after Chinese companies." It said Chinese companies observe the laws and regulations of the countries where they do business. "The U.S. should stop its wrong practice and create a fair, just and non-discriminatory environment for Chinese companies," the embassy said in a statement. [...] The Chinese Embassy on Monday accused the U.S. of "overstretching the concept of national security and making discriminatory lists to go after Chinese companies." It said Chinese companies observe the laws and regulations of the countries where they do business. "The U.S. should stop its wrong practice and create a fair, just and non-discriminatory environment for Chinese companies," the embassy said in a statement.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 18:58

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 18:47
Introducing the 'Monster Board'

This was my first race using this custom built board I designed and built myself! Although I couldn't have done it without a ton of help from my good friend Trevor!

I ended up with a second place finish for the open class!🥈

The ride video and board specs are linked👇

Ride video

Board Specs interview

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 18:45

Vice-president says deal could ‘absolutely’ come before midterms, as US strikes Iran after downing of helicopter

The US-Israel war on Iran could conclude in a week or a few months, Vice-president JD Vance said in an interview, hours before US forces launched retaliatory strikes against Iran, in response to the downing of the Apache helicopter near the strait of Hormuz a day earlier.

In a new interview with CBS, taped early Tuesday and set to air later this week, Vance claimed the US was “very close to achieving” a peace deal with Iran, adding that it could “absolutely” come before the midterm elections.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 18:43

The highly rated book adaptation premieres on MGM Plus soon.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 18:28

AI company restricted access to Fable 5, its most powerful Mythos model, for months over cybersecurity concerns

Anthropic, the maker of the Claude artificial intelligence (AI) models, made a new version of its technology available to the general public on Tuesday while restricting its use in sensitive areas.

Dubbed Fable 5, the model is the first to be made widely available from the company’s new Mythos class – its most advanced lineup of AI technology, unveiled in April but restricted to a small set of partner institutions for months over cybersecurity concerns.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 18:25

The House passed Republicans' $70 billion bill to fund immigration enforcement agencies for the rest of the Trump administration.

2026-06-10 12:04
2026-06-09 18:16

Reproducibility is absolutely critical in science, but it’s a troublesome characteristic when it comes to AI. Frontier models developed by Big AI may deliver superior accuracy and reasoning capabilities, but they do so largely as black boxes with little regard for reproducibility. If AI is going to turbo-charge scientific productivity, it must do so without compromising reproducibility. The question, then, becomes how to achieve it.

This was the topic of a presentation at the TPC26 conference last week by Noah Smith, a computer scientist at the University of Washington and senior director of NLP research at the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence. Smith discussed why it’s important for scientists to have AI tools that meet their needs when it comes to reproducibility, and how model flows can help to deliver them.

Image courtesy Noah Smith, Ai2

“Scientists need to be able to inspect and control their tools. A big part of science is your tools–the engineering, the systems that are going to help you answer questions,” Smith said. “At the Allen Institute for AI and with our collaborators at the University of Washington and other universities, we’ve taken the position that the way to get to this fine-grained control and inspectability is through what we call model flows.”

What exactly is a “model flow”? Smith went on:

“We use this term ‘model flow’ to refer to a kind of full openness,” he continued. “Everything that you need to reproduce the work from the very beginning: all of the data, the model weights…and intermediate checkpoints. We describe the entire recipe. I’ll give you all the code that you need to reproduce any stage so that you can go back and change anything. All of our evaluations are careful and open, and we richly document and analyze the capabilities of the models.”

Clearly, many frontier models fail to check even some of these boxes. Claude, Gemini, and GPT from Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI are all extremely capable models that deliver stellar results on many general purpose topics, but they are closed source and don’t offer the full model flows that is critical for reproducibility. Scientists receiving funding from government institutions, including the Department of Energy and National Science Foundation, can use these proprietary frontier models, although they must meet strict privacy and security guarantees.

Noah Smith, Ai2 director of NLP research and computer science professor at University of Washington

There are other challenges with using frontier models from Big AI. For starters, they’re optimized for consumer and enterprise usage, not necessarily for science (although some Big AI providers, like Google, are offering science packages). They also tend to be quite expensive to use at scale, which is why much of the discussion of AI for science and engineering, at least in the public sphere, tends to take place around fully open models.

The Allen Institute for AI (AI2), which received $152 million in funding last August from the NSF and Nvidia, is developing the Olmo 3 family of fully open models, intended primarily for use by scientists and engineers. Olmo 3, available in 7B and 32B sizes, delivers the full model flows that scientists need, and but at a fraction of the data budget of something like Qwen 3, according to Smith.

One of the Olmo 3 models is Molmo, a vision-language model designed to generate textual descriptions from visual input, and MolmoPoint, which adds support for pointing commands. Vision-language models are important for bridging the gap between AI models and agents and robots that are going to act in the real world, Smith said. Molmo2, which was recently released, adds support for video.

There is also DR Tulu, a reinforcement learning (RL) model designed to power deep research agents. The DR Tulu stack gives scientists the ability to create agents that search and browse literature, evaluate relevance, integrate evidence, write answers with attribution, and evaluate precision and recall. It uses RL to create rubrics that evolve based on what the agent discovers. DR Tulu-8B performs comparatively to GPT-5 Search, OpenAI DR, and Claude Sonnet, but at a cost that is 100X to 1,000X less.

Image courtesy Noah Smith, Ai2

Olmo Hybrid, meanwhile, melds the precise recall of transformers with the superior state tracking of linear recurrent neural networks (RNNs) to create a hybrid model that excels at both. Olmo Hybrid delivers superior performance in math, coding, and other categories compared to Olmo 3-7B, as well as offering better scaling, according to Smith.

While the AI models from Ai2 can deliver comparable performance to proprietary frontier models, they do so with full reproducibility as a result of their open model flows. They’re also more adaptable than frontier models, which Smith cited as another factor in their favor. If scientists value reproducibility, adaptability, and the ability to control their own AI models, then fully open models should be where they are putting their chips, he said.

“I think reproducing commercial AI is too small a goal for those of us working in the open space,” Smith said. “I think building infrastructure for science needs to enable scientific communities to do things that the market is just never going to prioritize: Inspect the internals of the system, adapt it to local scientific requirements, study every aspect of its development so we can make improvements, [and] control the costs and specialize for long-tail domains.”

 

The post Why Model Flows Are the Key for Reproducibility in AI for Science appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 18:00

The European Commission has ordered Meta to temporarily restore free WhatsApp Business API access for rival AI chatbots while it investigates whether Meta's ban on third-party assistants abuses its dominant position. Meta says it will appeal, calling the move "regulatory overreach" that would let major AI companies use a paid WhatsApp product for free. The BBC reports: The EU said it began its investigation, in December 2025, after Meta banned third-party general-purpose AI assistants from the WhatsApp for Business API. It said that appeared to be an abuse of Meta's dominant position in European markets. So, as an interim measure as its investigation continues, it has given Meta five working days to re-instate access for third-party general-purpose AI assistants to the WhatsApp for Business API under the same terms and conditions that were in place previously. "In rapidly evolving markets, competition can be lost long before a final decision is adopted," said Teresa Ribera, the Commission's executive vice-president for clean, just and competitive transition. "This is why these interim measures will remain in place for the duration of the investigation." She added the decision "preserved choice for citizens across Europe on the AI assistants they want to use with WhatsApp, without that decision being made for them." The Commission said if Meta failed to comply with its interim decision it could be fined up to 10% up of its total turnover. "The European Commission has decided that OpenAI and some of the largest companies in the world can use the paid-for WhatsApp Business product for free," it said in a statement. "This is regulatory overreach subsidized by the many European companies that pay. We will appeal."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 17:56

This live blog is now closed. For the latest, read our full report:

Vice-president JD Vance has added a chicken coop to his residence at the US Naval Observatory, the Daily Wire reports, along with a dozen baby chicks whose new henhouse is designed to look like the Victorian home where the second family lives.

The coop was built without taxpayer money, a person familiar with the project told the Associated Press. The residence hosted a family event over the weekend where local 4-H students taught other kids about the newly installed coup, the person said.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 17:55
Pint won’t charge

I have an older One wheel Pint and it doesn’t charge. The green light on the charger stays on whether it’s plugged in or not and it won’t turn on. Is there something I can do to hard reset it? Or is it just dead now?

It has been a couple years since I used it last, so I guess it’s a possibility that it’s just dead now.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 17:47

Secure America Act passes largely along party lines in 214-212 vote, ending months-long standoff with Democrats

House Republicans on Tuesday approved a $70bn bill funding through the duration of his term the agencies leading Donald Trump’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants, ending a months-long standoff with Democrats that at one point forced the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to shutter.

The Secure America Act passed in a 214-212 vote that was largely along party lines, with Kevin Kiley, an independent who aligns with the Republicans, joining all Democrats in voting no. The Senate approved the measure last week, which allocates $38bn to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), $26bn to Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and $5bn more to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) through September 2029. The legislation now awaits Trump’s signature.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 17:47

A year ago, AWS’s Thierry Pellegrino estimated that quantum computing was still four to five years away from broad commercial relevance. Speaking at TPC26 last week, however, he suggested the timeline may be accelerating.

“I think 2027 is going to see a lot of advancements,” Pellegrino said, arguing that some quantum computing modalities are making progress toward the logical qubit counts needed to tackle meaningful scientific problems.

The prospect of quantum computing becoming useful sooner than expected formed a central theme of Pellegrino’s keynote, which examined how advances in quantum computing, artificial intelligence and high performance computing are reshaping scientific discovery.

Pellegrino also argued that researchers increasingly need access to both cloud and on-premises computing resources, depending on the scale, urgency and nature of their workloads. The result, he said, is a more flexible computing environment in which advanced computing capabilities are no longer limited to organizations that can build and operate dedicated supercomputers.

“There used to be a time that a lot of us remember where building a supercomputer would take years,” Pellegrino said. Today, he added, researchers can access supercomputing resources “with the click of a button,” enabling a level of flexibility and scale that was previously available only to a handful of large national laboratories.

Thierry Pellegrino, Global Head of Advanced Computing at AWS, speaking at TPC26 in Baltimore.

Against that backdrop, Pellegrino outlined four areas where he believes quantum computing is most likely to deliver practical value first: physics and chemistry, cryptography, materials science, and optimization.

In physics and chemistry, quantum computers could help researchers simulate molecules and other quantum systems that are difficult to model accurately using conventional computers. Materials science represents a related opportunity, with researchers exploring how quantum systems might be used to engineer novel materials with properties that are difficult to predict using classical methods.

Cryptography remains one of the most widely discussed quantum applications. Pellegrino acknowledged that advances in quantum computing could eventually threaten some existing encryption methods, but argued that concerns about an imminent cryptographic apocalypse are often overstated.

“Even if we get to the point that a quantum computer can break that code, it will cost so much money that you will need to really know what data you want to get to,” he said. “So it’s not the end of the world.”

His fourth category encompasses optimization problems and related applications. While these remain largely prospective, Pellegrino said routing, resource allocation and machine learning continue to be promising areas for future quantum computing applications.

Despite the growing excitement around quantum computing, Pellegrino stressed that the technology is unlikely to replace classical high performance computing. Instead, he described a future in which the two become increasingly interdependent. Quantum hardware development already relies heavily on HPC resources for chip design, simulation and algorithm development, while future scientific workflows may combine classical supercomputers, AI models and quantum processors to tackle problems that would be difficult for any one technology to solve alone.

“Quantum researchers and scientists need HPC,” he said. “I believe also HPC needs quantum for the future of technology innovation.”

(Source: AWS)

As an example of the growing relationship between HPC and quantum computing, Pellegrino pointed to research by teams from the University of Southern California, Harvard University and AWS focused on quantum error correction.

The researchers developed a digital twin of a quantum device that could be used to evaluate error-correction strategies more effectively than conventional approaches that rely on simulating a device and injecting artificial noise. According to Pellegrino, the technique enabled analysis of a 97-physical-qubit system in 75 minutes using a single server with 96 virtual CPUs.

Without this approach, he said, the calculations would have required computational resources that were effectively out of reach.

While much of the discussion at TPC26 focused on AI-accelerated workflows, Pellegrino stressed that advances in scientific discovery will also depend on closer integration between classical HPC and quantum computing.

“Integrated quantum classical computing, that’s my plea,” he said. “Do not forget about quantum.”

 

The post TPC26: AWS’s Pellegrino Says 2027 Could Mark a Quantum Turning Point appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 17:27

A new analysis warns a proposed FEMA overhaul by a Trump-appointed panel would limit access to disaster aid for survivors, shifting the burden to state and local agencies amid hurricane season.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 17:03

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 17:00

Anthropic is releasing Claude Fable 5, a Mythos-class AI model for enterprise customers and paid subscribers. The company says broader access is possible thanks to new safeguards that block high-risk requests in areas like cybersecurity and biology. "For us, it's really around what we call 'race to the top,' being able to provide this technology in a valuable fashion, and at the same time providing the right safety guardrails so that it can do asymmetrically more benefits than harm," Dianne Penn, Anthropic's head of product management for research, told CNBC in an interview. CNBC reports: [W]ith the launch of Claude Fable 5, Anthropic is honoring its stated "eventual goal" to deploy Mythos-class models at scale. It's also capitalizing on growing momentum and investor interest in its technology ahead of a potentially massive IPO, which is expected to take place as soon as this year. Anthropic said Claude Fable 5 shows "exceptional performance" across software engineering and knowledge work tasks. On some benchmarks, it scored more than 10% higher than Claude Opus 4.8, another model the company announced late last month, according to a blog post. Claude Fable 5 represents a "significant jump" in capability, which is why Anthropic had to implement additional guardrails to prevent misuse, Penn said. If a user asks a high-risk question, like how to make ricin, a toxin, for instance, the model will block its response and fall back to Claude Opus 4.8 to deliver a safe answer. "What we wanted to do was to be very intentional about building new types of classifiers and new types of safety guardrails in place for this launch," Penn said. Anthropic also released an updated Mythos model called Claude Mythos 5. "It's the same underlying model as Claude Fable 5, but with the safeguards lifted in some areas," reports CNBC.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 16:55

President Donald Trump walked out of a sit-down interview with Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” That happened after he made, or repeated, a number of false and unsupported claims — some of which Welker pushed back on.

  • Trump seized on the slow vote-counting procedures in California to claim, without evidence, that its recent primary election was “rigged.”
  • The president falsely claimed that he “didn’t guarantee” that he’d keep the U.S. out of “new wars” in his second term. There are several examples of him making such a promise in 2024.
  • He claimed that Iran was “very close to having a nuclear weapon” under a multilateral agreement negotiated by President Barack Obama’s administration and wrongly said the country “got all of this uranium during Obama.” Arms control experts say Iran accelerated its uranium enrichment program after Trump withdrew from the deal.
  • The president also said that if he didn’t launch airstrikes against Iran in June 2025, the country would “right now have a nuclear weapon, and it could be that half of the world would be eradicated already.” That assessment is at odds with reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency and the U.S. Intelligence Community, which said in March 2025 that “Iran is not building a nuclear weapon.”
  • He provided no support for his claim that Jan. 6 rioters were “ushered into” the Capitol by “FBI agents.” A 2024 watchdog report said that FBI agents arrived to assist law enforcement after rioters had already broken into the Capitol.
  • Trump repeated other claims we’ve written about before regarding gasoline prices, the economy under his presidencies and construction of factories.

The interview was recorded on June 5 and aired two days later.

No Evidence of ‘Rigged’ California Elections

Trump walked out of the interview after Welker repeatedly asked him to provide evidence for his claims that the California elections were “rigged.”

The “evidence” Trump cited, however — that California had not finished counting votes several days after a June 2 primary election — is not evidence at all.

It does take California longer than other states to count ballots, but that’s because the vast majority of votes are cast via mail-in ballots, which counties send to all active registered voters. Mail-in ballots are accepted so long as they are “postmarked on or before election day” and received “no later than seven days after election day,” according to state law. That alone causes some delay.

“California has the largest number of registered voters in the nation—more than 23 million registered voters,” according to California Secretary of State Shirley Weber’s website. “Ensuring that all valid votes cast by eligible voters are accurately processed and counted takes time.”

California is also one of 32 states that require signature verification for mail-in ballots, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. But California also allows voters to “cure” their ballot if a problem arises in signature-matching.

“If a signature is missing or does not compare to the signature on file, state law requires county elections officials to reach out to voters to verify their signature to ensure that their ballot can be counted,” the California secretary of state website states. “By law, and for most elections, voters are allowed to verify their signature up to eight days before the county certifies their results. These processes ensure that all valid votes cast by eligible voters can be counted.”

On election night, California shares “semi-official” tallies of the votes cast in-person at the polls on Election Day, the early votes cast in person, and mail-in ballots received and processed prior to Election Day. But in close elections, that’s often not enough for election prognosticators to “call” a race for the winners.

The top two vote-getters in the primary for both governor and Los Angeles mayor — regardless of party — square off in the general election. As of the morning of June 9, the Associated Press had projected Democratic gubernatorial candidate Xavier Becerra would advance to the general election, but it is yet to be determined whether he will face Republican Steve Hilton or Democrat Tom Steyer. In the Los Angeles mayoral election, the Associated Press projected a day after the election that incumbent Karen Bass will be on the November general election ballot. But it wasn’t until June 8 that the AP projected Nithya Raman, a city councilwoman, would grab the second spot over reality TV star Spencer Pratt.

In his “Meet the Press” interview, Trump revived his false and unproven claims that the 2020 election was “rigged” and “dirty.”

Welker noted that “you’ve never presented evidence” that the 2020 election was “rigged.”

“It’s happening right now in California,” Trump said. “Right now, it’s, look at what’s happening in California.”

“Where’s the evidence to that?” Welker asked, adding that “the Republicans are doing well in California.”

“In California, it’s, no they’re not,” Trump said. “They’re dropping fast because it’s a rigged election. Let me tell you, it’s four days and they aren’t even close to coming up with the —”

Welker pushed back, saying, “That’s how they count the votes in California.”

“Do you know why they’re doing that? Because they’re cheating on the election,” Trump said.

“Do you have evidence to support that?” Welker said.

“All I have to do is look,” Trump responded.

“But that’s not evidence,” Welker said.

“And I listen. And I listen to people,” Trump said.

“But sir, that’s not evidence,” Welker said.

“We’re like a third world country,” Trump said. “Your elections are crooked and you’re crooked, and ‘Meet the Press’ is crooked. And so is ABC and CBS and CNN. You’re a one-sided crooked network. Sorry. Let’s call it quits because I’ve had enough. Thank you, darling. Have a good time.”

The unfounded claim about California was not new for Trump, who posted on Truth Social on June 4, two days after California’s election, “There’s BIG cheating by the Dumocrats in California. Votes are all tied up. May not be in for weeks. Under investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles. Why the vote counting DELAY???”

The following day, Bilal “Bill” Essayli, first assistant U.S. attorney for the Central District of California, posted on X that his office “has multiple election fraud investigations underway” in coordination with the FBI in Los Angeles. “We will follow the evidence wherever it leads and prosecute any violations of federal election law to the fullest extent,” Essayli wrote.

No further details about the investigations were provided.

Essayli also lambasted the state’s “[u]niversal vote-by-mail with no voter ID requirements,” which he said “creates conditions where fraud can go undetected and unpunished, eroding public confidence.”

He added that the U.S. attorney’s office would be working with the Department of Justice’s civil rights division “to conduct a comprehensive audit of California’s voter rolls.”

A post from California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s press office on June 4 warned, “There is a lot of misinformation floating around about California’s election — including from the President.” The post linked to a CNN explanation of why it takes California so long to count ballots.

“And yes, for the record: we wish the votes were counted faster, too,” the governor’s press office post concluded.

‘No New Wars’

During an exchange about the Iran conflict, Trump repeatedly denied — wrongly — that he ever promised there would be “no new wars” in a second Trump term.

“One of your consistent campaign promises was no new wars, going all the way back to 2015,” Welker said, before asking the president, “Did you break that promise to the American people?” In response, Trump said, “No,” then he added: “I had to stop a country, very powerful, very dangerous country, from having a nuclear weapon because they’d use it.”

When Welker continued to press the issue, asking Trump “what changed” to make him go back on his promise to keep the U.S. out of “new wars,” he said, “First of all, I didn’t guarantee no war. Why would I have built the strongest military in the world?”

Later in the interview, Trump again said that he had made no such guarantee. “When you say I promised, I didn’t promise anything,” he said. “I don’t like these endless wars. This is not an endless war. We’ve been doing this for three months.”

Several times during his 2024 campaign, Trump was specific about wanting to “end” or keep the U.S. out of “endless” foreign wars. For example, during a Wisconsin campaign rally in September 2024, he said: “I will expel the warmongers from our national security state and carry out a much-needed cleanup of the military industrial complex to stop the war profiteering and to put always America first. … So, we’re going to end these endless wars, endless wars. They never stop. You ever see these wars? They’re going for 14 years, 20 years.”

However, to Welker’s point, there also were many times when Trump said that there would be no U.S.-involved wars at all in a second Trump administration.

When accepting the GOP nomination for president in July 2024, Trump said, “With our victory in November, the years of war, weakness, and chaos will be over. I don’t have wars.”

The following month, at an August 2024 rally in Pennsylvania, he told the audience, ”Under Trump, we will have no more wars, no more disruptions, and we will have prosperity and peace for all.” A few days earlier, during a campaign speech in North Carolina, Trump said that “we will end the era of inflation, mayhem and misery” under the Biden administration by having “no more wars” and “no more disruptions.”

Then, while giving his election victory speech in November 2024, Trump said that his political opponents were wrong to say that he would be the one to start a war. “I’m not going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars,” he said.

But it was the U.S. and Israel that launched the airstrikes that began the fighting with Iran.

Iran Nuclear Capabilities

The president made several disputed and unsupported claims about Iran’s nuclear capabilities and the actions he and former President Barack Obama took.

Trump claimed that Iran was “very close to having a nuclear weapon twice.” The first time, he said, was under a 2015 deal with Iran negotiated by the Obama administration. Called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the agreement 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. In 2018, in Trump’s first term and two years after the JCPOA went into effect, Trump announced the U.S. would withdraw from the deal.

In the “Meet the Press” interview, Trump said the JCPOA was a “horrible deal. It was a path to them getting a nuclear weapon. They were very close to having a nuclear weapon. I terminated the deal.”

The deal put restrictions on Iran’s enrichment of uranium and required international inspections of the country’s nuclear facilities for 15 years. While there were critics of the agreement who said it didn’t go far enough, experts we interviewed disputed Trump’s claim that it was a “path” to Iran “getting a nuclear weapon.” In fact, they said, Iran accelerated its uranium enrichment program after Trump withdrew from the deal.

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 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, “Iran began to reconstitute its nuclear capabilities, including by deploying large numbers of advanced centrifuges and stockpiling” highly enriched uranium.

Laura Rockwood, senior fellow at the Vienna Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation who worked for the International Atomic Energy Agency for 28 years, told us: “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.” That’s a reference to the amount of 60% enriched uranium Iran had before June 2025 airstrikes on the country’s nuclear program sites.

In July 2019, about a year after Trump announced the U.S. would withdraw from the Obama-era deal, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported that Iran had exceeded the deal’s limits on Iran’s stockpile of low-enriched uranium, and Iran’s foreign minister said the country would begin to enrich uranium beyond the low level needed for civilian nuclear power.

In the NBC News interview, Trump wrongly claimed that Iran “got all of this uranium during Obama.” When Welker said that Iran “escalated their development after the deal was ripped up,” Trump said that “they didn’t escalate anything.” That’s contrary to what arms control experts have said.

As we’ve explained before, to be weapons-grade, the 60% enriched uranium would need to be enriched to 90%.

The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation estimated that Trump’s withdrawal from JCPOA shortened 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. As of November 2024, the center estimated that the breakout time went from two to three months before the JCPOA to 12-plus months during the deal. After the U.S. withdrew from the agreement, the breakout time was reduced to just a couple of weeks.

To be clear, that doesn’t mean that Iran would have a nuclear weapon in a couple of weeks. Emma Sandifer, program coordinator at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told us that once Iran had weapons-grade uranium, it “would then need to manufacture the rest of the weapon. This process would likely take much longer, perhaps months to a year.”  

Again, if Iran chose to do so. That brings us to another disputed claim by Trump. He said that Iran was close to having and potentially using a nuclear weapon before the June 2025 U.S. airstrikes. “If I didn’t go in there with the B2 bombers, they would right now have a nuclear weapon, and it could be that half of the world would be eradicated already,” Trump said.

The president’s view is at odds with the assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community — which is made up of 18 government intelligence agencies and departments — and the International Atomic Energy Agency.  

In late March 2025, the U.S. Intelligence Community assessed that “Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and that [Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei has not reauthorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003.” In a March 25 congressional hearing, then Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard reiterated that finding in her opening statement. Gabbard also said, “Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile is at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons.”

Similarly, a May 31, 2025, report from the IAEA said it “has no credible indications of an ongoing, undeclared structured nuclear programme” to develop nuclear weapons in Iran, but the group had concerns about “repeated statements by former high-level officials in Iran related to Iran having all capabilities to manufacture nuclear weapons.”

The agency said, “[T]he fact that Iran is the only non-nuclear-weapon State in the world that is producing and accumulating uranium enriched to 60% remains a matter of serious concern, which has drawn international attention given the potential proliferation implications.”

The Iranian nuclear program sites targeted by last June’s U.S. airstrikes were damaged, but not “obliterated,” as Trump put it, according to experts, who told us the bombings likely increased the so-called breakout time. The operation didn’t “remove or help account for 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent U-235 that Iran already had stockpiled,” Kimball said.

Trump has said he wants Iran to turn over its stockpile of enriched uranium as part of a peace deal to end the current U.S. military operation in the country.

Finally, Trump said that Obama sent a plane to Iran loaded with “$1.7 billion in cash, “adding that the administration “emptied out the banks” in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C., for this payment. As we’ve explained before, the $1.7 billion payment, made in 2016, settled a claim that Iran had filed against the U.S. in an international tribunal in The Hague. It concerned a decades-old dispute over Iran paying the U.S. $400 million for military equipment, and the U.S. refusing to provide the equipment after the Shah of Iran was overthrown during the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

The $1.7 billion included the original $400 million and “a roughly $1.3 billion compromise on the interest,” according to a statement by John Kerry, the secretary of state at the time.

The $400 million came from a foreign military sales trust fund, and the $1.3 billion in interest came from Treasury’s judgment fund, which pays lawsuit settlements or judgments against the government. That’s according to a December 2016 Congressional Research Service report and September 2016 congressional testimony by the Treasury Department’s assistant general counsel for enforcement and intelligence.

The Treasury counsel, Paul Ahern, said the money was sent to European banks, which changed it to foreign currency to be remitted to Iran. He acknowledged that cash was involved because U.S. and international sanctions on Iran “had effectively cut off Iran from the international financial system.”

Jan. 6 Claims

Trump also claimed without evidence that some of the people who were arrested for entering the U.S. Capitol during the riot on Jan. 6, 2021, had been “ushered into the building” by “FBI agents.”

After Welker asked Trump if people who attacked police officers that day should be compensated via a $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund that the Justice Department announced and then halted due to bipartisan backlash, Trump said, “I wouldn’t be inclined to say so, but I have to see it.” He then argued that some of the roughly 1,400 people who were charged with entering or remaining in a restricted federal building or grounds had been victims of government weaponization.

When Welker told Trump that “172 people did plead guilty to assaulting police officers,” he said: “They pled guilty because they were frightened. They went down. They were ushered into a building. Many of them were arrested without even going into the building.” Earlier, he said that there were “FBI agents ushering them into the building.”

But as Welker said, there is no evidence that FBI agents did that.

A December 2024 report from the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General said that “several hundred” FBI special agents and employees were deployed after the Capitol already had been breached by rioters who broke through windows and doors. The report also said that there were no undercover FBI employees at the Capitol on Jan. 6. 

In addition, there were 26 FBI informants, or confidential human sources, in Washington, D.C., that day “in connection with the events planned” for Jan. 6, the report said. However, those individuals are not agents or employees.

During the riot, 17 of the 26 informants entered the Capitol or a “restricted area” outside of the building. But the report said that none was authorized to do so or “to encourage others to commit illegal acts.” Only three informants were tasked with informing the FBI about suspects attending Jan. 6 events; other informants who went to the Capitol did so by choice.

As for Trump’s claim that “many” people “were arrested without” entering the Capitol, that ignores some of the serious offenses — such as assault — committed by people who were outside of the building. As an example, NBC News published photos of David Dempsey assaulting officers with a pole and pepper-spray just outside of a tunnel leading inside the Capitol. He later pleaded guilty to assaulting, resisting or impeding officers with a deadly weapon and was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Dempsey was one of the many rioters who pleaded guilty to using weapons to assault officers, who — according to police statements and media reports — suffered cuts, bruises, sprains, concussions, bone fractures and other injuries.

When Trump took office in January 2025, he pardoned or commuted the sentences of every person charged with committing an illegal act during the Capitol riot. His executive order also directed the attorney general to seek dismissal with prejudice of all pending indictments against individuals for conduct related to Jan. 6 events.

More Repeats

There were more claims in the interview that we’ve fact-checked before:

Gasoline prices. Trump said that gasoline prices would “drop like a rock” once the war in Iran was over, saying they were “going to go lower than they were before.” Energy experts told us that prices will start to drop when the war ends, but it could take many months before the national average price is back to its pre-conflict level. The average U.S. price for regular grade gasoline was $4.15 per gallon as of the week ending June 8, according to the Energy Information Administration, up about 41% from the week ending Feb. 23, five days before the U.S. and Israel launched airstrikes.

“For pre-war prices to show up, it could take beyond a year,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis for the fuel-price tracking service GasBuddy, told us, adding that there are “a lot of different potential” outcomes depending on what happens when the war ends.

Economy. He has said it over and over again — “I had a great first term. I had the greatest economy ever.” This time, the president added: “And you know what? This one’s blowing it away.” By the measure favored by economists — growth of real (inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product — the U.S. economy wasn’t the greatest ever during Trump’s first term.

Annual real GDP growth peaked in that term at 3% in 2018, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Dating back to Ronald Reagan’s presidency, real economic growth has exceeded Trump’s peak year 17 times. 

As for this term “blowing … away” the first? Not so far. Real GDP growth was just 2.1% in 2025. The annual rate for the first quarter of 2026 was 1.6%, according to the BEA’s second estimate released in late May.

Factory construction. Trump mentioned that “we’re building more factories.” But that’s not what the Census Bureau’s manufacturing construction spending data show — data that the White House cited earlier this year when Trump made claims about this issue.

The monthly figures show a nearly 20% decline in manufacturing construction spending, from January 2025, when Trump was sworn in, to April, the most recent data available. On a quarterly basis, construction spending went down 18%, from the fourth quarter of 2024 to the first quarter of this year. And on a yearly basis, the drop was 6.6% from 2024 to 2025.

See our February story for more on what factors have affected this spending under the prior administration and under Trump.

Although there has been a slight uptick in manufacturing jobs this year of 23,000 jobs, overall manufacturing employment has declined during Trump’s second term by 68,000 jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That comes after a drop of 202,000 jobs in Biden’s last year in office.


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 FactChecking Trump’s Contentious ‘Meet the Press’ Interview appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 16:43

From August 2025 to March 2026, an immigrant detention facility at Fort Bliss Army base suffered a host of serious incidents, including two deaths that were investigated by the Government Accountability Office.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 16:40

A new logo means new merch! I’m launching brand new merch today, all featuring the brand new OSNews logo. We’ve got the classic T-shirt with the new OSNews logo, in sandy white and terrain grey. They’re made from sustainably-grown and processed cotton, come in a variety of sizes, and ship worldwide.

The crowdpleaser is also making its triumphant return: the OSNews coffee mug, now also with the new logo and a green-on-white two-tone design. It holds coffee and tea, of course, but feel free to use it for whatever you want. Grow a plant in it!

A newcomer is the OSNews Mousepad – a basic, no-nonsense, no-frills mousepad that does exactly what it’s supposed to do, in a classic square(ish) formfactor. It makes for a great companion to any (retro) setup, but feels particularly at home with BeOS and OS/2.

One merch item remains from our previous collection: the ever-popular Gemini shirt and longsleeve, with a retro ASCII-art OSNews logo in bright green on deep black. It’s like staring at a real classic CRT. On your chest. Don’t sit too close.

As always, every price is set so that for every item sold, roughly €8 goes to OSNews. I will add the proceeds to our fundraiser tracker, so this is yet another way to support us, together with Ko-Fi donations, SEPA direct bank transfers1, and Patreon.

  1. Name: Thom Holwerda – IBAN: SE08 8000 0820 1684 4657 8414 – BIC: SWEDSESS ↩︎

2026-06-09 20:04
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If you want to test out Fable 5 without paying extra, you need to try it before the end of the month.

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Kingdom Hearts 4, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time remake and Xenoblade Genesis stole the show.

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Medicare's hospital insurance trust fund will be unable to pay full benefits in 2033, which could lead to higher health care costs for Americans over 65.

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The trial of Karmelo Anthony centered on whether he acted in self-defense when he fatally stabbed Austin Metcalf at a Frisco ISD track meet in 2025.

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In an interview airing on "CBS Sunday Morning," Vice President JD Vance said the U.S. will reach a deal with Iran before November's midterm elections.

2026-06-09 16:04
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NASA's Artemis III astronauts plan to carry out rendezvous and docking procedures with commercial moon landers being built by SpaceX and Blue Origin.

2026-06-09 16:04
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The two crew members were rescued by a sea drone in the first such operation ever carried out by the U.S. military, officials told CBS News.

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Frisco is one of the nation’s fastest-growing cities. That growth — and a partisan election season — has fueled racism and anti-immigrant bigotry.

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Get ready for the longest stretch of daylight all year. One Alaska location experiences a full day of uninterrupted sunshine.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Researchers have analyzed a high-severity vulnerability in Linux that's able to escalate untrusted users to root by exploiting a bug you don't often see: a single errant character inside the kernel. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-23111, is located in nf_tables, a subsystem of the Linux kernel that provides packet filtering capabilities. It's used to manage firewall rules and replaces older subsystems such as iptables, ip6tables, arptables, and ebtables. The presence of a single mis-issued exclamation point in code implementing nf_tables introduced a use-after-free, a class of vulnerability that corrupts memory by placing malicious code at memory addresses that haven't been properly freed of their previous contents. CVE-2026-23111 can be exploited by an unprivileged user or process to elevate system rights to root. The exploit works by disrupting the deletion of verdicts -- a determination within the nf_tables framework that determines if a packet matches a rule calling for a certain action to be performed. This process can use what are known as catchall elements, which act as a wildcard in the event a lookup doesn't match any other element in the set. When a verdict map is deleted from memory, catchall elements are deactivated and a chain's reference counter is decremented. When errors occur the deletion can be reversed and the counter incremented. CVE-2026-53111 allows for that process to be altered. As a result, the exploit can decrement the variable an arbitrary number of times and then delete and free the chain when some objects still point to it. Although the kernel vulnerability was fixed in February, multiple proof-of-concept exploits have since emerged, including one from FuzzingLabs in April and another from Exodus Intelligence that works on Debian and Ubuntu.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Democrats say they won't vote to reauthorize the key spy authority known as FISA Section 702 as long as Bill Pulte is leading the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

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Gemini 3.5 Live Translate doesn't wait for one speaker to finish before generating a response.

2026-06-09 16:04
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  • Videos show Spurs fans having jerseys ripped off

  • Players from both teams say incidents are unacceptable

Players from both teams in the NBA finals have condemned apparent attacks on San Antonio Spurs fans by supporters of the New York Knicks.

Videos circulating on social media showed Spurs fans having their jerseys ripped off on the streets of New York in the aftermath of the Knicks’ loss in Game 3 of the finals at Madison Square Garden.

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Economists expect the Consumer Price Index this week to show U.S. inflation continuing to rise due to higher energy costs.

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Crowds, including people in masks and hoods, begin to gather in parts of the city after calls for mass protests

Politicians and community leaders have accused the far right of seeking to foment unrest in Northern Ireland and across the UK after a graphic video of a knife attack in Belfast prompted calls for mass street protests against immigrants and refugees.

Police charged a 30-year-old asylum seeker from Sudan with attempted murder on Tuesday night after an attack that left a man severely injured and caused widespread shock and revulsion.

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The Justice Department accused the EEOC of violating civil rights laws by issuing guidelines that effectively pressured employers to make race-based considerations in hiring and promotions.

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Apple and Google worked together to make new foundational Apple Intelligence models. Here's what's inside them.

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Moving $200,000 out of your retirement account into a CD may make sense now. Here's how much interest you can earn.

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Researchers have discovered dozens of headless human skeletons in a ditch in Slovakia, which they believe date back 7,000 years.

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June 9, 2026 — Yesterday, the EuroHPC JU Industrial and Scientific Advisory Board made up of the three newly selected Advisory Groups, RIAG, INFRAG and the newly formed QTAG, elected Chairs and Vice-Chairs during its inaugural meetings in Luxembourg.

The three Advisory Groups, RIAG, INFRAG and the new QTAG provide their technical knowledge and expertise to support and inform the activities of EuroHPC JU.

Chairs and Vice-Chairs of RIAG, INFRAG and QTAG

The first meeting of the 2026-2028 Research and Innovation Advisory Group (RIAG), the Infrastructure Advisory Group (INFRAG), and the newly established Quantum Technologies Advisory Group (QTAG) took place on 8 and 9 June 2026 in Luxembourg. The Executive Director of EuroHPC JU Anders Dam JENSEN opened the meeting and oversaw the formal part of this meeting.

The election of the Chairs and Vice-Chairs was held on 8 June 2026. The new members of these advisory groups were appointed on April 24, 2026 by the EuroHPC JU Governing Board. Each group is composed of 12 members and 12 observers who will serve a two‑year mandate. Coming from 23 different countries, they bring diverse perspectives and backgrounds to support EuroHPC’s work.

The three groups provide independent advice to the EuroHPC JU Governing Board on the strategic research and innovation agenda and on the acquisition and operation of the supercomputers, quantum computers and AI factories owned by the Joint Undertaking. They contribute to the capability building, the widening activities program, the federation, the connectivity and international cooperation activities program.

Research and Innovation Advisory Group (RIAG)

RIAG members elected Maike Gilliot as their Chair.

Maike Gilliot is a Project Manager for HPC-related R&I activities at CEA and involved in the ETP4HPC’s Steering Board. She graduated from TU Darmstadt at the department of Computer Science and worked as Research Assistant at the University of Freiburg at the department of Telematics, before joining Inria Research Center, where she worked as a Technology Transfer Officer, and later Teratec, to manage its European collaborations with academic and industrial partners and contribute to different EU-funded research projects.

RIAG members also elected Jan Martinovič as their Vice-Chair.

Jan Martinovič is the Head of the Advanced Data Analysis and Simulations Lab at the IT4Innovations National Supercomputing Center, part of VSB – Technical University of Ostrava. He holds a PhD from the same university and has extensive experience leading major R&D activities in information retrieval, data processing and analysis, orchestration platforms for HPC, cloud and AI, and traffic disaster management.

RIAG will continue to provide independent advice to the Governing Board of EuroHPC JU on its research and innovation priorities. The group contributes in particular to the development of the multiannual strategic research and innovation agenda supporting integrated HPC, quantum computing and data ecosystem in the EU, providing advice on activities related to international cooperation and skills development, as well as stakeholder engagement and feedback.

Infrastructure Advisory Group (INFRAG)

Members of INFRAG elected Walter Lioen as their Chair.

Walter Lioen is Senior Advisor at SURF and a member of the management team of its Compute Services Department. He studied mathematics at the University of Amsterdam and began his career as a scientific programmer at CWI. With more than 40 years of experience in HPC, he has held roles ranging from scientific programmer and HPC consultant to team lead and department head. Since joining SURF in 2007, he has been closely involved in major European research computing initiatives, including DEISA, PRACE, and EuroHPC, serving in a variety of advisory and governance roles.

INFRAG members also elected Valentin Plugaru and Mark Parsons as their Vice-Chairs. As the votes of INFRAG members were equally split, it was decided to divide the mandate of the Vice-Chair between the two representatives. Valentin Plugaru will start the mandate on the first year (2026-2027) and will then be substituted by Mark Parsons for the following year (2027-2028) and will conclude the mandate.

Valentin Plugaru is the Chief Technology Officer of LuxProvide. He studied information and computer science at the University of Luxembourg and has nearly 15 years of experience in High Performance Computing; he has worked as part of national and European HPC initiatives, helping shape the roadmap for the European HPC ecosystem and to create Luxembourg’s national supercomputing center.

Mark Parsons is Executive Director and Professor at EPCC at The University of Edinburgh. He holds a PhD in Particle Physics undertaken on the LEP accelerator at CERN in Geneva and joined EPCC in 1994 as a software developer working on several industrial contracts; his research interests include highly distributed data intensive computing and novel hardware design with a specific focus on digital health research.

INFRAG will continue to provide independent advice to the Governing Board on the acquisition, deployment and operation of EuroHPC supercomputers and AI factories, as well as on the federation and interconnection of infrastructure and capability-building activities across Europe, update the multiannual strategic agenda in relation to such activities and organize public consultations.

Quantum Technologies Advisory Group (QTAG)

Members of the newly established QTAG elected Eleni Diamanti as their Chair.

Eleni Diamanti is CNRS Research Director at Sorbonne University and Director of the Paris Centre for Quantum Technologies. She is an expert in quantum technologies, acknowledged by the 2024 CNRS Silver and Innovation medals. She received her PhD in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 2006 and performed her postdoc as a Marie Curie fellow at the Institute of Optics Graduate School in France before joining the CNRS in 2009; her research focuses on experimental quantum cryptography and communication, and on the development of photonic resources and applications for quantum networks.

QTAG members also elected Martin Knufinke as their Vice-Chair.

Martin Knufinke is working as Senior Expert Quantum Computing and Senior IT Consultant at Bull. He is active in multiple groups on national and European levels and has joined Bull in 2014 and is working in the fields of Quantum Computing and High-Performance Computing for manufacturing.

QTAG is a newly created advisory group reflecting the expansion of the EuroHPC JU mandate to include a dedicated quantum technologies pillar. It provides independent expert advice to the EuroHPC JU on matters related to quantum technologies, in particular their development, deployment and integration within the European high performance computing ecosystem.

The group also draws up its contribution to the draft multiannual strategic program in relation to quantum technologies activities and related subjects, contributes to strategic priorities in quantum computing, communication and sensing. It also addresses international cooperation, skills development, standardization, and security considerations.


Source: EuroHPC JU

The post EuroHPC JU Advisory Groups Appoint New Leadership appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 16:04
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The U.S. being a host country for the World Cup generates interest among fans, but less so among those who are not soccer fans.

2026-06-09 16:04
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Low wages and fears of ICE crackdowns have set workers on edge of strike as thousands set to arrive during World Cup

Hospitality and food service workers in several US cities hosting World Cup games are warning of looming labor disputes and possible strikes as the largest single sport tournament in the world gets ready to kick off on 11 June.

In Los Angeles, California, cashiers, dishwashers, cooks, bartenders, concessions workers and food attendants at the SoFi stadium reached a tentative agreement on Tuesday afternoon, but the union noted it had a contractual right to walk off the job if it determines that federal immigration enforcement is threatening worker safety during the World Cup. The US’s opening match, against Paraguay, is scheduled to take place at SoFi Stadium – rebranded as the Los Angeles Stadium for the tournament – on 12 June.

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2026-06-09 16:04
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Bad Bunny and Pope Leo XIV may have radically different personas, but when it comes to pluralist visions, they are brothers in arms.

2026-06-09 20:04
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Bluetooth sleep masks block out light and let you stream audio. I spent weeks testing some of the top-rated ones on the market

My sister has fallen asleep to the dulcet tones of Law & Order every night for years. I myself am partial to the sound of rain at bedtime. A friend, meanwhile, swears by sleepcasts. One gadget that could work for all of us – and may work well for you too – is a Bluetooth sleep mask.

If you like to listen to something as you nod off, earbuds specially designed for sleep are certainly an option. But some people (like my sister, who has a newborn) don’t want to block out all noise, which earbuds tend to do. Others just don’t like the feeling of having something jammed in their ear canals all night, especially if they sleep on their side or stomach.

I tested 42 pairs of wireless earbuds to find the best in the US

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2026-06-09 16:04
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In today's unique economic climate, borrowers need to understand these four specific mortgage rate dos and don'ts.

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The man in charge the last time the US hosted the World Cup marvels at the transformation of football in America over the last 32 years

The Super Bowl-style half-time show curated by Chris Martin for the World Cup final will not be to everybody’s tastes, but one octogenarian American will have a wry smile on his face when Madonna and Shakira walk out on to the pitch at MetLife Stadium next month.

In his role as chair and chief executive of the 1994 World Cup, Alan Rothenberg wanted Whitney Houston to perform on the pitch at the final at Pasadena’s Rose Bowl, only to be overruled by Fifa, who insisted that the singer stay on the sidelines.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 15:00

The European Commission says Apple's decision not to launch Siri AI in the EU is Apple's alone, arguing that the company sought an exemption from Digital Markets Act interoperability rules instead of building a compliant privacy- and security-preserving solution. Apple, meanwhile, says regulators rejected its proposals and claims the DMA would require giving third-party AI systems overly broad access to users' devices. MacRumors reports: Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier told reporters in Brussels: "The decision not to roll out Siri AI in the EU is Apple's and Apple's only. Apple was simply unable to develop interoperability solutions that meet essential EU privacy and security standards. Instead of trying to find a suitable compliance solution, Apple simply made a request to the European Commission to be exempted from their interoperability obligations. That's not an option." Craig Federighi, Apple's senior vice president of Software Engineering, said the company was "deeply disappointed" and cited what it described as regulators' refusal to accept any of Apple's proposals, including a system called Trusted System Agent that would have allowed third-party virtual assistants to safely access the same device capabilities as Siri AI. The Commission's account tells a different story. Rather than negotiating over Apple's proposed solutions, regulators say Apple simply requested a blanket exemption from its interoperability obligations under the Digital Markets Act, something the Commission says is not an available option. Apple's statement framed the DMA's requirements as demanding that any AI system be given "nearly unlimited access" to a user's device.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:53

Fears grow over anti-immigration protests after asylum seeker charged with attempted murder in Northern Ireland

The Sudanese barber shop owner was at his cash register and smiling at the question, “Did he feel safe in Belfast?”, when two men strolling down the street paused at his open doorway and unleashed a sudden, shrieking howl.

It ended as abruptly as it began and without saying a word the two men, white, in their 20s, wearing grey tracksuits, resumed their stroll.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:53

Leon O’Leary threw a smoke grenade and Connor Bishop a traffic cone at officers during disturbance in Southampton

Two men who threw a smoke grenade and traffic cone at police during the violence in Southampton that followed the sentencing of Henry Nowak’s killer have been jailed.

Leon O’Leary, 41, from Basingstoke, Hampshire, was sentenced to three years and one month after throwing a smoke grenade at officers.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 14:52
  • 44-year-old victorious alongside partner Victoria Mboko

  • Pair win 7-6 (2), 6-2 over Melichar-Martinez and Routliffe

At the most tense moment of Serena Williams’s comeback to professional tennis, the score uncertainly balanced at 5-5, 30-30, an audience member could no longer hold her tongue. Her voice booming across all corners of Andy Murray Arena, she shouted: “Come on Serena, come on Victoria. You got it!” From the stands, a sneering spectator responded by stating that he did not understand a single word of those cheers.

Williams, however, understood perfectly. She nodded warmly towards the fan, then she stepped up to the baseline and fired down a 120mph service winner en route to a decisive hold.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:47

Several retired U.S. generals and the former director of a U.S. intelligence agency told CBS News they believe Ukraine now has the upper hand in the war with Russia.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:46

David Stroud grabbed a woman’s hair and asked if he could kiss her two days after legislation took effect

A train passenger has become the first person to be sentenced under a new harassment law after a prosecution brought by the British Transport Police (BTP).

David Stroud, 44, grabbed a woman’s hair and asked her “can I kiss you?” on a rail journey to London on 3 April, two days after the new legislation came into force banning harassment motivated by a person’s sex.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 14:40

The death of the 11-year-old, named only as Lyhanna, has pushed the issue of male violence against girls to the top of the agenda

A lawyer for the family of an 11-year-old girl whose disappearance and murder sparked protests across France has called for more funding for the struggling justice system, amid a political row over the French state’s failure to tackle sexual violence against children.

“Frankly, if the justice system had more resources, this tragedy and all the others wouldn’t have happened,” said the family’s lawyer, François Roujou de Boubée, on Tuesday. “The victim’s family and I trust in the justice system. So enough is enough.”

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:39

Southern Poverty Law Center releases report as US government pursues federal fraud charges against group

A new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) finds hard-right groups have increasingly expanded their influence across the US government, which is pursuing a federal fraud case into the civil rights organization.

Tuesday’s report – which identified 1,263 hate and anti-government groups in operation throughout 2025 – comes less than two months after it was indicted by the government it says the hard right has infiltrated.

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2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 14:17

PALO ALTO, Calif. and NEW YORK, June 9, 2026 — Broadcom Inc., a global technology leader that designs, develops, and supplies semiconductor and infrastructure software solutions, today announced the establishment of the AI XPV Platform with Apollo and Blackstone‘s Credit & Insurance Business as initial anchor investors. The Platform is designed to enable more than 20 gigawatts in compute capacity using Broadcom’s XPUs and networking solutions customized for leading frontier AI labs, including Anthropic and OpenAI, through 2028.

The Platform launches today with an initial tranche of $35 billion led by Apollo, in partnership with Blackstone, to facilitate Anthropic’s previously-announced capacity expansion of more than 1 gigawatt of compute infrastructure expected to deploy in Fluidstack-based sites starting in mid-2026. This builds upon the deep strategic relationship between Broadcom and Anthropic and illustrates the immediate size and capabilities of the Platform.

It also establishes a scalable framework for future deployments of XPU-based compute capacity and networking to enable frontier model training and inference at the lowest cost and lowest power, significantly lowering per-token delivery costs.

“We are at a historic inflection point where the demand for AI compute is fundamentally reshaping the global economic landscape,” said Hock Tan, President and CEO, Broadcom Inc. “This strategic Platform with Apollo and Blackstone synchronizes the world’s most sophisticated capital with Broadcom’s advanced technological roadmap to meet this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity by enabling our rapidly scaling customers, starting with Anthropic, to realize their most ambitious AI visions with speed and certainty.”

“The sheer scale of the global AI opportunity requires a bold, collaborative model,” said Jim Zelter, President, Apollo. “Our investment in this Platform reflects our conviction in Broadcom’s technology leadership and Anthropic’s frontier roadmap. We are proud to deliver the capital foundation that allows this ecosystem to scale efficiently.”

Jon Gray, President, Blackstone, added: “The demand for compute has created an unprecedented opportunity to invest at scale across the AI infrastructure ecosystem, including providing financing through our credit and insurance business. We are proud to support this powerful combination of Broadcom’s exceptional technology and Anthropic’s pioneering models.”

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.

About Apollo

Apollo is a high-growth, global alternative asset manager. In our asset management business, we seek to provide our clients excess return at every point along the risk-reward spectrum from investment grade credit to private equity. For more than three decades, our investing expertise across our fully integrated platform has served the financial return needs of our clients and provided businesses with innovative capital solutions for growth. Through Athene, our retirement services business, we specialize in helping clients achieve financial security by providing a suite of retirement savings products and acting as a solutions provider to institutions. Our patient, creative and knowledgeable approach to investing aligns our clients, businesses we invest in, our employees and the communities we impact, to expand opportunity and achieve positive outcomes. As of March 31, 2026, Apollo had approximately $1.03 trillion of assets under management. To learn more, please visit www.apollo.com.

About Blackstone

Blackstone is the world’s largest alternative asset manager. Blackstone seeks to deliver compelling returns for institutional and individual investors by strengthening the companies in which the firm invests. Blackstone’s over $1.3 trillion in assets under management include global investment strategies focused on real estate, private equity, credit, infrastructure, life sciences, growth equity, secondaries and hedge funds. Further information is available at www.blackstone.com.


Source: Broadcom

The post Broadcom Launches $35B AI Infrastructure Platform with Apollo and Blackstone appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:14

Many Americans spend decades saving for retirement, but lack a plan for using that money once they stop working, a new survey finds. Here's what to know.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:10

CD and high-yield savings accounts remain viable tools for savers. Here's how much an $8,000 deposit will earn in each.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-09 14:10

SANTA CLARA, Calif., June 9, 2026 — d-Matrix, a pioneer in low-latency AI inference for data centers, today announced its Corsair inference accelerator platform is in full production, with products to begin shipping in volume to priority customers.

d-Matrix founders Sudeep Bhoja (left) and Sid Sheth today announced d-Matrix’s Corsair inference accelerator is in full production to meet surging demand from hyperscalers, neoclouds, and frontier labs.

Demand for Corsair has surged as agentic AI tools — led by the late-2025 breakouts of Claude Code and OpenClaw — are pushing inference workloads beyond what GPU-only infrastructure was designed to handle. To solve for this, customers have begun using novel disaggregation techniques that can speed up AI model response time by more than 10x when using heterogeneous computing clusters with a mix of GPUs, CPUs, and accelerators.

With its supply and fabrication services secured, d-Matrix is ramping to meet commitments from high-profile hyperscalers, neoclouds, and frontier AI labs — all eager to deliver faster, more interactive AI experiences at scale.

“We built Corsair specifically for this moment, the Age of AI Inference,” said Sid Sheth, founder and CEO of d-Matrix. “The applications that matter most today — agentic AI, interactive coding, real-time voice agents — live or die on latency. Corsair takes off from where the GPU leaves off, and this summer our customers will be able to experience the turbocharge d-Matrix brings at full rack scale.”

The End of the GPU-Only Era

d-Matrix’s Corsair platform is quickly emerging as the infrastructure of choice for heterogeneous AI compute deployments, where operators pair Corsair accelerators alongside GPUs in the same rack to unlock dramatically faster token generation, supporting a premium-token economy.

Disaggregated computing techniques are increasingly being adopted by hyperscalers and frontier AI labs to slash response latency as well as the compute and energy costs that accompany GPU-only approaches. For disaggregated workloads, GPUs dominate the compute-intensive prefill portion of the workload, while Corsair excels at the decode phase. GPUs and Corsair accelerators operate in concert to deliver premium-level interactive AI experiences that individual users and enterprises are increasingly seeking — and paying for.

Delivering Data Center-Scale Inference

d-Matrix’s SquadRack reference design built with Arista, Broadcom and Supermicro delivers a complete, production-ready rack-scale inference solution. d-Matrix’s acquisition of GigaIO’s data center business this April brought a team of proven rack-scale systems engineers directly into d-Matrix, deepening the company’s expertise in large-scale data center deployment, integration, and field operations and accelerating SquadRack’s path to production.

Designed to run in industry-standard data center environments, SquadRack solutions do not require liquid cooling and can be deployed within days of installation. SquadRack integrates Corsair inference accelerators, d-Matrix JetStream high-speed networking, and d-Matrix’s Aviator software stack into a cohesive rack-level system — purpose-built for the latency-sensitive, always-on inference demands of frontier AI labs and large-scale cloud providers.

d-Matrix provides customers the ability to customize their own server racks, with Corsair-powered solutions available in rack, server and air-cooled PCIe card formats.

Purpose-Built for Supply Chain Certainty

d-Matrix designed Corsair from the ground up with supply chain predictability as a core requirement, not an afterthought. Manufactured in partnership with TSMC and Alchip Technologies on TSMC’s established N6 process node, Corsair benefits from reliable, high-volume manufacturing capability that enables d-Matrix to meet customer commitments on schedule.

Corsair’s SRAM-based in-memory compute chiplet architecture — built on organic substrates, rather than HBM-based CoWoS packaging — is a deliberate design choice that streamlines the supply chain and sidesteps the memory integration complexities that have slowed other AI accelerator deployments. Combined with LP-DDR5 memory technology, d-Matrix has assembled a manufacturing ecosystem built for ease of supply.

With ecosystem partners in place, production underway, and customers able to receive product in volume beginning this summer, d-Matrix is positioned to meet the inference moment the industry has been building toward.

Availability

d-Matrix’s Corsair inference platform is being made available to select, qualified customers. For inquiries and consideration, please visit: https://www.d-matrix.ai/contact-sales.

About d-Matrix

d-Matrix is pioneering accelerated computing for AI inference, breaking through the limits of latency, cost and energy. Its Corsair inference accelerators, JetStream networking accelerators, Aviator software, and SquadRack rack-scale solutions deliver fast, sustainable AI inference at data center scale.

The post d-Matrix Corsair AI Inference Platform Enters Full Production to Meet Customer Demand appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:02

ACTIVATE AI Delivers Token Budgeting and Chargeback Capabilities Across On-premises and Cloud AI Deployments

CHICAGO, June 9, 2026 — Parallel Works, provider of the ACTIVATE control plane for hybrid multi-cloud computing resources, today announced new AI governance and budget management capabilities for ACTIVATE AI, enabling enterprises and government organizations to centrally manage, govern and control AI usage across commercial and privately hosted large language models (LLMs) through a single unified gateway.

The Parallel Works ACTIVATE AI Gateway addresses the growing challenge of uncontrolled token consumption by applying proven governance principles that enterprises utilize for compute and storage. Designed for large enterprises, government/defense organizations and HPC/research environments, the platform addresses the costly challenge of uncontrolled token use as organizations strive to manage escalating AI usage costs.

“Organizations are discovering that the future of AI will be defined as much by governance and economics as by the model itself,” said Matthew Shaxted, CEO, Parallel Works. “As AI adoption expands across departments, teams and cloud providers, token consumption is quickly becoming fragmented and difficult to manage. Enterprises need centralized visibility, accountability and financial controls to ensure AI can scale sustainably across the organization.”

The ACTIVATE AI platform is differentiated by its ability to combine hybrid compute orchestration, GPU governance, Kubernetes management and AI consumption governance, including token budgeting and chargebacks, within a single platform. Organizations are able to centrally connect commercial AI services and self-hosted LLMs from a unified, vendor-neutral API gateway.

The platform supports all OpenAI-compatible providers, Anthropic, Azure OpenAI, AWS Bedrock, and privately hosted LLM models, allowing organizations to govern AI access and consumption consistently across cloud and on-premises environments while avoiding vendor lock-in.

Key capabilities of the ACTIVATE AI Gateway governance module include:

  • Unified virtual API gateway for public and private LLM access.
  • Real-time token usage, budget allocation and reporting.
  • Organization-level governance and tracking at the user, group, department or organization level.
  • AI resource consumption chargeback and cost accounting.
  • Single-pane-of-glass management integrated into existing compute and storage governance.

“Our customers are demanding stronger AI governance capabilities to ensure AI can be deployed securely, responsibly, and at scale,” said Chris Coker, VP Major Accts Aerospace & Defense, FutureTech. “The combination of token budgeting, usage visibility and chargeback, integrated directly into the compute governance environment, gives our clients the controls they need to scale AI responsibly and with confidence.”

ACTIVATE AI Gateway governance capabilities are currently deployed within FutureTech’s large system-integrator environment, supporting thousands of users while managing token consumption across complex AI workloads. The platform helps VARs and system integrators control inference costs and govern AI resources efficiently across cloud and on-premises environments.

“Developers consistently want the state of the art, and in AI, that’s changing day by day. ACTIVATE AI gives organizations a unified governance layer across both commercial AI APIs and private infrastructure, which is critical for anyone running hybrid environments,” said Michael McQuade, Director of Engineering for Parallel Works. “Enterprises want to expand AI access across their teams, but without governance controls, costs and operational risks spiral fast.”

Availability

The ACTIVATE AI Gateway governance and token budgeting capabilities are now available. The functionality is designed for large enterprises, government and defense organizations, HPC environments and research institutions that deploy private GPU infrastructure or consume commercial AI APIs at scale.

About Parallel Works

Parallel Works ACTIVATE is a leading hybrid multi-cloud computing control plane, empowering teams with seamless provisioning, management and sharing of compute resources at scale across on-premises and cloud environments with advanced cost control and budgeting features. ACTIVATE facilitates collaborative research and enhances productivity through intuitive interfaces and API-driven processes, enabling the operating system for complex enterprise computing environments. For more information, visit Parallel Works at parallelworks.com.


Source: Parallel Works

The post Parallel Works Adds AI Governance and Token Budgeting to ACTIVATE AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:01

Decarlos Brown Jr to stay in custody while receiving treatment for remainder of case over Iryna Zarutska’s death

The man accused of fatally stabbing Iryna Zarutska on a Charlotte commuter train in August has been found incompetent to stand trial in federal court for now, the US attorney’s office for the western district of North Carolina said on Tuesday.

Decarlos Brown Jr, 35, is accused of killing Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee, on a Charlotte light rail train in a case that drew national attention after a surveillance camera video depicting the violent attack was released.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:01

Commentary: Apple says its new Siri AI can handle all the details: personalized invitations, creative menus, scheduling and more. Don't expect it to bring a dessert.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 14:00

Meta says it will expand how it uses off-platform activity shared by other businesses to personalize Facebook and Instagram feeds as well as AI responses, not just ads. The change starts in July and can be disabled through the "Activity from other businesses" setting, though Meta says it is not collecting new data as part of the update. The Verge reports: For example, Meta says if you bought a tent online recently, you might see camping-related videos in your Reels feed. "We aren't collecting any new data as part of this update," the blog post says. "This is about using information that businesses already send to us to further improve your experience." Meta spokesperson Emil Vazquez tells The Verge that the company previously only used the activity across its apps, such as likes, views, and follows, to tailor the content you see. The company also started using conversations with its AI assistant to personalize ads last year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:57

Expanded cooperation spans DTCO, IP readiness and design enablement to advance next-generation customer innovation

SAN JOSE, Calif., June 9, 2026 — Cadence has announced an expanded collaboration with Intel Foundry to advance Design Technology Co-Optimization (DTCO) targeting Intel’s next-generation process technologies, beginning with Intel 14A. The new multi-year agreement combines Cadence’s agentic AI-driven EDA and Design IP solutions with Intel’s process innovation and advanced design expertise.

The DTCO collaboration focuses on optimizing tools, flows, and methodologies to deliver industry-leading performance, power, and area (PPA). Cadence and Intel will work closely to optimize Intel 14A to deliver production-ready PDKs. The collaboration will also leverage Cadence’s agentic AI flows and core products to accelerate time-to-market and reduce design risk.

“Advancing our relationship with Intel into a much deeper partnership is a major milestone for both companies,” said Anirudh Devgan, president and chief executive officer, Cadence. “This collaboration will leverage the strengths of both companies to empower customers to unlock new levels of performance, power, and efficiency, advance the state of the art and accelerate the realization of next-generation products.”

“Our expanded collaboration with Cadence reflects Intel Foundry’s continued focus on delivering on its technology roadmap and ecosystem on behalf of our customers,” said Naga Chandrasekaran, executive vice president and general manager of Intel Foundry. “By combining Intel’s process and packaging with Cadence’s AI-driven design tools, we are enabling deeper co-optimization, strengthening our ability to deliver on customers’ needs, and showcasing the ability of both companies to drive innovation at scale.”

About Cadence

Cadence is a market leader in AI and digital twins, pioneering the application of computational software to accelerate innovation in the engineering design of silicon to systems. Our design solutions, based on Cadence’s Intelligent System Design strategy, are essential for the world’s leading semiconductor and systems companies to build their next-generation products from chips to full electromechanical systems that serve a wide range of markets, including hyperscale computing, mobile communications, automotive, aerospace, industrial, life sciences and robotics. In 2024, Cadence was recognized by the Wall Street Journal as one of the world’s top 100 best-managed companies. Cadence solutions offer limitless opportunities—learn more at www.cadence.com.


Source: Cadence

The post Cadence and Intel Foundry Expand DTCO Partnership for Intel 14A Process appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:56

Though WWDC didn't spotlight CarPlay this week, iOS 27 delivers a solid update: EV range integration, video apps and a new Audio MiniPlayer.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:56

Repairing your AC can save you thousands of dollars, but only if you know when fixing it makes financial sense.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 13:47

US embassy came out against UK’s proposed under-16 social media ban, which would affect American firms

White House displeasure over the prospect of an under-16 social media ban will not deter the UK from cracking down on tech platforms, the British government has said.

The technology secretary, Liz Kendall, told the Guardian she was not concerned “in the slightest” by the Trump administration’s intervention in the debate over restrictions, after the US embassy in London posted a notice warning against a ban.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:44

Oysterman and marine veteran favored to win Democratic primary amid a string of controversies

Voters are headed to the polls on Tuesday for primary elections that include a crucial Senate race involving the scandal-haunted Graham Platner.

In Maine, Platner is favored to win the Democratic primary after his main opponent, former governor Janet Mills, suspended her campaign. The incumbent senator, Susan Collins, remains safely at the top of the Republican ticket – just slightly behind newcomer Platner’s lead in polling.

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2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-09 13:41

Political newcomer Graham Platner won a bruising primary fight for the state’s Democratic Senate nomination Tuesday night, when voters easily picked him to take on Republican Susan Collins in November despite damage from stories delving into his past.

Plainspoken populism won the oyster farmer and Marine Corps veteran support among fed-up Mainers, who nominated him in a landslide that The Associated Press called with just 8 percent of the vote in.

“Over the last nine months I have seen Mainers come together behind a vision to take back our power from corporations and billionaires,” Platner said in his acceptance speech Tuesday. “I love every single one of you. Everyone who has shown up at a town hall, who has knocked on a door, who cast their vote — not for me but for a vision of a life in Maine that you can afford; a life of dignity and a government that actually serves its people.”

Platner’s appeal seemed unshaken amid months of negative press stemming from his inflammatory comments on Reddit and an ill-advised tattoo resembling a Nazi symbol. But a recent series of damaging stories in national media, including revelations in the Wall Street Journal about extramarital sexting and allegations in the New York Times of abusive behavior in past relationships, have given some voters and political observers pause. Others say that in Maine, a fiercely independent state where residents nurse a healthy suspicion of influence “from away,” Platner supporters have dismissed those stories as meddling from an establishment fearful of a political maverick.

“From what I can tell, I don’t think the Times piece moved the needle much,” said Shay Stewart-Bouley, a longtime Maine resident who has written both critically and supportively of Platner on her blog, Black Girl in Maine. “I heard some women say it made them uneasy, but I haven’t heard anyone say it changed how they’re going to vote.”

In other cases, the coverage appears to have cemented Platner’s status as an outsider to an establishment embodied by Collins, who has represented Maine in the Senate since 1997. Like many incumbents nationwide, the Republican senator will have to run amid a shrinking job market and rising costs, points that Platner has seized on throughout his campaign. And Collins’s association with the establishment could prove a major liability, even among onetime supporters of President Donald Trump, according to Charles Pray, a former state senator and veteran figure in Maine Democratic politics.

“Part of Trump’s rise was a total frustration with incumbents and people in power, and a lot of people who were Trump supporters who hoped he was going to address rising grocery prices and stuff now see him saying that affordability is not an issue,” said Pray. “Well, affordability is a big issue in Maine, and I think that hurts Collins.”

Platner faced a nominal challenge in Tuesday’s primary from Maine Gov. Janet Mills, who suspended her campaign in April but remained on the ballot, and from David Costello, a former Democratic nominee in the 2024 Senate race who was little more than an afterthought in the latest contest.

Related

The Left Put Its Faith in Graham Platner. Will He Break Its Heart?

Just days before the primary, the Times reported disturbing allegations about Platner, including that an ex-girlfriend accused him of drunkenly locking her in a room during a fight and physically restraining her at times. (Platner has acknowledged the relationship with the accuser, a longtime Republican operative in Washington, but denies he engaged in violent behavior.)

Pray said that among people he’s spoken with, the allegations, while concerning, are undercut by Collins’s support for the nomination of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh despite the sexual assault accusations against him, and by her support of Trump despite the many accusations against him and his consistently hostile behavior toward women interviewers.

“I think people aren’t buying the double standard. She confirmed Kavanaugh, she supports Trump despite his behavior,” Pray said, pointing to the president’s recent outburst on NBC News. “I spoke to three women, including Republicans, who were very upset by that and who said ‘Susan just goes along with that.’”

To Platner’s most ardent supporters, the revelations look like meddling by an establishment that never wanted him to be the candidate, said Andy O’Brien, a former state senator who writes about politics in the state and supports Platner. (O’Brien works for the AFL-CIO of Maine, which has endorsed Platner, but did not speak to The Intercept on behalf of his employer).

Related

GOP Megadonor Leonard Leo Is Bankrolling a Website on the Warpath Against Somalis

“So many people know Graham, and they listen to what he says, they don’t listen to all the crap coming from Washington and New York and California,” said O’Brien. “They like Graham because he speaks to them, and they believe him and trust him. They know he had a messy personal life. I think that there’s a lot of grace that they’re showing him, partly because of his post-traumatic stress from combat and also because there’s this sense that Trump has already lowered the bar so much.”

Mostly, however, Mainers are weary of the national attention the primary brought to their state — with little hope in sight of a let-up, Stewart-Bouley said.

“The general mood is people are really tired of this primary,” she said before Platner’s Tuesday night victory. “But if Platner wins, I suspect we’re not going to be out of the woods.”

In his remarks Tuesday, Platner acknowledged errors in his past and thanked the people of Maine for putting their trust in him despite them.

“Redemption is not just some simple or easy destination. It’s a journey. I’ve made mistakes in my life. Mistakes that I regret, that I live with and that I continue to learn from. And I’m still far from perfect. But every day I wake up and I try to be a little bit better and a little bit kinder than I was before,” Platner said. “And if you give me the chance, I will be a senator for the people who cannot afford to buy a senator.”

Update: June 9, 2026, 9:39 p.m. ET
This story has been updated with news of Platner’s victory in the Maine primary.

The post Graham Platner Wins in Maine, Turning Anti-Establishment Fight on Susan Collins appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:30

Russia’s ‘spring offensive’ is failing and Kyiv’s drones have brought the war to Moscow and other cities. Europe must strengthen Zelenskyy’s hand further

Last week, Vladimir Putin responded with characteristic disdain to an open letter from Volodymyr Zelenskyy calling for face-to-face talks. Declining to mention Ukraine’s president by name at an economic forum in St Petersburg, he said that he saw “no point” in a meeting and insisted that all Russia’s war aims, including the annexation of the entirety of the eastern Donbas region, were on course to be met.

Mr Putin is “in blood stepped in so far” that agreeing to a ceasefire while those messianic goals remain unachieved may seem more politically dangerous than continuing a war which has cost an estimated 500,000 Russian lives. But as a concerted Ukrainian drone attack on St Petersburg the next day vividly illustrated, his confident assertions are increasingly belied by facts on the ground and in the air.

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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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 13:18

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-09 13:14

Hey folks, I’m a newer rider, just bought a pint a couple weeks ago but already wishing I had more power and longer range. My budget is pretty limited, so the used market is really my only option here. There’s a Onewheel plus XR for sale near me with 600 miles that’s about $800. From the pics it looks almost brand new, no scrapes and fire looks new. Seems like a fair price based on other listings in the area. Am I looking at a good deal or will there be regrets in my future? I just don’t want to buy something and regret it (again) but I’m not too knowledgable about these things yet. Any info or advice is much appreciated.

Edit: bought it, love it. Battery seems to be perfectly fine, the previous owner was very knowledgeable and owned a bunch of these, so storage and upkeep was done properly as far as I can tell. Took it 17miles today with no issues. Decided to keep the pint as well since my wife and kids are all psyched to ride with me. Thanks everyone for the advice and input!

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:13

Police dispersed demonstrators in Nanyuki, 120 miles from Nairobi, amid rising anger at US plans

Kenyan police have shot dead a man during a protest against a proposed Ebola quarantine facility for US citizens.

Patrick Wahome, who has organised protests in Nanyuki against the centre, told Reuters on Tuesday the man died from a gunshot wound to the head. Reporters from the agency saw his body lying motionless in a police van with a large head wound.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:11

Daniel Crago says he feels ‘extremely lucky’ after encounter with bear at Glacier national park last month

As the large roaring grizzly bear charged down at him from across a snow field in Montana and mauled him, hiker Daniel Crago had just enough time to put his arm up and think: “This is it.”

But two weeks after that perilous, exceedingly rare encounter in Glacier national park, Crago, 32, is still alive, recovering after three surgeries and feeling “extremely lucky”, he said on Monday in an interview with ABC News.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:10

Geoffrey Wall is alleged to have flown over 900 flights domestically and internationally between 2009 and 2025

A former Air Canada pilot has been charged after flying for years without a proper license, Canadian police have said.

Geoffrey Wall, of Barrie, Ontario, is alleged to have operated as an airline captain between 2009 and 2025 without a license to fly large commercial passenger planes, according to Peel regional police.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 13:07

Luca Parmitano to pilot all-male crew of four paving way for planned first human landing of Artemis IV in 2028

Jared Isaacman, the Nasa administrator, hailed the creation of “Earth’s first starfleet” on Tuesday as he revealed the Artemis III crew and details of the next stages of the space agency’s project to return humans to the moon.

An Italian astronaut, Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency (ESA), will be the pilot of the planned two-week mission to lower Earth orbit next year that will test lunar landers from private companies Blue Origin and SpaceX.

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2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 13:01

Eleven U.S. cities will host hundreds of thousands of World Cup fans over the next few weeks.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:00

Commentary: Siri AI and Apple Intelligence updates are less about "catching up" with competitors and more about a broader mobile evolution.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 13:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: Microsoft has shut down a wave of its own repositories on GitHub, including those related to Azure and AI coding agents, as it investigates a data breach, according to research from cybersecurity researchers and a statement given to 404 Media by Microsoft. Hackers planted malware that would harvest peoples' credentials when they opened it in AI coding tools like Claude Code or Gemini CLI, according to one set of researchers. The exact contours of the breach are unclear, but researchers say Microsoft has disabled more than 70 of its own repositories, and pointed to a particular package that was previously compromised. Last week, cybersecurity website OpenSourceMalware.com, which acts as a clearing house for indicators of supply chain attacks so defenders can secure their own networks, and which also publishes its own write-ups, wrote about the mass disabling of Microsoft GitHub repositories. "GitHub disabled 73 Microsoft repositories across four of its GitHub organizations -- the entire Azure Functions org, the whole Durable Task family, and a row of AI sample apps -- in a 105-second sweep on June 5," the website wrote on Friday. Is it very unusual for any company, let alone Microsoft, to disable so many of its own repositories in one go. They include 49 related to Azure, Microsoft's cloud computing arm, and some concerning AI agents. The shutdown repositories also include ones related to durabletask, a Microsoft development tool. Researchers from StepSecurity wrote on Friday that the GitHub closures came after a malicious commit was pushed to the durabletask repository. That attack planted configuration files that would harvest peoples' credentials when they opened the repository in Claude Code, Gemini CLI, Cursor, or VS Code, StepSecurity wrote. Microsoft said in a statement: "Our priority is to protect customers and the broader ecosystem. We temporarily removed some repositories as we investigated potential malicious content. Some of these repos have been restored after review, while others may remain offline while work continues. As part of our investigation, we notified a small number of customers who may have pulled down content from the affected repositories. We will continue to investigate, and if anything further is identified that requires customer action, we will reach out directly through our established support channels."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 12:55

Commentary: MacOS Tahoe's worst feature is finally being addressed, and it has nothing to do with AI or Siri.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 12:46

Sora, Donald and Goofy are coming back for a new adventure.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 12:30

Earthquake was region’s strongest tremor in nearly 150 years and was also felt in parts of Mexico including Cancún

An earthquake on Monday off the coast of Cuba, which was that region’s strongest tremor in nearly 150 years, could be felt in Florida and parts of Mexico.

The 6.1-magnitude earthquake, which struck in the afternoon, occurred approximately 65 miles (105km) north-west of Mantua, Cuba, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS). The USGS added that the earthquake had a depth of 16 miles.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 12:20

Tech company says it ‘caught and disrupted’ NSO Group’s attempts to access accounts in Jordan and Lebanon

A spyware firm has been targeting WhatsApp users with malicious links in contravention of a US court order forbidding it from doing so, Meta has said.

In a post, Meta said WhatsApp had “caught and disrupted spear phishing attempts” by NSO Group, which a spokesperson said targeted a handful of users in Jordan and Lebanon. It had also caught the group creating “test accounts and groups” on WhatsApp.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 12:12

House report alleged governor and state attorney general knew of ‘widespread taxpayer fraud’ in social programs

The US vice-president, JD Vance, asked the Department of Justice to investigate Tim Walz, his rival in the 2024 election, after a congressional report renewed allegations of inaction and retaliation over fraud schemes in Minnesota.

In the Trump administration’s latest broadside against the midwestern state and its political leaders, Vance referred Walz, its Democratic governor, and Keith Ellison, its Democratic attorney general, for investigation.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 17:49

Apple's software event, the last for outgoing CEO Tim Cook, gave us an early look at new features for iOS and MacOS and an overhauled Siri.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 18:08

Police appeal for calm as graphic video of a Belfast stabbing attack fuels calls for anti-immigration protests in Northern Ireland.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-10 18:33

Meta pledged to invest $115 million to train electricians, plumbers and other workers needed to operate data centers.

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NHS England plans to roll out Microsoft Copilot to 505,000 clinicians and support staff after a 30,000-person pilot claimed the AI assistant saved users an average of 43 minutes a day on administrative work. The Register reports: The rollout won't happen overnight. NHS England said that each trust will receive a central allocation of licenses based on headcount, typically starting with around 2,000 Copilot seats, and that more than half a million staff are expected to have access by October 2026. The NHS has no shortage of administrative work to throw at the software. The rollout envisions Copilot helping with discharge paperwork, bed management, rota planning, meeting minutes, board papers, briefings, data analysis, and assorted HR, finance, and procurement tasks. NHS organizations will also receive access to Copilot Studio, Microsoft's toolkit for building custom AI agents. NHS England said trusts will be able to develop agents for tasks such as handling Freedom of Information requests, processing complaints, reducing helpdesk workloads, and assisting with financial analysis. A governance framework called Agent 365 will oversee the deployment of those systems.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 11:58

People flee historic district of ancient city after airstrikes hit residential areas and damage archaeological sites

Israel has bombed the city of Tyre, killing eight and injuring at least 32 people, and struck dozens of other villages in south Lebanon as it issued forced evacuation orders for the historic Christian quarter of the ancient city for the first time.

Israel struck the al-Masaken neighbourhood without warning on Tuesday morning, sending smoke plumes high above the city’s buildings and igniting fires. Further airstrikes were carried out across the city and a series of bombings hit Abbasieh, a village north of Tyre.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 11:55

Your credit card balance can quietly reshape your retirement healthcare, and not always in the way you'd expect.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 11:55

Pontiff appeals in Catalan for harmony on Barcelona leg of Spain tour after making football foes in city

To the delight of many, Pope Leo XIV kicked off the Barcelona leg of his week-long visit to Spain with a few words in Catalan, calling on the faithful who had gathered in the city’s cathedral on Tuesday “to build harmony and communion beyond all polarisation”.

The pontiff’s familiar and commendable plea for people to set aside their differences may, however, have come a little late. Three days earlier, while chatting to journalists on the flight to Spain, Leo had made an awkward confession.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-09 11:49

Can Iraq’s new prime minister finally rein in its armed factions? Expert comment thilton.drupal

The Iran war has seemingly created a potential opportunity to integrate armed groups into the state. But significant hurdles remain.

Saraya al-Salam fighters in the city of Samarra

As the US-Israeli war with Iran drags on, Iraq’s government under new Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi faces a challenge that has plagued successive governments: how to establish meaningful authority over the dozens of armed groups, loosely connected under the umbrella organization of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), that operate outside the government’s direct command. The issue has become increasingly urgent because some of these groups, backed by Iran, are drawing Iraq into the regional conflict that Baghdad has sought to avoid.

The long-standing issue has gained fresh momentum in recent weeks. Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who leads the Saraya al-Salam armed group, announced his support for its integration in May. More notably, Qais al-Khazali, the head of the Asaib Ahl al-Haq armed group and a long-time Tehran ally who has recently increased his focus on domestic Iraqi politics, also signalled his group would integrate into the state. While Sadr has made similar pledges before, it is noteworthy that such rhetoric is now being echoed by a wider range of actors. 

However, other factions have refused. These include groups that are more deeply embedded in Iran’s ‘axis of resistance’, among them Kataeb Hezbollah and Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, who have made it clear that they will continue to fight regardless of Baghdad’s policies. 

Their position exposes the limits of any integration effort: the groups with the greatest domestic political stake in Iraqi institutions are the most amenable to integration, while groups with more loyalty to Tehran’s regional project have less incentive to subordinate themselves to the government in Baghdad. 

Formal incorporation does not necessarily change who holds real authority.

The key question is whether the Iraqi government and its allies have both the ability and the will to confront these groups. The recent killing of a government intelligence officer in a drone attack, which Iraq’s foreign minister attributed to ‘factions from the inside’, suggests that confrontation will likely be dangerous. 

Every new Iraqi government arrives with ambitious promises. Yet governing reform agendas tend to lose momentum once confronted by powerful political parties, entrenched patronage networks and armed actors with influence inside and outside of the government. Zaidi’s new government must now consider whether the war has provided a potential opportunity to break this cycle, or whether these fundamental obstacles remain.

No longer neutral

Baghdad has attempted to shield Iraq from the escalating regional conflict that followed Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel. Yet the latest phase of the US-Israeli confrontation with Iran has exposed the limits of that strategy.

During previous rounds of escalation, particularly the 12-day war in June 2025, Iran largely instructed its allied Iraqi armed groups to stand down. Preserving stability in Iraq served Tehran’s interests: Iraq provided an important economic lifeline amid sanctions and offered strategic depth that Iran was reluctant to jeopardize.

That calculation has changed. Tehran sees itself as in an existential conflict and no longer seeks to preserve the status quo in the region or in Iraq. Instead, it increasingly sees Iraq as a key arena through which it can project influence and reinforce a new regional deterrence as it seeks to raise the economic and security costs of continued conflict for its adversaries. 

During the war, Iran-aligned Iraqi militias have claimed attacks against US interests in Iraq and the region, while the US and Israel have carried out strikes on groups in Iraq. The presence of armed groups in Iraq has diminished Baghdad’s room for manoeuvre as the US/Israel and Iran play out their confrontation on Iraqi territory. 

A political opening?

In recent years, many Iraqi faction leaders have experienced the benefits of the country’s relative stability. While other countries connected with Tehran’s project descended into conflict and economic crisis, Iraq has enjoyed relative calm and periods of economic growth. PMF leaders acquired parliamentary seats, ministerial portfolios and influence throughout the civil service. For many of them, participation in government became more profitable than permanent resistance. 

The current war therefore threatens the gains they have made from stability. As Iraq becomes a battlefield, resistance is increasingly bad for business. Together, these developments have created a potential political opening as the interests of some PMF leaders increasingly align with the government’s interest in preventing militias from dragging the country into further conflict. 

The push for action is not coming solely from within Iraq. The Trump administration has become increasingly impatient with Baghdad, demanding stronger action against Iran-aligned armed groups and greater government control over weapons. Tom Barrack, who was already playing an active role before being recently formally announced as special envoy to Iraq, has welcomed integration in line with the broader US goal of reducing the influence of Iran-backed armed organisations across the region. 

Washington has continued to impose sanctions on individuals and institutions suspected of facilitating Iranian influence. Iraqi officials worry that inaction could expose the country to greater economic and diplomatic pressure, including restrictions on access to dollar flows that are critical to Iraq’s economy. 

The integration illusion

Yet even if the political conditions for integration are becoming more favourable, implementation remains extraordinarily difficult. Iraq has seen similar processes before. For example, the Badr Corps paramilitary formally entered government institutions after 2003, but this did not sever its pre-existing political loyalties and it continued to exercise influence outside of government. 

This reflects a broader characteristic of the Iraqi political system. Power is frequently exercised through informal networks. Decisions are often made in party headquarters rather than government offices. Senior officials may answer as much to political or armed patrons as they do to their formal superiors.

The same challenge applies to militia integration. Moving fighters into state institutions does not automatically transfer their loyalty to the government. As one Iraqi fighter recently remarked to me: ‘What is integration? Moving the gun from my right hand to my left hand.’ Formal incorporation does not necessarily change who holds real authority.

The crucial issue is not whether fighters keep their guns. Iraq is awash with small arms. The more important question is whether factions will surrender the drones and rockets that provide their leaders with confidence that they retain the means to defend their interests independently of the state. Without addressing those capabilities, integration risks becoming an administrative exercise rather than a genuine transfer of coercive power to Baghdad.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 11:30

AI is creating a new set of demands for HPC centers. Researchers are no longer focused only on training models. Many are now looking for inference services and AI agents that can be used as part of their everyday research. For HPC centers, that means figuring out how to provide these services at scale and make them work alongside existing HPC infrastructure. 

Those issues were a major focus of the TPC26 session, “Toward Scientific AI Platforms: Inference, Agents, and AI Services at HPC Facilities.” The discussion brought together speakers from national labs, supercomputing centers, industry, and research organizations to share how they are building and operating AI services for researchers.

Participants included Dr. İlkay Altıntaş, Chief Data Science Officer at the San Diego Supercomputer Center and Principal Investigator of the National Data Platform; Dr. Venkat Vishwanath, AI lead at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility; Dr. Jason Haga of Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST); Samantha Sury of HPE; Dr. Paola Buitrago of the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center; Dr. Shoaja Fan, and Dr. Dan Stanzione, Executive Director of the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC).

Dr. İlkay Altıntaş presents on AI inference services and the National Research Platform at TPC26.

Dr. Altıntaş kicked off the discussion with an overview of the National Research Platform, which provides researchers access to AI models through shared services.

“We have to think of it as three different layers,” said Dr. Altıntaş. “There’s definitely an infrastructure layer here, compute, storage and everything around it. This is a bit like HPC services, but instead of core hours, we think of tokens.”

The National Research Platform currently offers nine open models and is designed to give researchers access to AI capabilities without having to deploy and manage their own infrastructure. The topic came up repeatedly throughout the session as speakers discussed how HPC centers are adapting to growing demand for inference services and AI tools.

Building those services also requires infrastructure designed specifically for inference. That was the focus of Dr. Haga’s presentation, which outlined Japan’s efforts to evaluate a range of AI accelerators and inference technologies through a national testbed initiative.

“What we’re trying to do is evaluate diverse and cutting-edge AI accelerators and developing technologies to realize highly performant inferencing services and ways to actually access these different computing resources,” said Haga.

For researchers, the hardware itself is often secondary. What matters is whether the service is available, performs well, and can be integrated into their work without requiring them to become experts in the underlying infrastructure.

The project is designed to help researchers experiment with different AI hardware platforms and also to offer a framework for deploying inference services. The effort is exploring how a broader mix of accelerators could support future scientific AI workloads.

The presentation highlighted a challenge facing many HPC facilities: researchers may not care what hardware is running underneath, but they increasingly expect AI services to be readily available when they need them.

Dr. Jason Haga discusses AI inference infrastructure and accelerator research at TPC26.

While much of the discussion focused on infrastructure and technology, Dr. Stanzione argued that economics may ultimately prove to be the bigger challenge.

“I think what will become the thorny issue for us is that tokens, as it turns out, cost money,” said Stanzione. “When you have people aggressively use tokens, there’s a lot of labs we’ve seen talk about forgone usage in the last few months.”

As AI services become more widely available, usage is rising quickly. That creates a different set of pressures than traditional HPC workloads. This is particularly the case as institutions try to balance growing demand with finite budgets. According to Stanzione, the long-term challenge may not be building inference platforms – but finding sustainable ways to operate them.

“I do think among our many technical issues, the financial side of this is probably going to drive more of what we do than anything else in the long run,” he said.

The discussion offered a glimpse into how HPC facilities are adapting to the next phase of AI adoption. While much of the industry’s attention remains focused on models and hardware, speakers often returned to the practical and inevitable realities of delivering AI as a service.

From shared inference platforms and accelerator testbeds to the economics of token consumption, the challenges discussed during this presentation suggest that the future of scientific AI may depend as much on operations and infrastructure as it does on advances in the models themselves.

The post TPC26: Toward Scientific AI Platforms at HPC Facilities appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 11:24

We would like to hear from fans in New York and around the world about their reactions to the Knicks’ performance in the NBA finals

The New York Knicks are leading the NBA finals 2-1 against the San Antonio Spurs, much to the excitement of fans across the world. It’s their first appearance in the playoff finals since 1999, when they lost the best-of-seven series to the very same Texas team.

We would like to hear from New Yorkers and Knicks fans, both in the state and around the globe, about how they’re feeling in this current moment. With the Knicks doing so well after so long, how are you celebrating? Are you still optimistic despite the Spurs’ close win in Madison Square Garden on Monday? How are you feeling about the future?

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 11:13

US spy-tech company to challenge London mayor’s intervention after he raised concerns over breach of procurement rules

Palantir intends to sue the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, after he blocked a contract between the US spy-tech firm and the Metropolitan police.

The Met had planned to use Palantir’s software to automate intelligence analysis in criminal investigations, until Khan intervened in late May, sparking a row between the UK’s largest police force and the mayor’s office.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 11:12

Banks, crypto firms and Kremlin oil reserves also targeted in 21st set of measures since full-scale invasion of Ukraine

The EU hopes to ban Russian soldiers from entering its territory as part of further sanctions against Moscow that also target banks, crypto firms and the Kremlin’s oil revenues.

Announcing the proposals on Tuesday, the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said: “We propose for the first time to ban from entry into the European Union anyone who has served in the Russian armed forces since the beginning of the war. So Europe stays off limit for anyone who has participated in the invasion of Ukraine, as simple as that.”

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 11:03

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as the AI trade bounces back

The pound is strengthening against the US dollar today, as calm returns to the markets.

Sterling is up a third of a cent at $1.3376.

A light week in terms of macroeconomic news out of the UK meant the focus for sterling traders was mostly elsewhere. We did see an MPC member (Greene) stating that she would consider voting for a hike at the next Bank of England meeting later this month.

A notable upward revision in the PMI business indices last week suggests that the initial confidence drop was overstated and that the UK economy is more resilient to the Middle East events than first feared. We look to this week’s April monthly GDP data, released Friday, to validate this modestly optimistic view.

“Just when the supersized tech rally was looking a little tired, along comes the news of OpenAI’s decision to IPO.

Presumably the move has been spurred along by Anthropic’s recent move towards a public listing, but and now markets face the test of yet another superheavyweight firm listing to test demand for these highly-valued companies that promise to reshape not just the investing landscape, but the entirety of human society.”

The race is on to extract money out of the roar of enthusiasm for companies providing the backbone to the artificial intelligence revolution. There’s now a hat trick of mega listings on the cards, with OpenAI’s filing for an IPO coming hot on the heels of Anthropic and SpaceX. The research company behind the hugely successful ChatGPT had first-mover advantage, buoyed by an early deal with Microsoft, but Anthropic has gained ground and is tackling adeptly from behind, winning reams of enterprise contracts.

The price of staying at the top of the game is eye-watering for OpenAI – it’s estimated to be spending more than $100 billion a year on the infrastructure and processing power to support its services and power the next generation of AI models. To stay high and dry in its AI fortress, the company reckons that by spending at this level, it will create a moat too difficult to cross for the competition, enabling it to keep raking in revenues and eventually turn big profits.

OpenAI is currently valued at $850bn, the ‘baby’ of the group, since Anthropic is now valued ahead of OpenAI at $965bn. The company laid out the ‘third phase of OpenAI’ on Monday and said that it is undertaking research into artificial general intelligence, and looking at becoming a ‘product company’.

The latter is interesting for investors, since it would be a major potential source of future revenue. Although it is early days, if OpenAI launches its own product range, it could become a major competitor to Apple and Google, and their share prices are worth watching closely on Tuesday.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 11:01

National average gas price stands at about $4.16 per gallon as Americans grapple with price hikes sparked by the war

Donald Trump has claimed US fuel prices are “not very high, relatively speaking” as his administration grapples with affordability concerns after the surge in costs sparked by his war on Iran.

The national average gas price stood at about $4.16 per gallon on Tuesday, according to AAA – $0.37 lower than a month ago, but still about $1 more expensive than the same time last year.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 11:00

Shasta county has one of the state’s highest rates of suicide and gun ownership. Here’s how locals are trying to combat it

Like many men in the mountainous California county of Shasta, about 200 miles north of San Francisco, Bill Rocha loved to hunt and fish, spending the infernal summers out on the lake in his boat. For decades he made his living as a contractor, working hard with his hands every day. And like many men in rural parts of the state, Bill was a gun owner. He had several hunting rifles, some of which he kept locked in a safe, and another firearm that he kept unlocked in his car.

Kelly Rocha, his daughter, described him as extremely sociable, but in private things were starting to fray. She didn’t know the extent of what her father was struggling with until she got a call one night in 2019. She had slept through two voicemails from her father’s wife, but finally picked up when her own mother called. “It was after midnight,” recalled Kelly, who was then 43. “She told me that my dad went out to his truck and killed himself.”

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 11:00

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has given Apple, Google, and other tech firms until September to introduce device-level protections that prevent children from taking, sharing, or viewing explicit images. "If businesses do not comply within three months, legislation will be brought forward requiring the protection to be added to all phones and tablets sold in the UK," reports The Guardian. "Tech firms that fail to do so could face fines, and their senior managers could be made criminally liable." From the report: "Today, I am calling on tech companies operating in this country to introduce vice controls that prevent children from sending and receiving sexually explicit images. Because this is not an impossible challenge," he said. "If they choose not, then we will act and we will change the law." [...] Under the changes, sexual predators will be prevented from being able to exploit and abuse victims through their devices, and children stopped from being able to access pornography, the Home Office said. Adults will still be able to take, share or view nude content once they have verified their age. In the Commons, Melanie Ward, the Labour MP for Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy, said: "It's time to stop asking social media companies to make their products safe, and instead time to start requiring them to do so through regulation." Clive Efford, the Labour MP for Eltham and Chislehurst, said the "sociopaths" running social media platforms had no concern for the welfare of children. "The only message that they're going to listen to is if there's legislation put before this house that is going to act and send a clear message to them." The proposal is designed to sit alongside the Online Safety Act, which requires companies to have processes for removing material that is illegal or harmful to children.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 10:56

A man suspected of driving while impaired was attacked by an alligator after attempting to flee police in Louisiana, authorities said.

2026-06-09 12:04
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  • Spurs had 24-8 free-throw advantage in second half

  • Towns: Officiating didn’t cost us the game

  • New York have 2-1 lead in NBA finals

Knicks coach Mike Brown had harsh words for the officials about what he characterized as inconsistent foul calls in New York’s 115-111 loss to the San Antonio Spurs in Game 3 of the NBA finals.

The Spurs took 24 free throws to the Knicks’ eight in the second half Monday night at Madison Square Garden. Fourteen of San Antonio’s attempts came in the third quarter, when New York took just three. In the final period, frustrations boiled over: the Knicks were whistled three times in the opening 64 seconds, and within three minutes they were in the bonus.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 10:53

Deal to create a streaming and sports powerhouse will be scrutinised by Competition and Markets Authority

The UK competition watchdog has opened an investigation into Paramount Skydance’s $110bn (£82bn) takeover of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD).

The deal will create a media powerhouse controlling assets including the Paramount and HBO Max streaming services, Channel 5 and TNT Sports, which broadcasts Champions League, Premier League and the Olympics, the Hollywood studios behind franchises including Superman, Batman and Top Gun, as well as HBO, home to shows including Game of Thrones, The White Lotus and Succession.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 10:46

Head of Chatham House Ukraine Forum gives evidence to UK Parliament Defence Committee on Ukraine war News release jon.wallace

Orysia Lutsevych provided evidence on 9 June, discussing Ukraine’s war effort, the impact of the war on civilians, and public attitudes towards a ceasefire with Russia.

Head of Chatham House’s Ukraine Forum Orysia Lutsevych gave oral evidence to the UK Parliament Defence Committee on 9 June, during a one-off session – discussing the outlook for the war in Ukraine and the possibility of a ceasefire. Her evidence follows the publication of the new Chatham House report, How a Russia–Ukraine ceasefire could imperil Ukrainian and European security.

During her evidence, Orysia discussed the factors that have been contributing to Ukraine’s recent success on the battlefield in the war with Russia, including defence industry innovation, unity of purpose among Ukrainians, and increasing European support amid US withdrawal. 

Orysia Lutsevych speaking at Parliament on 9 June.

Orysia Lutsevych speaking at Parliament on 9 June.

She also described Ukraine’s challenges: a population exhausted by constant Russian bombardment; internal displacement; and debate about conscription and remuneration. 

Orysia also described growing support inside Ukraine for a ceasefire and the conditions that Ukrainians would accept – resting on credible security guarantees.

Addressing the current situation, Orysia said:

‘I would say the support inside Ukraine for a ceasefire…is growing compared to the start of the war. Ukrainians would accept a ceasefire along the current front line… under the condition of the presence of the multinational force that will jointly with Ukraine…deter the next Russian invasion. That support is strong…but when you start subtracting that multinational force [from an agreement]…of course support for the ceasefire decreases. 

‘I think the main goal of Ukraine is to ensure the next generation of Ukrainians are not fighting against Russia again. But we still see in public opinion polling a strong commitment to endure…for as long as it takes.’

Orysia also called on the UK government to increase its production and supply of long range missiles and air defence interceptors to help Ukraine defend itself against Russian attacks on its cities and critical infrastructure.

Watch the session in full.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 10:34

The Defense Department made changes after a list was released with many religious groups tagged “Christian” but not the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 10:27

Father and mother of Annabel Rook praise her dedication to helping others and want to focus on her legacy

A retired Old Bailey judge has paid tribute to his daughter after her killer was jailed for life.

Clifton George, 45, was sentenced on Tuesday to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 23 years after being found guilty of the murder of Annabel Rook, 46, whom he stabbed in the living room of her home in Stoke Newington, north London, in June last year.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 10:27

Audience members said baby’s cooing and gurgling ruined Branagh’s return to the RSC after 30 years, with some seeking refunds

Boatswain! The opening scene of Shakespeare’s seminal play The Tempest, in which Prospero conjures up a violent storm to shipwreck his treacherous brother, is enough to wake up anyone – let alone a baby.

Audience members at a matinee performance of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s production, starring Kenneth Branagh as Prospero, complained after a baby gurgled and cooed its way throughout the entire first half.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 10:22

Nick Reiner is accused of stabbing his parents Rob and Michele Singer Reiner to death at their home in December.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 10:15

Reform had previously suggested Farage would be ‘steering clear’ of event, modelled on US conservative gathering

Nigel Farage will be headlining at an American conservative summit brought to the UK by Liz Truss next month alongside hard-right speakers, despite his party previously suggesting he would be “steering clear”.

The Reform UK leader has announced he will speak in July at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), which claims it wants to “save Britain, save the west”.

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2026-06-09 10:00

Gabriel Raimondo put his A-levels on hold to run in Channel Islands and ‘represent the younger voice’

Most politicians who win an election in Jersey are probably satisfied with a pat on the back from their supporters and a mention in the local newspapers.

But after becoming one of the youngest politicians in the world, Gabriel Raimondo received a message of congratulations from Donald Trump.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:50

The president’s new Craposseum is the perfect venue for Vance, Hegseth and others to battle for favour. Fight, fight, fight indeed

On behalf of the US administration, the American embassy in London has published a notice advising the UK government not to ban social media for the under-16s. Thanks, but … we didn’t ask? Or perhaps that’s uncharitable. It’s actually a privilege to take child protection lectures from a country where the leading cause of death in children and adolescents is gunshot wounds. Are we allowed to suggest a surprisingly obvious way to help with that grimly perennial problem – or is international advice just a one-way street?

Either way, lectures from Donald Trump’s administration have not been in short supply in recent days, with the US defence secretary deciding that a D-day commemoration address was a seemly moment to dump all over Europe. It’s always painful to be reminded of Pete Hegseth, with his fundamentalist “body art” and Mr Whippy hair – primarily because it dilutes the purity of one’s loathing for JD Vance. (Who, it won’t have escaped you, was also on the international lecture circuit last week.) But standing at the podium in Normandy, Hegseth had just phoned in some stuff about how wars are won, when he got to the needle-scratch subject-change you sensed he’d made the transatlantic journey for. “Sadly,” began this here-it-comes moment, “today, different European beaches are stormed by different, dangerous ideologies. Beaches in Spain, Italy, Greece and Bulgaria, boats and men arrive.”

Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:49

States across the Midwest and northern Plains could see ongoing flooding as severe storms hit, forecasters say.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 09:49

MUNICH and ESPOO, Finland, June 9, 2026 — IQM Quantum Computers today announced that it has developed a novel quantum error-correcting code that achieves up to three orders of magnitude lower logical error rates than the surface code, also requiring up to eight times fewer physical qubits.

IQM´s new technology, called barbell codes. Credit: IQM

Unlike many alternative high-performance quantum error-correction approaches, the new code also maintains a comparatively low hardware complexity, marking a significant advancement toward scalable fault-tolerant quantum computing.

Quantum error correction remains one of the defining challenges in the race toward practical quantum computing. Errors introduced by noise must be corrected faster than they accumulate, a requirement that previous approaches demanded either complex hardware or significant performance trade-offs, which IQM’s codes address both constraints simultaneously.

IQM´s breakthrough technology, called barbell codes, is a family of quantum low-density parity-check (QLDPC) codes tailored to IQM’s Constellation, a unique quantum processor topology with enhanced planar connectivity where each qubit can natively interact to 12 other qubits; vs. four qubits in a conventional square grid topology, but only requiring three couplers for the computational qubits and six for the central elements.

By exploiting qubit connectivity and requiring only a single long coupler connection for every other qubit, barbell codes make high-performance error correction with dramatically reduced hardware complexity a reality.

The development details and numerical performance analysis published by the IQM team on arXiv demonstrate a major advancement in quantum computing. Barbell codes are constructed by connecting two sites of standard planar Constellation connectivity with a single long coupler for every second qubit, thereby providing the capability for generating entanglement between such pairs.

Therefore, this unique design eliminates the need for additional long-range crossing couplers on open boundary conditions — simplifying fabrication without compromising performance. The result is a solution engineered not for ideal laboratory conditions, but for the practical realities of superconducting qubit manufacturing.

“We are pioneering the next chapter in quantum computing,” said Jan Goetz, CEO and Co-founder of IQM Quantum Computers. “Our approach offers a highly competitive path to scalable quantum error correction with superconducting qubits, paving the way for large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computers.”

IQM has sold more quantum systems than any other manufacturer and will deploy 150-qubit systems to customers later this year. The company has further announced IQM Halocene, an advanced quantum computer for error correction codes.

The barbell codes approach aligns with the company’s development roadmap, positioning IQM on a credible path to fault-tolerant quantum systems with hundreds of high-precision logical qubits and possibility of quantum advantage across multiple industries.

IQM recently announced increased commitments to its PIPE, driven by upsized investor demand ahead of its planned Nasdaq listing through a merger with Real Asset Acquisition Corp. (Nasdaq: RAAQ).

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM Quantum Computers is a global leader in superconducting quantum computers, delivering full-stack quantum computers and cloud platform access to research institutions, universities, high-performance computing centers, national laboratories and enterprises worldwide. IQM’s on-premises deployment model gives customers direct ownership and control of their quantum infrastructure. Founded in 2018, headquartered in Finland with major operations in Munich, it has over 400 employees. IQM operates across Europe, Asia, and North America. IQM has filed an F-4 registration statement to the SEC with the intention to become the first publicly listed European quantum company on Nasdaq Global Exchange in the U.S by merging with Real Asset Acquisition Corp. (Nasdaq: RAAQ).


Source: IQM

The post IQM Announces Novel Quantum Error Correction Approach Toward Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:47

Donald Trump arrived at the Knicks’ biggest night in 27 years hoping to cement his status and power in his hometown. But the fans had other ideas

On Monday night, the most powerful man in the world crashed a citywide celebration 27 years in the making and almost shut it down, with barricades around Midtown Manhattan, security lines outside Madison Square Garden and agents wanding Victor Wembanyama as if the San Antonio Spurs phenom were a threat off the court as well as on it. And when Donald Trump finally arrived for his grand entrance, it was in a half-mile-long motorcade. Anyone taking in the scene couldn’t help but ask the quintessential New York question: who does this guy think he is, some kind of big shot?

At this point in Trump’s presidency, it’s fair to wonder if he got into politics for the free tickets. On a night when he could’ve been dealing with far more pressing issues – soaring living costs, war with Iran, a global economy under strain – Trump flew to New York expressly to watch the Knicks play host to their first NBA finals game since he started making noises about running for office someday; he evidently couldn’t turn down the game after being invited by “numerous people.”

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:39
  • Pair are friends and will play golf together at college

  • Tournament will start at Shinnecock Hills next week

Miles Russell was among two 17-year-olds who earned a spot in the US Open on Monday. Still to be determined was whether Russell brings his caddie from the 36-hole qualifier – the son of three-time champion Tiger Woods – to Shinnecock Hills next week.

Russell, the No 10 amateur in the world, survived a bogey on the first playoff hole and grabbed the fourth and final spot from the Florida qualifier. Charlie Woods is one of his close friends who has the same commercial agent and is following Russell to Florida State to play college golf.

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2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 09:16

Groff worked for Epstein for nearly 20 years, starting in 2001, in which her job was to ‘organize one man’s life’

Lesley Groff, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime executive assistant, is testifying on Tuesday before the House oversight and reform committee as lawmakers on the panel continue their investigation into the late convicted sex offender.

Groff worked for Epstein for almost 20 years, beginning in 2001 and ending in July 2019 when he was arrested.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:15

Lawrence Berkeley, Oak Ridge, and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories propose partnering with Rescale to make DOE simulation codes accessible through agentic AI

SAN FRANCISCO, June 9, 2026 — Rescale today announced a landmark proposed collaboration with three premier U.S. Department of Energy national laboratories: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). The proposed collaboration builds on existing work with the ORNL Manufacturing Demonstration Facility to bring world-class simulation codes developed at the national labs to American industry at scale. Operating as the Agentic HPC Pipeline Initiative (AHPI), the partnership would use recently launched agentic digital engineering capabilities on the Rescale platform to accelerate U.S. manufacturers’ deployment of DOE-developed codes in production engineering environments.

For decades, the Department of Energy has invested in developing some of the world’s most sophisticated engineering simulation codes, spanning advanced manufacturing, materials science, energy systems, and beyond. Yet operating these codes has required specialized expertise to configure and maintain the software on HPC infrastructure as well as run the advanced simulations themselves, keeping their power out of reach for most of U.S. industry.

The AHPI consortium is designed to close these infrastructure and expertise gaps. By hosting DOE codes on the Rescale digital engineering platform and pairing them with agentic AI that guides users through every step, engineers across U.S. industry can translate intent into fully autonomous simulation workflows. Tasks that previously demanded deep specialist knowledge, such as mesh configuration, hardware selection, solver tuning, and checkpoint management, are now handled autonomously by these simulation-native agents.

“America’s national laboratories have spent decades building the most powerful engineering simulation software in the world, like our AMReX framework, but the depth of domain expertise required to configure and validate these tools has kept them out of reach for many manufacturers,” said Peter Nugent, Division Deputy for Science in the Applied Math & Computational Research Division at LBNL and Principal Investigator of the AHPI project. “By integrating our codes with Rescale’s AI agents, we are fundamentally shifting the paradigm. We are replacing the manual burden of solver selection, checkpointing, and hardware configuration with intelligent automation. This translates scientific intent directly into computational reality.”

Rescale’s in-platform agents are already orchestrating manufacturing codes developed at ORNL’s Manufacturing Demonstration Facility, enabling engineers to integrate manufacturing data into automated workflows.

“At ORNL, we are focused on pushing the boundaries of what is possible in physical production,” said Ramanan Sankaran, ORNL Lead. “We are already seeing our advanced manufacturing codes from the Manufacturing Demonstration Facility being orchestrated by in-platform agents. By reducing the expertise bottleneck in job configuration and allowing engineers to train surrogate models on their simulation data using in-platform agents, we are enabling U.S. manufacturers to innovate at speeds that were previously impossible.”

The proposed collaboration with LLNL builds on the established HPC for Energy Innovation (HPC4EI) program, which connects U.S. companies with national laboratory expertise and resources in high performance computing, modeling and simulation.

“Through HPC4EI, LLNL has a long and successful history of bridging the gap between national lab supercomputing and real-world industrial applications,” said Aaron Fisher, LLNL Lead. “However, scaling that impact requires a new approach to user accessibility. We believe the use of agentic AI will lead to a step change in our ability to bring these capabilities to American industry. This effort is exploring scalable pathways to help manufacturers access AI-enabled simulation workflows beyond initial DOE engagements, while building on HPC4EI’s broader mission.”

Together, the three laboratories bring complementary depth across fluid dynamics, phase and chemical transformations, additive manufacturing, materials science, and energy systems, covering the full breadth of advanced manufacturing applications. The Rescale platform is intended to provide secure, cloud-native access to these codes through an intuitive, agent-augmented interface that requires no specialized HPC expertise to operate.

“In the United States, both industry and the national labs have made extraordinary investments in computing infrastructure and simulation software,” said Joris Poort, CEO of Rescale. “Rescale’s digital engineering platform serves as the bridge that brings both investments together in one place and puts them to work accelerating innovation for American industry. By pairing the world’s best simulation codes with AI agents that automate the complex workflows around them, we are giving American manufacturers a compounding advantage to accelerate progress, which is the ability to explore design spaces, validate materials, and optimize manufacturing processes at speeds and scales that were previously out of reach.”

The AHPI initiative represents a broader strategic vision for the role of AI in closing the gap between government-funded scientific capability and commercial industrial application. As AI-powered simulation becomes increasingly critical to how products are designed and built, the companies with access to the best tools will have a meaningful edge. AHPI is committed to making sure those tools are within reach for U.S. industry.

The Rescale platform, including the capabilities powering the AHPI consortium, is available now. For more information, visit rescale.com.

About Rescale

Rescale is the digital engineering platform built for the AI era. The Rescale platform integrates intelligent HPC, advanced modeling and simulation, agentic digital engineering, and AI physics to create compounding value that accelerates product development and empowers digital transformation. The Rescale platform delivers the world’s largest network of engineering and R&D applications, intelligent automation, and computing infrastructure to enterprises across aerospace, automotive, energy, life sciences, semiconductor, manufacturing, and the public sector. Rescale is backed by leading investors such as NVIDIA, Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Paul Graham, Peter Thiel, Microsoft, Samsung, Hitachi, University of Michigan, and others. Rescale has a global customer base that includes Applied Materials, General Motors Motorsports, SLB, and the U.S. Department of Defense.


Source: Rescale

The post Rescale and US National Labs Form Initiative to Bring DOE Simulation Codes to American Industry appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:15

TEL AVIV, Israel, June 9, 2026 — Quantum X Labs Inc., an advanced quantum technologies company, and IQCC, a Quantum Machines company, today announced the signing of a strategic cooperation agreement, under which Quantum X Labs will evaluate its AI-based quantum error-correction technology on Quantum Machines’ quantum control infrastructure. The primary objective is to run Quantum X Labs’ proprietary AI-driven error correction algorithm in a fully integrated hardware-software environment.

The collaboration will test Quantum X Labs’ AI-based decoding technology using IQCC’s quantum computing infrastructure, with the goal of exploring its applicability to future quantum error-correction workflows.

IQCC will provide access to its quantum control and orchestration infrastructure, including the OPX1000 real-time quantum controller, used by leading quantum research institutions and commercial quantum-computing programs worldwide. IQCC’s systems are designed to support future low-latency feedback and quantum error-correction workflows.

“This collaboration represents an important milestone in our roadmap toward validating our AI-based decoder on real quantum-hardware data,” said Prof. Nir Sharon, Chief Quantum Technology Scientist at Quantum X Labs. “By working with IQCC and Quantum Machines, we gain access to a highly respected quantum-computing environment that enables us to evaluate our technology under realistic operating conditions and accelerate its path toward practical deployment.”

“Quantum error correction is widely recognized as one of the key challenges on the path to large-scale quantum computing,” said Dr. Nir Alfasi, GM of IQCC. “By providing access to advanced quantum infrastructure, IQCC enables researchers and companies to explore new approaches under realistic conditions. We look forward to working with Quantum X Labs as they assess their AI-based decoder on real quantum hardware.”

Quantum X Labs Inc.

Quantum X Labs Inc. and its subsidiaries are focused on quantum technology, digital advertising and computing and enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) solutions. Quantum X Labs Ltd. is focused on developing and promoting quantum algorithms for the transportation, drug discovery and security segments as well as developing quantum- based GPS replacement and quantum atom accuracy solutions. Gix Media develops a variety of technological software solutions, which perform automation, optimization and monetization of internet campaigns, for the purposes of acquiring and routing internet user traffic to its customers. Metagramm is a developer of grammatical error correction software and offers tools for writing and reviewing, grammar, spelling, punctuation and style features, as well as translation and multilingual dictionaries, using artificial intelligence and machine learning technology. For more information about Quantum X Labs, visit https://quantumxlabs.xyz.

About IQCC

The Israeli Quantum Computing Center is Quantum Machines’ research and development testbed that provides multi-vendor quantum hardware, access for academic and industrial users, and an environment for benchmarking, algorithm development, and hardware evaluation. The IQCC operates multiple quantum processors and advanced control systems, enabling researchers to explore different modalities of quantum computing within a unified infrastructure. The company focuses on facilitating collaboration, accelerating quantum technologies, and expanding hands-on access to cutting-edge quantum systems

About Quantum Machines

Quantum Machines (QM) is the leading global provider of hybrid quantum-classical control solutions. The company’s flagship Orchestration Platform harmonizes quantum and classical operations to eliminate friction and optimize performance across the entire stack. By providing a unified hardware and software infrastructure that supports any qubit modality, QM empowers researchers and builders to iterate at speed, resolve setbacks, and scale systems previously thought impossible. Learn more at: https://www.quantum-machines.co.


Source: Quantum X Labs

The post Quantum X Labs and IQCC Explore AI-Driven Quantum Error Correction Workflows appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 16:04
2026-06-09 09:14

June 9, 2026 — Building useful quantum technologies—from sensors to computers—requires generating highly complex entangled states, in which the properties of particles are deeply intertwined. Producing such states has traditionally required complex tools and carefully engineered setups with many parts.

Now, researchers at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (UChicago PME) have found a surprisingly simple method to create and control a broad variety of entangled quantum states. Their theoretical approach, described in the journal Physical Review X, begins with experimental tools already common in quantum physics laboratories and has immediate applications for ultraprecise sensing technologies and fundamental physics.

“We wanted to take simple ingredients that you find in a lot of physical platforms and put these together in a minimal way to get something interesting, complex and powerful,” said Aashish Clerk, professor of molecular engineering at UChicago PME and senior author of the new study.

The study is supported by Q-NEXT, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Quantum Information Science Research Center led by DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory.

An Optical Cavity with a Twist

The starting point for the new entangled states is a well-established experimental platform called cavity quantum electrodynamics, or cavity QED. In these systems, atoms or other particles are placed inside an optical cavity — a chamber formed by two mirrors. The particles interact with light that is confined in the optical cavity.

In most cavity QED systems, all atoms interact with the confined light identically, making them indistinguishable from one other. This symmetry limits the range of quantum states the system can produce.

“The challenge has always been that these systems have too much symmetry. All the atoms are talking to light in the same way,” Clerk said. “That really restricts what kind of entangled states you get.”

Each atom in a cavity QED setup has a ground and excited state, separated by an energy difference.

Clerk’s group had an idea for a simple way to break that symmetry: While all atoms are driven with a common laser, scientists use an additional magnetic field or additional lasers to tune the excited-state energy of different groups of atoms relative to one another. The researchers arranged the system so that each atom is paired with another whose energy offset is equal and opposite. This gives the particles distinct identities while allowing enough structure for the system to behave predictably. By changing which atoms get different energy assignments, the researchers can tune the whole system to produce a range of different states, all without changing any physical components.

“You turn these lasers on and wait, and at some point the system stabilizes into an interesting, highly entangled quantum state,” said Anjun Chu, a postdoctoral researcher in the Clerk group and first author of the new work. “By simply adjusting the lasers, we can access kinds of entangled states that no one had thought about before.”

Sensing Differences

One of the most important applications for the new system is quantum sensing, Clerk said. Entangled states can, in principle, detect tiny differences in magnetic or gravitational fields between two locations. But generating entangled states that are highly sensitive, robust to noise and easy to measure has been a major open challenge in the field.

Clerk, Chu and colleagues showed how one version of their new proposed cavity QED system — involving two ensembles of atoms — could be used to measure a gradient in magnetic or gravitational fields. Placed in two locations, the systems’ final quantum states would reflect the differences between the local fields while remaining insensitive to background noise that affects both locations equally.

“You’re able to do two things that are normally not compatible with one another: Use entanglement to build an exquisitely sensitive sensor but also have robustness to arbitrarily large amounts of noise,” Clerk said. “Normally, entanglement is very fragile. This approach has some amazing resilience.”

Importantly, extracting information from these states doesn’t require exotic measurements. Standard techniques known as Ramsey measurements are sufficient to read the quantum states.

Next Steps

Beyond sensing, the researchers showed that the same platform can produce exotic quantum states of broad interest to physicists. One example is the AKLT state — a famous many-body entangled state, first described in the 1980s as a way to describe exotic magnetic materials. The team showed their simple setup can stabilize this state, which in addition to its relevance to complex magnetic material, is potentially useful in quantum computing.

The work is currently theoretical, and the researchers are in discussions with experimental groups about implementing and testing the ideas. They are also exploring more complex ways of arranging the atoms within the system and working to more fully map out the quantum states the method can generate.

“The fact that such simple ingredients can generate such complex and useful quantum states gives us hope that even before we reach the dream of a general all-purpose quantum computer, we can already generate quantum states that let us do things we couldn’t do in a purely classical world,” Clerk said.

Citation: “Reconfigurable dissipative entanglement between many spin ensembles: from robust quantum sensing to many-body state engineering,” Chu et al, Physical Review X, June 1, 2026. DOI: 10.1103/qdh9-2pc7

This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science National Quantum Information Science Research Centers as part of the Q-NEXT center.


Source: Sarah C.P. Williams, UChicago

The post UChicago Team Designs Reconfigurable Platform for Entangled Quantum States appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:07

June 9, 2026 — A year ago at London Tech Week, NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer made a declaration: the U.K. would be an AI maker, not an AI taker.

At this year’s event, NVIDIA and its partners are showcasing how that commitment is producing real momentum across the nation’s infrastructure, startups and enterprises.

Credit: NVIDIA

U.K. technology leaders are innovating across healthcare and life sciences, coding, agentic AI, inference and more — all running on sovereign AI deployments.

AI Minister Kanishka Narayan said: “A year ago, we said the UK would be an AI maker, not an AI taker. Today we’re delivering on that — with sovereign compute powering British startups to push the boundaries of what AI can do, from drug discovery to healthcare to robotics. This is what it looks like when a country backs its own talent with the infrastructure to match.

“NVIDIA’s decision to invest billions here is a reflection of the strength of what’s being built in Britain. We are determined to make sure the next generation of AI breakthroughs happens in this country, and we have everything we need to make it happen.”

Commitment to Compute

Over the past year, the number of AI cloud providers planning to deploy AI infrastructure on U.K. soil has doubled.

Nebius has announced plans to expand customers and cloud capabilities with three new deployments of advanced NVIDIA AI infrastructure, as the NVIDIA AI Cloud ecosystem partner continues to build out its commercial and AI R&D hub in London. Combined, the deployments are expected to reach 65 megawatts when fully ramped up in 2027.

CoreWeave is building in the U.K. Government’s AI Growth Zones, and seven more NVIDIA AI Cloud ecosystem partners have plans in the pipeline. BT and Nscale announced plans to build sovereign AI data centers across three existing BT sites in the U.K., combining NVIDIA AI infrastructure, Nscale’s full stack and BT’s trusted nationwide connectivity backbone.

From Fund to Frontier
Central to that sovereign compute story is Isambard-AI — the U.K.’s most powerful computer. Built on 5,400 NVIDIA GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips and running entirely on zero-carbon electricity, it’s the engine behind some of the U.K.’s most ambitious AI research.

The U.K. government’s Sovereign AI Fund is putting that capability to work by backing homegrown companies and providing the domestic infrastructure needed to scale their ambitions.

Among its first recipients is Ineffable Intelligence, which recently announced a collaboration with NVIDIA to build the future of reinforcement learning infrastructure.

Other recipients include four U.K.-based NVIDIA Inception startups, each pushing the AI frontier using Isambard-AI. These startups are:

Cosine Builds Sovereign Coding Platform

Cosine is building an end-to-end sovereign AI coding platform for highly regulated industries such as financial services, critical infrastructure and national security. Using Isambard, Cosine is training a new, large-parameter, mixture-of-experts, multimodal agentic LLM for natively handling data types beyond text and image.

“Access to Isambard enables the project, full stop,” said Alistair Pullen, cofounder and CEO of Cosine. “We already have the people who know how to do this. We have the data. We have the infrastructure and the training. The thing we’ve never had is this level of compute.”

Cursive Trains Self-Improving AI Systems

Cursive is building self-improving AI systems that learn continuously from real-world data, enabling them to operate autonomously over long periods of time. This is unlocked through new memory-augmented architectures with dramatically larger context windows, currently in development using the Sovereign AI Fund resources. In addition, the team recently adopted the NVIDIA Megatron-LM framework for distributed training at scale.

“The Sovereign AI Fund is more than just processing power — it’s a statement about investing in AI in the U.K.,” said Talfan Evans, cofounder and CEO of Cursive. “Sovereignty is actually now a buying criterion — and it’s a challenge to tap into the resources we uniquely have as U.K. and European companies.”

Doubleword Optimizes Inference to Deliver Abundant Intelligence Tokens

Doubleword, the U.K.’s first dedicated inference lab, optimizes every layer of the AI stack to maximize what it calls “IQ per dollar.” The company deploys open models including NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super 120B and builds on the NVIDIA Dynamo inference framework.

On Isambard, Doubleword’s early results achieved 70x faster model cold starts — aka model loading times — and 4x lossless KV cache compression, critical advancements for long-running agentic workloads. The result: inference at 90-95% lower costs than other leading inference providers.

Credit: Doubleword

“Sovereign AI is most impactful at the inference layer,” said Meryem Arik, cofounder and CEO of Doubleword. “Inference is when you’re actually getting the value from the model — we want that value created in the U.K., with U.K. compute and U.K. data centers.”

Prima Mente Uses Foundation Models to Study Alzheimer’s and More

Prima Mente builds biological foundation models to identify new biomarkers, subtypes and drug targets of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and ALS. With its Isambard allocation, the company is developing Pleiades 2, a foundation model combining five biological data modalities.

Achieving nearly 3x speedups in model training with NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs, Prima Mente also uses NVIDIA Parabricks for genomic data processing and NVIDIA Transformer Engine for model optimization.

“Research shows Alzheimer’s might be 25 different subgroups of disease, and we want to help by using AI to identify these subtypes and the biology within the cells as they change,” said Hannah Madan, cofounder of Prima Mente.

AI Talent, Policy and Production

NVIDIA’s £2 billion investment in the U.K. startup ecosystem — in collaboration with leading venture capital firms — is bringing new capital and advanced AI infrastructure to major U.K. hubs including London, Oxford, Cambridge and Manchester.

U.K. membership in the NVIDIA Inception program has increased by 50% over the past year. AI-native companies like Doubleword, Synthesia and PolyAI are scaling globally from U.K. roots.

At last year’s London Tech Week, NVIDIA announced a collaboration with the U.K Department for Science, Innovation and Technology on 6G and AI skills. The 6G collaboration has seeded testbeds at four U.K. universities. In May, the NVIDIA Deep Learning Institute (DLI) delivered two new courses — added to support the nation’s wireless research community — to participants from over 30 U.K. universities.

Plus, as part of this AI skills collaboration, NVIDIA DLI courses are offered as part of QA’s AI Apprenticeships in England.

And the NVIDIA Developer Program now includes more than 200,000 U.K. developers.

The Sovereign AI Forum, which launched last year with seven charter members, convened the country’s AI leadership to turn policy into deployment roadmaps. Over the past year, the Forum has welcomed dozens of participants across government, industry and the startup community — turning policy into deployment roadmaps.

And enterprise AI is moving from pilot to production:

  • Apian is building digital twins of two National Health Service hospitals, combining autonomous devices, ground robots, computer vision and robotic simulation.
  • Deliverance AI is helping regulated enterprises to run, govern and scale AI agents inside their own environment — through a single control plane. The Agentic Operating System is built for organizations where data sovereignty is non-negotiable.
  • Glass Futures has installed an AI-driven digital twin of its glass furnace capable of testing and predicting new, optimal ways to make glass. The digital twin taps into NVIDIA accelerated computing and the NVIDIA PhysicsNeMo framework.
  • Orbital Industries has announced codesigned, NVIDIA Vera Rubin DSX AI Factory-compliant AI infrastructure that accelerates time to first token.
  • Reading Football Club is partnering with Stelia to establish an AI Centre of Excellence, combining Stelia’s full-stack AI platform with accelerated compute infrastructure from NVIDIA and Lenovo.

It all reflects momentous progress in U.K. AI leadership — and offers a glimpse of where it’s heading.


Source: Anthony Hills, NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA Showcases Sovereign AI Growth Across UK Infrastructure and Startups appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:06

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:00

Sharp rise in hospital visits will in turn drive up annual healthcare costs for heat-related conditions to over $1bn

People in the US are poised to endure another summer of unusually ferocious heat and there will be little respite in the years ahead, with a new study finding that the coming 15 years could see a doubling in hospitalizations due to heat-related illnesses.

The number of annual heat-related emergency department visits or hospitalizations across the US are set to rise from about 109,000 cases a year to as many as 237,000 cases by 2040, the new research has estimated.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:00

Rights groups and some locals worry that program to ‘track illicit activity’ could become a data collection project

The Great Lakes have rarely ever been considered a hotbed of illicit drug activity or center for illegal immigration.

But that hasn’t stopped US government agencies and the company behind surveillance sailing drones from treating the region as such. The US Coast Guard recently announced it has launched an armada of at least six sailing drones in the Great Lakes this summer in an attempt to, in part, “track illicit activity”.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 09:00

Pacoima is hemmed in by highways and heavy industry, and its residents are fighting pollution with hyperlocal air quality monitoring

Jose Luis Salas looks up at the ladder. “Are you ready?” he asks Shance Taylor, an environmental project manager who’s holding a white container, about the size of a shoebox, covered with wires and numbers.

Taylor nods and climbs up to reach the side of Salas’s tidy house in Pacoima, a neighborhood in Los Angeles’s north-east San Fernando valley. The curious box in their hands is known as Aeroqual sensor – part of a community air-quality monitoring program run by Pacoima Beautiful, a local environmental group.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 08:59

Meta has since fixed the exploit, but it's yet another example of AI doing it worse than humans.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 08:49

Nuvalent’s late-stage lung cancer treatments zidesamtinib and neladalkib are expected to launch later this year

GSK’s new boss, Luke Miels, has struck one of the British drugmaker’s biggest deals, announcing the $10.6bn (£7.9bn) acquisition of a US cancer specialist with two late-stage medications.

The FTSE 100 company is increasing its oncology portfolio by agreeing to buy Nuvalent, a Boston-based biotech company that develops cancer drugs, including three for lung cancer. GSK will pay $124 a share in cash.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 08:46

Suspect, charged with driving while impaired, was eventually captured and arrested with injuries to his arms

An alligator inserted itself into a police pursuit in south-eastern Louisiana, chasing and attacking an allegedly impaired driver who tried to evade law enforcement by leaping into a swamp.

The suspect, a 40-year-old man, was eventually captured and arrested with injuries to both arms. Deputy body-worn camera footage of the alligator swimming at speed towards the man and thrashing with him in the water was posted on YouTube by local CBS News affiliate and Guardian reporting partner WWL Louisiana.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 08:26

1.2.2 has hit the VESC Package Store today.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 08:10

Attorney Dan Cogdell backs Paxton’s Democratic opponent and says the Republican is too focused on appeasing Trump

A lawyer who represented Ken Paxton, Texas’s attorney general, for nearly a decade over accusations of corruption and securities fraud is supporting Democrat James Talarico – and not his former client – in one of the biggest US Senate races.

Talarico on Monday drew attention to his campaign winning the endorsement of Houston attorney Dan Cogdell, who was part of Paxton’s defense team during the Republican’s historic impeachment trial in 2023 that ended in acquittal.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 08:00

Stellantis is recalling almost 1.08 million Jeep Wranglers and Gladiators in the U.S. that could catch fire even when they're parked and turned off, federal regulators say.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 08:00

The climate phenomenon is intensifying an already unequal global economy

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:42

The bear sightings had forced the closure of all 94 public primary and middle schools in a city just north of Tokyo.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:21

The Pentagon has added several prominent Chinese businesses, including tech giant Alibaba, to its list of Chinese military companies, keeping them from getting U.S. defense contracts.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:07

In an exclusive interview, Ukraine’s president says he believes the war will be won when Russian society feels its impact. Plus, why California’s election count is taking so long (hint: it’s not fraud)

In the fifth year of Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine, Volodymr Zelenskyy says he is feeling upbeat and has been grateful for military support from the US, but has a pointed message for Washington.

Speaking to Luke Harding and Pippa Crerar in London, the Ukrainian president acknowledged that the priority of Trump’s second term in foreign policy had shifted away from Ukraine to conflict in the Middle East.

What did Zelenskyy say about Trump’s relationship with Putin? He carefully praised US diplomatic efforts, despite his bruising encounter in the Oval Office and the fact that Trump has been willing to meet Vladimir Putin, saying: “I always said to President Trump that Putin is lying. He plays games with you, with the White House.”

Does he see any prospect of the war ending? The military situation was the most promising it had been for Kyiv for two and a half years, Zelenskyy ssaid. “We can’t say Russia is losing this war. But we can say they are losing the initiative each day, day by day,” he added. “Victory in this war is when Russian society recognises that the war is awful, that the war is a tragedy not for someone, somewhere, but for themselves.” To that end, Zelenskyy said the purpose of long-range strikes – drones buzzing above apartment blocks in greater Moscow and St Petersburg – was to make residents “feel” what war meant.

Which other AI companies are making market moves? In addition to Anthropic, which makes the popular Claude chatbot, Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which owns his artificial intelligence company xAI, is also imminently slated to go public at an expected valuation of $1.75tn.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:06

One suspect drove a vehicle "at very high speed and recklessly, even hitting several local residents" before being stopped by authorities, officials said.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 07:01

Governor urges people to report videos on X that falsely show the men clashing in the Question Time studio

The Bank of England has warned the public against falling for AI-generated scams after deepfake videos of Nigel Farage fighting its governor spread online.

Andrew Bailey, the head of the BoE, said AI-generated content related to central banks was spreading and urged people to be “vigilant”.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:00

Partly inspired by the poem In This Place (An American Lyric) by Amanda Gorman, FotoFocus, a non-profit, has opened its inaugural exhibition at the new FotoFocus Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. Titled Big Tent, the show is on view until 22 August 2026 and presents the work of more than 50 artists. The work created by each photographer reflects on the present state of US democracy and demonstrates the power of the image

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:00

Becoming the world’s first trillionaire is only going to supercharge this sense of impunity and bring us one step closer to full-blown oligarchy

“Whoever said ‘money can’t buy happiness’ really knew what they were talking about,” Elon Musk wrote in February on Twitter/X, the social network he bought for $44bn. He capped the statement with a sad face emoji.

Alas, Musk’s information is outdated. A 2024 study found a substantial difference in happiness between the wealthy and people who are low income. “A greater feeling of control over life can explain about 75% of the association between money and happiness,” the study’s author noted.

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist and the author of Strong Female Lead

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:00

After helping track fires for years, Watch Duty is aiming to become your disaster go-to with flood coverage straight from the front lines.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 07:00

Researchers say mysterious, seconds-long GPS interference bursts detected across Europe appear to come from Russian EKS early-warning satellites, making this "a rare example of human-made GPS interference coming from space," reports Ars Technica. The signals may be tests of space-based jamming capability, short satellite communications, or something else, but experts say they raise troubling questions about whether GPS disruption could eventually be weaponized on a continental scale. From the report: The discovery came from an investigation detailed in a June 2 preprint paper by Todd Humphreys and his student Zach Clements at The University of Texas at Austin, along with Argyris Krizise at Stanford University in California. By sifting through public data from ground-based stations with global navigation satellite system (GNSS) receivers, they identified a pattern of high-powered interference lasting less than 10 seconds each time but simultaneously detectable by ground stations across Europe from Norway to Spain to Poland, and even reaching as far west as Greenland and Canada. By analyzing the ground station data from January 2019 to April 2026, the researchers found 75 days with at least one widespread GNSS interference event overlapping with the GPS L1 frequency band centered on 1575.42 megahertz. That represents the main band used for signal transmission by the US-made GPS satellite constellation and GNSS constellations from other countries. Such interference patterns happened mostly on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays during business hours in Europe, Humphreys told the YouTube channel Veritasium. Because such "continental-scale" interference was simultaneously affecting GPS receivers across Europe and beyond, Humphreys and his colleagues calculated that the source had to be at least 1,200 kilometers above the Earth. [...] In the Veritasium video, Humphreys speculated that the Russians may have been testing the satellites' GPS interference capabilities only briefly on a neighboring frequency adjacent to the typical GPS band. "And then in the eventual future when there is a hot conflict, they go ahead and tune their transmitter down to the GPS band, but it's much more damaging now that it lies right on that band," he said. Incidentally, the raw data also revealed a second interference burst from the Russian satellites in a lower-frequency band used by China's BeiDou navigation system. "I can no longer say this is accidental with confidence," Humphreys told Veritasium. He also described the Russian satellites' quiet demonstration as a "massive escalation in the electronic warfare background conflict that is going on right now." Richard Bowden, division head of assured and resilient PNT at the multinational technology company GMV in Spain, wrote in a LinkedIn comment: "These signals are, without a doubt, intentional and placed on or around GNSS signals, and have the potential to disrupt legitimate use of GNSS services. But from our side at least, we can't be sure they are intentionally malicious or intended as an EW [electronic warfare] weapon."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-09 07:00

An older man wearing a baseball cap and a black Raw Farm hoodie stands with his hands in his pockets in a foggy, grassy field. Two black cows stand in the background to his right.
Mark McAfee, CEO and founder of Raw Farm Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

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A white Ford pickup truck broke through a thick curtain of fog one morning in February, winding its way down a muddy farm road in California’s Central Valley. From it emerged a 64-year-old dairyman, burly and tan, who left the engine running as he lumbered toward me with open arms. 

“You must be Mark,” I said, warning him I wasn’t one for hugging. 

“I’m a hugger,” he said, pulling me in anyway. “I feel like I’ve known you for a lifetime.”

I had spent the past couple of weeks corresponding with Raw Farm founder Mark McAfee, who’d filled my inbox with messages and PowerPoints extolling the virtues of his most important, and controversial, product:

It is delicious.

It makes you feel good (the gut-brain serotonin and dopamine cycle).

It’s great for asthma and literally saves lives.

He was talking about raw milk, which, if you trust 150 years of bedrock science, offers little reason to consume. By definition, it has not been pasteurized, the simple process of heating milk to kill off harmful bacteria. Before the practice was widely adopted a century ago, thousands of babies died each year from illnesses linked to contaminated dairy. Today, most scientists and health experts agree that raw milk has no significant, proven nutritional benefits over its sanitized counterpart, cannot treat or cure disease and subjects its consumers to over 100 times the risk of foodborne illness, which can be especially dangerous for young children.

And yet, McAfee’s farm, the largest raw-milk dairy in the country, is pulling in about $30 million a year, meeting a growing demand from customers who say they want food that hasn’t been robbed of health benefits by industrial processing. Once drawing a fringe crowd, raw milk has been thrust into the mainstream in recent years by a potent mix of politics, wellness culture and a wave of suspicion that health institutions have been compromised by Big Pharma and Big Food. Its proponents have turned it into a symbol of freedom and defiance. More than 10 million Americans now drink it; national weekly sales rose by 65% from 2023 to 2024 alone.

Raw milk’s success confounded me: How had it gained such a foothold in this country, despite regular outbreaks of salmonella and E. coli, and even the discovery of bird flu in Raw Farm’s milk? More pressing still, what was the government doing to protect the public amid demands for products that scientists warn are risky, even deadly? Speaking with McAfee seemed like a good place to start; federal and state regulators had linked his business to more than a dozen recalls and outbreaks that had left hundreds of people ill.

“I’ve put a couple kids in the hospital, and they have been sick, but they recovered,” McAfee acknowledged before my visit. “But here’s the thing: I’m a pioneer. And I’m going against the grain here. I’m climbing a mountain they say you can’t climb.”

An older man wearing a baseball cap leaning on a wooden railing, looking out over a foggy, grassy field. Several cows stand in the distance. A sign on the railing reads, “So fresh. So clean.”
Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

McAfee isn’t any ordinary farmer. He is a raw-milk zealot who has escaped serious sanctions despite two decades of skirmishes with the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Justice, which have repeatedly accused him of breaking federal laws and regulations. The Biden administration was on the verge of a crackdown against his farm when President Donald Trump assumed office and turned over leadership of the nation’s health agencies to one of McAfee’s most notable customers. 

The year before he was confirmed as the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ran for president, using his campaign platform to decry the government’s “aggressive suppression” of raw milk. In his new role, he said he was “advocating” for it and celebrated the release of a federal report to Make America Healthy Again with a toast of raw-milk shooters in the White House.

For his part, McAfee isn’t just selling Kennedy’s favored milk. He is selling the notion that his dairy products are safe and healthy — for you, your kids, your grandparents — because his farm thoroughly screens its milk for bacteria. 

“They think we’re some kind of a fringe, weird trend, and we are dead serious here,” McAfee said after he greeted me at his farm, which he runs with his adult son and daughter, 20 miles southwest of Fresno. “And you’ll see that in what we’re doing today.”

He led me into a cream-colored bungalow he called his pathogen laboratory, where two workers in lab coats prepared milk samples.

The farm screens each batch for four types of bacteria: salmonella, E. coli, campylobacter and listeria, all of which thrive in the intestines of cattle and can contaminate milk through microscopic flecks of infected feces. The microbes can cause a constellation of symptoms in humans, from vomiting and diarrhea to sepsis, kidney failure and even death.

“We catch these things and divert the milk immediately,” McAfee said of the pathogens. 

I assumed that after diverting batches, the farm discarded them. 

Later that day, I learned otherwise.

“We have a red-flag system here, where if there’s anything that gets really out of whack, they can immediately tag the milk, and it doesn’t go to anything but cheese,” McAfee told me. “Because, you know, cheese is resistant to pathogens.”

Research has shown that raw cheese is not, in fact, resistant to pathogens; while aging can mitigate some risk, harmful bacteria can still survive the usual 60-day maturation process. 

Hearing about the practice took me by surprise — the farm did what with that milk? — so I asked about it again.

McAfee confirmed that milk with pathogens was used to make cheese, except for batches with salmonella, which he said were dumped or sent out for pasteurization. (I later learned the FDA knew he was doing this and had told him to stop two years ago. But no one had alerted the public.) 

“Our cheese is just wildly successful across America,” McAfee said, noting it was sold in hundreds of stores from natural food shops to chains like Sprouts Farmers Market. “H-E-B down in Texas sells 50,000 bucks a week.”

I wondered how long it might take for the cheese to be linked to another outbreak. 

Unbeknownst to me, one was already underway.

A man in a white lab coat and black gloves works in a laboratory setting. He is handling glass flasks containing an amber liquid lined up on a stainless steel countertop. In the background, lab equipment and a refrigeration unit are visible.
A laboratory technician prepares broth to test for pathogens inside a lab at Raw Farm. Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Chapter 1: The Pioneer

In the early 2000s, McAfee was producing pasteurized milk for the dairy group Organic Valley when a raw-milk enthusiast named James Stewart made an unusual request. 

Stewart had founded a private food club in Venice, Los Angeles. Its members included movie stars, “crystal worshippers” and other “fanatical people,” McAfee recalled. They were looking for a steady source of raw milk at a time when consumers were waking up to the risks of food contaminated by additives, fertilizers and pesticides.

“How fast can you drive down here with as much milk as you can?” McAfee recalled Stewart asking.

McAfee, not fully grasping why people would want to drink milk that was unpasteurized, nonetheless went to his silo, filled half-gallon containers and packed them in ice chests. Then, with his wife, he made the long drive south to the L.A. coast.

Dozens of people were waiting for them, McAfee said, launching into a scene that unfolded with a Hollywood sheen. “I couldn’t even get out of the car,” he said. “They’re beating on the windows and opening up the back. … Just mayhem, cheering, excitement, crying.” 

As their $20 bills started flying at him, so did their stories, about how raw milk had healed their health issues, including asthma. The moment transformed him, he said: He realized that he was selling more than just milk — it was “food as medicine.”

Twenty-odd years later, Stewart, too, recalls the moment. “I saw the light go off in his head,” Stewart told me. “He was looking for a way to expand what he was doing and not just be a commercial, pasteurized, homogenized milk provider.” 

McAfee, a third-generation California farmer, was born into a family that had charted an unconventional course. His father, whom McAfee described as both a humanitarian and a rebel, founded multiple farm cooperatives and made national news in 1972, when he helped post bail for activist Angela Davis by putting his land up as collateral. 

McAfee didn’t initially follow in his father’s footsteps. He worked for 16 years as a paramedic before taking the helm of family farmland that his grandparents left behind. The farm grew apples, almonds and alfalfa, and, by 2001, McAfee had expanded into commercial dairy. But his days of producing milk for pasteurization were short-lived; within a few months of meeting Stewart, McAfee converted his dairy to sell only raw milk.

He entered a market on the verge of extraordinary growth. 

California had always permitted raw milk to be sold in stores, but Los Angeles County’s more stringent rules had, in effect, curbed its retail sales. In 2001, food-freedom advocates, including Stewart, successfully petitioned the county to weaken regulations, providing McAfee access to a new pool of customers. That would happen again and again, in state and local governments across America, as the internet, and then social media influencers, drew exponentially more people to the cause. 

Around the time McAfee converted his dairy to raw milk, only 27 states allowed its sale. 

In one way or another, nearly all of them ultimately would.

Many States Allow the Sale of Raw Milk

A consumer could buy raw milk:

A cartogram showing the easiest way a casual consumer can buy raw milk in each state. Raw milk can be purchased from a retail store in Alaska, Maine, New Hampshire, Washington, Idaho, Utah, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, California, West Virginia, Arizona, New Mexico, South Carolina and Arizona. Raw milk can be purchased directly from a farmer in Vermont, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, New York, Massachusetts, Oregon, Wyoming, South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, Illinois, Delaware, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Georgia and Texas. Raw milk can be purchased as pet food in Wisconsin, Ohio, New Jersey, Colorado, Indiana, Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama and Florida. Raw milk can be purchased with a doctor’s prescription in Rhode Island, or as part of a herd-share program in Michigan, and cannot be purchased at all in Nevada, Hawaii or Mississippi.
Raw milk is available in Michigan only through “herd share” programs, where consumers receive milk after purchasing a partial share of an animal. Other herd-share programs are not shown in this map. Raw goat milk can be purchased in Rhode Island with a doctor’s prescription. Map and research by Alyssa Fowers, special to ProPublica

One thing stood between McAfee and all of that business: a federal regulation restricting the sale of raw milk from one state to another. The 1987 ban had the effect of keeping outbreaks contained, making it easier for local officials to address them. 

But there was a loophole: Raw milk could be sold across state lines if labeled as pet food. 

McAfee saw an opportunity, and he wasn’t subtle about it on the website for his farm, which at the time was called Organic Pastures. The farm “creatively labeled its products for sale outside of California in such a way that it is not illegal,” the site said, and it assured people they could still consume them. Justifying the strategy to an Oregon newspaper, McAfee said in 2005, “I am a revolutionist in this, and I won’t overlook any loophole that will get the milk out there.”

As his raw dairy grew, McAfee portrayed himself as an underdog waging a war against industrialized food. “The giants of the marketplace have processed our food to death to extend shelf life and expand distribution,” he said in a 2006 interview. “The raw milk revolution grows right out of this disorder.” 

Two decades later, he still talks about raw milk with the passion of a convert. He answered even simple questions with lengthy explanations, speaking in a quick, torrential style and snapping his fingers or pinching the air for emphasis. Only later did I realize that much of what sounded spontaneous was a pitch he had been refining in years of promotional interviews and farm tours.

McAfee has professed the benefits of unpasteurized milk in public libraries and chiropractor offices. Raw dairy, his farm has claimed, could cure, treat or prevent myriad diseases and ailments, from diabetes and ear infections to allergies, eczema and arthritis. The farm developed the website icanbreathe.org to promote the so-called Milk Cure for asthma. “Only raw milk works in this natural treatment,” the dairy stated. “Pasteurizing milk kills or changes the natural enzymes, antibodies, and fatty acids that are critical to the physiology of how this works in your body.”

McAfee founded a nonprofit, Raw Milk Institute, in 2011, broadcasting similar claims alongside studies he said support them. While a few European studies he cited observed a correlation between drinking raw milk and lower rates of asthma and allergies, they did not prove raw milk directly led to reduced illness, nor did they recommend its consumption due to pathogenic risk. Experts have suggested the association could likely be explained by the “farm effect,” in which children growing up around animals and agriculture have been shown to have stronger immune systems.

Exhaustive reviews of the published science on raw milk have broadly been unable to substantiate claims of its benefits, and most experts agree that it is neither healthy nor safe to consume. But McAfee said his customers know better. To him, the stories of families who believe raw milk has transformed their health are their own form of evidence, revealing truths that institutions have failed to capture. “If raw milk was a fad or a lie, then why would people repeatedly buy raw milk and then tell the world how they love it,” he said. “Our consumers read their gut and watch their kids thrive.”

He also said the government hasn’t invested enough in research to assess its benefits.

“I’m begging you to say: ‘This is not anti-science, this is extremely pro-science,’” he told me. “It’s using science that is not conveniently accepted yet.”

And for many health-conscious people, this possibility that raw milk may help them — or their loved ones — is often enough for them to try it.

A refrigerator holds multiple plastic containers filled with liquid substances. The labels on the bottles read “raw cream” and “raw kefir.” On the top shelf of the refrigerator are small boxes that read “raw butter.” The refrigerator has text at the top that reads “raw goodness.”
Raw-dairy products are sold at Raw Farm. Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Chapter 2: The First

Mary McGonigle-Martin was shopping in a Southern California grocery store in 2006 when she spotted ads suggesting McAfee’s milk could treat allergies and digestive problems. She thought of her 7-year-old son, Chris, who she suspected was dealing with dairy sensitivity, and later visited McAfee’s website to learn more. She knew the risks of forgoing pasteurization, but the site eased her concerns: It said the farm tested its milk and had never found a single pathogen. 

So she started buying it, and her son started drinking it. And about a month later, he fell gravely ill. What began as a trip to the nearest hospital for bloody diarrhea turned into a race to save his life as his kidneys started to fail. Airlifted to a children’s hospital in Loma Linda, Chris was put in a medically induced coma. He spent nine days on a ventilator and 18 days on dialysis, during which time doctors gave him blood, platelet and plasma transfusions. “He was on the verge of death,” Martin told me. “I had flashes of him being in a casket and being at his funeral.”

Chris had a dangerous strain of E. coli, known as O157:H7, which led to hemolytic uremic syndrome. This rare condition, which mostly impacts children, occurs when bacterial toxins spread throughout the body and damage red blood cells, causing clots in the organs, primarily the kidneys. With quick intervention, most people survive. But it can cause lifelong complications.

While sitting in the intensive care unit, Martin overheard another mother mention her daughter had the same condition. It turned out the young girl had also drank milk from McAfee’s farm. Hoping to intervene before others got sick, the families reported the illnesses to the dairy and the state, which quickly issued a recall and quarantine order, suspending distribution of the farm’s products.

McAfee told me that when he learned of the two sick children, he “wanted to know the truth.” So he took his wife’s Volvo and drove four hours to the hospital. Then, somehow, he found a way into the ICU. “I knew how to get back past security,” he said. “A paramedic can get anywhere, and I sucked up to the nurses.”

Martin told me she was surprised when McAfee introduced himself in the waiting area, but nonetheless she shared details of her son’s ordeal. “I listened to her as compassionately as I could,” McAfee told me. But in his recollection, he observed that Martin’s son was not as critically ill as he’d been led to believe. “He’s eating McDonald’s, watching cartoons, doing just great, and they’re telling the story to the world that he’s ready to die,” claimed McAfee. “I was really upset about that.”

McAfee’s version of events was impossible, Martin told me: When he appeared at the hospital, Chris had just been taken off the ventilator and still struggled to breathe on his own; reams of her contemporaneous notes confirm this. Even after being extubated, he couldn’t have solid food for weeks due to severe pancreatitis. “I was so hungry,” Chris told me. “I started crying because I couldn’t eat.”

When I asked Martin why she thought McAfee gave such a different account of their meeting, her response was simple: “Mark is the master of spin.” (McAfee maintained that his recollection was accurate: “This is not spinning; this is simple truth.”)

An overhead view of an older person’s hands flipping through a stack of documents and photos. Prominently displayed on the left is a printed photograph of a young child in a hospital bed with medical tubes attached.
Mary McGonigle-Martin looks through old articles and documents she has saved. Nearly 20 years ago, her son, Chris, contracted an E. coli infection after consuming unpasteurized milk. Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Six people contracted E. coli during the first outbreak connected to McAfee’s farm, according to federal regulators; their median age was 8. While the outbreak’s specific strain of E. coli was not found in the products, some samples taken by investigators had high bacterial counts, indicating contamination. 

Chris suffered permanent kidney damage. Now 27, he can’t drink alcohol and will spend the rest of his life under a nephrologist’s care because of his elevated risk of chronic kidney disease. 

The illness lingered in other ways, too. “I would have random flashbacks and panic attacks from anything,” he told me. The smell of hospital soap. The sticky feeling of Band-Aids or tape on his skin. His mother found him a trauma counselor, which was “life-changing,” he said, except he still held onto a knot of resentment. Not toward his parents; he views them as victims like him. “Just so much anger towards Mark,” he recently told me. When he later saw McAfee’s milk being sold at a Sprouts, “I wanted to take a bat and smash the entire aisle.”

Martin couldn’t let go either. She hired Bill Marler, a Seattle attorney who specializes in food safety litigation. Alongside the family she met in the hospital, she sued McAfee’s farm in 2008, and the dairy settled for an undisclosed sum. “They couldn’t find the pathogen in our milk,” McAfee told me. “She claims she had it in her milk with her child, and that’s what the insurance company took to settle, and we weren’t going to litigate it.”

Emboldened, Martin, who was a high school guidance counselor, found her second calling as a food safety advocate, testifying against raw-milk-access bills across the country.

Following the settlement, McAfee wrote to Martin to apologize, but also begged her to move on. 

“Mary, please appreciate that so many children thrive and grow very strong on raw milk,” he wrote. “The very remote theoretical risk of illness from tested, retail, approved raw milk is far outweighed by the health and recovery from the illness that children that drink raw milk enjoy.”

Martin appreciated the note, but recognized that even in his seemingly heartfelt apology, McAfee could not adapt his belief system to fit her experience. “He really believed this was like a fluke. It’s not going to happen again,” she said.

Three people — an older man, a younger man and an older woman — sit together on a brown leather couch in a living room, all wearing serious expressions. The older people rest their hands on the younger man’s shoulders.
Tony Martin, left; Chris Martin; and Mary McGonigle-Martin, at their home in Murrieta, California, on March 26 Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Chapter 3: The Pathogens

Eager to keep showing me his farm’s serious approach to pathogens, McAfee ushered me into his truck to see the milking of his cows. Raw Farm keeps about 1,400 of them, which produce up to 8,000 gallons a day, each priced at $19. The smell of sweet milk hung in the air, mixed with the earthy musk of manure. 

“We’ll see what kind of music they’re playing this morning up in the milk barn,” he mused. 

“You play music for the milking?” I asked. 

“Mexican music,” he said, as he got behind the wheel. “It’s very Pavlovian. … You start seeing milk coming out of their teats.”

In the open-sided barn, workers sprayed a small herd of cows with a fire hose, removing flies and flecks of manure from their bellies, which were then inspected, coated with iodine and wiped with a towel. The steady pulsing of milking machines mingled with a thumping musical beat as McAfee marched down the rows, pointing to their light pink udders. “Super clean,” he said with pride. 

Hygiene appeared to be a clear priority everywhere we went, from the thick binders of safety plans — “not one of those documents collects dust,” he told me — to the sterile, full-body moon suits workers wear to package milk. 

McAfee said the 2006 outbreak opened his eyes to the risk of his product and was part of the reason he developed standards for unpasteurized dairies. 

But more awareness and better practices didn’t stop McAfee’s customers from continuing to get sick — in 2007, and 2011, and 2012, and 2016 — and the farm had to issue recalls more than half a dozen times after pathogens were found in its products.

And then between 2023 and 2024, regulators linked the farm to one of the largest publicly known raw-dairy outbreaks in decades, with more than 170 people falling ill from salmonella. McAfee disputed his farm’s connection to many of the outbreaks, including this one.

“I call complete crap,” McAfee said, claiming that his farm was not responsible for all the cases. “It was 25, maybe 30.” He also disagreed that the majority of patients were children, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had detailed in a report published last year. “I challenge that data at the fundamental level.”

It was a typical McAfee defense. Throughout our conversation, he never lost his composure, even when discussing outbreaks. Instead, he calmly dismissed the government’s methodology, explaining that it was counting cases of “standard diarrhea,” which he said have “no claims for illness,” as they could be managed with “good hydration and plenty of good bone broths and electrolytes and stuff.” 

He also seized on instances when the government could not identify an outbreak strain in his products, but instead found it in samples of farm water and cow feces or drew ties to his farm using genetic sequencing or interviews with patients — practices epidemiologists routinely rely upon. McAfee held that none of this was smoking-gun proof that his farm directly caused outbreaks. Instead, such episodes seemed to reinforce his perception that he was climbing a mountain alone, battling institutions that were already biased against raw milk before hearing his case.

When mandated quarantines ended, he would declare victory.

After his dairy reopened following an outbreak that sickened five children in 2011, he revealed how much people were suffering without his product in a celebratory video. McAfee shook the hand of a young man who was wearing a sideways cap. “This guy came all the way from Alaska to get raw milk!” McAfee said. The young man described a kind of withdrawal: “My immune system broke down. I lost a lot of lean body mass.” When a gray-haired woman said she was driving four half-gallons to her grandbabies in Texas — “that’s how desperate I am for them to be healthy” — McAfee kissed her on the head and called her a “raw-milk freedom rider.”

At least 233 people have been sickened in eight outbreaks that federal and state regulators have connected to McAfee’s farm since 2006, and at least 40 of them have been hospitalized. 

The tally is almost certainly an undercount, experts and regulators told me. Many recover at home from foodborne illness and do not seek out testing.

McAfee’s Dairy Has Sickened Hundreds of People Over the Years, According to Regulators

Federal and state regulators have linked 233 outbreak cases to Organic Pastures or Raw Farm. The true number of cases is likely higher.

A graphic showing the number of cases in each outbreak of foodborne illness linked to McAfee’s dairy. There were eight outbreaks between 2006 and 2025; the largest was an E. coli outbreak starting in October 2023. In total, there were 233 outbreak cases.
Source: CDC, FDA, California Department of Food and Agriculture, California Department of Public Health, Food Safety News Graphic by Alyssa Fowers, special to ProPublica

The outbreaks raised an obvious question: Why hadn’t regulators shut down the farm? America’s food safety system aims to balance public health with people’s freedom to eat foods that can harm them, like raw oysters and sushi. Regulators expect some will inevitably get sick, and so they focus on ensuring consumers, at the very least, are aware of the risk.  

State regulators are responsible for overseeing raw milk sold legally within their borders. In California, they require it to be sampled and tested monthly for pathogens. Raw Farm is in good standing, according to the Department of Food and Agriculture, consistently meeting standards for sanitation and cow health. But spokespeople for that agency and the state Department of Public Health emphasized that the best way to prevent illness is to drink milk that has been pasteurized. Otherwise, they wrote in an email, “there will always be some risk of contamination.” 

Many people who turn to raw milk don’t have a full understanding of that risk, John Lucey told me. A professor of food science who directs the Center for Dairy Research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Lucey grew up on a farm and has studied dairy products for three decades. “Cows poop all the time,” he said. “Farms are just a reservoir of bacteria: The soil has got bacteria, the walls have got bacteria, the cows are carrying bacteria.”

One of the draws of raw milk is a deeper connection to its source; by knowing a farmer personally, people assume their food will be more safe, Lucey said. But what raw-milk consumers often don’t realize is that many dairy farmers are in a relentless battle to produce clean milk.

“Sometimes you lose because the cow kicked off the milking machine. Something just happens,” he said. “Farmers do the best they can and they are super hardworking people, but just because Daisy is a nice cow and the farmer is a nice guy doesn’t guarantee that things are sanitary and that they can prevent things 100% of the time.”

A close-up of a brown dairy cow looking directly at the camera from behind a barbed wire fence. The cow has pale yellow ear tags in both ears that read “raw,” “Helga” and “12057.” The background features a sunny blue sky with a few clouds.
Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Over the past two years alone, nine states have experienced outbreaks that regulators linked to raw dairy, not including those connected to McAfee’s farm. In Washington state, about 10 people fell ill with E. coli connected to raw-cheese consumption, and in Florida, where raw milk can be sold only as pet food, about 20 people got sick. Among them was a pregnant mother whose toddler was hospitalized; she said she caught his bacterial infection and had a miscarriage at 20 weeks. (The Florida farm said its products had not tested positive for pathogens and that it informed customers its raw milk was not for human consumption; the Washington creamery voluntarily recalled its cheese.)

Just last week, Idaho’s health officials announced that nearly 60 people had become ill after consuming raw milk.

Discussing the risk of raw milk with McAfee was a challenge. 

As we rode in his truck to the next stop on the tour, I brought up the prevalence of pathogens, as well as his farm’s pattern of outbreaks. He acknowledged that some risk exists, but stressed that it was “very, very, very small” and was “fantastically” outweighed by raw milk’s therapeutic value. And then, he insisted one should disentangle the benefits from the risk, as if that’s even possible.

“Show me the criticism of raw milk if it’s safe,” he told me, one hand on the wheel, the other punctuating his points in the air. “None.”

“Well, the critics would argue that there’s risk—”

“No, if it’s safe,” he said, cutting me off. “If it’s safe, how could you criticize it?”

“But they would argue that it’s not safe,” I said.

“Show me the risk,” he repeated. “I’ve yet to see it. We found it. We immediately diverted it.”

The interior of a dairy milking parlor with cows lined up in elevated stalls on both sides. Yellow milking hoses hang from the ceiling, and two workers stand in the wet center aisle.
Employees hook up cows to milking machines at Raw Farm. Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Chapter 4: The Art of War

We’d seen nearly every stage of production — from “grass to glass,” as McAfee called it — when he parked his truck next to the hangar that houses his Cessna 210 Centurion propeller plane. Next to it, steps from his hacienda-style home, is a bungalow he uses as an office. 

He showed me his replica medieval broadsword, his podcasting setup and one of his favored books, Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War.” He said the ancient Chinese military treatise had informed his longstanding feud with the federal government. 

Two decades ago, his use of the pet food loophole to ship across state lines attracted scrutiny almost immediately. In 2005, an undercover investigator from the FDA called the farm and was told the milk was safe for human consumption. Two years later, according to court records, the farm sent an email to consumers saying, “Raw milk can be shipped via UPS to all US states,” and “Tell everyone who has asthma that they will be cured by raw milk.” 

In 2008, the DOJ pursued criminal charges and a civil suit. McAfee resolved the charges, promising that the farm wouldn’t sell raw milk across state lines again. But prosecutors wanted a court order that would force McAfee and the farm to comply, citing their “unabashed efforts to manipulate the law.” 

To illustrate McAfee’s ongoing defiance, the government pointed to statements he had made online that year and the next. In one post on a blog, he said, “If we ever get raided it will be grand theater. … There will probably be some riots.” In another, he said he would not use guns “until the tipping point” and mentioned “another Wounded Knee, Ruby Ridge or Waco.” Prosecutors argued his conduct demonstrated a “cognizable danger” that he would violate the law again.

In 2010, the judge granted a permanent injunction, requiring, among other things, that the farm stop selling raw milk beyond California and take down any statements promoting its health benefits. McAfee told me the directive was an attack on his right to free speech. “I deeply and passionately believe in the truth, and they were telling me I could not speak the truth,” he said. “I’ve had to have therapy over that, you know. I didn’t want to do something stupid.”

A violation of the order could have led to an enforcement action, but in the years that followed, officials pulled their punches. (McAfee insisted they had no punches to throw.)

The FDA and the DOJ kept finding evidence of violations, in 2016, and 2019, and 2021, according to court records. Though federal prosecutors initially pushed for strong penalties, including holding Raw Farm and McAfee in contempt, they agreed to a consent decree in 2023, which required the farm to undergo independent audits to ensure it was complying with the law.

Then, in early 2024, FDA inspectors discovered the farm had a “standard practice” of producing cheese from milk suspected or known to contain pathogens, according to court documents; lab records showed its cheese had also tested positive even after the mandated aging period. 

That February, federal regulators publicly linked Raw Farm’s cheese to a monthslong E. coli outbreak. Nearly a dozen people across five states fell ill. 

Among them was Paul Panelli, who went to his grocery store in Newport Beach, California, looking for Tillamook cheese to make tacos. Finding it was sold out, he reached for Raw Farm’s cheddar, drawn in by packaging that made it seem organic and all-natural. He told me he didn’t realize the cheese was made with unpasteurized milk.

Both Panelli and his wife, Julie, came down with food poisoning. She was diagnosed with an E. coli infection that left her needing several kidney surgeries. “She literally is afraid to eat things,” her husband told me. The family’s lawsuit against Raw Farm is ongoing; in court records, the farm denied responsibility for their illnesses.

Raw Farm pushed back against the government, maintaining that it followed federal regulations by aging its cheese and claiming to have tested all of it before sale, so no contaminated product reached the market, according to court records. Federal law allows the interstate sale of unpasteurized cheese as long as it’s aged for at least 60 days, though this doesn’t fully eliminate the risk — or account for a farm using pathogenic milk to make it. The FDA told the farm to destroy any cheese made with contaminated milk, arguing that it was violating the law, according to court documents. The farm’s lawyer said it was in compliance, and insisted there was no “bad cheese” to throw out.

To force the farm to follow the government’s orders, it needed a judge’s ruling, but a backlog in the under-resourced Eastern District of California left the case on pause well into 2025. The arrival of the Trump administration that year created a political opening for McAfee.

By the time Kennedy took the helm of the health department, McAfee had already developed close ties to his inner circle. “I go way back with him,” McAfee told me. Kennedy’s running mate, Nicole Shanahan, had made a stop at Raw Farm during his presidential campaign, creating multiple videos featuring McAfee. (She did not respond to my emailed questions.) He was even asked to become an adviser to the FDA, McAfee told me. The position never materialized, but McAfee still benefited from the change in administration. 

Without publicly stating a reason, this past January the government dropped its efforts to take action against the farm. A former federal employee with knowledge of the suit told me that cases involving raw milk were deprioritized in the new administration because of Kennedy’s stance on it. 

Natalie Baldassarre, a DOJ spokesperson, didn’t respond to my questions about the decision, but said in an email that the administration will “always be concerned about risks to public health and will continue to take enforcement action as appropriate to protect American consumers.” The health department and the FDA did not respond to my attempts to seek comment. Kennedy, through his department, also did not respond to my questions.

McAfee called the withdrawal a “big win.” Drawing on Sun Tzu’s teachings, he told me that he had learned not to engage in “their war,” but his own. 

“You win the war they don’t expect you to fight,” he said. While officials were gathering evidence, he was focused on the “education” of consumers. He once delivered his message to dozens at a time. Now online influencers spread it to audiences of millions. “They have the guns and the money,” he said of the government. “I got the truth and the moms.”

His work could soon pay off. A month after I shook McAfee’s hand and left his farm, Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Kentucky, and Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, reintroduced the Interstate Milk Freedom Act, which would prohibit “federal interference” with the interstate sale of raw dairy in states where raw milk is already legal. 

Massie, who served raw milk at his recent wedding, has a farm with 50 cattle, and Pingree, a former dairy farmer and the only Democratic sponsor of the bill, raises her own grass-fed beef. “The Interstate Milk Freedom Act would make it easier for families to buy the milk of their choice,” Massie said when he announced the bill, “by reversing the criminalization of specific dairy farmers.”

When asked if she was concerned the bill may increase access to a product that puts people at risk, Pingree told me that the bill was not about marketing raw milk or making any health claims. “I trust state departments of agriculture and health to monitor compliance, assess health risks, and enforce the rules in place to protect consumers,” she said in an emailed statement. Massie did not respond to my questions.

A man in a baseball cap walks past double glass doors inside a dimly lit building with corrugated metal walls. Above the doors hangs a large Raw Farm sign.
McAfee exits the hangar where his airplane is stored at Raw Farm. Sarahbeth Maney for ProPublica

Chapter 5: The Devoted

Six weeks after I left Raw Farm, it happened. 

On March 15, federal regulators publicly linked its cheese to yet another E. coli outbreak. 

Nine people were infected across three states; more than half were younger than 5. Of the three people who had to be hospitalized, according to regulators, one developed the same severe kidney condition that Martin’s son had battled two decades earlier. 

Initially, federal health agencies didn’t urge the public to avoid the cheese or throw it away, as they had under previous administrations. Instead, a CDC notice said consumers should “consider” not eating it; the FDA gave no consumption guidance at all. Three federal health employees later told me political appointees had watered down the original language. (The agencies’ advisories have since been updated. Neither the CDC nor the FDA responded to my questions.)

The fact that the agency was under Kennedy’s leadership didn’t make Raw Farm any more compliant when regulators asked it to recall its products. It refused. “If there was ever a question about whether there was a pathogen in our products,” McAfee later told me, “I’d be the first one to recall immediately, voluntarily.”

He said he texted Kennedy to “call off the dogs,” but got no response. 

When FDA inspectors showed up unannounced at the farm, it complied with an investigation. And when the agency threatened to force a recall, the company reluctantly issued its own, 18 days after the outbreak was announced. 

The farm appended several unusual statements to its April 2 advisory: 

This Voluntary Recall is being performed under protest.

This Voluntary Recall is performed as a path forward.

The farm retracted those statements five days later, but continued to dispute the cause of the outbreak and contest the agency’s findings. It had tested its products, found no pathogens and wasn’t at fault, McAfee said.

However, during its investigation, the FDA also sampled and tested the company’s cheese. While it didn’t find the recent outbreak strain, one sample tested positive for E. coli. In their inspection, agency officials also found the farm’s cheese had recently tested presumptively positive for pathogens even after 60 days, showing the limitations of its aging process. The farm destroyed these contaminated batches. 

I reached out to McAfee and asked him whether the illnesses might be connected to his practice of using problematic milk to make cheese. But now, he told a different story. 

“We would in the past divert to cheesemaking,” he told me. “We no longer do.” He didn’t pinpoint exactly when the farm made the change, throwing out dates from two years ago to last summer. “It’s been quite some time.”

I brought up the fact that he’d made similar disclosures in podcasts in the last year and to me just weeks earlier. But he doubled down. 

“I think you have caught me in something where there’s an issue between practice and what I’m saying,” he said. “If I said it, I believed that at the time to be true, but I do know that now we do not use any questionable milk.” 

In almost the same breath, McAfee noted that his farm would not have violated any laws if it had done so. “It’s not illegal,” he said. “That’s why the FDA dropped their thing.” (California regulators told me such a practice was “concerning.” The FDA refused to respond to questions about it.)

Speaking to a congressional subcommittee on April 16 about the outbreak, Kennedy noted that companies usually comply with recalls right away. “But there was foot-dragging,” he said. “This company was intransigent.” 

U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., asked Kennedy whether in the face of these new, serious illnesses, it wasn’t time for a shift in his messaging: “You are the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Is there not some moral responsibility or compunction to say, ‘Don’t drink raw milk’?”

“Every product can contain contaminants,” Kennedy replied. “What we do is inform the public, and we let people make the choice.” 

On April 30, the FDA closed its investigation without taking any enforcement action. McAfee told me his raw-cheese products were back in stores. Sprouts and H-E-B, two major retail chains that have carried his cheese, did not respond to my emailed questions about the outbreak.

“We don’t feel bad at all,” McAfee told me about the entire episode. “Our sales are highest they’ve ever been, and feedback online with influencers is: If the FDA says something, do the opposite. It’s safer. They don’t trust them at all.” 

On a sunny weekend in early May, hundreds congregated at Raw Farm for its annual Camping With the Cows event. Blue skies extended to the horizon, and a small colony of tents, camper vans and motorhomes sprawled out across the lush alfalfa fields. Influencers in cowboy hats chugged cartons of milk. Matt James, the leading man on Season 25 of “The Bachelor,” ambled around with his mother in a T-shirt that read, “Raw Milk Club.”

Many attendees were unbothered by the recent illnesses. They said they consumed raw dairy because they wanted to reduce their inflammation, and avoid additives, and prevent lactose intolerance, and clear their skin, and bring their hormones into balance. They wanted nutrients that didn’t exist in “boiled to death” milk. They wanted to drink it “the natural way.” 

Alyssa Wolfer, a 42-year-old mother of two from Bakersfield, viewed raw milk as a symbol of “true American freedom,” she said. “I very much lean on the side of freedom of people to choose what they consume and less regulation.”

“I’m seven months pregnant, and I drink raw milk because that’s how God has created it to be,” said Lindsay Espinoza, 34, reclining on a bale of hay with her husband and young son. “There’s so much fear behind raw milk, but it makes sense to us.”

Some, like 58-year-old Melanie Copeland from Huntington Beach, questioned whether the outbreak had occurred at all. “The odds of it being true are slim to none,” she said, “and people need to do their research.”

McAfee mingled among his flock. Some stopped him for pictures as he beamed down the camera and flashed a thumbs-up.

The post He Profits Off Raw Milk That’s Making People Sick. The Government Isn’t Stopping Him. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:49

18-year-old Subhan Ahmed allegedly assisted with the torching of four ambulances used by a Jewish volunteer organization

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:37

TUC, GMB and Unison leaders reject invitation to affiliate to Reform amid rising support for party among their members

Major trade unions and the TUC have rebuffed Nigel Farage’s call for unions to affiliate to Reform UK, saying the party is “cosplaying” as workers’ champions and has opposed new employment rights.

Farage issued a call on Tuesday for unions to attend Reform’s conference and to affiliate to the party, and he suggested one union may be on the brink of doing so.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:29

MLB All-Star former catcher Yadier Molina said on social media that the plane was bound for Texas to pick him up, along with family and friends.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 06:06

Updated Pentagon list includes swathe of China’s top technology firms in move that could inflame tensions between the countries

The US added Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba, internet search provider Baidu and carmaker BYD to a list of companies it believes are aiding Beijing’s military, in a move that could inflame tensions between the countries.

The long-awaited update released on Monday supersedes a list from early 2025, and comes less than a month after Donald Trump met China’s Xi Jinping on a visit to Beijing, where the two leaders maintained a delicate trade war truce.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 06:04

The dollar will decline, not fall Expert comment jon.wallace

The history of pound sterling, the world’s previous dominant currency, is not reassuring for the dollar.

British pound notes arranged next to one dollar bills.

Over the past 18 months there has been considerable debate about the dollar’s ability to retain its pre-eminent role in the global economy. 

For some, a tipping point is approaching where the world dumps the dollar. For others, the currency’s inherent strengths will make it robust even to the latest vagaries of partisan politics. 

But these arguments lack something vital – history. The decline of pound sterling, the world’s first truly global currency, suggests that the dollar’s demise may well be inevitable – but also that it’s unlikely to be quick or straightforward.

Declining heft means declining dominance…

The way in which a currency becomes dominant can be usefully explained in both standard economic terms and through a geoeconomic lens. 

Economic theory links the rise of dominant currencies to self-reinforcing interactions between trade and finance. A disproportionate degree of trade invoicing in a currency leads to stronger demand for that currency. That depresses borrowing costs in that currency, which in turn reinforces demand for it.

Meanwhile, the geoeconomics perspective links currency dominance to hard power. In this set up, a hegemon uses the strength of its domestic economy to underwrite safe assets – typically government debt. As foreigners are attracted to these safe and liquid assets, the hegemon strengthens its hold over foreign economies and generates an excess return. But the hegemon will also be tempted to overreach, to maximize its influence, and issue more assets than it can safely back.

Two insights flow from these models: First, that currency decline may be inevitable once an economy passes its peak. Second, that the entanglements that arise from dominance can make that decline extraordinarily slow. 

Sterling’s decline illustrates both points. Britain was the trading powerhouse of the first era of globalization, accounting for 30 per cent of global trade in the later-19th century, over which period ‘60 per cent of world trade was invoiced and settled in sterling’. 

Arguably, Britain’s hard power peaked around the same point, between the Napoleonic and Boer wars. Yet from this late-19th century peak in Britain’s global dominance, sterling wasn’t definitively surpassed by the dollar until the immediate post-war years and played a meaningful global role well into the 1970s. That represents around a century of decline.

It’s common to assert that this time is different, because there is no alternative to the dollar. But such an argument rests on the simplistic assumption that only one currency at a time can hold a dominant role. Sterling’s history offers a straightforward rebuttal to this argument. 

The most comprehensive historical estimates show not only that the dollar and sterling were close rivals in the interwar years, but also that sterling was rivalled by both the French franc and the German mark throughout its 19th century heyday – dominance doesn’t preclude serious rivals.

A currency dominates when it is the unit of account for safe assets – and safety arises through scale and credibility, not through specific asset types or market structures.

The more sophisticated version of this ‘no alternatives’ argument states that potential competitors to the dollar have serious flaws, for instance that euro assets lack the liquidity and market depth of dollar assets; and that the renminbi is largely closed to external investors. 

Yet it is easy to overlook two striking facts. First, the euro accounts for a larger share of trade-invoicing than the dollar, even if that largely reflects the scale of trade between Euro Area countries. 

Second, the euro comes a distant but stable second to the dollar in foreign exchange reserves, retaining its 20 per cent share even while the dollar share has tumbled from nearly 75 per cent to below 60 per cent over the past quarter century. 

Meanwhile, China and the Euro area are vastly larger trade partners than the US for most countries. A set of topical and technically feasible reforms, enhancing competitiveness and capital market depth and liquidity, could support a stronger role for the euro and renminbi. Linking back to sterling’s experience with rivals: the alternatives don’t have to be perfect to play a prominent role.

A newer strand of argument in defence of dollar dominance appeals to technology. This argues that the rise of dollar-denominated stablecoins will sustain demand. But that misses the point as to which technology matters for currency dominance. 

Again, sterling provides an illustrative example. It’s commonly forgotten that sterling safe assets weren’t sovereign-issued – they were highly liquid trade bills, backed in the first instance by the private sector, but ultimately backed by commitments to low inflation, sound public finances and by the scale of the UK economy. 

Put simply, a currency dominates when it is the unit of account for safe assets. And safety arises through scale and credibility, not through specific asset types or market structures.

…but decline is slow and meandering.

Why was sterling’s decline so drawn out? A lot of people had a stake in preserving its value. It retained its global role after the Second World War partly because the dollar was scarce – but mostly because huge sterling balances had been accumulated during the war. 

It was in no one’s interest to liquidate those quickly, destabilizing the global monetary system and destroying asset values. Hence, a complex system of managed decline was constructed between the UK, holders of sterling and wider participants in the global economy. Equally, today dollar assets are widely held, making a sudden demise in no one’s interest.

Sterling’s decline was drawn out – but that is not to say it was gradual. It was punctuated by a series of crises with global impact. In 1931 it brought down the gold standard; in 1949 it forced a reset of the Bretton Woods monetary system; and, in 1968 it brought Bretton Woods down altogether

Those global crises sat alongside domestic ones, including the ‘stop-go’ years, when the UK current account constrained growth and London was forced to repeatedly borrow from the BIS and IMF, culminating in the controversial IMF bailout of 1976.

Does the end of dominance necessarily mean depreciation? Superficially, sterling’s history would suggest yes. At the onset of the First World War, one pound sterling bought $4.86; it hasn’t bought $2.00 since 2001. 

But the reality is more complex. After the war, Britain pursued loose monetary policy and financial repression leading to high inflation – not only were sterling assets less attractive, but they were prevented from adjusting to become more attractive. 

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:01

What I’m Discussing Today:

  • Kareem’s Daily Quote: What happens to self-government when we decide a free press isn’t worth the trouble to defend?

  • CBS News fires Scott Pelley of “60 Minutes”: Is CBS clearing out anyone who still believes journalism should make powerful people uncomfortable?

  • Experts criticize plan for American-only Ebola quarantine center in Kenya: It’s less public health and more a fear-driven move that ignores evidence and abandons basic ethics.

  • The Knicks Have Celebrity Fans. The Spurs Have Nuns: The Spurs’ beloved nuns are a lovely story, but lovely stories can also distract from who gets priced out of the arena.

  • What I’m Reading: Walter Mosley’s Ghalen offers a patient, humane portrait of love, family, and neurodivergence that rewards readers willing to let character lead.

  • Jukebox Playlist: Ella and Louis turn a modest romantic request into something warm and lived-in.

Kareem’s Daily Quote

“There is no more essential ingredient than a free, strong, and independent press to our continued success in what the Founding Fathers called our ‘noble experiment’ in self-government.”

40th U.S. President Ronald Reagan (1911–2004) with a written message on the Observance of National Newspaper Week, October 6, 1983

(Photo by Diana Walker/Getty Images)

Read those words without attribution and you might think they came from a left-wing editorial board or a lawyer with the ACLU. When you see Ronald Reagan’s name attached, your brain does a little double-take because we’ve watched the political party he led and the political movement he built devolve into something that treats the press as a target rather than an institution worth defending. That gap between what he wrote then and where things stand now shows you how quickly our leaders will abandon principles the moment they become inconvenient to maintaining power. But the word that Reagan chose to characterize the role a free press plays in our democracy deserves attention: it’s an “ingredient,” something that gets mixed in as part of an overall recipe. Take it out and the meal may look the same, but the final dish could have an entirely different flavor.

Still, a credible defense of the press demands an acknowledgement of what the press has actually done wrong. The coverage in the run-up to the Iraq War was a genuinely serious institutional failure: major outlets accepted and amplified claims about weapons of mass destruction without sufficient independent verification, and The Times eventually published a formal apology for its journalistic errors. That’s a real thing that happened. So was the false equivalency with which the press treated the few lapses of judgment in Hillary Clinton’s distinguished career in public service and Donald Trump’s lifelong habits of greed, corruption, and abusive behavior towards women. But by using the media’s occasional errors to rebrand the entire industry as “fake news,” Donald Trump has convinced a significant portion of our population not to trust anyone who writes for the nation’s newspapers or appears on the nightly news.

Reagan also invoked “our noble experiment,” and the word “experiment” is the most important one in that phrase. Do we actually treat our democracy as something that requires constant attention, that might blow up in our faces if we don’t practice it with the rigor and integrity it demands? Too many of our citizens, not to mention our politicians, do not. If they took the experiment seriously, they wouldn’t look at the collapse of the media industry with such an indifferent attitude. Since 1990, newspaper employment in this country has declined by roughly 82 percent. More than 3,200 newspapers have closed since 2005. When local newsrooms close, school board meetings go unattended, city contracts go unscrutinized, and government corruption simply goes unreported.

Politics isn’t a game, like basketball. The winners and losers in our democratic system aren’t playing for titles or championship rings: they’re competing for food, housing, and their children’s future. We need the free press to keep a close eye on everyone involved and make sure these competitions, which can be actual matters of life and death, are played fairly and according to the rules. Because, no matter what he says, you can’t trust a politician with a bullhorn labeled Truth to tell you anything but lies.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:00

The tournament kicks off on Thursday in Mexico City. Here’s what newcomers can expect from one of the world’s largest and most watched events

It is! Every four years the best men’s teams on the planet gather to see who will be crowned world champions. This year’s tournament will be co-hosted by frenemies Canada, Mexico and the United States in 16 cities as different as Vancouver, Kansas City and Guadalajara. The 48 teams are initially divided into [does arithmetic] 12 four-team groups with each team playing the others in the group once. The top two from each group, along with the eight best third-placed teams – 32 in total – will advance to the knockout stages. Matches from that point on are single-elimination - lose and you’re out. If scores are level at the end of extra-time, the match is decided by a penalty shootout.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:00

Darren Sharper, who pleaded guilty or no contest to raping women in four states, is projected to be released in 2028

Admitted serial rapist and former National Football League champion Darren Sharper has been transferred from federal prison to a halfway house program with his projected 2028 release date nearing.

In a statement to the Guardian on Monday, a US Bureau of Prisons (BoP) spokesperson said Sharper, 50, was transferred on 27 May from a federal correctional institution near Elkton, Ohio, to “community confinement” overseen by the agency’s residential re-entry management office in Baltimore.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:00

Two men’s silhouettes face each other. They are framed by the silhouette of a refinery, smoke and the American flag.

Collage by Alex Bandoni/ProPublica. Source images: Westend6, JHVEPhoto, Jean Catuffe and Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images.

In late November in Jamnagar, India, the scions of two of the most powerful families in the world stood face-to-face. On one side was 30-year-old Anant Ambani, son of one the richest men in Asia. On the other was Donald Trump Jr. For months, the Trump administration had been on the offensive against the sprawling Ambani energy empire, placing it at the center of an escalating tariff campaign against India. But after Trump Jr. touched down, the two men toured the Ambanis’ private zoo, and at night they performed a Gujarati folk dance, grinning as they moved together to the music.

Four months later, an obscure Texas startup called America First Refining announced that it had received a nine-figure investment from the Ambanis’ company. The deal puzzled numerous energy investors familiar with the project, which aims to build the first major new oil refinery in the U.S. in about 50 years. The company is run by a serial entrepreneur with a history of bankruptcy and lawsuits alleging fraud. After more than a decade of failed attempts to raise money, blown deadlines and rebrands, it had been floundering.

America First Refining’s unexpected breakthrough came after it forged a previously unreported relationship with Trump Jr., who secretly acquired a stake in the startup, according to records and seven people familiar with the company. The new details reveal the role the president’s son has played in a theme of Trump’s second term: overseas investors with interests before the administration putting money into the Trump family’s business interests.

Over the past year and a half, Trump Jr. has amassed a fortune from stakes in companies ranging from crypto startups to a drone business to a firearms retailer. Some firms tied to the president’s son have received contracts or other support from the federal government, part of what critics describe as a run of Trump family self-dealing. In December, Forbes estimated that Trump Jr.’s net worth had rocketed from roughly $50 million to $300 million since the election. But the Forbes figures were based on the investments that have been publicly disclosed. The America First Refining episode suggests there is much about the family business that remains secret.

The size of Trump Jr.’s stake in America First Refining and what he paid for it remain unclear. Top executives at the startup have also said that they speak regularly with Trump Jr., according to a person close to the company. And after the Ambani investment was announced, Trump Jr.’s personal lawyer took credit on social media for playing a part in the deal.

America First Refining has flexed its Trump Jr. connections during pitch meetings with foreign officials. Early last year, Trump Jr. joined the company’s leadership for a meeting in South Florida with potential investors from Saudi Arabia, according to two people familiar with the matter. Another foreign government official pitched on the project told ProPublica that the company’s team emphasized they had backing from the Trump family and suggested that an investment would help with White House access.

The Ambanis’ investment coincided with the family’s securing major U.S. policy wins that their company, Reliance Industries, had been lobbying for. “Reliance Goes From Trump Foe to Friend With Refinery Pledge,” ran the Bloomberg headline after the deal was announced. Reliance’s intent with the deal was to “smooth out” tensions between the U.S. and India, the outlet reported.

A Trump Jr. spokesperson said that Trump Jr. “has no operational involvement in AFR and is simply a passive minority investor in an American company that aligns with his worldview.” 

“The entire premise of this story relating to Don is false,” the spokesperson said, adding, “Don does not interface with the Federal Government on behalf of any company that he invests in or advises.” ProPublica did not find evidence Trump Jr. was aware of refinery executives’ suggesting that an investment would help with White House access. 

In response to detailed questions, a spokesperson for America First Refining said, “The claims in this story are false,” but declined to specify what they were referring to. The company’s CEO previously denied wrongdoing in the lawsuits against him reviewed by ProPublica, and the suits were either settled or dropped.

The Ambani family had long been cultivating its relationship with the Trumps. Reliance paid $10 million to the Trump Organization in 2024 as a “development fee” for a project in Mumbai, according to the president’s financial disclosure. (Despite the payment, Reliance has not yet announced a Trump project. Reliance told ProPublica that “the real estate project is real” and “remains under development.”) Ivanka Trump attended Anant Ambani’s wedding party in India that year, where guests were treated to a Rihanna concert. Anant’s father, Mukesh — who is worth an estimated $90 billion and lives in a 27-story home — came to Washington, D.C., for Trump’s second inauguration, posing with the president at a private reception.

But by the summer of 2025, the family was under attack from the White House. Since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Reliance had reportedly made billions in profits by purchasing vast quantities of Russian oil at a discount. In August, as Trump grew frustrated with his administration’s struggles to bring the war to an end, the president doubled his tariffs on India to 50%. The move was explicitly designed to force companies like Reliance to stop buying Russian oil. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro publicly assailed “India’s politically connected energy titans” for “funding Putin’s war machine,” widely read as a reference to the Ambanis.

Amid this tension, Trump Jr. visited Anant Ambani on his November trip to India. At the end of the trip, Trump Jr.’s personal lawyer commented at a business conference in Miami: “I had a nice closing this morning with Don Trump Jr., who’s flying back from India today.” (The following week, the Texas startup — then called Element Fuels — filed paperwork to create America First Refining LLC. In an email, the attorney, John Willding, told ProPublica that there was “no transaction in India or with an Indian company that I was ever involved with.”) 

Anant Ambani, who helps run Reliance’s energy business, personally worked on the Texas refinery deal for months before it was announced, a major Indian newspaper later reported.

As the Ambanis quietly finalized their deal with America First Refining, U.S.-Indian relations appeared to warm. In February, the Trump administration struck a trade deal with India, dramatically lowering tariffs, and also reportedly gave Reliance a license to buy Venezuelan oil. When the Iran war broke out and rocked global energy markets, the U.S. gave India a sanctions waiver to buy Russian crude. (The waiver was later expanded to all countries.) 

In response to ProPublica’s questions, the White House said that “there are no conflicts of interest.” Reliance did not answer ProPublica’s questions about Trump Jr.’s and Anant Ambani’s roles in the investment deal, but said in a statement that the company did not receive “any unique or preferential treatment” from the U.S. government. 

“There is no connection between Reliance’s investment in AFR and any unique measures associated with general U.S. trade, tariff, sanctions or licensing outcomes,” Reliance said. “The investment was evaluated and approved on its commercial merits, strategic fit and long-term value creation potential.”

In March, President Trump personally announced Reliance’s deal with the Texas startup on Truth Social, thanking the Ambani company for its “tremendous Investment.”  

After the announcement, Willding, the Trump Jr. lawyer, shared the news on LinkedIn: “Just so proud to have been part of this one.”

Willding rowed back his claim in an email to ProPublica. “I have never worked for or advised AFR and had zero involvement in their deal with Reliance Energy,” he said. “I simply saw the press release and was excited for them.” America First Refining’s spokesperson called Willding’s comment “moronic and false.”

In June 2025, Willding registered a new entity in Wyoming called TX Fuels, LLC, listing the company’s address as Trump Jr.’s mansion in Jupiter, Florida. In his email, Willding said his “only involvement in AFR was handling the legal paperwork” for the Trump Jr. LLC’s investment in the startup.

Trump Jr. first hired Willding in May 2021, according to interviews the lawyer has given. A corporate deal lawyer in Dallas, Willding has referred to himself as “outside business counsel to the Trump family” and has said he talks to Trump Jr. or Eric Trump almost daily. A former Bill Clinton and Barack Obama voter who fell hard for MAGA, the attorney has installed a portrait of President Trump over the mantel in his living room.

Willding’s practice has boomed during the second Trump administration, bringing the lawyer to Argentina, Saudi Arabia and South Korea. “Everybody in the world wants to do business with the United States right now,” Willding said at a conference in June 2025. “Every company wants to do business with the Trump family.”

There are other fingerprints of the Trump world on the refinery deal. 

Howard Lutnick’s firm Cantor Fitzgerald — which his sons took over when Lutnick became Trump’s commerce secretary — is working as the financial adviser to America First Refining, including on the Ambani investment deal, Cantor Fitzgerald announced. (Cantor Fitzgerald declined to comment.)

And the Trump administration played a direct role helping America First Refining find potential foreign investors, according to public comments from the company’s CEO, John Calce. “We have received support from the White House,” he told a local news outlet. The National Energy Dominance Council, led by the interior and energy secretaries, has “helped us with, candidly, introducing us and helping us meet some of these people overseas,” Calce said on an industry podcast. 

America First Refining has recently explored going public, according to three people close to the company. That could allow its current investors to start cashing out even if the refinery never gets built — a milestone many energy industry insiders still view as a long shot. Reliance made its investment in the startup at a valuation of at least $1 billion, according to America First Refining’s announcement.

Building a refinery at the Port of Brownsville on the Gulf Coast has been Calce’s mission for a decade. A former Yale offensive lineman, he started his career as a high school football coach after an unsuccessful attempt to make the NFL and now describes himself as a “lifelong entrepreneur.” 

The project has been serially delayed, out of money, rebranded and trailed by angry former business partners. At one point, Calce’s companies were being sued simultaneously by eight other firms. In 2022, during bankruptcy proceedings for an earlier iteration of the project, the trustee appointed to impartially oversee the case sued Calce too. The trustee alleged that Calce and other insiders had improperly siphoned away cash and other assets. (Calce denied wrongdoing. The case was ultimately settled.)

During the Biden administration, as the company sought financial support from the Department of Energy, it pitched itself as a climate-friendly green project that would also help “people of underrepresented social demographics” in Brownsville, according to records from that period. The company failed to get enough money from outside investors, and the planned construction was delayed. 

By the company’s own estimate, building the refinery will take years and cost $3 billion to $4 billion. Even if it’s built, profitability could be hard to achieve. Many energy investors told ProPublica there’s a reason the U.S. hasn’t seen a major new refinery in decades. “Refineries cost a lot of money and essentially make pennies on the dollar,” said Ed Hirs, an energy economist in Houston. “Wall Street is not going to finance a new refinery.”

Even after the start of the second Trump administration, the company was in jeopardy, according to interviews and documents. It laid off workers last year, and, by late 2025, with delays continuing to plague the refinery, officials at the Port of Brownsville believed the project looked to be dead, according to records reviewed by ProPublica.

That has not stopped Calce and his team from making grandiose claims to the public. Earlier this year, a website went live for another Calce company called Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals. It claims to have a far-flung network of oil storage terminals in places like the Netherlands and Singapore, more than 850 employees and a C-suite of experienced energy executives. But ProPublica could find no evidence that the executives are real people or that the storage terminals actually exist. The phone numbers on the website are also currently listed online as the contacts for a Houston baklava caterer, a Dallas-area taxi service and an OB-GYN office. The numbers are dead.

America First Refining’s political ties, though, may have boosted its standing with Texas state regulators. In February, shortly before the Ambani investment became public, the company sought an extension on its permit from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. 

Inside the state agency, emails obtained by ProPublica show, officials scrambled to approve the request.

“Need to get this one logged and processed asap,” wrote one official.

“You are going to have to do this one. I will explain why in person in a few,” wrote another. “You can guess if you check out the name.”

America First Refining got its approval the next day. A spokesperson for the Texas agency did not address questions about the emails. “This request was processed quickly due to the quality of information provided,” the spokesperson said.

The post An Indian Billionaire Was Targeted by Trump. Then He Poured Money Into a Startup Secretly Backed by Donald Trump Jr. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:00

These are the best sci-fi programs Apple has to offer.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 06:00

Even somewhat puritan Massachusetts is giving soccer fans more time to drink during the tournament.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 06:00

The magazine writes: ‘Resisting Gen-Z socialism is therefore an urgent task.’ That urgency must outweigh any urgency of feeding hungry people

A spectre is haunting Europe and America – the spectre of gen Z socialism.

That’s the urgent warning from the Economist in a new cover-story editorial, How to fight back against Gen-Z socialism. Alarmed by a youthful threat to the established order, the magazine is calling for heightened vigilance from defenders of private enterprise.

Norman Solomon is the director of RootsAction and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 06:00

Critics say president using well-worn playbook – with loyalists in key positions ready to amplify his message

Donald Trump is “inventing fraud” in California’s primary elections, and likely to ramp up unfounded allegations when more races go against him, pro-democracy experts have warned.

While the US president has used this playbook for years – from his loss at the Emmys as a reality TV star to his defeat in the 2020 presidential election – election integrity campaigners fear this time could be different.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware is set to open its first medical school in 2028. For years, lawmakers and healthcare leaders have pointed to healthcare worker shortages in the state, especially below the C&D Canal. And as Delaware gets older and sicker, more physicians and specialists will be necessary to meet the demand. 

Last week, Delaware announced it would open its first medical school in partnership with Thomas Jefferson University, bringing one of Gov. Matt Meyer’s campaign platforms to life.

Meyer hoped the school would help to close the medical professional shortage gap in the state. When the federal government announced last summer it would dish out billions of dollars across all 50 states to build out their rural healthcare infrastructure, the possibility of a medical school came into focus.

But some questions still remain unanswered about how exactly the school will operate, and how some of the more technical agreements will work between more than a dozen state institutions taking part in the venture. 

The state has committed to funding dozens of students’ educations if they commit to working in rural Delaware following their graduation, and nearly a dozen hospitals and higher education institutions have rallied around Jefferson as a “consortium” to stand up the medical school. Currently, students are set to begin classes in 2028. 

But Spotlight Delaware has yet to see any signed agreements between Delaware’s hospitals, higher education institutions or the state, so the exact operations of the medical school remain unclear. A public records request for those materials is pending. 

Here is what we know about Delaware’s first medical school, and its potential impact on the state’s healthcare landscape.

Who’s paying for this?

A federal taxpayer grant, for at least five years, will pay for Delaware’s medical school. But state officials have said that following those five years, the medical school will be able to sustain itself.

The grant, the Rural Health Transformation Program, is aimed at improving rural health across the country. It was created last summer to court Republican senators hesitant to support more than $900 billion in cuts to Medicaid, which could disproportionately impact rural communities and their healthcare facilities.

In February, Meyer’s office released an initial batch of requests for potential vendors to carry out programs that will be funded by the federal grant.

It came weeks after the state received its first award from the federal government totaling more than $157 million. The full RHTP award amount for the state remains unclear, but Delaware will receive at least $500 million from the multi-year program.

In plans submitted to the federal government, Delaware budgeted more than $100 million to run its medical school for five years. But Neil Hockstein, chair of the Delaware Health Care Commission, said the signed contract allows Jefferson to run the school for $78 million. 

Neil Hockstein, chair of the Delaware Healthcare Commission. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

Asked how the state is required to spend the remaining funds, he said Delaware is allowed to reallocate that money to any of its other 14 RHTP initiatives. 

Hockstein added the state intends to spread those leftover funds across multiple different programs instead of reallocating them to just one initiative. 

Additionally, Hockstein said when the federal money runs out for the medical school, it would be “self-sustaining without an influx of state dollars.” Still, he said he hopes the state’s philanthropic ventures would help to support the medical school’s future.

Free medical education?

When the state announced Jefferson would run the medical school last week, Meyer also said students in the first cohort would be eligible for a free education. To qualify, Meyer said students would need to commit to practicing in one of the state’s rural hospitals. 

That would likely mean five years of work at Bayhealth, Beebe Healthcare or TidalHealth. But at the moment, TidalHealth – western Sussex County’s principal hospital – is not a part of the agreement between the dozen healthcare and higher education institutions to collaborate on the medical school. 

Students in that first cohort receiving free education would be allowed to leave the state for their residency, but would be required to return to Delaware following that post-graduate education. For that first cohort, Delaware officials said that tuition would be funded through the federal grant.

“Students who enroll in the Primary Care–Rural Health pathway, or who complete their clinical training in Delaware, may be eligible for financial awards covering the full cost of their education in exchange for a commitment to practice in rural Delaware after completing their training,” a spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) said.

Why UD, will it move downstate? 

For months, as questions loomed over who would run Delaware’s maiden medical school, the location remained just as unclear. 

So when officials announced last week that the University of Delaware would host medical school classes in Newark, questions arose over why the state would select a northern, suburban venue if it wants to bolster rural health. 

Representatives from the university did not answer whether there are plans to move the campus downstate at any point, but state officials have made the argument in the past that where the campus is located is not as important as the curriculum it offers. 

“Jefferson and UD have worked together to educate Delaware students for decades, and this partnership builds directly on that foundation,” a spokesperson for DHSS said.

According to a FAQ page for UD about the medical school, students enrolled in Jefferson’s program would attend two years of classes at its campus then be placed into clinical rotations somewhere downstate. 

The university’s webpage also said the new medical school would have no impact on its tuition or programs, and that the university is not running the medical school, simply hosting classes for Jefferson.

The rural health grant prohibits Delaware from using any money for new construction. Still, the university said last week that space on its campus would be “refurbished” using the federal grant and would supplement the work of its College of Health Sciences. 

According to the federal government’s requirements for the grant, capital expenditures for the state’s entire grant cannot exceed 20% of its budget. 

The state has two other large capital expenses it will likely incur using RHTP funds, its two proposed homeless shelters in Kent and Sussex counties, though it is unclear at the moment how much these renovations will cost.

What happens to DIMER?

For those who heard news that Delaware would be opening its own medical school, some within the state may have asked about existing state programs meant to place Delawareans into medical education. 

The Delaware Institute of Medical Education and Research, better known as DIMER, is the state’s most prominent medical education program. Currently, it places Delaware students into nearby medical schools like Jefferson and the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM).

Jefferson reserves 20 seats annually for Delawareans and PCOM reserves 10. With both of those universities having competed to run the medical school, and Jefferson winning the race, some questioned whether DIMER would become obsolete.

It appears, however, that DIMER will continue to operate as normal, but may evolve in the coming years. At a Delaware Healthcare Commission meeting on Thursday, Hockstein said the medical school and DIMER programs serve different purposes.  

“One is to give Delawareans an opportunity to get into medical school, and the other is to bring students from around the country to Delaware, where they can train,” Hockstein said during the meeting. 

Hockstein also hinted that the program might shift toward specialty training and sending students away to bring back clinical skills the state sorely lacks. 

In a statement from PCOM, a spokesperson said the college is “committed” to its DIMER partnership with Delaware. Hockstein also said the state and PCOM had discussed its role in DIMER and that the college was “very enthusiastic” about continuing its work in the program. 

A key part of the state’s strategy in training and retaining doctors in Delaware is banking on students who complete their residency in the state and stay for the long term. On top of the financial aid incentives built into the federal grant, the state hopes to close the physician gap. 

“Together, these investments are designed to strengthen Delaware’s long-term physician workforce and improve access to care in communities that need it most,” a spokesperson for DHSS said.

The post What to know about Delaware’s new medical school appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-09 06:00

Why Delaware Should Care?
In recent years, the unhoused community in Wilmington has grown. In response, Mayor John Carney introduced a plan to convert an Eastside park into the only city-sanctioned encampment. But the initiative has since faced protests and criticism. Now, officials have decided to close down the encampment.

The Wilmington City Council has taken a stand against Mayor John Carney’s plan to shut down the city’s only sanctioned homeless encampment next week.

In a resolution unanimously passed Thursday, the council urged Carney to “immediately halt any forced removal” plans at Christina Park “until a comprehensive, humane, and adequately funded transition plan is fully operational.”

The resolution vote followed an hour of comments from the public, featuring dozens of residents speaking against the city’s plan to close the Eastside neighborhood park. Some of the commenters live at the park.

“Seeing us in that park is an eyesore for [Carney], but at the same time, he has to realize, we have nowhere to go, nowhere to sleep,” park resident Andreu Taylor-Simmons said.

In response to the council resolution, the Carney administration reaffirmed the city’s intention to close the encampment on June 15. 

Gov. John Carney speaks at a bill signing in Dover, Delaware, in May 2024.
Wilmington Mayor John Carney has sought to turn the page on the city’s intervention into homeless services, but the abrupt end has drawn criticism. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

In a statement released Monday, city officials stated that the Eastside neighborhood park was always meant to be a temporary space for the unhoused. They also argued that neighbors have been “patient” while waiting for the park to be restored for recreational use. 

Transition plans are already in place, they said. 

As part of the transition plan, the city said there are 20 beds at two separate housing organizations that offer case management services. For those unable to get one of them, the Wilmington Housing Authority will cover the cost of emergency hotels and motels, the city said.

Caroline Klinger, spokeswoman for Carney, said the names of the two housing organizations will be released “as they solidify the placement process.”

The statement from the Carney administration follows a letter sent by city officials to the council, arguing that the resolution did not acknowledge the administration’s progress.

“Instead, it demands that Wilmington taxpayers continue to shoulder the cost of temporary encampment until the state completes its planning work,” the letter read.

Wilmington City Councilmember Shané Darby has raised concerns over the proposed next steps for residents at Christina Park. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CITY OF WILMINGTON

The resolution’s sponsor, Councilwoman Shané Darby, read the letter during a city council committee meeting last Wednesday. 

When asked about Carney’s promise to link park residents with housing, Darby expressed skepticism, stating in an interview with Spotlight Delaware, “I would love to see it.”

Darby’s resolution also recommends creating a senior-level Homelessness Response Coordinator position in the mayor’s office to coordinate citywide outreach, work with service providers, track homelessness data, pursue funding and develop long-term plans to reduce chronic homelessness in Wilmington.

Mounting criticism

The Carney administration launched its initiative to direct homeless people to Christina Park seven months ago. At the time, there were already about 50 people living in tents there. 

Since then, officials have faced mounting criticism from encampment residents and housing advocates who said that the city had not provided promised services and that it had imposed burdensome rules

Many also decried the city’s decision in April to direct residents into city-issued tents placed on large pallets at the park. The city spent nearly $60,000 on the pallets and tents. 

Last month, Kim Eppehimer, the head of the nonprofit contracted to oversee the encampment, called the mayor’s plan to evict park residents an “unfortunate displacement of folks who are essentially already displaced.”

The city contract for Eppehimer’s nonprofit, Friendship House, is set to expire June 30. 

Tents sit on a grid at Christina Park in April. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY KARL BAKER

Opposition to the encampment closure has also arisen outside of formal organizations. A petition, sponsored by local housing advocates, that asked the city to pause the eviction received over 150 signatures. 

During Thursday’s council discussion, Darby said she believes the park should be returned to the public, but argued there should be a plan in place before the eviction takes place.  

Several council members also asserted that the city and state need to expand the number of shelter beds available, and affordable housing. Councilman Chris Johnson said more dollars are needed for social services targeting homeless people in the city. 

Councilwoman Yolanda McCoy noted that homelessness has been a years-long issue — one for which Carney isn’t to blame. She said his initial sanctioning of the encampment at Christina Park simply brought “eyes to a situation we were already in.”

Is a pallet village a solution? 

In the Carney administration’s response to Darby’s resolution, officials also said talks are ongoing with Springboard Delaware about potentially bringing a tiny home village to Wilmington.

They also noted that Carney has directed the City Council to select one of two sites for the village by July 1, in order to secure federal COVID-era relief dollars before they expire. The sites include a property across the street from Christina Park and another that sits along Garasches Lane, a small street lined by industrial land in Southbridge.

Last month, Southbridge residents expressed their opposition to the proposed site in their neighborhood.  

Darby told Spotlight Delaware the council was being rushed to make a decision, saying members were not thoroughly consulted before the two locations were presented.

“The administration was like, ‘Hey, here’s this email. There are two locations, you choose it. You’ve got to do it before July.’ And I was like, ‘What?’” Darby said. 

Reporter Naomi Weiss contributed to this report.

The post Wilmington City Council formally opposes mayor’s plan to close park encampment appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 05:55

Three Practical Strategies for Scaling AI and HPC Infrastructure Despite Flash Constraints

The rapid emergence of AI is forcing research organizations and HPC teams to rethink infrastructure much faster than many expected. GPU clusters are expanding, training datasets are growing, and organizations are under pressure to modernize environments originally designed for very different workload patterns.

At the same time, the flash storage market is tightening. SSD pricing pressure, constrained supply, and long procurement cycles are arriving just as many institutions are attempting to scale infrastructure for large AI workloads.

But the real challenge extends beyond SSD availability itself. AI is exposing architectural assumptions that have existed in HPC infrastructure for years, particularly around how flash storage is deployed and utilized across compute environments.

Many organizations already have large amounts of NVMe flash distributed throughout their compute clusters inside CPU and GPU servers. Yet much of that storage remains isolated as node-local scratch space rather than operating as part of a coordinated, shared high-performance data architecture.

Several practical architectural approaches can help organizations scale AI and HPC infrastructure more efficiently despite ongoing flash constraints.

# 1 – Use The Node-Local NVMe as Shared High-Performance Storage

Most modern HPC and AI environments already contain significant amounts of high-performance NVMe flash distributed across CPU and GPU servers. In many cases, this node-local storage is used only as temporary scratch space because it operates outside the shared storage architecture supporting the broader environment.

As GPU infrastructure scales, this isolated flash capacity becomes increasingly valuable. Large compute environments may already contain petabytes of NVMe storage that remain operationally underutilized because they are not integrated into a coordinated data architecture. Treating this distributed flash as a shared Tier 0 storage layer can significantly reduce pressure on centralized all-flash infrastructure while delivering extremely low-latency access for AI training, checkpointing, and high-performance data pipelines.

Within the Hammerspace architecture,  node-local NVMe can be incorporated into the global namespace as shared high-performance storage, rather than remaining isolated within individual servers.That allows data placement and protection policies to operate automatically across Tier 0 flash and downstream storage tiers.

For example, AI training checkpoints can be written locally to Tier 0 flash for extremely fast access, then automatically orchestrated to other storage tiers as they age.  Critically, this Tier 0 architecture is not another storage island. The value comes from integrating node-local flash into a coordinated multi-tier data architecture spanning shared NVMe, high-capacity flash, disk, object storage, and cloud environments under a single operational framework. More on that below…

# 2 – Use Intelligent Tiering Across Flash and Disk

The reality is that AI workloads do not require every dataset to reside permanently on premium flash storage. Training pipelines, checkpoints, reference datasets, embeddings, and archival data often exhibit very different access and performance characteristics, making multi-tier architectures increasingly important as flash costs rise.  Hammerspace demonstrates how a coordinated data architecture allows flash, disk, object storage, and cloud tiers to operate as part of a unified environment, with data placement handled dynamically according to operational requirements rather than static infrastructure boundaries.

Frequently accessed or latency-sensitive data can remain close to accelerated compute resources, while colder datasets are automatically shifted toward lower-cost capacity tiers without disrupting user or application access.

Equally important, modern parallel file system architectures such as Hammerspace allow organizations to combine flash and disk tiers without sacrificing the throughput and parallel access patterns required by modern AI and HPC workloads.

# 3 – Extend AI Workloads into the Cloud without losing Governance Control

AI infrastructure is increasingly distributed across hyperscalers, sovereign cloud providers, neoclouds, and on-premises environments. As organizations look for available GPU capacity, the challenge is no longer simply where compute exists, but how to operationalize data consistently across these fragmented environments. The challenge is coordinating access to distributed datasets while maintaining governance, sovereignty, and operational consistency across environments.

A coordinated data architecture allows organizations to span on-premises and cloud environments within a unified operational framework, with data placement orchestrated dynamically according to policy. This means that data is automatically pushed to the cloud GPU resources that are available when needed, and can leverage cloud storage resources that are available, all as part of one file unified system.

For example, organizations may need to place only a subset of project data near temporary cloud GPU resources for model training or inference. Intelligent orchestration allows the relevant datasets, and only the relevant datasets, to move dynamically into those environments while governance policies remain intact.  HPC environments have long relied on sophisticated compute scheduling and orchestration frameworks. Increasingly, the same level of orchestration is required at the data layer itself.

In that sense, flash constraints may ultimately accelerate a broader architectural transition already underway across AI and HPC infrastructure: the shift toward unified, orchestrated data architectures capable of scaling across distributed compute environments without requiring organizations to continuously build new all-flash storage systems.

If you would like to learn more, come visit us at booth A20 at the International Supercomputing Conference in Hamburg June 22 – 26.

The post Modernizing HPC Infrastructure in an SSD-Constrained Era appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 05:00

Players and fans denied visas, the spectre of ICE raids on stadiums, Pete Hegseth’s latest speech ... By the end of this contest, the nature of this US government will be even clearer

Whenever my kids and I are stationary in the same room, within five minutes they will have started talking about football. Every now and then, a name will float out that I recognise – Jude Bellingham, say – but most of the time it lacks the dramatic texture to hold my attention. Everyone is either a genius or an irretrievable loser.

There’s a lot of counting. “Would you watch a play in which everyone was either entirely wise or entirely stupid and the rest of it was mainly a body count?” I ask, trying to wedge myself back into the conversation. They reply: “Hello? Romeo and Juliet?!” then go back to the shortcomings of La Liga, so I go back to looking at my phone.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 05:00

Commentary: Some say Apple is lagging behind in the AI gold rush. I think the company has positioned itself strategically.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 05:00

Socks from Arsenal Football Club have a new life helping rescued donkeys and horses heal from injuries.

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-09 05:00

An illustration depicting a firefighting aircraft flying against a textured yellow sky. Below the aircraft, stylized red and orange flames lick upward, with a technical inspection checklist form showing faintly inside the background of the fire.

Shoshana Gordon/ProPublica. Source images: Records obtained by ProPublica, USDA Forest Service photo by Andrew Avitt.

A little over a year ago, Sen. Tim Sheehy floated an audacious proposal to reshape the way the federal government fights wildfires. It called for expanding the use of private planes and helicopters to quickly attack blazes while also eliminating the U.S. Forest Service’s rigorous airworthiness inspections for those aircraft.

The idea stood to benefit Sheehy, a Montana Republican, personally. Before running for Congress, he founded and ran an aerial firefighting company called Bridger Aerospace, which is known for its scoopers, aircraft built to retrieve water from lakes or oceans and drop it onto fires. Since 2021, the Forest Service has paid Bridger more than $235 million for use of its scoopers, according to public records.

Sheehy’s ownership of Bridger is well known, but what hasn’t been reported is that the same month the proposal leaked, a Forest Service inspector had discovered a crack in a wing of an aircraft Bridger had presented as ready for service. The scooper had failed the very inspection Sheehy sought to eliminate. 

Forest Service inspectors have flagged problems with Bridger’s scoopers for years, according to sources and documents obtained by ProPublica under the Freedom of Information Act. The records were heavily redacted by the agency, including the problem that the inspector discovered last April. But a former government official with direct knowledge of the inspection told ProPublica it had revealed a crack in a wing. “It was a big crack,” the official said. Other experts said that kind of finding is rare and could have proved catastrophic.

“Very seldom do you find a crack in a major component,” said Paul Markowitz, a former national aviation maintenance manager for the Forest Service. Detecting such problems is the reason the Forest Service operates an airworthiness program, he added: “It’s to keep people alive.”

Veteran fire officials noted that Sheehy’s proposals would eliminate costly oversight of the company he founded and others like it while increasing spending on aerial firefighting. At the time the document leaked, he owned Bridger stock worth between $13 million and $15 million.

Within the Forest Service, the company was known to resist oversight, officials told ProPublica. Five current and former Forest Service officials say Bridger Aerospace has chafed at the agency’s rigorous inspections, even as records and sources indicate the company has presented aircraft in need of maintenance and repairs as ready to fight fires. The sources asked not to be named for fear of reprisal.

Bridger did not answer questions about the failed inspection but said in a statement, “Safety is the bedrock of our company, and we spare no expense.” It added, “Our investment in maintenance and training runs into the tens of millions annually and reflects the high safety standard we believe this work demands.”

Bridger’s aircraft have never been involved in a crash, according to records maintained by the National Transportation Safety Board. 

Sheehy’s office did not respond to interview requests. But he has been open about his frustration with the Forest Service’s inspections and contended that Bridger’s scoopers, because they are built to fight fire, require less oversight than other firefighting aircraft that were originally designed for other purposes. 

In response to detailed questions about Sheehy’s role in reshaping the fire service, a spokesperson for the senator said he stands by his efforts to eliminate Forest Service inspections. The process is “a relic of a bygone era and has become an unnecessary barrier to asset availability,” the spokesperson said in an email. The spokesperson also said that Sheehy has no conflict of interest because he has since moved his assets into blind trusts, adding, “The senator will continue to be adversarial toward anyone protecting a broken status quo that has allowed cities to burn to the ground.”

Former Forest Service officials say it’s common for companies to complain about inspections. What sets Bridger apart is its connection to a senator who is seeking to change how wildfire aviation is managed. A spokesperson for the Department of Agriculture, which oversees the Forest Service, did not answer questions about Sheehy’s relationship with the agency.

Last June, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing agencies to consolidate their wildland fire programs, an idea Sheehy and others have long favored. The order left Forest Service inspections in place. But as fire officials discuss consolidation, an influential industry group that Sheehy helped shape is advocating for ending them.

The United Aerial Firefighters Association was launched in 2022, with Sheehy serving as a founding board member. The group now wants to allow contractors to develop their own inspection standards.

“Industry inspects itself all the time. Industry inspects automobiles. Industry inspects baby formula,” said Tiffany Taylor, UAFA’s senior policy director. “Why can’t we be inspecting ourselves?”


Contractors like Bridger own the vast majority of aircraft that the federal government uses to fight wildfires. In 2022, the last year for which data is available, only 5% of the Forest Service’s flight hours for firefighting came from aircraft it owns. Regardless of their ownership, aircraft must be inspected before flying. That job falls to about 25 aviation safety inspectors, most of whom work for the Forest Service. 

The Federal Aviation Administration certifies aircraft but does not conduct regular inspections. The agency instead relies on companies to ensure their planes and helicopters are airworthy. Even when the FAA performs inspections, fire officials and contractors say, they do not account for the stresses inflicted by steering aircraft through wildfires. “The Forest Service is way more in-depth,” said Britt Coulson, president of Coulson Aviation, a prominent air tanker contractor.

Forest Service officials often say the agency’s rules governing aviation are written in blood. A pair of shocking crashes in 2002 ignited the push for more rigorous inspections. That June, an air tanker was dropping retardant in California when its wings folded upward, like a bird in flight, and detached. The plane burst into flames and fell to the ground. The harrowing moment was caught on video. Three people onboard were killed, and the NTSB later attributed the accident to undetected cracks in one of the plane’s wings. One month later, in Colorado, another tanker contracted by the Forest Service crashed after a wing separated from the fuselage. Two pilots were killed. Once again, the NTSB said the accident was caused by unidentified wing cracking.

Since 2010, when the Forest Service implemented its current airworthiness program, the accident rate for aircraft it owns or contracts has plummeted. Between 1993 and 2010, it reported 85 accidents that killed 63 people — an average of nearly four deaths per year. Between 2011 and 2023, the last year for which data is available, the agency reported just 17 accidents and seven fatalities.

Inspectors examine everything from the fuselage to the altimeter. When they find problems, they require the contractor to make changes before they issue a certifying document known as a card. In a separate procedure, inspectors issue cards to contractors’ pilots.

By 2018, Bridger had a modest fleet of surveillance aircraft, but Sheehy had bigger ambitions. According to Sheehy’s 2023 book, “Mudslingers: A True Story of Aerial Firefighting,” his brother, Matt, a Bridger co-founder, helped connect the company to the Blackstone Group, which invested a reported $150 million. Bridger used the funds to buy six scoopers from Viking Air. Sheehy wrote that the day of the first aircraft’s arrival in 2020 was “among the proudest of my life.”

In his book, he described that aircraft as a “brand new” model CL-415 but according to FAA records and aviation experts, this was inaccurate. The records show Bridger’s first scooper was built in 1985 and that it is in fact a precursor to the CL-415 model. Viking Air is now part of a larger company called De Havilland Aircraft of Canada Limited. A De Havilland spokesperson declined to comment about the aircraft’s age.

Records also show that Bridger’s first scooper had undergone extensive repairs before the company bought it. The skin of the fuselage had cracked from stress, and both wings had been repaired. One repair, done in 2012, fixed a crack in the left spar — a load-bearing beam extending outward from the fuselage. Experts say any repair to a wing spar is significant. “A spar is what’s holding the damn thing together,” said Markowitz. 

According to Sheehy’s account, in 2020, the Forest Service’s airworthiness chief at the time, John Nelson, insisted that Bridger’s scoopers meet an updated standard of maintenance and inspection. Sheehy was extremely upset. “Unfortunately, the relationship between industry and the USFS Airworthiness Branch is at an all-time low,” he wrote in his book. (Nelson did not respond to questions about Sheehy’s characterization.)

The next year, Bridger’s first scoopers received cards, allowing the government to pay for their use.

By 2023, the company had six contracted scoopers. Inspectors soon found more problems with the aircraft, according to the records. In January 2024, Bridger presented its first scooper as ready for service, only to have a Forest Service inspector find issues with the engine and electronics. The problems and reasons for the failed inspection were redacted in documents obtained by ProPublica. The scooper received its card the next month.

According to experts who examined the Bridger inspection records at ProPublica’s request, these issues are common in the aerial firefighting fleet. But they said it’s extraordinary for inspectors to find a problem like the one identified last spring.

In early April 2025, Bridger presented two scoopers for carding, saying they were ready for service. During one of these assessments, a Forest Service inspector found a crack in a wing.

The Forest Service records show that Bridger completed a repair in Montana by April 18. Within a week, both aircraft had been cleared for flight.

Bridger did not answer specific questions about the repair. In a statement, the company said, “For a 30,000-pound aircraft that skims bodies of water repeatedly at 100 mph to scoop 11,700 pounds of water in 12 seconds, regular maintenance and periodic repairs are an inherent part of the job.” The company added, “We welcome the rigorous certification process.”

But the relatively quick repair was not a reflection of the severity of the issue. Gil Elmy, a former Forest Service official who wrote the agency’s aircraft inspector guide, said such a finding “should not happen.” Markowitz said the finding evoked an uncomfortable historical echo. The 2002 crash, which was caught on camera and precipitated the Forest Service’s reckoning and its modern airworthiness program, was caused by unidentified wing cracking.

As Bridger’s scooper was being repaired, officials in the wildland fire community were responding to a proposal from the senator’s office that would have ended the airworthiness program. In March 2025, Sheehy asked Brooke Rollins, the secretary of the Department of Agriculture, to stop the inspections, and in mid-April, a draft executive order that proposed eliminating them leaked from his Senate office. Metadata showed the draft had been edited by one of Sheehy’s policy advisers at the time as well as a lobbyist for Bridger. The United Aerial Firefighting Association also shaped the draft.

“Senator Sheehy’s office circulated a living, breathing document to members of congress, outside policy experts, and industry stakeholders on ways to improve the way we fight fire in this country,” wrote Sheehy’s spokesperson.


When Sheehy resigned from Bridger in July 2024 to run for the Senate, he owned 21% of the company, making him its largest individual shareholder. Four months after taking office, in May 2025, he moved most of his stock into two revocable blind trusts, claiming they eliminated any conflict of interest he might have.

But the trusts appear to be managed by executives at Tallgrass, an energy infrastructure company that until March was run by Sheehy’s brother, Matt, who was also a significant early investor in Bridger. Neither Matt Sheehy nor representatives for Tallgrass responded to questions about the trusts. In an email, a spokesperson for the senator did not dispute the Tallgrass executives’ stewardship but pointed out that the Senate Select Committee on Ethics had vetted the trusts. The spokesperson wrote, “Senator Sheehy’s blind trusts are completely independent — he has no control over them.”

According to Cynthia Brown, senior ethics counsel at the nonprofit Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a decision to entrust stock to such close associates undermines the purpose of a blind trust, which is to ensure that a lawmaker’s investments are independently managed. In an email, Brown said, “Selecting a family member’s company appears to do that exact thing that the rules mean to prohibit.”

Since last spring, Sheehy has said little about airworthiness inspections. But he has pushed other policies that would increase business opportunities for aviation companies, such as requiring a response within 30 minutes to all wildfires on federal land. At the same time, he has driven an agenda that could debilitate his longtime foe, the Forest Service.

In statements, on podcasts and in the New York Times opinion section, he has advocated for a single national fire service. And at almost every turn — including in proposed legislation — he has insisted that the Forest Service’s vast wildfire apparatus be moved within the Department of the Interior’s smaller operation. It would hollow out the Forest Service, which draws more than half its budget from fire operations. “It would be a fatal wound,” said Doug Crandall, the agency’s former legislative affairs director.

There are inefficiencies in a fire aviation system spread between agencies. The rush for a couple dozen inspectors to certify hundreds of planes and helicopters before wildfire season can cause delays, temporarily grounding aircraft and cutting into contractors’ revenues. And the agencies have sometimes required duplicative inspections. 

But even officials and firefighting labor advocates who support consolidation, which requires congressional approval, have questioned why Interior should absorb the Forest Service’s fire program. Some liken it to forcing a minnow to swallow a whale. The Forest Service employs about twice as many full-time wildland firefighters as the Interior Department, and it spends at least three times more on aviation contracting. It is also responsible for the vast majority of inspections. According to a recent organizational chart reviewed by ProPublica, only five aviation safety inspectors currently work for the Interior Department.

Bridger carries significant debt and in 2024 warned shareholders that it had “substantial doubt about our ability to continue as a going concern.” But last year, the company reported a profit for the first time since going public. It also purchased two more scoopers and predicted that efforts to unify fire agencies “could increase contracting opportunities for private aerial providers.” In another recent filing, Bridger said, “the legislative and policy environment has never been more aligned with our mission.”

Last year, six Forest Service aviation safety inspectors resigned or retired, according to the agency. The recent organizational chart reviewed by ProPublica shows the same number of positions remain unfilled, representing more than 20% of Forest Service aviation safety inspector jobs. It’s unclear what would happen to the rest of the inspectors if the Interior Department were to absorb the Forest Service’s fire operations. In an emailed statement, Adam Mendonca, the Forest Service’s deputy director of fire and aviation management, said the agency “has no intention to change our aircraft inspection standards,” adding that it was “working closely with the Department of the Interior to streamline aviation operations.”

In late March, the Forest Service announced a dramatic reorganization that will move its headquarters to Salt Lake City. The Department of Agriculture reiterated the administration’s desire to fold the Forest Service’s fire operations into the Interior Department.

By that point, blazes had ignited in the Midwest. With the arrival of fire season, the Forest Service’s airworthiness inspectors performed their close examinations. At hangars across the country, they looked for cracks.

The post A U.S. Senator Pushed to Cut Firefighting Aircraft Inspections the Same Month His Former Company Failed One appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 04:56

Embattled International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Karim Khan was suspended after the court's oversight body referred him for disciplinary proceedings.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 04:00

Medical Protection Society calls for law to be overhauled to help medics avoid liability for errors made by technology

Doctors and the NHS could be sued for medical negligence over mistakes made by artificial intelligence tools used in diagnosing patients and suggesting their treatment, ministers are being warned.

Under the law as it stands, medics and the health service can be held liable for patients being harmed or dying even if it was AI that made the errors that resulted in their suffering.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 04:00

JPMorgan Chase leads 65 banks making decisions incompatible with restraining rising temperatures, researchers say

The world’s largest banks committed $906bn in financing to the fossil fuel industry last year, an “unfathomable” increase in investment locking in years more of coal, oil and gas production as the world continues to overheat, a new report has found.

The surge in new fossil fuel lending, up $64bn or nearly 8% on 2024, shows that the world’s largest 65 banks are making decisions incompatible with international agreements to restrain rising global temperatures, according to the coalition of environmental groups behind the new analysis.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 03:16

Dr Hussam Abu Safiya now in cell barely big enough to sit in, says son, after UN experts demanded his release in March

The son of a prominent Palestinian doctor who was detained by Israeli forces in Gaza in late 2024 and held for more than 500 days without formal charges has spoken of his deep concern for his father’s wellbeing after he was transferred without explanation to solitary confinement in a maximum-security prison.

Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of Kamal Adwan hospital in northern Gaza, was detained at work on 27 December 2024. Physicians for Human Rights Israel said last week it had received information indicating that the 53-year-old had been transferred from Ketziot prison to Ramon prison, part of the Ganot prison complex, where he had been put in solitary confinement. PHRI said it had not been told the reasons for the transfer.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 03:00

Track and field’s youngest world champion on ‘wanting to change the sport’ and his admiration for Napoleon

We are in living in the era of teenage super talents. On Saturday, Mirra Andreeva won the French Open at 19. Spain’s Lamine Yamal, at 18, is one of the favourites for the World Cup’s golden ball. Then there is Cooper Lutkenhaus, the 17-year-old American already making the world’s best athletes gasp for air and reach for superlatives, who may yet prove the best of the bunch.

True, it is early days. But Lutkenhaus is already track and field’s youngest world champion, having won 800m indoor gold in March. On Sunday, he added to his CV with victory against a top-class field in his first Diamond League race. But it was what his rivals said afterwards in Stockholm that left the deepest mark.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 03:00

His toxic Henry Nowak intervention fits a pattern. Vance has hard-right views, a disdain for European society – and he may yet become president

Immigration is falling in Britain. It’s falling so fast and so hard – net migration to the UK nearly halved between 2024 and 2025 – that before long we could conceivably be a shrinking population, with more people leaving the country than coming here. (And no, that’s not because of an exodus of bright young Britons fleeing overseas, though you wouldn’t blame them given how hard they’re finding it currently to get jobs: the rise, as the Institute for Government’s Sam Freedman helpfully points out, is mainly in foreign students and foreign workers going home.) Even small-boat crossings are down on last year. We have, in short, finally made ourselves as unattractive to the rest of the world as leave voters always wanted – which means that, sooner or later, populists who built their careers on railing against supposedly uncontrolled immigration are going to be needing another scapegoat to explain why taking back control hasn’t magically solved all the country’s problems. And with a grim inevitability, they’re finding it in turning on migrants who are already here.

That’s the background to two hand grenades lobbed aggressively into British politics from across the Atlantic last week, causing enough concern in Downing Street to prompt a rare public rebuke. The claim from the US vice-president, JD Vance, that “righteous anger” was “the only response” to the murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak would have been provocative enough, given its pointed echo of Nigel Farage’s now widely condemned call for “pure, cold rage”.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 03:00

A battery researcher's investigation, backed by more than 20 independent experts, claims Donut Lab's much-hyped "solid-state" battery is actually a conventional lithium-ion cell, with voltage curves and expansion data matching high-nickel NCM chemistry rather than the promised sodium-ion solid-state design. Electrek reports the company raised about $25 million from more than 1,300 mostly small investors on claims of 400 Wh/kg energy density, 100,000-cycle life, and 5-minute charging that now appear unsupported. From the report: The investigation consulted over 20 independent battery experts, including Julian Zanau from the Fraunhofer Research Institute, Dr. Yahim San from Justus-Liebig University, Tom Bicha from Leona, and Dr. Yuo Hesca from Seinajoki University of Applied Sciences. Every single one confirmed the tested cell is lithium-ion. There are two key pieces of evidence. First, the voltage curves from VTT testing match high-nickel lithium-ion cells (NCM chemistry). The cell sits at 3.7-3.8 volts at 50% state of charge -- right where lithium-ion cells operate. Sodium-ion cells don't go significantly past 3.5 volts at 50% SOC. The second piece of evidence is even more damning: VTT's cell expansion data. When a battery charges, ions squeeze into the anode material, causing it to expand in a predictable pattern. A graphite anode produces a distinctive "kink" in the expansion curve around 50-70% state of charge, caused by how ions reorder themselves in graphite's layered structure. The Donut Lab cell shows exactly that kink. This is critical because sodium ions are physically too large to fit into graphite layers. The graphite anode signature proves the cell uses lithium ions. The investigation puts it well: "it's like we have a slightly noisy fingerprint and a picture of the suspect's face. And yet again, it's a match." The calculated energy density? About 298 Wh/kg -- what you'd expect from a good lithium-ion cell, not the 400 Wh/kg claimed. The investigation reveals that the battery technology traces back to CT Coatings, a German company with an "eclectic" array of patents -- including inventions for screen-printed paving slabs, menu folders, and warning triangles. CT Coatings promised Nordic Nano and Donut Lab a screen-printed sodium-ion solid-state battery. What it delivered was a lithium-ion pouch cell.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 02:31

Los Angeles City Council member Nithya Raman surged past Spencer Pratt on Sunday in the race for LA mayor. The California governor's race remains undecided.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 02:00

Protectionist measures will deal blow to country’s budget as it defends itself against Russia, says Metinvest chief

New EU limits on steel imports could destroy Ukraine’s industry and deal a big blow to the country’s budget as it defends itself against Russia, according to the head of its biggest steelmaker.

Yuriy Ryzhenkov, the chief executive of Metinvest, said the new EU quota system due on 1 July could “kill the Ukrainian steel industry”.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 01:34

Victor Wembanyama had 32 points, eight rebounds and six assists in his first NBA Finals win, carrying the Spurs to a 115-111 victory over the Knicks in Game 3 on Monday night.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 01:00

Exclusive: Ukrainian leader says he has ‘a very good relationship’ with British monarch, who has supported his country

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has revealed that he plans to invite King Charles on a state visit to Ukraine as early as this year, which would make him the most senior royal to travel to Kyiv since Russia’s full-scale invasion.

The Ukrainian president said he had a close relationship with the king, whom he has met on numerous occasions, including when he gave a public show of support after Zelenskyy’s explosive visit to the White House last year.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 01:00

In a wide-ranging interview, an upbeat Ukrainian president also discusses Donald Trump, King Charles, and how Kyiv is prepared to share its experience of drone warfare with the west

Sitting down with the Guardian in London, Volodymyr Zelenskyy seems cheerful. More than four years after Vladimir Putin’s full-scale invasion, he believes Europe’s biggest war since 1945 appears to be slowly turning in Ukraine’s favour. The military situation is the most promising it has been for Kyiv for two and a half years, Zelenskyy says. “We can’t say Russia is losing this war. But we can say they are losing the initiative each day, day by day,” he insists.

Over the past week the Kremlin has suffered a series of setbacks. Long-range Ukrainian drones have hit Putin’s home city of St Petersburg, setting fire to oil terminals and sending smoke billowing above the skyline. Similar attacks have crippled occupied Crimea. A key supply road is littered with burning lorries and tankers and the peninsula seized by Russia in 2014 is experiencing severe fuel shortages.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-09 01:00

Datacentre off Shanghai coast uses less power and water than land-based equivalent

The world’s first wind-powered underwater datacentre has started operations off the coast of Shanghai, as China presses forwards with solutions for energy challenges created by the country’s artificial intelligence boom.

The Shanghai Lingang undersea datacentre demonstration project, which launched in May, has a capacity of 24 megawatts. It is a joint effort between HiCloud Technology and China Communications Construction, a state-owned company.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 00:34

I've been getting obsessed with possibly buying a OneWheel. I've owned multiple Boosted Boards and e-bikes in the past which had been great, but the OneWheel feels like it could be really fun for doing slight off road excursions especially when going camping and what not.

Naturally I've been binging all the YouTube videos I could and, while absurdly expensive, the GT S-series seems like the way to go for the "safety" aspect of the added power. But I have a question about the safety of a OneWheel in general...

Obviously the OneWheel is a single point of failure device -- one wheel -- and electronics can fail. But every post I read seems to have a mention of someone being hospitalized or at minimum nose-diving hard unexpectedly. Is this just part of the OneWheel life or are these crashes/falls more often than not user error of pushing the device past it's limit and purposely ignoring the pushback of the device? Hitting like a bump wrong and having to jump off is not a concern, but a lot of what I see are pretty serious falls

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 00:07

My XR Classic with 198 miles went into low power mode and nosed up at 21%. I was on a ride and thought I could make it back but the board had other ideas. What’s going on here? I started the ride at 90%. Love that thing but man it totally made me do the walk of shame. I was running it at a lower tire PSI since I was doing gravel / trail riding.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 00:00

America depends on global order—and can restore it.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-09 00:00

The oceans may soon be tolled.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 23:58

Spurs 19-9 Knicks, 6.49, 1st quarter

Finally, it’s time for basketball. The Spurs rattle off the first seven points behind a couple of Wembayana dunks and a Vassell three, doing their best to take the steam out of a deafening atmosphere. Hart answers with a three-pointer, but another Wembanyama lay-up and a Castle three makes it 14-5 to San Antonio. The Spurs have made six of their first eight shots while New York look quite scattered on the defensive end. Play continues well past the first TV timeout and by the time of the first whistle, San Antonio lead by 10.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 23:53

People told not to enter damaged buildings for fear of aftershocks from magnitude-7.8 quake

At least 37 people have died and hundreds have been injured after a magnitude-7.8 earthquake shook part of the southern Philippines early on Monday, collapsing buildings and triggering tsunami alerts.

The quake hit early in the morning about 20km (12.4 miles) off the coast of Sarangani province, with tremors felt strongly across Mindanao and 420km away in the city of Manado on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 23:46

Donald Trump was booed loudly by fans inside Madison Square Garden when he was shown on video screens during the national anthem prior to Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Monday.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: The world's oceans are under "severe and accelerating" pressure from human activities, with the rate of sea-level rise double that of a decade ago, according to a damning assessment from the United Nations. The "intensifying" stressors, which include pollution and large-scale industrial fishing, are cumulative, said the report, resulting in widespread biodiversity loss and putting ocean systems under "severe strain." The UN's third World Ocean Assessment, which reflects the work of nearly 600 scientists from 86 countries, looked at the oceans' health from 2021-25. The previous report, that covered up to 2018, found persistent degradation of the marine environment. Five years on, scientists know more about the cumulative impacts of anthropogenic pressures on the ocean, and the latest report shows just how much of the damage has been done in the past few years. The scientists' key findings include: - Sea levels continue to rise at an increasing rate, from 2mm a year prior to 2015 to 4.3mm a year in 2023. - 16% of the increase in global ocean heat since 1955 occurred after 2018. - The greatest relative warming has been observed in the Atlantic Ocean and the southern parts of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. - Large gaps in knowledge persist -- with only 27% of the ocean floor mapped by 2025, deep-sea ecosystems remain poorly understood. Lukas Meus, Greenpeace's global ocean campaigner, said: "We are calling on governments to create fully protected ocean sanctuaries that will close vast areas of the ocean off from extractive human activities. Governments have promised to protect 30% of the world's ocean by 2030 -- the minimum scientists say we need for the ocean to be able to recover."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 22:44

When I needed to ship my XR I had some difficulty figuring it out based on what I could find online. I kept seeing different methods and dreaded failures and some outdated info.

Here is what worked for me. Hopefully it's of use for others.

Labeling

I sold through ebay which gives you the option to create a label after a sale. It matters which shipper you go with. I went with UPS and generated a generic label. Because of the lithium battery there are restrictions but I recommend not selecting a hazardous material label until you get to the shipper. ebay has a drop down with all kinds of selections. Class 9 Lithium Battery Mark (UN3481) being the correct one but as of now, even if you select it, it does not give you an option for UPS or FedEx. It could be a software bug or some other reason but it defaults to USPS if you select the class 9 label.

Instead, I got the label for a basic non-hazardous shipment. However you create your own label, this is what I would recommend as well. The reason is when you ship, the shipper will apply a Class 9 Lithium Battery Mark (UN3481) sticker to the box. That's all it is. It does not need to be on the shipping label itself.

I wasn't sure of the weight so I estimated 30lbs.

Boxing

I bought a 12x12x40 inch box from u-haul to cut down to 30 inches as an outer box. If you want other options, Loews also makes that size box but as far as I was able to figure out, Home Deport does not.

This process worked perfectly for me to make an outer box:. See the instructions at 1:34: https://youtu.be/l6bc-XFW75A?si=pdlrQQTri9kKj0y1.

My XR had a retail box but I did not have those useful cardboard corners it originally came with. I got some bubble wrap, packed the retail box and then slid it into the modified outer box.

If you don't have a retail box you can still use the same size outer box or you might want to trim it further. Pack it well with bubble wrap so there is no sliding around. Seal the outer box with heavy duty clear tape.

Shipping

My box was almost 40lbs because of a hyper charger so I had to pay a little extra at the UPS Store but it was literally a 5 minute exercise. No hiccups. There was no resistance or interrogation by the shipper. It just needs the 3481 sticker which costs nothing. Just remember to mention it at the shipper. The weight of the box is the only cost. It goes ground.

I'm sure there are variations to this process that will work as well.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 22:32

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for June 9, No. 624.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 22:22

I am low vision and i want a board i can have fun on without feeling like i have to do tricks. I was thinking about getting the summerboard but i saw horrible reviews on it. Is one wheel something you have fun riding around on without going on ramps or doing anything extra?

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 22:09

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 9.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 22:00

Football fans are celebrating the tournament coming to Guadalajara. But with a brutal crime syndicate holding sway there, what are the risks for fans – and the government?

Excitement is mounting in Mexico as the World Cup opens in Mexico City, then heads to the city of Guadalajara.

Mexican journalist Leon Krauze is a fan. He was there the last time the World Cup came to Mexico and will be watching again. The city of Guadalajara has a mythical footballing past: “Pele’s Brazil played there in 1970, then Zico and Socrates played there in 1986. There is a real football memory there, a love affair between Guadalajara and football in general, and I expect it to be a wonderful party.”

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:59

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump on Monday posted on Truth Social that “Israel and Iran must immediately stop ‘shooting’” before claiming an hour later that Israel and Iran were “looking to do an immediate ceasefire” and that “final negotiations on peace” were under way.

While he did not provide any further details, AFP reports that Trump had called Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:41

The surprising and divisive mayoral campaign of right-wing reality TV star Spencer Pratt came to an end on Monday, when Los Angeles City Councilmember Nithya Raman, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, claimed her spot on the general election ballot against incumbent Mayor Karen Bass. 

The second-place finish for Raman means that in the coming months, Bass will have to grapple with a challenger from her left. The incumbent mayor’s establishment bonafides at once lend her a strong political apparatus and make her the object of voter frustration. Raman, meanwhile, will face an uphill battle against the entrenched Democratic machine, which helped Bass easily secure a first-place finish. The embrace of mail-in voting by Angelenos slowly turned the tide for Raman, who initially trailed Pratt when polls closed last Tuesday.

Related

The Los Angeles Left Is at War With Itself Over the Mayor’s Race

Under California’s nonpartisan, open primary system, all viable candidates stood for the same June election — putting Pratt, a Republican, in the same primary as the heavily Democratic field. The top two advance to a runoff in November, meaning Los Angeles voters will choose between two Democrats in the general election ballot.

The emergence of Pratt, who rode a wave of outside conservative funding, prompted an intense debate among the city’s left on how to vote in the open primary. Rae Huang entered the race early on a progressive platform of strident police accountability measures, free and fast buses, and public housing. Raman, a city councilmember, decided to run at the last moment, with polls quickly showing she had a clearer path to a November runoff to fend off Pratt. Huang and her supporters insisted that she had the bolder leftist vision for the city, while Raman’s backers accused the Huang campaign of splitting the left amid a real threat from Pratt. The left is now faced with the task of repairing its fractures ahead of the November runoff. 

Following Zohran Mamdani’s successful run for mayor in New York City, pundits were quick to ponder whether Los Angeles might be having its own Mamdani moment. But closer watchers of LA politics have been asking whether a different New York import could improve elections in the nation’s second biggest city: ranked-choice voting.

A ranked-choice voting system allows voters to rank candidates in order of preference. The system often leads to opponents with similar platforms and voter bases to cross-endorse, as was the case with Mamdani and his fellow progressive opponent Brad Lander, which helped stave off the more conservative-leaning former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. In the LA race, ranked choice would have allowed Raman and Huang to forge a similar alliance without compromising their positions and cooling the fierce debates among their supporters.

“We’ve heard lots of voters that they are voting strategically, they try and follow the polls instead of supporting their real favorite — that’s the narrative that I think ranked-choice voting would solve,” said Rachel Hutchinson, deputy director of research and policy at FairVote, a nonprofit that is pushing for ranked-choice voting across the U.S., including in Los Angeles, where City Council has until June 26 to decide whether to place a measure on the November ballot that would implement the system in future elections.

“Not only do people not have to drop out, but they can actually act civilly toward each other, especially if they share an ideology or they represent a similar community,” Hutchinson continued. “Voters under this system would feel more empowered to vote their conscience because they can still support their candidate.”

Related

LAPD Won’t Do Immigration Enforcement — But Will Shoot You With Rubber Bullets for Protesting ICE

Raman joined the LA City Council as part of a wing of left-leaning victories that shifted the city’s political calculus, and has cast herself as a pragmatic leader with an eye for policy. But she faced challenges garnering support from the left amid accusations of flip-flopping and cozying up to entrenched local power. Despite running on defunding the police in 2020 as the first member of the Democratic Socialists of America elected to the council, Raman repeatedly voted to expand the Los Angeles Police Department budget, although she has pushed back on plans to expand the force. In 2024, Raman accepted an endorsement from Zionist group Democrats for Israel–Los Angeles, which opposed a ceasefire in Gaza, for which she was widely rebuked and even censured by DSA–LA.

Even though Raman and Huang are both DSA members, the local chapter declined to reopen the endorsement process for them. Raman’s three DSA colleagues on the City Council opted to endorse Bass. 

Bass focused much of her fire on attacking Raman, despite arguably having the biggest ideological disagreements with Pratt. Bass and Raman were once allies: Bass campaigned for Raman in 2024, and Raman supported Bass in her previous mayoral race. But once Raman launched her last-minute campaign, Bass criticized her for claiming to be an outsider with no control over the current issues plaguing the city, despite Raman having spent years in City Hall. 

On Monday, the local publication LA Material released a text message Bass sent Raman shortly after the latter filed to run; it contained only a tweet announcing Raman’s filing and a woman shrugging emoji.

Bass’s tenure as mayor has been rife with controversy, particularly over her handling of the deadly 2025 Pacific Palisades fire. The mayor was in Ghana attending an embassy party when the fire broke out, and she returned home the following day, with her city and reputation in tatters. Bass’s office has also been criticized for watering down an after-action report on the Palisades fire, including allegations that she scrubbed the most damning findings about the city’s shortcomings in responding to the blaze. 

Her supporters are quick to point out that the Santa Ana winds, and not Bass, fueled the intense fire. And in fact, President Donald Trump, who endorsed Pratt, also shares blame for the slow recovery effort. The president and Republicans in Congress have declined to release the $34 billion in Federal Emergency Management Agency aid requested by California Gov. Gavin Newsom for assisting fire survivors. 

The controversy over the fires largely fueled the campaign of third-place finisher Pratt, a former television star on “The Hills” who has never worked in politics and is best known for getting into public spats with his female co-stars. He centered his pitch on his anger at Bass’s handling of the Palisades fire — which consumed his home as well as thousands of others — as well as his disdain for the city’s homeless population, whom he called “bums” and “zombies” and argued should be arrested en masse.

Housing experts told The Intercept that Pratt’s assertions were completely divorced from reality. But they pointed out that the lack of significant progress on the issue of homelessness in Los Angeles under Bass has emboldened figures like Pratt to swoop in and spread misinformation and dangerous propaganda.

The post Democratic Socialist Overcomes GOP-Funded Opponent to Advance in Los Angeles Mayor Race appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:24

A fan blurted out an exuberant rhyme for his beloved basketball team. It has transcended sports and become a joyful anthem to unity.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:19

OpenAI's move toward public markets raises a bigger question: Is the AI surge a lasting shift or an expensive gamble?

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:14

A renowned academic, Wood was hit by a car as he was crossing a supermarket’s parking lot and later died of the injuries

Gordon S Wood, a Pulitzer prize-winning author and historian, was killed on Sunday when he was struck by a car in a supermarket parking lot in Rhode Island.

Wood, 92, won the Pulitzer in 1993 in the history category for The Radicalism of the American Revolution, a landmark tome that advanced the theory of the break with Britain being at least as much of an internal social and political transformation as a desire to be rid of colonial masters.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:08

Group seeks emergency injunction to halt UFC Freedom 250 event at the White House before a single punch is thrown – key US politics stories from Monday 8 June

Donald Trump is throwing himself quite the 80th birthday party at the White House on Sunday. All he needs now is for a federal judge, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and a passing thunderstorm not to ruin it.

The watchdog group Public Integrity Project filed a lawsuit on Saturday in DC federal court, seeking an emergency injunction to halt the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Freedom 250 event before a single punch is thrown on 14 June – which is both Flag Day and the president’s birthday.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 21:02

Two new rape complaints have been filed against the 67-year-old singer and actor, who denies the claims

French singer and actor Patrick Bruel, facing sexual assault allegations from multiple women, was taken into police custody on Monday, as two new rape complaints were filed against him.

The 67-year-old, a major figure in French pop culture with multiple top-selling albums and more than 40 film appearances, is being questioned about 13 victims, the prosecutor’s office in the western Paris suburb of Nanterre said in a statement.

Agence France-Presse contributed to this report

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 20:45

Donald Trump was loudly booed when he was shown on the video screens at Madison Square Garden on Monday night before Game 3 of the NBA finals between the San Antonio Spurs and New York Knicks.

Trump was shown on the jumbotron while the Star-Spangled Banner was being sung before the game, and jeers and boos broke out around the arena. The president was shown for a little over eight seconds and held a salute the whole time with a smile on his face. A few seconds later, the video board showed Knicks players in line and the boos turned to cheers.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 20:41

Progressive challenger to face incumbent mayor in November as former reality star Pratt trails behind

Nithya Raman, a progressive Los Angeles city council member, has advanced to the November runoff for LA mayor, edging out former reality TV villain Spencer Pratt for the chance to face incumbent mayor Karen Bass.

Pratt, who decided to run for mayor after his Pacific Palisades home burned down in the 2025 wildfires, held a lead over Raman for days. But as ballot processing from last week’s election continued, the city councillor pulled ahead.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 20:39
Ever wondered what racing a onewheel is like?

Head to Head racing start at seeknshred 6 in the Pro Men finals! Full Video Below!!

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 20:37

The biggest WatchOS 27 upgrade could finally make Siri useful on the wrist. But most older watches are being forced to sit this one out.

2026-06-09 08:04
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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 20:10

On my fourth day riding the Pint S, is it just me or does it feel a bit wobbly? The PSI is at 15, and I weigh 145 lbs—should I pump it up a little to make it less wobbly? I mostly ride on the street for my commute, and I’m wondering if there’s a stance that helps reduce wobble. it's my first one wheel.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 20:05

The inner lining on Prada's spacesuits will keep astronauts comfortable and protected from the often harsh temperatures on the moon.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-09 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for June 9, No. 1,094.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-09 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for June 9, No. 828.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-10 10:25

Federal immigration authorities barred a Somali soccer referee who was slated to officiate the FIFA World Cup from entering the U.S. over the weekend, citing "vetting concerns."

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-09 10:00

"AI can make everything that was on my plate visible to colleagues while I'm gone," one expert said.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-09 14:11

SpaceX is setting aside a large chunk of shares for ordinary investors as it seeks to raise a record $75 billion. Here's what to know.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-09 10:35

Going public will allow OpenAI, valued at $852 billion, to inject more cash into its business as the AI race quickens.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 23:27

CBS News projects that incumbent Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass will face off against Nithya Raman in November's runoff election.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 19:52

Prediction market apps are doubling down on paid content creators denying election results, asking them to remove posts or lose sponsorship

Popular online prediction markets Kalshi and Polymarket will prohibit paid creators and affiliates from denying election results, NPR reports, as online creators spread misinformation about California’s election.

In a social media post, Bobby Allyn, NPR technology reporter, reports: “Kalshi now says it prohibits paid creators from calling into question the integrity or accuracy of an election, legal ruling or official determination in connection with an election.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 19:07

An earthquake off Cuba was felt across parts of Florida, but Miami officials reported no major injuries, significant damage or tsunami threat.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 19:01

Exclusive: Analysis shows 72.5% of 91 judgments in England and Wales contained judicial victim-blaming, with mothers scrutinised more intensely

A report has found “widespread and concerning evidence” of bias and victim-blaming in the family courts – primarily disadvantaging women.

The report, Scratching the Surface: Victim-Blaming and Bias in Family Court Judgments, by the nonprofit organisation Right to Equality, will be shared with MPs on Tuesday at an event in parliament.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 19:01

Government-funded JobsPlus trial in 10 neighbourhoods could be scalable nationwide, evaluation shows

A government-funded pilot of “hyperlocal” job support in 10 neighbourhoods across England has shown “promising early signs of effectiveness”, including for young people, and could be scalable nationwide, a new evaluation has shown.

The JobsPlus scheme, backed by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and the Youth Futures Foundation, an independent non-profit organisation, focuses intensive support in a small area of predominantly social housing. Echoing a similar, long-established scheme in the US, “community champions” at each site help to engage hard-to-reach people in the local area.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 19:01

David Lammy to announce trial of AI assistants in crown courts in effort to cut backlog of cases

A plan to roll out virtual legal assistants powered by artificial intelligence to crown courts has prompted warnings that the technology should not be used to “replace vital funding and additional court staff”.

David Lammy, the deputy prime minister, will announce on Tuesday that AI assistants will be trialled in an effort to cut the backlog of court cases in England and Wales.

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2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 19:01

Echo project will help erase images as part of package of support to end ‘prolonged suffering of survivors’

Victims of child sexual abuse in England and Wales will be given help to remove online images of their abuse as part of a wider package of support to end the “prolonged suffering of survivors”.

The Echo project will help those who have reported their abuse to the police to identify and remove images of abuse online. They will also be given trauma support, the possibility of having a victim impact statement read in court against their perpetrators and the opportunity of criminal or civil compensation.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 19:00

OpenAI has confidentially filed for an IPO, "setting it up for what may be the most highly anticipated market debut in recent history and a massive payday for early investors," reports CNN. The decision follows recent IPO announcements from Anthropic and SpaceX. From the report: OpenAI said it has not decided on timing yet. And because the filing is confidential, it's not yet clear how many shares the company plans to sell or at what price. "It may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company," it said in a post on its newsroom page. But the company said the filing "gives us the option to go public sooner if that ends up being best." The transition to a public company will give Wall Street a window into OpenAI's finances as the company pours billions into AI infrastructure and computing resources. Investors dumped tech stocks last week as they questioned whether a recent run-up in those shares had gone too far. OpenAI was last valued at $852 billion after raising $122 billion in March, but it's faced pressure to demonstrate it can generate the cash to match that valuation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:51

"The people are there to see these two teams play," Bill Bradley said of President Trump's plan to attend Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Monday night.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 18:44

Commentary: I can't trust AI to complete my tasks as I would.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:35

Shortly before abruptly ending his "Meet the Press" interview, President Donald Trump wrongly pointed to California’s ballot counting pace as evidence of "a rigged election." 

When Trump said the state was still counting ballots days after the June 2 election, host Kristen Welker said, "That’s how they count the votes in California." 

Trump said: "Do you know why they’re doing that? Because they’re cheating on the election."

Welker asked Trump for his evidence that the election was rigged.

"All I have to do is look," Trump said, adding, "And I listen. And I listen to people. And let’s see what happens."

After more back and forth, Trump called Welker’s show and network "crooked," saying, "Let’s call it quits because I’ve had enough." Shortly after, he walked out of the interview, bringing it to an abrupt end.

The California primary featured multiple races, including for governor and Los Angeles mayor. California typically takes longer than other states to count ballots, which is largely a function of the state’s laws and reliance on voting by mail. 

Trump’s interview was recorded June 5, three days after the election. As of mid-afternoon California time June 8, about 72% of the votes were counted in the governor’s race showing Democrat Xavier Becerra in the lead followed by Republican Steve Hilton.

We asked the White House for information showing that the California election is rigged and how that relates to ballot counting. A spokesperson referred us back to the president’s comments. 

For years, Trump has repeatedly spread falsehoods about "rigged" elections, including in California. Trump’s not alone in his criticism of the pace of California counting ballots, however, he distorted what it means. It’s not a sign of widespread cheating.

California laws set the pace of the count

In California, a state with about 23 million registered voters, election officials mail ballots to all active voters. In 2024, about 19% voted in person.

It takes time to process mail ballots, including election workers verifying identity by matching signatures on the envelopes with registration records.

The state Legislature in 2025 shortened the timeframe for counting ballots, requiring counties to count most ballots by June 15, nearly two weeks after the primary. County election officials have 30 days to process some ballots including provisional ballots.

Many voters turn in their ballots on Election Day, experts say. The state counts ballots postmarked by Election Day that are received by counties within seven days after the election.

County elections officials must report their final results to the secretary of state by July 3 and the state will certify results by July 10.

Kim Alexander, president of the nonpartisan California Voter Foundation, pointed to other factors that affect ballot processing time in the state’s 58 counties, including the election staff’s capacity, equipment and space. 

Even if counties had the money to add more equipment and staff, many don’t have the space, Alexander said. The foundation, along with Protect Democracy United, which works to build public confidence in elections, proposed that the state spend $91 million on additional county funding for equipment, space and staff as well as for voter outreach and education promoting early ballot return.

Alexander said that the pace of the count is not proof the election was rigged.

"But there is plenty of evidence that long vote counts undermine voter confidence," and California should better explain that it is prioritizing access, security and accuracy, Alexander said. 

California also requires a mandatory 1% manual tally for all jurisdictions, which also slows the process but is a security measure in addition to post-election audits, said Lisa Bryant, a Fresno State professor and expert on election administration.

Secretary of State Shirley Weber has defended California’s system.

"Accuracy comes before speed," Weber said in a statement days after the primary. 

The ballot counting has drawn interest in part because in the nonpartisan Los Angeles mayor’s race, Democrat Nithya Raman pulled ahead of Republican Spencer Pratt for second place. Mayor Karen Bass has remained in first place with the majority of votes counted.

Federal prosecutors said they are investigating fraud in CA election

There is anecdotal evidence of fraud in elections, but historically not enough to change the outcome.

Bill Essayli, a Trump appointee and first assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, wrote on X that his office has "multiple election fraud investigations underway" but provided no details. In another post, he pointed to the 2026 case of Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong, who agreed in May to plead guilty on a charge related to paying a homeless person to register to vote. 

Essayli has challenged the state’s election laws and questioned whether the state is keeping voter rolls up to date, including removing dead people. The federal government is in a legal battle with California and other states seeking their full voter rolls. 

Our ruling

Trump said the ongoing ballot counting in California means "they’re cheating on the election." 

The pace of counting ballots in the June 2 primary is in accordance with the state’s election laws. Those policies apply to all voters regardless of party. 

Most Californians vote by mail, with about 19% voting in person in 2024. County election officials count most ballots in 13 days but have 30 days for some ballots. It takes time to process mail ballots, including election workers veryifying identity by matching signatures on the envelopes with registration records.

We rate the statement Pants on Fire!

RELATED: Trump’s promise to count all votes on election night stalls as related case heads to Supreme Court

RELATED: All of our elections fact-checks including California

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:17

Six people, including the suspect, were taken to the hospital after a stabbing incident at New York City's Penn Station on Sunday evening.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:15

Commentary: Apple's new feature for adjusting the composition of a photo could be genuinely useful.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:13

Thirty-nine people taken near Magamin Diddi village in Maradun municipality, north-west Zamfara state, police say

Armed bandits in north-west Nigeria abducted dozens of villagers whom they invited to a meeting about potential peace negotiations, authorities and residents said on Monday, highlighting the region’s worsening security.

According to local police, 39 people were seized on Sunday during a meeting in the forest near Magamin Diddi village in the Maradun municipality of north-west Zamfara state. But some residents and officials believe the number of those abducted could be as high as 50.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:11

As president and allies spread baseless conspiracy theories, here’s what you need to know about the California count

As California continues to slowly count ballots, edging closer to determining who will advance in elections to run the state and its largest city, Donald Trump and other Republicans are spreading claims of election fraud that have become common after California elections.

On Monday, Trump-backed Republican Steve Hilton was inching closer to securing the second runoff spot in the California governor’s race, after Democrat Xavier Becerra secured the first spot on Friday. But the race has yet to be called for Hilton, with more than 2.5m ballots still left to be counted across the state.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:08

Some of my top new features were made possible by AI, but a lot weren't.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:04

This live blog is now closed. For the latest, read more of our coverage on the Middle East conflict here.

Iranian media is reporting that there were no immediate casualties following apparent Israeli strikes on the Karun petrochemical plant in Mahshahr, a city in Iran’s southwestern Khuzestan province.

According to the Fars news agency, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they responded to what they described as an American-Israeli strike on the Iranian petrochemical site by launching a missile attack on a similar plant in the northern Israeli city of Haifa.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 18:00

Last Thursday, Wired reported that Meta had quietly embedded an unreleased facial recognition system called NameTag into software installed on millions of phones. In a follow-up report, Wired says the tech giant has now removed the face-recognition-related code, while saying "no final decision" has been made about whether the feature will launch. From the report: On Thursday, WIRED reported that Meta had quietly integrated substantial portions of the NameTag system into the Meta AI app. Though never publicly enabled, the feature was designed to convert faces captured by the glasses into unique biometric signatures, commonly known as faceprints, and compare them against a database of faceprints stored on the user's device. WIRED also found that faces the system failed to recognize were cropped, indexed, and stored locally for future processing. NameTag first surfaced in February, when The New York Times, citing internal Meta documents, reported that the company was developing face recognition for its smart glasses and weighing a launch as soon as this year. One memo reportedly described releasing it during a "dynamic political environment," when privacy and civil liberties advocates would be distracted. Last week, WIRED reported that much of NameTag's machinery was already built into the Meta AI app, downloaded by millions of users, as early as January, even as Meta publicly said it had made no final decision about face recognition. After WIRED's report, Stone dismissed the findings, writing that the company couldn't answer questions about how the system would work because "the feature does not exist." Andrew Bosworth, Meta's chief technology officer, called the reporting "incredibly misleading" and "absolutely dishonest." [...] The newly released version of Meta AI removes nearly all traces of the feature Meta said did not yet exist. Gone is the face-recognition software itself, along with the code that ran the NameTag recognition process and the "Person recognized" alert the app would have shown if someone were identified. The update also strips out a folder where the app would have stored the cropped images and biometric signatures of faces it captured but could not identify. [...] A few fragments of the NameTag system remain in the version of latest Meta AI, including an internal debug menu label and a dormant link meant to open a recognized person's profile. The leftover code points to parts of the system that are no longer there.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:57

Apple's next Mac operating system update moves on from Intel chips.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:55

Commentary: By simply talking to me like I'm not a baffling millionaire, Apple showed it has more sense than Google.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:53

Apple is ready to fulfill many of its years-long promises for AI. Here's what to know about the new, and hopefully improved, Apple Intelligence.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:51

Attorney general pick joined Trump’s legal team in 2023 – there seems little doubt he would be prepared to carry out the president’s wishes

Todd Blanche’s nomination to be permanently made the attorney general marks the apex of a gamble from a man who bet everything on representing Donald Trump and became one of his most steadfast and punishing enforcers.

Trump announced the news at the White House on Monday. The nomination will require Senate confirmation to become permanent.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:48

An Election Night data reporting lag in California fueled misinformation and false claims of voter fraud in the Los Angeles mayoral primary. 

Several X accounts shared similar claims in the days following the June 2 election, saying an update showed 24,000 new ballots reported in the mayoral primary, with former reality TV star Spencer Pratt receiving zero. 

Pratt, the Republican favorite in the nonpartisan mayoral primary for the heavily Democratic city, was polling as one of the top three candidates in the leadup to the election, along with Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and City Councilmember Nithya Raman. The top two candidates will advance to the November general election.

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., shared the same claim, and Elon Musk amplified another version of it.  

The claim came as President Donald Trump repeatedly said, without evidence, that Democrats are committing election fraud in the California primary. 

Bill Essayli, who leads the U.S. attorney’s office in Los Angeles that Trump has said is investigating alleged fraud, said the claim that Pratt received zero votes in an update is false. 

"We reviewed official county records. The claim is false. Each candidate received votes in every update," Essayli wrote on X. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk’s office told the Los Angeles Times Pratt had received votes in each of the updates the office reported.

Automated data lag from media outlet muddled vote totals

The 24,000 ballot claim originated from numbers momentarily reported on news websites, not from official Los Angeles County reported results. On websites that draw from The Associated Press’s vote totals, an initial count showed a total of 308,878 counted votes, and a later update at about 8:35 p.m. Pacific Time displayed 333,712, a 24,834-vote difference. 

But the update did not include all results reported by the county at the time, which led to websites briefly displaying zero new votes for Pratt. 

The cause of the discrepancy was a lag in the AP’s vote count system that counted other candidates’ vote totals before counting Pratt’s, an AP spokesperson said. 

"Specifically, an electronic update from the Los Angeles County website pulled in votes for only one group of candidates, including Karen Bass and Nithya Raman," AP spokesperson Patrick Maks said in an email to PolitiFact. "Exactly one minute later, the electronic update picked up the votes for another group of candidates including Spencer Pratt."

Maks said those two updates included 21,870 votes for Pratt, 12,850 votes for Bass and 9,521 votes for Raman. 

A review of multiple data sources, including The Ballot Book and a GitHub project that scrapes each update from the government election website, shows the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk’s office never reported a batch of results with zero votes for Pratt. 

That matches what was reported at the time by outlets like Decision Desk HQ and VoteHub. The Ballot Book, an independent California election data outlet, shows the same results in its log of the 8:35 p.m. update. 

No ballot batch with zero Pratt votes

The update in question at around 8:35 p.m. Pacific Time was the first one after an initial results announcement at 8:15 p.m. The initial results showed: 

  • Karen Bass: 117,579

  • Spencer Pratt: 86,323

  • Nithya Raman: 61,949

The 8:35 p.m. update added 48,433 new votes to the count, with the top three candidates receiving votes as follows: 

  • Karen Bass: 12,850

  • Spencer Pratt: 21,870

  • Nithya Raman: 9,521

After that update, the candidates’ new totals were: 

  • Karen Bass: 130,429

  • Spencer Pratt: 108,193

  • Nithya Raman: 71,470

Screenshots used as evidence for the claim show 130,429 votes for Bass and 71,470 votes for Raman after the update, but show Pratt’s total at 86,323. That’s in line with the AP’s explanation of the data being updated out of sync. 

Our ruling

Social media posts said Pratt received zero votes out of 24,000 in a vote update during the California mayoral primary tally. 

The narrative originated from numbers that were momentarily reported on news websites, not from official Los Angeles County reported results. The media site reporting was based on a momentary data lag. Pratt received votes in each election update. 

We rate this statement False.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:47

Apple says your iPhone's search results could be faster, more reliable and more accurate.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 17:47

ChatGPT maker expected to be valued at more than $850bn, one of most highly valued listings in market history

OpenAI has filed confidentially to go public on the US stock market, according to a company blogpost published on Monday. The artificial intelligence giant’s debut on Wall Street is expected to be one of the most highly valued listings in market history with a valuation at more than $850bn.

“We recently submitted a confidential S-1. We expect it to leak so we’re just announcing it,” the company’s post reads. “We have not decided on timing yet; it may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company. But it’s a complicated set of tradeoffs and this gives us the option to go public sooner if that ends up being best.”

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:43

A deadly earthquake rocked the southern Philippines, killing dozens of people and sending small tsunami waves toward at least three nations.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:40

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 17:36

Commentary: The new Siri announced at WWDC 2026 comes with personalization options. My take: Voice assistants like Alexa and Gemini should have had these for years.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:34

At WWDC 2026, Apple announced that it's bringing a 3-band custom EQ to its latest AirPods this fall, so you can manually tweak their sound to your liking.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:26

In today’s climate, I needed this: GentleOS, an operating system targeting both 386 (GentleOS/32) and even processors as old as the 80186 (GentleOS/16), with a lovely retro graphical user interface, usable on bare metal, and, of course, open source.

Its goal is to provide a simple platform for tinkering with retro hardware and running graphical interactive apps on bare metal.

At minimum, it only requires an i386 CPU, 4MB of RAM, and a VGA display capable of 640x480x16 mode.

By design it’s entirely monolithic, mostly configured at compile time, and only supports standard PC devices: VGA/SVGA, keyboard, PS/2 mouse, serial mouse, PC speaker. The only future plans are bugfixes, optimizations, and adding more apps.

GentleOS/32 has a pure 16-bit spin-off called GentleOS/16, which targets devices as old as 80186.

↫ GentleOS GitHub page

While it can be run on real hardware, you can also run it in Qemu to make it easier to test and play around with. It looks great, and the stated goal of just focusing on maintenance and possibly additional applications is music to my heart. With everything that’s going on in technology today, this is an ice-cold glass of tonic in a scorching, data center-infested desert.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:25

In speech on Tuesday, Tory leader will claim obligation to consider equality being used to advance ‘divisive agendas’

Kemi Badenoch will vow to scrap the duty on public bodies to consider how they can promote equality as she seeks to head off the challenge from Reform UK by presenting her party as responsible but also in tune with populist anger.

Badenoch, who was Conservative minister for equalities between 2020 and 2022, will commit to scrapping the public sector equality duty (PSED), a legal requirement obliging those bodies to think how they can improve society and promote equality in their day-to-day business.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:14

Acting in the role since April, Blanche faces Senate confirmation after controversial DoJ moves

Donald Trump nominated Todd Blanche to serve permanently as attorney general on Monday, lining up his former personal lawyer to be the country’s ⁠top ⁠law ⁠enforcement officer.

The US president suggested earlier this week that Blanche, who was appointed on an acting basis in April after the president fired Pam Bondi, was set to receive the nod. “He’s a very talented guy,” Trump told a podcast.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:14

Commentary: The company stuck to using "Apple Intelligence," referencing its own proprietary AI, rather than the two-letter acronym and the negative baggage it carries.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:04

Senior administration officials jump on death of Henry Nowak – and statements echo language of the far right

Over a breathtaking few days that spanned Saturday’s 82nd anniversary of D-day, senior Trump administration officials have trampled over diplomatic protocol to tear into Europe’s immigration and anti-racism policies and argue that such actions could end western civilization.

From the United States, Vice-President JD Vance and other administration officials jumped on a controversial murder case in Britain to accuse Keir Starmer’s government of lacking the Trump administration’s “political will and leadership” to stop mass migration and defend national sovereignty.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 17:00

Microsoft executive Matt Booty says future Xbox exclusivity will be decided "case-by-case," with Gears of War: E-Day and Clockwork Revolution remaining Xbox console exclusives while major multiplayer, live-service, and previously promised PlayStation releases stay multiplatform. But IGN's Tom Phillips says Microsoft's announcement still leaves numerous questions unanswered, like "why just Gears and Clockwork Revolution?" and "how will this policy be enforced in future?" From the report: Last night's Xbox Showcase featured the return of games specifically earmarked as exclusives for Xbox consoles (though, of course, they'll still also be coming to PC). But why just Gears and Clockwork Revolution? And how will this policy be enforced in future? Microsoft's announcement left numerous questions unanswered. "We want a reason for people to get on board with Xbox, we want them to have a reason to buy an Xbox, we want them to have a reason to be an Xbox fan," Booty said. "At the same time, we want to reward all our players that have been with us for a long time -- we know that exclusives are important, and that's why we've got Gears coming in 2026 and Clockwork [Revolution] coming in 2027." "We also want to be clear that our big multiplayer games and live-service games are going to continue to be multiplatform," he continued. "If we've promised something to players already, we're going to honor that promise. And then -- I think Asha said it -- we're going to make the right decision and not the fast decision. "We're going to keep thinking about this going forward," Booty continued, "and, I think you guys know already, our principle is when we announce the date, we announce the platforms. So, it's going to be case-by-case, but we're going to be clear, that when it's got a date, it's got a platform and you'll know what the choice is going to be." Beyond those games already confirmed for PlayStation (such as the upcoming Halo: Campaign Evolved, and the PS5 version of Forza Horizon 6 due later this year), last night saw Microsoft make the call that other upcoming titles would still be coming to PS5 as well. While it had been assumed that State of Decay 3 would get a PS5 version, yesterday saw it made official. Hellblade threequel Senua was unveiled, and is getting a PS5 version. And, unsurprisingly, Spyro: A Realm Beyond is coming to Xbox, PS5 and Nintendo Switch 2.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:59

Netanyahu acknowledges pause in fighting in TV speech but vows forceful response to future attacks

Fears of a return to a full-scale regional war in the Middle East eased on Monday as Israel and Iran said they had halted attacks on each other after an appeal from Donald Trump to “immediately stop shooting”.

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, acknowledged the halt in fighting with Iran in a televised speech, but vowed to respond “with force” to future attacks.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:59

Commentary: Workout Buddy has the potential to be a great fitness app. But without major changes at WWDC 2026, it's not there just yet.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:55

A magnitude 7.8 earthquake off the southern Philippines on June 8 local time has killed at least 35 people, injured hundreds and destroyed buildings.

Online, people shared real footage of the destruction, but one video was captioned misleadingly.

"7.8 earthquake hits the Philippines today!!" a June 7 X post read, containing a video that showed people fleeing and screaming while debris fell from the building’s ceiling. It gained more than 488,000 views within 16 hours of being posted. 

The footage was not taken during the June earthquake; it captured a different earthquake that shook the Philippines two years ago.

Reverse-image search showed this video was uploaded by multiple accounts on Nov. 17, 2023, when a magnitude 6.8 earthquake struck the nation’s south. That earthquake killed 11 people.

PolitiFact was unable to find the original 2023 post, but a couple of accounts credited the video to "Dave Miles." The captions pinpoint the location to a mall in General Santos City, which is consistent with photos posted by a news outlet. 

Either way, the video is not from June in the Philippines. We rate that False.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:50

Amid unsubstantiated claims of a rigged California primary, amplified by President Donald Trump, social media users shared an image of a blue-haired person in an all-black outfit, holding multiple pieces of folded paper in front of a ballot box.

"Do you still not believe California is using people to ballot harvest?" read a June 5 X post featuring the image. The same day, another X post said the image was taken at a ballot box in Glendale, California; and posts on  Facebook and Threads with the image said it showed a "California voter" who "identifies" as many "different people." 

The image does not show a real incident or person; it was created using artificial intelligence. It contained the logo of Gemini, a Google AI tool, on the bottom right corner. 

(The photo’s bottom right shows the logo of Gemini, a Google AI tool.)

When we uploaded the image to Gemini, it found that the image was "edited or generated with Google AI." Images generated with Google’s AI tools contain SynthID, a digital watermark that is invisible to humans but detectable by Google’s technology.

(The text on the ballot box also featured warped letters and misspellings.)

We found no news reports or other evidence that this was a real incident.

Trump has falsely claimed that voting by mail means cheating, but his claims about the use of drop boxes and ballot harvesting for fraud have been exaggerated. 

California law outlines security measures for securing drop boxes; they are often placed in public locations, with constant video surveillance. The state allows voters to designate another person to return their ballots, while following requirements.

This image of a person stuffing ballot boxes in California is fake. We rate it Pants on Fire!

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:47

Commentary: Apple is at last addressing the most un-Apple-like thing about MacOS Tahoe.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-08 16:47

At his final WWDC keynote, Tim Cook highlights AI-forward upgrade to the voice assistant to be widely released in fall

After years of anticipation, user frustration and false starts, Apple announced a major upgrade to Siri at its annual developer conference on Monday. The voice assistant will come integrated with Apple’s artificial intelligence tool, Apple Intelligence, and has been rechristened “Siri AI”.

The new Siri, which will be widely released in the fall, will more closely resemble AI chatbots like ChatGPT or Google Gemini, than a question-and-answer tool that draws from the web.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:34

The drone, which entered Latvia from Russia, was the latest to violate the airspace of a NATO member during the war.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:18

The U-Haul driver who fatally struck a University of Delaware student on Main Street last year is facing a mandatory life sentence after being convicted of murder and related charges last week.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:16

Apple's tablets will get more AI features when iOS 27 ships later this year.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:15

We move from the famed alpine lake and mountains of Tahoe to the iconic Bay Area bridge.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 16:37

U.S. District Judge Leo Sorokin ruled in favor of a group of 20 states that challenged President Trump's new $100,000 visa fee.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-09 06:48

Iran and Israel declare a halt to fighting as President Trump says both are seeking an "immediate ceasefire" after a major escalation in the 101-day war.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-10 08:49

Although working remotely offers flexibility, it also takes a toll on people's mental health, experts said.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 16:39

Currently acting attorney general, Todd Blanche may face an uphill confirmation battle from some wary Republican senators.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 16:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for June 9, No. 1,816.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from AppleInsider: Apple has unveiled its next Mac operating system, macOS Golden Gate, with Apple promising better performance, the improved Siri, and more. [...] On the surface, macOS Golden Gate is not as significant an upgrade as macOS Big Sur, or even macOS Tahoe with its Liquid Glass redesign. But under the surface, it is much more significant than it seems. Apple has chosen this release to draw a line in the sand. For the first time, the new macOS Golden Gate will not support Macs that have Intel processors. [...] Nonetheless, as of when this is released to the public in September or October, no Intel Macs will ever be supported again. One of the most notable design tweaks in this new release is a refinement of macOS toolbars and sidebars: toolbars are now more distinct, sidebars can stretch all the way to the window edge, and sidebar icons have regained color. Apple is also tightening window corner radii to address complaints about resizing behavior.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:54

Apple’s developer conference started today, and as is tradition, this means it also announced coming updates to its operating systems lineup. macOS is probably one of the two major ones OSNews readers are interested in, so let’s start there:

Much like Mac OS X Snow Leopard in 2009, Apple said it focused on improving macOS’s performance and dozens of underlying technologies this year.

macOS Golden Gate has some Liquid Glass design changes. For example, apps now have a unified toolbar at the top, and the sidebar now expands to the edge of the window.

A new slider on macOS 27 lets you customize the opacity of Liquid Glass.

↫ Joe Rossignol at MacRumors

Effectively, a ton of “Liquid Glass” features touted only a year ago are being changed and fixed, which should make using Liquid Glass less of a frustrating affair. Of course, there’s a whole slew of new “AI” stuff built entirely on top of Google’s Gemini, but luckily for us Europeans, we won’t be getting those features because EU privacy and consumer protection regulations are too strict. Apple, one of the world’s most valuable companies, seemingly cannot create “AI” features that comply with some basic consumer protection legislation.

As for the other major platform, that’s iOS of course.

At WWDC 2026 in Cupertino, Apple announced iOS 27, the next mobile operating system for compatible iPhones. The update focuses on tweaking and improving last year’s iOS 26, particularly in areas like app launch time, Liquid Glass design, and more. It does not offer a lot of major new features or upgrades, as Apple focused on polishing the experience. However, there are some new upgrades, such as reworked parental controls, new Siri AI, better search, and performance improvements.

↫ Taras Buria at Neowin

These new versions, as well as those of Apple’s other operating systems, will be available later this year.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:46

Votes in the Los Angeles mayoral primary on June 2 are still being counted, but some social media users — and President Donald Trump — are already contesting the potential outcome and suggesting it’s fraudulent.

Conservative influencer Rogan O'Handley, known as @DC_Draino on X, in a June 7 post said: "Nithya Raman already gave a concession speech. Think about that. Not even she believed it was possible to make the top 2. But greedy machine Dems are still pumping her fake votes to get Spencer out of the top 2. Insane levels of fraud."

The latest election results update on June 7 shows that incumbent mayor Karen Bass is leading, followed by city councilwoman Nithya Raman and Spencer Pratt, a former reality TV personality. Raman moved to second place in the latest update after an early vote count June 2 showed her out of the running. The top two in the race will advance to a Nov. 3 runoff.

Raman spoke on election night before the release of any initial results. C-SPAN titled her speech a "concession speech," but at no point during her remarks did she concede. There are also no concession speeches or messages in her official social media campaign accounts.

Raman on election night thanked the city, her campaign and family, and spoke about campaign challenges and victories.

"Tonight may not give us a final answer on this race. Many thousands of votes will be counted in the days ahead. We may not get an answer we like. But regardless of what happens next, nobody can take away what all of us have built together," Raman said.

She cried as she thanked her 10-year-old twins for their patience and said her campaign was intended to build a better city worthy of every child. She didn’t give the impression she was crying because she lost the race or because she was leaving it.

On June 8, Trump shared on Truth Social an X post from U.S. Rep. Abe Hamadeh, R-Ariz., saying California elections aren’t fair because Raman was projected as one of the top two primary winners.

"No way this could have happened. Rigged Election!" Trump wrote.

During a June 7 interview on NBC News "Meet the Press," Trump also said the California primary elections were fraudulent. 

"The (2020) election was rigged. It was a dirty election. And it’s happening again right now in California," Trump said. "It’s four days and they aren’t even close to coming up with the — do you know why they’re doing that? Because they’re cheating on the election."

The 2020 presidential election wasn’t rigged. There’s also no evidence that the California primary elections are rigged. 

In the interview, Trump referred to how long it takes California to count the ballots and the changing election results. But this isn’t unusual. 

After election night, California Secretary of State Shirley Weber reminded voters in a June 4 memo that although voting ended June 2, the counting process continues for up to 30 days after the election, in accordance with state law

Weber said election results will change throughout the counting period as county election officials process votes by mail, provisional ballots and other ballots. This is normal as some mail in ballots are counted even if they were received seven days after the election, but are postmarked on election day. Last year, during a statewide special election, more than 80% of Californians voted by mail. 

County elections officials must report their final results to the secretary of state by July 3; the election results will be certified by July 10.

Our ruling

Social media users said Raman had conceded the Los Angeles mayoral race as of June 7.

C-SPAN titled a June 2 speech by Raman a "concession speech," but at no point during her remarks did she concede. Raman said that on that night her campaign might not get the results it wants, but she also said votes were still being counted.

Raman is still in the mayoral race as one of the possible top two contenders for the November runoff, and vote counts days past election day are the norm in California because of state laws.

We rate this claim False. 

PolitiFact Senior Digital Research Analyst Jeff Cercone contributed to this report.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 15:46

The Library Avenue railroad bridge will close for approximately eight weeks to allow a Delaware Department of Transportation contractor to make repairs to the bridge.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 15:32

Several older iPhones will get at least one more year of major software updates.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:26

On Friday, the Pentagon cut the number of religious affiliation codes from over 200 to 31 to help military chaplains streamline religious support services.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 15:22

SEOUL, South Korea, June 8, 2026 — Trillion Labs, a South Korean foundation model lab, announced that it is developing Industrial World Models for AI Factories, built with NVIDIA Omniverse libraries and NVIDIA Nemotron open models.

Industrial World Models are designed to enable AI systems and agents to understand, simulate, and optimize complex industrial environments such as AI data centers and power plants. Trillion Labs builds its world models from scratch, using NVIDIA Omniverse libraries for physics-accurate simulation and NVIDIA Nemotron for advanced reasoning, to serve as the intelligence layer for next-generation AI Factories.

Trillion Labs has built proprietary foundation models spanning large language models (LLMs) and vision-language models (VLMs), and is now developing world models for physical infrastructure. The company has also developed expertise across the entire AI stack, from training and inference to deployment and operations. This full-stack approach allows Trillion Labs to design and optimize models specifically for real-world industrial applications.

While continuing its foundation model research, Trillion Labs is increasingly focusing on industrial and engineering-specific AI models. Rather than developing general-purpose or generic AI, the company aims to build specialized foundation models capable of understanding and manipulating complex physical infrastructure and industrial operations.

Trillion Labs’ key focus is AI Factories, where data centers, power generation facilities, cooling systems, and other operational infrastructure operate in tightly connected ecosystems — increasingly, under one roof. Trillion Labs is developing Industrial World Models that can understand complex schematics, time-series data, facility operations, maintenance histories, operational constraints, and infrastructure dependencies, enabling AI systems to support optimization across industrial environments.

The company has been collaborating with GS Group on critical energy infrastructure, as well as other enterprise partners across industrial domains.

“Large language models remain the foundation of advanced intelligence, but understanding language alone is not enough to understand the physical world,” said Jay Shin, CEO of Trillion Labs. “Industrial World Models are our next step toward extending AI from language understanding to real-world reasoning. By combining foundation models we build ourselves with simulation and specialized reasoning, we aim to build AI systems capable of understanding and optimizing critical infrastructure at scale.”

The initiative reflects Trillion Labs’ broader vision of Industrial Superintelligence, where AI systems can understand, simulate, help, and eventually autonomously operate complex industrial systems. The company believes Industrial World Models will become a foundational building block for the next generation of AI-powered infrastructure.

Shin presented on Korean LLMs as a speaker at NVIDIA GTC 2025 and has maintained a meaningful partnership with NVIDIA through the Inception program. Trillion Labs views Industrial World Models as a key opportunity to combine its foundation model expertise with NVIDIA’s AI factory, digital twin, and physical AI ecosystem.

As the build-out of AI Factories continues to explode globally, Trillion Labs aims to establish a new category of Industrial Intelligence that bridges foundation models and real-world infrastructure.

About Trillion Labs

Trillion Labs is an AI research lab founded in 2024 by Jay Shin, a key architect behind NAVER’s HyperCLOVA X. Within a year of its founding, the company developed and open-sourced a full lineup of large language models (LLMs)—including 7B, 21B, and 70B parameter models—from scratch. Since then, Trillion Labs has expanded beyond language models, introducing a vision-language model (VLM), Korea’s first large language model built on a diffusion-based transformer architecture (dLLM), and gWorld, a mobile world model. Through these advancements, the company has demonstrated full-stack AI capabilities spanning foundation models, multimodal AI, and world models.


Source: Trillion Labs

The post Trillion Labs Targets AI Data Centers and Power Plants with Industrial World Models appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:19

US president for years has repeatedly suggested – and said outright – that he would not take the country to war

Donald Trump has forcefully denied he ever promised not to draw the US into war, having spent years pledging to avoid doing just that.

The US president’s own biography on the White House website credits him with “putting a stop to endless wars” – raising questions about the US-Israel war on Iran, which he launched, with no end currently in sight.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:18

Kids will be able to request permission to do things like browse new websites or buy apps.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:16

The next major iOS software will be available on devices as old as the iPhone 11, and it will land on your device this fall.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:12

I've seen AI video analysis like this before, but Apple has a unique twist that could mean a lot for home security.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:08

Hey floaters - looking for lock recommendations. I’ve been riding for 5+ years and never leave my OWs out of my sight, but my high schooler is a unique situation where they won’t let him bring his board into the school. He uses it to get to and from. There is a “bike room” with racks that is locked during the school day so it’s fairly secure, but he needs to leave his board there and have it locked. We need a lock mainly for deterrence rather than protection. Any recommendations on something lightweight that could be easy for him to use? I’m thinking just a light weight cable bike like but open to all suggestions.

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

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:07

I've only got 1000 miles and four months on this board but the tire has started bulging on the sidewalls. I've had three other boards with even more time and miles and none of them show this kind of wear. Even the threads on the edges have started flaring. Am I just too gnarly or do they get worse every year?

submitted by /u/Logical_Pop_1532
[link] [comments]

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:05

I've tested dozens of noise-canceling headphones. These are my current top picks at a variety of prices -- from high-end to budget models.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:00

Exclusive: Ukrainian president says ‘small mistake can break a big friendship’ in wide-ranging interview with Guardian

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said the decision by some Reform UK councils to take down the Ukrainian flag was the kind of “small mistake that can break a big friendship”, as he underlined the significance of strong bilateral relations.

The Ukrainian president tempered his rare foray into UK domestic politics by stressing how much the two countries “need each other” in the battle against Russia, which he said posed a threat not only to Ukraine but to Britain too.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 15:00

At WWDC 2026, Apple announced a new "Siri AI," describing it as a more conversational, personalized, and systemwide assistant that can understand on-screen context and interact with apps while relying on on-device processing or Private Cloud Compute. The relaunch comes two years after Apple's original Apple Intelligence promises stumbled and "never fully materialized," reports The Verge. MacRumors reports: Siri is now embedded directly in the Dynamic Island, accessible by swiping down from it, pressing the side button, or saying "Hey Siri." A revamped voice engine makes the assistant sound more expressive, with micro-adjustable voice settings available during initial setup. During Apple's keynote demo, presenters showed Siri handling chained, multi-step requests with apparent ease. In one sequence, a presenter asked about a Suki Waterhouse concert, was told tickets require a lottery entry, and asked Siri to set a reminder when the lottery opens, which it did. In another, the assistant identified a photo's landmark, pulled up navigation to that location, and surfaced photos from a recent family trip, adding a specific image to a shared family album on request. Another demo showcased Siri's ability to synthesize information across apps. A presenter asked about a dessert he had heard about at an event, and Siri located the relevant details from his Messages history. It then compiled the information into a watch-party menu, drafted a message to his contacts with the menu included, and presented send and edit options. In a further demo, a presenter asked about something his son had shared in a message and followed it up by asking Siri to compose an email on the subject. A new dedicated Siri app lets users scroll back through prior conversations and kick off new ones, with conversation history synced via iCloud so sessions carry seamlessly between devices. The app is also coming to watchOS. On the Mac, Siri is now also integrated into Spotlight and available via right-click context menus on any file or window. On visionOS, Siri AI gains a 3D visualization that users can place anywhere in their space.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:53

Fire in Bermondsey sends huge plumes rising high over the city and disrupts train travel in the area

Fifteen fire engines and about 100 firefighters have been called to tackle a major fire at a recycling centre in south London.

Fire control officers were first called just after 5.30pm on Monday to the centre on Landmann Way in Bermondsey.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:52

Cook received a minutes-long standing ovation during his live speech ahead of WWDC.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:47

President dramatically raised cost of visa for highly skilled workers in executive order last year

A US judge has invalidated Donald Trump’s $100,000 annual fee on H-1B visa applications, ruling it an unlawful tax that violated federal administrative law and the constitution.

US district judge Leo Sorokin in Boston issued the 42-page ruling in a lawsuit filed by 20 Democratic state attorneys general challenging a fee Trump announced in September that dramatically raised the cost of obtaining H-1B visas.. The ruling vacated the sweeping fee, which was a 20-to-50 fold increase on existing rates, and the Trump administration is widely expected to appeal.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:46

President Donald Trump had urged restraint after the two countries intensified attacks, and Iran said it would halt its strikes.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 14:39

The Seventh National Research Platform (7NRP) workshop was held at the University of California San Diego on May 5–7, 2026, with an agenda focused on artificial intelligence (AI) in education and agriculture.

After a welcome address by Rajesh Gupta, dean of UC San Diego’s Halicioğlu School of Data Science and Computing, keynotes were given by Christopher Alvarez (U.S. Department of Agriculture chief data officer) and Katie Antypas (National Science Foundation (NSF) senior adviser for cyberinfrastructure). UC San Diego San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) Director and NRP Principal Investigator (PI) Frank Würthwein then presented the status of NRP and its strategic vision for the future, while Sesh Murthy of the Halıcıoğlu School and Portia Restuccia of Vocareum described the UC San Diego ASPIRE Math Tutor program as an example of the power of personalized AI tutors.

Thursday’s agenda comprised three guided sessions led by UC San Diego researchers: Melissa Floca discussed AI for agriculture; Mohammad Firas Sada focused on AI inference infrastructure and services; and Larry Smarr presented a whirlwind tour of NRP science highlights. Chin Guok, chief technology officer at Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory gave a talk about the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Genesis Mission and American Science Cloud.

History of NRP

Larry Smarr, NRP’s pioneer architect 

The NRP’s pioneer architect was Larry Smarr (on left). For decades Smarr, a distinguished professor emeritus of Computer Science and Engineering at UC San Diego, has promoted a vision for a high-speed, distributed scientific cyberinfrastructure (CI), informed by decades of experience with and service to the federation. In 1985 he founded the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), located on the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) campus, where he also contributed to the high-speed research network that became NSFNet. In 2000, he moved from UIUC to UC San Diego to become the founding director of the California Institute of Telecommunications and Information Technology (CalIT2), a consortium of UC San Diego, UC Irvine and UC Riverside. In 2013, the UC San Diego Division of CalIT2 was named the Qualcomm Institute (QI), under the direction of UC San Diego Professor Ramesh Rao. Work with CalIT2 and QI engineers shaped Smarr’s enthusiasm for optical networking, LambdaGrids, distributed visualization and geographically distributed scientific collaborations.

Frank Würthwein, director of the SDSC (Credit: Kristina Mallari, assistant producer-director, Qualcomm Institute at UC San Diego)

In 2015, with Würthwein (photo on right) as co-PI, Smarr launched the Pacific Research Platform (PRP) which self-identified as a “science-driven, high-capacity, data-centric freeway system.” By 2019, a fully operational NRP emerged via contributions from a number of engineers, network researchers and collaborative institutions, with significant input and oversight by the SDSC team, Würthwein (Operations Lead and PI of prototype NRP), Philip Papadopoulos (Co-PI: Distributed Systems & Cloud Infrastructure), Tom DeFanti (Co-PI Visualization & Networking Infrastructure), Derek Weitzel (Co-PI: Kubernetes & Distributed Networking Architecture), Tajana Rosing (Co-PI: AI Systems & Energy-efficient Computing), and SDSC Chief Data Science Officer İlkay Altıntaş (Co-PI: NRP Data-intensive Science Integration).

Over the years, the platform progressed through three major phases, including the PRP regional experimental networking era; national prototype CI phase (Toward a National Research Platform); and a strategic AI research CI that fully integrates with NSF’s National AI Research Resource (NAIRR) pilot. WIth NAIRR integration, the NSF recognized the platform’s potential to democratize CI access (which currently supports 25 projects across the country). All along, it engaged with and benefitted from DOE ESnet topology, which supports software-defined networks, federated CI for data-intensive research, distributed collaborations, and ultimately cloud-native and AI/Machine Learning (ML)-oriented scientific orchestration.

In 2024 the PRP was renamed the NRP and leadership transitioned from Smarr to Würthwein signifying the shift from visionary development to a fully operational, federated CI. Primary partner institutions include the UC San Diego, SDSC, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, and the Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing (HPC) Center. NRP comprises 88 institutions, including 70 colleges and universities, three national laboratories and one museum in 129 geographic locations served by 14 research and education networks. There are twice as many non-R1 institutions as R1s on the NRP. Hardware is owned by the community, and participation allows institutions to access immense computational power that a single entity could never afford on its own. The NRP user base is about half the size of the community that uses the NSF ACCESS (Advanced CI Coordination Ecosystem: Services & Support) federated CI, and half the size of the DOE user community.

Larry Smarr stands with a Cray-1 supercomputer as the center opens for business in January 1986. Photo courtesy of NCSA.

What’s Under the NRP Hood

Traditional CI involves HPC systems housed under one roof; data centers are interconnected with high-speed networks. Conversely, NRP was conceived from the beginning as a nationally distributed, AI-oriented research platform that embraces the operational philosophy of commercial cloud platforms. Its core system, Nautilus, acts more like a hyperscale cloud for science than a classic HPC queue-based cluster. Collaborative institutions contribute hardware to a shared federation in which researchers use a secure, unified CI without having to negotiate privileges at each location. Workloads run wherever capacity is available. While traditional HPC can still outperform NRP with some tasks, modern AI/ML workflows run far more efficiently on NRP’s distributed infrastructure.

NRP’s storage, compute, networking and orchestration are well integrated which alleviates common AI/ML bottlenecks that occur with traditional HPC (checkpointing, distributed dataset access, model sharing, storage throughput, and more). Rather than treating storage as an afterthought, as with traditional HPC, NRP integrates high-speed networks, distributed storage, Ceph/Rock infrastructure, science DMZ transfer nodes, and national-scale content delivery methods so data processes geographically closer to its compute resource, thereby expediting the workflow.

As for acceleration, NRP has CPUs, GPUs and FPGAs; field programmable gate arrays are especially useful when developing novel chips, software-defined networks and more. There are CPU-only nodes, mixed CPU/GPU nodes, high-memory CPU systems, and distributed CPU clusters. Its CPU nodes range from 16 to 384 cores per node, with memory (RAM) ranging from 16GB to 2.16TB per node, large CPU pools accessible via Kubernetes, JupyterHub, Coder, and more.

Traditional HPC is scheduler-centric (for example, Slurm, PBS, Torque, and LSF), whereas NRP is Kubernetes-native, which supports AI/ML workflows more effectively since they increasingly rely on containers, microservices, elastic scaling, notebooks, inference endpoints, distributed data pipelines, edge (IoT/remote inferencing), and heterogeneous accelerators. Such workflows often involve batch jobs, distributed training, fine-tuning, agentic decision science, autoscaling and workflow orchestration – all of which Kubernetes supports. NRPs heterogeneity is also useful for compiler and benchmarking research.

Slides courtesy of Mohammad Firas Sada, UC San Diego.

In traditional environments, the systems administrator or facilitator with root access must build new modules for every customer. With NRP, users are responsible for their own container and its required dependencies, for example: CUDA versions, PyTorch/TensorFlow builds, model-serving stacks, custom compilers, and inference frameworks. Then, Kubernetes provides the primary orchestration layer. Containers are portable and repeatable across sites, and therefore reproducible. A range of application programming interfaces (APIs) fit within Kubernetes environments, such as large-language model (LLM) serving, vector databases, JupyterHub, Ray, Kubeflow, MLFlow and inference APIs. About 90 percent of NRP projects (151) use JupyterHub as an API which makes it easier for those who lack computational skills to engage with traditional advanced CI.

Mohammad Firas Sada, AI and FPGA specialist at SDSC

When asked about compliance, Würthwein said, “While the NRP can support research projects that implement compliant controls (within their containers), the platform itself is not officially certified for regulated workloads.”

Since February 2026, NRP’s LLM-as-a-service has supplied 751 users on 276 projects with LLM frameworks, computational services, and expertise without charge. According to Sada (photo on left), that amount of computational power would cost roughly $300k in a commercial cloud (via Claude tokens, for example). Fifty NRP GPUs are retained exclusively for LLMs. To date, the largest NRP LLM user has consumed 10B tokens. If projects exceed a certain threshold they, or their industry sponsors, can pay for NRP services – income that sustains the program for the long-run. Otherwise, small workloads are always free.

On-demand access is an NRP feature that Altintas (photo on left) emphasized several times in presentations about WIFIRE, the National Data Platform (NDP) and other projects she is involved with at her Societal Computing and Innovation Lab (SCIL) that run on the NRP. She described WIFIRE workloads as urgent and “bursty” requiring access to an agile CI resource. “We can’t wait around for an allocation to be approved,” she said.

İlkay Altıntaş Chief Data Science Officer at SDSC

The NDP provides an integrated and extensible environment for data discovery, collaborative workflows, and scalable computing. Both Würthwein and Altintas emphasized the importance of workforce development, and described how NRP and NDP are used in the classroom.

“Colleges that fail to adequately educate students on data science and machine learning concepts will go bankrupt,” said Würthwein.

“Education needs content,” said Altintas. “Customizable, compute-ready digital assets, like data, notebooks, readings, models, and agents; the NRP and NDP provide these, and more.”

A three-day NDP Education Hub Content Development Workshop will be held August 4–9, 2026 at UC San Diego.

Education on the NRP

Smarr also fostered a vision that empowers CI instructors to share, create, modify and contribute to open-source education materials. Sean Michael Morris (photo on left; UC Berkeley) presented UC Berkeley’s flagship data science education course, “Data 8 JupyterHubs for Education.” With an open-source blueprint, Data 8 makes it easier for high school and college instructors to teach data and CI skills in the classroom.

Katie Antypas (National Science Foundation (NSF) senior adviser for cyberinfrastructure) delivered a virtual keynote (Photo by Kristina Mallari) 

Originally created and piloted in 2015, Data 8 achieved national recognition by 2019. Since its inception, the need to improve U.S. competitiveness and build an AI-savvy workforce has driven its development. Rising demand for and reliance upon CI for research and education created a bigger gap between the institutional haves and have-nots. The post-Moore-Law era complicated domain science adoption of CI, in many cases. Data 8 prioritizes CI access for everyone, builds environments for collaboration and makes it possible for more schools to develop the national CI workforce. During COVID, remote scaling and broader online infrastructure adoption led to the mature, foundational model for modern data science education that we enjoy today.

The Data 8 course is wrapped in a Canvas shell, and organized week-by-week, with slides, videos and readings that are embedded into lesson plans – all accessed via a common browser. Its familiar look-and-feel facilitates adoption by experienced and novice teachers alike. It’s not necessary to have Git/GitHub experience; beginning practitioners easily adapt. JupyterHub utilizes CiLogon authentication, and GitHub occasionally uses OAuth. Each school gets access to two CPUs, RAM (1-2GB), development environments that include Jupyter Lab and Jupyter Notebooks, VS Code, RStudio, and languages (Python, R and C++). Everything is standardized and scales to accommodate class sizes ranging from two to 2000 students. No packages must be built or installed; everything is baked into the turnkey Canvas course.

Sean Michael Morris, UC Berkeley

Data 8 currently serves 3k students each semester at two California high schools, 27 California community colleges, 11 California State Universities and University of California institutions, and seven universities outside of California. Data 8 and the resources it provides are available at no cost.

Photos of Frank Würthwein, Katie Antypas and the cover photo are by Kristina Mallari, assistant producer-director, Qualcomm Institute at UC San Diego. Editorial contributions by Senior Science Writer and Editor Kim Bruch (UC San Diego) and others were much appreciated.

7NRP was funded by NSF; gold sponsors Ciena and IBM; silver sponsors Vocareum and Bedrock; and others. For recordings of each session, visit the NRP website.

Watch for part two of the 7NRP workshop recap in HPCwire!

About the author: Elizabeth Leake is an HPCwire contributor and founder of STEM-Trek, a global nonprofit that supports underrepresented STEM scholars with travel and professional development. She is also a project manager of advanced cyberinfrastructure at Texas A&M University. 

 

The post 7NRP: The Seventh National Research Platform Workshop, Part One appeared first on HPCwire.

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Department of Agriculture says new cases in Texas and New Mexico as officials move to combat parasite’s spread

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) on Monday confirmed three additional cases of New World screwworm – two more in Texas and the other in New Mexico, according to the agency’s animal health arm.

The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service said the two Texas cases affected a calf in La Salle county and a goat in Gillespie county.

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2026-06-09 08:04
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Back-of-camera image of a podcast episode being recorded

When the Delaware Community Foundation (DCF) began planning the relaunch of its original podcast series Building Opportunity in late 2024, the country looked very different. Federal budget cuts had not yet upended the nonprofit landscape, immigration enforcement had not dramatically ramped up surveillance, and shifting political dynamics had not rendered certain words controversial. 

The DCF debuted season 1 of How to (Not) Kill Your Community as a video podcast in April 2025 — the same week it launched its Meet the Moment initiative, which would ultimately deliver over $600,000 in grants and capacity-building programs to Delaware nonprofits assessing new paths to viability.

Hosted by DCF President and CEO Stuart Comstock-Gay, the first season brought on guests like U.S. Rep. Sarah McBride and Dogfish Head co-founder Mariah Calagione to talk about sustaining communities for the long haul in an atmosphere of caution and uncertainty. The first nine episodes included a disclaimer: “This podcast was recorded before recent federal policy changes impacted many of the programs discussed and may not reflect the most current information.”

If season 1 approached the shifting cultural and political landscape with restraint, season 2 of How to (Not) Kill Your Community – which dropped its final two episodes on June 9 – dives right in. Episode 1 features an indomitable U.S. Senator Lisa Blunt Rochester speaking on everything from the February attacks on Iran to the hard work of loving those you disagree with to praying for the lives of her colleagues on the Capitol balcony on Jan. 6, 2021. 

“My good friend Congresswoman Val Demings from Florida … grabbed my arm and I grabbed hers. She said, ‘Lisa, you know there’s only one who can get us out of this,’” Blunt Rochester recalled in the episode. “I could hear the gunshot at one door. I could see the Capitol police holding down the other door on the floor, and I just started to pray.”

Other Season 2 guests include Hook PR & Marketing founder Patricia Rivera talking about Hispanic entrepreneurs; Director of Community Engagement for the Delaware Department of Justice Corie Priest on high recidivism rates; and Rabbi Yair Robinson and Pastor Jeffrey Ross on the role of religion when democracy is under threat. 

“The landscape has changed a lot since we recorded Season 1,” Comstock-Gay said. “Communities, along with the people and organizations that serve them, are navigating intersecting crises. Guests this season are stepping up to meet these challenges and generously sharing what they’ve learned.”

Watch season 2 of How to (Not) Kill Your Community from the Delaware Community Foundation on YouTube and listen on Apple and Spotify

You can also click on the images below to watch them on YouTube right now!


The post DCF takes on deepening crises in Season 2 of How to (Not) Kill Your Community appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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Recent exchange of missiles between Iran and Israel highlights diverging views between US president and Israeli PM

The latest eruption of hostilities between Iran and Israel appears to have been contained for now after Donald Trump insisted he called “all the shots” in the Middle East, but in a dangerously fragile region Benjamin Netanyahu has again shown he is ready to take shots of his own.

The exchange of missiles on Sunday and Monday was ample demonstration of the inherent instability of the current limbo between war and peace, but it also shone a bright light on the complex and conflicted relationship between the US president and the Israeli prime minister, frenemies who could determine the fate of the current ceasefire.

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SEOUL, South Korea, June 8, 2026 — NVIDIA and SK hynix have announced a multiyear technology partnership to advance next-generation memory for the global AI factory buildout and accelerate semiconductor design and manufacturing. The agreement builds on years of deep co-engineering collaboration that has powered some of the world’s most advanced AI computing platforms.

Credit: Shutterstock

“AI factories are the engines of the next industrial revolution, and advanced memory is essential to their performance,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “SK hynix has been an extraordinary partner to NVIDIA, playing a central role in delivering advanced memory technologies for NVIDIA AI computing platforms. Together, we will codevelop the next generation of memory for AI factories and support the accelerating global expansion of AI infrastructure — from frontier model training to agentic and physical AI.”

“SK hynix and NVIDIA have been building toward this for years, and this partnership reflects the depth of that collaboration,” said Chey Tae-won, Chairman of SK Group. “Together, we are codeveloping the next generation of memory for AI factories and applying AI to how we design and manufacture semiconductors — work that will shape the future of AI infrastructure.”

The multiyear agreement supports supply to address the extended development cycles of advanced memory. As AI factories scale globally, this strategic partnership enables memory supply to keep pace with NVIDIA’s infrastructure roadmap and the sustained buildout of AI infrastructure worldwide. Through this partnership, SK hynix will diversify into new markets NVIDIA is creating — spanning AI infrastructure, personal AI and physical AI — codeveloping memory for NVIDIA Vera Rubin AI supercomputers, NVIDIA Vera CPUs, NVIDIA RTX Spark-powered PCs and NVIDIA Jetson Thor robotic computing platforms.

Accelerating Technology Computer-Aided Design and Semiconductor Simulation

SK hynix is using NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries and AI to speed semiconductor simulation, including technology computer-aided design and computational lithography workflows.

SK hynix is also using CUDA-X and the NVIDIA PhysicsNeMo framework to deliver core-workload acceleration across its in-house simulation codes and AI physics workflows.

By extending these tools to the semiconductor electronic design automation and simulation ecosystems, this initiative paves the way for three-way collaborations among chipmakers, NVIDIA and electronic design automation software vendors.

Advancing Fab Digital Twins for Autonomous Manufacturing

SK hynix is developing fab digital twins as a foundation for autonomous fab operations. Teams can use scene optimization technologies, as well as NVIDIA Omniverse libraries and OpenUSD pipelines, to build 3D factory scenes for visualizing, simulating and optimizing complex semiconductor manufacturing environments.

These digital twins can also support operational optimization, including the movement of autonomous mobile robots and other fab assets, using the open source, GPU-accelerated NVIDIA cuOpt decision optimization engine and the NVIDIA Metropolis platform.

The companies are also exploring ways to connect digital twins with existing legacy software and agentic AI workflows, enabling AI systems to reason over fab data, automate tasks and improve manufacturing decision-making.

About SK hynix Inc.

SK hynix Inc., headquartered in Korea, is the world’s top tier semiconductor supplier offering Dynamic Random Access Memory chips (“DRAM”) and flash memory chips (“NAND flash”) for a wide range of distinguished customers globally. The Company’s shares are traded on the Korea Exchange, and the Global Depository shares are listed on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange. Further information about SK hynix is available at www.skhynix.com, news.skhynix.com.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA and SK hynix Announce Partnership to Advance Memory for AI Factories appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:21

Interest earnings with a 6-month CD can be significant now, and they'll be available relatively quickly, too.

2026-06-08 16:04
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A controversial insertion in the National Defense Authorization Act currently winding its way through the House would permanently intertwine U.S. and Israeli defense technology, including artificial intelligence and autonomous systems.

Lawmakers and military experts told The Intercept that Section 224, named “United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative,” is highly irregular — and closely resembles a bipartisan bill backed by the pro-Israel lobby that died in Congress earlier this year.

“I can’t think of another example of Congress formalizing integration of critical national security technologies with a foreign power,” said retired Air Force Lt. Col. William Astore.

Unlike traditional foreign military aid programs, Section 224 would establish a framework for integrating Israeli-developed technologies directly into U.S. research, procurement, manufacturing, and acquisition processes — which military experts warned would be complicated, if not impossible, to unwind. It would apply across areas including AI, autonomous systems, cyberwarfare, biotechnology, missile defense, and defense industrial production.

Astore, who has taught military history at multiple institutions, said he’s particularly concerned about the AI component. “Israel is a leader in using AI predictive models and programs to surveil and kill people, using manned and unmanned drones,” he said. “The ‘smart,’ even autonomous technologies Israel has used against Palestinians could very well be used by the U.S. government against American citizens — especially the so-called radical left that President Trump appears to see as domestic terrorists.”

“The ‘smart,’ even autonomous technologies Israel has used against Palestinians could very well be used by the U.S. government against American citizens.”

The debate is raging as Congress prepares to take up the fiscal year 2027 NDAA, a routine piece of legislation that spells out congressional priorities and budgeting for the armed forces. The House Armed Services Committee approved the legislation on Thursday evening; it now advances for consideration by the full House.

A handful of legislators from both parties have rebuked Section 224. Among them is Rep. Thomas Massie, the Kentucky Republican known for opposing all foreign military aid — a stance that drew the ire of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and drove millions in spending against him in the recent primary he lost to a Trump-backed challenger.

Massie was quick to condemn the proposal before it moved forward, writing: “If the provision in the NDAA to integrate/synchronize the U.S. and Israeli militaries (section 224) makes it out of committee, I’ll offer an amendment to strip it from the bill on the floor.”

Rep. Ro Khanna, a California Democrat and Massie’s frequent collaborator, attempted to do something similar at the committee stage. On Thursday, Khanna introduced an amendment seeking to remove Section 224, arguing that Congress should not deepen military integration with Israel at a time when lawmakers are increasingly questioning the future of the U.S.–Israel relationship. But the amendment failed in committee after opposition from both Republicans and Democrats, including Armed Services Committee Ranking Member Adam Smith, D-Wash., who argued the U.S. benefits from access to Israeli military technologies developed under real-world combat conditions, citing missile defense, drone warfare, and other emerging capabilities as areas of mutual interest.

According to its proponents, the goal of Section 224 is to transition Israel away from decades of dependence on U.S. taxpayer-funded military assistance and toward a model centered on trade, co-development, and defense partnership — mirroring a desire expressed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

With the Obama-era Memorandum of Understanding with Israel set to expire in 2028, Israel and its backers in Congress are searching for new ways to preserve U.S.–Israeli military collaboration. The current U.S.–Israel MOU provides approximately $3.3 billion annually in foreign military financing and $500 million annually for missile defense cooperation, totaling $38 billion over 10 years through 2028.

Netanyahu stated in January that he hoped to replace Israel’s dependence on American military assistance in the next decade. Less than a month later, lawmakers in both the House and Senate introduced the United States–Israel Framework for Upgraded Technologies, Unified Research, and Enhanced Security (FUTURES) Act of 2026, a bipartisan proposal designed to expand U.S.–Israel cooperation in many of the same tech and AI areas as Section 224.

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The FUTURES Act was introduced in the Senate by Sens. Ted Budd, R-N.C., and Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and in the House by Reps. Ronny Jackson, R-Texas, and Don Davis, D-N.C. All four sponsors have received substantial campaign support from AIPAC and other pro-Israel groups.

The legislation also received public backing from both AIPAC and FDD Action, the advocacy arm of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, which has long advocated for deeper U.S.–Israel defense and technology cooperation.

The FUTURES Act did not advance as standalone legislation — but many of its core concepts later reappeared in Section 224 of the FY2027 NDAA. Legislative records and congressional offices contacted by The Intercept indicate that Section 224 adopts the same initiative and many of the same provisions previously proposed in the FUTURES Act, including language related to integrating Israeli-origin technologies into U.S. military programs, defense industrial cooperation, artificial intelligence, autonomous systems, biotechnology, cyber capabilities, and joint research and development.

The Intercept contacted the House Armed Services Committee and the Department of Defense, including Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s office, seeking clarification on the origins of Section 224 and whether Pentagon officials participated in its development. Neither the committee nor the Pentagon responded to requests for comment before publication.

The Pentagon’s refusal to answer questions about Section 224 comes amid renewed scrutiny of U.S.–Israel intelligence relations. Reporting published this weekend by the New York Times and Military.com detailed Defense Department concerns regarding Israeli espionage risks, raising additional questions about efforts to deepen technological integration between the two countries.

Wes Bryant, a former Air Force special operations member who previously served as chief of civilian harm assessments at the Pentagon’s Civilian Protection Center of Excellence, argued that deeper military integration raises broader concerns about the technologies and doctrines the United States may adopt through closer cooperation with Israel.

“Israel is a terrorist state, wantonly committing atrocity and genocide largely facilitated by its use of AI, and we are further along on the same path but, at the very least, complicit,” Bryant said. “And moreso the more we militarily integrate and partner with Israel.”

In a piece for The Guardian, the co-authors of the upcoming book “Israel’s Lobby: America in the Grip of a Foreign Power,” Eli Clifton and Ian Lustick, described Section 224 as “not an alliance with a talented and responsible ally that will help keep the US safe, but a trap being set by Israel and its lobby to bind our country to a state that, for all its past promise, has gone rogue.”

The post Congress Is Trying to Permanently Integrate U.S. and Israeli Defense Tech appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:16

At WWDC 2026, Apple shows off new AI image creation and editing tools.

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A man with gray hair, wearing a suit jacket, points with his left hand and speaks into a microphone. Behind him is construction machinery.
Sen. Jim Justice of West Virginia Shuran Huang/The New York Times/Redux

Trump administration officials earlier this year killed a federal criminal investigation into the coal empire owned by Sen. Jim Justice, a Republican from West Virginia and a close ally of the president’s.

The investigation examined potential criminal violations of the Clean Water Act by the multistate mining operations largely run by Justice’s son, Jay, according to current and former officials familiar with the matter.

The criminal probe was a significant escalation in the yearslong effort to police serial pollution offenses by Virginia-based Southern Coal and dozens of affiliated mining operations controlled by the family. In the past decade, Southern Coal and other Justice corporations have racked up tens of thousands of alleged violations of the Clean Water Act and have been sued repeatedly by state and federal prosecutors over their failure to properly follow environmental laws at their mining sites.

The investigation shuttered by the Trump administration was a joint effort by prosecutors and investigators with the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Justice’s Environmental Crimes Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Western District of Virginia to probe whether the incessant violations of antipollution laws had risen to the level of criminal behavior, people familiar with the matter said.

People familiar with the investigation told ProPublica that prosecutors believed they had a strong case. They initially had the blessing of Robert Tracci, President Donald Trump’s top official in the Western District of Virginia, to move forward.

But in recent months, as prosecutors battled the Justice companies in court over subpoenas for records, the Office of the Deputy Attorney General shut down the probe. At the time, Todd Blanche still headed the office, before assuming the role of acting attorney general in April.

“They were told ‘pencils down,’” a person familiar with the investigation said.

That prosecutors were even conducting a criminal investigation is noteworthy, people said, because the DOJ only charges a dozen or so criminal Clean Water Act cases each year. It is rare for top DOJ officials to derail a criminal investigation initiated by career officials at such an early stage, people familiar with the case said.

“I’ve never heard of that happening before,” said former federal prosecutor Rick Mountcastle, speaking generally about DOJ protocols. Mountcastle spent 24 years as a prosecutor in the Western District of Virginia. “There shouldn’t be some sort of untouchables list of people who are immune from enforcement.”

The move is part of a pattern of behavior at the top echelons of the DOJ to push cases against Trump’s political adversaries and ease up on allies.

Environmental enforcement against large polluters has plunged under the second Trump administration. Just days after inauguration, the administration reassigned top career environmental lawyers at the DOJ, including those overseeing the Southern Coal case, to work on the president’s immigration crackdown. At the beginning of the year, Blanche personally ordered prosecutors to stand down from cases against diesel emissions cheating.


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Steven Ruby, an attorney for the Justice companies, said they became aware of the criminal investigation earlier this year.

“Ultimately the finding of the inquiry by the government was that there wasn’t any evidence to pursue criminal charges,” Ruby said. “There’s never been any intentional wrongdoing by the companies.”

While objecting to the subpoenas in court, the company simultaneously convinced the DOJ to drop the case, he said.

“The Justice companies — because Sen. Justice has been governor and because he’s now a senator — are singled out and put under a microscope, and there’s news coverage of violations and consent decrees and compliance actions,” Ruby said. “But the fact of the matter is that those kinds of issues exist throughout the industry.”

Current and former government officials familiar with the companies’ environmental record called them routine bad actors. 

Spokespeople for the EPA and the Western District of Virginia referred questions to the DOJ. Justice’s senate office did not respond to questions.

“There is no case to be made here for a criminal investigation,” Emily Covington, a DOJ spokeswoman, said in an email. “Any career prosecutor who would paint a criminal case as strong is simply a deep state prosecutor continuing to push the priorities of the Biden administration.”

The deputy attorney general’s office is routinely involved with reviewing cases, she added. The office determined that this case was not consistent with the Trump administration’s priorities, she continued, and it was more appropriate to resolve it through the less punitive civil process. “The bottom line is that this was a politically motivated prosecution for a case that can and should be resolved civilly,” she wrote.

The Justice family runs a sprawling coal mining enterprise that extends across the South. Estimates of its fortune fluctuate. Forbes tallied Jim Justice’s net worth to be as much as $1.9 billion until 2021; more recently, it declared him “broke” and facing $1 billion in debt. But environmental groups have accused his companies of misrepresenting their assets to avoid paying environmental penalties. 

Ruby said company finances seesaw because coal is a “boom and bust” industry.

Justice, who was first elected governor of West Virginia as a Democrat, announced he had become a Republican at a Trump rally in 2017. Trump backed Justice’s bid for Senate in 2023, amid a contested GOP primary. Justice went on to win the seat, helping Trump clinch a GOP majority in the Senate.

Coal mines often leach dangerous chemicals like arsenic into waterways and are required to strictly monitor pollution discharge and keep it under certain limits. The family’s companies have settled many accusations of environmental violations by agreeing to pay fines and invest in better pollution prevention without admitting or denying culpability.

In recent years, however, the company has repeatedly flouted regulators and the legal process. Jay Justice has been a no-show at court hearings involving Clean Water Act violations in the past, and in 2024 a judge in Alabama issued a civil contempt order against him for his repeated failure to respond to those lawsuits. Ruby, the Justice companies’ lawyer, attributed the violations in that case to surrounding facilities the family does not own. The case is now in mediation. 

A number of recent legal proceedings have laid bare the extent to which the Justice companies may have knowingly violated environmental laws, a key threshold for bringing a criminal matter. 

Such allegations surfaced in a 2023 civil case brought by the Justice companies’ former chief of environmental compliance Robert Fowler. In the suit, Fowler claimed that Jay Justice blocked him from spending the money necessary to comply with environmental laws, including making court-ordered payments and repairing equipment. As a result, according to emails disclosed in the lawsuit there were at times complaints of near-daily violations of permit water requirements.

In a resignation letter and in subsequent court filings, Fowler said he was concerned the circumstances exposed him to “potential civil and criminal liability.” Fowler declined to comment. 

The Justice companies denied Fowler’s accusations. The Justice companies believe the government’s criminal investigation was based primarily on Fowler’s claims, which Ruby dismissed as the allegations of a “disgruntled” former employee. 

Last month, a jury in Alabama found that the Justice companies had made false representations to Fowler about his role, but it did not award him the millions of dollars in damages he demanded in his lawsuit. The judge has yet to enter his final ruling.

In the DOJ’s aborted investigation of Southern Coal, prosecutors and federal agents had begun to gather evidence, scrutinizing testimony in the Justices’ various civil trials, and had approached former employees seeking information. Government attorneys also sent subpoenas seeking further documentation, said those familiar with the probe, a move that was opposed by the company’s lawyers.

People familiar with the case said Justice Department attorneys were ready to fight the Justices’ lawyers over the subpoenas.

But before they could move forward, Blanche’s office shut it down.

The post Trump Administration Killed Criminal Investigation of GOP Senator’s Coal Companies appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-08 16:04
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Before you replace your air conditioner, make sure you understand the full cost — and what can impact it.

2026-06-08 16:04
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Point and shoot your phone camera, then press the Siri shutter button for a chatbot to tell you what you're taking a photo of.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:09

Hey guys, I recently bought an enduro tire for my GT and am starting to second guess if it was a good idea to try and install it myself.

Context: I have about 3.5k miles on my GT and this is my 3rd tire, but the other tire changes were done by a local Onewheel repair guy. Unfortunately, he moved away about a year ago. I was a little nervous about the idea of doing it myself, as I’m not handy at all, but after some digging it seems like people agreed it was pretty easy even for someone who has never even changed a real tire.

Well, 20% into the video and I’m already stuck. Ive been trying for an hour but can’t get the motor plug out. In the video he just turns the lock ring and it comes right out but idk if it’s because mines a bit dirty or I just don’t understand how the ring works. because the plug won’t budge. I’ve looked at other videos and they all take like 5 seconds to show the lock ring and plug so they don’t help. Do I have to push it in or squeeze it to loosen the ring? It really doesn’t make sense and my fingers are barely able to even fit in the small gap so maybe it’s a dexterity issue.

If I’m struggling this much with the simple part of the video should I just cut my losses and ship the whole thing off for someone else to do it? I don’t want to pay like $100+ to ship it but this motor plug thing has me very much doubting if il be able to do the more difficult parts of the video.

Anyone else experienced issues with the motor plug? I don’t mean to be a downer but I’m almost at my wits end and I haven’t even gotten to the “difficult” part

TLDR: first time changing a tire, can’t even get motor plug unplugged, wondering if I’m in over my head

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 14:09

We move from the famed alpine lake and mountains of Tahoe to the iconic Bay Area bridge.

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wiredmikey shares a report from SecurityWeek: Meta-owned communications app WhatsApp says it recently detected and disrupted a spear-phishing attempt linked to spyware company NSO Group. The attack is allegedly in defiance of a court order that bars the spyware maker from targeting WhatsApp. WhatsApp filed a lawsuit against NSO in 2019, after it came to light that a zero-day vulnerability had been exploited to deliver spyware to users. [...] NSO has been seeking to overturn the order blocking it from targeting WhatsApp users, arguing that the company will "suffer irreparable harm." According to WhatsApp, the spyware maker has violated the permanent injunction. The messaging app reported on Monday that it had recently learned of a social engineering attack that attempted to trick users into clicking on malicious links. WhatsApp has only shared a few domains as an indicator of compromise (IoC), but says it was able to link the attack to NSO, pointing to similarities to previously reported one-click phishing campaigns tied to the spyware company. WhatsApp says it also caught the attackers creating test accounts and groups. Those accounts and groups have been disabled, but further action is also being taken. WhatsApp says it is asking a federal court to hold NSO in contempt for allegedly violating a permanent injunction barring it from targeting WhatsApp and its users. The company also said it is making a "significant contribution" to the Spyware Accountability Initiative, a fund aimed at exposing and stopping spyware abuse.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:59

Progressive and former reality TV star have been battling for the number two spot to face off against Karen Bass

Nithya Raman, the progressive Los Angeles city councillor, appeared to be edging out Spencer Pratt in the LA mayoral race challenging Karen Bass as Donald Trump continues to repeat falsehoods that California elections are “rigged”.

The pair have been battling for the number two spot to face off against the incumbent, who already secured enough votes to advance to a runoff in November. Pratt, a former reality TV star, held a lead over Raman for days, but as ballot processing from last week’s election continued, the city councillor has pulled ahead.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:49

The Iranian regime has announced the end of attacks against Israel, while the US president has claimed both sides ‘want a ceasefire’. This comes after Iran and Israel attacked each other’s territory for the first time since a fragile ceasefire took effect in April. The Israeli strikes are in apparent defiance of Donald Trump, who told Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, not to retaliate against Iran, in order to avoid derailing peace talks. Nosheen Iqbal speaks to the Guardian’s senior international correspondent Julian Borger

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:44

Apple unveiled the new Siri at WWDC 2026. It's more capable and more conversational and also comes with its own dedicated app.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:39

The economy has changed considerably this year. Here's what a good mortgage interest rate is considered to be now.

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Redox progressed another month, and that means a ton of improvements and new features to talk about. The biggest news this past month is that Xfce has been ported to Redox, which offers a better X11 experience than MATE currently does. There’s still some bugs but apparently is works quite well. The porting process for the COSMIC desktop environment also progressed, with COSMIC’s new Monitor application making its way to Redox.

As part of Google Summer of Code, the EEVDF scheduler has been implemented in Redox, delivering better, more stable scheduling and overall system performance improvements. Also as part of GSoC inode caching has been implemented for RedoxFS, which improves file system performance. Of course, there’s a lot more here too, including the usual long list of kernel fixes, relibc improvements, and more.

2026-06-08 16:04
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Post on Facebook received more than 900 comments, with one Italian writing that they were ‘ashamed’

A US tourist has warned visitors to Rome after paying €44 (£38) for two ice-creams in the Italian capital.

Nicole Ann, from Florida, advised fellow tourists to “avoid Don Nino”, an ice-cream parlour on a street off Piazza Navona. She claimed she had ordered two small cups of ice-cream but instead was charged for two large cones topped with trimmings that were allegedly not requested, including macarons, cannoli and panna (whipped cream).

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 13:32

Paris and Berlin conclude firms involved unable to agree on way forward in blow to Europe’s common defence push

France and Germany have concluded that the companies involved in building a joint fighter jet will not be able to reach an agreement and have abandoned the project, officials in Berlin have said in a blow to Europe’s common defence efforts.

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, and the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, had “reached the shared assessment that the companies will not be able to come together”, an official told Agence France-Presse. “They acknowledge this reality.”

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:30

Micheal Barwegan is part of an all-Canadian crew at this World Cup, and says the new offside system makes his job easier in some ways

The 2026 World Cup will be the first edition of the tournament to feature semi-automated offside technology, utilizing a dozen cameras to track player movement at a rate of 50 stills per second. In theory, it sounds like an effective, if dizzying, way to cut down on delays and better aid the officials.

One of those officials is Micheal Barwegan, who is part of the first all-Canadian officiating team in men’s World Cup history. He has worked with referee Drew Fischer and fellow assistant referee Lyes Arfa increasingly often over the past two years. The team worked in-tandem at the 2024 Olympics and last summer’s Club World Cup along with their more regular work in club soccer.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:28

Molly Rose Foundation says government should instead set strict safety standards for apps

A rushed under-16s social media ban in the UK could unravel and families will be left to count the cost, a leading child safety charity has warned.

The Molly Rose Foundation (MRF) said an age limit on the use of tech platforms could unravel, after it was reported that the prime minister, Keir Starmer, would announce a ban on under-16s accessing “harmful” social media apps.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:27

President Trump abruptly ended an interview with NBC News when repeatedly challenged on his claims of election fraud

2026-06-08 16:04
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Announced at WWDC 2026, Apple's Health app will support cycle tracking for menopause and perimenopause. This is why it matters.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:22

New York Fed survey shows growing concern about household finances and the job market, even as the job market remains solid.

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2026-06-08 13:18

My OG XR+ BMS kicked the bucket and I don't want to run a loop key to jerry rig this thing back to life. I am looking at VESC conversions but none seem to use the original battery. Since mine is still healthy (good cell and overall voltage), it seems pointless to buy another battery. Is there a conversion that uses the original battery? Or is there a drop in BMS replacement I can buy (I can't find one that isnt OEM)?

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2026-06-08 16:04
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June 8, 2026 — A research team from Forschungszentrum Jülich has won the international “Metascience Novelty Indicators Challenge.” The scientists at Jülich Systems Analysis developed a method that enables artificial intelligence to assess the novelty of scientific publications – in other words, the extent to which a study advances scientific knowledge. For their success, the team has been awarded prize money of £300,000 to further develop the method.

The challenge was organized by the UK Metascience Unit (UKRI) in collaboration with international partners. The aim was to develop a scalable method for assessing the novelty of research articles at the time of their publication.

To this end, the organizers provided a dataset of 100,000 recent scientific publications. Experts from the respective disciplines assessed their novelty independently of one another. The task for the participating teams was to predict these expert judgements as accurately as possible – without knowing the assessments.

Jülich Approach Achieved Best Results Across All Evaluation Criteria

“Until now, the ability to assess what is truly novel and valuable in a scientific paper has been limited to human experts,” said Jann Michael Weinand, Head of the Integrated Scenarios Department at the Institute of Climate and Energy Systems – Jülich System Analysis (ICE-2). “Our approach shows that modern AI systems can support this task with astonishing reliability.”

AI Analyses Content Rather Than Citation Counts

Unlike many established research metrics, the Jülich system does not assess how often a paper is cited later on.

“Metadata is not sufficient to assess novelty at the time of publication. Our system therefore examines the content of a study and relates it to the state of knowledge at the time of its publication,” said project leader Jan Göpfert, also from ICE-2, who developed the approach together with his colleague Samuel Kieling.

To do this, the system first analyses the study itself as well as selected scientific papers to which it refers. On this basis, the AI reconstructs the state of knowledge at the time of publication, including known gaps in research. It then assesses the contribution made by the new study. Does it introduce a new method? Does it deliver surprising results? Does it solve a previously unsolved problem? In doing so, the system deliberately collects arguments both for and against the novelty of a paper and weighs them against one another.

In the end, the AI assigns a novelty score between 0 and 100. It also provides an interval indicating how confident the model is in its assessment. A detailed written justification then makes the evaluation transparent.

“The biggest challenge was defining novelty in a meaningful way. For us, novelty does not simply mean dissimilarity. What matters is a work’s contribution to scientific progress,” said Kieling.

Earlier Visibility for Important Research

The number of scientific publications continues to grow rapidly. At the same time, an increasing number of papers are being produced with the help of AI tools. This makes it increasingly difficult for researchers, academic journals and funding organizations to identify particularly relevant contributions at an early stage.

This is where the novelty indicator could help in future. Research with particularly high potential for generating new insights could be identified during the peer-review or publication process – rather than only years later, when its significance becomes apparent through citation metrics.

“We hope this will particularly benefit research that is often overlooked by traditional metrics,” said Kieling. “Our goal is not to replace human judgement. Rather, AI should help draw attention to potentially important research and support better-informed decisions.”

Furthermore, the Novelty Indicator opens new possibilities for metascience, i.e. the scientific study of the research system itself.

Prize Money Enables Further Development

With the prize money of £300,000, the team intends to further develop the existing prototype into a reliable scientific tool. The novelty indicator is intended to be transparent, resistant to manipulation, and must not exacerbate existing inequalities within the scientific system.

In the long term, the researchers envision applications far beyond scientific publications – for example, in the context of patents or the identification of new and promising research questions and hypotheses. “At the same time, this development raises fundamental questions: What role should AI play in scientific decision-making in the future? And how can we ensure that scientific evaluation and progress remain transparent and traceable?” said Göpfert.

The work of the Jülich researchers demonstrates that AI is now capable of far more than analyzing data or summarizing texts. It is increasingly able to evaluate scientific research itself – opening up new possibilities for the science of tomorrow.

About the Metascience Novelty Indicators Challenge

The Metascience Novelty Indicators Challenge was hosted by the UK Metascience Unit at UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) and Coefficient Giving. Partners in the competition were the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU) at the University of Sussex, the research and consultancy institute RAND Europe, and Challenge Works, global leaders in the design and delivery of challenge prizes, and part of the research and innovation foundation Nesta. £300,000 prize was provided by Coefficient Giving.


Source: Forschungszentrum Jülich

The post Jülich Researchers Earn Top Honors for AI-Based Scientific Novelty Indicator appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 13:16

There are multiple ways in which savers can earn $300 with a CD account now. Here are three to consider.

2026-06-08 16:04
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The Pulitzer Prize-winning author, who died Sunday, explored fundamental questions about what it means to be an American.

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Firefox has merged initial support for Vulkan Video decoding, giving the browser a more cross-platform path for GPU-accelerated video playback beyond Linux's long-running reliance on VA-API. Phoronix reports: Firefox on Linux has long been focused on the Video Acceleration API (VA-API) that isn't universally supported by Linux graphics drivers. This has left to efforts like NVIDIA-VAAPI-Driver to layer VA-API atop NVIDIA NVDEC interfaces to enjoy GPU-accelerated video playback in Firefox. Smaller Arm/embedded graphics drivers also have been largely left out of the game in the VA-API space. But with Vulkan Video we are beginning to see more adoption and in a cross-platform manner. [...] The Firefox 153 release due out in July will have Vulkan Video decoding support available. The Vulkan Video activity in Firefox Git culminated this week with the work of NVIDIA engineer Tymur Boiko and Red Hat's Martin Stransky. Firefox 153.0 is expected for release on 21 July with this Vulkan Video support assuming no last minute issues.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:53

Performing arts venue takes down references to a ‘Trump Kennedy Center’ in compliance with judge’s ruling

The Kennedy Center has removed Trump’s name from its website after a US district judge’s order last month to remove the US president’s name from the performing arts venue.

The removal of Trump’s name from the website on Monday came just days before a deadline instructed by the center’s general counsel to remove all references to the president by 12 June.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:52

Xi Jinping arrived Monday to pomp and fanfare in Pyongyang, celebrating what he and Kim Jong Un called the “unbreakable” bond between their countries.

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Hundreds of video games were shown at June’s annual bonanza. After watching more than 15 hours of showcases, our video games editor picks the highlights

The sequel to a revered 2014 horror game from British developer Creative Assembly: this time you must evade the xenomorph on the surface of a storm-ravaged colony world.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:44

Plane on way to pick up Yadier Molina and his family crashed in Dominican Republic, killing pilot and co-pilot

A pilot and co-pilot from the United States have died in a fiery plane crash as they attempted an emergency landing in the Dominican Republic, authorities said.

Former major league baseball all-star catcher Yadier Molina said on social media that the plane was bound for Texas to pick him up, along with family and friends.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:37

CBS News contributor David Begnaud shows an athletic coach in Illinois how he impacted one of his students, changing the trajectory of that student's life forever.

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Former safeguarding minister says if ban came into force properly it could ‘basically eliminate’ problem

The government has highlighted work done by the internet safety firm SafeToNet as showing that the technology is already in place that would allow tech companies to stop children using phones to take naked pictures of themselves, or other people. The Home Office says:

Measures to protect children already exist within smartphones and tablets, but are applied inconsistently, often switched off by default and only blurring content rather than blocking it. But the government is working closely with technology companies — some of whom, like Apple, have already taken steps to implement protective features — to make this goal a reality.

Companies must introduce these measures without threatening privacy or collecting any data. The device should simply block harmful content across all apps and services. Over-18s will still be able to view adult content by providing proof of age.

The government is right to act. Children have been failed for too long. This news will be welcomed by parents across the UK and hopefully, will inspire other countries to follow the UK’s lead.

We can put an end to so much online misery with this approach. SafeToNet’s HarmBlock technology is a proven example that it is possible to make the device safe by default and not as some optional add-on.

The changes will apply to UK devices, including both existing and newly sold smartphones and tablets. Legislation could cover operating system providers and others in the supply chain, such as retailers, and will not affect the use of devices owned and used by adults who verify their age …

Apple recently introduced age checks for iPhone users, making it the first company to activate safety features by default for those who are not verified as over 18. This is a significant step forward following the government’s commitments to work with industry, and one this announcement builds on.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:25

Great white sharks are classified as "critically endangered" in the Mediterranean Sea, and underwater sightings are incredibly rare.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:25

Bending Spoons, the Italian app studio behind acquisitions like Eventbrite, Vimeo, WeTransfer, Evernote, and AOL, has filed to go public in the U.S. after growing into a subscription-heavy app conglomerate with more than 500 million monthly active users. TechCrunch reports: In its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Bending Spoons said it ended the year with $1.31 billion in revenue and has generated $601 million in Q1, a 132% year-on-year jump. The company gets the majority of its revenue from subscriptions, which account for 84% of its business. It generated $27.4 million in profit in Q1 2026. The company raised funding at an $11 billion valuation last year, up from $2.8 billion in 2024. In April, Reuters reported that the company could seek a $20 billion valuation with the IPO.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:24

Paul Quinn will serve at least 14 years for the 2003 rape in Salford and could spend less time in prison than Malkinson

The government’s most senior law officer has been asked to review the “unduly lenient” prison sentence handed to a rapist who evaded police for nearly two decades in one of Britain’s biggest miscarriages of justice.

Paul Quinn was jailed last week for a minimum of 14 years, meaning he could spend less time in prison than Andrew Malkinson, who was wrongly convicted of his crime.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:22

Keir Starmer is reportedly also on the brink of banning social media for children under 16, just as Australia has done.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:18

The Trump administration on Monday announced it is seeking to revoke the citizenship of 17 U.S. citizens accused of immigration fraud.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:10

Russia sanctioned Alexander Browder, son of financier-turned-activist Bill Browder, after he unveiled an alleged cryptocurrency money laundering network.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 12:01

The AI-powered research assistant is getting major chat upgrades, better customization and more formatting options.

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In his presentation at the TPC26, Dieter Kranzlmüller, Chairman of the Board of the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ) and Professor of Computer Science at LMU Munich, talked about his vision for the Blue Swan AI Gigafactory and the role it could play in Europe’s AI future.

Europe’s interest in AI Gigafactories stems from a belief that current AI infrastructure will not be sufficient to support future AI workloads in science and industry. While Kranzlmüller agrees that Europe needs more AI computing capacity and that AI Gigafactories are worth pursuing, he raises a broader question: Should Europe simply build the biggest possible GPU clusters? Is there a more sustainable path?

“What I’m always questioning, and I have no answer to that is: What about sustainability? If we are spending $500 billion now, does it mean in five years we have to spend the same amount of money because we have to throw away all the old GPUs? That’s a question which comes up. And I believe actually it’s not that size that we need.”

Kranzlmüller’s concerns stem from the scale of AI infrastructure projects now being proposed and executed around the globe. He pointed to Project Stargate in the U.S., which is linked to nearly half a trillion dollars of capital and data centers consuming hundreds of megawatts of power. That is a massive scale. Is it sustainable? Kranzlmüller acknowledged the importance of expanding AI computing capacity, but he questioned whether simply building larger facilities is the answer.

According to Kranzlmüller, Europe should leverage decades of experience operating HPC systems. Energy efficiency, cooling technologies and long-term utilization must be considered alongside raw compute capacity. “I don’t think it’s optional,” he said of sustainability. “I think it must be a priority.”

(FOTOGRIN/Shutterstock)

The hardware alone will not create value, according to Kranzlmüller. But when combined with a surrounding ecosystem of tools, services and domain expertise, it becomes significantly more useful than a standalone GPU deployment.

A key differentiator of the proposal is its emphasis on science as well as industry. Currently, Gigafactories are envisioned by the European Commission as being driven by private sector capital. However, Kranzlmüller is of the opinion that research institutions should play a bigger role.

“Whatever we put in this, the only group today on the planet that can use all these GPUs here in Europe is the scientists. We can scale up these things. And I have enough friends in AI that tell me, well, if you give me 100,000 GPUs, I’ll make use of them.”

For Kranzlmüller, that is where Blue Swan begins to differ from many of the other Gigafactory proposals currently being discussed across Europe. The project is built around the idea that science should not simply be another user of the infrastructure. Instead, researchers should help shape it from the beginning.

If Europe is going to invest billions in AI infrastructure, someone has to use it. According to Kranzlmüller, scientists are among the few groups already working at the scale envisioned for these systems. Bring research institutions into the mix from day one, so that the Gigafactory can remain productive while industry gradually ramps up its own AI ambitions.

Kranzlmüller sees AI as an opportunity for Europe to build on its strengths in HPC rather than start from scratch. The supercomputing community has spent decades wrestling with issues such as power consumption, cooling, efficiency and system utilization. In his view, those lessons are just as relevant to AI as they were to traditional HPC.

The demand for AI compute is only going to grow. Kranzlmüller acknowledged that. He is not suggesting that Europe should build fewer AI systems. Instead, he argued that Europe should build smarter ones.

Kranzlmüller, who was named one of HPCwire’s 35 HPC Legends, sees AI as an opportunity for Europe to build on its strengths in HPC rather than start from scratch.

The supercomputing community has spent decades wrestling with issues such as power consumption, cooling, efficiency and system utilization. In his view, those lessons are just as relevant to AI as they were to traditional HPC.

The post Blue Swan AI Gigafactory: Can Europe Scale AI Sustainably? appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 11:41

LONDON, June 8, 2026 — AMD today announced plans to invest up to £2bn over the next five years in the United Kingdom to accelerate AI innovation and research and expand access to the compute resources needed for long-term economic growth and scientific leadership across the country.

Credit: Shutterstock

Speaking at London Tech Week, AMD Chair and CEO Dr. Lisa Su outlined a series of investments and strategic collaborations designed to help accelerate the UK’s AI ecosystem and broaden access to the advanced computing that underpins scientific discovery and public-sector innovation. The initiatives align with the UK’s AI Opportunities Action Plan and AI Hardware Strategy, supporting broader national priorities to build world-class AI infrastructure, develop technical talent and accelerate AI adoption.

“The United Kingdom has the talent, research excellence and ambition to help lead the next era of AI,” said Dr. Lisa Su, chair and CEO, AMD. “AMD is proud to deepen our commitment to the UK and work with partners across government, academia and industry to expand access to the compute infrastructure needed to advance sovereign AI, accelerate discovery and drive long-term economic growth.”

The announcement was welcomed by UK government leaders as a significant step toward strengthening the country’s AI infrastructure, research ecosystem and long-term economic competitiveness.

“This investment is a major vote of confidence in Britain’s place as a global AI superpower. We’ve got the talent, the world-class universities and the ambition to lead, and partnerships like this help turn that potential into real progress,” said Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer. “It will drive more cutting-edge research here in the UK, open up opportunities for people to build the skills they need for the jobs of the future, and speed up breakthroughs that can improve people’s lives and grow our economy.”

“This investment reflects the strength of Britain’s talent, research and ambition in AI – but also the infrastructure we are putting in place to match it,” said Liz Kendall, Technology Secretary. “With world-class chip designers, leading universities, and partners such as AMD choosing to invest here, we are building the compute capability needed to power innovation, drive growth, create jobs, and ensure the most advanced AI technologies are developed in the UK.”

New Strategic Collaborations to Advance AI Research and Infrastructure

Building on its recently announced work with Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC) and JPMorganChase, AMD also announced a collaboration with Imperial College London to advance computational science and supporting research that relies on large-scale computing resources, including healthcare innovation and climate modeling.

AMD and Imperial also intend to explore opportunities to optimize AI models, scientific workflows and data-intensive applications on AMD compute platforms and AMD ROCm open software.

Additionally, AMD is collaborating with Oriole Networks in support of the UK’s Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA) Scaling Inference Lab, a national initiative designed to address critical AI infrastructure bottlenecks.

The effort combines Oriole’s PRISM photonic networking architecture with AMD Instinct GPUs and AMD EPYC processors to evaluate new approaches for scaling inference workloads while improving performance and energy efficiency and reducing latency.

The initiative supports what is expected to be the world’s first large-scale AI system powered by a pure photonic network, an important step toward infrastructure technologies that can support future generations of AI systems in the UK.

Expanding National AI Supercomputing Capacity

AMD and Dell Technologies are working with the University of Cambridge on its expanding national AI infrastructure footprint, including the new Zenith AI supercomputer and the Sunrise fusion AI system developed in collaboration with the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA).

Zenith is a significant new UK AI-for-science platform, funded by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), designed and operated by the University of Cambridge, and built with AMD and Dell technology.

Sunrise is a second AI supercomputer powered by AMD and Dell being built now, funded by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ), owned by UKAEA, and operated by the University of Cambridge. Sunrise is part of a long standing UKAEA-University of Cambridge partnership and dedicated to the fusion mission.

Together, these systems support a broad range of AI-for-science applications including healthcare research, climate modelling, materials science, engineering simulation, fusion research and scientific AI model development.

Supporting the UK’s National AI Future

By combining strategic investments with research and ecosystem partnerships, AMD is helping expand the UK’s computing capabilities and supporting the next generation of scientific and technological breakthroughs. The company will continue working with government, academia and industry to strengthen the foundations for long-term competitiveness and global leadership in AI.

About AMD

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimised CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing. Learn more at www.amd.com.


Source: AMD

The post AMD to Invest up to £2B to Accelerate AI Innovation and Research in UK appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 11:30

Case argues Trump administration broke federal laws to accomodate ‘deeply corrupt’ commercial sporting event

Donald Trump is throwing himself quite the 80th birthday party at the White House on Sunday. All he needs now is for a federal judge, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and a passing thunderstorm not to ruin it.

The watchdog group Public Integrity Project filed a lawsuit on Saturday in DC federal court, seeking an emergency injunction to halt the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) Freedom 250 event before a single punch is thrown on 14 June – which is both Flag Day and the president’s birthday.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 10:54

Arch-enemies Israel and Iran have returned to active confrontation while Donald Trump tries to present himself as mediator

Israel and Iran have returned to active war for the first time since a ceasefire was agreed two months ago in an exchange of rocket fire that threatened efforts to end the conflict.

Donald Trump, who started the war in February alongside Israel but has since attempted to present himself as a mediator, told the two sides to stop shooting and said “final negotiations” on peace were proceeding. By late afternoon on Monday, the attacks had stopped.

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2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 10:52

From high-altitude training to made to measure kits, teams have resorted to all manner of things to adapt to conditions at the tournament

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The heat and the altitude worried everybody. The 1970 World Cup in Mexico would not be a normal one. So the Bulgarian authorities sent their squad south of Sofia to get used to playing several thousand feet above sea level. Which seemed a great idea until somebody noticed that the temperature in the Pirin mountains was not in the mid-20s as it is in Mexico but somewhere near freezing. How then could they replicate the effect of playing in intense heat? By restricting water intake so that the players got used to performing while dehydrated.

The plan was not a great success. Bulgaria lost their first two World Cup games in 1970 and had already been eliminated by the time they drew with Morocco. It’s safe to assume that preparations for this World Cup will be rather more sophisticated than they were 56 years ago. Most countries back then seemed to take the view that training at altitude was the logical way to prepare for games in Mexico City, Monterrey and Guadalajara. Israel went to Ethiopia and Colorado. Uruguay played in Quito and Bogotá. Mexico held a five‑month training camp that featured 13 friendly internationals in four months before two games against Dundee United.

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2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 10:49

The FCAS fighter jet looks like it’s dead. Could that be a good thing? Expert comment jon.wallace

FCAS was already competing with the GCAP project and Swedish and Turkish fighters. Europe should combine its efforts.

A mockup display of the Future Combat Air System at the Paris Air Show in June 2023

European states have known since the early 2000s that they will need to develop a replacement for their existing fighter aircraft. 

Concepts for a ‘next generation fighter programme’ go beyond the development of just a jet. Plans to include a combat ‘cloud’ and uncrewed systems to operate alongside fighter jets have been around for almost the same amount of time. 

But difficulties around the German-French-Spanish fighter project – the Future Combat Air System (FCAS) – demonstrate that even in a strategic context transformed by the Ukraine war and US disengagement, cooperative defence development in Europe remains fraught with difficulty.

The original plans for a next generation fighter were co-developed by several European states, including the UK and Italy, in the early 2000s. In 2017-19, the FCAS grouping around France, Germany and Spain was formed, primarily driven by President Emmanuel Macron and former German Chancellor, Angela Merkel. The idea was, in part, to create an aircraft that could complement or compete with the US’s F35 next generation fighter.

However, the collaboration between industrial partners Airbus and Dassault has been challenging from the start. The partners have struggled to agree how to divide work packages, leading to delays and deadlock – several deadlines to secure the fighter’s future passed without agreement. And both Airbus and Dassault have spoken about developing the fighter separately, or moving forward only the ‘cloud’ element, leading to speculation that the fighter collaboration would end. On 8 June, finally, the Financial Times reported that Germany has informed France it wants to withdraw from the joint fighter jet and continue working on the combat cloud. 

Part of the challenge has been that Germany and France are looking to develop different types of aircraft. For France, the ability to carry nuclear weapons and to land on an aircraft carrier is essential if it is to replace its existing Rafale fighter jets, which currently carry out part of France’s nuclear mission and fly from the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle. Germany meanwhile, is primarily looking for a conventionally armed fighter jet, without the requirement for carrier operations.

Looking to develop two separate aircraft – possibly with new partners – while continuing cooperation on the joint cloud and uncrewed systems, might work. But it would presumably undo a significant part of the cost savings promised by collaboration. 

Leaders in Germany and France are frustrated by the disagreements at the technical level. It seems to demonstrate the limits of their ability to set incentives for private industry where industry does not want to cooperate. 

The competition

The situation is further complicated by the many other competing European projects. There are three other significant European future fighters. 

Since December 2022, the UK, Japan and Italy have been working on the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP). Even though this collaboration started several years after FCAS, it now seems to be on surer footing with governance structures agreed and work on some aspects of the system underway. But the UK Treasury is reportedly worried the project’s international nature will make costs hard to rein in.

Separately, Saab has also announced work on a next generation fighter that would succeed its Gripen programme. Gripen was originally developed as a non-NATO alternative for states that did not want to buy US or European equipment and has become a big export hit: Most recently, Ukraine has selected Gripen to form the backbone of its fighter wing, in part for the aircraft’s ability to operate in harsh conditions and from improvised airstrips. Saab is presumably seeking to capitalize on this and other export successes with a new project. Turkey, another NATO member, is also developing a new stealthy fighter jet. 

Meanwhile the UK, Italy, Germany and many other European powers are purchasing the US F35 aircraft: only last year the UK doubled down on its F35 investment, announcing a purchase of the nuclear-capable F35A variant, in addition to its F35Bs. Germany is reportedly considering buying more F35s, as the FCAS project stalls. 

Ashes to ashes

With four next-generation fighter programmes underway – perhaps soon to be five – Europe risks replicating the mistakes of late 1980s and1990s, when Europe developed three competing fighter designs:

The Eurofighter Typhoon, a collaboration between the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain originally included France, but Dassault preferred to go at it alone then, too and developed Rafale separately. Gripen also competed. 

At that time Europe’s strategic defence partnership with the US through NATO seemed solid. That meant European defence industrial projects had the luxury of developing fighters while pursuing goals other than defence: they could be as much about investing in local industry, keeping skills and production capabilities alive, and competing for a lucrative export market. 

However, Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and faltering US commitments to Europe’s security, mean these incentives have changed significantly. There is a clear need for Europe to take its own defence more seriously. The wisdom of European NATO members pursuing multiple next generation fighter projects with broadly similar capabilities is questionable. Separate programmes mean countries spreading their resources thin rather than pooling them. It also means separate projects competing for the same export business. That hardly speaks to a Europe that is pulling in one direction on defence.

With US disengagement looming and the Russian threat significant, the emphasis must shift to prioritizing the quality of kit and the speed with which kit can be delivered.

Part of the problem is that GCAP and FCAS still have some elements of the ‘old’ European defence procurement model, in which equal weight is given to international prestige, domestic economic growth and exportability rather than focusing on Europe’s increasingly urgent defence requirements. 

With US disengagement looming and the Russian threat significant, the emphasis must shift to prioritizing the quality of kit and the speed with which it can be delivered. Equally, there is no longer an argument for a separate Swedish project to target an export market that does not want to buy NATO kit: Sweden is now also a NATO member-state.

There is an urgent reality that European countries must confront: if they are unable to produce a European alternative to the US F35 programme, they will be stuck relying on an increasingly unreliable US for a crucial part of their defence equipment – a platform they might conceivably have to rely on until well into the 2040s. That would dash the stated wishes of both President Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

Were European countries to begin by focussing on NATO interoperability and strengthening European deterrence, it would make more sense to pool money and resources and produce a single next-generation fighter system. If Sweden and Turkey cannot be persuaded, the so called ‘E3’ powers of the UK, France and Germany should at least live up to their rhetoric and invest in a joint outcome.

Of course, that raises the question of the extent to which European governments can influence their defence industries – who know how politically hard to kill international prestige projects like next generation fighter jets are. If one company does not play well with others and prefers to go it alone, what tools do governments have to influence them? The lesson of FCAS is: not many.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 10:33
  • Regulator will monitor measures taken by companies

  • ‘Spikes have often targeted Black and minority ethnic players’

Ofcom has written to social media companies to remind them of their responsibilities regarding online abuse and said it will monitor measures taken against “illegal hate content” during the World Cup.

After the experience of England players during the men’s 2021 European Championship and the women’s Euros last year, Ofcom has urged online platforms to make sure they have effective mitigations against abuse in place and that they are “adequately prepared for increased occurrence during the World Cup”.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 10:04

Chokehold on shipping route draws Houthis in Yemen back into conflict as commenters see ‘no turning back’

Iran’s reversion to large-scale military exchanges with Israel broadened the conflict that began in February not only by making the Israeli attacks on Hezbollah a direct casus belli for Iran for the first time, but also by drawing the Houthis in Yemen back into the conflict with as yet incalculable consequences.

Some in Tehran, buoyed up by past perceived military success and emboldened by the chokehold of the strait of Hormuz, would like to turn this moment into the point of no return in the conflagration with Israel. A minority would welcome the abandonment of ceasefire talks with the US, an outcome for which they have been agitating for weeks.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 10:01

Australia leads world in residential solar per capita with 22GW installed but commercial and industrial sector has deployed only a quarter of that

Australia’s revolution in rooftop solar has left behind commercial and industrial buildings, where installations have lagged far behind homes, according to new analysis.

Australia leads the world in residential solar on per capita terms, with 22GW installed as of last December. But businesses have only installed about a quarter of that – 5.6GW – despite consuming more electricity than households, a report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) has found.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 09:55

Drops follow sharp sell-off of US tech stock last week while oil prices seesaw after Iran and Israel exchange strikes

Stock markets have fallen amid concern about the prospects for tech stocks, while oil prices have risen after renewed conflict in the Middle East dampened hopes that the strait of Hormuz would soon reopen.

Markets in Asia and Europe fell on Monday after a sharp sell-off in US tech stocks late last week, as investors fretted over how firms at the forefront of the artificial intelligence boom would fund their “eye-watering” spending plans.

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2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 09:44

Will the UK’s Defence Investment Plan finally be honest about Britain’s defence?  Expert comment jon.wallace

Here are the key questions that should be asked when assessing the much-delayed plan.

UK Defence Secretary John Healey talks to media at RAF Akrotiri on 5 March 2026 in Akrotiri, Cyprus - two fast jets are parked behind him.

Britain’s defence policy has been dysfunctional for decades. The slow implementation of the 2025 Strategic Defence Review and delays in the release of the Defence Investment Plan (DIP) – originally scheduled for autumn 2025 – are the continuation of a litany of failures. As Britain’s capabilities have withered, allies have become increasingly sceptical of Britain’s ability to function as a military actor and frustrated at the slow pace of reform. 

A core problem of UK defence strategy, revealed in new research I have published with Dr Maeve Ryan and Dr William Reynolds of King’s College, London, is that dishonesty is endemic. It operates across a spectrum, from self-deception via optimism bias, to engaging in ‘alchemy’ over budgets, to lying for self-interest. It affects every aspect of defence planning. 

The issue is: will the DIP continue this trend or break it – by confronting the choices and costs involved in providing for UK defence? When the plan finally appears, a series of key questions will determine whether it is a valuable step forward, or another badly flawed exercise.

Strategic ambition

UK policymakers see Britain as a leading military actor, despite the sharp decline in its capabilities. In recent years, they have explored various ambitious projects, including: leading a coalition to stay in Afghanistan after the US withdrew; providing a peacekeeping force to Ukraine; leading a freedom of navigation mission in the Strait of Hormuz; and providing a Corps-sized contribution to NATO. 

The disconnect between these ambitions and the UK’s resources suggests a high level of self-deception about what the UK can do militarily. Each mission would stretch the armed forces to or beyond their limit.

The first question must be: does the DIP set out a plan for defence that aligns actual resources with realistic and achievable strategic goals?

The Strategic Defence Review (2025) is ambitious enough, calling for the UK to play a leading role within NATO and take on more responsibility for European security. This would require a rapid and significant increase in UK capabilities. 

Yet the record so far is clear: rhetoric about heightened insecurity and urgency, followed by a lack of money and action in response.

The first question must therefore be: does the DIP set out a plan for defence that aligns actual resources with realistic and achievable strategic goals?

Trade offs

For decades, policymakers have argued that Britain could do ‘more with less’, using technology to make up for declining mass. The result is the UK now has a shadow force of the full spectrum of capabilities – but so little of any one capability that it has few military options on the table when a crisis breaks out. 

This was starkly illustrated at the outbreak of the US/Israel/Iran war in 2026, when the UK had no maritime presence in the Gulf or the eastern Mediterranean and took weeks to deploy one ship to reassure allies. (The ship then had to be diverted for maintenance). 

At the same time, the core assumption of all British defence planning for decades – that the US will always take the lead and the UK will be a niche provider in support of the mission – is no longer true. Yet it continues to underpin procurement decisions.

The Defence Investment Plan therefore must make some big calls about how to de-risk the UK’s defence relationships, and the costs involved. Sourcing military equipment domestically, to bespoke designs, is slower and more expensive than buying on the open market. And the evidence for the economic benefits of defence industry spending is weak.

Furthermore, the UK simply doesn’t have the military resources to do what it used to, whether that be global force projection, or continental land deterrence, at scale. 

If it’s honest, the DIP will finally have to make a choice between focusing on capabilities to defend the mainland UK and the Arctic and ‘High North’ or opt for a massive effort to reconstitute its ability to project force around the world – with all the associated costs.

The next questions should therefore be: does the DIP explain how it will decide between sovereign capabilities or ‘off the shelf’ procurement options? Does it acknowledge the costs and trade-offs involved? And does it commit to investing in a force posture directed to address specific threats?

The money

UK defence once again finds itself facing a financial black hole, this time estimated at £28 billion. In the past, these have been met with two tactics, both of which have failed. 

Firstly, officials and service chiefs promised efficiency savings which never materialized. The 2025 SDR and NSS were undermined at the outset by the promise of £6 billion in savings. In our research, senior military officers talked about the ‘alchemy’ involved in pretending cuts would not affect frontline capabilities and budgets would be balanced by savings; privately acknowledging these were either wildly optimistic or put forward disingenuously for political reasons. 

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 09:30

June 8, 2026 — A landmark £1.1 billion plan to boost Britain’s ability to develop, deploy and scale AI technologies and chips has been unveiled today – pouring investment to back the next generation of British chip companies to support growth and jobs, strengthen national security, and boost the UK’s competitiveness.

Credit: Shutterstock

AI is already changing how economies work, public services operate and countries protect their interests. As more of the economy and public services comes to rely on AI, it matters more than ever that Britain has the ability to develop key technologies securely here at home. Ready access to compute is critical to these ambitions: giving AI innovators the digital horsepower they need, to get to work in Britain.

The new AI Hardware Plan, announced by the Technology Secretary Liz Kendall at London Tech Week today, sets out how the government will back British companies developing the chips and semiconductor technologies behind AI, while also investing in the scientists, engineers and technicians needed to turn new ideas into products and good jobs in the UK.

It comes just over a month after she announced in her speech at RUSI that the government would bring forward plans to boost Britain’s sovereign AI capabilities.

The global AI chips market is expected to reach one trillion dollars in the early 2030s. If Britain could secure just 5% of this market it would bring fifty billion dollars in revenue to the UK with tens of thousands of highly paid jobs in tech.

British companies – from Arm, whose chip designs are used in everything from smartphones to AI data centers, to startups like Fractile and Olix, which have raised more than £320 ($440) million between them – are already leading the next generation of AI hardware. This plan backs them – and the startups coming up behind them – to become the British AI titans of the future.

As the market shifts from general-purpose chips to bespoke hardware, that plays directly to the UK’s strengths, creating an opportunity for British firms to lead in the AI infrastructure of the future.

“AI is the defining currency of economic and hard power in today’s world and the countries that control the hardware behind it will hold the keys to the future,” said Technology Secretary Liz Kendall. “The UK is already a global leader in chip design, and I believe this is a race Britain can win. To do that, we must back more British AI – and that means investing in the chips, computing power and skilled people behind it. That is exactly what this plan does, backing the British firms developing the next generation of AI hardware, so we get more jobs, more growth, and more control over the technologies our future depends on. We are backing Britain because we believe in Britain.”

The AI Hardware Plan includes:

  • New £750 million for a national AI supercomputer: One of the most advanced in the world when deployed in 2030, it will bring together proven and next-generation processors and cutting-edge chips to run complex tasks more efficiently than traditional supercomputers. This is known as a heterogeneous mixed chip system. We want to see British-designed chips form a crucial part of the system, which will join Isambard-AI and Zenith (alongside DAWN) as part of the UK’s AI Research Resource, giving researchers, start-ups and public services the computing power they need to develop and run AI securely in Britain.
  • Supporting UK start-ups by creating demand for powerful new chips in Britain: Of the £750 million, £400 million will go towards equipping the UK’s AI supercomputer with next-generation chips – a significant increase on previous plans. £150 million of this will be used to buy next-generation inference chips – which power the day-to-day use of AI tools – this summer, creating an immediate opportunity for British firms, who are well placed to compete. The government is acting as an early customer to help bring new technologies to market. A further £250 million will support the purchase of more specialised chips as the most promising technologies mature – helping the strongest designs reach market and compete at scale.
  • Backing British companies to develop new technology: £120 million will fund a new AI Hardware Innovation Programme. Developing new chips can take years and cost millions before companies know if they will work, this program gives British companies the funding to design, develop and test innovative novel chips, so the best ideas can move forward. It is how the UK makes sure the next generation of world-leading chip companies are grown here in Britain.
  • Helping firms prove their chip technology: At least £20 million of the program will expand the Scaling Inference Lab, delivered by ARIA and CommonAI, to help companies prove their technology, attract investment and secure partnerships with global tech firms. The Lab is already delivering results. British AI company Oriole Networks, working with AMD through the Lab, will deploy the world’s first large-scale AI system that uses light rather than electrical signals to move data between chips, boosting the performance of UK data centers.
  • Boosting skills needed by the AI hardware sector: £45 million in new support for skills – backing doctoral training and undergraduate bursaries to train more engineers, chip designers and technicians, and open up clear pathways into the sector from university and on-the-job training to build the pipeline of British talent the sector needs. This means that government is now making £80 million available, to support the industry’s skills needs.

Building on the UK’s strength in cutting-edge tech, a new fund led by Silicon Valley investors Playground Global – whose partners include Pat Gelsinger, former CEO of Intel – and backed by up to £150m from the British Business Bank, will invest in UK-based AI hardware companies, giving British innovators the long-term backing they need to grow and stay in the UK, subject to completion of due diligence and legal negotiations.

It is the single largest fund investment the British Business bank has ever made, a signal of the scale of the government’s commitment to backing British AI hardware. The fund, developed by DSIT, and announced by the Chancellor at London Tech Week, will help them crowd in more private investment, and develop the technologies the UK’s future depends on, ensuring Britain can compete with the biggest players on the world stage. Playground Global will also open its first office outside the US in the UK, underlining Britain’s position as a leading place to develop the next generation of AI hardware.

Further Details

AI developers need vast amounts of computing power to train advanced models, test ideas and run complex simulations, and a lack of access to it can be a serious bottleneck on their ability to grow. By building out the UK’s supercomputing capacity, the government is tackling that bottleneck head on, helping promising start ups to scale, innovators to develop new products, and scientists to make discoveries sooner.

The plan is about making sure the UK has the tools it needs to stay competitive, support innovation and protect its national security. It combines work with world-leading partners and support for British companies in the frontier technologies prioritised by the government’s Modern Industrial Strategy, where the UK has a real edge.

On top of this, the government is doubling the compute available through the AI Research Resource to firms backed by the Sovereign AI fund, ensuring founders get the computing power they need to build, scale and compete globally.

The plan includes a new £12 million Centre for Doctoral Training in Chip Design to train the next generation of chip designers in UK universities, and working with employers to open up more routes into semiconductor and AI hardware careers. It expands the government’s existing semiconductor skills program, which is funding 300 undergraduate bursaries this year, and this will rise to 400 from next academic year and 500 the year after, with the total budget increasing to £48m.

Through TechFirst, the government has agreed a new strategic industry partnership with Arm, bringing one of the world’s leading chip designers into the UK’s skills pipeline, supporting the development of the future AI hardware workforce through industry engagement, expertise and alignment of training with real-world chip design needs.

A new £20 million expansion of the TechFirst program will support 500 more UK PhD students with funding and support throughout their training in strategically critical fields like chip design and AI hardware, helping attract and retain the British researchers the sector needs to grow.

In addition to the £1.1 billion AI Hardware Plan, the government will soon be launching the tender process for the £750 million Next National Supercomputing Service at the University of Edinburgh – a major step in building the next generation of UK compute infrastructure, giving Britain the capability it needs to power advanced research, industry and public services into the future.


Source: UK Government

The post UK Commits £750M to National AI Supercomputer in £1.1B Hardware Strategy appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 09:11

LONDON, June 8, 2026 — Oriole Networks today announced continued progress in its collaboration with AMD, in support of the UK’s Advanced Research & Innovation Agency (ARIA) Scaling Inference Lab. The work brings together Oriole’s photonic networking system and AMD Instinct GPUs and AMD EPYC CPUs to demonstrate how next-generation network fabrics address the growing performance, latency, and energy constraints of AI infrastructure. In the collaboration, which has been underway for more than a year, Oriole is set to deploy the world’s first pure photonic AI network at scale, built to supercharge AI performance at the system level by providing the lowest possible latency.

Oriole is contributing its PRISM photonic networking solution, which replaces electronic switches in the network core with nanosecond-scale optical circuit switching. AMD is supporting the program by providing CPU and GPU hardware, and technical collaboration to develop and run large-scale network models relevant to frontier-scale AI systems.

It also marks the first commercial deployment of Oriole’s technology, which has gone from R&D to production in just three years. Oriole’s xPU-agnostic designs are now locked and set for wider rollout across the industry in 2027 to meet growing demand from multiple accelerator platforms.

Reimagining AI Networks

At the core of the network is Oriole’s technology, PRISM: the world’s first AI networking platform that routes data as photons rather than electrical signals. For decades, data center networks have run on electrical switches that are inefficient, power-hungry, and generate enormous heat. Coupled with the rise of AI, with its need for thousands of chips exchanging data trillions of times per second, data center networks have been pushed to the breaking point.

PRISM removes the need for electronic switches entirely, replacing them with nano-second-switched optical circuits, which cuts core power consumption by 81%. With photons able to travel directly from chip to chip, GPU idle time drops from 60% today to less than 1%. With less hardware in the loop, PRISM can also reduce dependency on the complex supply chain that underpin today’s networking hardware and can minimize the need for cooling, thus slashing water usage. As the work with AMD shows, this leads to supercharged AI output with more tokens per second and more users served simultaneously from the same hardware.

Agnostic by Design

Crucially, PRISM is not built for any single chip vendor; it works across any accelerator platform, giving the wider industry a path to frontier-scale system-wide performance without the need for proprietary stacks.

Madhu Rangarajan, corporate vice president, Compute and Enterprise AI business, AMD, said: “AMD is excited to collaborate with Oriole on the ARIA Scaling Inference Lab cluster. Oriole’s AI backend networking with nanosecond optical circuit switching represents a fundamentally different way to connect accelerators at scale. We are helping to validate how photonic fabrics can work alongside AMD compute to deliver the low-latency, high-bandwidth connectivity that AI Inference workloads demand.”

James Regan, CEO of Oriole, said: “A year ago, we were proving the physics; today, we’re proving the business. Our collaboration with AMD has moved from concept to deployment to a system an order of magnitude larger, and the data proves this is already driving performance increases at pace. This is what it looks like when photonic networking stops being a research curiosity and starts being the foundation of how serious AI infrastructure gets built.”

Suraj Bramhavar, Program Director at ARIA, said: “Meeting the demands for modern AI requires rapidly identifying ways to improve the performance and cost-efficiency of large-scale AI clusters. ARIA is thrilled to collaborate with Oriole and AMD to demonstrate the benefits of this new technology and it’s exactly the type of collaboration, between innovative startups and industry leaders, that the Scaling Inference Lab was designed to foster.”

About Aria

Created by an Act of Parliament from the UK government, and sponsored by the Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology, ARIA funds breakthrough R&D to catalyze new paths to prosperity for the UK and the world. The Scaling Inference Lab is a testbed backed by £50m ($68m), set up to address a key bottleneck of AI workloads.

About Oriole Networks

AI Networking, Reimagined. Oriole Networks is a photonic networking company, developing disruptive technologies for AI/ML and HPC networking that will revolutionize data centers. These technologies address AI’s biggest challenges – speed, latency, and sustainability. Our holistic approach replaces energy-hungry electrical switching with photonic switching. By using only light to move data in the network, our solution will increase the efficiency of LLM training and inference to unprecedented levels while dramatically reducing the energy consumption of data centers, currently putting a huge strain on energy grids. We can offer faster, more efficient, and more sustainable AI without sacrificing the planet.


Source: Oriole Networks

The post Oriole and AMD Deploy Photonic AI Network for ARIA Scaling Inference Lab appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-06-10 08:04
2026-06-08 08:28

"Schmigadoon!" — which was tied for the most nominations, with 12 — won Best Musical, and "Liberation" took home the honor of Best Play at the 2026 Tony Awards.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 07:00

Guardian analysis finds facilities to be built in some of the driest areas as outcry grows over water needed to power AI

A record-shattering drought has racked much of the US. But the artificial intelligence industry is pushing ahead regardless, with the majority of planned datacenters set to be built in drought-ridden locations, a Guardian analysis has found.

About two-thirds of upcoming datacenters, which typically require a large amount of water to operate, are set to be built in places that have been among the driest in the country over the past year.

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2026-06-11 12:04
2026-06-08 06:02

What is necessary to return Venezuela to stable economic growth and democracy after the US operation? 16 June 2026 — 16:00 TO 17:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Online

How to bring credible elections, rule of law and economic recovery to Venezuela.

This webinar will bring together leading Venezuelan and international experts to discuss the ways the US, the international community and the interim government can initiate and sustain the complex processes for credible elections and for a system of rule of law to foster economic growth, prosperity and human rights.

The White House touts success of its January 2026 Venezuela operation, but the path to stability, democracy and growth remains unclear. While a three-stage process has been outlined by the US, concrete plans are lacking. This meeting convenes scholars, policymakers and business leaders to discuss credible elections, rule of law and economic recovery.

The discussion builds off recently published Chatham House policy papers, one on elections  and one on the rule of law, which identify and recommend the steps, priorities and benchmarks for elections and the rule of law in Venezuela under the interim government and beyond. The session intendeds to help focus those discussions for Venezuelans – in the opposition and the interim government – and the international community.

Key event questions:

  • What is needed to bring credible, democratic elections to Venezuela?
  • How can the interim Venezuelan government bring together the US, multilateral organizations, diplomatic missions, investors, and local business and civil society to restore the rule of law?

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 06:00

A collage overlays a black-and-white photo of a wooden sign reading “Measles testing” in a scene with a Texas flag in the background. Illustrations of genetic sequences and branching diagrams surround the sign, with red banners highlighting various DNA configurations that are labeled with locations and dates from Texas and Utah.
Photo illustration by Lisa Larson-Walker/ProPublica. Source image: Julio Cortez/AP Photo.

American children lined up for the world’s first measles shots in the early 1960s, but it took nearly 40 years of shoring up immunization programs before the infamous contagion had been so thoroughly controlled that a panel of experts declared in 2000 that the United States had eliminated measles within its borders.

For a quarter century, the U.S. only saw outbreaks when infected travelers brought the virus in from abroad. The resulting waves of measles didn’t last more than a year.

Those days are gone.

Measles began tearing through the dusty plains of West Texas in January last year, and since then, all but a handful of states have seen cases. Two unvaccinated Texas girls and an adult across the border in New Mexico died before the West Texas outbreak seemed to burn out last July.

By then, measles was popping up in Utah, and state health officials couldn’t tell where the earliest patients had caught the virus. Infections in that state took off that fall and winter and continued into May of this year.

The Texas and Utah cases now sit at the center of an unusually technical — and politically fraught — question: whether the United States will lose its measles-free distinction.

Countries aren’t penalized for losing the status, but it’s an indication of cracks in a nation’s once rock-solid immunization programs, a loss of faith in vaccines among its people — or both.

To have any chance of keeping the designation, the U.S. will need to make a strong case that measles didn’t spread endemically — from person to person in a continuous chain within the country for more than a year. If the Texas virus, for example, made its way across the Southwest to Utah and continued infecting people there, that would be a problem. But if cases in Utah were instead sparked by a patient who caught measles abroad, that would be a new chain, restarting the clock.

For clues, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is analyzing the full genetic code of measles viruses that infected patients. Last November, the CDC’s leader at the time said preliminary genomic analysis suggested the Utah cases were not directly linked to those in Texas. A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services told ProPublica that the work was done by the state laboratories and the CDC is conducting a more comprehensive investigation.

ProPublica embarked on its own analysis, reviewing over 1,800 whole genome sequences, including those released as recently as last month, to compare the genetic fingerprints of measles viruses circulating in the U.S. and Canada. This showed that the measles virus still spreading in Utah as of this May is very closely related to the one that sickened Texans over a year ago.

ProPublica’s analysis isn’t a smoking gun that proves endemic spread. It’s impossible to tell from this information whether the virus spread from state to state or if it at some point left the country and was brought back by a sick traveler.

But given how similar the viruses are in the sequences ProPublica identified, it’s going to be difficult for the U.S. to prove measles isn’t endemic — “unless CDC has something up their sleeves,” said Dr. Alberto Severini, a retired molecular virologist and measles expert who spent two decades at Canada’s Public Health Agency.

This is a small portion of the genetic code from a sample of measles virus collected in Utah in May 2026. Each letter represents one of the four molecules that encode the unique instructions for how the virus is built and operates.

ProPublica compared it to the sequence from a virus collected during the first days of the Texas outbreak in January 2025.

The two sequences are nearly identical. But when you look closely, mutations — tiny changes in the virus’s genetic code — begin to appear. These mutations form a distinct fingerprint.

Out of the nearly 16,000 genetic letters in each sequence, only 12 differ between the original Texas virus and the Utah virus sampled more than a year later. The mutations did not appear all at once.

As the virus spread in Texas, tiny copying errors appeared in its genetic code. One of these cropped up weeks into the outbreak: a G molecule turned into an A.

Over the following months, this branch of the outbreak continued spreading — and continued mutating. By May 2025, a virus collected from a Texas patient bore five distinct mutations.

Then those same five mutations appeared in Utah. A virus carrying this distinctive genetic pattern was found there in June 2025.

Soon, measles cases surged in Utah. Many viruses collected there carried the same five mutations, along with additional new ones. Related viruses continued infecting Utah residents as recently as this May.

The unique fingerprint of mutations hasn’t been limited to these states. The five mutations observed in Texas and Utah were also present in sequences the CDC published of viruses that infected patients last May and June in Iowa, North Dakota, Minnesota and Alaska.

But it’s not clear that the genetic fingerprint is only in the U.S.: No whole genome sequencing has been made public from cases in either Mexico or the Canadian province of Ontario, where measles has also raged.

That matters because whether the virus was spreading continuously in the United States for more than a year — rather than circulating abroad and being brought back into the country by travelers — is a key question facing a panel of experts convened by the Pan American Health Organization.

A regional office of the World Health Organization, PAHO will decide whether the U.S. keeps its measles-free designation. Canada lost its status last year. PAHO invited the U.S. to make its case in April, but American officials asked for more time to investigate how the virus had been spreading. The review was moved to November.

Daniel Salas, a PAHO official, said the kind of thorough analysis that CDC is doing “takes time.”

“What the U.S. is trying to do with this whole genome sequencing is trying to find some patterns that could eventually say, for example, this mutation of the virus occurred in a different country, in a different place to the current outbreak that they’re trying to analyze, so that eventually, that might be taken into consideration to somehow replace the epidemiological information that is missing,” he said. “There’s no country that has done this before.”

One of the biggest questions is how the virus got into Utah. Health officials determined that the first confirmed patient there, identified last June, couldn’t have been exposed to measles in another country or even another state. Utah State Epidemiologist Dr. Leisha Nolen said she and her team reviewed the places the patient had been and the people they had been around, but still couldn’t figure out where they caught the virus.

Clues suggested measles had been quietly spreading in the region. A CDC disease detective investigating subsequent cases that spanned the Utah-Arizona border said there had been reports of community members with rashes last June, but the patients declined measles testing and families were often reluctant to answer questions.

Throughout the outbreak, no interviews suggested any patient was exposed in another country, Nolen said, but she and her team cannot rule out the possibility.

ProPublica asked the CDC whether its epidemiologists had linked any of Utah’s measles cases to an international outbreak, but the agency wouldn’t say, nor would it directly comment on genetic similarities ProPublica found between viruses in Texas and Utah. In a written statement, a spokesperson said, “Sequencing alone cannot determine whether transmission has been continuous or sustained.”

While genomic analysis can provide clues, the spokesperson wrote, “These findings must be interpreted alongside epidemiological data, including travel history, exposure information, and known outbreak connections.”

The CDC is still working on “a comprehensive analysis of potential linkages among cases and outbreaks” and has gathered additional epidemiological data, the spokesperson said, but did not elaborate on what that shows.

With the midterm elections approaching, the spread of measles has become a political liability for President Donald Trump, who picked the founder of an antivaccine organization to be his health secretary. Since Trump’s inauguration last year, there have been more than 4,300 U.S. cases, a high not seen in three decades.

Eliminating the endemic spread of measles is the public health equivalent of slaying a dragon. The disease is among the most contagious humans have ever encountered. Patients are infectious even before the telltale rash appears, and the contagion can linger in a room for two hours after they leave.

Policymakers built the U.S. immunization system on lessons learned from measles outbreaks. To get the sky high-vaccination rates needed to stop the disease from spreading, states made shots mandatory for school and daycare attendance, and the federal government provided them free to low-income kids. When measles still managed to roar back, state lawmakers in California and New York cracked down on exemptions to their school mandates. The U.S. helped other countries fight measles, too, not only to prevent deaths but also because people in power recognized that infectious diseases kept in check abroad are less likely to return to American shores.

During prior U.S. outbreaks, health and political leaders, with unwavering language, urged Americans to vaccinate their children and assured them the shots were safe.

Trump and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. haven’t followed that playbook. Both have fueled doubts about the safety of the MMR shot, which guards against measles, mumps and rubella.

Researchers around the world have found the vaccine does not cause autism. Nevertheless, at a press conference on autism last fall, Trump said he had heard for years that there was a problem with the combination vaccine and urged parents to insist on separate shots for their kids — even though standalone shots don’t exist in the U.S.

Kennedy has said the vaccine offers protection from measles, but he also has repeatedly made the shot sound scarier than the disease.

“There are adverse events from the vaccine,” he told Sean Hannity on Fox News last year. “It does cause deaths every year.”

On a podcast, Kennedy said that when he got the virus as a kid, he got to watch television for a week. “I got chicken soup and vitamin A, which nobody can patent,” he said.

Measles kills 1 to 3 out of every 1,000 people infected and can cause deafness, intellectual disability and brain swelling. In a “know the facts” post, the Infectious Diseases Society of America said there have been no deaths shown to be related to the shot in healthy people. “There have been rare cases of deaths from vaccine side effects among children who are immune compromised, which is why it is recommended that they don’t get the vaccine,” the medical society explained. “That’s why it is so important that everyone who can get vaccinated does so, to protect those who can’t.”

HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon said in an email that Kennedy “believes Americans deserve clear information about both the benefits and risks of medical products so they can make informed healthcare decisions in consultation with their healthcare providers.”

Nixon said “heavy-handed mandates” contributed to the significant loss of trust in health institutions during the COVID-19 pandemic. “The Secretary maintains that public health agencies rebuild trust through honesty, transparency, and respect for individual choice — not coercion,” Nixon wrote.

Kennedy has tried to distance himself and the administration from the measles resurgence. He said the U.S. has done a better job of limiting the spread than any other country and pointed to the far higher number of cases in Canada and Mexico, whose populations are much smaller.

White House spokesperson Kush Desai told ProPublica, “Fake News reporters should be spending more time examining why the Trump administration’s efforts to contain America’s measles outbreak has been so much more successful than those of Canada and Mexico instead of regurgitating the same, tired narratives.”

Kennedy has also reminded lawmakers that the Texas outbreak began before he became health secretary.

“We have a global pandemic,” he told senators in April. “It has nothing to do with me.”

Kennedy has been among the most prominent voices in the antivaccine movement for more than a decade.

Dr. Adam Ratner, a pediatric infectious disease physician who wrote a book about measles, said Kennedy has done “everything in his power to undermine confidence in vaccines in the U.S.”

During a measles outbreak in New York City that began in 2018, Ratner treated at least five unvaccinated kids who were hospitalized, including a couple who needed intensive care, so he knows that not every child escapes the disease with nothing more than memories of screen time and soup.

While most parents still support immunizations, Ratner worries that the country no longer has the stomach for the kinds of policies that once stopped endemic spread. Rather than making school vaccine requirements stricter, some states are working to do away with them altogether in the name of medical freedom.

“You need a highly vaccinated population to control the spread,” he said. “In the absence of that, I think that we will have ongoing spread, and we’ll have tragedies like the ones that we saw in West Texas with the two kids who died.”

The U.S. may very well find the international travelers it needs to prove that the country is still measles free. But if all remains the same, experts said, it will only be delaying the inevitable.

“It doesn’t change the fact that there’s been transmission of measles in the United States for over a year,” Severini said. “If people don’t vaccinate, measles is going to be endemic.”

The post What ProPublica Found in the Genetic Code of America’s Measles Outbreaks appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 06:00

Incarcerated activist Malik Muhammad’s standing client call in March with their lawyer had been canceled without any real explanation. When Muhammad’s attorney, Lauren Regan, went to check their status on the Oregon Inmate Tracker, she found nothing. They seemed to have vanished without a trace. 

Friends and family feared the worst. Muhammad, an army veteran and activist serving the longest federal sentence of any 2020 Black Lives Matter protester, had been a target inside the state prison because of their outspoken political beliefs and organizing efforts while incarcerated, several of their friends and supporters told The Intercept. 

“We were calling everyone,” said Christopher Kuttruff, a close friend and supporter. “We were terrified that they were in the hospital or dead …your mind obviously goes to the worst places.”

For weeks, the activist disappeared from all tracking systems. The best Muhammad’s supporters could ascertain by early April was that they had been transferred to a “confidential location.” Late that month, Muhammad was able to get a letter out to their partner from Kirkland Correctional Institute, in South Carolina, an intake facility 3,000 thousand miles from Oregon — or, as Regan puts it, “as far away from me as possible.”

Muhammad described the conditions at Kirkland as deplorable, claiming that incarcerated people are denied access to enough water, food, and recreation, and are forced to sleep on mats on the floor, which sometimes get confiscated as punishment.

The South Carolina Department of Corrections had little to say of Muhammad. In mid-May, the state’s prison system told The Intercept they had no record of someone named Malik Muhammad anywhere in their custody; the prison system did not respond to a follow-up query in June. The activist had become a living ghost within the carceral system. 

Even now, friends and family struggle to reach Muhammad, with only the occasional letter or call to the few people approved to contact them serving as proof of life. 

Because she is not licensed in South Carolina, Regan said she has “not been able to speak on the phone or in person in an attorney-client privileged manner since their transfer,” seriously impeding her ability to represent her client. She had to hire a local attorney to speak with them in person and collect potential evidence.

Millions of people flow through the U.S. prison system every year. And every year, an untold number of them vanish off the map, lost in a massive system that is legally obligated to watch over them. In New Mexico, Stephen Slevin spent nearly two years in solitary confinement in county jail after county officials appear to have simply forgotten about him after charging him with driving under the influence. Slevin never saw a judge or a lawyer and had to pull his own tooth due to consistent medical neglect.

Wanda Bertram, communications strategist for the Prison Policy Initiative, said that people getting lost in the prison system is “pretty common,” even when they haven’t moved as far away as Muhammad. “There’s never any effort made by prisons to tell incarcerated people’s families, ‘Hey, we’re moving this person,’” said Bertram.

Related

Why Trump Is So Desperate to Keep Mahmoud Khalil in Louisiana

As the Trump administration ramps up its use of incarceration as a method of immigration enforcement, concerns are mounting about the already stretched system’s ability to keep track of the people within its care — and the opportunity such lapses in oversight create for authorities to target activists and dissenters adversarial to the government.

“Not only is [Malik] intelligent,” said Regan, a founder and director of litigation and advocacy at the Civil Liberties Defense Center, “but Malik is Black, Muslim, an anarchist, [and] a political activist, and they have targeted Malik as a result of all of those things.”

Muhammad, who was arrested in October 2020, received the harshest sentence out of the hundreds of protesters hit with federal charges in the wake of the 2020 summer protests for racial justice. After tens of thousands were arrested in some of the largest mass arrests in history, many were released without charges or saw their cases dropped, but some prosecutors pushed for harsh sentences and elevated state or local infractions to the federal level, arguing that rioters were masquerading as protesters.

Related

Two Brooklyn Lawyers Accused of Throwing Molotov Cocktails Are the Public Face of Trump Administration’s Crackdown on Dissent

Muhammad pleaded guilty to both state and federal charges, including two counts of “unlawful possession of a destructive device,” for throwing a Molotov cocktail during a protest in East Portland. In 2022, the then-25-year-old was sentenced to 10 years in state prison.

Their plea agreement specifically stated that they would serve their time in Oregon state prison, near their supporters and community. Regan says that Oregon’s prison system has reneged on the agreement — illegally transferring Muhammad interstate as retaliation for their activism while incarcerated — in another attempt by the criminal legal system to punish Muhammad for their organizing.

“Normally, they would have been sentenced to the federal prison system,” said Regan. However, “because their friends and family and supporters at the time were based in Oregon, they explicitly negotiated an outcome that ensured that they would remain in Oregon.” 

Federal prisons tend to be “better,” said Regan, because they often have more funding, allow for more freedom of movement, and have marginally better food. Put it this way, she said, “generally speaking, if you had a choice between Oregon State Prison or Federal Prison, most people would choose [federal].” But instead of relative comfort, Muhammad chose community.

Prisons are essentially a “black box” where people can disappear into solitary confinement or be transferred without their family’s knowledge, according to Bertram of the Prison Policy Initiative. 

“There’s so many constant questions that you live with as the loved one of an incarcerated person, and then when that person suddenly disappears, it’s terrifying,” said Bertram.

To make matters worse, she said, “prisons have a kind of nasty habit of not telling the family when someone dies or is transferred to an outside hospital, or needs emergency care,” compounding concerns for people who cannot locate their loved ones on the inside.

In Regan’s view, there are “a number of reasons” to characterize Muhammad’s transfer as retaliatory. For starters, she said this is part of a pattern of behavior from the Oregon prison system. In 2024, The Intercept reported that Muhammad had been effectively held in solitary confinement, which in Oregon is called “special housing,” for more than 250 days — despite the fact that Oregon limits the use of this type of confinement to 90 days.

Related

Oregon Prison Limits Solitary to 90 Days. This BLM Protester Has Been in the Hole for 250.

She said Muhammad had met people in prison, many who’d been through excessive solitary, and suggested that they could become potential plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit the Oregon Justice Resource Center is seeking to file against the state prison system. “The prison is, of course, retaliating against them for basically assisting a nonprofit legal organization in bringing a giant lawsuit about the abuses of solitary confinement in the Oregon prison system,” Regan said. 

Oregon flatly denies sending Muhammad to South Carolina as retaliation.

“These decisions are not made lightly and require a thorough review process conducted by all parties. In the case of Mr. Muhammed [sic], there is extensive background for the reasons [they were] a candidate for an Interstate Compact,” Amber Campbell, communications manager at the public affairs division for the Oregon Department of Corrections, wrote in a statement to The Intercept. 

Muhammad’s advocacy and community building inside have consistently put a target on their back, said Jeremy, a close friend and pen pal. Friends described Muhammad as “empathetic,” “generous,” and “passionate,” as eager to sing for their cellmates as they are to share a book on political theory. 

Now, Muhammad’s friends and family have to sit and wait, and hope the prison system won’t lose them all over again. 

Correction: June 8, 2026, 1:56 p.m. ET
This story previously misstated which legal organization is seeking a class-action lawsuit against the Oregon state prison system; it is the Oregon Justice Resource Center.

The post They Were Serving the Longest Federal Sentence of Any 2020 BLM Protester. Then They Vanished in Prison. appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Delaware is currently the only state where residents do not vote on proposed constitutional amendments. A new bill could give voters the final say, while also shortening the legislative timeline.   

A new bill could change how Delaware’s Constitution is amended, letting voters decide the fate of proposed constitutional changes. 

Introduced last month by House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn-Harris (D-Dover), House Bill 440 would shift the power to pass constitutional amendments from lawmakers to voters via a public ballot. If passed, Delaware would join the rest of the union in having voters decide on constitutional changes.

Currently, proposed constitutional amendments must receive a two-thirds vote by the legislature in two consecutive sessions of the General Assembly — sessions that are separated by an election. 

House Bill 440 calls for a single two-thirds supermajority vote in both the House and Senate, followed by a statewide referendum that would require 55% voter approval.

But Harris’ bill comes at an interesting political juncture for Delaware Democrats.

Senate Democrats currently hold a two-thirds supermajority, and their House counterparts could also soon hold that same power. Should House Democrats gain just one seat during this fall’s general election, the party would have the power to amend the state’s constitution without any bipartisan support.

House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover) said the voter involvement would make passage of constitutional amendments more fair. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

So Harris’ bill, in effect, could remove a strategic political maneuver from Democrats’ potential playbook. 

“Some people might say that it’s not strategic,” Harris said. “I come from a different standpoint, which is what would you want to happen if you weren’t in power?”

But the legislation, as it is currently written, would not cede Democratic political power entirely. If a proposed amendment were to fail to receive 55% of a referendum vote, it could then be reconsidered by the General Assembly, and potentially enacted without voter approval. 

Harris told Spotlight Delaware she included that provision in case a referendum loses by a slim margin, or the public shows more interest in it after the fact. She described the second legislative vote as a “failsafe,” but also a chance to garner more public input.   

House Bill 440, technically itself a proposed constitutional amendment, would need to be passed once before June 30, and again during the next General Assembly in order to become law. 

Republicans express reservations

Harris’ bill has yet to be heard in committee, but it has already drawn scrutiny from some Republican lawmakers.

Critics of the bill, like Rep. Bryan Shupe (R-Milford), warned the current two-stage process prevents impulsive changes to the constitution by temporary legislative majorities. 

While Shupe told Spotlight Delaware he would vote against the bill, he said he is “not opposed to adding the referendum process,” and thinks it would be beneficial to look at a referendum process moving forward. 

Rep. Bryan Shupe said he’d like to see a higher threshold for voter approval. | PHOTO COURTESY STATE OF DELAWARE

Shupe’s biggest concern is shortening the timeline to pass a constitutional amendment and the threshold from a two-thirds supermajority in the General Assembly to 55% of the public, he said.

“We’re not talking about normal legislation here, we’re talking about the foundational constitutional principles that hold up all of legislation,” he said. 

As for the 55% threshold, Harris said she saw it as a midway between a simple majority where a small minority could sway the vote and a 60% supermajority, which she said could be a more challenging target for voter turnout.  

In a May 27 episode of “For The Record,” a podcast produced by the Delaware State Senate Republican Caucus, Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown) also said he “didn’t mind putting the question to voters.” However, he’d like to see the bar raised from 55% of voters to 60%.

Pettyjohn also described the part of the bill that sends the proposed amendment back to the General Assembly if the referendum does not pass as “a direct slap in the face to the will of the people.”

But Harris defended that provision of the bill.

“If the General Assembly overturns the will of the voters, the people in the General Assembly are going to have to have something to answer for, and that will be a big deal,” Harris said.  

Delaware has strictest procedure

While Delaware stands alone as the only state in the country that does not include a referendum vote, its current system — a supermajority requirement in two consecutive General Assemblies —  may make it one of the strictest states to amend its constitution, said Quinn Yeargain, a Michigan State University professor who studies law and democracy.

Neighboring states like Pennsylvania and Virginia both require a bill to pass two legislatures, but they only need a simple majority. 

In New Jersey, an amendment can pass if it receives a three-fifths vote in a single legislative session, or a simple majority in both the House and Senate during two legislative sessions. 

While Harris’s bill would make Delaware’s constitutional process consistent with other states by adding a referendum, Yeargain also said changing the requirement from two sessions of the General Assembly to one would bring Delaware in line with other states.  

Other constitutional debates 

A separate bill that would change the way lawmakers notify the public about proposed constitutional amendments, House Bill 321, drew criticism from last month as a blow to government transparency. 

Harris said she had been drafting HB 440 for a while, and had originally intended to release it at a later time. After the outcry over HB 321, however, she felt it was the right time to introduce the bill.  

House Bill 321, which would no longer require the state to notify the public about proposed constitutional amendments in print newspapers, passed the House on April 21.

Harris said HB 321, which passed the House in April, is no longer being considered in the Senate. 

She said that bill was not intended to make people uncomfortable, and was rather a modernization effort. But after the reactions to the bill and anxieties about transparency, “it felt like the right time to drop it.” 

After the reactions to HB 321, Harris described HB 440 as an affirmation that the party had no intention to hide proposed constitutional amendments from the public. 

Rather, she said, lawmakers want voters to participate in the process.

House Bill 440 has until Jun. 30 — just 10 working days for lawmakers — to receive a supermajority vote from the House and Senate. Still, if it passes, the bill would have to make it through the second leg of the General Assembly under Delaware’s current constitutional amendment system. 

Make your voice heard on legislative issues in Dover this year. Click the button below to find your representative or senator and let them know your opinion on proposed legislation.

The post New bill would give Delawareans vote on constitutional changes   appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-09 12:04
2026-06-08 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
The popularity of artificial intelligence has sparked a boom in the construction of energy hungry data centers, including in Delaware. These bills aim to prevent an energy demand spike from raising electric bills, though critics say they may also scare off the growing industry.  

Delaware legislators are scrambling to address concerns about data centers raising residents’ energy bills before the legislative session ends.

Newly-amended House Bill 233 would make data centers the first to be cut off from power in a blackout unless the project includes its own energy generation. It is sponsored by Rep. Frank Burns (D-Pike Creek) and Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown).

The regional electric grid is struggling to produce enough energy to meet growing demand, primarily from the boom in energy-hungry data centers that power new artificial intelligence models. 

“So they have to be the first in line to take the hit,” Burns said. 

The bill also requires data center developers to enter into service agreements that are meant to ensure they pay the full costs of the energy they use, including potential transmission upgrades. 

And House Bill 445, sponsored by Rep. Debra Heffernan (D-Bellefonte), would require data center developers to supply all of the power they use within 10 years of beginning operations, and require some of that power to be renewable.

These bills come as Delaware braces for the impact of five new data centers proposals that have a combined energy demand that could double the state’s entire electricity usage.

Some fear that scenario would lead to increased energy bills across the state — both because of a limited supply of electrons, and because of the costs of the infrastructure needed to serve the demand.

HB 445 has yet to come up for debate, but HB 233 has drawn criticism from some lawmakers, business lobbyists and union representatives, who expressed fears that the legislation could prevent the growing data center industry from even coming to the state.

“We’re putting up another sign that says Delaware is not open for business. And when we continue to do this, then we hurt everybody,” Rep. Jeff Hilovsky (R-Long Neck/Oak Orchard) previously said about HB 233. 

The legislature only has 10 days left in its session to consider these and many other bills in the pipeline. 

HB 445 will likely come before the House Natural Resources & Energy committee, chaired by Heffernan, at its next meeting on Wednesday, June 10. HB 233 has already passed through that committee, and Burns said he is not sure when it will come before the House for a vote. 

Data centers would also have to provide a percentage of their power from renewable sources like solar panels. | Photo by American Public Power Association on Unsplash

What would the bills do?

The original version of HB 233 requires the Public Service Commission, the state body in charge of regulating utilities, to create a “large-load tariff,” or electricity rate and service agreement.

The Public Service Commission is already creating this tariff, but the bill added specific requirements for what it would have to include. 

The recent substitute for HB 233 combines this original proposal with Senate Bill 205, adding a requirement that large energy users like data centers enter into transmission and energy service agreements meant to prevent costs from being shifted to other electricity users. 

These agreements give the Public Service Commission and utilities some leverage to potentially stop data center projects from moving forward. 

Normally, energy utilities are required to serve any company that requests to be connected to the grid. But under this bill, if large energy users and utilities can’t come to a consensus on the service agreements — or if the Public Service Commission denies them — the utilities are not required to connect the projects.

The bill also requires data centers and other large energy users to be the first to be cut off from power in a blackout unless they generate renewable energy.

HB 445 says that data center companies must produce a quarter of the energy they use in Delaware when they begin operations, then produce all of the energy they use in the state within 10 years. 

That energy production has to follow the state’s renewable energy portfolio standards, which requires that Delaware’s utilities derive 40% of their energy from renewable sources by 2035. The bill allows nuclear energy to count toward that percentage. 

A representative from New Castle County’s Chamber of Commerce said in a written statement that it opposes both bills because there is not enough time in the session to deliberate them. The statement also says the chamber and trade unions “are concerned about the significantly negative impact that the legislation would have on Delaware’s economy.” 

Delaware Building Trades did not respond to several requests for comment. 

Public Advocate Jameson Tweedie, who is responsible for representing the public in state decisions about energy policy, said he supports both bills because they could help address the potential energy supply/demand imbalance that could drastically raise electricity prices. 

“The risks to ratepayers are dramatic if we don’t have enough generation capacity for the new enormous [energy] users,” he said.   

Increasing data center regulation across the country

Delaware joins states across the country that are proposing data center regulations to protect ratepayers and promote clean energy.

Hansen said the electric service agreement required in her bill is based on Minnesota’s new law with a similar provision. Sponsored by a Republican representative and Democratic senator, the bill passed the House and Senate there with wide margins. 

She said data center companies and other legislators were hesitant about her original proposal because it did not exist in other states. While electric services agreements are not very common in data center regulation bills, at least one state has done it before. 

“We like being the first state on a number of things, but this was not going to be one of those things,” Hansen said.

The New Castle County Chamber of Commerce called a recent Pennsylvania data center regulation bill “a more balanced approach” than the Delaware proposals. 

That bill does not create any new type of service agreement, but it directs the state’s public utilities commission, a similar public body to Delaware’s Public Service Commission, to review contracts for their impact on electric service reliability and affordability for residential customers.

Similar to HB 233, the proposal gives the commission the teeth to deny a contract if it negatively affects electric bills or reliability. 

Similar to Heffernan’s clean energy initiative, the Pennsylvania bill also requires data centers to generate 10% of the energy they use as renewable energy by 2027, 14.5% by 2030, and 32% by 2035. 

Lauren Posey, an environmental policy advocate for Pennsylvania environmental rights nonprofit Protect PT, said the feasibility of a clean energy requirement depends on a state’s renewable energy breakdown. 

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, about 8% of Delaware’s total in-state net energy generation came from renewable resources in 2025. Pennsylvania gets about 5% from renewables.

While she believes it would be better for data centers to use renewable energy, Posey explained HB 445 could be hard to pass since Delaware is already lagging behind in renewable energy and relies heavily on natural gas like Pennsylvania.

“Delaware certainly has a much loftier goal than Pennsylvania does,” Posey said. “I don’t think that’s a bad thing. Shoot for the moon, maybe you’ll land among the stars.”

Democrats make up all the sponsors on Pennsylvania’s bill. Republican representatives have criticized the bill, saying it doesn’t do enough to bring more power generation to the state.

The measure passed the Pennsylvania State House on March 24 and now sits in the Senate.

The post Bills would require, incentivize Delaware data centers to bring their own power appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 05:00

As a former NBA player, I know that criticism is part of the game. But in an age when players are under attack constantly, the Knick star is an example to us all

The entire basketball world is singing the praises of Jalen Brunson and rightfully so. He has led the Knicks to the NBA finals for the first time since 1999 and has united the entire city of New York in a unique way.

On every New York street you can see people of every race, color, creed, nationality, religion, economic status and political affiliation unified in excitement as the team seek their first NBA title since 1973. While older Knicks fans break out their Patrick Ewing, Charles Oakley and John Starks jerseys, younger fans have the names of Brunson, Josh Hart and Karl-Anthony Towns on their backs. Chants of “MVP!” fill the air in every New York borough every time Jalen Brunson steps up to the free-throw line. Knicks fans have staged watch parties on the sidewalks, in the parks, and on the corners. All of New York is, in the words of JadaKiss, “outside”.

Continue reading...

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-08 05:00

A collage including a photograph of a child playing while surrounded by a red shape representing a stop sign, a school bus and a city bus.
Illustration by Shoshana Gordon/ProPublica. Source images: Jesse Costa/WBUR, Alyssa Sieb via Nappy, PatrickRich via Flickr.

On the day 5-year-old Lens Joseph was killed by a Boston Public Schools bus last year, the driver had already struck a postal truck, ignored a stop sign and missed several stops, prosecutors said. When he got to Lens’ house, he dropped him off on the wrong side of the street and then ran over the kindergartner as he crossed in front of the bus.

Transdev, a multinational company that has been the city’s sole bus contractor since 2013, hired and trained the driver of the bus that killed Lens. Yet a federal safety database shows no sign that the company was involved in the April 2025 crash. WBUR and ProPublica found at least 60 fatal Transdev crashes in the last decade, but the federal database shows only 18 under the company’s name. That means 42 fatal crashes are not identified as Transdev’s.

This missing information is important because the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, which oversees commercial motor vehicles, relies on it to pinpoint unsafe companies.

But the process the agency uses to collect information is faulty: It identifies only a fraction of a company’s fatal crashes.

As a result, the full safety record of Transdev, one of the largest private operators of public transit in the U.S., remains a secret to regulators, the public and the local government agencies that might award it a contract.

“That is a serious, serious gap in safety,” said Peter Kurdock, general counsel with Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, a nonprofit that promotes transportation safety and has pushed for improvements in crash data for years. “And it’s a serious, serious shortcoming when it comes to the regulation of these carriers by FMCSA.”

Help Further Our Reporting on Bus Crashes

If you are a current or former FMCSA employee, or someone in the industry with information about the agency or the safety of school buses, transit buses or motor coaches, our team wants to hear from you. Willoughby Mariano can be reached by phone at 617-358-0802, Signal at willoughbymariano.55 and email at wmariano@bu.edu.

The deadly crashes associated with Transdev span at least 16 states and involve pedestrians, at least two bicyclists and other vehicles. Lens’ death and at least two others have resulted in criminal charges against the bus drivers. Transdev did not provide comment on any specific crash.

The crash data feeds into FMCSA’s online Safety Measurement System, which makes safety records public for bus companies nationwide. Instead of listing Transdev, that data often lists collisions under the government agency that hired Transdev or the name of a company it acquired. Also, when crashes are listed under other names, companies that oversee the buses involved are not required to claim the collisions. The agency’s instructions for how to determine the motor carrier involved in a crash are interpreted differently by police who respond to the scene, the news organizations found.

Based in France, Transdev has vast U.S. operations. It says it holds contracts in busing, light rail and other forms of public transit in 46 states, plus Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. The multibillion-dollar company employs more than 30,000 people nationally. Transdev’s only school bus contract is with Boston Public Schools.

Transdev U.S. CEO Laura Hendricks declined an interview. In a written statement, Transdev said it complies with “federally mandated reporting standards.”

“Transparency and continuous improvement are central to our safety approach, and we work closely with oversight agencies and our clients to ensure our practices meet or exceed expectations,” the statement said.

The statement did not respond to questions about why Transdev did not ensure crashes the company was involved in were logged as part of its safety record. It did stress that reporting crashes is the responsibility of law enforcement.

At the publications’ request, Transdev reviewed lists of the crashes that reporters tied to the company. Transdev confirmed that most of them matched with collisions in their records but did not have records for all of them.

The FMCSA did not respond to requests to interview Derek Barrs, the head of the agency, or emails with a list of questions.

Other than the federal database, there are few ways to connect crashes to particular bus companies. A different database, run by the Federal Transit Administration, records transit crashes but doesn’t connect them to contractors. Separately, FMCSA requires all bus companies to keep an internal register of how many serious crashes take place during their operations. However, those records are not open to the public, and companies are not obligated to submit the information to regulators unless they ask for it. Transdev declined the publications’ request for its register.

So while Transdev may know about its own collisions, federal agencies and the public often don’t.

Darin Jones, a former FMCSA Midwest field administrator, spent more than 35 years in federal transportation safety and often oversaw investigations. He said investigators are supposed to consider a company’s serious crashes as part of their assessment. If many are logged inconsistently, they cannot determine whether Transdev or any other company is operating safely.

“ The knowledge of this motor carrier’s operation, any motor carrier’s operation, is critical,” said Jones. “If you don’t have the full picture of an operation, how do you truly know what’s going on?”

At least in Boston, Transdev appears to have had no serious school bus crashes over 10 years. But that’s not true. WBUR and ProPublica uncovered at least 71 serious crashes involving the company that weren’t under its name.

Kurdock says the FMCSA needs to fix its safety data, especially in Boston.

“The  agency needs to be much more proactive in ensuring that the data they do have is accurate, even more so when you’re talking about a carrier that is operating a transportation service for schoolchildren,” Kurdock said. “If there is one bipartisan issue left here in Washington, D.C., it’s that schoolchildren should have a safe ride.”

Transdev Crashes Across the Country Were Recorded Under Different Names

Since 2016, about two-thirds of Transdev’s 60 fatal crashes have appeared in federal safety data under the names of a company it acquired or agencies that contracted with them. Click a state to see more details about the Transdev crashes we found there and how they were recorded in the federal database.

A table showing Transdev fatal bus crashes by state, sorted in descending order. Arizona and California lead with 12 fatal crashes each, followed by Nevada (8), Colorado and New York (5 each), Massachusetts (3), Louisiana, Maryland, North Carolina, Texas, and Virginia (2 each), and Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, Mississippi, and South Carolina (1 each).
Note: includes crashes from 2016 through 2025.

Nurse, Cyclist Among Those Killed

When a crash happens, local law enforcement fill out accident reports that document the location, identities of the drivers and companies involved. This information becomes part of the federal safety database and helps regulators connect a crash to a particular company.

But the news organizations found multiple examples where that system masked the company running the bus lines. For most of these crashes, the database is also unclear on whether the drivers violated traffic laws.

In Lens’ case, the motor carrier is listed as “CITY OF BOSTON MVMB,” an abbreviation for the city’s Motor Vehicle Management Bureau, which acquires and manages municipal vehicles. There is no mention of the school district or Transdev being involved.

Another crash killed registered nurse Renée Shea in southern Massachusetts in 2017. It appears under the name of the Greater Attleboro Taunton Regional Transit Authority, not Transdev, the agency’s contractor at the time. A bus made a left-hand turn into the path of the Jeep SUV she was driving, according to a police report. The bus company’s driver, Margaret Correia, may have been distracted because she began to take off her jacket before she made her turn, the report found. She could not be reached for comment. 

Correia pleaded guilty to misdemeanor negligent operation of a motor vehicle, court records show. A GATRA spokeswoman said Shea’s family received $1 million from the area transit agency’s insurer.

Charlie Shea said his ex-wife was a generous mother who had taken custody of her granddaughter.

A man and a woman stand close together and look at the camera. There is a crowd of people in the background.
A 2006 photo of Charlie Shea and then-wife Renée Shea, who was killed by a transit bus. He wants her death included as part of Transdev’s safety record. “It’d make them more accountable,” he said. Courtesy of Charlie Shea

As a former MBTA bus driver, Charlie Shea said he continues to be shocked by the bus driver’s actions.

Driving and taking your jacket off “ain’t a bright idea for anybody,” he said.

He said his ex-wife’s death, like all crashes, needs to be part of Transdev’s safety record.

“It’d make them more accountable,” Shea said. “They would have to use their safety records to get contracts from the state or the counties or from schools.”

Outside Massachusetts, there are dozens of other fatal Transdev crashes in the database with no mention of the company.

In a November 2023 Las Vegas crash, federal records list the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada as the motor carrier of a transit bus that killed bicyclist David Ortiz in a crosswalk. Court records state driver Johnelle Johnson, a Transdev employee, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter charge. A lawsuit by Ortiz’s family against Transdev and the driver was settled for an undisclosed sum.

Transdev has operated the Las Vegas-area bus system since 2023, when it acquired First Transit, which originally held the contract, the commission’s records show.

Although First Transit is now part of Transdev, at least five fatal crashes across the United States are still recorded under First Transit’s name after the acquisition.

Beyond the fatal crashes, WBUR and ProPublica also took a close look at all of Transdev’s serious, but nonfatal, crashes with Boston Public Schools. Those include crashes where any person was transported to a hospital or a vehicle was towed.

In a December 2024 crash, a bus lurched onto a sidewalk outside Curley K-8 School in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood. The bus struck an 8-year-old boy with autism and his school aide before smashing into two fences, a police report states. The crash sent both victims to the hospital with long-term injuries, their civil lawsuits against Transdev allege.

A bus camera showed that Transdev driver Vitony Laguerre’s eyes were closed and his head was back before he pressed the accelerator, police stated. He pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor charge of negligent operation of a motor vehicle.

The federal record lists the city of Boston, not Transdev, as the carrier.

Attorneys for Laguerre and both crash victims did not comment for this story. Laguerre and Transdev denied they were negligent in the crash, according to records in an ongoing civil case.

Boston Public Schools Superintendent Mary Skipper declined an interview request. A spokesperson did not answer a list of questions, but in a written statement said that the district follows established safety protocols and has worked with Transdev over several years to improve accountability and performance.

“We will continue to work with our transportation partner to monitor performance, address issues as they arise, and ensure every student gets to and from school safely,” the statement said.

Listen to WBUR’s Story

Local Law Enforcement Takes Over

The current system of collecting and publishing bus crash data began as part of a federal push for safer roads. In the early days of this work, in the 1970s and 1980s, rules put the burden on bus and truck companies to self-report serious crashes to the U.S. Department of Transportation. Each operator had to report its fatal bus crashes in person or by telephone “as soon as possible”; crashes that resulted in injuries or serious vehicle damage had to be reported in writing, and in triplicate.

But both companies and federal safety investigators complained the process was burdensome and inadequate. For one thing, investigators could not tell whether companies failed to report their accidents, said Jones, the former FMCSA regional administrator.

Regulators and traffic safety researchers thought they could do better. At the time, many states were already collecting crash information electronically from local police departments.

“Why burden the industry with reporting?” Jones said. “We had a more accurate record from the states.”

So in 1993, the federal Department of Transportation decided to end self-reporting by carriers. Today, local law enforcement agencies send their bus and truck crash information to state agencies, which submit it to FMCSA.

After investigating, a local officer must fill out a form that asks for the name of the bus company, or “carrier,” that is involved in the crash and the company’s U.S. Department of Transportation identifier. FMCSA training material recommends the officer determine which company should be included in the form by figuring out which entity “controls” or “directs” the bus.

For transit and school buses, this decision can be surprisingly complicated. Transdev employees may be behind the wheel, and the company may manage the daily operations of the buses, but the transit agencies or a school district may choose the routes. So who is in charge? In these cases, Transdev’s role often disappears in the data.

Transportation experts and former FMCSA officials said bus companies can voluntarily inform the agency that crashes under other names belong to them.

But Alex Scott, a University of Tennessee, Knoxville transportation expert, said companies rarely update the federal record, according to research he published in 2021. “There’s not really an incentive for them to account for all of their crashes,” Scott said. “If a company could just magically make them go away, of course they would.”

Boston City Councilor Erin Murphy, a former teacher for the district where Lens attended school, has become a vocal critic of how Transdev operates its buses. She was shocked when she learned from a reporter that the company is not required to take steps to ensure all its crashes are part of its federal safety record.

“Horrifying,” she said. “Why would they be able to not report accidents — one that was a fatal accident? There’s nothing worse than a fatal accident.”

“There’s not really an incentive for them to account for all of their crashes. … If a company could just magically make them go away, of course they would.”

Alex Scott, a transportation expert at University of Tennessee, Knoxville

After several passenger bus crashes with multiple fatalities, Congress passed legislation in 2012 that gave FMCSA powers to conduct more comprehensive inspections into the safety operations of bus companies.

When Transdev underwent one of these reviews in 2016, investigators uncovered what they described as “numerous crashes” that were not listed as part of the contractor’s safety record, according to the inspection report. There were enough crashes that the FMCSA planned to give Transdev a “conditional” safety rating, which would mean the company had insufficient safety procedures.

Because local police departments may not “be aware or equipped” to report crashes to the FMCSA, the carrier should report them, the report stated.

“This self reporting is required for accurate evaluation by FMCSA and the accurate safety record of the carrier,” it added.

The company successfully appealed the decision to lower its safety rating by arguing its drivers could not have prevented many of the crashes investigators uncovered.

FMCSA investigators urged Transdev to report to the agency when its role in a crash is not reflected in safety data, yet the company’s name continues to be absent from many of them. Transdev did not comment on this recommendation.

A Father Seeks “Justice”

Lens’ death last year became a local flashpoint, shedding new light on Transdev’s safety procedures and raising questions about its ability to keep the city’s children safe.

The driver of the school bus that killed Lens should not have been behind the wheel that day, and the bus never should have been on the road, according to information from city officials and prosecutors.

Driver Jean Charles became ineligible to operate a school bus in December 2024 after a required driving credential expired, according to a statement from Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s office last year. But the company did not take him off the road then. In the weeks before Lens died, Charles had two minor collisions and underwent remedial training, it said, and soon returned to work.

On the day of Lens’ death, Charles began his shift without conducting a required pretrip inspection, prosecutors alleged. One of the bus’s four rear tires was flat, and a safety crossing bar was broken. Transdev is also in charge of maintenance, but it’s unclear how long the bus had these problems.

Had Charles followed procedures, the bus would have been sent for repairs, prosecutors said. And yet Charles set off on his route to UP Academy Dorchester, where Lens climbed aboard.

At 2:42 p.m., Charles dropped off Lens and his 11-year-old-cousin on the wrong side of their street. To get home, they would have to cross in front of the bus.

A side view of a man walking through a government building.
Transdev school bus driver Jean Charles arrives at his arraignment hearing on felony involuntary vehicular homicide in March. Charles drove the bus that ran over and killed kindergartner Lens Joseph. Robin Lubbock/WBUR

Neighbor Carolyn Tomlinson was inside her home cleaning windows when the cries of a child brought her outside. She followed the sound to the corner of Glenwood Avenue and Washington Street, where she saw the cousin screaming. Lens was on the ground.

“I’m looking at Lens, just lying there,” Tomlinson said. “And as a mom it broke my heart.”

Tomlinson said she dialed 911 and held the cousin in her arms to comfort her.

“I was praying with her, saying, ‘It’s going to be OK. God’s got us,’” Tomlinson said.

Lens’ father, Esaie Joseph, had parked his truck in North Carolina after a day on the road as a long-haul trucker when his brother told him about the crash in a phone call. Hours later, he got word that his boy was dead.

Lens was Joseph’s only son, and he was self-assured beyond his years, his father said in an interview with WBUR. His nickname was “smart guy.”

Every time Lens asked Joseph for a new toy, he’d begin with, “Dad, you know I’m a smart guy?” the father recalled.

Joseph has kept his son’s soccer ball and toy cars, and he smiled as he sorted through them on a recent evening: a police car, because Lens wanted to be an officer. A Spider-Man-themed car because he loved the superhero.

A man leaning over and pulling two trucks out of a basket of toys.
Esaie Joseph, Lens’ father, looks through his son’s favorite toys, which he kept after the boy’s death. He said he is suing Transdev because he wants the company to improve safety. Jesse Costa/WBUR

After he lost Lens, Joseph stopped driving trucks and moved with his relatives to a new neighborhood, away from the scene of the crash. He now is a driver for a city of Boston van service for seniors.

He and his family are suing Transdev and Charles, who resigned from Transdev soon after the crash. Joseph said he wants some good to come from Lens’ death, and for Transdev to operate safely.

“The first thing I hope is justice for him,” he said. “They have to care for safety so something like this will not happen again.”

Charles pleaded not guilty to felony involuntary manslaughter and other charges in March. His attorney did not respond to requests for comment.

Transdev did not comment about the crash and said the company had discussed its safety measures publicly during a Boston City Council meeting last August. The company and Charles denied in civil court filings that they were negligent or reckless.

Transdev is in the third year of its five-year, $651 million contract with Boston Public Schools and transports about 19,000 of the district’s students every school day. It is currently looking to expand in Boston, where it is one of three finalists for a multibillion-dollar commuter rail contract.

To this day, the federal record does not show that Transdev was the operator of the bus that killed Lens. Neighbor Tomlinson wants it to be part of Transdev’s safety record so regulators can hold them accountable, and agencies and school systems can understand the companies they are hiring.

“It should be visible to the ones that need it, so we can see it and keep our babies safe,” Tomlinson said.

A yellow school bus on a city street next to a sidewalk memorial made up of stuffed animals and flowers.
A Boston Public Schools bus drives past a memorial where Lens Joseph was run over in April 2025 by his own school bus. Erin Clark/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

The post A School Bus Killed a 5-Year-Old. The Crash Is Among Dozens Missing From the Bus Company’s Federal Safety Record. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-08 04:48

Companies such as Apple and Google have until September to install software or face legislation, says PM

Apple and Google have been given until September to install software that blocks explicit images on children’s mobile phones or face legislation to force them to do so, Keir Starmer said on Monday.

The prime minister said tech companies must activate nudity-detection algorithms or other technical solutions on smartphones and tablets to prevent users taking photos or sharing images of genitalia unless they are verified as adults.

Continue reading...

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 04:37

After an eight-year hiatus, Newark Nite picked up right where it left off, drawing a large crowd to Main Street on Friday evening.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 00:30

Terron Harmon has been a part of the Delaware School for the Deaf for virtually his whole life, starting as a young child and now finishing as a high school senior.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-08 00:15

The Brennen School, which serves students with autism, celebrated the graduation of 22 students during a ceremony June 5 in the Newark High School auditorium.

2026-06-09 20:04
2026-06-05 17:17

Ohio voters are witnessing a battle of campaign television ads as each Senate candidate tries to tie the other to Jeffrey Epstein — by way of donations from those with some link to the late convicted sex offender.

Democrat Sherrod Brown’s campaign charges that Republican Sen. Jon Husted “took more money from Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirators than anyone else in Washington, and then voted to keep the Epstein files secret.” The donations total $116,892 over more than 20 years. Husted’s TV spot, meanwhile, calls Brown “a liar,” saying that Husted “voted to release the Epstein files” and that Brown took $100,000 “from Epstein associates.” Those contributions date back to 2005.

Whether the campaign donations are problematic is a matter of opinion that we leave to voters to decide. We’ll lay out who gave the money.

In Husted’s case, the contributions all came from Les Wexner, the founder and former CEO of the retail company L Brands, which included The Limited and Victoria’s Secret and is based in Ohio. Wexner, who knew Epstein and hired him to be his financial manager for many years, was listed in a 2019 FBI document as a “co-conspirator,” hence the description in the Brown ad. But he has never been charged with a crime. In February, after his inclusion in the document became public, Wexner said he “never witnessed nor had any knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activity.”

This year, Husted donated about $34,000 of the more recent Wexner donations to a charity, his campaign said, noting this was “all the funds that were available.”

In Brown’s case, the Husted campaign mined the Epstein files for mentions of Brown donors. A few have a well-known connection to Epstein, such as Larry Summers, the former Treasury Secretary who announced in February that he would resign from Harvard University after some of his correspondence with Epstein was released. Summers also hasn’t been accused or charged with any crime related to his friendship with Epstein. Some of the others who donated to Brown have a tangential connection to Epstein, or it’s unclear if they knew him, such as being mentioned by Epstein in an email.

As for Husted’s votes on the Epstein files, neither campaign tells the whole story. Husted voted against a Democratic amendment to release them — in a largely party-line vote — and, two months later, supported releasing them — in a unanimous consent vote on standalone legislation.

Brown was a longtime Ohio senator, from 2007 to 2025. Husted was appointed in January 2025 by Gov. Mike DeWine to fill the Senate seat vacated by Vice President JD Vance. The race is rated a toss-up by the Cook Political Report.

Both of the TV ads we examine here started airing in late May, according to AdImpact.

Husted’s Votes

We’ll start with the issue that’s easier to explain: whether Husted “voted to keep the Epstein files secret” or “voted to release the Epstein files,” as the TV ads from each campaign say. The senator essentially did both. The campaigns, though, point only to the vote that supports their position.

In this photo illustration, printouts from the Epstein files released by the Department of Justice are shown on Feb. 13 in Chicago, Illinois. Photo Illustration by Scott Olson/Getty Images.

On Sept. 10, Husted — and all but two Republican senators — voted to block a Democratic amendment to a defense budget and policy bill. The amendment, proposed by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, called for the attorney general to release all unclassified documents related to Epstein, including Department of Justice investigations of him and his associates, and information related to Epstein’s suicide.

In July 2019, federal authorities charged Epstein, a wealthy financier, with sex trafficking of minors, alleging that he “sexually exploited and abused dozens of underage girls by enticing them to engage in sex acts with him in exchange for money” between 2002 and 2005. A month after his arrest, Epstein died in prison. His death was ruled a suicide by the DOJ and the New York City medical examiner.

The Brown campaign has linked Husted’s September vote to a $3,500 contribution from Wexner two months earlier. “Just last year Husted took a maximum donation from Epstein’s co-conspirator and weeks later voted to block the release of the Epstein files. The record is clear,” Patrick Eisenhauer, Brown’s campaign manager, said in an email to us. (That is the maximum amount an individual can give to a candidate committee per election.)

At the time of the September vote, President Donald Trump was opposed to the DOJ releasing its files on Epstein. The two Republicans who voted in favor of releasing the files were Sens. Rand Paul and Josh Hawley.

Asked in a Feb. 18 deposition before a congressional committee whether he lobbied Husted or anyone else to block the release of the Epstein files, Wexner said, “Absolutely not.”

The Husted campaign noted that the September vote wasn’t on the standalone Epstein Files Transparency Act and said that it was “inappropriate” for Schumer to try to add the act as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act. “The NDAA is a bipartisan piece of legislation that covers military pay and benefits, and national security policy. Given that it is completely inappropriate and irresponsible to toy with military benefits and our country’s national defense, the Senate voted to table the amendment,” Amy Natoce, the campaign’s communications director, told us in an email.

Natoce contended that there was “a single recorded vote on releasing the Epstein files” — the Nov. 19 vote on the bill on its own. In a May 29 CNN interview, Brown argued this was “no real vote.” On Nov. 19, the bill passed by unanimous consent, meaning that no senator objected. Husted, therefore, along with the rest of the Senate, supported it.

The bill was signed into law the same day by Trump, who had changed his position and backed the legislation. The House had passed it by a 427-1 vote.

Donations to Husted

The Brown ad says that Husted “took more money from Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirators than anyone else in Washington,” and on screen, it says the contributions were 10 times more than what any other sitting senator got from “co-conspirators.” It doesn’t mention a specific dollar amount. The campaign sent us support for the ad, which details $116,892 in donations from 2001 to 2025 from Wexner.

That total includes $3,500 to Husted’s Senate campaign, $76,400 in donations for Husted’s state campaigns, and $36,992 that went to DeWine’s gubernatorial campaign when Husted was running on the ticket for lieutenant governor or to the DeWine-Husted transition fund.

The Brown campaign lists other “co-conspirators” or potential co-conspirators in FBI documents and then provides figures showing Husted’s total donations from Wexner are 10 times or more than what any other sitting senator received. For this article, we’re not delving into what other senators received. We’ll focus on the donations to Husted. 

The Husted campaign hasn’t disputed the amount received from Wexner. And it’s not surprising that the Ohio-born billionaire would donate money to politicians in his state. Wexner is a well-known figure in the Buckeye State. His name graces three buildings on the campus of Ohio State University.

He also has made some sizeable contributions to Republicans. Wexner gave $250,000 in October to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which works to elect Republicans to the Senate, according to Federal Election Commission data, and $250,000 in 2024 to a super PAC supporting Matt Dolan, who ran (and lost) in the Republican primary for Senate that year.

As for the “co-conspirator” label, it’s true that an August 2019 FBI email listed Wexner among eight Epstein “co-conspirators.” Wexner’s name was unredacted and made public in early February. The email listed him as a “secondary” co-conspirator and said that “[t]here is limited evidence regarding his involvement.” It also said that the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York “is currently in contact with his attorneys and a subpoena has been served.”

Wexner’s attorney has said that he cooperated with the Justice Department and was told in 2019 by a federal prosecutor that he wasn’t considered a co-conspirator. He hasn’t been charged with any crime related to his relationship with Epstein, whom he had hired as a financial adviser decades ago.

About a week after Wexner’s inclusion in the August 2019 FBI document came to light, Husted, along with other Ohio lawmakers, said he would donate Wexner’s contributions to charity. The campaign told us he had donated $34,300 to Freedom a la Cart, a nonprofit that helps survivors of sex trafficking. “Those are all the funds that were available because the remainder were received in previous campaign cycles and spent during those cycles,” Natoce said.

In his prepared statement to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on Feb. 18, Wexner said: “I was naïve, foolish, and gullible to put any trust in Jeffrey Epstein. He was a con man. And while I was conned, I have done nothing wrong and have nothing to hide.” He said he “never witnessed nor had any knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activity. I was never a participant nor co-conspirator in any of Epstein’s illegal activities.”

Wexner met Epstein in “the mid-to-late 1980s,” he said, and later hired him to manage his personal finances, giving Epstein power of attorney. Wexner claims that Epstein stole “vast sums” of money from his family but later returned a “substantial amount.” Around late 2007, Wexner said, he ended his association with Epstein, who was charged in Florida in 2006 with solicitation of prostitution. He pleaded guilty two years later to that charge and to solicitation of prostitution with a minor. “In light of his eventual guilty plea and deception of our family, we completely severed our relationship with Epstein,” Wexner said in his statement.

Donations to Brown

In pushing back on the Brown campaign’s criticism of the Wexner donations, the Husted campaign has cited contributions to Brown from what it calls “Epstein associates.” The Husted TV ad claims Brown “took a hundred grand” from these associates, citing on screen a March 7 New York Post article that puts the figure at “more than $124,000.” The article says that “Brown and Husted are far from the only politicians who took money from individuals with close ties to Epstein.”

A few of the people on the list the Husted campaign provided to us do have established, close ties to Epstein. But many don’t, and it’s unclear whether some on the list knew him.

The campaign cited 14 people who gave contributions to Brown, including Abigail Wexner, Les Wexner’s wife. She donated $10,200 to Brown’s campaigns from 2011 to 2017, and additional funds to his leadership political action committee from 2017 to 2019. The Husted campaign argues that this counts as also taking money from Les Wexner. “As a married couple, Abigail and Les Wexner share assets,” Natoce told us.

In a press release about the ad, Natoce said, “Brown is literally using Epstein money to run TV ads about Epstein money!”

None of the donors the Husted campaign identified has been charged with a crime related to Epstein, nor has any been identified as a co-conspirator. As we said, many have weak links to the late sex offender. For instance, one donor is mentioned in the Epstein files because Epstein asked an assistant for her email address. Another was invited to a dinner party Epstein was having and said he couldn’t attend. Another was among a list of names Epstein emailed to himself titled “billionaire.”

The campaign also flagged $20,400 in donations from billionaire philanthropist George Soros, citing a September 2019 FBI interview with a person who said he was a victim of Epstein and claimed Soros was present on a yacht with Epstein and several others and witnessed him being sexually abused. The FBI document said the alleged victim’s conversation with the FBI, which occurred after Epstein’s July 2019 arrest, “suggested some degree of possible mental illness or emotional instability.” The document also said this person wasn’t able to provide supporting evidence or “the identities of any witnesses to support his claim of victimization.”

Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted in 2021 for helping Epstein to recruit, groom and abuse minors, told the DOJ that she didn’t think Epstein knew Soros.

Some on the Husted campaign’s list either had a documented relationship with Epstein or what appear to be stronger links. Summers, the former Treasury secretary who resigned from his position at Harvard this year, had a friendship with Epstein, who hosted a 60th birthday dinner party for Summers in 2014. The released Epstein documents show Summers had dinner with Epstein in 2018, appeared to get romantic advice from Epstein that year and was corresponding with him in 2019. Epstein was arrested that July by federal law enforcement. Summers has called his relationship with Epstein a “major error in judgement.”

Summers gave $10,300 to Brown’s campaigns in 2024 and 2025.

Two others that the Husted campaign cited, including in the press release about the TV ad, are Casey Wasserman, an entertainment executive, and attorney Brad Karp, who donated $5,400 and $2,000 to Brown’s campaigns, respectively. Wasserman exchanged emails with Maxwell in 2003 in which he said he missed her and asked, “can we book that massage now?” He told the Hollywood Reporter early this year that he regretted the correspondence, which took place “long before her horrific crimes came to light,” adding that he “never had a personal or business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.”

Karp sent an email to Epstein in 2015 thanking him for an invite to an event at Epstein’s home that Karp called “truly ‘once in a lifetime’ in every way.” Epstein responded that “there are many many nights of unique talents. you will be invited often.” The same year, Epstein asked Karp if it was possible to revoke a woman’s tourist visa, and Karp responded that he would work on it. 

A 2003 email in the files said that media executive Barry Diller “would like to take a hike on the island” and indicated that Epstein had approved it. Diller — who donated $5,400 to Brown — said this year that “I am probably the only one who went to the island to see the architecture rather than the inhabitants.”

Husted’s camp also cited Reid Hoffman, who gave $7,000 to Brown’s campaign in 2025. Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and a well-known Democratic donor, had meetings with Epstein as late as 2018. He said this year that he knew Epstein “because of a fundraising relationship with MIT, which I very much regret.”

In the Husted campaign press release, Husted accuses Brown of “hypocrisy,” saying, “Why won’t he donate the money he received from Epstein associates to charity?”

When asked by CNN about donating contributions from Abigail Wexner or Summers, Brown said that those donations are “not tied in any way the way the co-conspirator” donations are. He said it was “not real reporting to make those comparisons.”


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The post Ohio Senate Candidates Spar Over Donations Tied, Loosely or Not, to Epstein appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-05 15:39

A man was critically injured in a motorcycle crash on Otts Chapel Road on Friday morning.

2026-06-09 08:04
2026-06-05 10:32

From Values to Action: Where do LGBTIQ+ rights sit in UK foreign policy? 30 June 2026 — 17:30 TO 19:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

In an increasingly contested world order and with global threats to LGBTIQ+ rights, experts discuss a path forward for LGBTIQ+ rights and the rule of law in UK foreign policy.

In an increasingly contested world order and global threats to LGBTIQ+ rights, experts discuss a path forward for LGBTIQ+ rights and the rule of law in UK foreign policy.

LGBTIQ+ rights are a meaningful but increasingly complicated pillar of UK foreign policy. The UK has positioned LGBTIQ+ rights as an integral aspect of its foreign policy, from diplomacy to development and international advocacy. But UK foreign policy on LGBTIQ+ issues has been shaped by challenges of aid cuts, changing political priorities at home and the wider world order. LGBTIQ+ people in the UK continue to face significant systemic issues, including hate crimes, discrimination, healthcare disparities and transphobia. UK foreign policy also operates in an increasingly contested normative world order, with rising global backlash against LGBTIQ+ rights. 

To commemorate Pride Month, Chatham House’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity Working Group has the privilege of convening a panel bringing together leading voices to examine what lies ahead for the UK’s foreign policy approach towards LGBTIQ+ rights.

  • What role does advocacy for LGBTIQ+ rights currently play in UK foreign policy
  • How might the UK’s commitment to protecting the rule of law and LGBTIQ+ rights - at home and abroad - advance its soft power?
  • How does the UK’s domestic record on LGBTIQ+ rights affect its legitimacy as a global advocate?

This panel is followed by a drinks reception. 

2026-06-10 20:04
2026-06-05 06:00

A man in a plaid shirt and jeans leans over a wooden desk, looking intently at a laptop screen surrounded by papers, maps and campaign flyers.
North Dakota state Rep. Eric Murphy at home planning a day of canvassing in his Grand Forks district. Murphy, an incumbent Republican, faces a contested primary election from conservative challengers after he introduced a bill to expand abortion access last year. Dan Koeck for ProPublica

If Eric Murphy loses his primary election on June 9, he believes he already knows one reason why.

Last year, the North Dakota state representative, a Republican, tried to expand the window of pregnancy in which women could access abortion. The state legislature had banned it for almost everyone from the moment of conception.

Tied up in court, the ban hadn’t yet gone into effect. But Murphy wanted to lock in a less restrictive law, making abortion accessible up to 15 weeks and even later for women whose doctors deemed it a medical necessity.

To convince his fellow legislators, he read out loud from two ProPublica stories about women in Texas who died without lifesaving care. “Physicians felt compelled to follow the law,” he said in a hearing, “and both women died so that an inane law could be followed.”

A conservative colleague had warned him not to file the bill, Murphy told ProPublica, recalling the man’s words: “I can no longer protect you from who’s going to come after you.”

There was some truth to that sentiment.

At least four Republican state lawmakers who challenged severe abortion restrictions lost support from anti-abortion groups and key party allies and went on to lose primary elections, ProPublica found.

The blueprint in those races was remarkably similar. Opponents either embraced stricter abortion policies or avoided the issue altogether. Anti-abortion organizations campaigned against the incumbents, party endorsements shifted to their opponents and activists worked to turn out voters in low-participation primary elections.

In some of the races ProPublica examined, lawmakers who replaced abortion-ban reformers went on to support even stricter abortion legislation. In South Carolina, for instance, two new senators supported a bill to eliminate almost all exceptions to the state’s abortion ban. One provision of the bill would send women convicted of illegally terminating their pregnancies to jail.

Murphy is one of at least two Republican state lawmakers now facing a contested primary after trying to modify their states’ abortion restrictions. Richard Briggs, a state senator from Tennessee, is also fighting to keep his seat. In 2019, Briggs voted for the state’s so-called trigger law — a ban that would snap into place if the federal right to abortion was ever overturned.

But he had second thoughts after that actually happened. A cardiothoracic surgeon, Briggs realized the newly activated law didn’t provide adequate protections for patients having medical complications. “As a medical doctor, I drew the line,” he said in an interview. He introduced bills for a clearer medical exception and protection for doctors who intervened in cases where a fatal fetal anomaly risked the mother’s health.

The latter bill failed and now serves as ammunition for the challenger vying for his seat in the state’s Aug. 6 primary. “My opponent consistently works to weaken Tennessee’s pro life laws,” Kent Morrell says on his campaign website, noting that Tennessee Right to Life had revoked its endorsement of Briggs.

Murphy, who teaches biomedical sciences at the University of North Dakota’s medical school, ultimately did not succeed at reforming the state’s ban. His bill failed 87-6, and the state Supreme Court later reinstated the original ban, which forbids abortion from conception, with exceptions for rape and incest up to six weeks and to save the life of the mother.

The first time Murphy ran for election, his county’s Republican Party had endorsed him. Not this time. Instead, the party endorsed his two challengers, including Jill Chandler, the executive director of a “crisis pregnancy center” who believes abortion should be banned from conception.

She told ProPublica she happened to be present in the committee room when Murphy made the case for his bill. “To know that he was an endorsed Republican candidate from my district and one that I had voted for because of that endorsement was eye-opening,” she said. “I remember thinking, ‘This can never happen again.’”

It was not the first time either Briggs or Murphy had taken positions that aggravated members of their parties in legislatures that have taken sharp turns to the right. Murphy voted against book bans and private school vouchers. Briggs had urged the public to get COVID-19 shots and has said that medical expertise should trump politics in decisions that involve public health.

Briggs expressed confidence in his election chances; he feels that voters agree with the decisions he’s made and noted that his Republican colleague, Sen. Becky Duncan Massey, survived a primary challenge over her support for abortion-ban exceptions.

Murphy believes the “silent majority” supports the intent of his abortion bill, but primary races historically have low turnout. It could come down to a handful of votes, he said.

“I might lose an election over this,” Murphy said, “but would I rather win an election by not doing the right thing?”

The Fallen Reformers

A woman with glasses and a colorful scarf speaks into a microphone from a legislative bench.
As a Republican state representative in Louisiana, Mary DuBuisson sought legislation that would make sure victims of rape and incest could terminate their pregnancies, and she also sponsored a bill that would have allowed women whose pregnancies were not viable to end them. She ended up losing a primary runoff. Melinda Deslatte/AP Photo

Mary DuBuisson, a former state Republican representative in a suburb outside of New Orleans, considers herself passionately “pro-life.” Like Briggs, she voted for her state’s near-total abortion ban in 2019. Three years later, just before Louisiana’s trigger law was implemented, it came before the legislature again.

Recognizing that women would now have to live under the restriction, DuBuisson wanted to make sure victims of rape and incest could terminate their pregnancies. When her colleagues refused to include those exceptions, she became the only Republican to vote against the ban.

A year later, she caused a stir when she sponsored a bill that would have allowed women whose pregnancies were not viable to end them. “To force a woman to carry to term with zero chance of survival is heartless and cruel,” she said at the time.

She didn’t feel it would be controversial. Other Republican women in the House told her she was doing the right thing. But when it was time to vote, another female Republican state lawmaker made a motion that ultimately succeeded at killing the bill in committee. “I mean, I just couldn’t understand,” she said of all her colleagues. “What if this was you, your daughter or granddaughter?”

When she came up for reelection, her primary opponent latched onto her record. Brian Glorioso was an attorney she had handily defeated in 2018. He called her proposed legislation a leftist attempt to circumvent the state’s abortion ban and said any “pro-abortion” doctor would falsely deem a pregnancy nonviable in records just to perform the procedure.

She beat him in the Oct. 14, 2023, primary by 384 votes — not enough to avoid a runoff.

Then, he got some extra support.

On Oct. 16, Louisiana Right to Life told its followers this runoff was key. Glorioso was expected to have a 100% “pro-life” voting record, while DuBuisson’s was 77%.

On Oct. 27, the state’s new governor-elect, Republican Jeff Landry, endorsed him, citing issues other than abortion; he wouldn’t tell ProPublica whether DuBuisson’s record on it played a role. But Landry, who had defended the state’s ban as attorney general, made clear during his campaign that he was “an unwavering defender of life, especially in the face of adversity,” citing his 100% rating from a national anti-abortion group.

“I think it partially cost me my election,” DuBuisson said of her attempts to reform the ban.

History repeated itself the following year, this time in South Carolina.

Three state senators — all Republicans who consider themselves “pro-life” — worked across party lines to defeat an abortion bill that essentially banned the procedure from conception and eliminated rape and incest exceptions. At the time, the state allowed abortion up to 20 weeks.

Sens. Sandy Senn and Penry Gustafson spoke out against limitations on abortion access for victims of rape and incest. Sen. Katrina Shealy, who had the longest tenure for a woman in the state legislature, pushed for making abortion accessible up to 12 weeks and later for exceptions in cases involving rape, incest and fatal fetal anomalies. Ultimately, a six-week window with rape, incest and fatal fetal exceptions became law.

Three women stand at a legislative podium holding up anatomical models of human spines.
South Carolina state Sens. Sandy Senn, left, Katrina Shealy, center, and Penry Gustafson, right, show off model spines they received from Students for Life Action with a message to “get a backbone” and vote to ban abortion at six weeks. The three, nicknamed the “Sister Senators,” ended up losing their reelection bids. Jeffrey Collins/AP Photo

Amid the Statehouse showdown, they were nicknamed the “Sister Senators.” All lost their county GOP’s endorsement to their male opponents.

But the bigger repercussions came from anti-abortion groups that mobilized a multifront grassroots campaign against them. Students for Life Action announced that it generated “37,000 pieces of mail, almost 130,000 personal text messages, more than 51,000 phone calls and thousands of doors knocked” to unseat the trio.

“All three of them got voted out — every single one of them lost because of that decision,” said Dr. Matthew Clark, the executive director of Personhood South Carolina, which believes abortion shouldn’t exist at all and that women who have them should be prosecuted for murder.

Clark, an allergist and Presbyterian pastor, said his group’s desired legislation has a better chance to advance now that the Sister Senators have been replaced.

Matt Leber, who beat Senn, previously co-sponsored a bill as a member of the state House that would make abortion a crime equivalent to homicide. It failed to advance, and Leber withdrew his name as a co-sponsor amid a controversy surrounding it in 2023.

This legislative session, Leber and Carlisle Kennedy, who beat Shealy, supported a bill that carries misdemeanor criminal penalties for women seeking abortions, with jail time up to two years. Senate Bill 1095 passed with supermajority support out of a committee Leber sits on.

The bill died before the session, but watchers of abortion restrictions noticed it got further than any other similarly repressive legislation ever has.

A Fateful Disconnect

A white-haired man in a plaid shirt sits on a porch, listening intently to a woman speaking to him in the foreground.
Murphy speaks to a voter in Grand Forks. Dan Koeck for ProPublica

The outcomes do not neatly match public polling. Surveys in states such as South Carolina and Louisiana have found that many Republican voters support at least some exceptions to abortion bans, including in cases of rape or threats to a woman’s health.

But primary elections often draw only a small share of eligible voters, giving outsized influence to highly engaged activists and organized interest groups.

DuBuisson’s runoff drew about one-third of registered voters. Participation in the South Carolina primaries was lower still. Some races were decided on tiny margins; Senn lost hers by 33 votes.

The North Dakota GOP has moved further to the right on abortion in recent years, even as polling suggested the state’s restrictions were losing support from Republican voters. At its 2026 convention, the party passed a resolution rejecting any policies that “normalize” abortion.

North Dakota is one of the few states with a multimember system, where two representatives and one senator govern together in the same district. District 43, which Murphy currently represents, is one of the only purple districts in an otherwise deeply red state. It includes part of Grand Forks, a growing college town home to the University of North Dakota.

Murphy’s fellow representative, Democrat Zac Ista, told ProPublica he hadn’t been able to make a dent in this legislature. He announced he wouldn’t be seeking reelection, opening up an opportunity for a Republican takeover of the district.

Ista said the lack of support rallying around Murphy is due to his position on abortion, as well as culture-war legislation he refused to support. “I think it’s illustrative of that schism, where at this district level, Republicans are really trying to sort of press the most extreme conservative opinions,” Ista said.

Richard Glynn, the GOP county chair in Murphy’s district, had previously supported Murphy’s abortion bill. In written testimony, Glynn shared his experience hearing about young women performing illegal abortions when he was a freshman at the University of South Dakota in 1966. Four young women who were in sororities died from using metal hangers to terminate their pregnancies, he wrote.

“These deaths were viewed as preventable if these girls could have received competent care. Unfortunately, North Dakota is going down the same path with limited access to obstetric care that negatively impacts the health of the woman,” his letter said.

When reached by phone, Glynn said delegates in the county voted and Murphy had the least amount of votes, which is why he did not receive the county’s endorsement.

Glynn declined to answer more questions before hanging up on a reporter.

One of Murphy’s opponents, Mike Holmes, has drawn a lot of excitement — and an endorsement from Gov. Kelly Armstrong — for his expertise in energy technology and industrial development. The governor said Holmes understands “what it takes to keep North Dakota’s economy strong.” Holmes has been silent on abortion and didn’t respond to ProPublica’s requests for an interview.

Chandler, who touted her “respect for life” in a campaign mailer, is favored among anti-abortion groups. “It’s a pretty stark contrast,” said Bridget Turbide, executive director of North Dakota Right to Life, who called Murphy’s proposal “the most extreme pro-choice bill we’ve ever seen.”

A flyer promoting Jill Chandler, one of Murphy’s opponents, was paid for by Citizens Alliance of North Dakota, a conservative group that opposes abortion among other causes. Photo courtesy Eric Murphy

Citizens Alliance of North Dakota, a conservative group that opposes abortion among other causes, paid for a mailer calling Chandler a “champion of family values.” The same group marked Murphy in “bad standing” in an online roster of legislators, questioning his alignment with North Dakota values.

Murphy’s third colleague who also represents District 43, Republican State Sen. Jeff Barta, campaigned alongside him in 2022 as part of a unified Republican ticket when the primary election was uncontested.

Asked about the upcoming race and the candidates, Barta pointed to Murphy’s proposal that would have expanded abortion access in North Dakota.

“Last session, he introduced House Bill 1488, which created a little divide there,” Barta said.

Barta said Murphy has also broken with the party on other issues.

“That probably opened the door for the third candidate to run,” Barta added. Had that not happened, Murphy would have made it to the general election without having to defend his spot on the ballot.

Before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, lawmakers taking such nuanced stands on abortion bans may not have risked a career death sentence, said abortion historian and law professor Mary Ziegler.

“The kind of incrementalism that Eric Murphy seems to be doing is something from a bygone era, where people were more pragmatic in the movement and not punished for it,” she said.

The post These Republican Lawmakers Challenged Abortion Bans. Then They Faced Backlash. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-06-08 16:04
2026-06-04 12:21

As Iran war reshapes the Middle East, Turkey’s regional role looks set to expand Expert comment LToremark

Ankara’s deepening relations with Gulf countries and a potential rerouting of trade are among the factors likely to benefit Turkey.

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan attends the Turkiye-Egypt-Pakistan-Saudi Arabia foreign ministers meeting in Islamabad.

The Iran war is fundamentally redefining politics in the Middle East and upending the regional status quo. It is also redefining Turkey’s role within the region, which presents both challenges and opportunities for Ankara.

For Turkey, the worst-case scenario was and is that Israel would seek to engineer state collapse in Iran, the fallout of which would consume both Iran and its neighbours for many years to come. It would pave the way for proxy conflicts, a refugee crisis and state fragmentation – and bring the Kurdish dimension of the war to the fore. This outcome would also further embolden Israel – with US backing – to continue its efforts to reshape the region on its own terms. But so far, Iran’s endurance has prevented Turkey’s worst fears from materializing.  

At this stage, Turkey has two interrelated concerns. One, Turkey wants to prevent a return to war, but it is also worried about what it sees as Iran’s attempt to rewrite the rules of the game in the Gulf. For example, Iran’s new transit rules for the Strait of Hormuz could effectively give Iran significant influence over Gulf states’ security as well as their economy. Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan has called for a return to the pre-war status quo in Hormuz, warning the new regulation could become a ‘new source’ of conflict. Plus, Turkey believes that Iran’s actions here will push Gulf states closer to the US and Israel.

However, the war also presents Ankara with opportunities in the shape of an expanded regional role: in defence industry and security partnerships; in regional connectivity and trade route redesign; and through regional alignments.

Defence industry

This war has brought the question of security to the forefront of policy conversations and considerations in the Gulf and the wider region. Although there is not yet an alternative to the US security umbrella, it has failed to provide the security that Gulf states wanted. For many countries in the Middle East – not least those of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) – the US is indispensable, but also unreliable and coercive at the same time. However, despite their mixed feelings and discontent, Gulf countries will have no choice but to double down on their relations with the US. This will only be reinforced by Iran’s actions and attempts to rewrite the rules of the game in the Gulf.

At the same time, Gulf states will also gradually seek to diversify their security partnerships and defence industry cooperation, as a hedging strategy against over-dependence on the US in this area. However, they will be cautious about engaging in such partnerships with US adversaries to avoid incurring the wrath of Washington. This is probably good news for Turkey, a country with a growing defence industry – and on good terms with the US and President Donald Trump – to further expand its security and defence industry cooperation with Gulf states. This cooperation is unlikely to be confined to purchases of Turkish weapons or drone systems; it will likely also include joint production agreements, joint investments, and technology and knowledge transfers.

Trade routes and regional connectivity

The Hormuz crisis has brought the question of rerouting trade corridors and redesigning connectivity to the top of regional and international agendas. Turkey is well-positioned to benefit from such shifts. The wider Middle East and beyond have seen an increasing number of connectivity projects aimed at rerouting trade and redesigning supply chains, such as China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) – whose prospects are dimming following the Gaza and Iran wars – and the now-defunct Eastern Mediterranean Pipeline project. Turkey already plays a central role in two such projects: the Iraq Development Road project and the Middle Corridor. These strategic connectivity projects are not only redesigning supply-chains and rerouting trade, but they also redefine the geopolitics of the concerned regions.

Turkey and its partners should consider ways to further boost the prospects of Ankara-supported connectivity projects. For example, bringing Syria on board with the Iraq Development Road project would provide an even shorter route to the Mediterranean, while bringing Armenia on board with the Middle Corridor would strengthen the ongoing normalization process between Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia. In the post-Iran war era, Turkey and regional states are likely to engage in even more dialogue on trade corridors and transport connectivity. For example, the Hejaz Railway project – a prospective land corridor between the Gulf and Europe, which will connect Turkey, Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, – is already attracting interest.

New regional alignments

The Iran war is also triggering or accelerating the formation of new regional alignments and groupings. The quartet comprising Turkey, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Egypt is a case in point, although it is more of a platform than a pact. Ankara wants it to remain open to including more countries to avoid counter-alignment groups from forming, which can lead to more regional rivalries and fragmentation. Although individual members of this group, such as Pakistan and Turkey, have assumed active roles to find a diplomatic settlement to end the war, the quartet itself is primarily designed to address post-war regional geopolitics and security.

2026-06-10 16:04
2026-06-04 09:09

Before you start comparing your mortgage loan options, make sure you know where interest rates could head next.

2026-06-08 20:04
2026-06-04 01:00

With the departure of University of Delaware students, Newark’s streets and parking lots are less crowded, and soon residents will be able to enjoy free weekend parking downtown.

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